Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
Did you guys know that the Jones Town folks were commies? Praytell why they never talk about that part. $7 Million in Bequests Reported According to testimony by Cecil A. Roberts, Guyana’s assistant commissioner of crime, at a coroner’s inquest two weeks…
Letter from Harvey Milk to President Jimmy Carter defending Jim Jones
Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
Did you guys know that the Jones Town folks were commies? Praytell why they never talk about that part. $7 Million in Bequests Reported According to testimony by Cecil A. Roberts, Guyana’s assistant commissioner of crime, at a coroner’s inquest two weeks…
Another letter to Carter. It's good to know that Jones had Jane Fonda on his team.
Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
Letter from Harvey Milk to President Jimmy Carter defending Jim Jones
Oh, and this child, John. That's important. These letters were of course taken very seriously by President Carter. No action was taken against Jim Jones despite John's Mother's cries to have her son back. John later died during the events at Jonestown.
Most observers interpret bureaucratic sclerosis as a sign of a government which is too powerful. In fact it is a sign of a government which is too weak. If seventeen officials need to provide signoff for you to repaint the fence in your front yard, this is not because George W. Bush, El Máximo Jefe, was so concerned about the toxicity of red paint that he wants to make seventeen-times-sure that no wandering fruit flies are spattered with the nefarious chemical. It is because a lot of people have succeeded in making work for themselves, and that work has been spread wide and well. They are thriving off tiny pinholes through which power leaks out of the State. A strong unauthority would plug the leaks, and retire the officials.
Never forget this classic:
https://mg.co.za/article/2008-05-09-south-africans-jailed-for-murders-in-uk/
Two South Africans who overstayed their British visas were jailed for life on Friday for the murders of two men strangled during a series of violent muggings.
Gabriel Bhengu, 27, and Jabu Mbowane, 26, will be deported after serving life sentences.
[...]
A life sentence normally lasts around 15 years.
https://mg.co.za/article/2008-05-09-south-africans-jailed-for-murders-in-uk/
The Mail & Guardian
South Africans jailed for murders in UK – The Mail & Guardian
Two South Africans who overstayed their British visas were jailed for life on Friday for the murders of two men strangled during a series of violent muggings. G
Former U.S. Ambassador to Cuba, Earl T. Smith, during Congressional testimony in 1960, declared flatly: "We put Castro in power."
https://archive.org/details/FourthFloor
https://archive.org/details/FourthFloor
Internet Archive
Fourth Floor : Stan Monteith : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Dr Stan Monteith talks with Ambassador Smith about who was at fault for the rise of Communism in Cuba. This video shows the involvement of Washington...
I've never seen anybody I've known write like this and I'm so thankful for that
Whenever there's a fire, there are these big, red trucks nearby. Has anybody ever looked into this? Seems suspicious.
But what Raspail doesn’t say explicitly is that the beautiful oak door SHOULD burn. It needs to burn. Its beauty is idolatrous.
Why?
Examine the teleology of the door, why it was made beautifully. The door was made within the tradition of sacred syncretism, to unify the Universal divinity of God with the local spirit of the hearth.
But then the Frenchman stopped believing in God.
Then he stopped believing in the sacred hearth and family.
And now he just has an ornate door, sitting alone, unable to explain its beauty or purpose, trying to justify its existence to desperate people in a dying society.
In other words, it’s an idol to a dead god. And idols MUST BURN. No human can tolerate the existence of such manifest desecration and be fully alive spiritually. We want to destroy these false promises that can’t be made real.
The Frenchman doesn’t have the grit to destroy the false idols of the past. The migrants do. That might be the reason the Frenchman invited them in to his country to begin with.
All told, we looked at test and survey data from over 600,000 students. Our analysis found that philosophy majors scored higher than students in all other majors on standardized tests of verbal and logical reasoning, as well as on self-reports of good habits of mind, even after accounting for freshman-year differences. This suggests that their intellectual abilities and traits are due, in part, to what they learned in college.
https://theconversation.com/studying-philosophy-does-make-people-better-thinkers-according-to-new-research-on-more-than-600-000-college-grads-262681
The Conversation
Studying philosophy does make people better thinkers, according to new research on more than 600,000 college grads
Philosophers are fond of saying that their field boosts critical thinking. Two of them decided to put that claim to the test.
Forwarded from Western Chauvinist News Network
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You can see in this footage that the homeless junkie runs up and spits on Sewell. Sewell turns to face the parasite, who immediately begins throwing punches. I am not sure what the Australian laws around self-defense are, but had this happened to anyone but the WA guys, the junkie would've been arrested for assault. Because Tom Sewell is an NS leader, he gets arrested for defending himself. Stand with Sewell.
T.me/TheWesternChauvinist12
T.me/TheWesternChauvinist12
Western Chauvinist News Network
You can see in this footage that the homeless junkie runs up and spits on Sewell. Sewell turns to face the parasite, who immediately begins throwing punches. I am not sure what the Australian laws around self-defense are, but had this happened to anyone…
Remember Carl Schmitt here:
If you're the enemy of the state, they can simply decide to arrest you for anything. Paper and law do not actually protect you.
A negro approaches me, saying, "hand over your wallet," and gesturing towards his pocket, whether there's an outline of a gun. I reply, "that's against the law, sir. The law says that's my wallet." He pulls out his gun.
What is the difference between this and a similar interaction between you and the government?
In the former case, there's a higher authority that might enforce those laws against him. He might go to jail if he shoots me.
In the latter case, there's no such entity. The sovereign is that highest force. Nobody can enforce the laws upon it, for it has the biggest guns. You are asking it to enforce the rules against itself. It probably won't.
The sovereign is he who decided the exception.
If you're the enemy of the state, they can simply decide to arrest you for anything. Paper and law do not actually protect you.
A negro approaches me, saying, "hand over your wallet," and gesturing towards his pocket, whether there's an outline of a gun. I reply, "that's against the law, sir. The law says that's my wallet." He pulls out his gun.
What is the difference between this and a similar interaction between you and the government?
In the former case, there's a higher authority that might enforce those laws against him. He might go to jail if he shoots me.
In the latter case, there's no such entity. The sovereign is that highest force. Nobody can enforce the laws upon it, for it has the biggest guns. You are asking it to enforce the rules against itself. It probably won't.
Forwarded from Poor Reads
So molded, ritualized, and controlled, utopianism has served here as elsewhere to diffuse or deflect dissent, or actually to transmute it into a vehicle of socialization. Indeed, it is not too much to see this as ideology’s chief weapon. Ideology represses alternative or oppositional forms when these arise. But it seeks first of all to preempt them, and it does so most effectively by drawing out protest, by actively encouraging the contrast between utopia and the status quo. The method is as old as ideology itself. Any form of protest, utopian or other, threatens society most fundamentally when it calls into question the claims of that society to represent things as they ought to be (by divine right, natural law, the dictates of holy scripture, the forms of reason). Fundamental protest, that is, involves a historicist, relativistic perspective on the claims of ideology. And the immemorial response of ideology, what we might call its instinctive defense, has been to redefine protest in terms of the system, as a complaint about shortcomings from its ideals, or deviations from its myths of self and community. Thus the very act of identifying malfunction becomes an appeal for cohesion. To that end, ideology seeks to focus attention on the distance between vision and fact, theory and practice. To denounce a king through precepts derived from the divine right of kings is to define government itself as monarchical; just as to denounce immoral Christians by contrast with the sacred example of Christ is to Christianize morality. To define injustice through particular violations of free enterprise (or its constituent elements, such as equal opportunity and representative individualism) is to consecrate free enterprise as the just society.
Hence the enormous conservative, restraining power in the alliance between utopia and ideology. It allows the dominant culture not merely to enforce rules of conduct, but to circumscribe the bounds of perception, thought, and desire. And if that culture dominates not by coercion but by consent—if its rituals are not traditional but newly formed, and “new” as well by cultural fiat (new rituals of what Winthrop, Paine, and Reagan called a New People in a New World); if the population, moreover, is broadly heterogeneous (and again, heterogeneous as well by cultural fiat, the self-proclaimed nation of nations, culture of pluralism, and haven of the oppressed and uprooted); if its power, therefore, depends on myths and values to which all levels of society subscribe, especially the excluded or marginalized (since to subscribe thus seems the ready way to power); and if, finally, it is a culture founded on the principles of contract, voluntarism, and self-interest—a culture whose primary unit is the self, and whose primary rites, accordingly, encourage the potentially anarchic doctrine of individualism (with its insidious affinities to individuality and the subversive claims of independent selfhood)—if the culture, that is, combines the conditions of modernization with the principles of liberal democracy, then the need to preclude alternatives a priori, before they can become radical fact, assumes special urgency.
We might say that the American ideology was made to fill that need. It undertakes above all, as a condition of its nurture, to absorb the spirit of protest for social ends; and according to a number of recent critics, it has accomplished this most effectively through its rhetoric of dissent. In this view, America’s classic texts represent the strategies of a triumphant liberal hegemony. Far from subverting the status quo, their diagnostic and prophetic modes attest to the capacities of the dominant culture to absorb alternative forms, to the point of making basic change seem virtually unthinkable, except as apocalypse. This is not at all to minimize their protest. The point here is not that these classic writers had no quarrel with America, but that they seem to have had nothing but that to quarrel about.
Forwarded from Poor Reads
Having adopted the culture’s controlling metaphor—“America” as synonym for human possibility—and having made this tenet of consensus the ground of radical dissent, they redefined radicalism as an affirmation of cultural values. For the metaphor, thus universalized, does not transcend ideology. It portrays the American ideology, as all ideology yearns to be portrayed, in the transcendent colors of utopia. In this sense the antebellum literary renaissance was truly, as Matthiessen said, both American and “the age of Emerson and Whitman”; the conjunction is embodied in The American Scholar and Democratic Vistas, both of which, in the very act of chastising the nation, identify the American future as utopia, and utopia, by extension, as the American Way.
— Sacvan Bercovitch, The Rites of Assent: Transformations in the Symbolic Construction of America
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Poor Reads
So molded, ritualized, and controlled, utopianism has served here as elsewhere to diffuse or deflect dissent, or actually to transmute it into a vehicle of socialization. Indeed, it is not too much to see this as ideology’s chief weapon. Ideology represses…
Have already got people sharing the new channel's posts claiming that the quotation is unreadable nonsense.
Remember that most people are functionally illiterate.
Remember that most people are functionally illiterate.
Forwarded from Poor Reads
PvmpGvng
Bold move banning people in a 5 subscriber channel
Standards are high here; this is a place for scholarly discussion among men of letters. Quality is preferable to quantity; quantity would signal that something has gone horrendously wrong. 7 high quality participants is preferable to 7,000 low quality ones.