In the lexicon of classical music, an ostinato is a motif or phrase that persistently repeats in the same musical voice, often at the same pitch. It is relentless, hypnotic, and sometimes maddening. The word destino —destiny—implies a predetermined end, a final chord toward which all narratives inexorably move.
That is the in its purest form. It is the rhythm of a civilization that knows its destiny (destino) but cannot stop repeating its mistakes (ostinato). Coda: The Unfinished Bar In 1992, the band R.E.M. released "Automatic for the People." On it was a song called "Man on the Moon," about Andy Kaufman, a performer who faked his own death. The chorus asks, "If you believed they put a man on the moon, / If you believe there's nothing up my sleeve, / Then nothing is cool." Ostinato Destino 1992-
This is why the dash after 1992 is the most violent punctuation mark in history. It suggests that 1992 never ended. We are still living in the aftermath of the Cold War's end, still using the same economic software (neoliberal capitalism), still arguing about the same culture wars (identity vs. class), still watching the same weather get hotter. In the lexicon of classical music, an ostinato
Is there a third option? A few dissident theorists suggest that the Ostinato Destino is not a bug but a feature. They argue that the repetition of crisis is humanity's immune response. The shock-witness-drift-repeat cycle is how a global civilization metabolizes trauma without dying of shock. The dash after 1992 is not a purgatory; it is a meditation . That is the in its purest form