tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-42037285518423372502023-11-15T07:00:46.647-08:00Step Back and Look Again...This is basically a place for me to share my thoughts and perspective on whatever topic is currently on my mind. Expect a wide variety of topics, ranging from the existential to the practical.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger27125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-80790518342544805662017-07-12T16:40:00.001-07:002017-07-12T16:43:45.755-07:00A Brief Meandering Rant on ReligionToday, sitting in the parking lot at the head of the hiking trails waiting for the tow truck to come and rescue me, I overheard bits and pieces of a conversation between two women sitting at the benches on the other side of the lot. One of them was ranting and raving rather loudly, cursing every other word, and sounding downright hysterical. Of course, none of that bothers me. It's not like I've never gone off on a rant before (like I'm about to do here), and it's not like I'm not known to sprinkle in some expletives to emphasize my point.<br />
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What did bother me was the content of the rant. The woman was furious because someone had said to her that they didn't believe in God. "You don't fucking say that! I don't want to fucking hear that!" and on and on and on. Here was someone on an angry tirade because someone had expressed disagreement with her religion, who was also openly defying her religion's morals in public. The hypocrisy was palpable.<br />
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I am a former Evangelical Pentecostal Christian. Former. Over the past year, I have slowly, but completely and utterly, dumped dogmatic religion into the refuse bin. There are many reasons for this. This sort of shit is one of them. The Bible says, "You shall know them by their fruits.", and in my lifetime of looking at these "fruits", I have seen no evidence in them for the validity of the religion held by the fruit bearers - including when I examined my own. None.<br />
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What I have seen consistently are lives which do not match with stated beliefs beyond the superficial. Whether it's the illiterate religious redneck ranting in a parking lot because someone disagreed with their religion, or the suit-wearing bible-college grad minister who psychologically abuses, manipulates, and intellectually disembowels his congregation on a weekly basis. Or me, who tried with everything I had to play the part, to fit into the mold - and not only failed spectacularly, but destroyed my life in the process - which I am now trying to rebuild from the ground up.<br />
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And I don't want to hear the "Christians aren't perfect, they are forgiven." bullshit. This isn't imperfection. This is fraud. It's calling something "life", but when you open it up, all you find inside it is death and decay. It's claiming moral high ground, then shitting all over it wantonly. It's condemning others for arbitrary offenses while ignoring when you do the same things. It's sick.<br />
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This doesn't apply to everyone who believes in God, calls themselves a Christian, or identified with a religion. I still believe in God, or something like God. My jury is out on what that is, and if it's something I want anything to do with. Not all Christians or religious people embrace dogmatism. There are non-fundamentalists, and they are often quite sane and pleasant by comparison. They think for themselves. They treat people who disagree with them with respect. They are open to new ideas and points of view. They don't use their religion as a pretense to gaslight, brainwash, or mentally abuse people. And I hope if any such person reads this, that you understand that I'm not talking about you. But I find it very telling that, in general, the worse people are at following their religion, the better people they are.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-75476805018896334742016-11-29T03:47:00.004-08:002016-11-29T03:47:45.589-08:00Anarchy is UnnaturalThis idea that I keep hearing that anarchy is somehow "natural" is absurd. Anarchy, the absence of rulers, runs directly contrary to nature. It is not the point of least resistance, a default, or a natural state of humanity. It is the result of overcoming the base and egotistical elements of human nature which would compel you to dominate, subjugate, and exploit your fellow human beings.<br />
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Nature is full of rulers. The predator rules the prey. Members of the same species vie for dominance. Animals survive at one another's expense. Rape, theft, murder, and tyranny (if you can call them those things, since nature is amoral) are commonplace in nature and part of the natural order. Even slavery is practiced by some animals.<br />
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Sure, there is cooperation in nature. But this is something grown into, an example of overcoming the baser natural defaults. Great things happen when these defaults are overcome. But they, themselves, are the exception, not the rule.<br />
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Natural is not necessarily good. We are not like non-sapient animals with little to no moral agency. We can think about the consequences of our actions, both for ourselves and others. We can do better than the natural order. And, if you look around at the things we've built which are directly contrary to what typically occurs naturally – from cell phones to sewage systems – it's clear that's what humans do. We naturally resist the natural order, go against the point of least resistance, and create new, better orders out of the chaos.<br />
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Anarchism, a society without rulers, is the apex of social order. Humans have unwittingly strived for it for thousands of years, with numerous ups and downs along the way. It is a difficult thing to strive for, as it often comes into conflict with our other instincts – our pack mentality, our desire for security, our egos, and our need for things to feel under control. And yet, anarchy is the ultimate fulfillment of who we are – sentient, sapient, autonomous individuals. Therefore, we continue to crave it, just as we crave survival in a nature which constantly strives to snuff out our existence. And, thus, we work directly contrary to nature to fulfill our own nature against the natural order.<br /><br />[<i>Note:</i> Before someone begins quibbling about the word "nature", I am using the term here in contrast to what is "artificial". That is, I am contrasting what is created through chance with what is created through thought and intent, or something close to it. I am aware that "nature" is used many different ways. If you don't like my use of the term here, simply substitute one of your own choosing with the meaning I have expressed above.]Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-9101694920795467142016-11-28T04:17:00.006-08:002016-11-28T04:23:48.167-08:00Appeal to Deserving - A Fallacy<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="36kro" data-offset-key="8hh4k-0-0" style="background-color: white;">
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<span style="color: #1d2129;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i>Note to the reader: Please read this entire article before jumping to conclusions. Your cooperation in this is much appreciated.</i>
Nobody deserves anything. Nothing at all, whether good or bad.
You don't deserve food, water, or air. You don't deserve healthcare or charity. You don't deserve dignity, respect, or love. You don't deserve life, liberty, or property. You don't deserve rights, voluntary interaction, or non-aggression. Wrongdoers don't deserve punishment. Victims don't deserve restitution. Nobody owes you anything by default. Life grants you no automatic entitlements.
On the contrary: You are in debt from the moment of your existence. You did not create yourself. You were created by forces which you did nothing to cause. Life was given to you unearned. You were raised, taught, empowered, and protected into adulthood by the effort of others. Every bit of matter and energy which makes you up came to you from external sources. And, some day, you will pay every bit of it back.
Through all of your labor and efforts, you cannot create even a single electron-volt of new energy. You can only gather to yourself energy which previously existed using the energy which was given to you. Thus you accumulate what you did not create with what was leant to you. You cannot, therefore, earn anything. Your labor cannot make you deserve what you gain from it.
If nobody deserves anything, then taking it from them cannot make you deserve any punishment or penalty. You do not deserve restitution when wronged. You do not deserve to be safe from harm or to be guaranteed voluntary or civil interactions with other people. You cannot destroy even a single electron-volt of energy, just as you cannot create it.
By what virtue, then, would you argue that you or anyone else deserves anything at all? Whatever that virtue is, nature clearly does not recognize it, and nobody else is obligated to recognize it. "Deserve" is a fantasy we make up to make ourselves feel justified in our actions, to patch up our insecurities, to prop up our self-worth, and to give us an excuse to look down on others. It has no substance in the real world. "Deserve" simply does not exist.
<b>Therefore:</b> All arguments which appeal to what we or others "deserve" as a rationale for how we or they should behave are fallacious – since we deserve nothing and "deserve" therefore becomes irrelevant to how we should treat one another or how they should treat us. If we are going to talk about how we ought to treat one another, those "oughts" must be derived from other factors besides what we do or do not deserve.
This does not mean that there are no "oughts". If I value myself as a person and the personal dignity, autonomy, and self-integrity which makes me a person, and if I would have those things respected by others – then I <i>ought</i> to likewise value and respect them in others as well. If I don't, I undermine any claim I make that they should be respected in me. This has nothing to do with what I or they <i>deserve</i>.
Therefore, this is not justification for apathy or treating people like dirt. Quite the opposite. It means that appealing to what someone deserves or doesn't deserve is not a justification for apathy or treating them like dirt. "Deserve" is a very sick concept if you think about it. It classifies people – sentient, sapient individuals with feelings, and desires, and hopes, and fears just like <i>you</i> – into categories of how much dignity and civility they should or should not receive based on merit. It reduces people to objects of utility.
Seemingly universally benevolent statements such as "Everyone deserves dignity." might seem better – but these either tend to be so over-generalized as to prove too much, which leads to absurdities – or they end up being reduced to the aforementioned utilitarian view of people when put to the test.
<b>In conclusion:</b> Appealing to what someone deserves is a fallacy. It is founded on broken reason which does not correspond to reality. It is not necessary for good ethics, and it inevitably leads to bad ethical conclusions. If we value what makes us people, then we ought not reduce ourselves or others to mere objects which deserve this or that based on utility, and to universalize "deserve" without consideration for utility causes it to lose all force and meaning.</span></span></div>
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-45363966308427991502016-08-23T05:12:00.001-07:002016-08-23T05:16:01.937-07:00F-TheorySince I have recently been asked about it, and since I have never written it down anywhere, I wanted to write this out so it is recorded <i>somewhere</i> for posterity. This is a hypothesis I've been developing for a long time. It's something I've been very much interested in pursuing, trying to put the math to it, and trying to falsify it. I'm sure there are things about it that will turn out to be wrong. It is almost impossible that it is all correct. In fact, it's entirely possible that it's entirely wrong. But I have been encouraged that my every exposure to Quantum Mechanics seems to be consistent with my hypothesis, and I have yet to encounter any hard evidence that contradicts it. That, of course, does not mean that such evidence does not exist.<br />
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So, without further adieu, this is my crazy Hypothesis of Everything. For now, I'll nickname it "F-Theory".<br />
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<b><i>The Stuff We're Made Of</i></b></div>
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The first thing you need to know is that I'm a monist, meaning that I believe everything that exists is comprised of a single substance. If I'm wrong about this it could change everything, but I don't see how two or more basic substances could even interact. It seems absurd to me that multiple base substances would even be affected by the other's existence. This is why I lean strongly towards monism, though my reasoning is admittedly subjective.<br />
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I haven't really settled on a name to call this base substance. Over the years that I've played with the idea I've called it "flux", "mana", "fluid", and various other things. For now, I will just abbreviate it as "F".<br />
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F has numerous significant properties. F is not inherently quantized in that it can be divided into infinitely small portions. F is conserved, as it cannot be created or destroyed. F is not inherently constrained by things like space, time, speed, etc; F is constantly vibrating, flowing, and changing. And because it is, by default, not constrained by time, space, and speed this means that F can take on many forms at once. A system comprised of F can seem to have everything happen at once because everything IS happening at once. This is where superposition arises from. It's also where properties like spin come from because F literally has no speed.<br />
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F vibrates at an arbitrary frequency. I say "arbitrary" but that isn't exactly right. Without time, space, or speed to give the concept of frequency any meaning it's vibrations are simply what they are. It is from these vibrations that time, space, speed, and even probability arise. Note that speed is just a function of time and space, so we arrive at 3 basic types of dimensions here: time dimensions, space dimensions, and probability dimensions. More on those and how they come about later.<br />
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Just as with any wave pattern, the vibrations of F form interference patterns. Where they meet, they form peaks and troughs, all of which take on lower frequencies than the original pattern, as the original pattern exists without speed and is unattainably high. This flow of F and F waves could be called an F-field.<br />
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F does not merely flow about willy-nilly but collects with other bits of F into clumps. These clumps become the particles we know and love and give rise to quantization. Each particle is something like a whirlpool in a body of water, except it's comprised of F. The F flows in and out of it freely, but the particle forms as the result of its movements. This also affects the wave patterns of F surrounding the particle.<br />
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<b><i>Rise of Dimensions</i></b></div>
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The flow of F between the particles and the interference patterns which form between them is where we get space. This is the medium by which F particles interact with one another. The number of dimensions of space you have are determined by the dimensions the F is flowing and are possibly infinite in their potential number. Distance is given meaning by the wave patterns of F which exist between particles. The changing form of these wave patterns can create distortions in space. Note that, without these wave patterns defining the spatial dimension, things like "flat" or "curved" would have absolutely no meaning. Outside of these patterns, there is no space, no time, no dimension whatsoever. It's not even empty. It's null.<br />
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Time comes about by the particle's interactions with themselves and other adjacent particles. While F moves so fast as to appear static (where again, "fast" isn't even really the right word), as it flows in and out of particles it causes them to change, both internally and relative to the entire F field. This change creates both motion and the time dimension.<br />
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Probability arises because F can potentially be everywhere at once and do many things at once without the constraint of time. It can exist in many superposed states at one time. This is where the wave function comes from. It allows particles to have many types of indirect interactions at once, even with themselves. But when a quantized particle has a direct exchange with another quantized particle it causes them to "snap" to a specific and definite form for the interaction. This is what we call wave function collapse.<br />
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Note that, as a result of all of this, space, time, and probability exist relative to F. F, and the particles derived thereof, are not suspended in space, time, or probability as if they were some sort of medium. It is their existence and interactions which define space, time, and probability. F itself is its own medium.<br />
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<b><i>Enter Relativity</i></b></div>
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The speed of light needs to be addressed at this point. "c", in this scheme, is a derived constant. It comes from what I call the "F constant". And the F constant is simply the frequency at which the underlying F-field vibrates. It is the vibrations of this field which create interactions, motion, space, time, probability, etc; This vibration rate could be compared to the frequency of a CPU and the universe thought of as a computer. "c" is simply a result of the fastest rate at which the F-field can process information at its frequency of vibration. Note that, while this frequency, as I said before, has no inherent meaning as far as speed, space, time, etc; now that we have derived space, time, and speed from it, we can potentially give it a relative measurement. Also note that, at this point in my hypothesizing, I have no idea how to calculate or even estimate this. Yeah, I know, there are holes.<br />
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Relativistic effects arise in a similar way. All dimensions, whether space, time, or probability, derive from F-field vibrations based on the F constant. As such, there is a limited amount of "processing power" to go around in any given physical system. The more of that processing power is devoted to movement through space, the less of it will be devoted to movement through time. That is, time will slow down as speed increases, and vice versa. Probability likely plays a role in here too, but I don't yet have the means to address it properly and with any hope of accuracy.<br />
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Force is, of course, simply the property of influence and interaction which F has on particles. Energy, which I define as what exists or happens, or the potential for something to exist or happen, is simply a base property of F which manifests in everything derived from it. It would be accurate to say that F is synonymous with energy, though in a broader sense than we know energy. As energy causes things to exist and happen in conventional physics models, so F does in this hypothesis. As energy is conserved, so is F, though energy as we know it <i>can</i> be created or destroyed through manipulation of F (this is consistent with observations of energy being "destroyed" through the expansion of space). And, as energy is carried in waves through frequency, and higher frequencies are associated with higher energy, so F transmits its influence through vibrations.<br />
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Different types of forces and fields arise as different patterns in the F-field. One set of patterns may account for electromagnetism, another for the strong force, and another for the weak force, but they are all vibrations in a single fundamental field. This is why forces unify at higher energy levels, because frequency increases as energy increases, and their varying vibrational patterns sync up and become similar at higher energy levels because the difference between them decreases as they all approach the same limit of the F constant. This is sort of like what you see when you take a bunch of different colors in graphical software and begin dialing up their brightness. The closer they approach to white (their upper limit), the less distinct they become until some hues that began as very distinct colors become completely indistinguishable. Gravity is the black sheep of the family of forces, which is why it has been so uncooperative in being unified with the other forces, but I will address that later.<br />
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<b><i>Bosons, Fermions, and Gravity</i></b></div>
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Fermions and bosons arise as different types of particles because they are different types of "whirlpools" in the F-field. Changing the analogy to one of weather, a boson might be likened to a gust of wind while a fermion might be likened to a tornado or hurricane. The F within a boson is a directional burst which traverses the F-field at a speed as close to <i>c</i> as can be achieved as this is the natural speed at which F particles typically move unless something inhibits them.<br />
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Fermions, however, do not move at <i>c</i> because they are too busy doing other things. Recall what I said earlier about the vibrational rate of the F-field, the F constant, being likened to a CPU's processing rate. Fermions have mass, take up space, and are generally up to a lot of things that bosons are not. This is why I liken fermions more to a tornado or hurricane in the last analogy. The F within them is not directional, at least not outwardly. That F may be given a directional momentum through interactions, and, in fact, all fermions have such momentum as nothing is truly "still", but the sum of the vectors of the F within the fermion are not synchronized as they are in the boson. And, because the fermion is busy interacting with so many different fields, including the Higgs field, while pushing away other fermions through their own interactions, this means that accelerating one to the speed of light is impossible as there is no way for the F within it to process that level of motion as well as its other interactions.<br />
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Charge, such as electric charge and color charge, have to do with the vibrational patterns of these fermions and what ambient patterns in the F-field they interfere and interact with. Likewise, these patterns also determine what sorts of bosons these fermions can emit, just like the length of a string on an instrument determines what sorts of vibrations it will emit when plucked.<br />
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And this is where we need to bring up gravitons. They are unique compared to the other bosons, and this is why quantum gravity has been so problematic. Remember how I said some time back that space is formed by the flow of F between particles? Gravitons, I believe, are the primary conveyors of that flow. Remember, F doesn't just flow around willy-nilly, it clumps. Gravitons are the most basic clumps. And this also makes the graviton the fundamental boson associated with the F-field, which in turn makes the F-field synonymous with both the gravitational field and space itself. The difficulty in unifying gravity with the other fundamental forces lies in how different it is from those forces.<br />
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Since space, time, and probability are all linked together as dimensions, gravity becomes the fulcrum on which these dimensions rest. Gravity distorts space-time because gravity <i>is</i> space-time. Waves in the gravitational field amount to a distortion of space-time.<br />
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<b><i>Miscellaneous Stuff</i></b></div>
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F-Theory provides a possible explanation for dark energy. Dark energy is caused by the interactions of the F-field pushing against itself within the universe, with nothing outside of the universe to push back. That is, it's like putting a filled balloon in a vacuum chamber. If what is external to the universe is null, then the null provides no resistance to the expansion of the universe. Thus, the pressures of the F-field cause the universe to expand. And for those concerned that the universe will someday "pop" like that balloon, I would suggest that this is the very end that our universe will eventually have. A big rip, when the fabric of the universe, the F-field, can no longer maintain its structural integrity and the connection between particles are severed. This is very hypothetical upon hypothetical, of course.<br />
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I do not know if F-theory will require the "curled up" dimensions which string theory demands, but it certainly leaves the possibility open. F-theory allows for an unlimited number of potential dimensions.<br />
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If anyone notices that I didn't mention symmetry in all of this, that was deliberate. While my conception of F-theory would give the F-field a property of symmetry, the question of "where's all the antimatter?" and some of the possible explanations that have been posed make me want to explore that subject further before trying to go into details on it.<br />
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The origin of the universe is something else I purposely didn't mention, and for three reasons. First, it really needs its own article to be addressed properly. Second, it gets into the subject of whether or not God exists, which again, needs its own article to be addressed properly, and I don't want that controversial topic to take away from anything I've said here thus far. And third, there is some new evidence, ideas, and possibilities that have come to my attention recently that I need to consider before I can properly address this.<br />
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Things I don't have a good explanation for, at least not yet, include dark matter, singularities, and the Higgs Field. I can see how explanations for these might potentially arise from F-Theory, but I have not found explanations for them that I find satisfactory enough to expound upon.<br />
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I need to emphasize that F-theory contrasts with typical thinking, both in physics and by the lay-person, in many ways. It is an <i>emergentist</i> and <i>anti-hierarchical</i> theory. It envisions a universe that is built from the bottom up, starting with the tiniest bits of stuff which, through their simple nature, cause all of the laws of physics, mathematics, and logic to come about as emergent properties. No laws are forced onto the universe from the top down, but neither is the whole merely the sum of its parts. F-theory means everything is connected, yet everything is individual. Everything is part of a whole and yet each part exists in its own right due to its own nature. F-theory contradicts both holistic and reductionist approaches to science and everything.<br />
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<b><i>Final Thoughts</i></b></div>
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I want to reiterate that everything above is a hypothesis. It is untested. What's more, I lack the mathematical prowess to even quantify it properly. I am an amateur without formal training. Any "calculations" that have been done have been done in my mind through processes that could be called dynamically geometric at best. I am not claiming that this hypothesis is true. I am simply posing it as a very imprecise and incomplete hypothesis.<br />
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I would very much like to explore this hypothesis, but I currently lack the means to do so. Without a sufficient mastery of mathematics, I cannot even write it down in a proper format, calculate its implications formally, and compare the results to existing data. Without doing that, I cannot design experiments to test the hypothesis. And without doing that, my hypothesis is stuck in hypothesis hell.<br />
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But, if there is a possibility that even a fraction of what I've proposed here is accurate, I don't want it to be lost due to my inability to pursue it. Therefore, I've put it all down here. Perhaps someone will find someday that it was right. Perhaps it will be proven wrong. Perhaps it will inspire someone. Or, if nothing else, perhaps it will help someone see things from a different angle instead of being caught up in the same theories that have been tossed about by physicists. Maybe, 100 years from now when a unified field theory has been formulated, someone will find this and have a good laugh.<br />
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Feedback, as always, is welcome.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-83187956132137392332016-07-15T08:43:00.003-07:002016-07-15T10:31:11.287-07:00Anarchy - What it is and what it is not<span style="font-family: inherit;">"Anarchy" is a term loaded with connotations that vary considerably from person to person. The common connotation of anarchy among the general population is "chaos, confusion, disorder, violence, and lawlessness". Language is arbitrary and relative, so it is perfectly legitimate to assign the term "anarchy" this meaning. But, when discussing the philosophy of anarchy, it is important to distinguish that this is <i>not</i> how actual anarchists typically define and use the term, nor is it generally reflective of our philosophy. Without this understanding, conversations about philosophical anarchy can become very confusing and unproductive, riddled with fallacy and misunderstandings.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;">Anarchy as a social, economic, or political philosophy – sometimes referred to as "anarchism" – is not actually one philosophy but a collection of many diverse philosophies. But almost all anarchists agree that the common thread of anarchism, the central premise of these philosophies, is a society without rulers. </span>The word "anarchy" literally comes from the Greek words "ἀν-" meaning "no, not" and "ἄρχων" or "<span class="polytonic mention" lang="grc" style="background-color: white; color: #252525; line-height: 22.4px;" xml:lang="grc">ἀρχή"</span> meaning "ruler, power, authority".<span style="font-family: inherit;"> A ruler is a person or group who imposes their will on another person or group unsolicitedly, depriving the latter of the free exercise of their own will. "Unsolicitedly" means that this imposition was not consented to and was not a defensive response to such an imposition by the ones being imposed on.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;">So, anarchy is a philosophy or a society characterized by the absence of rulers. That's it. Within those limitations many options and variations are possible. And, since chaos, confusion, violence, disorder, and lawlessness usually entail one party enforcing their will on another against their will, philosophical anarchism is practically the antithesis of the common connotation of the word "anarchy".</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;">Just to clear this up further, I'm going to go over a few things that anarchism, as a philosophy, is <i>not</i>.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not disorder.</b> It is a lack of the use of coercion to force an arbitrary order on those who don't want it. People still have the freedom to come together and create their own order. In our society today, people do this quite often. They form organizations, businesses, cooperatives, swap and shops, clubs, and community action groups which can range from minimal levels of organization to highly organized and formal operations. In many cases, they do this without a ruler coercing them into forming or joining these organizations. People can organize themselves just fine without coercion, and there are innumerable everyday examples which testify to this.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not lawlessness.</b> The absence of laws or rules is called "anomy". Anarchy can be understood as the forbidding of rulers, making it a law against rulership, which would put it in opposition to anomy. You can have law within an anarchist framework, you simply cannot have a person or group making up laws arbitrarily and imposing them on people who do not agree to them </span>–<span style="font-family: inherit;"> or who do not first impose themselves on others. Murder, theft, rape, </span>fraud,<span style="font-family: inherit;"> and any number of other crimes which victimize others are </span>impositions of this very sort,<span style="font-family: inherit;"> and therefore are naturally forbidden within anarchy. If these things were permitted you would no longer have anarchy. It is also perfectly legitimate within anarchy for a group of people to come together and voluntarily decide they want to live within a set of rules which they mutually agree to.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not the absence of government</b>,</span> although this depends on how you define government. If government is defined as synonymous with the state – an entity which claims or exercises ultimate authority to impose its will on others over a given region – then anarchy is the absence of government. But if government is understood as a mechanism to steer, guide, organize, or coordinate a society then it is by no means mutually exclusive with anarchy. Anarchy is only incompatible with government that uses force, threats, fraud, coercion, or other means to rule and force its agenda on people without their consent.<br />
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not "do whatever you want"</b>. Because if what you want to do involves forcing your wants, desires, or ideas on someone else against their will, then that's rulership, and that is not anarchy. Anarchy is closer to, "Do no harm, but take no crap." For anarchy to exist, respect for the autonomy of others must be maintained, and infringements on other people must be held accountable. There are, of course, plenty of edgy kids who sport the anarchist logo and like to pretend they're anarchists because they resent having to live in a world with other people where they cannot simply do whatever they want all the time. But that is sort of like children who pretend to be knights because they want to slay dragons </span>– when they know nothing of actual medieval chivalry and dragons do not exist.<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /><br /><b>Anarchy is not warlordism</b>. Somalia is <i>not</i> an example of philosophical anarchy. It is the polar opposite of anarchy. If you have outlaws, warlords, and thugs imposing their will on people with violence, then you have rulers. That is not anarchy. Of all modern examples, the society that perhaps most closely resembles anarchy are the Kurds in Iraq.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not a utopian fantasy</b>. Very few anarchists have the illusion that an anarchist society will be free of problems, abuses, crimes, and failures. We don't see anarchy as a panacea to cure all of the world's social and economic ills. We don't deny that an anarchist society could fail, collapse, or devolve back into statism. What anarchy is is a framework to give human beings back their humanity. It restores back to people their fundamental autonomous nature and attempts to give them the freedom to use this autonomy to create new solutions, to find what works for them, and to simply be human. Because the state, many of us would assert, is immoral and dehumanizing because it takes away the autonomy, self-determination, and individuality which centrally defines our human nature. It is not foolproof or failproof, but the worst case scenario of failed anarchy is simply the norm of statism which we have now.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchy is not homogeneous</b>. It is not one single philosophy, but many different philosophies which can sometimes be diametrically opposed to one another on some issues. There are socialist anarchists, capitalist anarchists, communist anarchists, individualist anarchists, mutualist anarchists, primitivist anarchists, transhumanist anarchists, and many other sorts. Sometimes these groups get along, and sometimes they do not. Sort of like statist political parties, which actually have a great deal in common, but still have bitter feuds with each other over small differences in their philosophies. There are movements among anarchists such as panarchism and synthesism which aim to bring these factions into unity, if not agreement, to work towards their shared goal: that there should be no rulers. These movements have recently been gaining ground as the abuses of the state are becoming more apparent and people are demanding change.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Anarchists do not want to destroy society</b>. Though there are some extremist exceptions, most anarchists do not want to tear down civilization brick by brick. We don't want violence in the streets. We don't want chaos, panic, disorder, and lawlessness. We want to live together with other people in peace, without having to worry about a violent state deciding it doesn't like what we are doing, extorting us of our resources, or invasively interfering in our lives. We want to live, as much as possible, without the threat of harm for doing something that someone else disapproves of. We want to be able to organize communities, build buildings, create enterprises, work in a trade, get married, choose what we consume, defend ourselves from harm, and make our own life choices without asking for permission </span>– so long as we aren't harming or endangering anyone else in the process. I think that's a rather reasonable thing to want.<br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span> <span style="font-family: inherit;">And finally, switching back to positive statements, <b>anarchists are all around you</b>. Our numbers are growing. No one is sure just how many of us there are, as no one has attempted to do an anarchist census. Be we are here. If you live in a town of any significant size, then you probably live or work close to some of us. We are influencing your culture, your politics, and your thinking. We create many of the memes, articles, and videos you share on social media. We have spearheaded movements and societal change, both past and present. And we are raising our voices loudly in light of the current abuses of the state, its wars of aggression, and its increasingly massive corruption </span>– things which nearly everyone is currently upset about to one degree or another.<br />
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Whoever you are, you probably have a lot more common ground with us than you realize. We know that you aren't going to agree with us on everything, and that's okay. We don't want to force our will on you, either. What we hope for from you is to open-mindedly work together with us, and with anyone who is willing, to try and solve the very serious issues we are dealing with currently. Because the politicians are not going to solve it for us. We, the people, have a responsibility to make our society and our world better and to stand up against the corruption, the wars, and the infringements that affect us all. And that's really what anarchy is all about – people willingly working together to make things happen while respecting one another as people.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-74070026534224274622016-06-07T16:43:00.005-07:002016-06-07T16:43:58.050-07:00God's Plan vs Free WillI recently encountered a post on Facebook that posed the following conundrum: If God gave man free will, how can everything be part of God's plan? If everything is part of God's plan, how can we have free will?<br />
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Without getting into the messy discussions of the existence of God, free will, and so forth (all good topics for another time), I wanted to address this conundrum, as the solution is actually very simple. And it can be illustrated with a game of chess.<br />
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Let's say that I'm a super-genius chess player. My IQ is so high that my brain operates with the efficiency of a computer, even better than the ones that beat the various chess champions. I can literally think millions of moves ahead, projecting all of the possible moves that my opponent might make for millions of moves in advance, which allows me to imagine every single possible chess game that is every likely to ever be played.<br />
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As such, I can account for every possible choice that my opponent might make in any given game or situation. I can plan ahead for every possible scenario and iteration of a game of chess. Yet, my opponent still has free will to decide what move they will make. I do not control what move they make, but I have planned for every possible choice. So, regardless of what move they choose to make, it is all part of my plan. I will close my traps on them and have them in checkmate regardless of what they choose.<br />
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This illustrates clearly that a "divine plan" can coexist with free will just fine, and that one does not inherently preclude the other.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-79898148568758479522015-11-26T09:47:00.004-08:002016-12-05T08:21:54.301-08:00Falsifying Solipsism<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="dv1vj-0-0" style="background-color: white; direction: ltr; position: relative;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="color: #141823; font-family: "helvetica" , "arial" , sans-serif;"><span style="line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">The reason solipsism presents an inky philosophical problem boils down to the same reason that many other ridiculous dilemmas present problems. There is a (very common) fallacy going on where language is being given primacy over concepts, and concepts over what is existentially real.
That is, we coin a word "X" based on some superficial observation or convention, then ask "what is X?". As if this word is somehow an existential thing. It isn't. Yet when we deal with philosophical problems we too often deal in words which we create, then try to backtrack and find some existential or objective conceptual substance to them. Or worse, we throw the words out there and assume they are objective and existential without even questioning it. But it just doesn't work that way.
Many philosophical dilemmas, from Theseus' Ship to the entire field of Epistemology, are founded in this erroneous and fallacious way of thinking. And solipsism is no different.
Solipsism, at its essence, is the idea that one's self, or one's mind, is the only thing you can be sure exists. And it's tricky to falsify only because the words "self" and "mind" are not objectively nailed down, but left open to interpretation. Therefore – when one attempts to put forth the obvious evidence that there appears to be an external world which cannot be directly manipulated by the mind, and from which the individual receives input which did not come from their own mind – the ambiguity in the definitions of 'self' and 'mind' allow the solipsism apologist to move the goalpost. They can claim that part of the mind is "locked" or "subconscious" or otherwise inaccessible to the direct experience or manipulation of the individual. And at this point we are stretching and expanding what a mind or self "is", because we started with the words, not existential things – yet we are treating those words as if they have intrinsic existential properties.
If you start with things that can be empirically observed and objectively defined, assign those things terms, and use those terms to define solipsism, then falsifying it becomes trivially easy.
I can observe that I have qualitative, phenomenal experiences. And I can observe that I react to those experiences, exerting an arbitrary will from what I experience. So from these observations I have empirically observed two things: 1) A function of qualitative and phenomenal input and arbitrary output which is experienced. I will define this as "consciousness". 2) That there is an object experiencing and participating in this function, which is me. I will define this as "self". So the self (as I have defined it here) has an input-output function called consciousness.
From this, we will define an objective form of solipsism: </span></span>¬ there exists ¬<span style="color: #141823; line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">self. Or, more plainly, nothing exists besides the self. To falsify solipsism, we need only to prove</span> there exists ¬<span style="color: #141823; line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">self, or that something besides the self exists.</span></span><br />
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For the input part of my consciousness to receive input (qualitative, phenomenal experience), there must be a source of that input. That is, an output. In a solipsistic universe, the only possible source of output would be the self. And the self does in fact have an output in the consciousness function in the form of an arbitrary will. The problem is that we receive input which is clearly not our own arbitrary will. We receive input which is different from and foreign to the output of our consciousness. We can observe this. You are observing it right now. Most of the sensory input you are currently experiencing is not being consciously willed into existence by you. You may be acting on it with your will, but it keeps acting on you regardless of your will, and it may behave in ways contrary to your will.
Since we receive input which was not an output of the will – that is, of the self – that means this input must have been an output of something </span></span></span>¬<span style="color: #141823; font-family: "helvetica" , "arial" , sans-serif;"><span style="line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">self. This proves, empirically, logically, and undeniably </span></span><span style="font-family: inherit;">there exists ¬</span><span style="color: #141823; font-family: "helvetica" , "arial" , sans-serif;"><span style="line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">self, that something other than the self exists. And this therefore disproves the original statement of solipsism: </span></span><span style="font-family: inherit;">¬ there exists ¬</span><span style="color: #141823; font-family: inherit; line-height: 16px; white-space: pre-wrap;">self.</span><br />
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You of course could revert back to some other statement of solipsism, or some other definition of the self, and proceed to move goalposts and create ambiguity. But if you do, then what are we even discussing? Anyone can make up a word and an idea and keep it vague enough to allow it to evade all analysis. But in doing so, you have removed all substance and validity from that idea itself. It may defy analysis, but it also defies usefulness and applicability. What, existentially, does a vague definition of solipsism even imply? What force does it carry? Exactly none.</span></span></div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-8573462087584993042015-09-11T17:55:00.000-07:002015-09-11T17:55:19.859-07:00Lessons in Bias from 9-11 and Dihydrogen MonoxideWell, it's September 11th again. If you didn't look at your calendar, you could probably tell easily enough from glancing at any social media feed. Today is the day everyone makes sure we never forget what happened on September 11th, 2001. And rightly so. What happened that day is infamous for a reason. 2996 people prematurely lost their lives on that day, and thousands upon thousands more have perished since then as a direct result of what happened that day. We should remember that day. And, just as importantly, we should have a thorough understanding of what happened.<br />
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Most people are at least vaguely aware of the conspiracy theories surrounding the 9-11 attacks and the 9-11 truth movements that have brought them to light. For a very long time, I didn't take those movements and theories seriously. They seemed completely bonkers, like complete hogwash. But when I learned that someone I respected held to those theories, I decided to at least hear their case out. I didn't make it past re-watching the video footage before I knew something wasn't right. Back in 2001 when the attacks happened, I wasn't as well versed in physics as I am now. Simply watching the way the towers fell within the context of what happened offended my understanding of physics so much that I was compelled to start asking questions. And I quickly found myself unable to believe the official story anymore.<br />
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To be clear, I don't know <i>what</i> happened on 9-11. Was it an "inside job"? And if so, who was involved? I don't know. What I do know is that the official story is impossible, and there is a lot of evidence to support that those airplanes had a lot of help in the form of demolition equipment in order to bring down those buildings. Beyond that, I refuse to jump to any conclusions without hard evidence. But there is some compelling evidence that suggests various culprits, including some within government.<br />
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If you want to see why I disbelieve the official 9-11 narrative, I would refer you to the mini-documentary <a href="https://youtu.be/5PY_qM28rnA">9/11 - Echos of Darkness</a> by StormCloudsGathering, as well as his <a href="https://youtu.be/hvcq3OpX8qQ">latest video</a> which was released today. I also encourage you to check out the YouTube channel <a href="https://www.youtube.com/user/physicsandreason/videos">Physics and Reason</a>, which addresses the issue from a straightforward and easy to follow scientific perspective using experimentation and empirical evidence. But convincing you that the 9-11 story we've all been told is bullcrap was not my main reason for this article. There is something even more important that I want to address.<br />
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In addition to 9-11, there is no shortage of causes and conspiracy theories out there. Some of these are legitimate, and some of them are not. And it's become quite apparent to me that, whether it's the official narratives or less mainstream accounts, people do not choose what to believe based on evidence, reason, or fact. Rather, people choose what to believe based on what they <i>want</i> to believe, and based on the biases they embrace in order to protect what they believe from any evidence to the contrary.<br />
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Those who are dissatisfied with the status quo, the government, the corporate dominated economy, and the system as a whole tend to be more inclined to believe things which would incriminate that system and the entities which comprise it. Those who believe in that system, however, tend to be more inclined to dismiss anything which might incriminate it. Liberals are more likely to believe a narrative that paints conservatives in a bad light or incriminates their policies. Conservatives are more likely to believe any narrative which does this to liberals. Whatever cause or ideology someone believes in, they will almost always accept information which upholds what they believe and reject information that doesn't. This is called confirmation bias.<br />
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There is a <a href="https://www.facebook.com/h2oawareness?fref=ts">satire/troll page on Facebook</a> which centers around a campaign against a chemical called <a href="http://www.dhmo.org/facts.html">dihydrogen monoxide</a>, also known as hydric acid. This chemical is rightly cited as being the cause of untold deaths in the US and around the world, and as being present in everything from acid rain to industrial runoff. It is also known more commonly by a different name: water. The point of the dihydrogen monoxide page is to illustrate how easy it is to take true facts and present them in such a way that it produces misleading information. I'm a big fan of the page myself. It's obvious satire, but apparently not obvious enough for some.<br />
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Recently, dihydrogen monoxide memes have been showing up on the pages of various March Against Monsanto pages and other non-GMO and pro-natural pages. They seem to be posting them in all seriousness, taken in by this troll campaign against water just because it sounds like something that supports their worldview. I find this both hilarious and sad. Sad because it is an example of information being accepted and held on to without scrutiny or thought on the part of those accepting it, simply because it suits their confirmation bias.<br />
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Please note that I'm not trying to discredit March Against Monsanto or the non-GMO movement. I have many sympathies with their cause, I support GMO labeling, and I have a lot of concerns over GMO foods. I'm merely using March Against Monsanto as an example. This phenomenon is not limited to them by any means. It's all over the place, spanning all ideologies, movements, and cultures. Whether a cause can be considered good or not, chances are good that many within it accept information that supports their worldview with minimal scrutiny. The ideas they are accepting may not even be wrong. But, because of their biases, they have no defense against any that are. And, as a result, many stupidities are able to creep in to otherwise sound movements, derail their intellectual integrity, and ultimately destroy their credibility.<br />
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This is a huge problem. And I'm not immune to it myself. It was my own bias that made me dismiss claims that the official story about what happened on September 11, 2001 is bogus. Before I could examine those claims objectively, I had to tear down those biases. And I have tried my best to make a conscious effort to identify and confront my own biases on every front. It's an ongoing effort that is by no means complete. Often, the problem with bias is that we are blind to our own. And it can be a very uncomfortable and humbling process to expose your own biases so you can see them, admit to them, and ultimately part with them.<br />
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But it is the problem of confirmation bias that prevents so many people from being objective about so many situations. It has led to a lot of ridiculous conspiracy theories and ridiculous official stories alike. It's the type of thinking that produces the crazy, way out there tinfoil-hat types and the sheeplike fools who accept what their television tells them without question. They are one and the same in their way of thinking, they just differ in the content.<br />
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So, this September 11th, with the world slowly marching towards disaster and sanity running in short supply on all of the various sides, I want to encourage you to do one thing: question yourself. Question your thought process and your conclusions. Question why you believe what you believe. And question deeply. And don't ever stop. Even when you feel satisfied that you have seen past your own biases, when you are certain of your own objectivity, that is the time to be questioning yourself the most aggressively. A little bit of self-doubt is healthy when it spurs you to more self-awareness, so long as it doesn't prevent you from being certain and assertive when you need to be. In fact, such doubt and questioning can ultimately lead to greater certainty as the biases are refined from your thinking.<br />
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With the world becoming increasingly like tinder, ready to go ablaze both at home and abroad, I cannot emphasize how important it is to think beyond the polarizing narratives and biases that are driving the various sides in conflict. It might be our only hope for averting disaster. Revolution begins within, with the overthrow of our own broken mindset. We cannot change the world until we first change ourselves.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-71341046334598831702015-08-27T15:25:00.001-07:002015-08-27T15:25:50.456-07:00An Overview of CountereconomicsA friend and notable activist just asked me a while ago what my idea of countereconomics is. As I contemplated his question, I realized that the answer was going to be far greater than the scope of a single Facebook message, and would require far more effort than something only one person was going to read warranted. So, I'm putting my answer on here for everyone to read.<br />
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For those not in the know, countereconomics is a form of civil resistance which involves circumventing a state-imposed economic system by engaging in economic activities outside of that system, to the end of furthering the subversion of that system. This doesn't necessarily involve anything illegal, and it can be something as simple as two people growing a garden and trading the produce with each other directly – as opposed to selling it to a store or in some venue where sales tax is collected. But more on the specifics later. First, there are some preliminaries to cover.<br />
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But before we can even talk about countereconomics, we have to talk about the more fundamental paradigm that underlies it: the paradigm of empowerment and disempowerment. Empowerment is what enables us to do things and to exercise our rights, and disempowerment is the lack thereof. Any action you take, you can only take because you are empowered to take it. If you build your own home, it means that you must have the know-how, the physical abilities, and the resources to build it. If you bake a pie, it means you know the recipe for a pie, have the physical ability to do what is necessary to bake it, have the necessary utensils and facilities to carry out the operation, and have access to the ingredients. Even simple things most people take for granted require empowerment. Walking requires a functional set of legs, strength, balance, and the neurological ability to make it all work together – and there are many people who lack these things. There is also such thing as psychological empowerment. Someone with an anxiety disorder may not be empowered to do things you find simple, and by no fault of their own. Even exercising the right to your own life and self requires empowerment – food to provide your body with the nutrients and energy to function, and the ability to protect yourself from things and people that might snuff out that right. This empowerment does not originate from within, it has to be obtained or received externally. And not everyone is empowered to empower themselves in every way. Empowerment is <i>everything</i>, but it is so rarely talked about or thought about in a fully pragmatic sense. And that is why I've taken this whole huge paragraph for it. It is <i>imperative</i> to thoroughly understand this principle. (It really deserves its own article.)<br />
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Statism, rule-by-violence, corrupt economic and political systems – at the end of the day they are all empowerment problems. It's all about disempowering people in general and empowering a select few, thus allowing the few to control and exploit the many. And most of these systems work from both ends. On one hand, they might use force and pressure to take power away from people. On the other hand, they use propaganda and bribes to convince people to surrender their empowerment all on their own. This is how statism works in all its forms.<br />
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If statism is disempowerment, and empowerment is the opposite of disempowerment, then what is the antithesis of statism? What creates empowerment for the many and disempowers the rulers who would subjugate them? I would assert that the antithesis of statism is cooperation.<br />
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Cooperation is simply when two or more people work together, uncoerced, for mutual benefit. Or, that is to say, mutual empowerment. It requires that two people take responsibility for themselves, to the degree that they are empowered to do so, and work together without being forced to. And this is the exact the opposite of the state in three ways: 1) It empowers the individuals instead of their rulers by allowing them to be dependent on themselves and one another, instead of some other party, to provide for their needs and wants. 2) It requires individual responsibility instead of deferring that responsibility to the state. No more wondering who is going to take care of you. No more, "They should really fix these roads!" followed by begging those in power to act. Instead, you and your community work together, pool your resources, and fix your own roads. 3) It takes the violence and coercion out of the equation.<br />
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Cooperation is more than the antithesis of the state: it is the antidote to the state. It takes the power, responsibility, and necessity away from the state and puts it back in the hands of the individual, robbing the state of its leverage, its legitimacy, and the resources it needs to survive. Because the state requires the support, finances, and labor of the masses in order to stand, but cooperation diverts that support, finance, and labor back to the masses themselves. It's supporting your neighbor, financing your community, and laboring together towards a common goal. Cooperation, when practiced broadly, effectively renders the state obsolete and irrelevant, starves it, dissolves it, and perpetuates itself as it replaces the state. For this reason, cooperation is to the state what fire is to wood.<br />
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So, when am I going to start talking about countereconomics? I already have been, and for some time now. Cooperation is the fundamental mechanism and essential form of true countereconomics. Countereconomics doesn't even necessarily have to involve trade, although trade is likely to be a major element as it is a form of cooperation when it takes place without coercion. But whatever form countereconomics takes, it must inevitably involve cooperation, and empowering individuals, in order to be effectual. Because the goal of countereconomics is the empowerment of individuals and communities and the disempowerment of rulers and their institutions.<br />
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So <i>how</i> can you conduct countereconomics? That depends what resources you have available. The essential element is empowering and working together with others, especially in ways that helps them become less dependent on the state, corporations, etc; and more inclined to participate in the countereconomy. If you know how to grow food, bartering or giving away what you grow is a good start. Teaching someone else to grow food is even better. Working together with that person you taught in order to sell, barter, or distribute that food and teach even more people, while including people with other skills, trades, and abilities and helping them do the same – that's hardcore. From there you can branch out, expand into nearby communities, form networks, and move chunks of the economy out of the bank-corporate-government controlled realm bit by bit.<br />
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This isn't limited to food of course. It applies to anything: fixing cars, digging wells, making jewelry, giving rides to people who need them, going shopping for the elderly, painting houses, cleaning trash out of ditches and gutters, playing music, teaching kids math, etc; And the aforementioned patching of roads, like they are doing in Detroit. Do as much business locally as you can and buy from co-ops when you can find them. Build networks and expand beyond the bounds of your community. Acts of charity also gets special mention, because that is reaching out to the least empowered and empowering them. If you have a small farm, consider hiring a homeless person to help you out in return for food, and teach them your skills while you are at it.<br />
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Countereconomics also has one distinct advantage over other types of resistance: you don't have to "convert" someone ideologically to get them to be part of the countereconomy. Just like the CEO of a major corporation doesn't have to get someone to agree with him politically in order to get them to support his business: he just has to convince them to buy his product. A countereconomy is a product. If that product is shown to others to be desirable or beneficial, chances are they will buy some of it. Your neighbor may not agree with the assertion that the system is corrupt, but they might be more than happy to buy eggs laid by your chickens for a lower price than they can get at the grocery store. If you provide benefit to someone's life they are going to be much more likely to listen to you. That's why the state gets followers: it offers people enticing benefits as bait.<br />
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I should also point out that countereconomics doesn't mean that you have no dealings with the current corrupt economy. You may work a job and get paid in dollars because it's the only way you can currently get by. Or you may even find yourself having to accept government benefits to survive. That's okay. Things suck right now, and no one has the right to condemn you for this. I received food stamps for years because I couldn't make it without them, but I used that extra income to improve my situation until I was no longer dependent on the government to put food on the table.<br />
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I have been without food stamps for nearly two years now. I still work a job, as my personal resources are limited, and even in a best case scenario I will have to acquire and use dollars for some transactions. And of course, I still drive on government roads because that's the only option I have to get from place to place. But I am trying to use what resources I have to reduce my dependence and look into alternate sources of income, monetary or otherwise.<br />
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That is to say, I'm pulling wealth <i>from</i> the system and looking for ways to consolidate it <i>outside</i> of the system. It's a long, slow, tedious process since I'm currently by myself on it where I am. But I have made progress. I am using what I have to empower myself so I can empower others.<br />
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And it really all comes back to empowerment. You want a revolution? Don't go trying to force someone else to do what you want them to. Instead, find someone to empower. Find something to give to or trade with someone else. Find a homeless person to feed, a snowy walkway that needs shoveled, or a single mom working two jobs who needs a babysitter at odd hours. Even if you can't help directly, maybe you know someone you can, or maybe you have something to give or teach that would help them help themselves. Teach others that they can provide for themselves and each other outside of this broken system, and condemn that system every step of the way. This is how you start it. It might become more complicated along the way, nothing like this is ever "that simple". But if we are serious about changing things, this is how it's done.<br />
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"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete." ~Buckminster FullurUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-25930826842753235402015-07-13T08:08:00.003-07:002015-07-13T08:20:03.182-07:009 ain't specialSo, I have seen <a href="https://youtu.be/W5mJeRtjPvY">this video</a> circulating around of recent. Go ahead, watch it. It's some high-school level math that apparently reveals some profound secret of the universe. And it is complete crap. The math is accurate enough, but the conclusions are demonstrably bogus. And I intend to lay it to rest below.<br />
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The basic premise of the video is as thus: That the reason there are 360° in a circle is not arbitrary, and that the number 9 simultaneously stands for everything and nothing, thus having some "divine symmetry" of some sort. For those who don't want to watch the video, it makes the following claims using the following proofs:<br />
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• A full circle is 360°. 3+6+0=9. A circle divided in half is 180°. 1+8+0=9. If you continue these divisions, the pattern holds: 1/4 of a circle is 90°, and 9+0=9. 1/8 of a circle is 45°, and 4+5=9. 1/16 of a circle is 22.5°, and 2+2+5=9. Etcetera. No matter how many times you bisect the circle, the digits always add to 9.<br />
<br />
• A similar pattern is seen in regular polygons. An equilateral triangle has 3 angles of 60° each. 60×3=180. 1+8+0=9. A square has 4 angles of 90°. 4×90=360. 3+6+0=9. A regular pentagon has 5 angles of 108°. 5×108=540. 5+4+0=9. A regular hexagon has 6 angles of 120°. 6×120=720. 7+2+0=9. And so forth.<br />
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• The sum of all single digits, excluding 9, is 36. 0+1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8=36. 3+6=9.<br />
<br />
• Adding any single digit to 9 will produce sum that, when its digits are summed, is the original number you added to 9. 1+9=10, and 1+0=1. 3+9=12, and 1+2=3. 5+9=14, and 1+4=5. 9+9=18, and 1+8=9.<br />
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<b>Therefore</b>, 9 is special and has some mystical, divine significance. It simultaneously represents everything and nothing. Yadda yadda.<br />
<br />
For the record, I'm not entirely a skeptic when it comes to the whole "sacred geometry" thing. Except for the "sacred" part. There are a lot of genuinely profound and interesting mathematical truths out there, in which are contained the secrets of how the universe works. Like the golden ratio. Study that thing some time.<br />
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But there is also a lot of crap out there. To say there is a fine line out there between numerology and genuine mathematics is an understatement – the line is big, bold, and well defined. And that line is when we assign arbitrary significance to something that it doesn't inherently have. Usually because we are unaware of what is arbitrary and what is objective. In this case, we have a clear example of this.<br />
<br />
The "proof" demonstrated in this video has a problem. The problem is that it attempts to prove that 360° is not an arbitrarily chosen division of a circle by using an arbitrary number base. That is, it uses the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal">base-10</a>, or decimal, number system as the crux of its proof. And our use of the base-10 system is entirely arbitrary in itself. So we are trying to prove something to be objective using an arbitrary standard.<br />
<br />
So, I decided to use the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexadecimal">base-16</a>, or hexadecimal, number system, run the math through it, and see what happens. For those not familiar with it, hexadecimal simply means that, instead of 10 possible single digits, there are 16: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, a, b, c, d, e, and f. And instead of each digit representing a power of 10, each digit represents a power of 16. So a=10, b=11, c=12, d=13, e=14, and f=15. Once you reach a second digit in hexadecimal, you start counting powers of 16. So 10<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">16</span></span>=16<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span>, 11<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">16</span></span>=17<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span>, 12<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">16</span></span>=18<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span>, and so forth. (Those little numbers mark which system the numbers are in for clarity, but will only be used when necessary. <span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span> means base-10, and <span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">16</span></span> means base-16 respectively.)<br />
<br />
In base-16, 360<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span> is written as 168<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">16</span></span>. So, here is the same math as above run in hexadecimal:<br />
<br />
• A full circle is 168°. 1+6+8=f. (Remember f=15<span style="vertical-align: sub;"><span style="font-size: xx-small;">10</span></span>) A circle divided in half is b4°. b+4=f. If you continue these divisions, the pattern holds: 1/4 of a circle is 5a°, and 5+a=f. 1/8 of a circle is 2d°, and 2+d=f. 1/16 of a circle is 16.8°, and 1+6+8=f. Etcetera. No matter how many times you bisect the circle, the digits always add to f.<br />
<br />
• A similar pattern is seen in regular polygons. An equilateral triangle has 3 angles of 3c° each. 3c×3=b4. b+4=f. A square has 4 angles of 5a°. 4×5a=168. 1+6+8=f. A regular pentagon has 5 angles of 6c°. 5×6c=21c. 2+1+c=f. A regular hexagon has 6 angles of 78°. 6×78=2d0. 2+d+0=f. And so forth.<br />
<br />
• The sum of all single digits, excluding f, is 69. 0+1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+a+b+c+d+e=69. 6+9=f.<br />
<br />
• Adding any single digit to f will produce sum that, when its digits are summed, is the original number you added to f. 1+f=10, and 1+0=1. 3+f=12, and 1+2=3. 5+f=14, and 1+4=5. f+f=1e, and 1+e=f.<br />
<br />
<b>Therefore</b>, this isn't some special intrinsic property of the number 9. By switching bases, we can see 15 (represented as f) exhibiting <i>all</i> of the same properties. What do 9 in base 10 and f in base 16 have in common? They are both the final single digit in their respective bases. This is why you can sum all of the other digits in their base together, add the digits of the sum, and get the final digit of that base. It is also why you can add any digit to them, add the digits of the sum, and get the number you added to it. When you try this in other bases, such as base 8, this all works the same way.<br />
<br />
<b>However</b>, when you try the math with the angles and the regular polygons in base 8 it doesn't work. And there is a reason for this. 9 and 15 have one more thing in common: 360 is divisible by both of them. 360/9=40. 360/15=24. This is why the math works with them when they are the final digit of their base. The final digit for a base 8 system is 7, and 360 is not divisible by 7. 360/7=51+3/7. However, when you cut a circle into units that <i>are</i> divisible by 7, say, 700 units, the math again works. All of the digits in the bisected circle or the sum of the angles of the regular polygons add up to 14, which is written as 16 in base 8, and 1+6=7. So the pattern still holds.<br />
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<b>In conclusion:</b> 360° is entirely arbitrary. It was arbitrarily chosen by the ancient Babylonians (or maybe someone else), possibly because they had a base 60 number system and found 360 easy to work with (360 is also divisible by 60). There is no objective basis for that choice, at least as far as anything intrinsic to math. The only thing that makes it seem special is that it happens to be divisible by the largest single digit in our own chosen base system. And the only thing that makes 9 special is that it <i>is</i> the largest single digit in our chosen base system, which itself is arbitrary. Base 16, base 20, base 60, and other systems have been and are used around the world. I'm a bit partial to base 16 and base 210 myself. 9 is a perfectly lovely number, but it doesn't hold within itself profound secrets of existence. Or at least if it does, this video didn't demonstrate it.<br />
<br />
There is some really fascinating math out there. But it is important to recognize where math ends and arbitrary interpretation begins. It is also important to be lucid about what is objective and what is not. There are so many things people take for granted in this world as just "the way things are" as if it were the only possible way it could be, when really, someone simply decided it should be that way, and that decision was entirely arbitrary. I cannot understate the value of becoming aware of the things in our lives which fall into this category. It will change the way you see everything, and for the better.<br /><br /><i>Bonus:</i> For those who have not already done so, check out <a href="http://www.wolframalpha.com/">Wolfram Alpha</a>. It helped me crunch some of the numbers for this one and is a wonderful tool for all of your math and information seeking needs. Bookmark it. Doooo ittttt!!!!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-45826808150694679702015-06-12T06:43:00.003-07:002015-06-16T11:57:20.588-07:00Concerning the TPPThe Trans-Pacific Partnership has been a topic which has bubbled around the internet for a while. I admit, I've been uncertain about it myself. As with most such issues, there are always lots of allegations which may or may not have any substance to them. With all of the issues out there, the TPP was mostly drowned out.<br />
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Recently, however, with StormCloudsGathering finally resurfacing after a long hiatus and putting out <a href="https://youtu.be/KnyPsKw_gak">a video on the TPP</a>, I decided it was probably worth giving a serious look at. It didn't really take me long to confirm that his concerns were founded on fact.<br />
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Primary concerns include:<br />
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<a href="http://www.politico.com/story/2015/05/secrecy-eroding-support-for-trade-pact-critics-say-117581.html">The language of the bill itself being kept from the public</a>.<br />
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<a href="http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/may/27/corporations-paid-us-senators-fast-track-tpp">Corporations paying lawmakers to fasttrack the bill</a>.<br />
<br />
And the most concerning part, the one I actively care about, is the <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/kill-the-dispute-settlement-language-in-the-trans-pacific-partnership/2015/02/25/ec7705a2-bd1e-11e4-b274-e5209a3bc9a9_story.html">"Investor State Dispute Settlement" clause</a>, which creates international trade tribunals with the power to undermine the sovereignty of nations, their laws, and the people who comprise those nations. It would be rule by judges, and international judges at that.<br />
<br />
(You can read the leaked partial draft of the TPP <a href="http://keionline.org/sites/default/files/tpp-10feb2011-us-text-ipr-chapter.pdf">here</a>.)<br />
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And deliberations on fasttracking this bill are apparently going on right now in the House. So, I'm urging people who recognize this as an issue to put the pressure on those in DC. Because this is a potentially serious issue.<br />
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As such, I sent this e-mail to my region's own representative, <a href="http://hartzler.house.gov/">Vicky Hartzler</a>:<br />
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<i>I am not sure what your position on the Trans-Pacific Partnership is, but I am writing you to urge you to consider the situation carefully, and to oppose the TPP until such time as the language of the bill is made public in its entirety, and until it can be assured that it will not compromise the sovereignty of the People of the United States over ourselves and our country.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>I am very much in favor of cultivating international trade that might stimulate the economy and create jobs. However, this bill concerns me both because of the secrecy surrounding it, the fact that it's language has not been made public, and the indications that it will set up international trade tribunals that can overrule national sovereignty and law. This is alarming to say the least.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>If government is to be derived from the informed consent of the governed, and if we are to be a country of the people, by the people, and for the people, where the sovereignty of self-government is to be maintained, then it is imperative that any law or bill which might compromise this be accessible to public review and scrutiny. Or else, self-government is lost. Compromising self-government is not an appropriate or effective way to stimulate the economy.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>I urge you again to oppose the TPP, pending that it's language would be released publicly and it be made certain that it will not compromise national sovereignty.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>Thank you.</i><br />
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If she responds back, I will post it below for all to see.<br />
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<i>Update</i>: The TPP Fasttrack, which would disallow debate and amendments, putting it to an up and down vote, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/13/us/politics/obamas-trade-bills-face-tough-battle-against-house-democrats.html?_r=1">has been defeated in the house</a>. That doesn't mean it's over. They can still repackage it and try again. But, it does mean that they have to take a strategic retreat and lick their wounds first.<br />
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<i>Update II</i>: <a href="http://rt.com/usa/266863-tpp-pass-house-obama/">It's complicated</a>.<br />
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<i>Update III</i>: I finally received the following generic e-mail back from Rep. Hartzler:<br />
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<div style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;">
<i>Dear Mr. Brown,</i></div>
<div style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;">
<div style="margin: 0pt 0pt 14pt;">
<i>Thank you for contacting me regarding the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), also sometimes referred to as "fast-track authority." I appreciate the time and effort you took to share your concerns with me on this vital issue. I value your input and welcome all comments so I can stay informed on the issues most important to the citizens of Missouri's 4th Congressional District.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>First, it is important to note that TPA and TPP are two separate issues. As you may know, TPA lays down the negotiation perimeters and objectives desired by Congress for any trade deal the administration may negotiate in the next five years to ensure the United States secures the most effective trade agreements possible and the people's voice is represented during the process. TPA's guidelines provide greater transparency to the negotiating process by empowering Congress to participate directly in the negotiations, if desired, and to conduct vigorous oversight of the process to hold the administration accountable. </i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>TPP, on the other hand, is the name of the trade agreement between the United States, Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Japan, Singapore, and Vietnam which has been under discussion for a while but is not yet finalized. The agreement hopes to focus on emerging trade issues and the creation of a new global trade standard for tariff and nontariff trade barriers. If the TPA bill passes, it will govern how the negotiations are finalized on the TPP deal and others in the future with other countries.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>TPA gives Congress the ability to see the negotiating text throughout the process with the authority to ultimately kill the deal if they do not find it to be satisfactory; to receive detailed briefings of the proceedings; and to be afforded the opportunity to attend negotiating rounds. Additionally, TPA protects U.S. sovereignty. Just as importantly, <span style="font-weight: bold; text-decoration: underline;">TPA requires that any proposed deal be made public for at least 60 days – giving the American people a chance to see for themselves what any deal will contain and voice their opinions accordingly – before Congress votes to approve or disapprove of the deal.</span> I am confident TPA will help deliver the strongest possible trade agreements that will boost American exports and benefit American workers, manufacturers, farmers, ranchers, and job creators.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>Ninety-six percent of the world's customers live outside the United States. In order to create more high-paying jobs here at home, we need to sell more American-made products and services overseas. That means tearing down barriers to American exports.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>Trade has a huge impact on our nation's economy. In Missouri, trade supports over 800,000 jobs, and enables it to export roughly $23 billion in goods and services annually through more than 900 exporters. Through lower trade barriers, these opportunities will only grow as more of our products reach more consumers. Additionally, by laying down strong and enforceable rules through TPA for our trading partners, American workers will be given the chance to compete on a level playing field. If we don't expand our opportunities through trade agreements, other countries (like China) will fill the void.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>I support free trade, but it must be fair. American workers are the backbone of our great country. They can compete with workers anywhere in the world when they are given a level playing field. I will continue to advocate for common sense legislative provisions that bring fairness to American trade policies. Unfortunately, there are consumers and markets across the globe that still cannot be accessed by American sellers because of high tariffs, quotas, and other barriers to international trade. It is time to knock down those barriers. </i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>While I have heard from many constituents on this issue, it is unfortunate that many have heard misinformation regarding TPA and what is accomplished through the perimeters Congress puts on the administration and how a trade deal is negotiated. That is why I have included a link to a <span style="font-weight: bold;">"Myth vs. Fact"</span> sheet on my website that I hope you will find useful: <a href="https://iqconnect.lmhostediq.com/iqextranet/iqClickTrk.aspx?&cid=MO04VH&crop=15504.10948861.7358365.9371131&redirect=http%3a%2f%2fhartzler.house.gov%2fblog%2fsetting-record-straight-tpa" style="color: #1155cc;" target="_blank"><span style="color: blue;">"Setting the Record Straight on TPA"</span><span style="color: blue;"> </span></a></i><br />
<i>Please know that as trade negotiations move forward, I will monitor the terms and conditions of any agreement to ensure that America's best interests are met and that American industries are fairly represented. As always, I greatly appreciate your concerns and perspectives. Please do not hesitate to contact me in the future on other issues important to you and your community. It is a privilege to be your voice in Congress.</i></div>
</div>
<span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"><i>With best regards, I remain,</i></span><br />
<i><br style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;" /></i>
<i><span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"> </span><wbr style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"></wbr><span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"> </span><wbr style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"></wbr><span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8000001907349px;"> Very truly yours,</span></i><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-size: 11pt;"><i> <wbr></wbr> <wbr></wbr> Vicky</i></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-size: 11pt;"><br /></span>
<span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-size: 11pt;">(Note that I did not include the irrelevant PS or her custom signature graphic, the former because it was irrelevant, the latter because I didn't know if reproducing it would be considered an issue or not.)</span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-size: 11pt;"><br /></span>
<span style="color: #222222;"><span style="background-color: white; font-size: 14.6666669845581px;">Make of it what you will, but it basically seems to boil down to "my mind is made up, you're wrong, and I'm right, so I'm going to correct you and you should take my word for it".</span></span>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-90777672550846006562015-04-02T15:47:00.002-07:002015-04-27T07:25:14.782-07:00Autism Awareness DayToday, April 2, is internationally known as Autism Awareness Day. I've never really paid much attention to Autism Awareness Day before because, in the past, I've never really known much about autism. Most of what I thought I knew came from depictions of autism in the media, articles on the subject, anecdote, and the very few brief encounters I've had with autistic children. Those unsatisfactory sources led me to envision autism as an unruly, hyperactive child who is completely socially detached, throws violent tantrums, and is more or less mentally handicapped, with parents or caregivers who struggle and grieve trying to deal with them. Some of the information I had come across even suggested that people with autism don't understand that other people are actually alive or conscious, only themselves. They didn't recognize people as people. For whatever reason I never questioned this image of autism for a long time, perhaps because I was too distracted by topics I found more interesting or relevant. I never thought too deeply about what autistic people go though, what life is like from their perspective, or what happens to those kids when they grow up. I was aware of autism, but my awareness was superficial.<br />
<br />
To make a long story short, my distorted image of autism was challenged on several fronts some time back. Not strongly, but just enough to get me asking questions and looking for the answers. I learned that autism wasn't at all what I thought it was, and that I had many gross misconceptions about it.<br />
<br />
I've learned that autism, at its core, is more or less a social learning disability. Many social skills and abilities that most people take for granted, such as understanding the meaning of someone's facial expressions, don't come naturally to people with autism. Many people with autism struggle with interpreting nonverbal and indirect forms of communication, such as facial expressions, tone of voice, body language, subtext, sarcasm, and figures of speech, though many can learn to master some or all of these. Often, they will take things literally, or at least their first instinct will be to take things literally. Social rules, such as those which determine what is and is not appropriate in a given situation, can also be difficult for an autistic person to grasp. This isn't because they are stupid. It's like being colorblind in a world where everything is color-coded. They just don't naturally see or pick up on these things. Another way to put it is to say that autism is to social skills what dyslexia is to reading. People with autism can often learn how consciously to recognize and interpret some or most of these social rules and cues, but some will find this extremely difficult and make limited progress no matter how hard they try. And while it is possible for someone with autism to become reasonably adept in social situations, for most, social situations are like feeling your way around in the dark in a booby-trapped labyrinth.<br />
<br />
Along with the social stuff, autism is characterized by what the DSM refers to as "restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities". This can include strong, focused, narrow, or obsessive interests or hobbies, adherence to rituals or routines, or repetitive sensory-seeking behaviors (often called "stimming") such as hand flapping, rocking back and forth, finger rubbing, pacing, or any number of other things. Many people with autism are also extremely oversensitive or undersensitive and indifferent to various kinds of stimuli, such as sounds, smells, tastes, textures, heat, cold, pain, and so forth. Too much sensory stimulation can become so overwhelming that it overloads the mind to where it can no longer function and shuts down most or all non-essential functions.<br />
<br />
Some forms of autism include delays in speech and communication abilities, others do not. Some autistic people are mentally handicapped, some are of average intelligence, and some are absolutely brilliant. Some hit all of their developmental milestones on time or early, speak and write very well, do well in school, and find themselves leading productive and independent lives. Some can pass as 'normal' perfectly when they want to. And some may require help and care for their whole lives. Autism comes in many varieties and effects each person differently, even those who have the same variety of autism. There is no stereotypical autistic person. But all of them face significant challenges, whether openly or silently, which are not easily understood by those who don't face those same issues.<br />
<br />
But, underneath all of the 'symptom' stuff, people with autism are still people. They are not stupid, broken, or "missing pieces" (at least not any more so than the average person). They have feelings, though sometimes those feelings work a bit differently. They have hopes, dreams, and aspirations. They get lonely and want to be loved. They care about others and are every bit as capable of moral and ethical judgement as anyone else. They want to understand the world they live in and themselves, and many are quite a bit more introspective and metacognitive than the average person. There are actually perks that can come with autism, and this is being recognized more and more. Many with high-functioning forms of autism can be very productive and successful, with analytical minds that excel at pattern-recognition, trouble-shooting, and logical thinking. The autistic mind processes and sees things differently than most others do, and this is not a bad thing. Sometimes it's just the perspective needed. Some employers are recognizing this and purposely hiring people with autism for specific jobs.<br />
<br />
When I realized I was wrong about autism, and what I thought autism was, I took the time to learn the truth and correct myself. Because, the thing I hear most from the autistic people I've talked to is that other people simply don't understand. They just want people to understand them and what they deal with, and accept them for who they are, differences and all. But the problem with correcting your own errors and learning the truth is, sometimes, you find things you didn't expect to find. Sometimes the rabbit hole goes down further than you thought it did. Or maybe, somewhere in the back of your mind, you knew where it was going, but you didn't really want to believe it. Because it could irrevocably change the way you see <i>everything</i>.<br />
<br />
The more time I have spent reading about autism, talking to people with autism, listening to them, and learning, the less it seems like I'm learning about some group of people and their challenges, and the more it seems like I'm looking in a mirror. The more it feels like my life story is being told back to me through the words of countless others. The more I can relate to their struggles. In fact, for the first time in my life, I feel like there are others who really actually get what I go though, and understand the crap that I've dealt with and have rarely talked about with others, since others don't seem to get it.<br />
<br />
I haven't come to any conclusions lightly, or without a great deal of scrutiny and review. Especially given the nature of those conclusions. But the more I look at myself, both now and as I was growing up, the more apparent it becomes that I, myself, almost certainly have mild autism – what they would probably have diagnosed as Aspergers Syndrome before the DSM-V mucked with the terminology. I had been very hesitant for some time to say this, especially publicly (I've talked to a few people about it). But as the evidence keeps stacking up I'm no longer able to achieve the level of denial necessary to avoid this conclusion. All of the signs and symptoms are there, and quite clearly. And it makes everything, the past 32 years of my life, and all of the crap I deal with to this day, make much more sense. I've always known there was something different about me. I've always felt like everyone knew something I didn't. Like I was always lagging behind others in everything. Like I was always the "c" of an "a b" conversation. Like even in my closest groups of friends I've mostly been on the periphery, unable to really be on equal footing with others. Now I finally understand why.<br />
<br />
Since I keep letting it slip to people, I figure there is no real point at keeping this under wraps anymore. I don't really want to do that anyways. As I've become more aware of what autism really is, what people with autism really deal with, the stigma of the word has dissipated for me. I don't feel ashamed or embarrassed about it. And I don't want it to be an elephant-in-the-room kind of thing that people are afraid to bring up or ask me about (or even joke about in a respectful manner), as if I might get offended by it. Plus, I'm tired of carrying this around and trying to keep it to myself. I'm not looking for attention or sympathy or whatever, but I think it's better to be out in the open and honest about who you really are. So, I'm putting it all out on the table, for better or for worse, come what may.<br />
<br />
In past years, Autism Awareness meant to me a passing awareness of someone else's problems. Kind of. Because on some level, I think I suspected. There were clues, and I did notice them, but I wasn't ready to accept them. Now, to me, Autism Awareness means self-awareness. It's amazing how much you can learn about something when you realize you've been living it for 32 years, seeing it from the inside. It's my intention to seek a clinical evaluation as soon as I can afford it, though that might be a while. Probably a year or two. In the mean time, I still want to be open and honest about where I am in all of this. I want to help other people understand and maybe clear up some misconceptions and distorted images, not just for my own benefit, but for the benefit of others too.<br />
<br />
Thank you all for taking the time to read this. If anyone has any questions or feels some point needs clarification, please just ask. Thanks.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-23928638235398288472015-01-05T03:39:00.003-08:002015-01-05T03:54:31.580-08:00A bit of reflection and reevaluationSo, for the past month, I've started writing several articles, and envisioned several more. I started writing Ethics Part III, and envisioned using it as a springboard to talk about the Police State and what has been happening in Ferguson, New York, and across the country. I've had some new insight on a theory I call Wealth-Energy Equivalency, and the economic implications of it, and I have been wanting to do an article on it for a long time. I've had idea after idea, but I've also had some other, more personal things on my mind which have stopped me from putting them into article form. Mostly, because I have become aware of an issue in my own writing and communication style.<br />
<br />
I've always known that I have a tendency to be 'wordy'. Brevity is not my forte. As a result, I will often go back over whatever I write and 'trim the fat' to make it shorter and more concise – with varying degrees of success. But I have recently discovered some things about myself, and about other people, which have brought to light a deeper issue. People, by and large, do not think the way I thought they did. And, more specifically, they don't think the way I do. I'm not merely saying that other people have different opinions, values, experiences, aptitudes, and perspectives than I do. That should be obvious to anyone, because everyone is different. I'm saying that the way I file and process information in my mind, the actual mental functionality, turns out to be markedly and fundamentally different from the way most other people do, and I was never aware of it. And this, of course, has been reflected in my communication style. I made the faulty assumption that other people did, or at least could, digest information in more or less the same way I did.<br />
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Please don't misconstrue this as a snobbish statement. I'm not meaning to imply any superiority or inferiority here – only difference. There are advantages and disadvantages to this difference. And the basic difference seems to be in the role of the subconscious. I have learned that many people, seemingly the majority, do most of their thinking in subconscious leaps and connections. It seems to be the 'default' way that people think. I... don't exactly do this. My thinking process tends to be very conscious, very systematic, and very detailed. I make intuitive leaps, but even these are very conscious and deliberate things, and I can easily follow and cross-examine the reasoning associated with them. However, this also means that thinking about anything, for me, requires intensive levels of concentration and can be quite demanding of my attention. If brains were cars, the average brain would be an automatic transmission and mine would be a stick shift.<br />
<br />
Because my brain tends to be conscious and meticulously systematic in its processing, the way I see things can be very different. Specifically, my idea of simplicity is very different from other people's. If someone were to ask the average person for the simplest possible definition of a car, they might say something like "A machine that people use to go from one place to another." That's very simple for most people. It isn't very wordy, it uses simple language, and it gives the big-picture idea of what a car is. But for me, this isn't simple at all. To me, the above is so ambiguous and frustratingly complex as to not even <i>qualify</i> as a definition of a car. The word 'machine', for instance, is so general that it can refer to just about anything, from a wheelchair ramp to robot. And does a car cease to be a car if it isn't being used to go from place to place? Is it is what it is because of what it does, or because of something intrinsic to it? And this is not even touching on details like how it moves, what it's made of, how if functions, etc; which are all essential to defining a car and contrasting it from other things such as a chariot or an airplane.<br />
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Please understand, this is not me overthinking the statement. This isn't some way that I choose to view it. This is how my brain processes information. It is the only way I know <i>how</i> to think. I now know there are other ways that people process information, and I can sort of emulate them indirectly (at least well enough to come up with the above example), but I'm overall not very good at it (it took me an entire days worth of pondering to formulate and settle on the above example). My brain simply does not subconsciously make many indirect or generalized connections the way other people's brains apparently do, but it is in turn great at consciously making direct and logical connections and refining out the details and patterns that other people have great difficulty with.<br />
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I understand things from the bottom up, taking the details and the simplest equations from which the whole is fractally derived and using them to piece together the larger picture. The 'big picture' way that many other people seem to see things is extremely difficult for me to wrap my brain around. When I see the 'big picture' it is indirectly as a fractal of the fundamental details. That is to say, to use an analogy: I cannot see the forest, but I can see the trees, and I can understand the forest only by observing the trees. And, more importantly, I see the minute and exact details which define a thing, from which the whole is derived, as being of crucial significance. And this has been the crux of my own difficulty. Because, as I have learned, others often do not. Such detail, to them, is boring, trivial hair-splitting that seems irrelevant to the 'big picture' idea. "Who cares if that tree is a conifer, it's a forest!"<br />
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And so, my attempts at communicating ideas, I have realized, are not always as effective as I'd like them to be. I look back over this very article as I write it, and I see within it many examples of this. If I tried to fix them, I would end up trashing the whole article, rewriting it a million times, and failing at it in the end (a process I have often gone through). And it is for this reason that I feel I need to reevaluate. I'm not quitting the blog (though posts may be more infrequent), or withholding commentary elsewhere on the web, but I know I need to find a better way to convey ideas to people so they are easier for them to digest, even if that means using a different medium. This will be a learning curve for me. And, by the way, I always welcome feedback.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-35048684439669521702014-11-25T04:04:00.002-08:002014-11-25T04:04:36.633-08:00Ethics Part 2 - Rights and ResponsibilitiesIf you haven't read <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/07/ethics-part-1-non-aggression-principle.html">Ethics Part 1 - The Non-Aggression Principle,</a> I recommend doing so before reading this.<br />
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The Non-Aggression Principle is, arguably, the most basic ethical statement anyone can make. Any sane ethical system starts with this simple idea that using violence to get your way is wrong. However, for many people who understand the NAP, this seems to be where it stops. I have even heard statements to the effect that the NAP should be the only law in existence. I take issue with this notion.</div>
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Please, don't construe anything I'm about to say as an attack on the NAP. I'm not saying that the NAP is flawed or inadequate, because it isn't. But it can be taken out of context, twisted, and abused until it has been turned entirely on its head. I have even witnessed the NAP be used by certain idiots as a justification for violence against entire groups of people, in the name of 'defense'. I have also heard statements like "I owe you nothing, except non-aggression", and have encountered people who are so fiercely individualistic that they would say it's okay (or at least, there should be no forced consequence) to knowingly letting someone starve to death on their doorstep, when they themselves have abundance.<br />
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Again, this is not a problem with the NAP. This is a problem with crappy, narrow-minded thinking. To understand the NAP, you must understand some other basic principles as well. Without them, serious problems can come up when applying the NAP to real life. Let me propose a dilemma to illustrate:</div>
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Let's say a man is lost in the desert. He has no food and no water, and the sun is beating down on him. Without finding water soon, he will die of thirst. The only things he has in his possession are the clothes on his back and a loaded gun. He happens upon a vendor selling water, but the vendor is charging $10,000 per bottle. The man has no money, and the vendor will not take anything he has in exchange for the water. He only accepts cash. There is no other water to be had in a hundred mile radius. This creates an ethical problem for the thirsty man. Either he uses his gun and initiates violence against the vendor and take his water by force, or he dies. He must choose between acting ethically and forfeiting his life, or preserving his life and making himself a criminal. And for argument's sake, we will say that he has done nothing negligent or stupid to end up in his situation, life has simply thrown it at him despite his best preparations. So, what should he do?</div>
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Most of you, I suspect, would say he is perfectly justified in taking the water by force, up to and including the use of deadly force if necessary. Or, at least, you would excuse him if he did so. But, why? The only way, according to the NAP, that such a use of force could be justified is if it is a defensive act. So if we say that this is a justified use of force, then we must conclude that it was a defensive act. And if it is a defensive act, we must conclude that the vendor acted aggressively – that is, his refusal to give the man water or to sell it at a reasonable cost was a violent and aggressive act.</div>
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But how can that be? The water didn't belong to the thirsty man, it belonged to the vendor. He pumped it out of his own well, on his own property, using his own resources. He bottled it with bottles he bought himself, with money he earned himself. He loaded it into his own truck by his own effort and drove through the burning hot desert using fuel he bought with his own money. He doesn't owe anyone anything, does he? And if it weren't for his efforts the water wouldn't have been available at all. The product wouldn't have existed where it was needed. Yet many of us just justified killing him, and called it a defensive act. I've heard this same dilemma used before to try and discredit the NAP. Does it really show that the NAP is inadequate or inconsistent?</div>
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Hardly. Rather, it shows us that there are other consistent principles at work. A helium balloon floating into the sky does not disprove gravity, it merely proves buoyancy. And, gravity and buoyancy do not contradict one another, but rather they complement one another. And in the same way, the Rights-Responsibilities Duality complements and balances the Non-Aggression Principle.</div>
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What I call the Rights-Responsibilities Duality is the basic idea that for every right exercised there is also an equal personal responsibility that accompanies it. Or, as Spiderman's Uncle Ben put it, "With great power comes great responsibility."<br />
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We don't live in a vacuum. What we do affects other people, directly or
indirectly, whether we intend for it to or not. We live in a universe where
energy is a conserved value. In any given system at any given point in
time it is finite. A world where the only types of human interaction are
voluntary is unrealistic, even where everyone follows the NAP, because, unless
the population density is incredibly low, human interaction is inevitable. What we do will always affect other people, for better or worse. And
to exercise our rights in a way which inhibits others from exercising theirs is
wrong.<br />
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Everything that we have was given to us. Either at the
moment of our conception, during our development in the womb, or some time
afterwards – even those things which we have earned through work were
ultimately earned using energy which was given to us. We cannot claim that we
have the right to receive from the universe those things which we need to
survive. We can’t claim things like food, water, shelter, and medical care as
rights. If we did, the universe would simply laugh at us and keep going on as
it always has, regardless of what the little hairless talking apes on the tiny
speck of a plant say, and we would get what we would get.</div>
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But it is the right of every person to seek those things out
which they need or want. And it is our responsibility not to inhibit others
from doing this, say, by hoarding resources to make them inaccessible to
others. This is not a 'collective responsibility' that necessitates a massive centralized regulatory system, forced taxation, and entitlement programs. It is an individual responsibility for which we are individually accountable, though one can certainly argue that it is more efficient to carry it out as a (voluntary) collective effort. And the degree to which we carry this responsibility depends on how we exercise our rights, that is, how we influence the world around us and what resources are available to us. It also depends on what falls within our reach to do. To whom much has been given much should be expected, and to whom little has been given little should be expected. But, failure at this responsibility is negligence, which is violence, and should be dealt with accordingly.<br /><br />There is a little more to it than this. For instance, it would be easy to surmise that we also have a responsibility to those who can't meaningfully exercise their rights to seek after what they need, such as the physically or mentally disabled, the mentally ill, children, and the elderly and infirm. Some might also say that we have a responsibility not to commit things like animal cruelty, which causes undue suffering on creatures that can clearly experience suffering. I would be inclined to agree with both of these statements. But before we can get much further down that rabbit hole, we need to understand a bit more about rights, what they are, and where they come from. And that deserves its own article, and a few other things should be addressed before that happens.<o:p></o:p></div>
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<i style="background-color: white; color: #444444; line-height: 18.2000007629395px;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</span></i></div>
</div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-44526098985141597732014-11-04T06:35:00.001-08:002014-11-04T06:45:04.181-08:00Why I'm not voting today.It's November 4th, time for everyone to go do their civic duty and vote for who they think should be allowed to <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-crux-of-problem.html">use violence to enforce their agenda</a> for the next several years. And that is, in a nutshell, why I won't be doing so myself. Because my vote is simply: no one. No matter how good and noble your intentions are, how brilliant you are, how solid your values are, how spotless your integrity is, or how nice a person you are – you have no right to use violence to make me or anyone else do things the way you want them done. I don't care how many people vote for you.<br />
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If a gang of thugs surrounds you in an alleyway, demands your money, and threatens to shoot you if you don't give it to them, that's called robbery. If the gang first holds a vote, gives you a vote in whether or not they get to take your money, and then wins because they are majority and majority rules – news flash, that's still robbery. No matter how much you dress it up, or how many layers of civic pleasantries you hide it behind. Calling the gang government, giving them official titles or badges, expanding the voting pool to millions of people, calling the money taxes, creating an elaborate structure of laws, 'checks and balances', and other such things doesn't change the underlying reality. Initiating violence against peaceful people is wrong, no matter who does it, what their intentions, or how many people support it. Period. Violence is only justifiable when it is <i>necessary</i> for <i>defense</i> of one's own natural rights or the natural rights of another party. That is, when someone else has initiated violence against you or someone else, and you have to fight back to stop it.<br />
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That's not my opinion or political preference. It is the most basic, fundamental, and self-evident ethical statement that can be made. I defy anyone who wishes to dispute it. And without that simple principle as a foundation you have no ethics, no morality, no principle that isn't arbitrary self-righteous nonsense. (And, my fellow Christians, if anyone wishes to argue against that on a Biblical basis, that principle is clearly implied in the Greatest Commandments. Love does no harm to its neighbor, and is therefore the fulfillment of the Law. So unless you want to toss out the Greatest Commandments your argument, whatever it may be, is invalid.)<br />
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Please understand me. I'm all in favor of participatory government. I'm totally down with using voting as a method of participation (though not the <i>sole</i> method). And while I frequently argue that the voting system itself is broken, using the <span id="goog_262517813"></span>failtastic <a href="http://youtu.be/s7tWHJfhiyo">'first-past-the-post' method</a><span id="goog_262517814"></span>, and that our government is not participatory enough but relies too much on indirect representation and centralization, neither of these are, in and of themselves, a good enough reason not to vote. Though they certainly don't lend any legitimacy to the whole system.<br />
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The reason I will not be voting, the reason I am boycotting the vote indefinitely, is because the only options on the ballot are to hand over the 'right' to initiate violence over to various candidates campaigning for that 'right'. Which is no right at all. The only meaningful vote that I can cast is not to cast one. I vote no confidence in the system itself, because that system is broken beyond repair. No amount of voting will fix it. The problem is rule-by-violence, and voting who gets to rule by violence only perpetuates that problem. You are voting for the problem to continue. It doesn't matter if it's the Democrats, the Republicans, the Libertarians, the Greens, or whoever else. The underlying paradigm doesn't change. And I will not lend legitimacy to such a paradigm by casting my vote for it, because rule-by-violence is inherently illegitimate.<br />
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If you would say, as some do, that I have no right to complain because I don't vote, I would respond with the opposite: you have no right to complain, because you voted for the situation to continue. You voted for someone to have the power to use violence to enforce their agenda on you. You might not have gotten the person you wanted, or the agenda you wanted, but you certainly got the system you voted for. I don't consent to such a system. I won't vote for it to continue. And I look forward to the day it collapses under its own dead weight. In the mean time, I will happily gripe about violence being used to force other people's agendas on me until others get it through their heads what the problem really is, and realize their own role in it.<br />
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If you choose to go vote today, I'm not judging you. If you feel it's the right thing to do, go and do it. I've voted in the past, largely because I didn't understand the problem. In hindsight, I regret casting my ballot, but hindsight is always 20-20 and I probably wouldn't have realized the truth of the matter without voting in the last major election, and the bad taste it left in my mouth afterwards. But I do strongly encourage anyone who understands what I'm saying here to consider boycotting the vote yourself. The less legitimacy this corrupt and violent government can claim for itself, the closer we are to real change. I vote No-Confidence 2014.<br />
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<i style="background-color: white; color: #444444; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; line-height: 18.2000007629395px;">If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-70931461395283370342014-10-19T23:51:00.000-07:002014-10-20T01:03:43.058-07:00I'm still here.I just wanted to post and let my readers (all two of you) know that I haven't been sucked into a black hole or anything, nor have I forgotten about this blog. I've actually had several articles planned, but due to having a lot on my plate and no reliable internet connection, I have failed to finish any of them thus far. In the past, I have forced myself to push through an article and get one out, but for right now, I'm taking my time to get my ducks in a row, work on some other projects (namely, a novel I've been meaning to sit down and write), and deal with other more mundane issues that are competing for my attention at the moment. I've also been spending some serious time and debt-based fiat currency in the area of prepping, something I've been meaning to do for some time. And no, Ebola didn't inspire me, I actually started before all that came to the forefront. I may do an article or two about that in the not-so-distant future.<br />
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I do, however, now have a semi-usable internet connection. It's slow, spotty, and occasionally just doesn't work, but it means I can actually get a few things done online. So, in honor of being mostly back up and running out here in the sticks, I thought I'd share a couple thoughts.<br />
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<b>Thought #1</b><br />
I rub elbows with several members of the tinfoil hat community online. I don't always agree with their take on things, but many of them are quite perceptive, catch things other people don't, and most that I know hold themselves to a decent standard of intellectual integrity. They make me think about things from a different angle, and that's a good thing. So, when I say what I'm about to say, I'm not saying it in application to everyone. Technically, I fall into the tinfoil hat category myself on some issues. Like 9-11.<br />
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But, some of the people in the conspiracy theory community are just plain nuts. It's fine to use inductive reasoning, intuition, and imagination to hypothesize about fringe possibilities. In fact, it's a good thing. Because sometimes those fringe possibilities turn out to be the truth. The problem comes when a hypothesis, because it sounds so good to you and there is some shred of evidence that correlates with it, becomes fact in your mind and is henceforth purported as such. If you have a hypothesis about lizard people, mind-controlling nanobots, alien overlords, or plans to massively depopulate the human race – well, awesome. All of those things, while they strain the bounds of probability and reason, still fall within the realm of plausibility.<br />
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If someone is interested, there is no harm and much good that can come from investigating these possibilities and discussing it with others. But when you start to declare something as fact (or worse, as a pre-assumed fact which goes without question), provide only shaky and circumstantial evidence, and label those who call it into question as 'sheeple' or 'asleep'... well, at that point you have lost my attention. I will entertain almost any idea, no matter how crazy. I learned from 9-11 not to dismiss something just because it 'sounds crazy'. But in the same way, I won't accept something just because it 'makes sense'. Before you can call something a fact, you must first eliminate the possibility that it is not true. And on that note...<br />
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<b>Thought #2</b><br />
We, as a society, have an addiction. And I blame the Ancient Greek philosophers for it. They did us a great disservice in that they ingrained into our culture a terrible, horrible concept called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_bivalence">two-valued logic</a>. For those not in the know, and too lazy to read the linked Wikipedia entry, two-valued logic basically means a logic system where a given statement can either be true or false, not both, and not some other third option. Everything is a zero or a one.<br />
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This works great in computer science, where everything <i>is</i> a zero or a one. But for the real world... not so much. We have to deal with things called unknown variables, which result in uncertainties, probabilities, and such. So from any individual's relative position there is inherently a third option besides 'true' and 'false', and that is 'indeterminate'. Someone will argue, "Hurr-durr, its still true or false, u jus dont know witch cuz yer igner'nt." Which makes me want to drop a crate of physics textbooks on their head. Three-valued logic is inherent to the universe, and one needs to look no further than quantum mechanics to see that. There, you find <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle">uncertainty</a> encoded into the most <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave_function_collapse">fundamental mechanisms of the universe</a>. In other words, the universe <i>runs</i> on three value logic, the same way a computer runs on binary logic. And all of you black-and-white, true-and-false determinists can get just over it. Because there is nothing you can do about it.<br />
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It is okay to be uncertain. It is okay to not know all of the answers. It is okay for your worldview to have unanswered questions, tricky conundrums, and loose ends that haven't been tied up. You will never have all of your ducks in a row. Your ideas and logic will never be perfectly watertight. No matter how hard you try, no matter how many lifetimes you spend, there will always be indeterminates, unknown variables, and unknown unknowns. That just comes with the territory of being a mere mortal.<br />
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But this makes many people very uncomfortable. We have been taught that, if an idea has loose ends or unknowns attached to it, it must be wrong or worthless. And we feel very uncomfortable when we can't put all of our observations and experiences into a neat box, because then we feel like we aren't in control. Which is okay, because we aren't. People, you need to let it go. (No singing!) In most cases, 'indeterminate' or 'I don't know' are just as acceptable answers to a question as 'yes' or 'no'. It doesn't mean the person saying it is stupid, or incompetent, or whatever. And if you don't know, it doesn't mean you are stupid or incompetent. We need to learn to live with uncertainty, to be honest about it with ourselves, with each other, and accepting of others (and not dismissive of their ideas) when they admit they are uncertain. False certainty is the fundamental unit of willful ignorance.<br />
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<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-29621246295361971172014-08-31T19:24:00.003-07:002014-10-19T23:59:09.732-07:00The Waves<div class="TheLinksStandard">
I write this now sitting on a wooden balcony of
sorts, overlooking the branch of the <st1:place>Lake of the Ozarks</st1:place>
that snakes out around the edge of the little community I call home. The sun is
setting, insects buzz in the thick green woods that surround the lake, and
while the air is warm, the breeze is just a bit cool, just enough to make the
temperature very pleasant. I see only a narrow strip of intermittent clouds in
the sky, darkened by the way the light is hitting them, with a pink haze
beneath them and a clear blue expanse above them which grows darker as it
approaches the zenith. Only a few evening lake-goers can still be seen on the
lake, and even they appear to be inching closer to the docks, their boats
leaving long wakes that fan out into waves which ripple slowly across the
water.</div>
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Ah, the waves. While there is no shortage of beauty
to be seen from where I sit, it is the waves that captivate me more than
anything else. As the wake from one of the boat continues to engulf the lake, changing
its entire landscape with even, parallel lines that slowly inch towards land, I
see another line of waves push back the opposite direction and begin to engulf
the first set of waves until they are canceled out. Then the more subtle natural wave pattern of the lake soon becomes apparent again, flowing at a
forty-five degree angle to the waves left by the boat. And all this time the
smaller little waves could be seen lapping up and down, entirely indifferent to
the larger waves with their greater wavelengths and lower frequencies. One does
not affect the other as far as I can tell. And these little waves, rippling
through the lake, seem to be random and yet in perfect harmony. If I cared to,
I could probably time them and measure their frequency, and it would probably
be the same no matter which point of the lake I picked to observe. I sit here
from my vantage point watching all of this as the sky begins to grow dark, and
I realize I am seeing the universe.</div>
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The lake is, indeed, an image and archetype of the
universe itself at all scales, from the smallest quantum scale to the scale of
multiple galaxy clusters. Waves flowing, crossing, merging, canceling, pushing, and
pulling on other waves. Waves made of particles, which are made of waves, which
are made of particles, which are made of waves, which continue down until you
reach the smallest possible thing, which is both particle and wave, quantized and
discreet yet flowing and amorphous. Bound by frequencies and amplitudes, yet
clumped into coherent units, creating a tension which is both quantifiable and
unpredictable. This is the palette of mathematical color from which the
universe itself is painted by its Painter, skillfully and carefully mixed into
photons and electrons, quarks and gluons, stars and galaxies, summer breezes
and sunsets.</div>
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I look at the lake and see the story of everything. I
see a narrative of all that has happened and will happen being told by the
water in its silent voice. I hear the whisperings of every joy, every tragedy,
every solemn occasion, every blissful moment, and I think to myself that if
only I knew what the water knows, perhaps I could influence that
narrative in some way and make the story a little bit better. Perhaps I could create waves of healing which flow opposite waves of tragedy, matching their
frequency and wavelength, and canceling them out. Perhaps I could learn to paint
with this palette of waves as a painter myself. For, in fact, I already am a
painter, as is every person whether they realize it or not. But we are not
always lucid as to what we paint, whether our waves make the story better or
worse. This is not always our fault, because there is so much we don’t yet know and
don’t yet understand. But, all too often we think we know, or rather, we pretend
we know. Or we simply cease to care. We stop looking at the waves and look only
at ourselves. We cease to learn or to observe the wake we leave behind as it
ripples through everything around us. And such willful ignorance inevitably
results in terrible chapters to this story we are all writing within the waves
of the universe.</div>
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<br />
<div class="TheLinksStandard">
It’s now nearly dark. The lake is still visible but
the I can no longer make out the waves except in the brightest spots. I know
that while the light, itself waves that mirror the nature of the
water, has crept away to shine on other parts of the Earth, the waves on the
water still continue unseen, telling their story to whoever can perceive them
and understand what they are saying. I hear their message, and I will keep
listening until I understand. Because I want to make beauty like they do, that
someone else might some day look on and take from me what I now take
from the lake.<br />
<br />
<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i></div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-79646972150005272152014-08-08T01:33:00.001-07:002014-10-19T23:59:22.234-07:00Israel and Palestine - Part 2<a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/07/thoughts-on-israeli-palestinian-conflict.html">Read Part 1 here.</a><br />
<br />
So, I want to address a very specific argument I am seeing a lot of from the side supporting Israel's actions in Gaza. It's the 'human shield' justification, which says that since Hamas is hiding behind civilians, using civilian facilities, etc; Israel is justified in attacking civilian targets, and not responsible for the civilian deaths. Those deaths are on Hamas.<br />
<br />
Now, I have heard <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israelgaza-conflict-the-myth-of-hamass-human-shield-9619810.html">counterarguments</a> against these allegations that Hamas is using human shields, including evidence that Israel is <a href="http://youtu.be/boAYuOgqzJQ">fabricating evidence</a> to that effect. There is the claim that Gaza is so population dense, that the people have nowhere to go. And there is the whole question of whether or not someone should have the right to order someone else out of their own home so they can drop a bomb on it. But, the pro-Israel side will no doubt have counterarguments to these counterarguments, and trying to sort out the fact from fiction in the midst of all the propaganda is a massive and knotty task. Inevitably, both sides present their 'evidence', reject or explain away the others' evidence, and end up in a stalemate of butthurt.<br />
<br />
Therefore, for the purpose of this discussion, we are going to make some assumptions for the sake of argument. I am <i>not</i> implying that any of these assumptions are actually true <i>or</i> false. I simply want to isolate the human shield argument and judge it by its own merits, without getting distracted by extra variables. So, for this article, we will assume:<br />
<br />
1. That the State of Israel is legitimate in every way, has the right to exist where it is, and has the right to defend itself when attacked.<br />
<br />
2. That Hamas is a real threat, its activities pose a significant danger to the civilian population of Israel, and Israel is completely justified in defending itself against that threat with deadly force.<br />
<br />
3. That Hamas is, in fact, using human shields purposefully, storing weapons in civilian buildings, hiding behind women and children, and forcing or tricking people to remain in areas that are going to be bombed, for the purpose of producing dead Palestinians that can be used as propaganda.<br />
<br />
So then, assuming all of the above is true – if you are Israel, what do you do?<br />
<br />
Let's start with an analogy. If you are in your home, and there are crowds of people on the street outside your house, and someone in the crowd starts firing gunshots into your window (and there are no police that can be called), what do you do? Well, what you <i>don't</i> do is pick up an automatic weapon and start firing into the crowd. It doesn't matter if the shooter is purposefully hiding in the crowd and using them as a shield. Your right not to be assaulted does not trump the rights of the people in the crowd not to be assaulted, and neither do theirs trump yours. You are equal, and writing them off as collateral damage does not magically change this, or justify taking their lives.<br />
<br />
"Well, warn them to disperse first!" someone will say. After all, Israel is supposedly warning the Palestinians to get out of an area before bombing them. Forget that this would, of course, give the shooter time to disperse too. But now, let's say that this crowd is actually in a fenced area. Their small neighborhood has been boxed in from all sides by a tall electric fence topped with barbed wire, and they have no way out. Nevermind that you built the fence and guard the only exit, that's not important. Thanks to this fence, though, the crowd has nowhere to disperse to. They can shuffle a bit, and maybe leave you a few empty holes to fire your automatic rifle down. But if you start sweeping side to side, they have nowhere to go.<br />
<br />
"The crowd should just turn in the shooter! They know who it is, they should grab him and hand him over!" Except for, you know, the shooter has a gun and all. Remember that the crowd has been living with this shooter in their midst for a while now. They are scared of him. They don't want to get shot, either by you or him. They are afraid to criticize him, lest he retaliate against them. He's got friends, after all, and their little gang is rather rough. The crowd is caught in the middle, scared of both sides, with nowhere to run to, and no way to defend themselves against either one. And, for some reason, they don't entirely trust you either.<br />
<br />
That is, they are hostages, and essentially being held hostage by both sides of the conflict. Coming to this realization should start shedding some light of perspective on the situation. Because in a hostage situation, great care is usually given to protect the lives of the hostages while taking down the hostage-taker, even if the hostage-taker is hostile and aggressive.<br />
<br />
So, what should Israel do? If this is a hostage situation, and they are partly responsible for keeping those hostages, step 1 would be to release those hostages. The absolute first step in dealing with Hamas should be the immediate end of the Apartheid against the Palestinians. Open the fences and let them out. Give them back the freedom to move and live where they choose. Let relief and supplies in. That would be a great start.<br />
<br />
But then, you still have to deal with Hamas, and if you release the Palestinians then you let Hamas out as well to tromp through Israel causing havoc. This is an inky problem, but so is any hostage situation. Going after them must be handled with care, just like you would when dealing with a criminal who has taken hostages. I can't give a detailed step-by-step guide on how to do so, but I'm sure there are plenty of hostage negotiation experts and tactical experts who could. Hamas could be hunted down and systematically eliminated in such a way that minimized civilian casualties, despite their human shields, with a bit of patience and tactical forethought. You cannot convince me that the mighty IDF would have any problem doing this.<br />
<br />
Would there be mishaps, perhaps a stray Israeli bullet here or there that might claim a civilian life? Probably. Mishaps do happen in difficult situations like this, even when the utmost care is given. It's not okay, but it is a far cry better than dropping bombs on a civilian populated area. And when you value the lives of those civilians, view them as hostages to a militant organization, and make preserving their lives and dignity as much a part of your mission as protecting your own people, then you will make every possible effort to prevent civilian casualties. And, in a war zone, that is often the most and the least that we can ask.<br />
<br />
In short, the human shield argument, even if it's valid, does not justify the bombing of populated civilian areas like we are seeing in Gaza. It doesn't justify over a thousand civilians killed since the beginning of the attack, including many women and children. These are real people, individuals with names, faces, family, friends, hopes, and dreams. Now they are dead. <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/07/thoughts-on-israeli-palestinian-conflict.html">I've said before</a>, and I will say again, that I fully support the right of the people of Israel to live in the land peacefully, and I fully support their right to defend themselves if attacked. But I cannot support what the State of Israel is doing now, or its continued Apartheid against the Palestinians, who also have those same rights. There is no way to justify it.<br />
<br />
<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-59042463244817966262014-07-19T00:22:00.000-07:002014-10-19T23:59:41.751-07:00Thoughts on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict<div class="MsoNormal">
Best laid plans have a way of going awry. I had planned on
doing several articles on the situation in <st1:country-region>Israel</st1:country-region>
and <st1:city>Palestine</st1:city>. The first was going
to go over the basic facts and statistics of the Israel-Palestine conflict, its
history, and some verifiable sources to back up those facts to help everyone
get on the same page. The second was going to address the current situation,
concerning the bombing of <st1:city>Gaza</st1:city> by <st1:country-region>Israel</st1:country-region>
and the ground invasion, which is now currently underway. The third was going to go where angels
fear to tread, and tackle the religious aspect of this issue – not concerning
Judaism or Islam, but concerning the Christians who back whatever actions <st1:country-region>Israel</st1:country-region>
takes, regardless of their inherent moral repercussions, and justify this based
on Scripture. I intended to examine the merits of this position from a purely
Biblical perspective.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
Well, I never made much progress on these articles,
primarily due to spending time working on the house I just purchased, which
doesn’t have internet, to make it livable enough for my family and myself to
move into it. It’s a 45 minute drive from my current residence, and between
that and work, I have gotten little done on anything else. I still might do the
first and third articles at a later time, and <a href="http://awakenedcitizen.com/after-a-long-history-of-apartheid-rule-is-israel-really-defending-itself-op-ed" target="_blank">Awakened Citizen</a> and
<a href="http://scgnews.com/the-gaza-bombardment-what-youre-not-being-told" target="_blank">StormCloudsGathering</a> both did excellent articles which cover the second topic
well, so there is no need for me to restate what they have already said. But I wanted to at least make a few comments of my own on the situation.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
On the topic of ethics, I believe in the <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/07/ethics-part-1-non-aggression-principle.html" target="_blank">Non-AggressionPrinciple</a>, the inherent <a href="http://youtu.be/IkIKDKtRQuY" target="_blank">Natural Rights</a> of every person, and in the inherent
personal responsibilities that come with those rights. In that regard, I stand
with the people of <st1:country-region>Israel</st1:country-region>
and their right to live in peace where they choose, to organize their own
society in a self-determined and peaceful way, and to defend themselves with
force against any aggressor when necessary. For the same reasons, I also stand
with the people of <st1:city>Palestine</st1:city> and
their right to do the same things – to live in peace where they choose, to
organize their own society in a self-determined and peaceful way, and to defend
themselves with force against any aggressor when necessary.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a wedge issue. It’s not
simple, straightforward, or easily solved. And people are angry about it, and I
understand their anger. Innocent people are dying, and I’m angry about it, too.
Over the course of the past week I have seen innumerable Facebook fights,
arguments, and angry words over this issue from both sides. I have heard many
claims and counterclaims, backed by many different sources of varying
reputation, which only add to the confusion and fuel the fire of both the
conflict and the heated debate surrounding it. I have admittedly, so far, had a
difficult time sorting the facts from the fiction.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
But, in my searching, a few thing have become abundantly
clear. The first, is that there is innocent blood on the hands of both sides. To what degree and in
what ways are obviously up for debate, but both sides have killed civilians,
children, and otherwise innocent people. The second is that the Palestinian
people, especially those in the Gaza Strip, are living in squallor in what can
only be described as the world’s two largest concentration camps. Walled in by
fences and troops, there is tight control over who and what enters or leaves, and this greatly limits economic development of any kind, and has even hampered relief efforts. Third, is that such conditions of great poverty and oppression, coupled with dogmatic thinking, create a ripe breeding ground for violent extremism. It does not excuse or justify such extremism, but it does provide fertile soil for it to grow in. And fourth, this back and forth, retaliatory violence is not solving anything, and is not going to. It's only making things progressively worse.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
Can this conflict ever be solved? Can the senseless violence ever come to an end, and if so, how? I don't have an easy or definite answer to that question. But I firmly believe it's at least possible. But if it's going to happen, it is going to have to start with at least one of the two sides putting their foot down against the elements within them that support aggressive violence and holding those elements accountable. That, of course, is no guarantee of peace, but it is the only path that can lead to it. Either side can choose to make this step, but given that Israel is the more powerful of the two sides, and exerts the most control over the situation, they are by far in the better position to make this move and have it be effective. They have the most power, and therefore, the most responsibility. They are in the unique position to relieve the Palestinian territories of their concentration-camp-like qualities and end the Apartheid.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
I have no illusions that, if they did this today and quit the Apartheid cold-turkey, it would somehow magically and instantly end the violence. Not by a longshot. But someone has to take the first step, and that someone will probably have to take the first several steps. Then, eventually, the other party will have to start taking steps, too. And they can only do this if enough people on either side choose to. And I have it on good authority that there are many, on both sides, that do want actual peace. I stand with those among Israel and Palestine who want to see real peace, for both sides. And I stand firmly against aggression of any type, and condemn the killing of innocent civilians, whether by airstrike, by rocket, by gun, or by suicide bomber. That includes these airstrikes by Israel on the densely populated Gaza strip.<br />
<br />
<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i><br />
<br />
See also: <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/08/israel-and-palestine-part-2.html">Israel and Palestine - Part 2</a></div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-80094169420332488032014-07-13T11:51:00.001-07:002014-11-25T04:05:51.540-08:00Ethics Part 1 - The Non-Aggression PrincipleAny sane system of ethics must be based on clear, consistent, and justifiable premises which, taken together, can be applied practically to reach a defined end. It was my intention to, at some future time, do a series of articles which proposed several such premises, explained their justification, and expounded on them to some degree. But, due to recent events, and to give context to several articles I'm planning, I think it's important to go into one of these premises right now, often called the Non-Aggression Principle.<br />
<br />
The Non-Aggression Principle (or NAP) can be summarized in the following statement: "The initiation of violence against another person is unjustifiable and unacceptable – the only legitimate and justifiable use of violence is when it is necessary for defense." Put simply, you don't go using violence against someone who isn't trying to do it to you first. The NAP divides all violence into one of two categories: aggression and defense. Only the latter of which is permissible and only when it is justified and necessary.<br />
<br />
Let me define a few terms before we go on.<br />
• <i>Violence</i> is the application of any force, whether actively or passively, directly or indirectly, against a person in such a way as to interfere with, preclude, or otherwise infringe upon the exercise of their natural rights (another premise deserving its own article). Violence includes, but is not limited to, direct physical force, threat of force, intimidation, coercion, fraud, slander, false accusations, invasion of privacy, putting someone at risk against their will, or exercise of undue leverage (such as taking advantage of a state of duress to get someone to do something).<br />
• <i>Aggression</i> is any act of violence which is initiated by one person against another who is not acting violently, and is therefore not defensive in nature.<br />
• <i>Defense</i> is an action taken, directly or indirectly, against an aggressor to 1) preclude an imminent act of violence, 2) bring an end to an act of violence in progress, 3) obtain reasonable restitution for an act of violence to fully compensate the injured party for loss, or 4) to secure reasonable assurance that the aggressor will not further injure the wronged party or any other person with legitimate cause for concern. Acts of violence born from revenge, resentment, outrage, offense, or intimidating potential aggressors are, in and of themselves, not legitimately defensive.<br />
• <i>Necessary</i> here means that there is no apparent and viable alternative that has not already been exhausted, or that the severity or imminence of the aggression warrants immediate response of defensive violence to deal with it. Also, it does not exceed the severity of the act being committed. For example: Gunning down a teenager who stole a pack of gum and is running from the scene is not a legitimate act of defense. Neither is shooting a cop on their lunch break just because you "know" they are involved in enforcing arbitrary laws.<br />
<br />
The validity and importance of the NAP should be self-apparent – but since most people tend to thoughtlessly accept things around them which violate it, it seems that it's necessary to spell it out. Unless you live in a war zone, under an extremely repressive dictatorship, or some other situation where violence is commonplace, the NAP is in effect to one degree or another all around you every day, whether you know it or not. If you can walk down the street, pass by someone, and reasonably expect that they won't attack you – and they can expect that you won't attack them – then you have just witnessed the NAP in action. Most people who aren't sociopaths know that it's unacceptable to arbitrarily attack another person – whether it's to take something that belongs to them, to force them to do something you want, or any other reason short of self-defense or defense of another. This general understanding is why, in most civilized places, you don't see people going around killing and beating each other in the streets. Because we all know such violence is unacceptable.<br />
<br />
However, in nearly all societies throughout history people have tried to shroud, disguise, or justify away aggressive violence in one form or another for some 'greater good' or 'worthy purpose', such as honor and glory, maintaining social order, upholding some arbitrary social standard, economic gain, or any number of other shaky reasons. On the other hand, you also have the rare total pacifist that denounces violence even in defense. (Although, there are certainly times when, for strategic reasons, it is arguably better to forgo defense to achieve a larger purpose. Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. both understood this well, and it is illustrated well in Gene Sharp's "From Dictatorship to Democracy".)<br />
<br />
Of these philosophies the NAP is the only one that, when followed, trends in a direction that approaches a limit (in the mathematical sense) of zero violence. Non-violence is the equilibrium state of an NAP based society. Pacifism has no mechanism to stop aggressive violence that does not require the aggressor's cooperation, which by definition they are not giving. Therefore, in pacifism, there is no force pushing back against the trend of violence. Total pacifism's equilibrium state is, therefore, one in which there is violence. In philosophies that try to justify aggression, it is possible to 'justify' employing violence where there was no violence previously. This means that, if you hypothetically had a situation where a group of people were living in total peace and without violence, you might still find 'acceptable' reasons to commit acts of violence against them. Since this allows for spontaneous acts of violence where no violence previously existed, this philosophy's equilibrium state is also one of violence. So, if peace is to be an objective, the NAP is the only practical philosophy that approaches that objective.<br />
<br />
It's important to understand this, because whatever the issue, in nearly every case, either some or all of the problem can be traced back to violations of the Non-Aggression Principle. Any ideology, philosophy, or socio-economic system that is both sane and legitimate will include the NAP in some form, whether explicitly or implicitly. When you compromise the NAP, you open the door to breakdown in these systems, and take a step down a path that, if pursued, eventually leads to senseless violence and overt tyranny. In absence of the NAP, <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-crux-of-problem.html">rule-by-violence</a> is guaranteed. The NAP is not the only important component of a system of practical ethics, but it is one of the easiest components to understand and agree on for most people, and it has some of the most far reaching implications. Going forward, I will likely be referring back to this article frequently.<br />
<br />
<b><i>Revised 11-24-2014</i></b><br />
<br />
Read <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/11/ethics-part-2-rights-and.html">Ethics Part 2 - Rights and Responsibilities</a>.<br />
<br />
<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-8194951408251943282014-07-09T03:44:00.003-07:002014-10-20T00:00:12.703-07:00I am NOT Anti-GovernmentI feel like I need to make my position here clear. Even though I have come to realize over time that I indeed fall within the extended anarchist ideological sphere, I am not anti-government. I am actually quite pro-government.<br />
<br />
Government has many definitions, and dictionaries are terrible at capturing the underlying essence of a word as they often throw in elements from specific contexts in which the word might be used. The origin of the word 'government' comes from the Latin 'gubernare', meaning 'to steer'. At its essence, its most fundamental definition, government is a person, body, entity, or device which steers and guides a group or society. 'Anarchy' comes from the Greek '<span class="polytonic mention" lang="grc" style="background-color: white; color: #252525; font-family: sans-serif; line-height: 22.399999618530273px;" xml:lang="grc">ἀναρχία</span>' (anarkhia), from '<span style="background-color: white; color: #252525; font-family: sans-serif; line-height: 22.399999618530273px;"> </span><span class="polytonic mention" lang="grc" style="background-color: white; color: #252525; font-family: sans-serif; line-height: 22.399999618530273px;" xml:lang="grc">ἀν-</span>' (an-) meaning 'no, not' and '<span class="polytonic mention" lang="grc" style="background-color: white; color: #252525; font-family: sans-serif; line-height: 22.399999618530273px;" xml:lang="grc">ἀρχή</span>' (arkhe) meaning 'ruler, power, authority'. Contrary to popular belief, it does not necessarily mean 'no government', but rather 'no rulers'. To rule, then, is to exercise power or force onto someone or something in order to impose your will on it.<br />
<br />
When reduced to its essential concept, I'm not against government at all. I'm not even against big government. If anything, we need more government, more coordination, more cooperation, and more collaboration between people, communities, and organizations. We need people to come together, voluntarily, to solve problems, pool resources, discuss issues, and coordinate efforts to improve things. Government, like this, can be used to do great things. It can be used as a forum for people to pool ideas and effort together. It can be used to help settle disputes, without force when possible.<br />
<br />
Where I have a problem is when that government, or any other entity, starts using force to shoehorn their agenda onto people without their consent. I am not anti-government, I am anti government by violence, fraud, and coercion. I am against a government which uses its power to control and dictate how its people live their lives without their consent, or steals their resources to use for its own purposes, by use of violence and threats. Even a benevolent government which genuinely tries to work for the good of its people, given the power to use violence as a means to its desired ends, will become corrupted over time until it descends into tyranny. Even a small, minimalistic government that depends on violence to carry out its functions will eventually devolve into an authoritarian menace. Guaranteed. History has proven over and over and over that when a person or group is allowed to use aggressive violence on others, that person or group will become corrupt and drunk on that power, no matter how seemingly benign, democratic, or noble that group seems to be.<br />
<br />
You can have government without making that government into your ruler. You can have a functional, effective government without rule-by-violence. I'm not saying that such a government would be pacifistic: violence is completely justified when necessary for defense, and exercising it in defense of the rights, property, and lives of its constituents is not rule-by-violence. Such a government can still have teeth. But government must never become our master – it must always be our servant. It must never claim ownership over us, our property, or our rights – we must own and administrate it. It must never be allowed to exist in its own right, or govern its own right – it must exist by the continuing will of the people and govern with the consent of the governed. And it must always obey the boundaries of the <a href="http://stepbackandlookagain.blogspot.com/2014/07/ethics-part-1-non-aggression-principle.html" target="_blank">Non-Aggression Principle</a>.<br />
<br />
So, when I speak out against this government, please don't think that I'm against government in any shape or form. I'm not. I speak out against this government because I am against rule-by-violence, and because I believe in the natural right to self-determination, which means our right to institute, alter, and dissolve whatever form of government or lack thereof we choose, so long as it does not embrace rule-by-violence. I believe in government of the people, by the people, and for the people without coercion, oppression, and aggressive violence – not being forcibly dominated by rulers, which is irrefutably what we have now.<br />
<br />
<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-52006659106871051732014-07-03T03:49:00.003-07:002014-10-20T00:00:40.776-07:008 "Unanswerable" Questions... Addressed<i>So, this was a completely unplanned post. A friend posted a link on Facebook: <a href="http://www.thinkinghumanity.com/2014/06/8-great-philosophical-questions-that-well-never-solve.html" target="_blank">8 Great Philosophical Questions That We'll Never Solve</a>. I read the article and, in a sudden burst of madness, proceeded to spend the next hour or so answering each of these questions, or at least showing how they might be answered in the future. See, I have a bit of a problem with the concept of an unanswerable question. If a question really is unanswerable, chances are it's a meaningless question anyways, like "what would a square circle look like" (an example I saw posted in the comments). So I couldn't let this one slide. But, after I spewed my rant, it seemed like an awful waste for just a Facebook comment (or rather, four of them) that would be read by just a few and then disappear into the ether. Therefore, I thought it would make sense to copy it and post it here. If the wording or format seems a bit off, or a bit sloppy, keep in mind I copied it word for word from Facebook, except for the questions in <b>Boldface</b> which I added in from the article for ease of reading. I recommend you read the above article first, and keep it open as you read along below:</i><br />
<br />
Challenge accepted. I'll give the uber-short versions so I don't end up writing a whole book here.<br />
<br />
<b>1. Why is there something rather than nothing?</b><br />
1. The question is illogical. 'Why' inquires of a cause-effect relationship, which in physics can be called action-reaction. Action is the expression of energy, reaction is a new expression of energy that is resultant from an action. Energy, however, is also the basis and definition of existence itself. Everything that exists is energy or is an expression of energy. So energy is both the fundamental element of cause and of existence. So the question, in essence, is asking "Why why?", or trying to derive the causality of causality, which is a redundancy. It's like asking "how many hours are in an hour?"<br />
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<b>2. Is our universe real?</b><br />
2. "Real" has two meanings, and we need to define which we are referring to. It can mean "true" or it can mean "existing". If the latter, the answer is certainly yes, because existence is manifest and clearly observable. See previous comments on energy. If the former, it gets a little tricky. "True" must be defined in context of an argument, namely a statement which may or may not be true. In this case, we are talking about a specific statement about the universe, which may go something like, "Is the universe what I think it is?" For most people, the answer to this is decidedly "No." since very few people have more than a rudimentary understanding of the world around them. If we want to ask if the any of the best theoretical frameworks we have are what the universe is, again the answer is no, as even the proponents of these theories acknowledge that they aren't complete. If we ask specifically if the universe is a 'computer simulation that feeds data to our senses', the answer is provably yes, because the universe functions as a massive quantum and classical computer, with particles that carry information, process it as they interact, and our senses collect that data as the particles bring it to us and feed it into our brain as a perception of reality. It's a big simulation, but it's still real in the sense that it exists. But if you want to push it and ask if we are all hooked into the matrix, and it's all an artificial simulation like a virtual reality, the answer is provably 'no'. We can prove this wrong by observing particles at the quantum state. It has been long since determined that quantum mechanics cannot be explained by 'hidden variables' that control the outcome of wave-function collapse. An artificial simulation that was simulating this in real time would be a hidden variable, and is thus impossible.<br />
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<b>3. Do we have free will?</b><br />
3. Yes. We can observe that we perceive sensory information subjectively and qualitatively as qualia. That is, it's not just some rigid mathematical data processing function, but something that defies mere deterministic calculation. Yet at the same time, this perception is coherent and takes on definite, albeit subjective, form. So the universe is acting upon us (remember, action=energy), and acting upon our subjective, qualitative consciousness, or sentience. And for every action there is opposed an equal reaction. So our sentience must also produce a reaction to this stimuli. We can observe easily within ourselves that we are aware of our own subjective perception, meaning that reaction from our consciousness must pass information back into the data processing and storage functions of the brain for us to even be aware of it. And if our perception is qualitative, non-deterministic, yet coherent then the reaction is of the same nature - neither deterministic nor random. It is arbitrary. Free will in a nutshell.<br />
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<b>4. Does God exist?</b><br />
4. This goes back to cause and effect, or action and reaction. We can trace the action-reaction chain of events of our universe back to a single event, the big bang. Or maybe multiple such events, it doesn't matter. Point is, there seems to be a first cause. If the big bang 'caused' the universe, then it caused time, space, and probability dimensions which occur within context of energy. But, as noted before, the big bang didn't 'cause' energy. That would be a violation of the law of conservation. Since it did cause time, it would be meaningless to talk about 'before' the big bang, but that doesn't mean that the singularity that resulted in the big bang is immune from the laws of cause and effect. We have to think outside of space, outside of time, and outside of probability to find the cause. The problem is, once you take those three dimension-types out of the picture you have a situation where even if there is an infinite amount of energy in existence, the chances that any 2 units of that energy would be together, interacting in some space-time relationship is zero, because there are infinitely infinite many possibilities of 'where' (which isn't even the right word) that energy could be. UNLESS all that energy was of a common origin, and began (not chronologically) at a natural state of infinity. Infinite energy, at infinite density, with infinite complexity. A hyper-singularity. And we have already seen that subjective experientiality and arbitrary will are functions which can exist in such little complexity as is offered by the human brain. With this much complexity, it can be inferred that the hyper-singularity would be conscious, would experience, and would have a will, and on a level that you and I cannot even imagine. And it is infinite, and so its inward pressure and density would constantly drive it into outward expansion, branching off, fountaining energy from itself in plumes that would become whole universes, infinitely aware of these branches on both the macro whole, and the tiniest of the micro scale. Such a being would have no need, only giving, only generosity, only expression of itself creatively. Perfect knowledge, infinite power, perfect love. Sounds an awful lot like God to me.<br />
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<b>5. Is there life after death.</b><br />
5. No. That contradicts the definition of 'dead'. If it's dead, it isn't alive. But what most people mean to ask by this question is if our sentience, our conscious experience and will, continues in any form after the body dies. And if our sentience is a function of the universe then the components in which our sentience functioned still exist even after death, even though they might no longer be together or coherent, nor may they ever be again. When we die, whatever we were is still out there, it just isn't what it was when we were alive. To fully answer this question requires actually understanding what sentience is and how it functions. But I don't doubt for a moment that this can be done eventually. Because we already know that sentience, whether it is a physical or metaphysical thing, interacts with the physical universe. If it interacts with the physical, it can be identified and studied.<br />
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<b>6. Can you really experience anything objectively?</b><br />
6. Yes. You are doing it right now. Those sensory signals that are being filtered through your nervous system? That's energy, and you are experiencing it objectively, though still qualitatively. If we can experience one sort of energy, we can experience other sorts, too. But that all goes back to how the mechanism of sentience works. See previous rant.<br />
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<b>7. What is the best moral system?</b><br />
7. This is admittedly not an easy one, and I can't give a universal moral or ethical standard from which the answer to every possible conundrum can be derived fractally. Yet. But what I can give is hope for possibly someday finding the answer, starting back at sentience again. Sentience, and the critical mass of sentience which is sapience, are what give us a notion that morality or ethics should even be a thing in the first place. (I distinguish morality and ethics, the latter being what is acceptable to do, the former being what is optimal). We experience qualitatively and will arbitrarily, and we know that others do, too. Therefore we conceive of these things called 'rights' in which we are entitled to experience and will, and so are others. This is the basis of ethics, that we are entitled to act according to our sentient nature, experiencing and expressing ourselves, so long as we do not impede others from doing the same... which sound a bit like the Non-Aggression Principle. But that's just a starting point. To derive from that a full ethical system, and a full moral system, would take a great deal more work and research, and probably a better understanding of sentience. But I don't think it's impossible.<br />
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<b>8. What are numbers?</b><br />
8. This is just question 1 restated, and the answer is basically the same. Energy. Energy is quantum, and has both a particle (digital, definite, unit) nature, and a wave (analog, vague, proportionate) nature. Numbers as we know them are a manifestation of this nature. Energy, therefore numbers. And since energy is the building block of everything, numbers therefore explain everything. Every interaction between particles is a calculation done in the quantum computer that is the universe. A side note: if we really want to find out what sentience is, I suspect we ought to be looking into those calculations, and into wave-function collapse. We describe it as random, but perhaps a better description for it might be... arbitrary. Just a thought.<br />
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Okay, so I lied. It turned into a book. My bad.<br />
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<i>So, that's it. Please feel free to comment if you feel I'm in error, especially if I've made any factual errors. I like considering new information and looking at all the angles.</i><br />
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<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-10931751342723951592014-06-29T02:04:00.000-07:002014-10-20T00:00:57.393-07:00Problems and OpportunitiesThere are two types of problems which exist. There is the kind that foreshadows success, and the kind that foreshadows failure. The first is like a mountain that must be crossed , beyond which lies a fertile country. The second is a void from which nothing can come. And when facing a particular problem, it can be very helpful to know which type it is. Life can be fairly overwhelming when you are getting hit with problem after problem, but knowing what you're dealing with can take some of the stress out of it.<br />
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And let me say, I've come to absolutely love the first kind of problem. I get excited when I discover one, because it is an opportunity. Mind you, solving such problems aren't always easy. Sometimes they can be extremely frustrating and take years of work to overcome. But, what's awesome about them is they <i>can</i> be overcome, and when they are, good things happen. Such problems are not impediments to success, they are the path to success. They are what make success at anything possible. Success is essentially the solving of one or more problems.<br />
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One of my mad projects, possibly my most central project, is a language based on mathematics and logic. It has been a long, frustrating, off and on project that I have worked on for many years. In making it, I have encountered many problems, and every time I solve one of these problems it typically reveals many new ones in its place. For many, this would be enough for them to give up and find a less aggravating hobby. But every time a new problem pops up, I find myself feeling giddy, because when I solve that problem I am one step closer to making that language a reality. Each new problem is an opportunity to move forward. And move forward I have – compared to even a year ago I have made measurable progress that has recently lead to the first usable forms of that language. I still have a mountain of problems to solve to make it work, but I know that these problems mark out the path to making my vision become a real thing. Those problems are the path to success.<br />
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So, what about the other kind of problem? The one that is just an empty void, and foreshadows failure? Well, those aren't always so pleasant to have, but they do have a silver lining. When you identify that you really are at a dead end and no good can come from continued effort in a particular direction, you have a wonderful opportunity. That is the opportunity to back up and change direction. You can save yourself loads of heartache and disappointment by identifying when there is nothing to be gained by carrying on with what you are doing. You can stop wasting your effort on what won't bear any fruit and start focusing it on something that will. This isn't always an easy thing to do. Sometimes it might mean giving something up that you wanted and admitting that the effort you made to get it was wasted. Sometimes that might represent years, or even a lifetime of personal investment. But, if you are indeed dealing with a dead-end problem, you wouldn't have gotten it anyways – or if you did, the price would have made the gain a loss. But when you give up chasing something that you can never have, or beating your head against a wall that will never budge, it means you now have the opportunity to go after something new, and you might just succeed at it.<br />
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The key, of course, is not confusing these two types of problems with one another. And this can be very difficult. I don't have an easy answer or a step-by-step guide on how to tell them apart. It can sometimes be hard to tell that dead-end job apart from the one that just requires a lot of effort to move forward, but will truly reward you down the road. It can be hard to tell the person who you can help from the person who will just drag you down with them. It can be hard to tell the visionary idea from the fanciful daydream. The mountain might be high and difficult to climb, so you don't know that the reward is in fact beyond it. The void might be foggy and shrouded, so you can easily deceive yourself into thinking it is solid ground. As hard as it is to tell them apart, sometimes just <i>knowing</i> that there are these two types of problems can help us feel them out. We can prepare ourselves to act on both possibilities.<br />
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Don't give up just because the going is difficult and the reward seems far off. And don't keep going when it's clear you're chasing false hope. Don't waste your energy doing what won't bring results, and don't waste your energy <i>not</i> doing what will. I don't say that as a good example of this myself, but I say it to myself as much as to everyone reading this.<br />
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<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-56771653783334950722014-06-14T07:57:00.001-07:002014-10-20T00:01:18.589-07:00This is not a good thingThere is something important that needs to be addressed. Recently, as most of you know, there was a <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/09/las-vegas-shooting-timeline-_n_5475808.html" target="_blank">shooting in Las Vegas</a> where Jerad and Amanda Miller killed two police officers on their lunch break in a CiCi's Pizza, then walk to a nearby Walmart where they ordered everyone out of the store and killed a third person who was carrying a concealed weapon and attempted to confront them. Police arrived at the Walmart to confront the shooters, a shootout between them commenced, and the couple eventually committed suicide (although some reports suggest that Jared may have been killed by police). Jared and Amanda Miller have since been identified as anti-government activists. Their cry as they entered the Walmart was, "This is a revolution."<br />
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While this event troubles me, there is something that troubles me even more. And that's the reaction I'm seeing to this shooting from a number of other activists, who appear to be supportive of the killing of these police officers by these two idiots. I've seen it on several sites and pages that I frequent, but it might be exemplified best by an article I found posted on <a href="http://www.copblock.org/" target="_blank">CopBlock's</a> Facebook page by Christopher Cantwell, entitled "<a href="http://www.christophercantwell.com/2014/06/08/dead-men-dont-start-revolutions/" target="_blank">Dead Men Don't Start Revolutions</a>" (CopBlock has since removed the article from their page). In this article, Cantwell criticizes the Millers for drawing bystanders into the shooting and for killing themselves, but at the same time says that they were perfectly justified for killing the cops, because according to him, "It is by definition, impossible to murder an aggressor. It is an act of defensive, retaliatory, or preventive force, not aggression, to do violence to people who have no doubt harmed peaceful people, and will no doubt continue to harm peaceful people. Every free man, woman, and child has every moral and ethical right to use violence to put a stop to such threats, and the world is a better place without these two police officers victimizing the public." And in the Facebook post linking to this article I saw several assenting comments to this point.<br />
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For those not familiar with Cantwell, he advocates violence as a necessary tool to bringing an end to the police state, and openly admits that <a href="http://www.christophercantwell.com/2014/05/13/dead-police-rant/" target="_blank">he celebrates the death of cops</a>. And he isn't alone, as I'm seeing a frightening number of activists sharing his sentiments. Not all by any means, but a sizable group of those whose comments I have observed. Let me be clear that employing violence as it is necessary for defense against aggression is completely appropriate. And Cantwell certainly tries to hide behind a distorted view of defense to justify his position.<br />
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An act of aggression by someone does not automatically give you the right to take their life. For one, it is arguable that most people have, at one time or another, acted in aggression to one degree or another – which would make most people's lives forfeit. If someone steals a pack of gum from your store, that doesn't give you the right to shoot them in the back of the head as they run away. It does give you the natural right to use necessary force to stop them, apprehend them, retrieve your gum, and bar them from ever entering your store again. Shooting the fleeing gum thief would be murder by any reasonable standard, and therefore it <i>is</i> possible to murder an aggressor. The objective of defense is to preclude an imminent act of aggression, to stop one in progress, to obtain reasonable assurance that it will not occur again, or to procure reasonable restitution for the act – it is <i>not</i> to kill the aggressor, get revenge, or 'make an example' out of them.<br />
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An aggressor who is not currently in the act of aggressing has the natural right to a fair trial and due process. They have the right to face their accuser, plead their case, and have it be considered impartially and objectively by their peers. The have the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. Denying them of this right is itself aggression, and taking their life in the process is murder. So even if you make the case that these officers had committed acts of aggression while on duty, and even if they were preparing to go back and do the same, shooting them while on their lunch break was just plain murder. It is unjustifiable use of violence, and it is aggression by any sane definition. Defending their murder is advocating aggression.<br />
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Police aggression is a problem, and one that needs to be dealt with. But it can't be used as a rationale to justify the killing of random cops. The Non-Aggression Principle implies that every person has the right to self-defense against an aggressor, or to defend another consenting party from the same. It does <i>not</i> grant you automatic and complete ownership over the rights and life of the aggressor. That is turning the NAP on its head to justify aggression. And when you twist law to unjustly deny a person their rights or to assert ownership over them or their life, when you arbitrarily inflict your judgments on them without due process of some sort, and when you unilaterally proclaim that everyone in a certain class of people is worthy of death, there is a word for that – statism. These are basically the same kinds of tactics and attitudes used by police and the government to oppress people. If the state is an arbitrarily appointed body that inflicts its rules on others through aggressive violence, then these so-called 'anarchists' who advocate such violence are nothing more than statists who are fooling themselves, and they are no different than the police they so hate. That includes Cantwell, who calls himself an anarcho-capitalist. The path that they are taking is one that, if they succeed, will inevitably replace the current rule-by-violence system of government with a brand new rule-by-violence society of a different sort. Just where the violence is more decentralized, at least in theory.<br />
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The violent revolution these guys are calling for is a bad idea for practical reasons, on top of the ethical reasons. It's very bad tactics to go after your opponent where they are strongest, and there is no point where the state is stronger than in the arena of violence. They have gotten quite good at it. Go study out the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003_invasion_of_Iraq" target="_blank">2003 invasion of Iraq</a> some time and look at the casualty figures. Less than 200 lost their lives on the coalition side, whereas Iraqi forces may have suffered as many as 30,000 fatalities. That's a <i>huge</i> margin between the two sides. And now they have drones and all sorts of other new toys they didn't have 11 years ago. If you are foolish enough to go pick a fight with a force like that without comparable training and equipment, your Darwin Award will be well earned. By all appearances, the powers-that-be want a fight. They've certainly militarized the police enough to seem like it. It would be very convenient for them to get rid of political dissenters and an excuse to crack down martial law style.<br />
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And that's what concerns me the most. If these idiots continue to promote violence, and if more violent attacks like those committed by the Millers take place, then it is likely to result in a crackdown from the government, police, and even military that could completely undo all of the work that activists across the country have been doing to pry us free from government-by-violence. People are making headway, more people are waking up and becoming aware of the problem, but all that could be undone overnight if some gun-toting whack-jobs hand the powers-that-be enough evidence to convince the people that everyone who opposes the government is a dangerous violent lunatic, and thus gets the public support necessary for such a crackdown. You want to see a ban on guns, militarized police searching house to house across the country, and full on martial law? Violence and promoting violence will help ensure it. Personally, I'm in no hurry to see that happen.<br />
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If ethics are not a good enough reason to support nonviolent civil resistance, then tactics should be. From a tactical standpoint, it is usually the best policy to focus on your adversary's weak points. And with the shamefully low approval ratings of our government, its deflating air of legitimacy, increasing unrest, the broken election system that ensures two-party rule, the broken legal system, the sinking economy, growing disenfranchisement with the public, and overall government dysfunction – it should be painfully clear where the weak points are. Civil resistance is very effective at striking those weak points hard, and, contrary to the ignorance of some, has been sufficient by itself to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonviolent_revolution" target="_blank">topple many a tyrannical government in the past</a>. If you have doubts, I encourage you to read <a href="http://www.aeinstein.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/FDTD.pdf" target="_blank">"From Dictatorship to Democracy" by Gene Sharp</a>. This book will explain civil resistance and its advantages in dealing with tyrannical governments better than I ever possibly could. Frankly speaking, it's the only tactically viable path to ending rule-by-violence I have yet seen.<br />
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CopBlock, to their credit, has <a href="http://www.copblock.org/56454/cop-block-is-committed-to-the-non-aggression-principle/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cop-block-is-committed-to-the-non-aggression-principle" target="_blank">removed Christopher Cantwell from their team</a>. This was the right thing to do, and as far as I'm concerned, it vindicates them of any wrong in this matter. CopBlock, here, has been a good example of how to deal with those calling for violence. And I think we should all follow this example. If we can agree that rule-by-violence is wrong, intolerable, and must come to an end, then we should speak out against anyone promoting, justifying, or committing acts of violence, except in defense. If they won't see reason, then we shouldn't associate ourselves with them, or any group or organization which does, lest it damage the legitimacy of our own positions. I believe we need to make a deliberate point of drawing a clear and well-defined line between those who advocate non-aggression, and those who advocate using violence to enforce their will on others. Because the media and the powers that be are already <a href="http://scgnews.com/the-las-vegas-shootings-the-alex-jones-anti-government-connection-here-comes-trouble" target="_blank">trying to lump us all together and use this shooting against us</a>. And that is not a good thing.<br />
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<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i><br />
<br />
Recommended viewing:<br />
<a href="http://youtu.be/35Fm03LhWvU" target="_blank">So You Want to Topple the US Government?</a><br />
<a href="http://youtu.be/8Zq4f6WYmHU" target="_blank">Revolution: An Instruction Manual</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4203728551842337250.post-19446961210719893392014-06-09T01:29:00.001-07:002014-10-20T00:01:37.676-07:00The crux of the problemI've heard the question asked before, "What is the most pressing threat that we currently face?" And I usually hear things like 'greed', 'poverty', 'loss of rights', 'corruption', 'war', and an endless list of other answers. Despite the diversity of answers given to that question, most of them have a common theme: The paradigm of one party imposing its will forcibly, directly or indirectly, onto another party.<br />
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Think about it for a while. Why is government corruption a problem, except that the government is passing laws on behalf of special interests – laws that are then forced on you with penalties for failing to comply? Why is greed a problem, except that the banks and corporations have used their wealth and clout to force a large degree of dominance and control of the economy, and therefore the livelihood of millions? Are your civil rights being violated? Afraid they are going to confiscate your guns? Concerned over the increased reports of police brutality, no-knock raids, and police militarization? That's the government using force against you or threatening to do so. Tired of toxic chemicals being pumped into the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat? Those toxins are a force being exercised against us, often without our consent. Tired of the government spying on your phone calls and online activity, invasively searching you at airports and elsewhere, all the while refusing to be transparent and accountable to the public in its own activities? That's all force in one form or another. And unless it is a defensive action, what is war but using military force to impose the will of one country onto another? Even problems which don't necessarily stem from this situation, such as disease or poor education, have solutions frustrated because of the meddling of governments, corporations, and other groups that use their power to exacerbate the matter. I can keep going down the list if I need to, through issues at federal, state, and local levels, and show how most of them directly result from one party initiating the use of force against another to accomplish its own ends – but I hope you get the idea.<br />
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When force is used against someone in a way which harms them, their person, their liberties, or their property without their willing consent, that is violence. Violence does not need to involve shooting, bombing, or beating someone – it can be the use of threats, intimidation, fraud, coercion, deprivation of needs, or any number of other indirect methods. Violence can be justified when used defensively in response to another act of violence. But when violence is initiated against someone else, when it is used by one party to force its agenda arbitrarily onto another, that is wrong by any sane ethical standard. It is rule-by-violence, and it is the most pressing issue we currently face, because it makes all of the other problems possible, or worse than they need to be.<br />
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Rule-by-violence is very prevalent in our society, yet it is rarely acknowledged and so rarely questioned. We overlook it as 'normal', or make excuses for it because it's carried out by the will of some majority, according to some law, or for some greater good. And yet, it should be the top issue on every one of our lists, regardless of our political affiliation, whether we consider ourselves 'liberal' or 'conservative' or 'libertarian' or 'green' or whatever. Whatever your issue, if it is a legitimate issue, it can be traced back to this. We should all be in agreement that rule-by-violence is an unacceptable way to govern a society and working together to do everything in our power to bring that paradigm to an end. So why aren't we?<br />
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Well, there's a catch. Almost everyone objects to having the agenda of someone else rammed down their throat by force, but many people are more than happy to give their assent when their own agenda is rammed down the throat of someone else. When the politicians of the day force oppressive laws on us, instead of questioning a system that authorizes them to do this, we put in new politicians that use the same abusive power in ways we find more palatable – or at least we think they will be more palatable. Those same politicians inevitably abuse that power and put the boot of authority on someone's neck. Perhaps not ours, but someone's. We perpetuate the system of violence ourselves and empower politicians, governments, corporations, and others to subjugate us. We authorize them to do it to others, then others authorize them to do it to us, and all the power trickles up until these 'public servants' have effectively become our rulers. In order to be part of the solution we have to stop being part of the problem. We have to give up this insane idea that we can make others do things our way at gunpoint just because a majority votes on it, a law is passed, or someone with some clout thinks it's a 'good idea'.<br />
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Until this paradigm changes, don't expect things to improve in any meaningful or lasting way. You can vote in 'good' politicians until you are blue in the face, but in a system so susceptible to abuses of power it is inevitable that those inclined to misuse that power will find ways into positions of power. The system itself has to change. That's a tall order, but there is simply no way around it. If you think there is, you're living in a dream world. The only way that we can bring an end to rule-by-violence is to demand it together in one voice. It is going to require that people of every walk of life, every race, every creed, and every political leaning put their differences aside and unite on this single point long enough to affect real change. And that <i>can</i> happen if we decide to make it happen. It has already happened once, briefly, when the US government tried to go to war with Syria and the American people put their foot down. We can do it again. We have to. Because the alternative is a slow slide into overt tyranny, and the loss of every ounce of liberty that those who came before us fought, protested, and died for. The alternative is leaving a future for our children where they are told how they must live their lives at gunpoint, where their rights are not protected, where government protected corporations control their access to goods, services, and jobs, and where liberty is just something they pretend to have in history class and on the 4th of July.<br />
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We can't change the nation until we change ourselves. We can't solve problems with the same kind of thinking that created them.<br />
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<i>If you like what I write, please share it, hit a 'like' button where you saw it so more people will see it, and spread it around.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0