The root of the problem

So, today is 9/11, and I debated whether or not to make a post.  After all, it was a terrible event, the effects of which still resonate strongly with many people–myself included.  It’s one of those “where were you when” moments, that people carry with them for the rest of their lives.  But at the same time, it wouldn’t have felt right to say nothing at all, considering this year, an entire generation has been born, and gone through school since it happened.  A generation who’s too young to even have witnessed the towers coming down, and might still be asking themselves what would drive people to do something like that.  One could argue there are many reasons, but I’d posit that a strong contender is hatred of the Other.  Which brings us to today’s word.

odium, noun –  intense hatred or contempt

Learned from:  Odium  (PC, Mac)

Developed by Metropolis Software, Hyperion Entertainment (Linux)

Published by Monolith Productions (Windows), Linux Game Publishing (Linux), e.p.i.c. Interactive (Mac) (1999)

Known in other regions as Gorky 17, Odium is kind of what you’d get if you took an early Resident Evil, and made it into an isometric, turn-based strategy game.  You control a team of commandos, sent to investigate some weird goings-on at a top-secret research lab in Poland, only to find it’s been overrun by biomechanical horrors.  It wasn’t a terribly good game, but it was a deceptively difficult one.  Even the early monsters frequently hit you for at least half a health kit’s worth of damage, which doesn’t seem too bad at first, when supplies are plentiful.  But soon you’re entering combats with your troops at half health, just to try and conserve what few healing items you have left.  It doesn’t help that new (harder-hitting) monster types are introduced in almost every battle, giving you even less time to breathe and find your footing.

I never got far enough to discover why the game was renamed Odium for the US release, but the word seemed fitting.  Hatred of the Other stems from ignorance and tribalism.  When the only people you feel you can trust are from your own group, that tends to engender a sense that anyone outside that group is somehow untrustworthy/unclean/evil.  And sadly, 18 years later, rather than bringing all of us together, one need only to look at the political climate in this country to see that tribalism has only gotten worse.  Except this time, it’s from within our own population, instead of from without.

I know it sounds vaguely hippie-ish to say that a nation can’t survive if its citizens are at each other’s throats, but we’ve seen what happens when that sort of fear-mongering takes hold elsewhere in the world.  It doesn’t take much imagination to see how prolonged exposure to that sort of thing will end up within our own borders.

A wise, green alien once said that fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, and hate leads to suffering.  And despite Yoda being a muppet, he’s right; hatred leads to all sorts of terrible things, like flying planes into buildings, or driving cars into crowds of people, or shooting up schools.  So, on the anniversary of this particular tragedy, I implore you to remember it by trying to rise above what caused it.  There’s a lot of shit wrong with this world, but hating people of a different religion, or race, or political leaning isn’t going to do a damn thing to make it better.

odium

Just like slapping an edgy title on a mediocre game won’t make it any less disappointing.

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