Stand-up comedian, actor, and social critic, George Carlin will be best remembered for his irreverent political views and incisive humor.
His material, thoughts and sentiments are best encapsulated in the introduction of his 1997 book: Brain Droppings, which you can hear live from his audiobook of the same title in the video below:
For a long time my stand-up material has drawn from three sources. The first is the English language, you know words, phrases, sayings, and the ways we speak. The second source, as with most comedians, has been what I think of as ‘the little world’–those things we all experience everyday: driving, food, pets, relationships, and idle thoughts. The third area, is what I call ‘the big world’–war, politics, race, death, the social issues. So without actually having measured, I would say this book reflects the balance very closely.
Now the first two areas in the book will speak for themselves, but concerning ‘the big world’, let me say a few things…
I’m happy to tell you there’s very little in this world that I believe in. Listening to the comedians who comment on political, social, and cultural issues, I notice that most of their material reflects kind of an underlying belief that somehow things were better once, and with just a little effort we could set them right again. They’re looking for solutions and rooting for particular results, and I think that limits the tone and substance of what they say. They’re talented and funny people but they’re really nothing more than cheerleaders attached to a specific wished-for outcome.
I don’t feel so confined.
I frankly don’t give a fuck how it all turns out in this country or anywhere else for that matter. I think the human game was up a long time ago when the high priests and traders took over, and now we’re just playing out the string. And that is of course precisely what I find so amusing! The slow circling of the drain by a once promising species and the sappy ever more desperate belief in this country that there is actually some sort of an ‘American Dream’ which has merely been misplaced.
The decay and disintegration of this culture is astonishingly amusing if you’re emotionally detached from it. And I’ve always viewed it from a safe distance, knowing I don’t belong. Doesn’t include me, it never has. No matter how you care to define it, I do not identify with the local group, planet, species, race, nation, state, religion, party, union, club, association, neigborhood-improvement committee. I have no interest in any of it.
I love and treasure individuals as I meet them, I loathe and despise the groups they identify with and belong to.
So if you hear something in this book that sounds like advocacy of a particular political point of view, please reject the notion. My interest in issues is merely to point out how badly we’re doing, not to suggest a way we might do better.
Don’t confuse me with those who cling to hope. I enjoy describing how things are, I have no interest in how they ought to be. And I certainly have no interest in fixing them. I sincerely believe that if you think there’s a solution, you’re part of the problem.
My motto: Fuck Hope.
P.S. In case you’re wondering, personally I’m a joyful individual, I had a long happy marriage and a close and loving family, my career has turned out better than I ever dreamed, and it continues to expand. I’m a personal optimist, but a skeptic about all else. What may sound to some like anger, is really nothing more than sympathetic contempt. I view my species with a combination of wonder and pity, and I root for its destruction. And please don’t confuse my point of view with cynicism–the real cynics are the ones who tell you everything’s gonna be all right.
And P.P.S., by the way, if by some chance you folks do manage to straighten things out and make everything better, I still don’t wish to be included.
Similar sentiments here. The idealist in me is hopeful of a better people, world. But people have proven again and again that they are as lousy, hopeless, narrow-minded, unevolved, and crazily “normal”(mediocre) as they have always been. It’s futile to do anything for the world/people. Just be selfish becomes a coping mechanism.
I was giggling when I first read this. It’s as if he’s saying, “Grow up!” I have many ideas in connection w/ it. First of all, hope is A. attachment to outcome, and B. disconnected from the now, which leads to wrong or misaligned action. We agreed on these 2 points.
Intisksiomai/Sandra,
Agree with your points most definitely. Carlin has been one of my earliest inspirations even before starting this site. One thing his in-your-face humor has taught me is to “call a spade a spade”, and cut through the B.S. of everyday people and life.
when i came across this article,I just had to throw in my two cents.George Carlin (in my opinion)the most comedy blessed genius ever, will always be missed.the mold was definitely broken when he was made ….and even if you didn’t like some of his politics,you just knew what he was saying was brilliant and real.
If everyone was frank and spoke their mind like good old George here, there maybe a slight possibility for the world and the human species to improve for the better…but alas!
Bill Hicks must also get a mention here, as he shared many of the same views and philosophy as Carlin….both were fantastic and true prophets of comedy!
RIP to the both of you.
Carlin inspired me to think more critically about the world and as a result . . . enriched my life. His use of logic, comic timing, inflection and delivery were unparalleled , just sheer genius. A great thinker and a one of the funniest ever.
*ucking hope is not exactly for the hopeless, or by the hopeless.
So funny, at the same time, it’s a tricky, witty play on words…