Words from Dic(tionary)
Alleviate: (v) to make suffering, deficiency or a problem less severe: e.g. he took measures to alleviate unemployment
You usually can tap a tear or draw a cheer by speaking against the evils of pain, poverty and suffering. And certainly, these nasty villains have crushing results on the weakest members of our society.
But I think you are often trying to treat the rash on your skin caused by the tumor in your heart. What we need to alleviate in order to improve the status and quality of life are:
- Piety
- Politics
- Prejudice
They are the spawners of all pond scum, and therefore should be attacked for their vicious planning of the destruction of mankind.
In one stroke, piety makes us feel better than others and worse than God. It leaves us uncertain of our value, falling into a pit of pomposity to try to prove our worthiness for salvation.
Politics is the band-aid for the gaping wound which pretends to repair the breach, only to welcome deeper and deeper levels of infection.
And of course, prejudice targets an enemy who has done nothing to us other than being different, so that we might promote our own singularity as superior. It is the nastiest form of insecurity available in the arsenal of human weaponry.
Would we have war without politics, religion and prejudice?
Would there be hungry people if politicians, religionists and bigots weren’t restricting the flow of charity?
Would there be suffering if politicians were actually addressing the needs of society, churches were spreading the blanket of Jesus’ love to “the least of these,” and prejudice was dissolved and a liquidity of acceptance was poured forth?
Alleviate. Yes, I believe my job as a human being in the twenty-first century is to lessen the effect of piety, politics and prejudice, on the mind and heart of the common man.
In so doing, I will find that less pain, poverty and suffering will afflict the strangers–now acquaintances–around me.
