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John Coltrane Versus the Borg

 As I have commented a number of times, I HOPE people will take ideas they read here and riff on them.  Let me lay down a beat or a melody, and you improvise on top of it.

The only people really still allowed to be creative, whose culture still values originality, are those of us who have not had our heads ritually chopped off by left wing Commissars.

What our universities are breeding are Borg.  And the way they confuse the kids about it, is they call US the Borg.  They pretend that “right wingers” all think alike and work solely off of talking points, when it is obvious that someone like Donald Trump ENJOYS figuring out what he thinks as he does along.  

Joe Biden recently read “end of quote” from his teleprompter.  That is very Borg-ish.

It’s astonishing, isn’t it, that the Left wants to elevate to our highest office a man a few months away from needing to be spoon fed?  And who was a corrupt, stupid asshole before his brain started shutting down?

The growth of QAnon should not be a source of wonder.  Some sort of conspiracy theory is needed to explain this madness.

The true enemy is always fear, and the greatest fear most of us have is uncertainty, of living in or entering a world whose rules we don’t understand.  The great offering that the Left makes is that you don’t need to worry because you don’t need to think: you will be told what to think.

I am of course paraphrasing a Pink Floyd line there, and in their own time, they were speaking from a hippy, acid-dropping place, about Richard Nixon sorts of conservatives, who even then were by and large unjustly maligned, but who were certainly more straight laced and right flying than the hippies.

But all the hippies have become control freaks.  They have bred neurotic, fearful, OCD children.

My task–and it is a considerable task–is to see all this clearly, and still figure out how to remain calm and confident about my own future and that of my children.

As a Coda, I will add that I am really enjoying reading Alexandra David Neel’s account of her trip into Tibet, sneaking in when no foreigners were allowed.  Every day contains hardships, and not a few brushes with death.  In one case, they trekked 19 straight hours through knee deep snow, on a meal that can’t have had more than 2,000 calories total for the two of them, so that they could get over a pass before the sun set and they froze to death at that high altitude.  They had to guess where the path was, and she guessed right.  When it came time to start their fire, their fire starter was wet and would not work, and if they could not get it to work, they were both going to die.  At least, her companion was going to die.  She had studied gTummo, so she put it under her shirt, and dried it out.  When her companion came back with wood, they were able to get a fire going.

Having stories like this in my mind is useful.  Our lives are so easy, that our minds have plenty of time to invent problems.  Yes, the future of humanity may lie in the election.  Yes, madness is stalking the land.  Yes, these problems are deep and complex and seemingly insoluble.

But sufficient unto itself is each days march, and following rest.

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Comments on life

 It seems to me that many if not most parents–at least in our culture, but this is probably common around the world, at least now–feel the same anxieties their children do.  They worry, just as children worry, but they learn to hide it, at least from their children, as well as they can.

True maturity, it seems to me, is stable acceptance of both life and death as they are presented to us, with death being merely the last and most puzzling aspect of life.

This means accepting that the NATURE of life is imperfect information, which results in confusion and doubt among sane people.  We don’t know the future.  We don’t even really know the present or past, as they truly happened and are happening.

The psychological value of manias and unwarranted certitudes is obvious.  It builds a stable place for the mind, one which–while disconnected from the world as it is–allows cessation of doubt and confusion for a time, sometimes a long time, and not infrequently a life.

Religion does that for people.  But I think most religions constitute in some ways a shelter from life as it exists.  All religions, I think, teach some form of living in the moment, and being present to experience, but it is the laws and rules and orders and commandments and stable ontologies which most people focus on and remember.

Every morning all of us get on a train whose destination we don’t really know.  Most days it seems to travel an arc and bring us back to the same station.  But if you look, it is not really the same station.  It changes.  The people we meet there change too, and if we were to look in a mirror, we too would find subtle alterations.  Every day.

All I can say is that for myself I am trying to learn to lean into the sun, to lean into experience, to not avoid or shy away from it.  Some of it will enrapture me, some hurt me, but all of it can be worked into growth.

And the end aim of growth is a stable peace, a stable sense of wonder, and an ability to negotiate lifes ups and downs without undue anxiety.  If you hide, you have to live in fear and doubt forever.

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I suppose

 Anyone who knows how to be cruel knows how to love.  It is the same pathway in.

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The problem with our educational system

 Our kids are taught bad ideas programatically, along with static emotional gestalts, but not taught in the least how to critique either the ideas or the emotions underlying them. They are not taught curiosity, or any useful form of introspection beyond learning to blame their problems on others.  They are not taught emotional or intellectual maturity, with many of them remaining callow and stupid throughout their lives, and somehow managing to do so from a position of assumed moral and intellectual superiority.

In theory, it seems to me, there is a sort of Noblesse Oblige that educated people have to people less fortunate.  Their job is to understand things that the American equivalent of peasants do not, and to look out for the poor and ignorant.

But here, and in most of the developed world, educated people do the OPPOSITE.  This can be seen in very sharp relief right now, with most college educated leftists favoring more oppression of the poor and working classes, while they themselves can work from home and ride local bike trails in the evenings and complain about Trump voters.

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Principle

 If you want to breed confusion, multiply.  If you want to increase clarity, divide.

Like all general principles, this one is subject to abuse.  Sometimes you need a large amount of data to form simple patterns, which is multiplying then dividing.  This takes intelligence, which is not as common as it ought to be in 2020.

But it is nearly impossible for most of us to live happily with the Many.  This is a fairly basic Taoist principle, which of course is echoed in most of the world’s religions.

Every day, we are confronted with literally countless choices.  Where to go on the internet, what clothes to wear, what food to cook or where to go out to eat, who we want to be with, etc.  

The task, however, is not for some elite to force us into small boxes.  The task is for all of us to emerge from our individual chrysalises and learn the uses and limits of freedom, as they relate to ourselves as individuals, and our various Us’s.  The system, like COVID-19, needs space to grow, and that may mean short term suffering, discomfort and doubt.  But long term, it all resolves if allowed to play out.

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Outstanding Ad by Trump

 https://twitter.com/i/status/1302258937866010632

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Sweden

 Worth the short read: https://www.dailywire.com/news/prager-the-lockdown-has-gone-from-a-mistake-to-a-crime

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Communism as a virus

 I was pondering the other day that what BLM has done to black communities around this nation–wreck them, and set them back decades in every way–is more or less what Communist agitators did around the world in the anti-colonial period, from roughly the late 1940’s until the 1970’s or so.  In many cases, of course, the Communists won entirely, such as in China, Vietnam, Laos, Zimbabwe and eventually–after a long delay–Venezuela.

Broadly speaking, three cultural strands exist in Western Culture.  The first is the one which reaches back into the mists of pre-history, in which military force is used to settle difference, and the victors get the losers stuff.  What England did around the world is really no different from what the Mexica Aztecs did to many other tribes in their region, or what the Babylonians did thousands of years ago, or the Incas in their area, or the Malinese or Egyptians in Africa, or the Romans, or Turks or Mongolians, or the list is more or less equal to most of history.  The British were vastly less violent than most–no pyramids of heads, for example, as with Timur–but they still came in, took over, and started telling people what to do, and started either appropriating revenue, or protecting their own trade, as in India, or pushing drugs, as in China. 

All of this is ubiquitous in history, and anyone who denies it is ipso facto demonstrating deep and really inexcusable ignorance.  We were merely the greatest–in terms of territorial extent and technical dominance–and the latest.

Secondly, we have a strand which speaks of human rights, of progress and of freedom.  These ideas, articulated the way we articulate them, and deployed concretely in the law the way we deploy them, are unique in human history.  The concept that all men (and eventually women) were created equal has no analogue in any human culture of which I am aware.  Difference and relative superiority and inferiority is the default condition of the human race, in all times and places.  Even, say, in individual tribes in which everyone is equal, none of them view the tribe over the hill the same way.

The Greeks practiced and invented Democracy, but it was only for a slave-owning (white slaves, by the way) elite, and that period lasted perhaps 200 years before they themselves were conquered and subjugated.

The Romans considered all Romans equal before the law, but non-Romans were subject to whatever local vagaries existed in their people and place.

The concept of universal human rights is a Western invention.  The concept that people should be free before the law, and that the job of government is to protect their freedom is a Western invention.

We need to remember that we evolved as a tribal species.  We are not wired to know or rely on more than perhaps a hundred people. Over time, we learned to form larger groups, I suspect mainly for the purpose of war.  One clan raided another clan, and that clan then teamed up with a third to wage a reprisal.  Etc.  The buildup is not hard to understand.  War in fact may be the origin of larger and larger governments, all of which eventually necessarily became larger than any tribe, necessitating ideologies to justify and sustain them, which itself may be the origin of the need for larger organized religions.

If you look at, say, Native American beliefs, they were non-dogmatic, and very organic in a healthy way.  They broadly seem to have believed in a Great Spirit, and told many stories about creation and how the Spirit worked, depending on their tribe and its particular history, but they did not fight wars over religion, and most of them had enough space that large scale power structures rarely formed.  Places like Cahokia are a bit of the exception.  And I would wonder what the religious life of that place looked like.  I suppose they must have imposed a theology of sorts, and they appear to have practiced human sacrifice.  

The view of human beings as inherently equal is not something encoded in our biology.  It is not something which comes naturally to us.  Necessarily, we partake in abstraction to consider and implement such views, and necessarily this alienates us somewhat from what would otherwise be binding roots, roots of people and very small place.  Religion, I will remind you, literally means “to bind”.  No binding is needed when groupings are organic.  Only when they become much larger do you need something like religion.

When we accept the idea of all people being equal, we lose some part of ourselves.  I think this is necessary, from what I will perhaps invent a neologism in calling the anthropophysiological perspective.

So I think it could be argued that Communism, in important respects, is an end run around our Liberalism, as it has developed–oriented as it is around freedom, self restraint, and abstract morality–BACK to the old ways of conquest and violence, but using a circuitous logic based entirely on lies.

Communism, in other words, is a sort of virus within Western Culture whose main symptom is the habit of lying in the practice of all forms of violence, including sacrifice, conquest, mass theft, ritual humiliation, and the elevation of political elites who answer to no one.

Phrased alternatively.  Communism is the Shadow of the West.  It represents all of our unprocessed emotional needs, including those for tribe, group violence, and a static social order.  Given that is our shadow, its close affiliation with sadistic violence makes a ton of sense.

As I ponder this, I think I have shown these two related sides of our culture in my piece on the Grand Inquisitor.

So seen from this perspective, the REASON socialist ideas continue to recur–and I was just reflecting how Bastiat refuted all the claims being made today some 170 years ago–is that they are an emotional part of our collective psyche.  Until we process those emotions qua emotions, on their own level, the needs that this darkness recognizes and meets will continue to exist, and so too will the ideas associated with them.

I am very close to being able to “go operational”, as I like to think of it.  I like to think of myself as some sort of cultural or even spiritual warrior.  The problem is, parts of me remain moronic and unresponsive and blind.  I can see and feel that much.

If Trump wins–and we are really fucked if he doesn’t, absent a coup or other response I have no way at all to anticipate–then that should buy us enough time for me to begin experimenting with ways of reconciling the psychic conflicts global peace necessarily brings in its train.  There is considerable good in the abstractions which enable large nations like the United States.  There is physical peace and prosperity.  But there is also much loss that is unremarked upon.  We do not live on bread and freedom alone.

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Great Trump ad

https://youtu.be/gtdEeDUkbBE

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Solid Gold

 https://twitter.com/drsimonegold/status/1300899072333807621/photo/1