First Published as “Age of Reason: Imperialism and Vedic Wisdom”, 16 Rounds to Samadhi, San Diego, California, 12 December 2012. http://www.16rounds.com/2012/12/age-of-reason/

There is no age of reason. It is an imperialist construct. The
so-called ‘age of reason’ actually is the age of imperialism.
Imperialism is a highly discriminatory and exploitative system. It can
be distinguished, in the scale of human suffering, from the earlier
distorted systems like slave-owning city-states, followed by classical
empires (Mediterranean), imperial Confucianism and neo Confucianism (Far
East), mysticism-ritualism-casteism (Indian sub-continent),
church-feudal diarchy (Medieval Europe), Islamic theocracies and
autocracies (Middle East), and many forms of tribalism, animism, and
paganism. It is the most in-egalitarian, unjust and illiberal, and also
the bloodiest age in human history. The irony is that the unimagined
scale of discrimination, exploitation, and suffering has been achieved,
not only through coercion, but also blind participation of the victims.
Imperialism was born when mercantile capitalism of the white race,
from the 16th to 18th century, armed with scientific inventions,
borrowed from the Orient like compass (for navigation or looting),
gunpowder (for warfare or killing), printing (for proselytization or
religious enslavement), and decimal numbers (for calculating the scale
of looting, killing, and enslavement), subjugated the other races,
exterminating the red, enslaving the black, impoverishing the brown, and
harassing the yellow. The three centuries of banditry enriched the new
Occidental elite, the merchants and lawyers.
Technology, organization, and mass hysteria became the weapons of the new elite in the 19th century, as they refined and systematized the methods of exploitation, developing industrial capitalism. Industries were fed by the indigenous white labor and the raw-materials produced in white settlements or non-white colonies. The wealth began to flow from the periphery (colonies) to the core (industrial centers), impoverishing the once developed Oriental and pre-American civilizations. This evident form of barbarism was self-labeled as the only civilization through cultural hegemony.
At the end of the 19th century (Victorian age), the imperialist
project encompassed the entire earth. The scale and intensity of
exploitation necessitated the emergence of banks, stock markets, and
paper currency. Speculation became the most lucrative avenue to amass
wealth. Finance capitalism was led by large corporations and
international bankers. Industries used assembly lines for mass
production and advertisement was used to encourage consumerism. It was a
period of great human miseries involving two world wars, the Great
Depression, Holocaust, genocides, ethnic and racial riots, xenophobic
violence, atomic warfare, famines, et cetera. Communism took advantage
of the horrible effects produced by capitalist greed, lust, and
competition, promising a utopian dream based on the same principle of
materialism. It created further imperialism (Soviet empire), wars,
genocides, famines and exploitation.
The devastation of the first half of the 20th century exposed the
weaknesses of imperialism. The colonized elite turned against its
colonial masters. Third World nationalism adopted the modernization
principle, whether in the form of capitalist democracy, socialist
authoritarianism, or mixed economic-political system. What followed was a
new type of imperialism: indirect, consensual, gradual, subtle,
cultural, and spiritual. Capitalism entered the phase of interdependency
(among the imperialist powers) and dependency (of the subjugated
nations). The imperial powers (the white West) remained the core, the
Third World industrial and commercial centers became the semi-periphery
and the vast hinterland (where the overwhelming majority of the
population, say 90% resided) was the periphery, totally deprived of its
self-sufficient, traditional economic, social, and political structures.
On the other hand, the communist elite, cut off from the imperialist
metropolis, preferred autarky and mutual co-operation, but squeezed to
the last drop the sweat and blood of the peasants and unorganized
working class to maintain their bureaucratic hegemony and utopian
five-year plans. The Cold War created a new military-industrial complex,
which led to vertical and horizontal proliferation of lethal weapons,
profiting the imperialists and causing numerous wars and genocides in
the Third World. Modernization destroyed the cultural fabric of all
nations, leading to commoditization of women and destruction of stable
families (in the name of feminism), ruination of social harmony,
increasing prostitution, drug abuse, intoxication, criminalization and
corruption, loss of support for the orphaned, aged and disabled, et
cetera. Finally, the ecological balance was irreversibly damaged, the
natural resources were depleted, the entire living space was polluted
(through fertilizers, pesticides, industrial waste, carbon emissions),
and numerous species of flora and fauna were exterminated.

The 1970s was a period of great turmoil due to unsustainability of
state-centric neo-imperialism, which lost support even in the
imperialist countries where the traditional society was totally
uprooted. An age of extremes set in. On the one hand, radical values
like teenage sex, abortion rights, homosexuality, nudity, pornography,
et cetera, became more acceptable; on the other hand, religious
fundamentalism re-emerged to salvage the remaining traces of human
civilization. Governments issued currencies, no longer backed by any
hard assets, and maintained huge budget deficits simply by printing
notes (in developed and emerging economies reliant on crude-oil
imports). Individuals, corporations, and nations became so entangled in
consumerism that they carried debts to maintain a modern lifestyle. This
was an unstable period in history for the masses, with financial crises
occurring every few years.
We live in a hierarchical, hegemonic, and neo-imperialist global
order. Globalization, privatization, and informatization processes have
led to the creation of a new globalist elite, totally separated from its
cultural roots. The Western elite are at the top, with control over the
information and communication industries, global financial
corporations, high-tech production, and popular brands. Among the
emerging economies, China is the factory of the world and India the
international BPO, while others, like Russia and Saudi Arabia, are
suppliers of precious energy resources. Australia is an exporter of
agricultural goods. Most countries are subsistence economies, relying on
whatever incentives they have for earning a living, like agriculture,
animal-rearing, mining, or tourism.
Disparities of culture and affluence are quite strong. A management professional lives an extravagant lifestyle, while a farmer is forced to commit suicide due to perpetual debt. The globalist elite of bankers, industrialists, and media barons are assisted by organic intellectuals and professionals to maintain this repressive system. Meanwhile, the middle class struggles day and night to save some money, so that their children may get modern education to join the organic class. The vast majority lives with almost no opportunity to rise on the economic ladder.
Contemporary Homo sapiens have become dependent on their senses,
carried away by consumption, which is far beyond any rational
calculation, and is devastating the biosphere and exploiting their
fellow species. The system of exploitation has become very
sophisticated, with the exploiters always claiming high moral ground.
Let us discuss some examples:
1. The elite and their organic servants murder billions of animals everyday for satisfying their palate.
2. They maintain large philanthropic foundations to help the hapless,
whose needs are created by them. Without them, the villages would be
self-sustaining units and there would be no urban slums and impoverished
migrant workers. They have even forced the governments to stop funding
schools and hospitals and subsidizing agriculture. As a result, people
have become needy and they offer some token gift to earn a name as a
philanthropist.
3. The tobacco and alcohol companies package and advertise their
products as health hazards, yet sell it to the public for huge profits.
4. People are allured to consume junk like beer, energy drinks, fast food, etc.
5. China maintains a firewall that stops unwanted cyber intrusion
into its society, while other governments feign helplessness as children
are fed on pornography, violence, and unsocial values.
6. People are victimizing themselves by becoming attached to modern
gadgets and edibles that ruin their immune system and make them
dependent, when they could easily do without them.
7. Women are enticed to abandon the family and home commitments, so
that the elite and the organic class can satisfy their unholy desires.
Although promised the moon, many women end up in positions which exploit
their sexuality for corporate gains.
Given the plethora of deleterious events in history, as of late and
old, which stem from the elitist attitude, we can undoubtedly conclude
that a change in paradigm is necessary. Greed and lust, the impetus for
wanting to exploit nature and people, cannot engender solace at any
level. A more compassionate approach must be taken that accounts for the
invaluable intricacies of the world around us, then a genuine ‘age of
reason‘ might ensue.