Saturday, November 1, 2008

Gone Too Far? Says Who?

Here's the latest absurd news, and a brief analysis of what it means. First, the story:

Man petitions to marry comic book character
A Japanese man has enlisted hundreds of people in a campaign to allow marriages between humans and cartoon characters, saying he feels more at ease in the "two-dimensional world."
Comic books are immensely popular in Japan, with some fictional characters becoming celebrities or even sex symbols. Marriage, meanwhile, is on the decline as many young Japanese find it difficult to find life partners.


Well, admittedly it's hard to take this one seriously, yet it does raise a question. Who decides? Who decides what is right and wrong? By what authority is the line drawn here and not there?

These questions are continuously arising. In business, men like Andrew Carnegie and Rockefeller built fortunes doing things that were legal. Our government rightfully drew up new rules. In health care Dr. Kervorkian and the Hemlock Society sought to change medical rules regarding what is acceptable with regards to end lof life situations of great suffering. The definition of when life begins is continuously being debated. Likewise, the simple definition of marriage is no longer simple.

French philosopher Michel Foucault, in his book The Archaeology of Knowledge, argues that all ideas have a moment when they emerge, are birthed, and that one needs to examine the context of this emergence in order to understand its transformative power. Behind his thesis is an effort to break down the moral absolutes that label people as "crazy" or "sick" for behaviors that don't fit a prescribed norm as dictated by those with power. To some extent he was right. Labels can often be applied arbitrarily.

As regards what is and is not acceptable or legal today, the conviction of the founding fathers was the principle of Lex Rex, "law is king." But whose interpretation of the law? Isn't that really the question? And what law? Revealed law, as in Scriptural truth, or natural law? Or some other law?

Naturally, the founding fathers conveniently gave no voice to the founding mothers on these matters, but that's another matter.

Well, here's where things go when "anything goes." Instead of a family being constituted of a man and a woman, we now have a man and a comic book hero. Hopefully he's in pursuit of Wonder Woman and not, say, Bugs Bunny. Then again, by post-modern standards, who am I to impose my tastes on everyone else?

In other news, an Australian carnival performer is planning to set a new world record by walking on 57-foot stilts. I think this is going a little too far, don't you?

3 comments:

LEWagner said...

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Man petitions to marry comic book character
A Japanese man has enlisted hundreds of people in a campaign to allow marriages between humans and cartoon characters, saying he feels more at ease in the "two-dimensional world."
Comic books are immensely popular in Japan, with some fictional characters becoming celebrities or even sex symbols. Marriage, meanwhile, is on the decline as many young Japanese find it difficult to find life partners.

Well, admittedly it's hard to take this one seriously, yet it does raise a question. Who decides? Who decides what is right and wrong? By what authority is the line drawn here and not there?<<<<<

Next thing that'll happen in this post-modern surreal world: Some Japanese girl will come home pregnant. She'll tell her family and fiance that her comic book hero is the father, and that she has slept with no man.
Her family, her fiance, and billions of others will believe this, without question.

LEWagner said...

"On Sunday and the past two weekends, volunteers in 14 states who belong to Protestant megachurches, politically active conservative churches and Catholic parishes distributed literature at their churches comparing McCain and Obama on hot-button issues like abortion, gay marriage and judges. "Who Shares Your Values?" the flier says. "You decide.""
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081102/ap_on_el_pr/rel_campaign_churches#full

These "hot-button issues" don't include, of course, things such as preemptive war based on lies, holding and torturing suspects indefinitely without trying them, people dying for lack of health care, racism, police brutality, forced drugging of dissidents, homelessness, hunger, etc., etc.
Oh, well. And so it goes.

Ed Newman said...

>>> Her family, her fiance, and billions of others will believe this, without question.<<<

Your wit is quite pointed... You should have been a satirist.


>>>hot button issues<<<

Yes, the report card by which candidates are measured is often quite narrow.

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