THE FOLLIES MY AFFLICTED EYES DOTH SEE
I have the (thankfully rare) distinction of genetically-induced tunnel vision. I gave up driving before I was forced to, because of the danger I posed to myself and others.
Known as retinitis pigmentosa, my malady is, in simple terms, a non-reversible deterioration of light receptor cells. I only see what is directly in front of me, and even that appears filtered through fine gauze.
But those problems pale to insignificance when compared to the ones wrought by what I have taken the liberty of labelling politicinitus pigmentosa.
Fewer than five in every 4,000 people in the world have some form of retinitis pigmentosa.
Among politicians, the ratio of those afflicted with the politicinitus version seems frighteningly tighter.
Just consider how many demonstrably lack vision that extends as far as the next election cycle, never mind beyond.
If they were required to meet the equivalent of a driving licence eye examination or lose their authority, imagine how much safer the world could be.
The tunnel effect of retinal deterioration means that unless my head is on a constant up-down-up-side-to-side swivel (which I confess I consistently fail to keep), anyone approaching from the side, curbs, objects on the ground, ranging from plastic signs like slippery floor warnings to dogs and small children etc, don’t exist until I bump into, or trip over them.
As a result, I tend to move at a pace that must annoy everyone around me.
One of the most glaringly obvious diagnoses of politicinitus pigmentosa is Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. The only thing he seems to see clearly is whatever he believes threatens, or will ensure his political survival, which he tries to disguise under the rubric of safeguarding the Israeli state and people.
It’s fair to say that the punishment the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) dealt to Hamas and Hezbollah, and which even with politicinitus pigmentosa they both should have anticipated, is justifiable on some levels, although not the one it has reached.
What has been done to the people of Gaza and southern Lebanon and Beirut is exactly what one would expect from someone with politicinitus pigmentosa.
If proof were needed, the mainstream Israeli newspaper Haaretz, reported that Netanyahu recently declared that the southern Lebanon incursion and occupation, should ensure “everything above ground and below ground that served [Hezbollah] as a means of attacking us – infiltration routes, terror tunnels, terrorist villages – it’s all going down. That’s the directive: Leave nothing behind.”
It was no idle threat. Lebanon’s state media reported that Israeli forces torched houses in two Lebanese villages located in an area under IDF-control.
NECESSARY LEARNING
For the sake of myself and others, I try to avoid crowded places that require slalom skills to move through, and am learning (grudgingly, I admit), to rely on friends and loved ones as “guide dogs” when and where necessary.
That’s something from which President Donald Trump, who consistently demonstrates an inability to see anything except what he decides is there, reality be damned, could benefit.
But no one around him who fits the bill of friend, loved one or paid to do so, appears to be willing — or indeed capable and confident enough — to offer such guidance. Not that Trump would accept it. But still, it would make things considerably easier for the rest of us if he could at least be nudged around obstacles and pitfalls.
For me, stepping from dim to bright light, and vice-versa, can be disconcerting to the point of nerve-wracking. I need to pause for several seconds while my eyes adjust, and even when they do, things usually don’t appear to be what they really are.
And therein lies another warning sign of the presence of politicinitus pigmentosa.
A leader who plunges without pause into the darker corners of any issue fraught with unknown obstacles, is either ignorant or in denial of an affliction that ought to preclude ultimate control of military and economic forces.
The same applies, perhaps to an even greater degree, to stepping with smug alacrity into the glare of overt fawning and flattery.
There is at present no cure for retinitis pigmentosa , but stem cell research is providing hope for those whom it will render completely blind (among whom I have, thankfully, been assured I do not fit).
Treatment for politicinitus pigmentosa is not, as far as I can tell, being researched.
So we’ll have to rely on picking up the tell-take ticks and mannerisms of a sufferer, which will of course be labelled “fake news” by those who manifest the politicinitus strain.
But at least we’ll have a better idea of whether we want share the road with them.
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One thought on “THE FOLLIES MY AFFLICTED EYES DOTH SEE”
Very good analogies! And sorry you have to put up with this aggravating condition.