The Internet Is Still Brand New. Maybe That's Why We're All Fighting, says Rob Bell | Big Think
We have better technology than ever, we’re more enlightened than ever. Why do we see these upsurges or explosions of very primal, tribal conflict? Let’s build a wall. Let’s keep them out. Let’s have these people separate from these people. Let’s make sure that those people never – there’s a French paleontologist named Pierre Chardin who wrote about 100 years ago, and he said that everything that rises must converge.
And he essentially laid out an arc of the history of the world and the evolution of the universe, and that there are moments of great conflict on the way to unity, depth and complexity. So there’s actually a whole body of thought that if everybody’s in separate tribes, but the whole thing is moving us towards a global tribe, a connection. Everybody’s my brother and sister. The only way for this tribe to become close, connected brother and sister with that tribe is they’re going to have to interact.
And when they interact, those first interactions may be a little dodgy, as the Brits would say. There may be some conflict. I also think if you go beyond simply larger, large scale movement towards complexity and unity, whenever you encounter the unknown, whenever you encounter pain, loss, suffering or something different, it will either break you open, and you will be broken open in the best kind of ways so that you become more expansive.
South American Indians have this phrase. They talk about making room within yourself for the immensities of the universe. So you were always taught that these people are like this, but then one of those people moves in next door, and you find out they’re actually fantastic. They’re actually wonderful. Like the best neighbor you’ve ever had. Then whatever you were previously taught, whatever bias, racism, bigotry, you know have to redo all your labels and categories because they don’t work because this flesh and blood person has smashed them to pieces.
So this disruption, it will either break you open, and you will become more expansive, more inclusive, more of an embrace for the other. Or the pain of that disruption, you will dig your heels, and you will regress. You will build a bigger wall between the two of you. And I would argue that what’s happening right now is the world is shifting really, really, really fast.
If you go back 500 years, and let’s say the year 1543. If I were to say to you 15 years after the invention of the printing press, what, 1443 or whatever that is. If I were to say to you, hey, this books thing. I think this books thing could really catch on. We all laugh now because we’re like, yeah, that books thing did kind of catch on. And it upended government, authority, education, religion, science.
We’re essentially 15 years into the Internet. And we’re only 15 years into what could probably be the greatest sort of technological invention or revolution. And at least 500 years, maybe ever. So we’re in this time of massive transition. If you would have said to Jeb Bush at the beginning of the Republican primaries, who had more money stockpiled than any candidate ever, with more name recognition than any candidate, oh by the way, you’re going to get destroyed by a guy on Twitter, we would all have said no way.
That is the weirdest idea. Oh yeah, a candidate’s going to come along who’s not going to spend any money. He’s going to have no structure. He’s going to have no field operatives. He’s going to Tweet. We would all be like no. Like there’s a way it’s done. And yet that’s what happened. So you can already see 15 years in, entire things changing. I mean, you have the printing press. Not long after the printing press, you have people saying things like, hey, by the way, I don’t think the earth is the center of the solar system, which was how human beings had seen things for thousands of years.
So I think we’re in one of those periods. And whenever you have a disruption, all new technology will bring some form of disruption. Some people will be like, look at this new world. Look at the possibilities. Let’s figure this out. And other people will dig their heels in. They will fight it. They will white knuckle all the more.
And the reason why we know this is true at a macro level is think about friends of yours who have been through great suffering. Think about friends of yours who lost a child or went through a horrible divorce. Generally, people either become bitter or they become better. They generally close down. Their heart becomes harder or all of that pain somehow softens and breaks them open, and they become more open, more expansive.
They often respond either by becoming a victim. Look what happened to me. Look at all the reasons I have to not step into the fullness of life. Or they go out into the world carrying around this wound. And others who have been through what they have been through, they look them in the eyes and say me too. And they become this extraordinary voice for healing.
And the exact place of their wound is the place where all sorts of grace and help flows through them to others. So I think that’s what you’re seeing right now is the world is different. In 2008, 48 percent, I believe it is, of births in America were to nonwhites. And at the time, a number of people said this statistic is important because this will shape the political future of our country.
Are you okay with that? Are you okay with all this difference and diversity? Do you see it as a threat? Are you saying what happened to my country or are you saying look what’s happening to my country? It is a threat or it is an invitation to new possibilities. And what we’re seeing right now are two very distinct answers to that question, which have always been the two responses.