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Conservative Fabianism

The Left, being inherently irrational, dogmatic, and emotionally obsessive, has often tried to impose its will directly on the people it claims to want to “liberate”.  “Revolution” was in the air in the era of FDR.  It was in the air in the 1960’s, where the pot addled Weathermen plotted the wholesale murder of millions of Americans.

But as George Bernard Shaw and his ilk realized early on, normal people will not accept lunatic ideas right out of the bottle.  They have to be diluted, and added to the water supply, such that the end of achieving them can be pursued in open sight, and be welcomed by people who would be infuriated by and sickened by the actual end plan.

Even in the Soviet Union, before it was the Soviet Union, the Bolsheviks found it necessary to promise farmers more land, independence to various nations captured through Russian imperialism, relief to workers, fair elections for all, and similar folderol, of which they meant none of it.

Only once they had complete power did they ban unions, start collectivizing farms, faking elections, and over the course of the 1920’s, reconquering all the nations to which they had initially promised freedom.  They rebuilt the allegedly immoral Russian Empire, then worked diligently on expanding it–to repeat myself–imperialistically.

Logically, the push in the OTHER direction has to be subtle, long term, and filled with compromises in the interest of pragmatism.

One sees these silly Never-Trumpers acting as if the only options are complete rigidity and complete submission.  If politics is the art of the possible, then honest, serious people have to become politicians.

And the great advantage of Conservatism–which I call true Liberalism–is that WE DON”T HAVE TO LIE.  We win by getting our truths out.

But we have to be gradual.  We have to be pragmatic.  We have to remember our ideals, but like the Left–which has so effectively conquered over time our cultural and political landscape–we have to always be looking for small steps, small moves, small victories.  Enough of them, and we turn back the tide.

Conversely, for those who will not bend under any circumstances, I would suggest they are ideologically identical to True Believers, who are useless, and quickly cast aside by everyone, as has indeed happened under Trump.

The question is always: in this cultural tug of war, in which direction is the ball going?  If it is going our way, and we can keep it going our way, at any speed, then eventually we will win.

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The Left and Hitler.

Yes, The National Socialist German Workers Party, which found support mainly among the so-called proletariat and among intellectuals, was socialism.

Watch this.  From a Leftist perspective, there was nothing to object to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJtLx19kQ24

It is true that the Communists and the Nazis fought in the streets.  It is true Hitler used the rise of the Soviet Union to create his own party.  But it is equally true that Nazism is to Communism roughly what Episcopalianism is to Catholicism. For those who are historically ignorant, large wars were fought for centuries over fine points of dogma.  This did not make all sects not fundamentally Christian.

Surely Trotsky was closer to Stalin than to Hitler, but even he was killed for not being close enough to orthodoxy.

All Left wing ideologies–among which National Socialism is but one variant–are most usefully described as life destroying Fascist cults.

As the editor of the German periodical Die Welt recently noted, these violent lunatics even share the black shirts of the ORIGINAL Italian Fascists.

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EMP Attacks

One of the present greatest threats to global civilization is the possibility of lunatics attacking our power grid.  Trump, finally, convened a Congressional group to look at this.

Without knowing any of the details of how our power grid is structured, what I would like to suggest is that even if we cannot protect every discrete part of it, what we can perhaps create is firewalls, sections of the grid where perhaps power moves more slowly by design, such that there would be sufficient time for a circuit breaker of some sort to pop in a condition of overcurrent.  We could perhaps, with relatively less effort than a comprehensive, honest solution, create sections of power, sections of flow, which are severable, such that if an attack hits one part of the country, it is limited to that region.  And of course the more segmented we can make it, the better.  I would in fact draw an analogy between physical power, and the limitations and firewalls of political power which our Founders wisely wrote into the Constitution.

I am inclined to say that war with North Korea would be stupid until we can do this.  That we can win the war, and do so quickly, is indisputable.  That they could inflict vast harm even on mainland America in the process is a possibility we need to consider carefully.

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Socrates and the Buddha

You know, I think it is healthy to relate to ideas almost like to people.  Ideas have personalities, quirks, tendencies, emotive textures.  The idea of “I am RIGHT” feels different from “I have an idea”.  Atheisms–I suppose there are various sorts, various ways of carrying this idea–feel different from the countless theisms on the planet at this time.

For myself, sometimes I am looking at them and they feel blank, lifeless, like a rice paper roll filled with nothing.  Other times, they open up, and I find myself in an ocean, wondering what will next emerge from the deep, at home because I am large and everything else is small.  This is of course my whale aspect.

It is dissociation that makes the difference.  I understand where Camus was going with L’Etranger, which in my understanding can be, and perhaps best is, translated as “a foreigner”, someone just visiting, unknown to anyone.  His distance was nothing new.  Writing about it was what was new, and of course it spoke to the countless traumatized people in the middle half of the twentieth century, some of whom had seen not one, but two pointless and enormously violent conflicts in the heart of Western civilization.

Trauma is not new, and thus of course dissociation is not new either.

In this context I would like to place Socrates.  He was a military veteran of the Peloponnesian War, and as such as likely as any soldier to have been suffering from the ill effects of close in violence and death.  Human neurophysiology was no different then than now, although the bonds of affection among tribes and peoples were perhaps closer and more supportive.

Athens lost the Peloponnesian War in 404, Socrates was put to death in 399, 5 years later.  I want to argue these historical facts are relevant to understanding his ideas. 

Here is what one source has to say about him: 


All our information about him is second-hand and most of it vigorously disputed, but his trial and death at the hands of the Athenian democracy is nevertheless the founding myth of the academic discipline of philosophy, and his influence has been felt far beyond philosophy itself, and in every age. Because his life is widely considered paradigmatic for the philosophic life and, more generally, for how anyone ought to live, Socrates has been encumbered with the admiration and emulation normally reserved for founders of religious sects—Jesus or Buddha—strange for someone who tried so hard to make others do their own thinking, and for someone convicted and executed on the charge of irreverence toward the gods. 


Socrates was plainly guilty of undermining the morality of the youth of Athens, because he questioned everything, and he considered it the summation of his lifes work to be able to pronounce, at the edge of his death, that he was SURE that he knew nothing.

Such a man began what we call in the West “The love of truth”.

One senses his immense importance as the Founder, as the man there at the beginning, in Allan Bloom’s “Closing of the American Mind”.  Bloom’s impatience with the moderan academy is that it does not teach the questioning, skeptical, critical spirit.  It does not teach people sufficiently well to not know, and to be comfortable with the “not knowing”.  It should teach openness to new experience, new ideas, the revisiting of old ideas, above all a spirit of curiosity.  Closing is the opposite of exploring, you see.  Telling, dogmatically, is the opposite of asking open ended questions.  Knowing, self evidently, is the opposite of not knowing.

One can derive readily enough the scientific method, which begins from a presumption of ignorance, that all premises and ideas have to be demonstrated using a clearly articulated method, from Socrates.  One could say that this thread from the Founder continues unabated, to the extent science is done honestly.  One can of course see readily deviation from the Founder to the extent “science” is conflated with political convenience, unexamined and untested assumptions, and simple arrogance.

But if we separate the Meaning function from the Truth function–as I do in my own definition of culture, (to which I assign the tasks of creating and distributing meaning, truth, power and wealth)–then what we see is that his not-knowingness has led to inertia and failure in the realm of philosophy.  If everything can be reduced to words, and if words only mean what we say they mean, then nothing is left.  We are left with a functional nihilism, of the sort which plainly is the parent of the blackshirted fascists which recently descended on the streets of Hamburg, and the smoke of whose visit–like that of a battle ground–still lingers.  Bloom is very clear on this obvious point that ideas have consequences, and that the failures of the academy to teach useful, life affirming values have antecedent failures. most of which on his account did happen in Germany.

Returning to Socrates, though, can we really side with Bloom that the aim of philosophy really is living a life where the goal is to know nothing?  Is this psychologically realistic?  He himself admits only a very few can pull it off, and one has to wonder: what is the value of this feat, and why should we make it the basis of the world view of our thought elites? Is knowing nothing a stable foundation for anything?  Of course not.

Famously, Socrates wrote nothing down.  He did not believe in recording conversations that were specific to times and places and people.  He was not trying to found a cult at all, although that is what happened.  In this, I feel he was like Jesus, who was trying to address problems specific to his time and place (and which I have argued likely had to do at least in part with an ardent desire to avoid the calamity which took place some 20 years after his death.  To be clear, I am no historian.  I say what I feel, and do not charge even Lucy’s 5 cents for my opinions).

Could we not posit that Socrates existed in a time where radical change was happening–where the entirety of Athens was nearly enslaved, and her monuments destroyed–and that he was trying to find what he could hold on to?  Could we not posit he was trying to find a firm foundation, failed, but was still looking?  Can we not connect his questioning of everything to the disastrous times in which he lived, and perhaps to PTSD and emotional distancing from his own time and people?  Can we not say that the role of philosophy is not continual questioning, inherently, but that such questioning has a time and a place, particularly times and places of rapid change, in which seeking understanding, a knowledge of how things are put together, could prove useful in building something different and better?  Such would be my contention.

I would assert that the basis of Western culture is thus not questioning everything, but seeking to avoid complacency, of constantly engaging with life on its own merits, of continual curiosity and exploring.  It does not consist in the rejection of common sense morality, self defense, and some sense of satisfaction in achieving peace, prosperity, and social justice (in the honest sense of allowing all people to be equal before the law, and in their access to political participation).  These are not Western aims, but human aims.  Truth and justice have been the aim of all decent human beings for all time.

Now, it is a contention in the air and water of the philosophy of Buddhism that no honest Buddhist can be a Buddhist–one violated continually due, again (I have perhaps not quite said this yet, but this applies above, of course), to the human need for conformity, and fear of encountering the unknown alone–so I cannot say I am a Buddhist, but I am sympathetic.

Ponder, in this context, this excerpt from the Heart Sutra (Thich Nhat Hanh being au courant) :

“Listen Sariputra,

this Body itself is EmptinessEmptiness itself is this Body.This Body is not other than Emptinessand Emptiness is not other than this Body.The same is true of Feelings,Perceptions, Mental Formations,and Consciousness.all phenomena bear the mark of Emptiness;their true nature is the nature ofno Birth no Death,no Being no Non-being,no Defilement no Purity,no Increasing no Decreasing.Body, Feelings, Perceptions,Mental Formations and Consciousnessare not separate self entities.


How hard is it to reconcile this with knowing nothing?  In Buddhism there is no knower, but there is neither knowing nor not knowing.  These are not intended are riddles, but as thorough descriptions.  Buddhism is in my estimation by far the most diligent and useful philosophical system introduced on this planet of which I am aware.
Within my own Kum Nye practice, one becomes aware that “I” consist in a field in space.  “I” am my Kum, my space, and the motion within that space, or what is called Nye,  and the practice consists in part in developing and exploring my own space.  It is a delight seeing that there is a space where “I” exist that is completely unique.  Buddhists do not deny the ego, per se–in my understanding– but want to point to the obvious fact that what we call “I” is usually a dessicated, truncated, defiled, small fraction of who we really are in our full extension, in our full life.  When you get to what is real, it is eternal and beautiful.
In my considered opinion, Socrates would have been a Buddhist, had he been exposed to these ideas.  In my own ideosyncratic view, among Buddha, Jesus, and Socrates, Buddha alone intentionally created and intentionally propagated a system of thought and practice and belief, one which in spite of the inevitable corruptions and permutations and even perversions which human stupidity has created over time, retained–continues to retain–essential elements.  This is the mark of genius.  
He did not intend monasteries, but no doubt foresaw their development.  He did not intend the ossification of his beliefs in ritual, but no doubt foresaw their development.  In spite of all of this, essential truths continue to exist, and useful practices continue to exist.
The spirit of Socrates, the spirit of abstraction, is always already a mistake.  No truth relevant to human life exists as an abstraction.  It is always in our body, in our unique individual, indivisible and incommunicable perception.
Socrates was obviously a creative genius of the first order, but he failed to grasp this.  If I might perhaps make the historical error of conflating his time, his psychology, with our own, it has long been obvious to me that people who want to live in their heads, who want to discuss ideas only, who want to live from their necks up, suffer from feelings, intrusions, griefs and inconsolable pains for which their malady of abstraction serves as a needed ointment, a salve, a distraction, and an escape.  But malady it is, because pure abstractions makes even the most intelligent people stupid when it comes to life itself. One sees evidence of this everywhere.
In speaking of universals, in speaking of relentless questioning, Socrates could be seen as the father of the concepts of universal human rights, of the universal value of all human life, and of the scientific method.  These are to the good. Perhaps his error was the will of God, seen as the pattern underlying it all, moving us all towards increasing awareness and following increasing perfection.  These are deep things of which I can claim no knowledge at all, other than the temerity to guess.
But looking forward over the next century, in trying to see where we are, where we come from, and most of all where we are headed, I would submit that we can do much better.
And I will continue to insist, from my own perspective, that no more useful philosophical practice exists than learning to know ones own body, ones deepest feelings, and expanding them.  And no better practice exists that I have found than Kum Nye.  In world committed to hyperbole, the language used to describe this practice consists in what I might term “hypobole”.  It is small.  It starts small.  It stays small for a very long time.  But when it opens, there, there is something interesting and unique.  At its heart, it is feeling Life, big L, and participating in it.
My present life plans consists in using this method, and the Neurofeedback most Americans need, because we are horrifyingly inefficient at raising well adjusted children, to start creating small circles of sanity, and hoping they expand.
We are all so crazy, so alone, so lost, and so busy we fail to see it.  Rather, we are busy, because no large secret can ever remain so, except with our willful–on some level–complicity.  We run around, because we don’t want to know.  Pessimism and darkness are in the air, at this very moment where global peace and prosperity and connection are a very real possibility.
Your homework, because I am an idiot (in Sufi typology I would almost certainly be an Arrogant Idiot, if that is one of their types.  I will in fact assume so, since I speak honestly.), speaking as a lone prophet praying to the winds, and welcoming the wolves in the frozen wilds as kindred spirits, is to rewatch Koyaanisqatsi.



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“Healthcare”

It should have long been obvious to anyone with a mind that the Left, and those who control them, want ordinary American to make the fundamental error of confusing health INSURANCE with health CARE, I.e. Doctors and medicines and hospitals.

But it seems to me they pushing a further and more insidious error, which is reifying “health” and claiming it is something the government can grant or withhold. Such is the stupidity in the air, the usual idiots seem to be buying it.

Health is our birthright. As a general rule, we take it from ourselves with bad lifestyle choices.  It is one of the peculiar features of the unique American healthcare scene that our system works so WELL that many millions of people expect it to work miracles to compensate for long term bad decisions.  With a less comprehensive system people would have to get well on their own or die. There might actually be some mercy in this. I do not think that in some respects it would be too strong to call it codependent–PROFITABLY codependent to be sure–but fundamentally supportive of health killing lifestyles.

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Inner Stockholm Syndrome

I woke the other night after a bad night, and realized that what we might call the dominant Self, the I in most of our experience, quite often finds itself fatally attracted to and dependent upon subpersonalities–parts, Complexes, emotional threads–which are unhealthy.

All of us consist in an aggregate of emotional solutions to a variety of problems, many of which happened long ago, have disappeared, and are no longer relevant.  Once created, though, and until discharged more or less consciously, those parts endure, and they continue to influence thoughts and behavior.

They do, in some respects, at least for some of us, constitute something like captors, which keep us chained to old ways of doing things, even though we try mightily to rise above them.  Will is insufficient for full freedom.  Wisdom, seeing, is what it takes.

I will continue to tout Kum Nye as the most brilliant self development system I personally have come across.  It is subtle.  There is nothing in there that screams “sexy”.  There are no flashing lights, bells, or whistles.  The main “guru” keeps to himself.  He wrote a number of books, and until people progress beyond what he already put in the public domain, why waste time with lazy idiots?  Do the work, and when you progress beyond the work, seek him out then, if and when.  It has likely happened, but rarely.  He mentions, notably, one of the reasons to seek out a qualified teacher is “too much joy”.  We should all wish to have this problem.

Being someone who loves to lecture (the word “factzoid” came to me in a meditation last week, which I was the way my Unconscious wanted to tell me how being machine like, a repository of information, has helped me survive) I cannot resist noting that Stockholm, itself, now suffers from Stockholm Syndrome.  They have let into their nation many people who mean them ill, who are raping their women, committing the overwhelming bulk of all crimes, and yet they cannot bring themselves to do anything but continue to welcome the people who are hurting them.

Good people hurt the world when they let bad people hurt them.  There is no virtue in a doormat.  You become merely an usher to worse things to come.

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Documentary on After-Life Research

https://youtu.be/Hbxm6e0pwOM

One does not have to “internet” long to see the circular argument that no research into the afterlife should be done because there is no evidence for it.  Logically, as anyone not constrained by the emotional rigidity which both creates and reinforces dogmatic world views–evidence happens AFTER research.  There was no evidence for molecules until somebody looked for them.  Democritus posited little bits that make up everything several thousand years ago, but he had no evidence for them.

Here, a well qualified researcher associated with a major university set up an experiment, using well tested scientific protocols, to see if the mediums could do significantly better than, say, the “Amazing” (no doubt that word is his own invention) Randi (who incidentally can’t do as well as even self admitted cold readers, who in turn cannot replicate what Schwarz found).  Using a formal scientific scoring system, they did extremely well, and no alternative explanations other than that they were doing what they said they were doing can be plausibly advanced.

Who is it that so passionately rejects the notion of survival, an idea which has filled human history, and which no doubt predates recorded history, the world over?

No one is asking for faith.  No one is asking that “science”, as a method, be rejected.  All reasonable people are asking is that people stop conflating “science” with whatever outdated notions they happen to consider important to their belief systems.

The point of both science and skepticism is not to make people stupid, but that is all too often the case.  Having engaged in what I will overgenerously call “debates” with hardcore materialists–they are not skeptics, that term already being a lie–my own sense is that their deceased grandfather could literally walk into a room, slap them in the face and tell them to wake the fuck up, and that wouldn’t do it.

We are born with a truth-finder, and it is exactly the opposite of the point of true education to teach people to ignore their own instincts, intuitions, and most of all experience.  Yes, of course, by all means reconcile them with formal evidentiary approaches, but if something is there, for God’s sake investigate it and treat the evidence as what it is.

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Mental Discipline

I have in recent weeks been running up again and again against incompetence, laziness and stupidity.  I am tempted to say our real crisis is mediocrity, but I’ve dramatized enough things recently.

What I am trying to guide myself into is a habitual reaction, in running into people who have no pride in their work, is focusing on how I can improve my game, how I can become MORE competent.

As I have said often, Dale Carnegie was quite right, that most people, even when entirely to blame, even when they are fucking up royally, and when they KNOW they are fucking up royally, still just want to protect their egos by being stubborn and vindictive.

You may never have put these two words together, but Carnegie was a cynic.  He didn’t think a lot of people: he thought very little.

Yes, with encouragement and regular praise, the mediocre can become average, and the average can become above average.  But solid people don’t need molly-coddling or nursemaiding, and they thrive on criticism, when it is accurate, because they are always wanting to improve.

Carnegie himself, in my view, WAS a solid person.  His task, as he put it, was to create a PRACTICAL guide, and he did do that.  It remains a field guide, one which I sometimes use, but sometimes fail to use due to my own lack of patience, and for which I often pay the price.

The truth is, sometimes yelling works, and sometimes that is the ONLY thing that will work.  But it is a poor long term strategy outside the military, and perhaps not even there.  A better strategy is to figure out how to be surrounded by competent, motivated people.

So, net/net, I need to redirect my yelling at others at myself.  There are many ways I can become better, and I need to find all of them.

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Single Decider Healthcare

As we saw recently in the case with the baby in Britain–where the National Health Service more or less declared sole sovereignty over the life of an infant with severe health issues, by declaring that EVEN THOUGH THEY COULD PAY FOR IT, the parents could not bring the child to America–when the government is in charge, the government is in charge.  This should not be a challenging or controversial statement.  Those who want more government merely nourish pipe dreams of universal morality and compassion among career bureaucrats.  This level of delusion is quite astonishing, and only possible for the historically ignorant.

For the rest of us, that is slavery.  The government declared the baby belonged to it, not the parents.  That is the government interfering in a very personal matter in a way which helps no one but the government.  They wanted to make sure nobody got the bright idea of trying to get healthcare in any way which they did not directly control.

Single payer equals single decider.  It might get sold as “you get to keep your doctor”, or “you will get choices of doctors”, but once the government has sole control, that is up to them.  They might give you choices this week, then next week decide, for really any reason, good or bad, that you have to see one doctor or another, or that you can get treatment for something, or not get treatment.  They might tie the decision up in committee so long you die of a treatable illness.  There is nothing to prevent this, inherently.

In any realm of life, when you depend on the government, they have you by the balls, and they know it.  That is why the traditional principles of the Democrats fell away easily and thoroughly a hundred years ago or more in the big cities, when they realized that the bigger and more powerful they made the government, the more favors they could grant, the more graft they could commit, and more loyal the voters who benefited from the system would be.  They create a gravy train, get as many on it as possible, then work year on year to make it bigger and better, for them and theirs.

There is no economic or moral argument for Single Payer.  Quite the contrary: it is bad economics and bad morality.  Clearly, people who get something truly for nothing are net beneficiaries, but all those paying for it lose, on balance.

There is room for discussion on the scope of Medicaid, which is simple charity.  But there is no room for discussion in how those who can afford to do so should self insure: all of it should be left up to them, and the government should act only to protect competition.

It is time to repeal Obamacare, particularly the requirement that insurers accept people who are already sick, and that they issue policies with minimum coverages.  Rand Paul’s proposal is excellent.

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Paranoia

Para: http://www.dictionary.com/browse/para-

Nous/noos/no: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nous

To be paranoid is literally to be next to that faculty which enables the perception of truth.  You are outside of it, but related to it.

I am going to offer a bold statement: with the exception of innate or traumatic organic defects in the brain and nervous system, all forms of madness derive from trauma, and those which are seemingly inexplicable derive from developmental or subtle emotional traumas, which divide the person through dissociation.

In my own case, I have very high delta brainwaves throughout my brain.  They are everywhere.  I researched this and found little, but speculated to the person administering the neurofeedback that that was the neurological evidence of dissociation, and he corroborated that.  Delta and theta are apparently what appears when the “mind”–which is scarcely a unity–enters a dreamlike state.

And the thing with the nervous system is that dissociation is a lot like a circuit breaker.  Once it is triggered, it must be reset or it stays off permanently.  You only have to trigger it once–push something to and past complete overload–and the neurophysiological system is permanently altered.  With regard to all subsequent traumas, dissociation becomes a resource.  They don’t hurt as bad. That primal terror does not reappear, at least in waking hours, and if the trauma is very early in life, does not appear for many decades.

There are many factors involved in the so-called “Midlife crisis”.  Certainly, I think the relentless drumbeat of consumerism and the promise that something better is always on the other side of the fence, plays a role.

But I think too that many people enter dissociated states early in life, and only far into life realize that other feelings exist, that they do in fact have opinions, that some pleasure is in fact possible in life, that they have an innate and unexpressed personality.

I will again offer the no-doubt traumatized David Byrne, and his take on this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qCl6KyOy34