The classic argument from child is in the Emperor's New Clothes -
though we sit as adults nodding like donkeys when he is declared naked
without recognising 'we' are the idiot adults of the story.  South
Park does a lot of sociology as 'out of the mouths of babes'.

My child was impressed by the opening of a B movie vampire saga.  The
opening is a memoir of an old vampire fighter, writing-up as they are
about to do for him.  Another child was impressed by the guy hanging
on to life in a pulp Western, one bullet left, Indians swarming.  He
hangs on long enough to discharge his last bullet in order to warn the
oncoming stagecoach.  Existential heroes a-go-go.  I don't approve of
Indian-slaying or the myths that hide its reality, but do believe the
Undead are amongst us (as metaphor).

Over the years it has regularly seemed to me that one emerges from
organisational interventions only with a memoir about the Undead to
write - something that might just help in a more rational future, or
with the one-bullet warning.  The old joke is about it being no use
draining the swamp when one is up to one's arse in alligators, yet the
reality is that the alligators would have been no problem in the first
place if we had taken account of them in their own terms.  The classic
statement in systems analysis is that you are doing it for the first
time when you first see the world through the eyes of another.  The
ghastly truth is that this view will not be very nice, likely a flying
mess of projections.
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