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We Call This Order

A System That Isn’t Working challenge entry.

By Paul StewartPublished about 20 hours ago 3 min read
We Call This Order
Photo by Antenna on Unsplash

A system is normally set in place with the promise of bringing order. A system organises behaviour and, in turn, rewards certain responses.

Our system rewards outrage.

As a promised collective of order that makes patterns out of the cast darkness of the cosmos and screams against the emptiness with technology and self-considered progress, we, civilisation, are struggling.

I am not trying to be funny. But it is funny. It just is. Whatever your thoughts, beliefs, values, favourite sports team, singer, film, video game, religion, or brand, we are all essentially the same. Our differences are not nearly as great as our similarities.

For such a progressive civilisation of biped flesh monsters with an endoskeleton, we have built and honed a system that doesn’t serve us.

We are rewarded for reacting. Either positively or negatively — a reward is a reward. We are trained from an early age to defend identity, which is no bad thing.

However, another thing we are taught is that disagreement is an attack. Though some disagreements could correctly be defined as such, most are simply differences of opinion.

In the age of the internet and social media, algorithms are fine-tuned to amplify micro-conflicts, and any sense of nuance dies quietly on the corner.

We are often careless. We are more or less responsible for every terrible thing that happens — but why?

Outrage is amazing. It gives a sense of moral certainty. That certainty gives us our tribe. Tribe gives us safety in numbers, and safety feels like survival.

Survival overrides nuance.

We can’t agree to disagree. Now, I am not trying to piss in anyone’s cereal here. But even if I was, my point still stands.

I don’t want to simplify larger issues, but on many of the hotbed, conversation-ending and war-starting subjects, a difference of opinion is what it all boils down to.

We are broken because, as a society, we don’t seem able to hold a variety of opinions without blood, guts, and metaphorical debris being spilled.

I don’t really like Dracula and Frankenstein adaptations that take liberties with the original texts and add romances here, there and everywhere.

It’s my opinion.

No matter how right I think I am (and I do think I am right), it is still just an opinion — valid, perhaps, but not worth falling out with someone because of it.

A harmless preference because I “get” the original text and hate seeing it stripped of intent.

But to voice my opinion might be taken as defensiveness, or as someone being sensitive to criticism, and as our identity is intrinsically linked to everything we are, it may be seen as an attack — which leads to social fracture.

I am not in any way righter or wronger. Even with the best intentions in wanting to voice my opinion, I could start problems.

Opinions and preferences can become markers for taste, tribe, intelligence and even moral worth — and that’s when issues really arise.

Even from something as seemingly insignificant as Dracula and Frankenstein adaptations.

Now, take me for instance. I have unsubtly made references to the fact that I think I am right.

I like being right. It feels good and validating.

It’s also great when I find others who agree. For as much as I would love for people not to agree with me, the dopamine hits harder when they do.

And much to my own chagrin — something my wife will attest to — it feels good when I see someone else is wrong.

Those notification buzzes that bring comments saying, “Yeah, Paul, you’re right,” feel like tiny victories.

Our system, by and large, has difficulty differentiating between aesthetic and ethical disagreements and existential threat.

This system, as it stands, shapes the most vulnerable — the quiet individuals, those with two conflicting ideas, those who respond with “maybe,” and those who change their minds.

You say one slightly opinionated thing in a conversation. Others decide it is wrong. You are piled onto with hatred.

Your stomach tightens. Your jaw aches from the tension it’s carrying. Your face creases into a scowl. You type faster. Delete. Re-type. Delete again. Defiance kicks in — along with that familiar sense of rightness. You double down rather than back down, because if the other side won’t, why should you? You screenshot. You check the likes. You count the comments.

With this kind of system, there is no loud collapse. Not at first. The misalignment happens quietly and gradually.

The quiet learn to speak less.

The careful stop speaking at all.

Only the loudest survive.

Volume is mistaken for truth.

And we call that order.

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About the Creator

Paul Stewart

Award-Winning Writer, Poet, Scottish-Italian, Subversive.

The Accidental Poet - Poetry Collection out now!

Streams and Scratches in My Mind coming soon!

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Comments (7)

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  • Sean A.about 2 hours ago

    Paul, you’re right. Maybe not about ALL the Dracula and Frankenstein adaptations…. But seriously, well written and filled with the nuance it feels like we’ve lost (if it was ever more than an illusion)

  • Imola Tóthabout 3 hours ago

    OMG, I so agree! I was complaining about this to my boyfriend the other day, it's fucking 2026 and there's freedom to identify yourself as a fucking oven baked pizza if that's what you want but we still don't have the freedom to state our own opinions without getting into a fight about it... I feel like people take everything so seriously, except the things they should actually take seriously. I love the ending, I'm definitely the one who stopped speaking, even if I'm asked, especially by strangers. I love it though when people come together who can actually discuss things without turning it into a fight, and just talk for hours about theories and what not, listening to the other's side too and coming to conclusion (or not) without anyone taking anything personally, because it never is. But in this egoistic world, somehow it seems so. P.s. I'm stealing this sentence to use it in real life:I am not trying to piss in anyone’s cereal. Perfect.

  • Katherine D. Grahamabout 10 hours ago

    You have captured 3 minutes of clarity in this piece. squeaky wheels should just get oiled.. and non squeaky ones should as well. I enjoyed how what applies to writing a story applies to so many other things. The nice thing about writing is the delete button. nice work

  • Kera Hollowabout 13 hours ago

    Only the loudest survive really hit home :(

  • Heather Hublerabout 16 hours ago

    "Volume is mistaken for truth" I've found that so appallingly true anymore in too many areas of life. I love a good debate. I appreciate having ideas challenged and learning something about how people think. Unfortunately, I don't see a lot of thinking going on. My head is crowded with the deafening bleating of sheep. Great chance to highlight this ballooning scenario. Well done, matey mate :) #i'mright

  • Lana V Lynxabout 19 hours ago

    It is also called "the spiral of silence," when the loud minority hijacks the discourse and everyone else keeps silent because they erroneously think that the loud minority is in fact a majority. That's how Hitler came to power in Germany. I never thought it would be possible in the US, but here we are. Also I don't think it's "we" who produce the outrage. Rage-baiting is in the interests of the tech industries because it keeps people engaged on the platforms, and they keep fleecing us for our time, attention they sell to advertisers, and money. We are all contributing to tech billionaires becoming richer because we are so engaged in the outrage, but it's not our invention. The algos contribute to it more than the humans do.

  • Harper Lewisabout 19 hours ago

    Damn, Paulie! You’re not wrong. 💜💜💜💜

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