Sunday, July 18, 2010

Tampering

The Americans have this saying, “If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.” Spell checker, I don’t care if you don’t like ‘ain’t’, ‘cause that’s just how we talk, so get over it!

I’m sure every nation under heaven has a saying that means the same as this one. If something is working as it was intended to, just leave it alone, and let it do its work.

Although gradual, incremental change is good, in fact, is the way of nature itself, the hallmark of the current age is to tinker with something until it finally falls apart.

Modernism, in my mind, is the idea that we think of the world in the Greek manner, examining things scientifically, brushing aside unnecessary accretions, to find the best.

Post-modernism, what we have today, is the idea that we think ourselves so far superior to all that came before, that we can rule, disorder, vivisect and undo, to find our pleasure.


The company I work for was humming along just fine. It was small but we didn’t need much, because our product was unique, had no competitors, sold itself on its merits. Our customer service was entirely personalized and also drew additional business, just from our attitude of “do as you would be done by.” We did business on a handshake. The natural growth of the company was well underway, without losing any essential characteristics, but then, the owner, who had not had a university education and was feeling “out of league” with other “world class” companies, went to Harvard Business School. When he returned, he was a changed man.

All at once, everything was thrown into a frenzy of irresponsible tampering and tinkering. Actually those two words are really inadequate to describe what happened. The first step was bringing in outsiders well-versed in the new managerial mysticism and armed with a new selection of games for us to play. Magic words were thrown around, ISO certified, lean manufacturing, Five S, kaizen and poka-yoke.

Lots of big posters were hurriedly designed, printed and plastered all over the walls. We were forced through a sieve of mental manipulation that made some of us think of the brainwashing techniques used by the enemy in the cold war.
A template was forced on us that didn’t fit. In the end, it ruined the company which, even without the current economic conditions, is now a vague shadow of what it was, depleted completely of the good will and enthusiasm that it once had.

Why are we even still around?

Because the owner, unrepentant but quietly burying the history of the past five years, fired all of the managers that he hired to tamper, just as the economic collapse started. We have about a third of the people we had before and our output is a fifth. How do I know? Because I used to be the General Manager and I’ve kept all my weekly production records. Used to be? Yes, because I was morally incapable of joining in the fun of managerial devolution, I was demoted overnight to the status of an entry level worker, and allowed to do menial clerical tasks. I got over it, but not without a struggle. I still work there because the owner has some traditional notions in him that he couldn’t kick, even with all his “education” — the feudal lord’s responsibility to his faithful serf.

“If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.”

After having that very personal experience of the effects of the spirit of tampering, actually during that experience, my eyes were opened to what was happening around me in the world at large.

Being a historian by nature and education, I am surprised I didn’t notice this from my studies. History has a way of being written by the victors, who never tell you about the devious means they used to achieve their ends. When you actually live history and look at it with open eyes, you see something that you rarely find in history books.


We are, the human race is, a species that is currently under vicious and pre-meditated attack by spirits who want to take us apart piece by piece and reassemble us to serve their ends, not what we were created and designed for. Sound familiar? Well, yes. That’s because it is the same old war we’ve known about since we were placed at enmity with the serpent. It’s not just a myth, you know. It’s for real.

From scientists taking apart and reassembling DNA to engineer what is not in nature, to sociologists taking apart and reassembling society to engineer what is not human, to economists taking apart and reassembling markets to engineer what is not just, to religionists taking apart and reassembling the Bible to engineer what is not holy, the pattern is all around us. It needs no brains at all to see it, and it’s not a conspiracy theory. Perhaps it’s so pervasive that we tend to accept it as normal, as an abused spouse accepts a bad marriage as normal.

Is engineering just another name for tampering? Well, yes and no. Everything in creation can be used as it was intended, or abused, including engineering, which is part of the Greek mind, of modernism. What has happened is that it is often hijacked by the spirit of tampering, of post-modernism, of devolution. It’s just a word. Abuse of engineering is also an abuse of the name.

When and where has the spirit of tampering affected you lately? In a vital or a peripheral area? Or, are you one of those who is doing it, or contributing to it? Sometimes we’re forced to, because our livelihood depends on it. In fact, that is possibly true of most of us.

Where we can make a difference is to stand our ground on what really matters.

If you are a Christian, believe your Bible as it is, be the Church wherever you are, don’t let religious professionals tamper with your life, don't let economic gurus dicker with your values, don’t let social engineers tinker with what you know is right. In your social and employment network, stand for what is right, new or old, again, keeping your eyes on Jesus, doing what He does, saying what He says, thinking what He thinks.

Have you noticed that when you do this, you’re actually more in the driver’s seat of your own life than when you follow the cosmic managers with their tinkering schemes?

That’s because what the Bible says is true, and you can depend on it.

When Christ freed us, He meant us to remain free. Stand firm, therefore, and do not submit again to the yoke of slavery.
Galatians 5:1 Jerusalem Bible

τη ελευθερια ουν η χριστος ημας ηλευθερωσεν, στηκετε και μη παλιν ζυγω δουλειας ενεχεσθε

8 comments:

  1. Let we who have eyes to see and ears to hear, take in all that you have said. I experienced this sordid brainwashing under the nonsense of 'round table' discussions. These discussions were controlled by linguistic manipulation, which was foisted upon us by the management, all of whom were replaced by more ruthless capitalists.
    The invasion of psychobabble has always troubled me. We are so awash in the language of lies, now, that we can't even distinguish truth from falsehood without questioning our motives for doing so. Isn't that sad!
    I was working for a newspaper about 25 years ago, with editors who had a poster from the Modern Language Association, where the Verboten words were listed, and their euphemisms were in column B.
    Now those words are commonplace. I will give you an example that you may not have even noticed:
    People don't have problems anymore, do they, no...they have:
    ISSUES. yep, problems are hard to overcome, issues implies no problem whatsoever.
    You see how that was done? Pretty sneaky. Here's how it worked:
    We had a serious morale problem because of one employee shirking her responsibilities. She feigned injuries and billed the company's insurance, she was incompetent at her job, and she was obnoxious to the other employees. Everyone complained about her, but instead of calling her in to fire her, they called us all in for some touchy feely round table talks. When we voiced our anger about wasting time, we were given worksheets to come up with even more creative time wasting solutions. Everything under the sun was talked about but Connie and her one woman work place wrecking machine.
    It is why now, free from editors, and not chained by guilt, I blog with ferocity.

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  2. Great post! I enjoy exploring Scripture, but I do avoid tampering. I don't believe textual criticism is always dangerous and irreverent, but many do take it in that direction.

    P.S. "ain't" has been around for centuries. It's informal, but it is valid English. Too-snooty literature people need to get over that, haha.

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  3. "From scientists taking apart and reassembling DNA to engineer what is not in nature, to sociologists taking apart and reassembling society to engineer what is not human, to economists taking apart and reassembling markets to engineer what is not just, to religionists taking apart and reassembling the Bible to engineer what is not holy, the pattern is all around us. It needs no brains at all to see it, and it’s not a conspiracy theory. Perhaps it’s so pervasive that we tend to accept it as normal, as an abused spouse accepts a bad marriage as normal."

    Amin, Ameyn, Amen!!! I have for the longest time not been able to express this truth, brother! How you put this is excellent and I am going to remember it. Thank you for this post, Romanos!

    Word Verification: inerongr

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  4. Well said. I appreciated this story; it shed light on a number of things that affect us almost without our knowing it.

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  5. There is a word that I hear slightly different from the ones you use, that has taken a considerable focus of my attention.

    "Modernity"

    This word has all sort of historical reasons for being useful, but another more clear term is "Utopian".

    There is an infection in the human psyche, this desire to "meddle" or "tamper" or "abstract and idealize" and then demand that the complexities of reality conform by forcing unnatural efficiencies onto the natural world.

    So completely pervasive is this way of thinking that even though most Christians (especially conservative Catholics and the Orthodox) would oppose it in rhetoric, their own lives are mixed with it as clay in iron feet.

    Your story is not so different than so many I've heard and experienced (even at my place of work).

    I must confess that I have a same sad predilection to tamper, and worse yet, tamper with those I claim to love.

    Lord have mercy.

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  6. Modernism is the idea that everything can be measured, controlled, and made optimally "efficient." The idea that all problems can be solved, so long as the right information is available and the right techniques are utilized. Knowledge is thought of as individual bits of information, and the categorizing and analyzing of those bits of information will yield "truth." The rise of "management" as a discipline is itself a product of modernism, an attempt to scientifically analyze and control workers and productivity to achieve efficiency. History, then, is seen in terms of "progress," and ages that cannot be reinterpreted as embodying the values of modernism are termed "primitive" or "dark ages." The University systems, particularly in the realms of business and science, have been some of the chief purveyors of modernistic thought.

    Post-moderism, at the cultural level, is perhaps best seen as a reaction against modernism. However, it also maintains some of the seeds of modernism, and the need for tampering is one of those seeds. Indeed, "deconstruction" is a hallmark of post-modernism, which is simply the tampering of modernism applied to modernism. In other words, looking in a mirror, instead of looking at everything else.

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  7. Brother, you make some excellent points in a way that I hadn't thought of. Still, I'm wondering how we distinguish between counter-productive tinkering and the passion for constant improvement that has been a chief strength of such companies as 3M and Walmart.

    Part of the tinkering that scares me is the tinkering with truth and history that's done by the "politicalliy correct" people. A professor at a major university was recently fired for holding a view that was almost certainly the view of over 90% of the US Presidents. He dared to call a particular sin a sin instead of affirming it as normal.

    Colorful posters at work quickly become invisible to me. How fast depends on whether I think they're useful in the first place. If I don't, I may work near them for months on end without ever reading them.

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  8. Something you commented, Jim, has turned into a consideration that I want to share as a post in its own right. You wrote, "I'm wondering how we distinguish between counter-productive tinkering and the passion for constant improvement that has been a chief strength of such companies as 3M and Walmart."

    My simple response to your thought is, "We don't have to wonder."

    In my post Certainty I go into greater detail.

    Thanks for your comment.

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