No, not Zombie Day–Zeitgeist Day.
Last Sunday, my friend Kelly, whom I play D&D with, put together a meet-up at a local bar. Kelly has gotten quite interested in this organization called Zeitgeist, which you can read about here. You can also find their free-for-download movies here, and I can quite recommend them if you have a couple of spare hours–very thought provoking. In short, I would describe Zeitgeist as a mostly-harmless utopian movement that believes that outmoded ideologies are blinding us to the grave danger that the world is in, and that we need to cast off irrational thinking and join together in a eco-techno-anarchist world society that rejects money and ownership of property.
At this point I should make clear that while I find these guys very interesting, and even admire much of what I know about them and agree with many of their ideas, I am not endorsing them, nor am I a member.
Anyway, Kelly wanted to show the most recent movie and get some discussion going. He invited me not in spite of but because he knew I had some criticisms. Eight people showed up, which I was surprised at–I had expected maybe one or two others besides Kelly and me. It was in the afternoon on a Sunday, so I think the bar owner just let us use the place for free since he wouldn’t normally be open at that time. (Most of us bought drinks, so he made some money off it.)
The filmmaker and head of the movement (to the extent it has a head–and by the way, I have so far detected no indications that he might be a cult leader, no claims to divine inspiration or worshipful talk about him by members or anything like that; the whole thing seems about as individualistic and anarchic as the society they’d like to build) seems to be doing a better job of framing the message with each film, responding to criticisms by clarifying and better supporting the thesis. The first one, Zeitgeist: The Movie, was frankly pretty nutso; the second, Addendum, pulled back from that a lot, and the newest one really focuses on the message instead of dumping tons of conspiracy theories on you.
And it was good company–I already knew half the people there, but I met several new ones, people from Argentina, Japan, Britain, Australia, and Canada, with the rest being Americans.
Good drink, too–that barman poured me a simply huge dram of Laphroaig, so much that I wasn’t sure I could drink it all and still hold a coherent conversation. (Managed by nursing it over the course of an hour.) I’ll have to remember to go back there…
Anyway, interesting utopian meet-up, right here in Fukuoka.