Sunday, October 26, 2008

Why I Can't Vote for John McCain

“We’re Americans. We never quit…”



Fall of Saigon



Somalia


“…We don’t hide from history,”



Smallpox Blankets



Columbine Miners Massacre



Johns Manville’s Great Escape from Asbestos Lawsuits


“…we make history!”



Rambo!


“Barak Obama says he wants to ‘spread the wealth around’.

That’s not our country!” - John McCain

Halliburton's No-bid Contracts




Economic Stimulus Act of 2008

Regressive Tax


Any tax structure that favors one economic group over another, either by nature or by loopholes, represents a redistribution of wealth.

One other point of clarification in closing to avoid a potential shitstorm of outrage from the Patriotic Armchair Military. US Soldiers do all that is asked of them, generally speaking. Sometimes it makes sense to throw in the towel. Those who exclude this possibility are poor strategists who create nothing but casualties. My objection here is to the delusional rhetoric, not to the actions of military personnel in the performance of their duty.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Origins of Chritianity


My next post, if it ever gets written, started as a result of this research: The Origins of Christianity and the Search for the Historical Jesus. by Achyara S. The web site I initially found it on was neither one of those. It was a Gnostic site that included a rebuttal of sorts. I knew a little about the Gnostics, I knew that the Church eventually decided they were heretics, but I didn't know much about what they actually believe. The "rebuttal" is a word salad composed of dogma and logical falacies. I was originally going to write a critique of that essay, but the core beliefs are equally tempting. To me, they illustrate how far a group will go to delude themselves with pat excuses for the inconsistencies and contradictions in core Christian dogma.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Blogfrog



Aaron Kinney put up a post about this post at Anarchy in Your Head titled, “Anarchy, the New Atheism”. After reading it, I felt compelled to comment that Anarchy has been around for quite a long time as a non-government philosophy, and has a rich history of its own. Aaron’s reply to that comment got me thinking, never a safe thing to do. This is the part that set me off and writing:

“Now that atheism has begun achieving mainstream acceptance, and anarchy, while increasing in popularity, has not yet achieved mainstream acceptance, anarchy is accordingly the new atheism, just like atheism was the ‘new gay.’”

I kind of understand what you're saying Aaron, but I think there is additional social chemistry to consider. I've been struggling with how to express this concept, along with it's implications for a long time.

There is a way of looking at things that says, once one battle has been fought and won, another can take its place, or take its turn. There is another way of looking at things that says, everything always emerges before its time, and then persists as a wave form of peaks and valleys until some final integration takes place. I think there is a combination of these two models. There are too many variables to accurately predict how that combination will play out in any given situation, however. One is inspired by others' successes. If there was no conflict, no resistance, no prejudice or fear, any given organized movement for social justice would be unnecessary. Society would merely acknowledge the disparity and adjust. Unfortunately, human history has been dominated by those who are most insane.

It’s often said that the Women’s Rights movement was an outgrowth of the Civil Rights (ethnic flavor) movement of the 1960’s. It set an example tactically. To say more is to ignore the ongoing social pressures resultant from such events as the Woman’s Suffrage movement, and the employment demands of World War II, and the subsequent peacetime reversal of the demand for both laborers and heroes from all segments of society. The caste system and segregation could not reestablish itself. The barriers were already coming down. The Movement was in essence a large group of people with one primary message: “NOT FAST ENOUGH!” The secondary messages are, “We’re not going back” and, “those trying to shove us back can fuck off”. The Women’s movement, the Gay Rights Movement, the demands for equal treatment from groups like atheists, anarchists, etc., etc. are all The Civil Rights Movement.

There is a pattern to the way these issues present themselves. It is a combination of the size of the population affected, and the degree of oppression (per capita) to which they are subjected. Women represent a larger population than African Americans, but there were factors that made the affronts to the smaller group more egregious. There were no Jim Crow laws on the books that made it an offence not to discriminate against women. Then too, if you write out all these groups in set notation, they all have overlapping subsets. The woman’s group was further fragmented because, until the 1970’s, single-income families were common. Career housewives did not encounter wage discrimination in the workplace, or the glass ceiling. Laws discriminating against the rights of women to hold property, vote, smoke, or gamble had already been erased. Meanwhile, The Americans of African descent were being redlined into ghettos, and generally being denied the opportunity to have even one breadwinner in a family that could reach his or her full potential.

There is also a third factor that is even more basic to human nature. Robert Heinlein said, “There are two kinds of people, those who want to be led, and those with no such desire.” What he didn’t say in so few words, is there are some in the latter category with a strong desire to lead others. Some of those provide necessary direction and expertise, others ruthlessly exploit this desire in some to be led. These are the self-serving megalomaniacs, ruled by emotional and financial greed, and leading mainly by use of fear. Unfortunately, there is a confederacy of interests that are served by this model, and selfishly but effectively work to maintain this as the status quo. Humans are easily organized into hierarchies, having lived and bred, and having been subjected to them since the prehistoric time of the alpha male.

In one respect, Anarchists have more in common with the failed Marxist movement than with atheists or gays. Black Americans, women, gays, and atheists have all taken a turn on the Civil Rights stage, demanding equal treatment and equal rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” under the law. Marxism and Anarchism demand a revolution in government, hopefully not a violent overthrow. In any case, these philosophies present an alternative, not a system that can co-exist with the bastard-Capitalistic Republic disguised as a Democracy that we live under in the US. As Winston Churchill once quipped, “"Democracy is the worst form of government except for all those others that have been tried." If anyone ever does get a social anarchy off the ground, I’d be interested in seeing how far it flies before becoming corrupt. Not in my lifetime, I think.

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Flying Spaghetti Monster Found!

Next time some overly-religious type hits you with the "Eye of God" Nebula, hit back with this fun fact!

Galactic 'spaghetti monster' powered by magnetic fields
20:07 20 August 2008
NewScientist.com news service
Rachel Courtland

http://space.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn14573&print=true