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1
Science, Culture, & Humanities / Why I support Israel
« on: January 03, 2024, 05:49:45 PM »
“I have a premonition that will not leave me: as it goes with Israel so will it go with all of us. Should Israel perish, the holocaust will be upon us.”
-   Eric Hoffer

First of all, no I’m not Jewish. I suppose however that I’m a Zionist though I say that with some surprise as it never occurred to me to call myself such before now.

By Zionist I mean I support the right of Israel to exist, to have secure borders, to have the right to control immigration, to defend itself by all means recognized for any other state, and to retaliate against aggression by all means recognized for any other state.

Why? No seriously why? What business is it of mine?

Well for one, consider the alternative. The atrocities of Hamas are well known in sickening detail and cannot be denied because Hamas is documenting and boasting about them.

Still they are being denied, even justified by some of the vilest people one can imagine. That should be enough in and of itself.

Israel by contrast still attempts to minimize civilian casualties among a population that hates them. And one wonders why. They’re not going to affect public opinion that way.

It appears to have something to do with Jewish ethics. And here we come to an important reason.
Israel is part of Western Civilization, is in fact historically one of the twin roots of the West. The other being ancient Athens, with the emphasis on ancient.

Us anthropologists like to classify human organization in ascending levels according to how many people they can support: bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and states.

We tend to forget there’s a level above states – civilizations. A civilization is a group of nations with recognized commonalities of culture, law, etc. The definition gets vague around the edges but can often be practically defined as speakers of related language families.

Isolationists do not see a level above their country. A luxury only maintainable in big powerful states such as ours.

When we play the parlor game of “When did Western Civ begin?” it’s fun to argue, was it when the democratic party of Athens swore not to take revenge on the out of power oligarchs even for the murder of their families? Was it when the Romans put the Twelve Tablet of the law in the public forum for all to read?

Or was it when the Prophet Nathan told King David, “Thou art the man!”

One moral law for king and peasant alike, what a concept! One that is not shared by every culture, even today.

I believe Western Civ has evolved some basic assumptions that are worth keeping and worth spreading for the benefit of all mankind. Such as the rights of Man, equality under the law, the dignity and worth of the individual.

Our civilization is under attack, from without and within by an axis of enemies united for the sole purpose of opposing the West. Israel is one front in a multi-front attack on the West. I believe Ukraine is another, and I greatly fear the opening of another front, perhaps in Taiwan – or here.

But perhaps that’s a bit tin-foil hat conspiratorial for some of my readers. So here are some practical questions I like to ask.

Who is more likely to develop…?
-   A cure for cancer?
-   Significant life extension?
-   Clean cheap sources of energy?
-   Cheap practical desalination tech? (Oops, cross that one off. Already done.)

Seven million Israelis or 700 million Arab Islamists?

And that’s why I support Israel, for my own self-interest.



2
Politics & Religion / Why I support Israel
« on: January 03, 2024, 05:42:25 PM »
Recent column


“I have a premonition that will not leave me: as it goes with Israel so will it go with all of us. Should Israel perish, the holocaust will be upon us.”
-   Eric Hoffer

First of all, no I’m not Jewish. I suppose however that I’m a Zionist though I say that with some surprise as it never occurred to me to call myself such before now.

By Zionist I mean I support the right of Israel to exist, to have secure borders, to have the right to control immigration, to defend itself by all means recognized for any other state, and to retaliate against aggression by all means recognized for any other state.

Why? No seriously why? What business is it of mine?

Well for one, consider the alternative. The atrocities of Hamas are well known in sickening detail and cannot be denied because Hamas is documenting and boasting about them.

Still they are being denied, even justified by some of the vilest people one can imagine. That should be enough in and of itself.
Israel by contrast still attempts to minimize civilian casualties among a population that hates them. And one wonders why. They’re not going to affect public
opinion that way.

It appears to have something to do with Jewish ethics. And here we come to an important reason.

Israel is part of Western Civilization, is in fact historically one of the twin roots of the West. The other being ancient Athens, with the emphasis on ancient.
Us anthropologists like to classify human organization in ascending levels according to how many people they can support: bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and states.

We tend to forget there’s a level above states – civilizations. A civilization is a group of nations with recognized commonalities of culture, law, etc. The definition gets vague around the edges but can often be practically defined as speakers of related language families.

Isolationists do not see a level above their country. A luxury only maintainable in big powerful states such as ours.

When we play the parlor game of “When did Western Civ begin?” it’s fun to argue, was it when the democratic party of Athens swore not to take revenge on the out of power oligarchs even for the murder of their families? Was it when the Romans put the Twelve Tablet of the law in the public forum for all to read?

Or was it when the Prophet Nathan told King David, “Thou art the man!”

One moral law for king and peasant alike, what a concept! One that is not shared by every culture, even today.

I believe Western Civ has evolved some basic assumptions that are worth keeping and worth spreading for the benefit of all mankind. Such as the rights of Man, equality under the law, the dignity and worth of the individual.
x
Our civilization is under attack, from without and within by an axis of enemies united for the sole purpose of opposing the West. Israel is one front in a multi-front attack on the West. I believe Ukraine is another, and I greatly fear the opening of another front, perhaps in Taiwan – or here.

But perhaps that’s a bit tin-foil hat conspiratorial for some of my readers. So here are some practical questions I like to ask.

Who is more likely to develop…?
-   A cure for cancer?
-   Significant life extension?
-   Clean cheap sources of energy?
-   Cheap practical desalination tech? (Oops, cross that one off. Already done.)
Seven million Israelis or 700 million Arab Islamists?

And that’s why I support Israel, for my own self-interest.


3
Politics & Religion / Why I support Israel
« on: November 13, 2023, 07:36:49 AM »
Why I support Israel
By Steve Browne
(Weekly column)

“I have a premonition that will not leave me: as it goes with Israel so will it go with all of us. Should Israel perish, the holocaust will be upon us.”
-   Eric Hoffer

First of all, no I’m not Jewish. I suppose however that I’m a Zionist though I say that with some surprise as it never occurred to me to call myself such before now.

By Zionist I mean I support the right of Israel to exist, to have secure borders, to have the right to control immigration, to defend itself by all means recognized for any other state, and to retaliate against aggression by all means recognized for any other state.

Why? No seriously why? What business is it of mine?

Well for one, consider the alternative. The atrocities of Hamas are well known in sickening detail and cannot be denied because Hamas is documenting and boasting about them.

Still they are being denied, even justified by some of the vilest people one can imagine. That should be enough in and of itself.

Israel by contrast still attempts to minimize civilian casualties among a population that hates them. And one wonders why. They’re not going to affect public opinion that way.

It appears to have something to do with Jewish ethics. And here we come to an important reason.

Israel is part of Western Civilization, is in fact historically one of the twin roots of the West. The other being ancient Athens, with the emphasis on ancient.

Us anthropologists like to classify human organization in ascending levels according to how many people they can support: bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and states.

We tend to forget there’s a level above states – civilizations. A civilization is a group of nations with recognized commonalities of culture, law, etc. The definition gets vague around the edges but can often be practically defined as speakers of related language families.

Isolationists do not see a level above their country. A luxury only maintainable in big powerful states such as ours.

When we play the parlor game of “When did Western Civ begin?” it’s fun to argue, was it when the democratic party of Athens swore not to take revenge on the out of power oligarchs even for the murder of their families? Was it when the Romans put the Twelve Tablet of the law in the public forum for all to read?

Or was it when the Prophet Nathan told King David, “Thou art the man!”

One moral law for king and peasant alike, what a concept! One that is not shared by every culture, even today.

I believe Western Civ has evolved some basic assumptions that are worth keeping and worth spreading for the benefit of all mankind. Such as the rights of Man, equality under the law, the dignity and worth of the individual.

Our civilization is under attack, from without and within by an axis of enemies united for the sole purpose of opposing the West. Israel is one front in a multi-front attack on the West. I believe Ukraine is another, and I greatly fear the opening of another front, perhaps in Taiwan – or here.

But perhaps that’s a bit tin-foil hat conspiratorial for some of my readers. So here are some practical questions I like to ask.

Who is more likely to develop…?

-   A cure for cancer?
-   Significant life extension?
-   Clean cheap sources of energy?
-   Cheap practical desalination tech? (Oops, cross that one off. Already done.)

Seven million Israelis or 700 million Arab Islamists?

And that’s why I support Israel, for my own self-interest.



4
My column, just submitted.

Attacks send a message if we can read it
By Steve Browne

Israel is at war again and disturbing questions arise, more than we have answers for.
To begin with, why now?
The attacks took place a day after Biden released a bunch of money to Iran. Biden supporters rightfully point out the planning for the attacks took a lot longer than a day and suggest it’s because of Putin’s birthday or something.
Nonetheless it is not unreasonable to suppose the one had something to do with the other. Hamas doesn’t make a move without Iran’s say-so. Perhaps Iran was holding back till now lest it delay the release?
It’s worth noting the attacks came 50 years almost to the day after the October 6, 1973 surprise attacks that began the Yom Kippur War. Dates are important to the jihadists.
What’s the connection with Russia? Did Russia support this as a distraction from Ukraine? Do they hope for a strategic diversion? Is this the opening of another front in a wider war?
And how did Israeli intelligence not see this coming?
Is it possible preparations were made somewhere out of the theater of operations beyond Mossad’s area of activity? If so, under whose sponsorship?
The attackers came across the border on motorbikes, pickup trucks, and motorized parasails. That last has a dramatic effect beyond the merely practical. Is there a message there?
And why attacks of this kind with conspicuous atrocities?
They killed women and children hiding in their homes. They kidnapped civilians and took them back to Gaza. They paraded the naked body of a young woman around and made sure it was videoed. They showed a terrified mother with two redhead boys humiliated by their captors. They showed a terrified young woman tourist captured at a concert dragged by her hair into a vehicle to be taken to Gaza.
It's not just that they committed recognized war crimes, it’s that they made sure we saw them.
Preliminary photo collages of the missing show a preponderance of young women. What do they intend to do with them? Use them as human shields? Sell them back?
And what are they doing to them now? God help them, rape might be the best they could hope for.
We are dealing with people whose thought processes and world view are alien to us and too often we try to fit their actions into what makes sense to us, rather than try to figure out why it makes sense to them.
We could start by realizing that though these are military actions they do not have specifically military objectives. They gain no territory nor do they significantly impact Israel’s ability to wage war.
They may hope to provoke a response so violent it would bend world opinion in their direction, but those lines pro and contra Israel are already firmly drawn and not likely to change. And why would they make sure the world sees those horrific atrocities if that’s their goal?
After 9/11 the German composer Karl Stockhausen had an insight that repelled a great many people. He called it, “The greatest work of art of all time.”
I suggest if we can get past the shock, there is a point here.
What the jihadists are doing, is theater. The audience is both the West and their own people.
To Israel it’s a taunt, “You can’t protect your women!”
To their own a boast, “Look what the warriors of Allah can do with pure hearts and intentions!”
However this turns out I think it’s a new turn in the Long War, and it’s not just Israel in danger.








5
Politics & Religion / What is the left?
« on: August 23, 2023, 06:33:55 AM »
The Left

It’s not exactly news the political divide in our country is… pretty deep. And pretty acrimonious and growing more extreme. If you doubt that, try and imagine yourself only five years ago and ask yourself what you’d have thought if someone had told you one side would be fighting passionately for the right of parents to surgically mutilate their children – or worse, the power to take children away from one parent and give them to the other who wanted to mutilate them.

To some it seems like a dispute between two models of governance, and that’s at least partly correct. But though the left model is pretty well articulated: soul engineering, central control, top-down my-way-or-the-highway, the opposition on the right is not nearly as well defined.

Purely in terms of the oppositional dynamics what we have is a situation where the federal government has become so powerful to the point it has occurred to some that they must never let power change hands again, the danger the Founders feared.

And given no one is immune to the corrupting effects of power the question of which side is most dangerous. The answer is, the side which has been ascendant the longest of course. And today, that’s the Left. So…

What is the left?
-   That part of the political spectrum historically concerned with obtaining the support of the bottom half of society, ranging from the moderate left to full-on communism. (Note I said, “the side concerned with obtaining the support of” not “benefitting.”)
-   But like all social movements, the leadership is at the top end of society the aristocracy, either by birth or adoption. During revolutionary times it is comprised of ambitious middle classes, the so-called noveau riche and disaffected members of the upper class. (Stick a pin in that.)
-   The very bottom of society comprises: low-wage earners and the disabled,  but also the unemployable, the insane, and low-end criminals. Both victims of misfortune and those who’ve fallen to the bottom due to poor life choices. Leftists at the top of society cannot or will not recognize the difference.
-   The line that defines “bottom half” also runs through the middle class and high-wage working class. Whether the middle identify as left or right may be determined by whether they see government as either, 1) the guarantor they do not fall downwards, or 2) as an obstacle to working their way further upwards.
-   Today the left has lost the working class and now base themselves in a coalition of minorities – which they automatically characterize as part of the bottom half and lacking in “privilege” no matter how wealthy and influential they may be. Thus billionaires like Oprah can count themselves as unprivileged minorities with a straight face.
-   While rightists can generally describe the left accurately, leftists cannot describe the right and when attempting to describe right-wing views create a grotesque caricature at best. This has been confirmed by research, most notably in Moral Foundations theory.
-   While there is both a moderate left and a hard left as in every movement, the hard left is at present in control of the movement.
-   Note that EVERY movement has a tendency to become controlled by its most extreme elements. Because they are the ones ready to devote themselves heart and soul to the movement. The rest of us have lives. Passion is power.
-   Despite their professed concern for the poor and powerless they are elitist to the core and believe in rule by an enlightened ruling class rather than the rule of impartial laws.
-   They implicitly believe in the inferiority of minorities and the poor, believing them incapable of rising by their own efforts no matter what opportunities they are given.
-   The moderate left may be just as horrified by the crimes of communism as the right, but the difference is of degree, not basic principle. They are totalitarian by nature, by the very definition of the man who invented the term. “Tutto all'interno dello stato. Niente fuori dallo stato. Niente contro lo Stato”  “Everything within the state. Nothing outside the state. Nothing against the state.” – Benito Mussolini.
-   Though the Hard Left calls themselves “Progressives” they are anything but progressive, they revert to the oldest model of politics in history, the rule of the strong and (allegedly) wise.
-   They despise liberty, but feel compelled to pay lip service to it – for now.

The Leftist approach to what they call “social justice” is: hierarchical, top-down, one-size-fits-all, my-way-or-the-highway. When they see a problem their first instinct is not to approach it with private, voluntary means, but to pass laws and create new government offices.
-   Any suggestion that resources available to address social problems are finite and must be allocated intelligently is met with moral outrage.
-   Their default assumption is that ordinary people are helpless to support and take care of themselves without preferential legislation and massive subsidies. In time this creates a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The Leftist model of governance is failing catastrophically, due among other things to:
-   The increased complexity of government resulting from regulatory burdens that hamper production and growth.
-   The enlargement of government resulting in the withdrawal of more and more educated people from productive work in the private sector.
-   The diversion of wealth into patronage for supporters.
-   The chaos and waste of resources caused by attempts to “soul engineer” i.e. make people good according to their vision of the good via manipulation of language and censorship.
-   Attempts to increase upward social-economic mobility for some, which result in destroying the already established institutions that historically provided the means for the poor to rise. (See the history of City College of New York, “The Harvard of the Proletariat.”)
-   Ignoring human nature. Note defunding the police and the subsequent rise of crime in poorer neighborhoods.

They react to the failure of their model by doubling down on everything that causes it to fail and finding scapegoats to blame for the failure.

The left is utopian rather than pragmatic.

-   A lot of the injustice they see is just life.
-   The idea that “the perfect is the enemy of the good” and the corollary rule-of-thumb “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” are anathema to them. They favor change for the sake of change, confident it will always tend towards perfection -  as long as they direct it.
-   They are impatient with established rules and procedures and see them as institutionalized barriers to achieving The Good.
-   For them the end justifies the means. If the end is perfection, what wouldn’t be justified to achieve it?
-   For many years in many countries leftists have seen criminals as "primitive rebels" (as in the title of the book by Marxist historian Eric Hobsbaum) engaged in "social banditry."
-   Part of the utopian view is to see planning and purpose everywhere. So failure to achieve it is never due to bad decisions or even just bad luck, but of active villainy on someone’s part.
-   They are ferociously hostile towards religion. They seek to establish heaven on earth right now rather than in an afterlife or in the indefinite future.
-   Their ethics are strictly situational. They reject the notion of an action that is bad in and of itself rather than whether it serves their cause or not.
-   They maintain double standards for themselves and their opponents. Another word for which is “privilege,” the right to do that which is forbidden to others. And this is not hypocrisy! They see themselves as a separate and superior caste who must be judged by different standards than us peasants.
-   There is no end-point to their demands. They have no appreciation of diminishing marginal utility.
They do not argue for their position and against yours – they write the script for both sides of the argument, i.e. not against your position but what they say your position is. (Strawman.)
-   They do not appear to know what an argument is. (A set of propositions, one of which, the conclusion, is claimed to necessarily follow from the others.)
-   They rely on fallacies “the counterfeit of argument” to support their proposals, most often: Appeal to Pity and Ad Hominem.
-   They do not value free speech and the free play of ideas. Their reaction to any coherent contrary argument is to silence the arguer.
While claiming to be the “party of science” and to represent “the knowledge class” they believe and profess things directly contrary to what we know to be immutable scientific fact, such as their claim men can become women, get pregnant, etc.

They have to have enemies to excuse the failure of their model and rally their supporters with the strong social glue of grievance. Grievance which is fed by envy, “The only one of the seven deadly sins which brings the sinner no pleasure at all.”

-   The target of that grievance, the Enemy – is you. Anyone who doesn’t think like them. And we have arrived at a point at which why they think of you as the enemy is of no importance compared with the fact that they do.
-   They are not producing enough children to stay viable over generations, so they need yours to replenish their numbers via indoctrination. They have no respect for parental rights at all.
-   Moderate Democrats are in what amounts to an abusive relationship with the hard left. They will not let themselves see that the things that pass for normal on the hard left are nothing like normal, and are in fact quite insane.

The dilemma of the right, or the "non-left" in general.

-   They hate you, make no mistake about that. The level and kind of insult should make that plain to you. When they call you “Nazis” they are expressing a willingness to see you killed.
-   There is nothing you can say or do that will make them stop hating you. They need an enemy to hate to preserve the cohesion of their movement.
-   They say libertarian conservatives are racists, fascists, and Nazis. We know we are not.
-   They say conservatives are homophobes and this is more nuanced. There are those who don’t have anything against gays per se, but just don’t like them setting the agenda in education and entertainment. It feels too much like grooming.
-   They say conservatives want to return Black people to their status under (historically Democrat) Jim Crow. We know we want no such thing.
-   They say conservatives are transphobes. They’re more solid ground here, anyone who’ll volunteer to be castrated and surgically mutilated is pretty scary. And anyone who can talk kids into it is REALLY scary.

What all of this amounts to is othering conservatives, classical liberals, and moderate Democrats to the point they feel justified in assault, vandalism, and repression by means of organized rioting and politicized government agencies such as the DOJ and IRS.

It’s not going to get better in the foreseeable future.

Bottom line. To recapitulate they hate you. They can’t be persuaded not to hate you because they need someone to hate to give their movement cohesion.

If you belong to any of the groups they see as their client minorities, in essence their property, they hate you most of all and you are in the most danger from them.

You say, “Well I’ve got lots of friends who are leftists and I don’t feel they are dangerous to me.”

So do I, and I feel that way too about them. But – to quote Heinlein from his novel Methuselah’s Children. “I am not in danger from my neighbors and you are not in danger from yours, but I am in danger from your neighbors and you are in danger from mine.”

You need to make your plans and preparations accordingly.

Questions:

Q: What percentage of the Left is really Hard Left?
A: Don’t know for sure but some estimates have it that “Progressives” are around 14-16% of the voting age population.

Q: How dangerous are they really?
A: Every totalitarian movement coming to power needs a thug corps. We saw the summer of riots a few years ago which produced relatively few casualties but billions of dollars of property damage. We also saw their tactics evolving. We saw training maneuvers designed among other things to sort out the “tooth to tail ratio.” To find out who among their ranks can be street fighters, who can stand incarceration, etc.

Q: But aren’t they a decentralized movement with no central command structure?
A: In a word, bullshit. We saw a sophisticated logistical support and supply system involving busing rioters from outside. The fact we cannot identify their command hierarchy with certainty should worry you.

Q: How bad is it going to get?
A: No clue. The left power base is confined to major cities with dense populations. It might stay there and make the cities progressively more unlivable. It might become something like the Troubles in Ireland, or worse La Violencia in Columbia. (Look it up.) Or it could burn itself out in a hurry and leave a minor footnote in history. (Well it might!) It’s a big country and the bulk of it will possibly not even notice much. I’ve heard that from expats living in rural Chile during the late troubles.

Q: You talk about plans and preparations, what kind of plans and preparations do you mean?
A: Up to you and your own individual threat assessment. I myself plan to live out in the sticks where violence is unlikely to penetrate with adequate preparation for supply train interruptions while I watch the world burn – or smoke and fizzle as the case may be.

Q: Do you think it could become a civil war?
A: We’re already in what amounts to a cold civil war. Will it become hot and if so how hot? Dunno, and where would it be fought? It’s not like everybody is going to dress up in their cammies and tacticool gear and head out to the national parks to duke it out. (Although the idea of holmgang has some merit to it..) Although as unlikely as that sounds to anyone living amid the broad treeless fields of the Midwest farm belt, one might remember General Grivas and the Cypriot insurgency.

Q: Aren’t you just being alarmist? We’ve been through bad stuff before as a country and always got through it.
A: Yes we have, but I urge you to remember this irrefutable historical truth. All predictions of social collapse come true – eventually.


I will leave you with Steve's Four Rules of Power, distilled from observations of totalitarian movements contemporary and historical. Listen, remember, and see if this doesn’t explain a lot of otherwise crazy stuff.

Demonstrate your power over others by:
1) Making them constantly afraid of giving offense unintentionally.
2) Making them give up cherished customs, symbols, pastimes, relationships.
3) Making them pay lip service to ideas of breathtaking absurdity.
4) Making them do things that disgust and repel them.
 





6
Politics & Religion / Re: The Cognitive Dissonance of the left
« on: August 23, 2023, 06:28:18 AM »
From another thread:

The Left

It’s not exactly news the political divide in our country is… pretty deep. And pretty acrimonious and growing more extreme. If you doubt that, try and imagine yourself only five years ago and ask yourself what you’d have thought if someone had told you one side would be fighting passionately for the right of parents to surgically mutilate their children – or worse, the power to take children away from one parent and give them to the other who wanted to mutilate them.

To some it seems like a dispute between two models of governance, and that’s at least partly correct. But though the left model is pretty well articulated: soul engineering, central control, top-down my-way-or-the-highway, the opposition on the right is not nearly as well defined.

Purely in terms of the oppositional dynamics what we have is a situation where the federal government has become so powerful to the point it has occurred to some that they must never let power change hands again, the danger the Founders feared.

And given no one is immune to the corrupting effects of power the question of which side is most dangerous. The answer is, the side which has been ascendant the longest of course. And today, that’s the Left. So…

What is the left?
-   That part of the political spectrum historically concerned with obtaining the support of the bottom half of society, ranging from the moderate left to full-on communism. (Note I said, “the side concerned with obtaining the support of” not “benefitting.”)
-   But like all social movements, the leadership is at the top end of society the aristocracy, either by birth or adoption. During revolutionary times it is comprised of ambitious middle classes, the so-called noveau riche and disaffected members of the upper class. (Stick a pin in that.)
-   The very bottom of society comprises: low-wage earners and the disabled,  but also the unemployable, the insane, and low-end criminals. Both victims of misfortune and those who’ve fallen to the bottom due to poor life choices. Leftists at the top of society cannot or will not recognize the difference.
-   The line that defines “bottom half” also runs through the middle class and high-wage working class. Whether the middle identify as left or right may be determined by whether they see government as either, 1) the guarantor they do not fall downwards, or 2) as an obstacle to working their way further upwards.
-   Today the left has lost the working class and now base themselves in a coalition of minorities – which they automatically characterize as part of the bottom half and lacking in “privilege” no matter how wealthy and influential they may be. Thus billionaires like Oprah can count themselves as unprivileged minorities with a straight face.
-   While rightists can generally describe the left accurately, leftists cannot describe the right and when attempting to describe right-wing views create a grotesque caricature at best. This has been confirmed by research, most notably in Moral Foundations theory.
-   While there is both a moderate left and a hard left as in every movement, the hard left is at present in control of the movement.
-   Note that EVERY movement has a tendency to become controlled by its most extreme elements. Because they are the ones ready to devote themselves heart and soul to the movement. The rest of us have lives. Passion is power.
-   Despite their professed concern for the poor and powerless they are elitist to the core and believe in rule by an enlightened ruling class rather than the rule of impartial laws.
-   They implicitly believe in the inferiority of minorities and the poor, believing them incapable of rising by their own efforts no matter what opportunities they are given.
-   The moderate left may be just as horrified by the crimes of communism as the right, but the difference is of degree, not basic principle. They are totalitarian by nature, by the very definition of the man who invented the term. “Tutto all'interno dello stato. Niente fuori dallo stato. Niente contro lo Stato”  “Everything within the state. Nothing outside the state. Nothing against the state.” – Benito Mussolini.
-   Though the Hard Left calls themselves “Progressives” they are anything but progressive, they revert to the oldest model of politics in history, the rule of the strong and (allegedly) wise.
-   They despise liberty, but feel compelled to pay lip service to it – for now.

The Leftist approach to what they call “social justice” is: hierarchical, top-down, one-size-fits-all, my-way-or-the-highway. When they see a problem their first instinct is not to approach it with private, voluntary means, but to pass laws and create new government offices.
-   Any suggestion that resources available to address social problems are finite and must be allocated intelligently is met with moral outrage.
-   Their default assumption is that ordinary people are helpless to support and take care of themselves without preferential legislation and massive subsidies. In time this creates a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The Leftist model of governance is failing catastrophically, due among other things to:
-   The increased complexity of government resulting from regulatory burdens that hamper production and growth.
-   The enlargement of government resulting in the withdrawal of more and more educated people from productive work in the private sector.
-   The diversion of wealth into patronage for supporters.
-   The chaos and waste of resources caused by attempts to “soul engineer” i.e. make people good according to their vision of the good via manipulation of language and censorship.
-   Attempts to increase upward social-economic mobility for some, which result in destroying the already established institutions that historically provided the means for the poor to rise. (See the history of City College of New York, “The Harvard of the Proletariat.”)
-   Ignoring human nature. Note defunding the police and the subsequent rise of crime in poorer neighborhoods.

They react to the failure of their model by doubling down on everything that causes it to fail and finding scapegoats to blame for the failure.

The left is utopian rather than pragmatic.

-   A lot of the injustice they see is just life.
-   The idea that “the perfect is the enemy of the good” and the corollary rule-of-thumb “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” are anathema to them. They favor change for the sake of change, confident it will always tend towards perfection -  as long as they direct it.
-   They are impatient with established rules and procedures and see them as institutionalized barriers to achieving The Good.
-   For them the end justifies the means. If the end is perfection, what wouldn’t be justified to achieve it?
-   For many years in many countries leftists have seen criminals as "primitive rebels" (as in the title of the book by Marxist historian Eric Hobsbaum) engaged in "social banditry."
-   Part of the utopian view is to see planning and purpose everywhere. So failure to achieve it is never due to bad decisions or even just bad luck, but of active villainy on someone’s part.
-   They are ferociously hostile towards religion. They seek to establish heaven on earth right now rather than in an afterlife or in the indefinite future.
-   Their ethics are strictly situational. They reject the notion of an action that is bad in and of itself rather than whether it serves their cause or not.
-   They maintain double standards for themselves and their opponents. Another word for which is “privilege,” the right to do that which is forbidden to others. And this is not hypocrisy! They see themselves as a separate and superior caste who must be judged by different standards than us peasants.
-   There is no end-point to their demands. They have no appreciation of diminishing marginal utility.
They do not argue for their position and against yours – they write the script for both sides of the argument, i.e. not against your position but what they say your position is. (Strawman.)
-   They do not appear to know what an argument is. (A set of propositions, one of which, the conclusion, is claimed to necessarily follow from the others.)
-   They rely on fallacies “the counterfeit of argument” to support their proposals, most often: Appeal to Pity and Ad Hominem.
-   They do not value free speech and the free play of ideas. Their reaction to any coherent contrary argument is to silence the arguer.
While claiming to be the “party of science” and to represent “the knowledge class” they believe and profess things directly contrary to what we know to be immutable scientific fact, such as their claim men can become women, get pregnant, etc.

They have to have enemies to excuse the failure of their model and rally their supporters with the strong social glue of grievance. Grievance which is fed by envy, “The only one of the seven deadly sins which brings the sinner no pleasure at all.”

-   The target of that grievance, the Enemy – is you. Anyone who doesn’t think like them. And we have arrived at a point at which why they think of you as the enemy is of no importance compared with the fact that they do.
-   They are not producing enough children to stay viable over generations, so they need yours to replenish their numbers via indoctrination. They have no respect for parental rights at all.
-   Moderate Democrats are in what amounts to an abusive relationship with the hard left. They will not let themselves see that the things that pass for normal on the hard left are nothing like normal, and are in fact quite insane.

The dilemma of the right, or the "non-left" in general.

-   They hate you, make no mistake about that. The level and kind of insult should make that plain to you. When they call you “Nazis” they are expressing a willingness to see you killed.
-   There is nothing you can say or do that will make them stop hating you. They need an enemy to hate to preserve the cohesion of their movement.
-   They say libertarian conservatives are racists, fascists, and Nazis. We know we are not.
-   They say conservatives are homophobes and this is more nuanced. There are those who don’t have anything against gays per se, but just don’t like them setting the agenda in education and entertainment. It feels too much like grooming.
-   They say conservatives want to return Black people to their status under (historically Democrat) Jim Crow. We know we want no such thing.
-   They say conservatives are transphobes. They’re more solid ground here, anyone who’ll volunteer to be castrated and surgically mutilated is pretty scary. And anyone who can talk kids into it is REALLY scary.

What all of this amounts to is othering conservatives, classical liberals, and moderate Democrats to the point they feel justified in assault, vandalism, and repression by means of organized rioting and politicized government agencies such as the DOJ and IRS.

It’s not going to get better in the foreseeable future.

Bottom line. To recapitulate they hate you. They can’t be persuaded not to hate you because they need someone to hate to give their movement cohesion.

If you belong to any of the groups they see as their client minorities, in essence their property, they hate you most of all and you are in the most danger from them.

You say, “Well I’ve got lots of friends who are leftists and I don’t feel they are dangerous to me.”

So do I, and I feel that way too about them. But – to quote Heinlein from his novel Methuselah’s Children. “I am not in danger from my neighbors and you are not in danger from yours, but I am in danger from your neighbors and you are in danger from mine.”

You need to make your plans and preparations accordingly.

Questions:

Q: What percentage of the Left is really Hard Left?
A: Don’t know for sure but some estimates have it that “Progressives” are around 14-16% of the voting age population.

Q: How dangerous are they really?
A: Every totalitarian movement coming to power needs a thug corps. We saw the summer of riots a few years ago which produced relatively few casualties but billions of dollars of property damage. We also saw their tactics evolving. We saw training maneuvers designed among other things to sort out the “tooth to tail ratio.” To find out who among their ranks can be street fighters, who can stand incarceration, etc.

Q: But aren’t they a decentralized movement with no central command structure?
A: In a word, bullshit. We saw a sophisticated logistical support and supply system involving busing rioters from outside. The fact we cannot identify their command hierarchy with certainty should worry you.

Q: How bad is it going to get?
A: No clue. The left power base is confined to major cities with dense populations. It might stay there and make the cities progressively more unlivable. It might become something like the Troubles in Ireland, or worse La Violencia in Columbia. (Look it up.) Or it could burn itself out in a hurry and leave a minor footnote in history. (Well it might!) It’s a big country and the bulk of it will possibly not even notice much. I’ve heard that from expats living in rural Chile during the late troubles.

Q: You talk about plans and preparations, what kind of plans and preparations do you mean?
A: Up to you and your own individual threat assessment. I myself plan to live out in the sticks where violence is unlikely to penetrate with adequate preparation for supply train interruptions while I watch the world burn – or smoke and fizzle as the case may be.

Q: Do you think it could become a civil war?
A: We’re already in what amounts to a cold civil war. Will it become hot and if so how hot? Dunno, and where would it be fought? It’s not like everybody is going to dress up in their cammies and tacticool gear and head out to the national parks to duke it out. (Although the idea of holmgang has some merit to it..) Although as unlikely as that sounds to anyone living amid the broad treeless fields of the Midwest farm belt, one might remember General Grivas and the Cypriot insurgency.

Q: Aren’t you just being alarmist? We’ve been through bad stuff before as a country and always got through it.
A: Yes we have, but I urge you to remember this irrefutable historical truth. All predictions of social collapse come true – eventually.


I will leave you with Steve's Four Rules of Power, distilled from observations of totalitarian movements contemporary and historical. Listen, remember, and see if this doesn’t explain a lot of otherwise crazy stuff.

Demonstrate your power over others by:
1) Making them constantly afraid of giving offense unintentionally.
2) Making them give up cherished customs, symbols, pastimes, relationships.
3) Making them pay lip service to ideas of breathtaking absurdity.
4) Making them do things that disgust and repel them.
 

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Science, Culture, & Humanities / Older column on wokeness
« on: August 21, 2023, 07:25:10 AM »
Are you awoke yet?
By Steve Browne

Oh dear, Dr. Suess has been cancelled! What shall we read to our children?

Well, not exactly. The Suess trust has removed a very few of the very large canon of children’s literature because they have caricatures of Chinese and Africans considered offensive.

Fact is, though some of the criticism is kind of odd, “Chinese kids eat with sticks” (they do), the illustrations of Africans with bones through their topknots are pretty cringe-worthy.

I’m old enough I used to see caricatures like this in Saturday morning cartoons. And I remember Popeye punching sneering buck-toothed Japanese sailors over the horizon in the re-cycled WWII-era cartoons.

My impression is that contemporary Japanese find these caricatures amusing rather than offensive, and if they do get woke we can always dig up the historical woodcut images 19th century Japanese artists made portraying Commodore Perry and his men as gross barbarians with huge noses.

But now Looney Tunes has consigned Pepe le Pew to the trash heap of history for behavior considered “rapey,” or as some say – French.
(I’m only half-joking. I grew up with French kids and I remember they simply assumed a woman who resisted their advances was just making a pro forma protest for modesty’s sake. And fairly often they were right.)
But the Pepe is more complicated than it seems. The female cat who was the object of his affections was repelled by his smell, and when he is doused with perfume the roles reverse and she starts chasing him.
She is obviously Odor-ist!

We might have seen this coming after the announcement that a musical number, “Baby It’s Cold Outside,” performed by Ricardo Montalban and Esther Williams (Neptune’s Daughter, 1949) is not a light-hearted song of flirtation and seduction, but rape with the aid of drugs. (“Hey what’s in this drink?”)

But moving on. Al Jolson classics, not going to see him on classic movie channels anymore. Not in blackface at any rate.

And now that I think of it, there’s an old Bing Crosby movie “Dixie” (1943) which we’ve got to archive. It’s about the songwriter who composed the song Dixie. It has a scene where two actors have to invent blackface performance after blacking each other’s eyes in a fight. And though it’s set in the antebellum South it doesn’t have a word to say about the injustice of slavery.

OK, so we’ve had a lot of fun at the expense of the Social Justice Warriors and their crusade to remove all that is racist, sexist, whatever-ist from our culture. But now folks are getting irritated and are starting to get downright mad.

So what’s going on?

We have a history, and not all of it is pretty or in the best of taste. Otherwise good people held what we now consider objectionable attitudes and opinions.
Which leads to the question, are we going to hide that history? Put it in vaults you need special permission to enter? Erase it from the experience of our children and only let them learn about it in college?

Oh, that’s right. Safe spaces…

Well here’s what I think is happening. Colleges are turning out large numbers of people who assume they have the right to leadership roles in society.

Trouble is, there’s not enough of those roles to go around, creating what Russian-American author Peter Turchin calls “an overproduction of elites.”

As a result we have an overabundance of arrogant holier-than-thou busybodies looking for something, anything to justify telling you what attitudes to have, opinions to hold, and what to do with your time.

I think it could be just that simple.




 


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Science, Culture, & Humanities / Re: Steve Browne's columns
« on: August 05, 2023, 07:58:50 AM »
In view of the latest indictment I dusted off this old column:

The Unwritten Constitution
By Steve Browne
Not long ago I stumbled across an interesting factoid about constitutions. Of all sovereign states with constitutions around the world, only half have been functioning for more than 19 years.
The Constitution of the United States was ratified in 1788, making it the oldest codified constitution in the world.
The Republic of San Marino has a written constitution dating back to 1600, but experts in such matters have defined a difference between “written” and “codified” constitutions.
Codified constitutions tend to occur as a result of the founding of a new kind of government or a new nation.
A couple of perfectly nice countries, the UK and New Zealand, have no written constitutions.
A constitution is the basic and highest law of the land, which all other laws are measured against. If found to be in contradiction to the constitution, a law must be discarded as ‘unconstitutional.’
The constitution itself cannot be changed “by ordinary processes of legislation” in Thomas Jefferson’s words.
It is of course possible, even common, for governments to violate their own constitutions without going through the formal processes of amendment. Strict constructionists will point out the U.S. government does all kinds of things not specifically authorized by the Constitution, which would seem to be in violation of the Tenth Amendment, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.”
And I’ve never understood how a draft could be constitutional under the 13th Amendment, “Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction,” but the Supreme Court does not agree.
But the nice thing about a written constitution is that no matter how disregarded it may be, it’s still down in black and white for a later generation to rediscover.
But what concerns me is the violation of certain unwritten customs that aren’t formally parts of the Constitution.
The first example that comes to mind was Franklin Roosevelt running for unprecedented third and fourth terms.
Two terms was a precedent established by George Washington when he could easily have had as many as he liked. It was customary until FDR, and made law only with the passage of the 22nd Amendment.
But lately there has been more disregard of tacitly understood customs around our Constitution.
Obama disregarded presidential protocol during his term by blaming his predecessor for “the mess I inherited,” and after his term by staying in Washington and setting up what amounts to a shadow government – which is a  perfectly normal practice of parliamentary systems but until now not done in America.
Another unwritten custom has been, an incoming administration does not prosecute the loser of the election or the previous administration.
Though it might seem justice demands it there are just too many ways that can go south.
During his first campaign Trump alluded to Hillary going to jail, but did not follow through.
And now after challenging the validity of election results, something even Nixon didn’t do after dodgy election results, there is much talk of prosecuting Trump.
It doesn’t matter what you think of Trump or his attempt to challenge the election, that’s a dangerous road to go down.


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Thanks Guys. I'm still learning my way around the controls here but I'm going to start a topic "Steve Browne's columns."

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Science, Culture, & Humanities / Steve Browne's columns
« on: July 30, 2023, 07:39:55 AM »
The monsters among us
By Steve Browne

James Gordon Meek is a paragon among journalists: ABC news senior producer, senior counter-terrorism advisor to the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security, winner or two Emmy awards, and the Foley Foundation World Press Freedom Award. And he is a monster.
Meek has pleaded guilty to child pornography charges in a plea deal after the FBI received a tip from Dropbox about images of the sexual abuse of children on his account.
But there’s more not referenced in the charges. Meek has evidently used social media to get minors to send him nudes and seems to have been trying for meetups.
And most disturbing, so disturbing I was at first inclined to dismiss it as sensationalism, he allegedly asked someone on a chat ap, “Have you ever raped a toddler girl? It’s amazing.”
Has he actually done this? He has spent time in Third World countries where the most perverted appetites can be indulged for a price.
Meek is facing charges which carry a mandatory minimum of five years, and potentially up to 40 years.
For those salivating at the thought of “prison justice” I hate to tell you but a friend, an investigator who has donated countless hours to child protection, tells me it’s a myth. Your status in prison is largely determined by how tough you are.
What’s terrifying about this is, Meek functioned in society without anybody suspecting he was a monster until he got careless with evidence.
We know monsters live among us. Sometimes we recognize them from a feeling there’s something “off” about them.
A Facebook friend told me he once had an encounter with someone who turned out to be a serial killer and knew within a minute he was somehow bent.
I once worked with a guy who murdered an old man who stopped to help him when his car broke down one night after he’d robbed a convenience store. No one at work was at all surprised.
On the other hand I once briefly met a fellow I immediately liked who I later found out was killed by his own daughter – and the Grand Jury no-billed her after learning he was a monster.
The Wichitaw BTK killer murdered 10 people over a period of 30 years and probably would have murdered many more but for his egotistical habit of taunting police and media by sending detailed descriptions of the crimes.
His wife and children are still dealing with the fact their loving husband and father was a monster.
We know ordinary people are capable of terrible things under stress. We know potentially decent human beings can be warped by their environment growing up. And those of us who study history know it’s normal for people to behave mostly decently towards people in their own tribe, but often badly towards outsiders.
And anyone capable of honest introspection knows we are all capable of self-justification when our self-interest is at stake.
But what are we to make of those whose motivation appears to be evil for its own sake? Who get nothing from their acts but the delight they experience from destroying the lives of the innocent and helpless?
Our therapeutic society is ill-equipped to deal with the concept of evil. We like to think of anti-social behavior as the result of a sickness of some kind. It’s a comforting idea because it lets us believe it’s within our control, that we can fix it.
But we can’t always fix it, and that’s terrifying.

 





 

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OK

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Science, Culture, & Humanities / Steve Browne's columns
« on: July 25, 2023, 04:25:54 AM »
(Column)
Country boys and dwarves
By Steve Browne

“I got a shotgun a rifle and a four wheel drive and a country boy can survive!”
Are those the lyrics America is currently obsessing over in a song by Jason Aldean extoling the virtues of small towns?
Oops no, that’s Hank Williams Jr.’s hit single from 1982. So what’s the difference?
The difference is I’d actually heard of Hank Williams Jr. I became aware of Jason Aldean only after all the fol-de-rol about the music video of his song Try That in a Small Town. (The song itself was released in May.)
So as soon as I heard about the controversy I went right over to YouTube and played it.
Apparently so did a lot of other people because it’s currently at the top of the charts in spite of being banned on Country Music Television. Which is now experiencing a backlash from country singers standing in solidarity with Aldean and demanding their videos be removed from CMT.
Critics claim its message is racist and promotes vigilantism. Aldean protests it’s about how in small towns, "We all have each other's backs and we look out for each other."
The fact anyone can interpret, "Sucker punch somebody on a sidewalk / carjack an old lady at a red light" as racist is kind of creepy, and frankly sounds pretty racist. Like somebody mentions crime and you automatically jump to the conclusion they’re talking about race?
On the other hand, "Well, try that in a small town / See how far you make it down the road / Around here we take care of our own” does sound like it approves of people taking the law into their own hands.
But if you want a song that is straight up about personal vengeance in a small town it’s hard to beat Martina McBride’s 1995 song Independence Day, about a battered woman who sets the house on fire, immolating herself and her husband.
And half a country and worlds away from the country music scene, Disney is getting very nervous about their live action remake of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. It seems they’ve removed all but one of the dwarfs and replaced six of them with a highly diverse cast.
So striving to make a version promoting diversity and inclusion, Disney has excluded – and denied jobs, to the smallest minority in the acting community.
Uh, maybe I shouldn’t have phrased it that way…
Obviously this is all about “message” in entertainment, bringing to mind Samuel Goldwyn’s advice, “Pictures are for entertainment, messages should be delivered by Western Union.”
But messages have been in entertainment since the first storytellers sat by the fire and gathered the tribe around.
The Trojan Women was written and staged by Euripides a year after he participated in the massacre of the men of Melos during the Peloponesian War. It was translated to film in 1971, and widely interpreted as a commentary on the Vietnam war.
Obviously it stands well as entertainment with a timeless message about the horrors of war and the plight of the conquered.
I could cite a lot of excellent movies and songs with messages. So why is it some make your heart swell and your eyes tear up, and some just irritate the heck out of you?
I want to say it’s the difference between subtle and hitting you over the head with the message but The Trojan Women isn’t subtle at all, it reaches into your chest and rips your heart out.
Could it be about the coherence of the message itself? I wish I knew.







 

13
Politics & Religion / Intra group bonds; Movement building
« on: July 23, 2023, 06:44:51 AM »
Us anthropologists have noticed a couple ways groups create infra-group bonds, whether it's a fraternity, secret society, or a movement.

1) Shared taboo breaking,
2) Ritual torture

Looked at this way the attempts to normalize pedophilia and surgical mutilation of children begins to make sense.

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Post-op suicides aren't the least surprising. From a recent column:

If you are an adult and choose to go this route, that’s your choice in the land of the free. But you will never become a real woman (man), you will never have normal sexual functioning, never become a parent, and no normal straight man (woman) will want to have sex with you.

“Trans rights” is nonsense. You have all the rights of your fellow citizens. What you demand is for us to humor your delusion.

Archived here: http://www.stephenwbrowne.com/2023/04/humoring-delusions/

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An essay from 1970. Eric Hoffer deserves to be rediscovered by all Americans. I have (ahem-ahem) introduced Hoffer to the academic establishment of two countries,  Poland and Belarus. For that I think many of my sins may be forgiven.

Whose Country is America?

NOWHERE at present is there such a measureless loathing of educated people for their country as in America. An excellent historian thinks Americans are “the most frightening people in the world,” and our foremost philologist sees America as “the most aggressive power in the world, the greatest threat to peace and to international cooperation.” Others call America a “pig heaven,” “a monster with 200 million heads,” “a cancer on the body of mankind.”

Novelists, playwrights, poets, essayists and philosophers depict America as the land of the dead—a country where sensitive souls are starved and flayed, where nothing nourishes and everything hurts. Nowhere, they say, is there such a boring monotony: monotony Of talk, monotony of ideas, monotony of aim, monotony of outlook on the world. One American writer says: “America is no place for an artist. A corn‐fed hog enjoys a better life than a creative artist.” One she‐intellectual maintains that “the quality of American life is an insult to the possibilities of human growth.”

It is hard to believe that this savage revulsion derives from specific experiences with persons and places. What is there in America that prevents an educated person from shaping his life, from making the most of his inborn endowments? With all its faults and blemishes, this country gives a man elbowroom to do what is nearest to his heart. It is incredible how easy it is here to cut oneself off from vulgarity, conformity. speciousness. and other corrupting influences and infections. For those who want to be left alone to realize their capacities and talents, this is an ideal country.

The trouble is, of course, that the alienated intellectual does not want to be left alone. He wants to be listened to and be taken seriously. He wants to influence affairs, have a hand in making history, and feel important. He is free to speak and write as he pleases, and can probably make himself heard and read more easily than one who would defend America. But he can neither sway elections nor shape policy. Even when his excellence as a writer, artist, scholar, scientist or educator is generally recognized and rewarded he does not feel himself part of the power structure. In no other country has there been so little liaison between men of words and the men of action who exercise power. The body of intellectuals in America has never been integrated with or congenial to the politicians and business men who make things happen. Indeed, the uniqueness of modem America derives in no small part from the fact that America has kept intellectuals away from power and paid little attention to their political [opinions].

The nineteen‐sixties have made it patent that much of the intellectual’s dissent is fueled by a hunger for power. The appearance of potent allies—militant blacks and students —has emboldened the intellectual to come out into the open. He still feels homeless in America, but the spectacle of proud authority, in cities and on campuses, always surrendering before threats of violence, is to him a clear indication that middle‐class society is about to fall apart, and he is all set to pick up the pieces.
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There is no doubt that in our permissive society the intellectual has far more liberty than he can use; and the more his liberty and the less his capacity to make use of it, the louder his clamor for power—power to deprive other people of liberty.

THE intellectual’s allergy to America shows itself with particular clarity in what has happened to many foreign intellectuals who found asylum here during the Hitler decade. It is legitimate to assume that they had no anti‐American preconceptions when they arrived. They were, on the contrary, predisposed to see what was best in their host country. Though no one has recorded what Herbert Marcuse said when he landed in New York in 1934, it is safe to assume that he did not see Americans as one‐dimensional men, and did not equate our tolerance with oppression, our freedom with slavery, and our good nature with simple‐minded‐ness.

We have a record of what some other foreign intellectuals said when they arrived in the nineteen‐thirties. It is worth quoting in full the words of Olga Schnitzler, the widow of Arthur Schnitzler: “So much is here to learn and to see. Everyone has been given an opportunity. Everyone who has not been completely wornout experiences here a kind of rebirth. Everyone feels what a grandiose, complex and broad‐minded country America is, how well and free one can live among these people without perfidy and malice. Yes, we have lost a homeland, but we have found a world.”

Once they had settled down and found their place, many of these intellectuals began to feel constrained and stifled by the forwardness and the mores of the plebeian masses. They missed the aristocratic climate of the Old World. Inevitably, too, they became disdainful of our lowbrow, practical intelligence. They began to doubt whether Americans had the high‐caliber intelligence to solve the problems of a complex, difficult age. Hardly one of them bethought himself that in Europe, when intellectuals of their kind had a hand in shaping and managing affairs, things had not gone too well. There was something that prevented them from sensing the unprecedented nature of the American experiment; that the rejected of Europe have come here together, tamed a savage continent in an incredibly short time and, unguided by intellectuals, fashioned the finest society on a large scale the world has so far seen.
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SCRATCH an intellectual and you find a would‐be aristocrat who loathes the sight, the sound and the smell of common folk. Professor Marcuse has lived among us for more than 30 years and now, in old age, his disenchantment with this country is spilling over into book after book. He is offended by the intrusion of the vulgar, by the failure of egalitarian America to keep common people in their place. He is frightened by “the degree to which the population is allowed to break the peace where there is still peace and silence, to be ugly and uglify things, to ooze familiarity and to offend against good form.” The vulgar invade “the small reserved sphere of existence” and compel exquisite Marcusian souls to partake of their and smells.

To a shabby would‐be aristocrat like Professor Marcuse there something fundamentally wrong with a society in which the master and the worker, the typist and the boss’s laughter do not live totally disparate Ives. Everything good in America seems to him a sham and a fraud.

AN interesting peculiarity of present‐day dissenting intellectuals is their lack of animus toward the rich. They are against the Government, the Congress, the Army and the police, and against corporations and unions, but hardly anything is being said or written against “the money changers in the temple,” “the economic royalists,” “the malefactors of great wealth” and “the maniacs wild for gold” who were the butt of vituperation in the past. Indeed, there is nowadays a certain rapport between the rich and the would‐be revolutionaries. The outlandish role the rich are playing in the affluent society is one of the surprises of our time. Though the logic of it seems now fairly evident, I doubt whether anyone had foreseen that affluence would radicalize the upper rich and the lowest poor and nudge them toward an alliance against those in the middle. What ever we have of revolution just now is financed the rich.

In order to feel rich, you have to have poor people around you. In an affluent society, riches lose their uniqueness—people no longer find fulfillment in being rich. And when the rich cannot feel rich they begin to have misgivings about success—not enough to give up the fruits of success, but enough to feel guilty, and emote soulfully about the grievances of the disadvantaged, and the sins of the status quo. It seems that every time a millionaire opens his mouth nowadays he confesses the sins of our society in public.
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Now, it so happens that the rich do indeed have a lot to feel guilty about. They live in exclusive neighborhoods, send their children to private schools, and use every loophole to avoid paying taxes. But what they confess in public are not their private sins, but the sins of society, the sins of the rest of us, and it is our breasts they are beating into a pulp. They feel guilty and ashamed, they say, because the mass of people, who do most of the work and pay much of the taxes, are against integrated schools and housing, and do not tax themselves to the utmost to fight the evils that beset our cities. We are discovering that in an affluent society the rich have a monopoly of righteousness.

Moreover, the radicalized rich have radical children. There is no generation gap here. The most violent cliques of the New Left are made up of the children of the rich. The Weathermen…have not a member with a workingman’s back ground. The behavior of the extremist young makes sense when seen as the behavior of spoiled brats used to instant fulfillment who expect the solutions to life’s problems to be there on demand. And just as in former days aristocratic sprigs horse whipped peasants, so at present the children of the rich are riding rough shod over community sensibilities. The rich parents applaud and subsidize their revolutionary children, and probably brag about them at dinner parties.

As I said, the alienated rich are one of the surprises of our time. It is not surprising to be told that America is a country where intellectuals are least at home. But it is startling to realize that the rich are not, and probably never have been, wholly at ease in this country. The fact that it is easy to get rich in America has not made it a rich man’s country. The rich have always had it better elsewhere—better service, more deference, and more leisure and fun. In America, the rich have not known how to savor their riches, and many of them have not known how to behave and have come to a bad end.

There is a story about a British intellectual who traveled through this country toward the end of the last century. He was appalled by the monotony and unimaginativeness of the names of the towns he saw through the train window: Thomas ville, Richardsville, Harrysville, Mar ysville and so on. He had not an inkling of the import of what he was seeing: namely, that for the first time in history common people—any Tom, Dick and Harry—could build a town and name it after his own or his wife’s name. At one station, an old Irishwoman got on the train and sat next to him. When she heard his muttering and hissing she said: “This is a blessed country, sir. I think God made it for the poor.” Crevecceur, in the 18th century, saw America as an asylum where “the poor of Europe have by some means met together.” The poor everywhere have looked on America as their El Dorado. They voted for it with their legs by coming over in their
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Yet during the nineteen‐sixties, poverty became one of the chief problems that plague this country: one of several nagging problems—like race relations, violence, drugs, inflation—which defy solution. From being a land of opportunity for the poor, America has become a dead end street for some 15 million unemployables‐80 per cent of them white, and most of them trapped in the cores of big cities. Money, better housing, and special schooling have little effect. Our society is showing itself unduly awkward in the attempt to turn the chronically poor into productive, useful citizens. Whereas, in the not too distant past, it was axiomatic that society lived at the expense of the poor, the present‐day poor, like the Roman proletariat, live at the expense of society.

WE have been transferred by affluence to a psychological age. Impersonal factors, including money, no longer play a decisive role in human affairs. It seems that, by mastering things, we have drained things of their potency to shape men’s lives. It is remarkable that common people are aware of this fact. They know that at present money cannot cure crime, poverty, etc., whereas the social doctors go on prescribing an injection of so many billions for every social ailment.

In the earliest cities, suburbs made their appearance as a refuge for dropouts who could not make the grade in the city. When eventually the cities decayed, the suburbs continued as the earliest villages. In our cities, the process has been reversed. The dropouts are stagnating in the cores of the cities, while people who are ideally suited for city life seek refuge in the suburbs. The indications are that we shall not have viable cities until we lure the chronically poor out of the cities and induce the exiled urbanites to return.

The diffusion of affluence has accelerated the absorption of the majority of workingmen into the middle class. The unemployable poor, left behind, feel isolated and ex posed, and it is becoming evident that a middle‐class society, which hugs the conviction that everyone can take care of himself, is singularly inept in helping those who cannot help themselves. If the rich cannot feel rich in an affluent society, the poor have never felt poorer.
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WHOSE country, then, is America? It is the country of the common — the common men and women, a good 70 per cent of the population — who do most of the work, pay much of the taxes, crave neither power nor importance, and want to be left alone to live pleasurable humdrum lives. “The founders of the United States,” said Lord Charnwood, “did deliberately aspire to found a commonwealth in which common men and women should count for more than elsewhere.”

Again and again, you come up against the mystery of what happens to common folk when they land on our shores. It is like a homecoming. They find here their natural habitat, their ideal milieu that brings their energies and capacities into full play.

Tasks that in other countries are reserved for a select minority, for a specially trained elite, are in this country performed by every Tom, Dick and Harry. Not only did common Americans build and name towns, but they also founded states, propagated new faiths, commanded armies, wrote books, and ran for the highest office. It is this that has made America unprecedentedly new.

IT tickled me no end that the astronauts who landed on the moon were not elite‐conscious intellectuals but lowbrow ordinary Americans. It has been the genius of common Americans to achieve the momentous in an unmomentous matter‐of-fact way. If space exploration re mains in their keeping, they will soon make of it an everyday routine accessible to all.

Prof. Victor C. Ferkiss, author of “Technological Man,” sees the astronauts as “thoroughly conventional and middle‐class and essentially dull people who would make such nice neighbors and such unlikely friends.” Could these, he wonders, “be the supermen whom the race had struggled for a million years to produce?”

The intellectuals call this giving access to the vulgar—vulgarization. The intellectuals’ inclination is to complicate things, to make them so abstruse and difficult that they are accessible only to the initiated few. Where the intellectuals are in power, prosaic tasks become Promethean undertakings. I have yet to meet an intellectual who truly believes that common people can govern themselves and run things without outstanding leaders. In the longshore men’s union the intellectuals have a nervous breakdown anytime a common, barely literate longshoreman runs for office and gets elected.
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TO me it seems axiomatic that the common people everywhere are our natural allies, and that our chief contribution to the advancement of mankind should be the energizing and activation of common folk. We must learn how to impart to common people everywhere the technological, political and social skills that would enable them to dispense with the tutorship of the upper classes and the intellectuals. We must deflate the pretensions of self‐appointed elites. These elites will hate us no matter what we do, and it is legitimate for us to help dump them into the dust bin of history.

Our foreign aid to backward countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America should be tailored to the needs of common people rather than of the elites. The elites hanker for the trappings of the 20th century. They want steel mills, airlines, skyscrapers, etc. Let them get these trappings from elitist Russia. Our gift to the people in backward countries should be the capacity for self‐help. We must show them how to get bread, human dignity and strength by their own efforts. We must know how to stiffen their backbone so that they will insist on getting their full share of the good life and not allow them selves to be sacrificed to the Moloch of a mythical future.

There is an America hidden in the soil of every country and in the soul of every people. It is our task to help common people everywhere discover their America at home.
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16
I have a theory about language change. See what you think of it.

Anthropologists have now had enough time doing fieldwork with pre-literate cultures to notice their languages change quite rapidly. It seems literacy slows the rate of change. But still,  it's been noted that English changed more in the 200 years between Chaucer and Shakespeare than in the 400+ years from Shakespeare to us.

I've wondered if at some point in the history of a language a gifted author or group of authors creates a body of literature that sets the standard and somehow "fixes" the language in place so that it doesn't change out of comprehensibility, at least for a very long time.

For English it would be the Shakespeare plays and the King James Bible.

For Polish it might be the works of Mikowaj Rej (1505-1569) the first poet to write exclusively in Polish. (Some say because his Latin wasn't very good.)
"A niechaj narodowie wżdy postronni znają,
iż Polacy nie gęsi, iż swój język mają."
   

"Let it by all and sundry foreign nations be known
that Poles speak not Anserine but a tongue of their own."

17
Politics & Religion / Re: Crisis in the Ruling Class
« on: July 16, 2023, 05:34:24 AM »
Sorry all, I'm not a techie and still a newbie to self-publishing. 'Crisis' is available on Amazon on Kindle format and paperback on demand, which could admittedly use a reformatting of the margins.

18
This is my weekly column. One of those that will cause everyone to hate me. :)

Sound of Freedom opened July 4 in a limited number of theaters with comparably  little advertising and immediately beat out Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

Wow.

So lets get some questions out of the way.

Is it a good movie?

Yes, very good. The cinematography is excellent, the acting superb, the plot is gut-wrenching and the horrors it depicts are hinted at rather than shown explicitly, like all the best horror movies. They get more emotion out of a man closing a curtain than any slasher flick. This is the kind of movie the audience sits through so silent you could hear a pin drop.

Is it QAnon adjacent?

What the heck does that mean? Does it promote nutty conspiracy theories? No. Does the lead actor Jim Caveziel believe in some? Maybe, so what? Alec Guiness thought Star Wars was juvenile trash and still did a heckuva job as Obi-wan Kenobi.

Some of that impression seems to come from the fact Caveziel in interviews conflates the very real trafficking of children for prostitution and porn with the just as real African practice of using body parts of children and albinos for magic. They’re both real horrors, but not the same thing.

Does it promote religion?

Noooooo, not really. There is a religious undertone but the phrase “God’s children are not for sale” occurs only three times in the film, and there is one reference to a religious epiphany when the character Vampiro describes his road to Damascus moment that led him to quit the cartels and start rescuing children.

But if you believe the notion that pedophilia is… you know, wrong, is a purely religious position then I guess it does.

Is it based on a true story?

Well there lies the problem. One source, an investigator with years of experience in child protection, tells me Operation Underground Railway is kind of dodgy.

Do they exaggerate the magnitude of the problem and the effectiveness of their operations?

Possibly. Which would not be the least bit unusual in any advocacy organization. So how exaggerated does it have to be before you consider the problem not worth your time and attention?

But my source tells me they are vague about how the children they allegedly rescue were rescued. When pressed they say by passing information on to law enforcement, which is not a bad thing but not nearly as dramatic as elaborate stings and commando style-raids.
Worse, they have not been transparent about the collection and disbursement of funds, as required by law for non-profit organizations.
Internet sources say they stage stings for potential donors in countries where prostitution is legal and there is no age of consent. I have no idea how to evaluate that claim.

But some of the criticism is just off-the-wall weird. Rolling Stone called it, “A Superhero movie for dads with brain-worms.”
Even if the movie were nothing but a rollicking good adventure story, that attitude is really creepy.

Reactions like that have convinced lots of people the movie has terrified Hollywood pedophiles.

Nonsense. I have no doubt there are lots of Hollywood pedophiles, but they’re not terrified. In their arrogance they think they are untouchable.

What terrifies Hollywood is that a movie this good, this popular, and this profitable was made on a budget of $14.5 million.

The cost of movie-quality cameras, editing equipment, and even CGI has fallen to the point what matters in making a popular movie is the acting and the writing. Precisely what Hollywood has lately so conspicuously failed to deliver.




19
Politics & Religion / Ben & Jerry's and indigenous land
« on: July 13, 2023, 10:38:01 AM »
This was my weekly column inspired by Ben & Jerry's virtue signaling about "stolen indigenous land."

Musings on property
By Steve Browne

Well Ben & Jerry’s 4th of July announcement that America was built on stolen indigenous land and should give it back was well received in at least some quarters.
Chief Don Stevens of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation in Vermont noted the corporate headquarters was located on Western Abenaki land and urged opening a dialog with Ben & Jerry’s to work together to uplift their people.
The company itself was sold to multinational corporate giant Unilever in 2000, but founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield are still employed in non-managerial positions under an agreement whereby the ice cream company maintains its political and social activism.
I urge a look at the company’s history. Ben and Jerry are said to be socialists of some sort, but have succeeded very well as venture capitalists. They actually do try to put their money where their mouths are, whatever you think of any given stance they take. (They attempted to end sales in parts of Israel they consider occupied land for example.)
Frequently of course, economic reality catches up with them. After supporting defund the police and the July 4 tweet the parent company has lost an estimated $2.5 billion in market cap due to boycotts.
We shall see what happens, but in the meantime I was prompted to consider the nature of property and how we look at it.
So what is this thing we call “mine” as opposed to “thine”?
I think we probably have a broad general agreement that property consists of: the right to use it, the right to exclude others from using it, the right to the usufruct of it, and the right to sell it.
The devil of course, is in the details. Anyone who has sat in on a permit hearing for a proposed pig farm knows there are some pretty significant hoops one has to jump through to use your land in certain ways.
The whole concept of property in land is actually a late development in human history and the source of a lot of conflict between cultures. (“Late” as in the last 10,000 years or so, since the beginning of agriculture.)
The English philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) came up with a rule of thumb of what defines property: what is found in a state of nature that man “mixes his labor with.”
Interestingly Locke used the example of “the Indian that hunteth the deer” and thereby mixes his labor with it. That is he changes the state the deer was found in, from alive to food. But he does not change the land the deer lives on.
The indigenous peoples of America were quite familiar with changing the nature of land. Half the world’s food crops originated in the Americas, greatly changed by generations of selective breeding from their natural state.
But the Americas are poor in large domestic animals and so agriculture was constrained by lack of a crucial bottleneck resource – manure. The great civilizations of Mexico and Peru could work around this, but in North America horticulturalists had to move their gardens frequently due to soil exhaustion.
When Europeans arrived they brought livestock that produced large quantities of… you get the idea.
And with their livestock and all their… stuff, they brought the idea of permanent land tenure which conflicted with indigenous notions of temporary stewardship. Not for the first time, high civilizations have been in conflict with nomads in the Americas, Asia, and Europe for millennia.
The different notions of what constitutes ownership in land created problems which persist to this day.








 

20
Politics & Religion / Re: Stephen Browne's thread
« on: July 10, 2023, 10:08:06 AM »
Thanks!
Still learning my way around the controls.

21
Politics & Religion / Re: Stephen Browne's thread Correction
« on: July 10, 2023, 06:50:57 AM »
"I've smuggled cash to support the families of imprisoned dissident in Bulgaria,"

Should read "in BELARUS."

23
Politics & Religion / Re: Stephen Browne's thread - who am I?
« on: July 09, 2023, 07:59:57 AM »
Hi all, I'm Steve Browne.
I'm 72 years old, divorced single dad of two kids, a son 21, and a daughter 16.
After working for years as a garbageman and sewage treatment plant operator and going to university part time, I graduated with an MA in anthropology in 1991 and immediately took off to live in Eastern Europe.
Over the next 13 years I lived and worked in Poland, Bulgaria, and Serbia, traveled widely throughout the region and "made my year" in Saudi Arabia.
I've smuggled cash to support the families of imprisoned dissidents in Belarus, wrote an English program to teach advanced students how to read the slightly archaic dialect in documents important to the history of political liberty, and in 1997 was elected Honorary Member of the Yugoslav Movement for the Protection of Human Rights.
Along the way I got into some scrapes and on one occasion learned what jackboots and rubber truncheons applied to tender places feels like.
I started writing professionally about the things I'd seen and done, like marching down the yellow brick road with the people of Sofia, Bulgaria in the protests against the last coalition government or covering the election that brought down the Milosevic regime from the streets of Belgrade.
Well I was either selling this stuff for beer money or giving it away to journals "of much passion and small circulation." Even I could tell this was stupid so I returned with growing family to the states to study journalism formally.
Since then I've served an apprenticeship in small rural newspapers where I covered... basically everything but sports, but concentrating on city and county government - which after Eastern Europe I find fascinating.
Now semi-retired I work as a stringer covering county government in a couple of southwest Minnesota counties and have a weekly column syndicated in all of three newspapers, which you'll all be seeing more of.
I also practice martial arts, mainly a Wing Chun-derived style and of course FMA.
Please to make your acquaintance.

24
Politics & Religion / Crisis in the Ruling Class
« on: June 30, 2023, 05:48:55 AM »
This is the blurb for my book available on Amazon:

This is the print companion to a series of video lectures I started in 2017. The theory has evolved as I discovered others thinking along the same lines. Basically the important points are:
- There is a ruling class because every complex society has a ruling class.
- The historical functions of a ruling class are: arms, land (production), and knowledge.
- A ruling class can be stable as long as it fulfills those functions, loves or at least identifies its self-interest with the country, and is open enough to admit the ambitious but not too open.
- We have a ruling class which is unfit to rule. They do not fight, they are increasingly invested in rent-seeking and influence peddling rather than wealth production, and the knowledge they peddle is crap. (Anything ending in "-Studies.)
- They not only do not love their country, and their civilization, they appear to hate it.
- They have fostered a generation which believes they are owed a place in the ruling class for the price of getting a college degree and holding all the correct opinions within a very narrow range of permissible disagreement.
- They are destroying this country in their desire to feel important.

https://www.amazon.com/Crisis-Ruling-Class-Falling-Dragging/dp/B09TN1J9JN/ref=sr_1_1crid=3VMGX9BT9H19Y&keywords=crisis+in+the+ruling+class+steve+browne&qid=1688129184&sprefix=Crisis+in+the+Ruling+%2Caps%2C150&sr=8-1

25
Politics & Religion / I was told I could promote my book so here...
« on: June 27, 2023, 04:16:59 PM »
It's titled Crisis in the Ruling Class: How a Ruling Class Not Fit to Rule is Falling and Dragging the Country Down With Them

The theme is pretty well summarized on the Amazon page.

https://www.amazon.com/Crisis-Ruling-Class-Falling-Dragging/dp/B09TN1J9JN/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ZUX96IQVP2XJ&keywords=crisis+in+the+ruling+class+steve+browne&qid=1687907505&sprefix=Crisis+in+the+ruling%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1


26
Politics & Religion / Introducing myself
« on: November 16, 2015, 08:50:58 AM »
Hi all, very pleased to meet you and a special thanks to Marc Denny for inviting me to this forum.

I'm Stephen Browne. Live in Oklahoma where I'm raising my two children alone. Journalist by profession, right now taking time off to write my own stuff before I run out of funds. My current projects are: "Contrarian Libertarian," and "Thinking Like a Journalist."

This is the bio I use for my self-syndicated column (which so far has one subscriber in a farm journal in the upper Midwest).

Stephen W. Browne is an award-winning reporter and columnist, famous in rural newspapers of the Midwest where he's known as, "Steve who?" He entered journalism by accident while living and working in Eastern Europe from 1991 to 2004, when he met a decayed Austrian count in a bar who said, "Gee Steve, you sure can talk, can you write?"
His very first published and paid for article about Polish health services provoked a call from the then-Minister of Health demanding to know, "Who is this Steve Browne guy and why is he saying these terrible things about our wonderful Polish hospitals?"
He is the author of two books for English students: "Word Pictures: English as it is REALLY Used," published in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and Novosibirsk, Russia, and "English Language Humor: Puns, Play on Words, Spoonerisms, and Shaggy Dog Stories," privately circulated among English teachers and students in brown paper bags around the world.
He possesses a constitution inability to stay out of trouble which resulted in him being elected an Honorary Member of the Yugoslav Movement for the Protection of Human Rights in 1997.
He is currently living with his two children in his native Midwest, which he considers "the most interesting foreign country I have ever lived in." (He stole that line from Kipling, he loves to kipple.)

His blog “Rants and Raves” appears regularly on newspaper websites across the Midwest but doesn't pay. He publishes for Kindle on Amazon, or at least will when he figures out how to download, and teaches martial arts out of his garage, backyard or basement as the case may be.

I also have two video presentations available on Youtube.

"The Progressive Mind" an analysis of why the most affluent and educated people in the West hate the civilization that made them the most fortunate individuals in the history of mankind, and want to destroy it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nqk7_e5Pv4c

"Let's Have a Kipple" readings of selected poems of Rudyard Kipling.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04CXO0_qwS4

27
Politics & Religion / My op-ed on the Paris attacks
« on: November 16, 2015, 08:37:23 AM »
Paris

By Steve Browne


Well, it’s happened again to everyone’s shock and horror, but to no one’s surprise.

Jihadists struck at several locations around Paris. The latest death toll stands at 129.

Some of the attackers are dead. More believed responsible for planning are being sought.

France reacted by bombing areas held by ISIS in the Middle East.

Satisfying for sure, but not likely to affect anything in the short run.

Other reactions include cries of “false flag!”

Some people love this one. It makes them feel wise and powerful to know they have the world figured out when all us peasants are still in the dark.

I have a couple of observations. One is that it violates the Principle of Parsimony expressed in William of Occam’s famous razor.

Paraphrased it means that of competing explanations, the simplest is most likely to be closest to the truth. In this case you have a bunch of murderous fanatics screaming they did it, they’re glad they did it, and they’ll do it again. Versus the CIA/Mossad managed to talk a bunch of peaceful Islamists into doing something they’d never have thought of on their own.

As the late Christopher Hitchens said, “What is asserted without proof may be dismissed without proof.”

Another predictable reaction is that they’re “not really Islamic.”

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the head of ISIS, has a doctorate from the Islamic University in Baghdad in Islamic studies and history. His immediate family include professors of Arabic language and rhetoric.

Could you please tell me how he’s “not Islamic” with citations from the Koran and Hadith – in Arabic with notes on translation?

Then there’s the blowback hypothesis. We caused this by our meddling in the Middle East and all the people we’ve killed there.

This argument has some merit to it. We have meddled, and continue to do so and lately our meddling has caused two large Arab Muslim countries to collapse into chaos. Iraq because we didn’t have the stamina to stay and do the imperialist peacekeeping thing after we deposed a murderous tyrant. And Libya because we knocked off a murderous but relatively well-behaved tyrant and didn’t even bother to march in and fix things.

And by the way, the U.S. did those in spite of vociferous objections from France.

One can point out that lately Muslims have killed hundreds of times more Muslims than Westerners have.

Doesn’t matter. That’s what cops call a “domestic dispute” and they hate them precisely because attempts to break up a fight often end with both parties turning on the meddler.

We could talk all day about why they hate us and miss the essential point – that they hate us, and there is probably little we can do about it. They have their reasons, but they are theirs not ours.

The attacks on Paris were well planned and involved French citizens born in the country but who do not feel themselves to be French, coordinated with fellow-jihadists outside the country.

And they will do it again.

Why? What do they hope to gain by it?

Well, sometimes they do manage to affect state policy. After the Madrid bombings in 2004 that killed 191 people and wounded 2,050, the Spanish voted out their government and withdrew the miniscule force they had in Iraq.

Big deal.

What I think they’re doing is counting coup.

The Plains Indians gave the highest honors not to warriors who killed the most enemies, but to those bold enough to ride in amongst their enemies and slap one in the most insulting way possible.

The jihadists come from a proud hyper-macho culture that sees the wealth, freedom and accomplishments of the West as deeply humiliating. They cannot hope to overcome the West by military force, but they can humiliate us back.

And no matter how much we bomb them in return, one coup counted against the West is a greater victory in their eyes.

If I am correct, this is going to go on for some time.

I would give a lot to be wrong.

 

28
Politics & Religion / Re: The Cognitive Dissonance of the left
« on: January 11, 2013, 05:23:09 AM »
(This where it belongs?)

Yes, they really hate America.


Gentlemen and ladies,

Guro Marc Denny did me the honor of inviting me on to this forum, and I've been remiss in jumping in. I'll introduce myself at greater length later, but in brief: I'm a single dad, a journalist, a martial artist (PTK and Wu Wei Gung Fu.) I lived from 1991 to 2004 in Eastern Europe: Poland (where my son was born), Bulgaria, Serbia, and traveled around the region quite a lot. I lived a year in Saudi Arabia as well.

My blog site is stephenwbrowne.com and you can find out more about me there.

The topic I'd like to get a discussion started on concerns my thesis which is briefly - yes, the left hates America, and I believe I know why.

See the first of a series I wrote about it a while back, which I really need to distill into a more succinct article, but the basic thesis is here. Two men, Abraham Lincoln and Francis Bacon showed my why the people who are arguably the most fortunate individuals in the history of the human race hate the civilization that gifted them beyond the reach of ancient kings.

http://www.stephenwbrowne.com/2006/10/western-civilization-and-its-discontents-part-1/

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