I read a lot.
A lot of history.
And a lot of history involves wars.
A lot of history involves firsts.
I am sad for a world where no one, especially our so-called leaders and our military so-called leaders don't know history.
If you love history (and I could argue that loving history is about loving humankind--since history is an aid to understanding, people, situations, life, planets and their movements and actions) you eventually wind up reading about the civilizations that occupied the area the Greeks called Mesopotamia. In Greek, roughly that means "between the rivers." The rivers in question being the Tigris and Euphrates. Some people call Mesopotamia "the Fertile Crescent." I like it with a drizzle of tahini.
It was the original home of the Sumerians, the Babylonians and the Assyrians. It's currently one of America's favorite places to bomb the shit out of.
| The equivalent of each and every amerikan dropping about $20 worth of bombs. |
When our current round of bombing the shit out of Mesopotamia started about two weeks ago, I found myself saying to myself something that might pass for profound. That is if anyone listened to me outside of people I have to pay to listen to me. (BTW, today, a "Yikes!" uttered by Bazooka Joe passes for profound.)
I said aloud to myself, "A culture led by a man with an eight-second attention span should never go to war with a culture with an 8000-year attention span."
Here's a brief niblet on what I mean by 8000-year attention span. "The cuneiform sources for [Mesopotamian] culture span from c. 3400 BC up until c. AD 80...This culture endured for more than three millennia, meaning that from the Middle East to the West more than half of human history is written in cuneiform."
English has lasted roughly 1000 years. I can't imagine it lasting so that it's legible to current practitioners 2500 years from now. I don't even remember what on fleek means anymore, or 23-skidoo. Half of the things I say to people render them as crazy-eyed as Marty Feldman navel gazing.
Further, Wisnom, the author of the book shown above writes, “Writing is not the only legacy of Mesopotamia. Many concepts indispensable to civilisation originated here, including the city, banking, and law. Our division of hours into sixty minutes is based on the Mesopotamian mathematical system, and the constellations we look for in the sky were first grouped and named by the Babylonians. The Assyrians had aqueducts before the Romans, and the Babylonians had a version of Pythagoras’ theorem a thousand years before Pythagoras.”
Yes, but no trump meme-coins.
By the way, Hammurabi's Code, composed around 1750 BC (and stolen by the French for a display in the Louvre about 200 years ago) pre-dates the Magna Carte by about 2800 years. It predates the us constitution by about 3600 years. Its precepts from back then are currently being ignored and violated by our leaders today. (Admittedly, the code is a bit harsh for my taste. A lot of ears cut off. A lot of putting to death. But at least they punished serial child-rape.)
But this is a blog on advertising, remember?
What does any of this have to do with advertising?
Well, the same f-upped-ness that leads us to think we could subdue Mesopotamia today has led our industry--especially the rose-tinted "performance" and "measurement" sides of it down a similar poison-ivied garden path.
We have forgotten time.
We have succumbed to the illusion of quick wins.
We have fallen prey to magical thinking.
We tactic-ize and hope for quarterly success.
We work so we can cash in and cash out.
We willingly forget that brands, relationships, life are built over time, not over spreadsheets.
We forget that the only things that work are:
-work
-repetition
-time
Our eight-second attention span will lead to untold amerikan and iranian deaths. Our eight-second attention span will cost us trillions of dollars in brand-equity. Our eight-second attention span will accomplish nothing while costing everything.
We worry about immediate returns for things that take decades to pay off. Or we think hard can be done easily.
Check back with me in 8000 years.
I'll still be writing.