Thursday, 31 December 2015
Confessions of an Idiot
~~~
I had a prolonged, traumatic birth, as a terrible winter storm raged outside. I eventually arrived on the leap day of 1984, with a scar on one cheek from the doctor's forceps.
~~~
When I was a couple of years old, the neighbour boy knocked me unconscious with a lead pipe. He was pretending to play baseball. The stitches left a scar on my forehead over my third eye.
~~~
When I was six or seven, I saw a flashing electric blue rectangle descend from the night sky. It was outside my window and behind some trees, but nothing about it looked like anything I'd seen before or since. I thought it over, and couldn't see any good coming from discussing it with the adults. The experience was never integrated, only occluded by being ignored.
~~~
When I was twelve or thirteen I began to develop a neurotic melancholia. My brother was gone from the house, and my parents' marriage had started the slow and quiet march to dissolution. I had gleaned from my social studies classes that my nation had no identity of its own, and it was increasingly clear that my education was a boring waste of my talents. I had every opportunity to develop the bad cognitive habits and bodily environment for a pernicious and persistent depression. These behavioural and biochemical ruts can be overcome, and the thought of quitting made a friendly gadfly, but any mental illness leaves a mark that never fully leaves.
~~~
I went to Trent University to learn how to be academically critical of my society. The unheralded Semitic cynicism of the theorists on offer neglected the constructive responsibilities of philosophy. We only destroyed. It was understood but never justified that an egalitarian communist utopia would fill the resultant void.
I could only do well in philosophy and cultural studies by keeping them strictly delineated and compartmentalised in my mind. Cultural studies selected from every discipline, but its critique was beholden only to pissy projection.
~~~
When I returned from Ontario in disgrace and confusion, and without Honours, my feeling of affinity for the moustache man and his project had become so acute that I took myself to have my head checked. The NS Hospital was no help. They deemed me sane. This would be a valuable tether in the years to come.
~~~
Cannabis had made the existential ache endurable, so it had been no great leap to obey the cultural script and proceed to other psychoactive substances--only to discover how at-home they made me feel. I learned the warp and woof of tryptamines and phenethylamines, of illumination and The Void. On a summer off from school, down by the brook, on a bottle of cough syrup, some mushrooms, and a beer, I became aware of a consciousness greater than myself. In the morning, I cast Him out as only chemical.
~~~
When those chemicals no longer had as much to teach me, I moved on to the hard stuff: exopolitics, the New Age, and conspiracy theory.
I had exhausted my education; there were still too many missing pieces in my understanding before I would be able to make psychological and philosophical sense of those classes.
I had exhausted entheogens; absent a proper initiation by a carrier of a wisdom tradition (or the time, security, stability, and supplies to rigourously develop my own tradition) neo-shamanism seemed to be a pie-eyed dead end, in terms of obtaining reliable and consistent information.
Cultural studies had at least made me cognizant of our capacity for self-delusion, and of the cultural mediation of reality. Psychedelics had made me aware of dimensions normally unseen. With the hope that my philosophy classes in logic and reasoning were still working for me, it seemed the right time to cross my Rubicon--and try to learn profound things from the scary, dangerous, and untrustworthy Internet. After all, those disreputable drugs hadn't been so bad!
I made vast strides into the unknown over a very short period. In a flurry of cheap documentaries and questionable interviews, I caught up with ten years of paranormal, spiritual, conspiratorial, and batshit insane conversation. Much of it was remarkable, most was incredible, and all of it was far beyond the pale of polite conversation. I began to get comfortable with a constant consciousness of the limits of other people's realities.
There were certainly a lot of well-spoken people convinced of nefarious plots and epic cosmic battles. They referenced the same undocumented fancies, and it was easy to get swept up in excitement over the imminent disclosure of alien life, and our imminent ascension into fluffy rainbows. It was a strange time.
~~~
My pseudo-shamanic forays had finally begun to yield fruit. My mystical readings had begun to cohere and come alive. I was beginning to experience synchronicities.
I would hold conversations with an ethereal DJ. It selected the songs in my extensive playlist that would answer with uncanny insight the question I was pondering. First, the astonishment at such magic. Second, the slow recognition of its ubiquity.
As the new year approached, I made a resolution to undertake an experiment. It required a leap of faith. I decided to take up the provisional acceptance of a series of dubious claims.
If it was true that all existence is the fragmented consciousness of the One, all awareness must be made of the same stuff. If we're all reaching higher levels of consciousness on our climb back to wholeness, there are probably intermediary conglomerations of awareness of which we can be a part. If we're all connected through our common Source, it should be a simple matter to contact other intelligences by means of the very intelligence which seeks to make such a contact.
I resolved that in 2009 I would see a UFO.
~~~
I didn't step outside without looking up. I didn't look up without asking to see. Everywhere I went, everything I did, I held the thought in my mind that I wanted to make contact, I wanted to witness, I wanted to experience. I asked in earnestness and humility. I projected friendly compassion and curiosity. I wanted to see a flying saucer and I meant it.
~~~
On the night in February when I signed for an apartment with my girlfriend, I walked to my warehouse night shift down a darkened road. I was distracted from my feeling of relief and anticipation by a bright light in the sky straight ahead.
Before I had time to think about it, the word "angelic" popped into my mind. This word wasn't really in my vocabulary, so it surprised me enough that I immediately took a closer look at the light. It was too large and bright to be a planet, but it wasn't in motion except for a slight waver. Something about the luminous shimmer convinced me that it was suitably angelic, and in a moment I found myself asking it in my head if it was a UFO.
The light gently winked at me in a seeming affirmation.
A pregnant pause; one-two-three. A mugging double take wouldn't have been out of order. That really happened, didn't it? Another slow blink, after the same measure as the last question. The light hovered still, now resolutely unblinking.
I tried to command it, telling it to do it again. Instead, the light shrunk to the size of a faint star, and suddenly began moving to the right. It quickly expanded to a large black shape with lights on it that passed almost overhead. It was just enough like a plane that I could believe I had been fooled, and I spent the rest of the night laughing at the ambiguity of the sighting.
On further consideration, I couldn't remember a sound from an aircraft that came very close, nor a green light on the starboard side that faced me.
~~~
About a month after that first sighting, in a time of alienated despair, the floodgates were opened. After noticing a series of strange aerial things one night, I saw a nearby flying object instantly reverse on its course without turning around--and there was no going back.
Over the course of 2009, forever to be remembered as That Year, I saw multiple daytime discs, luminous saucers, and glowing orbs, as well as countless suspicious lights that were surely almost all conventional. Often enough, the more striking appearances seemed to interact with me and my expectations. I found them to be playful, but also seemingly compassionate, sometimes responding to my emotional need to see them at a certain time or place, sometimes performing a novelty when I asked nicely.
It culminated in a pink saucer shrouded in mist going past my apartment window one afternoon like it was going for a Sunday drive. This time our requisite exchange of recognition manifested as the orange-pink light of the object brightening responsively, and then the trail of vapour behind it got correspondingly longer. Somehow this simple physical logic was too much. Weird phantasms passing over populated areas are fine, but if they behave like they're real? I had seen enough.
It was around this time that I was becoming preoccupied with my soul's mission, and beginning to suspect that my favourite singer-songwriter might be an evil sorcerer. I had to grudgingly admit that it might be a good time to pause and reflect.
I reflected in retreat for years, exploiting the goodwill of friends and family to survive, struggling not to succumb to this new madness I didn't understand, or an old sadness I knew all too well. I went back over everything; every experience, but also every fact and argument that led me there, and every one that followed from it. I adopted more nuanced perspectives on secrets and mysteries. I became more sure of some things and less sure of others. Mostly I languished.
~~~
There is still no idiom sufficient to take account of reality. Not science, not religion, not the left or right, not the high or straight. Mostly there is insular confusion. A vast spinning cosmos surrounds us, and we're too ridiculous to assume our inherent dignity and face that universe.
I have fled from my experiences even as I struggle to understand them. The truth is that I have to let them be. I don't understand everything, and I have to let that be. Most people are ignorant dumbasses without a shred of passion or curiosity, and I have to let that be. There's too much to learn and teach and explore and discover to be held back by not knowing the destination, or not getting everyone to take the journey.
The Magic of John Cale
The latest development in the Land of Nod
Says the animals got the best of us all
Lost in the miles of the 20th century
Cocktail parties and things
If we could work it out
We'd have done it by now
If we could work it out
Don't you think we'd have it done?
-"Indistinct Notion of Cool," John Cale, Walking on Locusts
~~~
When the postwar generation came of age, adulthood greeted them with a Dionysian orgy. Long-suppressed pagan urges were let loose without cultural grounding. Sex and drugs were freely enjoyed without a meaningful and historically-conscious social context.
For a semantically-softened populace, art stepped in to explain what was going on. Rock provided the soundtrack, psychedelia and folk informing the optimism of the time.
Standing in the corner, dressed in black, arms folded, were the Velvet Underground. The seed of a grungy, distorted tradition of musical nihilism was already planted, nurtured by Andy Warhol, and soon to bloom into glam, punk, noise, and eventually a mandatory music called "alternative rock."
~~~
Lou Reed's lyrical subject matter would receive the most notoriety, but it was John Cale who arranged and refined the sonic backdrop that animated Reed's songs. Cale didn't receive credit for producing the first two Velvet Underground records, but it's understood that he did the job. He went on to produce debuts by the Stooges, the Modern Lovers, and Patti Smith. When the lines of influence on subsequent artists are traced, Cale's reputation in New York in the late 70s as "the godfather of punk" becomes a reasonable proposition.
~~~
Before the Velvets, Cale had learned how to play drone music with La Monte Young. This sometimes involved holding a note for an hour at a time. The kind of entrainment following from such an exercise can be useful for the alteration of consciousness, but techniques first developed in India for getting closer to an ultimate mystic reality were now to be re-purposed to make the mud sound sexier. With an insistent beat, loud volume, and persistent tones, any message can be delivered more forcefully, and potentially more subliminally.
~~~
Cale's social maladjustment may well be attributed to being abused by a priest as a child, and his drug abuse to being prescribed opiates as a child. How should we understand his marginal success, expertly crafting a miserable canon of neglected art rock?
Willfully uncommercial yet doggedly hard-working, John Cale has cut an interesting path. After making a profound impact on music history, he used the songs of his solo career as a series of masks and genre exercises, too eccentric to appeal to the masses. This relative lack of attention permitted him to comment on society, psychology, and history in ways more direct than many of his contemporaries. He was writing songs for sullen intellectuals with bitter tastes, and providing an artistic precedent for tools of crowd control to be applied to the maverick depressive set.
Among informed hipsters and music snobs, Cale's importance in bringing distorted psychosis to rock music is undisputed. What may surprise some is that the sad jester has been recognised by the Crown for his efforts.
In 2010, John Cale was inducted into the Order of the British Empire, "For services to Music and to the Arts." It's almost as if the Empire, such as it remains, is somehow served by hypnotic songs engendering apathy and debauchery.
~~~
You're just feeling some of the magic
But you're feelin' it
This is just some of the magic
I write reams of this shit every day
But you're feelin' it
Where's the heat coming from, Brotherman, Brotherman?
Very uncomfortable... but you're feelin' it
Where the hype coming from, Brotherman, Brotherman?
Out there in the courtyard with Uncle Sam
-"Brotherman," John Cale, blackAcetate
~~~
Further reading
Says the animals got the best of us all
Lost in the miles of the 20th century
Cocktail parties and things
If we could work it out
We'd have done it by now
If we could work it out
Don't you think we'd have it done?
-"Indistinct Notion of Cool," John Cale, Walking on Locusts
~~~
When the postwar generation came of age, adulthood greeted them with a Dionysian orgy. Long-suppressed pagan urges were let loose without cultural grounding. Sex and drugs were freely enjoyed without a meaningful and historically-conscious social context.
For a semantically-softened populace, art stepped in to explain what was going on. Rock provided the soundtrack, psychedelia and folk informing the optimism of the time.
Standing in the corner, dressed in black, arms folded, were the Velvet Underground. The seed of a grungy, distorted tradition of musical nihilism was already planted, nurtured by Andy Warhol, and soon to bloom into glam, punk, noise, and eventually a mandatory music called "alternative rock."
~~~
Lou Reed's lyrical subject matter would receive the most notoriety, but it was John Cale who arranged and refined the sonic backdrop that animated Reed's songs. Cale didn't receive credit for producing the first two Velvet Underground records, but it's understood that he did the job. He went on to produce debuts by the Stooges, the Modern Lovers, and Patti Smith. When the lines of influence on subsequent artists are traced, Cale's reputation in New York in the late 70s as "the godfather of punk" becomes a reasonable proposition.
~~~
Before the Velvets, Cale had learned how to play drone music with La Monte Young. This sometimes involved holding a note for an hour at a time. The kind of entrainment following from such an exercise can be useful for the alteration of consciousness, but techniques first developed in India for getting closer to an ultimate mystic reality were now to be re-purposed to make the mud sound sexier. With an insistent beat, loud volume, and persistent tones, any message can be delivered more forcefully, and potentially more subliminally.
~~~
Cale's social maladjustment may well be attributed to being abused by a priest as a child, and his drug abuse to being prescribed opiates as a child. How should we understand his marginal success, expertly crafting a miserable canon of neglected art rock?
Willfully uncommercial yet doggedly hard-working, John Cale has cut an interesting path. After making a profound impact on music history, he used the songs of his solo career as a series of masks and genre exercises, too eccentric to appeal to the masses. This relative lack of attention permitted him to comment on society, psychology, and history in ways more direct than many of his contemporaries. He was writing songs for sullen intellectuals with bitter tastes, and providing an artistic precedent for tools of crowd control to be applied to the maverick depressive set.
Among informed hipsters and music snobs, Cale's importance in bringing distorted psychosis to rock music is undisputed. What may surprise some is that the sad jester has been recognised by the Crown for his efforts.
In 2010, John Cale was inducted into the Order of the British Empire, "For services to Music and to the Arts." It's almost as if the Empire, such as it remains, is somehow served by hypnotic songs engendering apathy and debauchery.
~~~
You're just feeling some of the magic
But you're feelin' it
This is just some of the magic
I write reams of this shit every day
But you're feelin' it
Where's the heat coming from, Brotherman, Brotherman?
Very uncomfortable... but you're feelin' it
Where the hype coming from, Brotherman, Brotherman?
Out there in the courtyard with Uncle Sam
-"Brotherman," John Cale, blackAcetate
~~~
Further reading
Labels:
consciousness,
conspiracy,
history,
magic,
music,
propaganda,
psychology,
symbolism
Thursday, 24 December 2015
The Top 10 Retractions of 2015
Can’t make this stuff up: This spring, we found a retraction in the Indian Journal of Dermatology of a guideline for detecting and dealing with plagiarism, by Thorakkal Shamim. The reason the paper was pulled? Plagiarism.
Sweden’s public broadcaster bans the word “immigrant”
The language manual also warns staff against using the words “black“, “dark skinned“, or “African origin” in a negative context.
It says they should refer to them as “Swedish” if they have Swedish citizenship.
However, it tells SVT staff that using the term “white” or “fair skinned” in the same negative context is absolutely fine.
It says they should refer to them as “Swedish” if they have Swedish citizenship.
However, it tells SVT staff that using the term “white” or “fair skinned” in the same negative context is absolutely fine.
Monday, 21 December 2015
Cross-Shaped UFOs Are Being Reported Over War Zones
A good case could be made that this is a perfect spot to see how the
population would react to a Project Blue Beam-type religious projection
or distribution of CGI videos with a religious connotation. Based on the
activity in social media, the pictures and reports seem to have
generated a strong response.
How Language Influences Emotion
Our current sense of the word “emotion” is deeply ingrained in an early
19th-century view of what it is to be human: that we’re a mechanistic
body evolved from animals, and that our psychology is rooted in the
world, as opposed to given by God. The key thing about this is that it
imagines the body and the psychology working together as a secular
event.
Labels:
community,
health,
history,
language,
perception,
psychology
Star Wars, ancient Tibet, and Jedi training
"The conclusion of the study was that the reported subjective experience
of exceptional spaciousness, or timelessness, reported by some advanced
meditators, appears to be objectively correct. That is, their
subjective sense of 'now' appears to expand substantially, and our
experiment indicates that this was not an illusion."
Saturday, 19 December 2015
30% of GOP voters support bombing the city from Aladdin
Almost one-third of Republican primary voters would support bombing the
fictional kingdom of Agrabah, according to a report released by Public
Policy Polling on Friday.
4 out of 5 say they would prefer Russian president than Cameron as UK leader
Asked 'Who would you rather was Britain's prime minister?', 78 per cent
chose the Russian president, while 22 per cent voted for Mr Cameron.
Yale Students Eagerly Sign Petition to Repeal the First Amendment
The fact that some of the supposedly best and brightest college students
this country has to offer are practically jumping up and down with glee
to attempt to get rid of one of the most important natural rights we
have as human beings just kinda makes me throw up in my mouth a little.
Star Wars porn sees 500% sales growth in two weeks
"The spike in sales for the parody is representative of a much larger
trend of brand-specific merchandise for Star Wars, which shows the strong bond fans have with the movies."
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Cancer caused by environmental factors, not 'bad luck'
Modern lifestyles are causing 90 per cent of cancers, according to new research.
New Miley Cyrus Music Video Promotes The Sexualization of Infants
The transformation from a seemingly wholesome American girl into super
whore (sex slave) began young, with it becoming obvious to anyone with a
semi-functional brain that Miley was being sexually exploited, and also
being used to transform her fans into pornographic prepubescents.
Startling new report on Oak Island is set to ‘rewrite history’
“I think as humans we have evolved enough to be able to handle the truth
now. It’s time for theory to be reflected by hard science. Even if
there’s no gold inside Oak Island - it’s a trillion-dollar treasure we
are uncovering in history for our children and grandchildren.”
Elite Plan to Escape to Mars
Newsweek
put out an article this week claiming that the new commercial space
projects by billionaires like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are actually
about an escape hatch for the wealthy elite one percent who plan to
escape to Mars and leave the rest of us “to suffer on a dying, warring
planet.”
In 5 years, a robot could be your boss
Not surprisingly, many managers feel threatened by robots -- managers in
electronics and high tech are most concerned that robots could threaten
their positions (50%), followed by banking managers (49%), managers in
the airline sector (42%) and retail (41%), the Accenture data show-- as
do many workers.
Elite scientists can hold back science
Here's the pattern: After the unexpected death of a rock-star scientist,
their frequent collaborators — the junior researchers who authored
papers with them — suddenly see a drop in publication. At the same time,
there is a marked increase in published work by other newcomers to the
field.
Computers now know when you're angry
Thanks to advances in modern technology, Jenkins and his colleagues can
now gather and process enough data points from your cursor movement to
measure those deviations and indicate your emotional state.
Trudeau's Canada, Again
Trudeau’s most radical argument is that Canada is becoming a new kind of
state, defined not by its European history but by the multiplicity of
its identities from all over the world. His embrace of a pan-cultural
heritage makes him an avatar of his father’s vision. ‘‘There is no core identity, no mainstream in Canada,’’ he claimed. ‘‘There are shared
values — openness, respect, compassion, willingness to work hard, to be
there for each other, to search for equality and justice. Those
qualities are what make us the first postnational state.’’
Labels:
government,
history,
journalism,
migration,
peace,
politics,
science
Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Millionaire cleared of rape after claiming he ‘accidentally penetrated’ teenager
A London court has cleared property developer Ehsan Abdulaziz, 46, of
raping an 18-year-old girl after just 30 minutes of deliberation. The
London-based Saudi millionaire claimed he may have accidentally
penetrated the teenager after he fell on her.
The Road to Galactic Serfdom
Shortly after 9/11, Vice President Dick Cheney said on television, “We
also have to work, though, sort of the dark side, if you will.” And,
stricken with terror and indulging in hate, America did embrace the dark
side, accepting torture, indefinite detention, warrantless
surveillance, assassination, perpetual illegal wars, and mass civilian
casualties.
Labels:
economics,
empire,
fascism,
film,
government,
history,
peace,
philosophy,
propaganda
NIH-funded trials dip, industry trials on the rise
The pharmaceutical industry tests its own
products, while the NIH funds tests of treatment approaches, including
lifestyle interventions or drug comparisons, which industry tends not to
fund because they do not lead to an increase in their bottom line.
Vegetarian diets could be bad for environment
“Eggplant, celery and cucumbers look particularly bad when compared to pork or chicken.”
The Illusion of Western News
Patently, the censorship is correlated with specific sources
of commercial advertising income, which is over-riding the Western
public interest in knowing what is really going on in Yemen and how
their governments are involved in violations of international law,
including state-sponsored terrorism.
Labels:
censorship,
economics,
journalism,
law,
media,
peace,
politics,
propaganda
Kindness, charitable behavior influenced by amygdala
"Generally our actor monkeys prefer to reward the other monkey rather
than let it go unclaimed," Platt said. Relationship status matters, too.
"They are more likely to give to those they're more familiar with," he
added, "and also to monkeys subordinate to them. The social
relationships shape how prosocial the actor monkeys are."
UFO truthers want to make Roswell an issue for 2016. Meet their lobbyist.
“He’s one of the most overly optimistic people I’ve ever met,” said
Joseph Buchman, a fellow true believer. “I find that endearing, but I
don’t know if it’s quite as close to happening as he thinks it is.”
Tuesday, 15 December 2015
Your Attitude About Aging May Impact How You Age
“Positive age stereotypes seem protective of not experiencing these
biomarkers,” she says—so if we can find a way to promote positive age
stereotypes on a societal level, our brains may be better off once we
reach old age.
Helping Others Dampens the Effects of Everyday Stress
“It was surprising how strong and uniform the effects were across daily
experiences,” says Ansell. “For example, if a participant did engage in
more prosocial behaviors on stressful days there was essentially no
impact of stress on positive emotion or daily mental health. And there
was only a slight increase in negative emotion from stress if the
participant engaged in more prosocial behaviors.”
Monday, 14 December 2015
French court rules that “Native White French” do not exist
The court said that ‘native French’ as a group “does not cover any reality; legally, historically, biologically, or sociologically.”
“Blacks, Negroes, gooks, Jews, leftists, gypsies, disabled, Freemasons and even my gay friends, in solidarity: bring up your hard dicks! Let our consciences sleep under the pillow, and jump on the right-wing pussies offered (unfortunately sometimes pretty!) Hail to a vast altruistic copulation. Provide multicolored descendants to the sinking country of France.”
“Blacks, Negroes, gooks, Jews, leftists, gypsies, disabled, Freemasons and even my gay friends, in solidarity: bring up your hard dicks! Let our consciences sleep under the pillow, and jump on the right-wing pussies offered (unfortunately sometimes pretty!) Hail to a vast altruistic copulation. Provide multicolored descendants to the sinking country of France.”
Utah Reduced Chronic Homelessness By 91 Percent
Advocates say it takes time for people to get used to the fact that they
have a home. Some people will sleep in tents, inside their apartments.
Some will even go sleep on the streets a few nights a week.
Elon Musk launches $1bn fund to save world from AI
“Because of AI's surprising history, it's hard to predict when
human-level AI might come within reach,” they said in a statement. “When
it does, it'll be important to have a leading research institution
which can prioritise a good outcome for all over its own self-interest.”
Labels:
artificial intelligence,
futurism,
research,
technology
Facebook’s Top 10 Most Discussed Stories of 2015
The good news? Well, quite frankly this means that young people are
finally taking notice that the elite are drunk behind the wheel and
speeding up, rather than slowing down. This means the world is
collectively waking up.
“None of Us Had to Flee”
Laughing, the Syrian replied: “No (laughs). My friends and I are here
because we thought we’d find work. We did not like Turkey.”
Healthcare Costs Can Be Reduced By 43% With Yoga And Meditation
Evoking a relaxation response or a physiologic state of deep rest helps
alleviate stress and anxiety while positively benefiting one’s heart rate and blood pressure.
Sunday, 13 December 2015
Yale instructor at the center of racial protest to leave teaching role
“I have great respect and affection for my students, but I worry that
the current climate at Yale is not, in my view, conducive to the civil
dialogue and open inquiry required to solve our urgent societal
problems.”
Thousands of Calais migrants to take over idyllic English tourist hamlet
He refused to reveal the locations of all current and planned sites
across the UK, adding: "We do not actively discuss the locations of
initial asylum accommodation, for the protection and privacy of these
vulnerable people."
Neo-Nazi demo sparks massive counter rallies
The right-wing demonstration ended peacefully about 4:00pm local time
(3:00pm GMT). However, the clashes between police and counter-protesters
continued. About 5:00pm local time (4:00pm GMT), police had to disperse
the crowd of demonstrators at the crossing between Karl Liebknecht and
Kurt Eisner streets “actively using water cannons, tear gas and pepper spray.” Many police officers as well as many protesters were injured in the incident, Leipziger Folkerszeitung reports.
Syria won’t negotiate with foreign terrorists
“This heavy bombardment is just to dissipate the anger within the
French public opinion, not to fight terrorism. If you want to fight
terrorism, you don’t wait for a shooting in order to fight terrorism.
Fighting terrorism is a principle.”
Neocons' Aggression Towards Sovereign States Destroying Earth
Neocons are the unhumans who created on purpose the "war against terror"
in order to gain a weapon against Russia and China. You can witness
these unhumans every day on talk TV and read them in the Weekly
Standard, National Review, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times,
the British, German, Australian, Canadian, and endless Western
newspapers.
Singing is a Beneficial Memory and Mood Hack
Given the increasing global prevalence and burden of dementia and the
limited resources in public health care for persons with dementia and
their family caregivers, it is important to find alternative ways to
maintain and stimulate cognitive, emotional, and social well-being in
this population. Our findings suggest that musical leisure activities
could be easily applied and widely used in dementia care and
rehabilitation.
Saturday, 12 December 2015
A Learning Advance in Artificial Intelligence Rivals Human Abilities
The improvements are noteworthy because so-called machine-vision systems
are becoming commonplace in many aspects of life, including car-safety
systems that detect pedestrians and bicyclists, as well as in video game
controls, Internet search and factory robots.
Labels:
artificial intelligence,
neuroscience,
perception,
robots,
technology
Children Can Absorb 10x More Radiation In Their Bone Marrow
Based on the existing science, many public health experts believe
it is possible we will face an epidemic of cancers in the
future resulting from uncontrolled use of cell phones
and increased population exposure to WiFi and other wireless devices.
Mentally ill 16 times more likely to be killed by cops
“By dismantling the mental illness treatment system, we have
turned mental health crisis from a medical issue into a police matter,” Snook said. “This
is patently unfair, illogical and is proving harmful both to the
individual in desperate need of care and the officer who is forced to
respond.”
British spooks 'could hack into children's toys for spying'
Mr Walker, whose organisation represents 850 UK technology firms,
added: “When we start to think, not just about the world today, but the
world in five, 10 years' time as the Internet of Things becomes more
real, and more pervasive... I think it requires careful thought in terms of where the limits should be."
How Bill Gates Is Causing the Collapse of Traditional Farming and Local Food Economies
I want you to reimagine Africa as a vibrant continent where farmers are
in control of their seed systems, are proud of their knowledge systems,
share seeds from generation to generation through the age-old practice
of exchange where they are self-reliant on a huge diversity of seeds
under their control, where women play an important role in production
decisions, seed selection, and breeding — and where our local food economies find their roots.
Labels:
community,
economics,
farming,
genetic engineering,
knowledge,
sustainability
Hijrah and Jihad
Yes, there is a multicultural community being manufactured here, and it
is benefiting these global mega-corporations and the international
financial institutions that fund them. Europe and the U.S. as we know
them have served their purpose, but the ideals that many in these
nations still hold onto are a barrier to global corporate power, so they
must be “replaced” by people who are accustomed to living under tyranny
and less attached to real liberty.
All They Have Is Fear
A tattoo client of mine was recently
told by his human resources department that he was “too manly” and
needed to be more “gender fluid” because his “certainty about his
gender” might make those who were uncertain of their genders
uncomfortable. He was asked to shave his beard and wear baggy clothes to
hide his muscular frame. The Harrison Bergeron world of the Handicapper General is no longer dystopian fiction — it’s becoming dystopian fact!
Friday, 11 December 2015
Russia Is Backing Assad Alone Because He Alone Is Interested in Syria Stability
Right now that vital ingredient can only be supplied by the reimposition of order by Damascus. The folks in Washington, Paris and Ankara might
not like that, but they are not the ones facing a future of anarchy. And
indeed, the more they stand in the way of Damascus, the more chaos they
will help create.
10,000 Soldiers Desert Ukrainian Army
"Ukrainians have been protesting against the mobilization. They travel
to work abroad or simply reside at their relatives' in other countries.
Almost 1,3 million Ukrainian draftees live in Russia."
“Please, I’m not upset,” Yatsenyuk said while addressing the PPB speaker, “so there are lots of morons - let’s finish with the questions to the government.”
“Please, I’m not upset,” Yatsenyuk said while addressing the PPB speaker, “so there are lots of morons - let’s finish with the questions to the government.”
Thousands of Muslim clerics issue fatwa against evil Islamic State
"It is written in the Quran that killing one innocent person is equivalent to killing all humanity."
"Authorities have said the Mina crush and stampede occurred when two waves of pilgrims converged on a narrow road, suffocating or trampling to death those caught in the disaster. Saudi Arabia has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and safety measures for those attending the annual five-day pilgrimage, required of all able-bodied Muslims once in their life, but the sheer number of participants makes ensuring their safety difficult."
"Authorities have said the Mina crush and stampede occurred when two waves of pilgrims converged on a narrow road, suffocating or trampling to death those caught in the disaster. Saudi Arabia has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and safety measures for those attending the annual five-day pilgrimage, required of all able-bodied Muslims once in their life, but the sheer number of participants makes ensuring their safety difficult."
Wednesday, 9 December 2015
Wholesale lies and deception from Obama in his televised speech to America on terrorism
By diabolical design through its divide and conquer strategy the ruling elite has set up its Trojan horse
now being unleashed throughout both Europe and North America to
purposely foment civil unrest, violence including terrorism as well as
class, racial and religious warfare. That's why when Obama and
other Western politicians piously preach their pie in the sky ideals of
tolerance and acceptance under the benign guise of multiculturalism,
the elite's puppets are actually fulfilling their demonic, treasonous
role to destroy America and Europe from within by willfully betraying
the very oaths they took to protect their citizens from both foreign and
domestic enemies.
Labels:
academia,
community,
conspiracy,
economics,
empire,
free speech,
government,
history,
human rights,
journalism,
law,
migration,
morality,
narrative,
peace,
politics,
propaganda,
religion
Google’s chairman wants algorithms to censor the internet for hate speech
“It’s our responsibility to demonstrate that stability and free
expression go hand in hand,” he writes. “We should build tools to help
de-escalate tensions on social media—sort of like spell-checkers, but
for hate and harassment.”
Labels:
censorship,
communication,
community,
free speech,
government,
media,
technology
Will Syria Repeat the Fate of Libya, ‘Which No Longer Exists’?
“During the NATO bombardment of Libya, western media conveniently forgot
to mention that the United Nations had just prepared a lengthy dossier
praising Mr. Gaddafi’s human rights achievements."
Labels:
economics,
education,
empire,
government,
human rights,
media,
peace,
politics
Smartphones to die out 'within five years'
Michael Björn, Head of Research at Ericsson ConsumerLab, said: "Some of
these trends may seem futuristic. But consumer interest in new
interaction paradigms such as AI and virtual reality (VR), as well as in
embedding the internet in the walls of homes or even in our bodies, is
quite strong."
We do have a 'grammar' in our head
This is a controversial conclusion from the perspective of current
research, the researchers note, because the notion of abstract,
hierarchical, grammar-based structure building is rather unpopular.
Declassified CIA Manual Shows How US Uses Bureaucracy to Destabilize Governments
It seems if any country should refrain from showcasing how easy it is
to disrupt inefficient federal agencies, however, it would be the
United States.
Su-24 downing gave grounds for war, but Russia decided against symmetrical response
“Yet we had to make them understand they’re going to hold
responsibility for their actions. Exactly for that reason and for the
safety of our citizens the relevant decisions were taken,” Medvedev said regarding the economic and other sanctions Russia has introduced towards Turkey.
Sri Lanka pleads for maid sentenced to death by stoning
"Your Majesty's kind intervention in pardoning these unfortunate victims
would enhance the high esteem in which Sri Lankans hold Islam, the
people and the kingdom of Saudi Arabia," said the Muslim Council of Sri
Lanka.
Flesh-eating skin disease grips ISIS-controlled areas in Syria
“As a result of abominable acts by ISIS that included the killing of
innocent people and dumping their corpses in streets, this is the
leading factor behind the rapid spread of Leishmanisis disease,” Dilqash Isa, the head of the Kurdish Red Crescent told the Kurdish Rudaw news.
Labels:
community,
health,
human rights,
medicine,
revolution
Trump Calls for “Closing the Internet,” Says Believing in “Freedom of Speech” is “Foolish”
Trump obviously knows his audience well and uses his position as a
cultural icon and skilled entertainer to embolden his fascist demagogue
status… and Americans can’t seem to get enough of it.
Labels:
censorship,
fascism,
free speech,
government,
migration,
technology
Physical activity may leave the brain more open to change
"Our study suggests that physical activity,
which is also beneficial for the general health of the patient, could
be used to increase the efficiency of the treatment in adult patients,"
Lunghi says. "So, if you have a lazy eye, don't be lazy yourself!"
Labels:
consciousness,
health,
knowledge,
memory,
neuroscience
How Loneliness Wears on the Body
While access to good health care and nutrition
are essential to physical health in older people, social connections
may be just as important. Imagine if the most powerful health
intervention for the at-risk elderly isn’t a high-tech surgery or a
handful of expensive pills, but the simple exchange of stories over a
steaming cup of tea.
Tuesday, 8 December 2015
Seeing Green: The Importance of Nature for Our Health
World Health Organization projections indicate that in fewer than 20
years, 75 percent of the world’s population will live in urban settings,
compared with the current distribution of about 54 percent city
dwellers. The potential ability of a single factor — time in nature — to
counteract a cascade of stress hormones will have enormous implications
for us and future generations.
Labels:
community,
health,
medicine,
nature,
neuroscience,
psychology
Is Turkey at War With Free Speech? 100 Arrested for 'Insulting' Erdogan
The total number of those who have been taken into custody over human rights issues in the period from January 1 through October 7 has reached
5,795 people, according to statistics contained in the report.
Labels:
censorship,
free speech,
government,
human rights,
media,
politics
Does Fear Lead to Fascism? A Culture of Fear and the Epigenetics of Terror
For the final hammer of fascism to fall, it will require the most
crucial ingredient: the majority of the people will have to agree that
it’s not only expedient but necessary. In times of “crisis,” expediency
is upheld as the central principle—that is, in order to keep us safe and
secure, the government must militarize the police, strip us of basic
constitutional rights and criminalize virtually every form of behavior.
Labels:
community,
fascism,
government,
law,
media,
politics,
propaganda,
psychology
Woman stabbed at Art Basel Miami, gallery visitors confuse crime for modern art
A woman was stabbed at a Miami art gallery after accusing her attacker
of following her around and repeatedly bumping into her. But although
the victim was left bloody and fearing for her life, visitors didn't bat
an eyelid, assuming it was a performance.
Mammograms Increase Risk of Breast Cancer
In 1982, the FDA approved thermography for
breast cancer screening, yet most of the
medical establishment is either unaware of
it or still associates it with its early
false start. Since most women are also uninformed
of the technology there is no pressure on the medical
community to support it.
Scientist Who Discovered GMOs Cause Tumors in Rats Wins Landmark Defamation Lawsuit in Paris
The jury is still out on GMO safety to say the very least, just as countless independent scientists have
warned, and Séralini’s study stands as yet another cause for concern
with the ongoing GMO experiment. It also shows the lengths that the
Biotech industry will go to in order to discredit any independent
science that clashes with their own version of science.
Labels:
food,
genetic engineering,
health,
law,
propaganda,
research,
science
Robots Could Fill Half of Jobs in Japan by 2035
According to media reports, Japan's residents mostly welcomed the
imminent "robo-revolution" because on the one hand it would allow the
mitigation of economic pressure on the quickly growing number of aging
people across the nation, while on the other it could provide job
seekers with the ability to conduct more creative work.
What your father ate before you were born could influence your health
"We did not expect to see such important changes in epigenetic information due to environmental pressure," says Barrès. "Discovering
that lifestyle and environmental factors, such as a person's nutritional
state, can shape the information in our gametes and thereby modify the
eating behaviour of the next generation is, to my mind, an important
find," he adds.
Monday, 7 December 2015
The Future of the West Can Be Seen in the Soviet Past
The aspiration actively not to understand the essence of
contemporary society, its hidden mechanisms and objective tendencies,
has become the dominant force in the intellectual conditioning of
Western society. People are prepared to spend time on anything except
laboring over books which will land them with the burden of cognition of
ugly reality. People are prepared to stuff their heads with anything
but bitter and merciless truths.
Labels:
academia,
community,
government,
history,
journalism,
politics,
psychology
First worldwide survey of religion and science
The study's results
challenge longstanding assumptions about the science-faith interface.
While it is commonly assumed that most scientists are atheists, the
global perspective resulting from the study shows that this is simply
not the case.
Let Them Eat Cake: The Army of Fanatics at the Heart of Europe
The traitors responsible for the coming horrors will not escape the
judgment of history. Nor, if justice is served, will they escape
prosecution and punishment for what are, by their own liberal ideology,
unmistakable crimes against humanity. Decade after decade, the liberal elite have deliberately encouraged the murder, rape, impoverishment and
ethnic cleansing of Europe’s indigenous White population. While they are
up, Europe is down. As Europe rises, they will fall.
Sense of purpose in life linked to lower mortality and cardiovascular risk
The analysis showed a lower risk of death for participants with a high
sense of purpose in life. After adjusting for other factors, mortality
was about one-fifth lower for participants reporting a strong sense of
purpose, or ikigai.
We Don't Really Know What's Happening
The good news in all of this comes when we accept the facts and stop
running our brains on bad information. Yes, it would be nice to know
what’s really going on, but we don’t, and there isn’t much we can do
about it. So, it’s time to stop treating the news seriously.
Is Science Kind of a Scam?
The way scientists do think makes us aware of how we can think.
Samuel Johnson said that a performer riding on three horses may not
accomplish anything, but he increases our respect for the faculties of
man. The scientists who show that nature rides three horses at once—or
even two horses, on opposite sides of the universe—also widen our
respect for what we are capable of imagining, and it is this action, at
its own spooky distance, that really entangles our minds.
Labels:
community,
history,
imagination,
philosophy,
physics,
psychology,
research,
science
Meet the woman leading China's new organic farming army
"I don't think there's anything low about being a farmer," muses Wang. "It's not like we don't have any pressure to do
well, it's just a different kind of pressure. Working in other jobs, you
might be staying up late and having a lot of anxiety. Here, it's about
solving problems. For example, 'Are the chickens laying enough eggs? Is
there an issue with the tomatoes?' This is the kind of stress I can deal
with, and the work feels positive overall."
Labels:
community,
economics,
farming,
food,
government,
health,
technology
Friday, 4 December 2015
Islamic Society students disrupt university lecture on blasphemy and make 'death threat'
"Muslim students who attended the event were shocked and horrified by
statements made by Namazie, and peacefully expressed their dissent to
the disrespectful cartoons shown of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). These
students were subsequently made subject to unnecessary bullying, abuse
and violence by the ASH society and security staff."
Neighbors of shooters did not report them for fear of racial profiling
'She didn't want to do
any kind of racial profiling. She's like, 'I didn't call it in … maybe
it was just me thinking something that's not there.'
Israel buys most oil smuggled from ISIS territory
Israel has in one way or another become the main marketer of ISIS oil.
Without them, most ISIS-produced oil would have remained going between
Iraq, Syria and Turkey.
Thursday, 3 December 2015
Conspiracy Theorists Might Actually Know More About Politics Than You
Don’t assume that people who believe in conspiracy theories are
uninformed and simply need more information about a situation.
Conservative conspiracy theorists are likely to be well-informed about
politics, and liberal conspiracy theorists aren't necessarily poorly informed. Having said that -- climate change is real, Bush didn't do 9/11 and you should still vaccinate your kids.
Why the Art World's Raging Narcissism Epidemic Is Killing Art
Real world Facebook and Twitter egotists set benchmarks for normal users
of social media, just like their art world counterparts. Both misshape
the wider cultural environment, but also open the floodgates to a more
extreme scenario—the normalization of narcissism.
How to Feel Normal in an Anomalistic Universe
We spend an inordinate amount of time talking about the pathological
delusions of true believers, the cognitive dissonance of skeptics, and
the fear of commitment of those who straddle the line. The focus has
shifted from a simple ontological statement that while our valuation of
science has an impressive track record of achievement, the universe
nonetheless keeps serving up oddities that throw a wrench in our
metaphysical project of comprehending the significance of human
existence and grasping at the nature of reality.
Labels:
consciousness,
cryptozoology,
ghosts,
media,
perception,
philosophy,
psychology,
research,
scepticism,
science,
UFOs
Austrian Villagers to Refugees: Please Don't Fear Krampus
The integration of Syrian and Iraqi refugees is facing a terrifying challenge in rural Austria this holiday season.
Is yoga culturally oppressive? That’s a stretch
Fortunately, according to Ms. Kuo, these issues do not apply to European
food – only to food created by non-white people. Which means that
anyone can appropriate the cuisine of my forebears – sauerkraut and
haggis, mainly – to their heart’s content. Not that anyone would want
to.
Wednesday, 2 December 2015
Law enforcement took more stuff from people than burglars did last year
In the United States, in 2014, more cash and property transferred hands
via civil asset forfeiture than via burglary. The total value of asset
forfeitures was more than one-third of the total value of property
stolen by criminals in 2014. That represents something of a sea change
in the way police do business — and it's prompting plenty of scrutiny of the practice.
How You're Born May Affect Your Brain Development
Looking at the behavior of baby mice, the researchers found that
cesarean-born mice made softer cries when separated from their mothers
at 9 days old than mice born vaginally. This could be meaningful for a little mouse's life and survival, Forger said, because other research
has found that moms pay more attention to the mouse babies when they're
louder.
Why Do Some People Find Deepak Chopra Quotes Deep And Not Dung?
This kind of tendency also feeds into broadly resonating societal
effects, such as the susceptibilities that led—and still lead—some
people to chase false “cures” for everything from autism to cancer, to
follow false prophets who promise them transformation and revelation of
hidden beauty while giving them nothing, and to confuse categories of
existence and believe that the material is magical. And that is deeply,
deeply important to understand.
Labels:
conspiracy,
health,
language,
materialism,
psychology,
rationality,
scepticism
Tuesday, 1 December 2015
Is free speech really a right worth protecting anymore?
Those that are allowed to self-publish on the internet without any
regard for what they write are some of the worst, most hateful, racist
bigots left on planet Earth. To make matters worse, blacks and browns
are far less able to defend themselves on the online battlefield due to the far lower literacy rates that have been foisted upon them by white oppression.
Behind the ‘white student unions’ springing up at Australian universities
“We think the ideas and issues we’re raising have become more relevant
to students as a new strain of political correctness has swept across
the Western world over the past few years promoting ideas like ‘white privilege’. There are all these nasty ideas around now that white
people, particularly white men, are always ‘privileged’ regardless of
their background and personal circumstances and that if they suffer
hardship they deserve it, and that white people are the cause of
everything that’s wrong in the world.”
Nutella rejects personalised jar for five-year-old girl named Isis
Ms Taylor said she would not be in favour of putting the name "Hitler"
on a jar of Nutella, but her case was different because she named her
daughter before the rise of Islamic State, she said. She also has no
intention of changing her daughter's name, and argues the name Isis
needed to be reclaimed.
US asteroid-mining act is dangerous and potentially illegal
The idea that American companies can on the basis of domestic laws alone
systematically exploit mineral resources in space, despite huge
environmental risks, really amounts to the audacity of greed. The Romans
had this all correctly figured out in their legal maxim: “What concerns
all must be decided upon by all.”
Labels:
economics,
government,
law,
science,
space,
technology
Monday, 30 November 2015
Inside the once tranquil Swedish village at war with migrants
'The village integration works badly
because people don't want immigrants in the village. This is no longer a
happy community, it's divided and is not a pleasant place to live.'
Filipino Entrepreneur Creates Revolutionary Lamp That Runs on Saltwater
“Just imagine, if we’re able to power a whole island using ocean water. That’s what we’re trying to aim for.”
Sunday, 29 November 2015
College Students Say Remembering 9/11 Is Offensive to Muslims
Of course, it’s not just Muslim students’ whose feelings are zealously
guarded by the new regime of campus censors. Students at university
after university are demanding the right to turn campus spaces—even
public spaces—into “safe” spaces: zones of total emotional and
intellectual coddling. What’s more, these students assert that
administrators are required to enforce these safe spaces, even at the
expense of free speech.
Saturday, 28 November 2015
How creative sparks help humans make new tools
In the model, certain knowledge can be concentrated in a subset of a
population, such as medicine men and medicine women. This concentration
of knowledge subsequently leads to increased susceptibility to the loss
of this knowledge.
Labels:
archaeology,
climate change,
consciousness,
evolution,
knowledge,
technology
Nature: An Antidote to Crime and Isolation
Weinstein explains that contact with nature accounts for five percent of
the variance, or variation, in crimes rates between areas. That’s a
significant amount, considering that previous research has shown that
socio-economic deprivation (which is basically a fancy way of saying
poverty) also accounts for five percent of the variance in crime rates.
The Pilgrims Were Definitely Not Like Modern-Day Refugees
If you have any liberal relatives or friends coming over for your
Thursday feast, they’re going to relish the chance to tell everyone that
the Pilgrims were refugees too — and hope that statement decimates all opposing view points.
Israeli Colonel Caught with IS Pants Down
It’s becoming increasingly clear that at least a faction in the Obama
Administration has played a very dirty behind-the-scenes role in
supporting IS in order to advance the removal of Syrian President Bashar
al Assad and pave the way for what inevitably would be a Libya-style
chaos and destruction which would make the present Syrian refugee crisis
in Europe a mere warmup by comparison.
Labels:
economics,
empire,
government,
migration,
peace,
politics,
propaganda
Brain structure may be root of apathy
As far as we know, this is the first
time that anyone has found a biological basis for apathy in healthy
people. It doesn’t account for apathy in everyone but by giving us more
information about the brain processes underlying normal motivation, it
helps us understand better how we might find a treatment for those
pathological conditions of extreme apathy.
Columbia Student Claims To Be Traumatized By Reading About White People
This isn’t the first time students have complained about the mental
anguish of studying the Western canon. Last spring, four students
published an editorial for the Spectator complaining that a student was triggered by having to read Ovid, and proposed replacing his offensive works with those of Toni Morrison.
Wednesday, 25 November 2015
Betrayals of trust helped the rapid spread of human species around the world
Active colonisations of
and through hazardous terrain are difficult to explain through
immediate pragmatic choices. But they become easier to explain through
the rise of the strong motivations to harm others even at one's own
expense which widespread emotional commitments bring.
Labels:
anthropology,
archaeology,
community,
migration,
morality,
psychology
Rude Behavior Spreads Like a Disease
Collectively, the data from Foulk and colleagues highlight the dangers
of low-intensity negative behaviors, even those that are merely
witnessed rather than personally experienced. With negative behaviors,
the witness becomes the perpetrator, just as the person who touches a
doorknob recently handled by a flu sufferer can themselves get sick and
infect others. No conscious intent is necessary, and the contagion may
last for days. Unfortunately, unlike the flu, there currently is no
known inoculation for this contagion.
Labels:
community,
conformity,
health,
perception,
psychology
Tuesday, 24 November 2015
Are Good Doctors Bad for Your Health?
It is surprising how uncomfortable some physicians get when you ask
these questions. No one likes to be second-guessed or have to justify
their decisions. But studies show that when patients are systematically
given information about benefits and risks they tend to consent to fewer
interventions and feel more informed about their decisions.
Scuffles as pro-refugee demo in Paris defies protest ban
Local police notified the organizer that if the rally wasn’t canceled,
they could face up to six months in prison. However, the warning was
issued in vain.
Monday, 23 November 2015
Saudi Arabia Sentences Poet to Death for “Renouncing Islam”
Isn’t it cute that one of the U.S. government’s closest allies has a
“morality police.” Where are the Hollywood celebs when it comes to the
Saudis? Crickets, as usual.
Labels:
atheism,
free speech,
government,
human rights,
media,
morality,
poetry,
religion
Eyes Wide Open at the Protest
Few observers outside of the protesters’ inner circle will deny the
horror of the worst bits of their behavior and speech. Their march
through the library was an intentional exercise in every disgraceful behavior they claim to endure themselves, from insults and physical
force, to racial barbs tossed out with disgust. But in the view of many
sympathetic commentators, their brutal tactics could never overshadow
the basic justice of their cause. For seemingly every overzealous
protest, you can find a thinkpiece on the web that argues just this
point.
One fifth of young adults think fish fingers actually are the fingers of fish
More than a fifth of mothers and fathers (22 per cent) admit they have
lied to their children about the origin of some food because they didn’t
know the answer.
Sunday, 22 November 2015
Skepticism on the couch
A Skeptic encountering evidence of the paranormal is like the
stereotypical woman in a movie farce who discovers a spider in her hair.
Does she pause to calmly assess the situation? No, she starts batting
wildly at her head, screaming, "Get it off me!" In this state of mind,
even the most intelligent and knowledgeable person will be hard pressed
to think logically. Panic makes anyone stupid.
Labels:
knowledge,
parapsychology,
perception,
psychology,
rationality,
research,
scepticism
People unlikely to change their mind, even when facts contradict their views
To keep from making erroneous conclusions, Gruca used a ‘control group’
in his research – in this case a separate group of people trading in
markets, who weren’t asked to explain the logic behind their forecasts.
With the explanation effect missing, it was found the respondents
adjusted their opinions according to the new information presented much
more readily.
Tuesday, 17 November 2015
A letter to friends
Learned and freethinking gentlemen,
Sorry I haven't been in touch. I took some time away from Maddingcrowdbook in order to hear myself think. The herd found me anyway. Even in the mountains I can hear them move.
Here's something of where I've uncomfortably been for the last few months. I promise I'm not coming from a place of racism, sexism, or (worst of all) conservatism, but--
~~~
I read Kevin MacDonald's The Culture of Critique. He suggests that evolutionary psychology can clarify the unconscious motivations of certain ideologues, with a certain persistent tribal identification, who assert that healthy Western cultural norms are secretly pathological.
There are good historical reasons for Jews to have led the argument in favour of multiculturalism, and against European ethnic hegemony.
This means that there actually is an internal coherence and logic to my education in the denigration of Western civilisation (post-structuralism, deconstruction, critical theory, et cetera). It's not just that it was frustratingly mystical and pretentious; it was wrong, and it was wrong for reasons.
A little psychology and history applied to my lessons makes them appear less like a misanthropic shit test. This recasts my failure to engage in the bad faith performance necessary for my final papers. Of course I couldn't get my Honours! The field of cultural studies wasn't honourable!
The reasons for that are understandable, and not at all a conscious conspiracy by scheming Jews to undermine our culture, but the whole tenor of my studies is rendered suddenly comprehensible by this transgressive observation--that a significant portion of the people I read in university were Jewish atheists who believed in the moral exceptionalism of the Jewish people.
~~~
So I've just read in MacDonald's book--about academic theory--that immigration policies in the West were changed in the 60s and 70s against popular sentiment, and not by elected politicians, but by government officials responding to lobby groups. Canada quietly abandoned a policy of favouring immigration from the cultures that constituted it because that's what it had to do to play ball with the UN. It was not a democratic decision.
All of this is swirling around my head, when the biggest migration since the last world war breaks into the news, and browbeaten Swedes and Germans scramble to welcome refugees who have crossed half a dozen safe countries to get there. What am I to make of this?
~~~
More conscious of the origins of intersectional grievance politics, I take a closer look at the works of people who got degrees like mine, but actually believed them. Gamergate, Shirtgate, Elevatorgate; each time the media just repeated what professional victims said about the oppressive patriarchy. That kind of talk is grounded in opaque poetical political philosophising, not any kind of science.
They have not one, but two Jewish prophets: Marx and Freud. It's inevitable that the oppressed female proletariat will throw off the shackles of those bourgeois boys with all their unfair power. It's clear that white people repress how hateful and unbalanced they really are (just like all men want to fuck their mothers) and your vehement denials really just prove how deeply true it is.
This is old stuff, adapted and polished for a new age, but people live and breathe it as gospel truth -- and they know the god they don't believe in is on their side.
~~~
Where have I heard this before? But of course!
This is the "ressentiment" of slave morality. Nietzsche was talking about Judaism by way of Christianity, but the psychological calculus tracks perfectly.
Resentment of the powerful leads to a reversal of values whereby the weak and powerless turn their lack of power into a virtue. Where the nobles before called the things that were not great "bad," the slaves now call the things that are great "evil." Where "goodness" before was a sense of strength and health and the power to effect one's will in the world, "goodness" in slave morality glorifies being a victim.
Nietzsche was writing about Social Justice Warriors in the fucking 1880s!
~~~
In the service of this narrative of oppression, regressive progressives have abandoned any pretense of classically liberal values. The academy and the wider public discourse have become actively hostile to the free expression of ideas, to say nothing of facts and reason. What passes for moral and rational is frequently a barrage of ad hominem, ab absurdo, straw man, and reductio ad Hitlerum arguments.
People think that repeating the received dogma is what constitutes thinking. How can I be surprised? Other than the philosophy courses I took, that was the measure of success in my seminars.
Universities are not about reading widely and learning how to assess information, the media is not about objectively reporting the facts and showing all sides, politics is not about defending the interests of the people and the land, and the agora, the marketplace of ideas, has been reduced to the exchange of instinctive feelings, recycled reasons, and decadent distractions. 2500 years of intellectual, political, scientific, and moral development have earned us the privilege of not simply neglecting those gifts, but denying their value.
Franz Boas said that cultures are relative and can't be compared, which our radicals have taken to mean that only our culture can be criticised, and certainly not praised. And why bother cultivating an elevated sense of possibility, if nothing we could ever accomplish would be any better than savagery?
Maybe the epidemics of mental illness and addiction and suicide in our society have something to do with the consequences of not honouring our ancestors (something codified as a religious rite by some cultures, but perhaps developing from a naïve psychological instinct for health). We're the culture that chose to end institutional sexism, to end the most obvious forms of colonialism, to end legal slavery, and instead of pride for our self-overcoming, we accept the blame for inventing these injustices, reversing our accomplishments into a listless and demented ethnomasochism.
~~~
And then...
Those people didn't choose to bomb Syria. They didn't colonise Algeria. They didn't deserve it. So why are some people--my father, for one--seemingly more interested in understanding and defending the motivations of jihadists than in deploring a dangerous ideology?
No amount of cultural relativism makes it not wrong. Of course we shouldn't meddle with other regions. Of course our nations have done terrible things in our name. It's still wrong. There's no moral equivalency that can absolve terrorism. It's wrong without the need for a song and dance to lend context and nuance. That's my culture.
If the people who value liberty, equality and fraternity can be gunned down for peacefully enjoying their way of life, and they shrug and say they probably deserved it, what competition can we hope to muster against a theocratic religion still in its petulant teenage years?
~~~
In Missouri, where the president of the state university was forced to resign after someone made a swastika out of poo, activists began using the hashtag #FuckParis, because those Parisians don't understand the institutional oppression of a townie driving by and shouting the n-word.
In Peterborough, the city where I got my schooling in what turned out to be cultural Marxism, someone set fire to the only mosque.
Sorry I haven't been in touch. I took some time away from Maddingcrowdbook in order to hear myself think. The herd found me anyway. Even in the mountains I can hear them move.
Here's something of where I've uncomfortably been for the last few months. I promise I'm not coming from a place of racism, sexism, or (worst of all) conservatism, but--
~~~
I read Kevin MacDonald's The Culture of Critique. He suggests that evolutionary psychology can clarify the unconscious motivations of certain ideologues, with a certain persistent tribal identification, who assert that healthy Western cultural norms are secretly pathological.
There are good historical reasons for Jews to have led the argument in favour of multiculturalism, and against European ethnic hegemony.
This means that there actually is an internal coherence and logic to my education in the denigration of Western civilisation (post-structuralism, deconstruction, critical theory, et cetera). It's not just that it was frustratingly mystical and pretentious; it was wrong, and it was wrong for reasons.
A little psychology and history applied to my lessons makes them appear less like a misanthropic shit test. This recasts my failure to engage in the bad faith performance necessary for my final papers. Of course I couldn't get my Honours! The field of cultural studies wasn't honourable!
The reasons for that are understandable, and not at all a conscious conspiracy by scheming Jews to undermine our culture, but the whole tenor of my studies is rendered suddenly comprehensible by this transgressive observation--that a significant portion of the people I read in university were Jewish atheists who believed in the moral exceptionalism of the Jewish people.
~~~
So I've just read in MacDonald's book--about academic theory--that immigration policies in the West were changed in the 60s and 70s against popular sentiment, and not by elected politicians, but by government officials responding to lobby groups. Canada quietly abandoned a policy of favouring immigration from the cultures that constituted it because that's what it had to do to play ball with the UN. It was not a democratic decision.
All of this is swirling around my head, when the biggest migration since the last world war breaks into the news, and browbeaten Swedes and Germans scramble to welcome refugees who have crossed half a dozen safe countries to get there. What am I to make of this?
~~~
More conscious of the origins of intersectional grievance politics, I take a closer look at the works of people who got degrees like mine, but actually believed them. Gamergate, Shirtgate, Elevatorgate; each time the media just repeated what professional victims said about the oppressive patriarchy. That kind of talk is grounded in opaque poetical political philosophising, not any kind of science.
They have not one, but two Jewish prophets: Marx and Freud. It's inevitable that the oppressed female proletariat will throw off the shackles of those bourgeois boys with all their unfair power. It's clear that white people repress how hateful and unbalanced they really are (just like all men want to fuck their mothers) and your vehement denials really just prove how deeply true it is.
This is old stuff, adapted and polished for a new age, but people live and breathe it as gospel truth -- and they know the god they don't believe in is on their side.
~~~
Where have I heard this before? But of course!
This is the "ressentiment" of slave morality. Nietzsche was talking about Judaism by way of Christianity, but the psychological calculus tracks perfectly.
Resentment of the powerful leads to a reversal of values whereby the weak and powerless turn their lack of power into a virtue. Where the nobles before called the things that were not great "bad," the slaves now call the things that are great "evil." Where "goodness" before was a sense of strength and health and the power to effect one's will in the world, "goodness" in slave morality glorifies being a victim.
Nietzsche was writing about Social Justice Warriors in the fucking 1880s!
~~~
In the service of this narrative of oppression, regressive progressives have abandoned any pretense of classically liberal values. The academy and the wider public discourse have become actively hostile to the free expression of ideas, to say nothing of facts and reason. What passes for moral and rational is frequently a barrage of ad hominem, ab absurdo, straw man, and reductio ad Hitlerum arguments.
People think that repeating the received dogma is what constitutes thinking. How can I be surprised? Other than the philosophy courses I took, that was the measure of success in my seminars.
Universities are not about reading widely and learning how to assess information, the media is not about objectively reporting the facts and showing all sides, politics is not about defending the interests of the people and the land, and the agora, the marketplace of ideas, has been reduced to the exchange of instinctive feelings, recycled reasons, and decadent distractions. 2500 years of intellectual, political, scientific, and moral development have earned us the privilege of not simply neglecting those gifts, but denying their value.
Franz Boas said that cultures are relative and can't be compared, which our radicals have taken to mean that only our culture can be criticised, and certainly not praised. And why bother cultivating an elevated sense of possibility, if nothing we could ever accomplish would be any better than savagery?
Maybe the epidemics of mental illness and addiction and suicide in our society have something to do with the consequences of not honouring our ancestors (something codified as a religious rite by some cultures, but perhaps developing from a naïve psychological instinct for health). We're the culture that chose to end institutional sexism, to end the most obvious forms of colonialism, to end legal slavery, and instead of pride for our self-overcoming, we accept the blame for inventing these injustices, reversing our accomplishments into a listless and demented ethnomasochism.
~~~
And then...
Those people didn't choose to bomb Syria. They didn't colonise Algeria. They didn't deserve it. So why are some people--my father, for one--seemingly more interested in understanding and defending the motivations of jihadists than in deploring a dangerous ideology?
No amount of cultural relativism makes it not wrong. Of course we shouldn't meddle with other regions. Of course our nations have done terrible things in our name. It's still wrong. There's no moral equivalency that can absolve terrorism. It's wrong without the need for a song and dance to lend context and nuance. That's my culture.
If the people who value liberty, equality and fraternity can be gunned down for peacefully enjoying their way of life, and they shrug and say they probably deserved it, what competition can we hope to muster against a theocratic religion still in its petulant teenage years?
~~~
In Missouri, where the president of the state university was forced to resign after someone made a swastika out of poo, activists began using the hashtag #FuckParis, because those Parisians don't understand the institutional oppression of a townie driving by and shouting the n-word.
In Peterborough, the city where I got my schooling in what turned out to be cultural Marxism, someone set fire to the only mosque.
Labels:
academia,
anthropology,
community,
conformity,
empire,
eschatology,
evolution,
free speech,
government,
history,
media,
migration,
morality,
narrative,
peace,
philosophy,
psychology,
race,
religion,
synchronicity
Friday, 13 November 2015
Information is Everywhere and Everywhere We are Ignorant
All the resources of this societal form — from primary schooling to
telecommunications — are marshaled in this great learning project: to
undermine our self-reliance and know-how. Everything is to be provided
for us; everything is to be thought for us; everything is decided for
us; everything is packaged to amuse us to death. We are being returned
to the pre-enlightenment state of Kant’s “self-incurred immaturity.”
Labels:
communication,
community,
economics,
education,
food,
government,
health,
knowledge,
morality,
peace,
philosophy,
propaganda,
religion,
research,
science,
technology
Metaphysics Is Prior to Science
The difficulty with using raw scientific evidence, untethered from a
valid metaphysical framework, is that it gives free reign to ideological
bias. In that sense our metaphysical framework -- whether explicit or
implicit -- is analogous to train tracks, where the trains are our
scientific investigations, and the destination is the truth. Our
scientific investigations are restricted to the tracks that the trains
run on, and if we are to understand the truth of our science we must
understand the tracks that constrain our work. If our metaphysical
framework is materialistic, the destination of our inquiries will always
be materialistic -- we can do no other.
Labels:
evolution,
materialism,
neuroscience,
philosophy,
rationality,
research,
science
Thursday, 12 November 2015
The Anti-Migrant Video Going Viral Across Europe
Although the main thrust of the film is to goad native Europeans against
mass migration and the negative effects of multiculturalism, the film
also paradoxically takes a swipe at one European minority group who
stand to lose almost the most from mass Muslim immigration.
Florida boy, 9, threatened with sexual harassment charges for writing love note
"I like you," the Tampa fourth grader in the Hillsborough County Public
Schools district wrote inside a heart drawing. "I like your hair because
it is not sloppy. I like your eyes because they sparkle like diamonds."
Labels:
absurdity,
communication,
education,
language,
law,
poetry,
psychology,
sexuality
Syngenta Now Patenting Natural Foods with No GM Biotechnology
There is nothing about this process that is proprietary to Syngenta. It
has been used by farmers for millennia through the simple observation of
their crops. Certain strains of plants are known to adapt to the region
in which they are grown over time. It has been happening for millennia.
Labels:
farming,
food,
genetic engineering,
law,
nature,
technology
Mizzou student body president admits to spreading false rumor KKK was on campus
Head, who had previously claimed he was called the “n-word” from a
passing pickup truck — one of the actions that led to the school’s
president, Tim Wolfe, resigning on Monday — was at it again on Tuesday.
This time, he took to social media to warn students about the KKK being on campus.
This time, he took to social media to warn students about the KKK being on campus.
Labels:
academia,
communication,
conformity,
education,
free speech,
race
Quitting Facebook could turn your frown upside down, study says
There can also be positive benefits from Facebook and social media,
but I think the real thing to always be aware of is the effect it has on
our perception of reality. This constant flow of great news we see on
Facebook only represents the top 10 percent of things that happen to
other people. It shouldn’t be used as the background for evaluating our
own lives.
Labels:
communication,
community,
health,
perception,
psychology,
technology
Wednesday, 11 November 2015
Politician Calls For “Compulsory Labor” to Force Germans to Service Migrants
Meanwhile, as Breitbart reports, Germany’s Interior Minister recently, “announced his intention to
drop educational standards in the country to help migrants get into
school or find a training place.”
50,000 Nationalists March in Poland
This march was, in strong contrast to far-leftist street demonstrations, completely peaceful and ended without incident.
The More Robots We Bring into Society, the More We're Forced to Behave Like Them
This scenario is still a very long way off, and it’s tenable that our
home appliances already force a certain kind of robotic regularity on us
anyway. Nevertheless, if such corporations as Toyota do bring us to the
stage where personal robots and AI are a daily fixture in our routines,
we will have to tread carefully, since this encroachment would amount
to our robotization.
Labels:
artificial intelligence,
futurism,
psychology,
robots,
technology,
transhumanism
WHO Soon To Classify Aging As A Disease
Doctors are usually the most inclined to consider states of being as
diseases. Laypeople are the least inclined, and nurses and
legislators are in between. The willingness to pay for treatment
from public funds is very strongly correlated with the perception of disease.
Labels:
economics,
health,
medicine,
perception,
propaganda,
psychiatry,
psychology,
research,
science
Study links narcissism and psychopathy to career success
Earlier studies
of the Dark Triad qualities suggest these negative traits often
overlap with positive traits associated with career climbing, like
extraversion, curiosity, and self-esteem, while other research links Machiavellian tendencies with the ability to seduce and captivate bosses, as well as intimidate co-workers
Does Creativity Make You Happy?
The concept of flow points to two happiness factors that have enhanced
human life for thousands of years via the arts. One is the capacity to
find joy in creativity through the pleasure of invention and
exploration. This capacity is based in evolutionary biology to ensure
survival of individuals and communities through innovation. The other is
the ability to get pleasure and relaxation from creating useful, yet
aesthetic objects; this is a form of rejuvenation that is not only
practical, but also health-enhancing.
Internet Trolls Attack Anyone Resisting Vaccine Party Line
But rather than take umbrage, those at whom such vitriol is aimed should
feel comforted by Socrates’ memorable adage, “When the debate is lost,
slander becomes the tool of the loser.”
Armistice Day 97 Years On
There was a moral case made that expected the best of people. War wasn’t
opposed merely on economic grounds or because it might kill people from
our own country. It was opposed as mass murder, as no less barbaric
than dueling as a means of settling individuals’ disputes.
Labels:
history,
law,
morality,
peace,
philosophy,
politics,
propaganda,
religion
Tuesday, 10 November 2015
Europe: Welcome to a United Police State
This leads to a situation in which you might be reported to the police
for being critical of Islam, or the so-called refugee issue, when making
entries on Facebook or commenting under online articles, through the
monitoring of these entries by different ‘pro-democracy foundations’.
Bizarre clog-wearing Hitler cult on rise in rural Germany
Barbara said: "They brought us over eggs and goat's milk. But soon we became suspicious.
"The man with a tattoo of an imperial eagle, the man who wore a Nazi helmet when riding his motorbike."
Mr
Jahn added: "Our neighbours were widely accepted as good and helpful
citizens and could spread almost undisturbed their supermen propaganda."
Labels:
community,
education,
politics,
propaganda,
race,
sustainability
‘White Privilege’ Now Means the Privilege to be Fired for Being White
“I am talking about the growing minority of students who believe they
have a right to be free from being offended. If we don’t reverse this
dangerous trend in our society there will soon be a majority of young
people who will need to walk around in plastic bubble suits to protect
them in the event that they come into contact with a dissenting
viewpoint. That mentality is unworthy of an American. It’s hardly worthy
of a Frenchman.”
Labels:
absurdity,
academia,
community,
conformity,
education,
free speech,
journalism,
race
Monday, 9 November 2015
Five Leaders Challenging Western Imperialism Through Diplomacy, Persuasion And Public Pressure
From widely divergent origins and diverse ideological backgrounds, five
political leaders have set a new agenda for dealing with war and peace,
equality and inequality, security and terrorism and environmental
protection. Except for Jeremy Corbyn, who in any case will probably be
rendered impotent by his own party’s elite, none of these progressive leaders’ ideologies is derived from the secular left.
Labels:
climate change,
economics,
empire,
government,
human rights,
peace,
politics,
religion
Does religion make kids less generous?
"A common-sense notion
is that religiosity has a positive association with self-control and
moral behaviors," Decety said. "This view is unfortunately so deeply
embedded that individuals who are not religious can be considered
morally suspect. In the United States, for instance, non-religious
individuals have little chance to be elected to a high political office,
and those who identify as agnostic and atheist are considered to be
less trustworthy and more likely to be amoral or even immoral. Thus, it
is generally admitted that religion shapes people's moral judgments and
prosocial behavior, but the relation between religiosity and morality is
actually a contentious one, and not always positive."
Understanding the Shocking Suicide Rate of US Vets
The crux of the matter is that going to war, which can be regarded
as committing a state-sanctioned murder, increases criminal violence
in the non-combat environment. And this fact shifts our attention
directly to the problem of war, not to the problem of which fraction
of returning troops to offer a "modicum of reorientation into nonviolent
life."
Labels:
community,
health,
human rights,
media,
peace,
psychology
Slain spirit medium's lottery numbers 'too accurate'
As a medium, he had predicted winning three-digit numbers for both
the Oct 1 and Oct 16 draws. Many punters had won money on the
underground lottery betting on numbers based on his forecasts. Several
underground lottery operators had suffered huge losses as a result. Possibly
they had been angry enough to hire gunmen to kill him, Pol Lt Col
Praphan said.
Saturday, 7 November 2015
‘Richard Wagner Square’ To Be Renamed ‘Refugees Welcome Square’ In Snub To German Patriots
Renaming squares and streets is an emerging cultural battleground in
Europe, as leftist groups on city government boards seek to erase cultural histories and inconvenient reminders as soon as they seize
power. Breitbart London reported on two such examples in July
where Spanish authorities insulted the memories of right-wing figures by
renaming their squares after LGBT-lobby campaigners.
Friday, 6 November 2015
More Things That Are Now “Racist”: Thor, Heavy Metal Music, Viking Cosplay
“Folk metal serves as a comfortable leisure space for those that have
lost power in recent decades: the white European, working class men who
have faced challenges to their assumed privileges from women,
globalisation, immigration and postmodernity. However, at the same time
it should not be easily dismissed in this way, and I believe it remains
central to the idea of heavy metal as a form of leisure that makes
masculinity and whiteness the norm.”
Thursday, 5 November 2015
Real-Life Paranormal Experiences Are Nothing Like the Movies
“If you ring a bell, that frequency will set off another, but it’s not
going to set off anything unless you ring it," he said. "A classic
example of this would be telling ghost stories. People may be sitting at
a campfire having fun, but once they shift into the frequency of
telling the story, it becomes scary. The mind shifts, and the veil
thins. They have created a frequency that attracts that energy. It’s
synergistic.”
Labels:
media,
neuroscience,
perception,
psychology,
synchronicity
Youth Turn Out in Large Numbers for NPI’s Rainbow Racist Gathering
Dickson claimed African Americans could “be given Manhattan” describing
his version of a Balkanization of America. Spencer spouted some
anti-Semitism himself, before trying to retract it, stating, “The Jews
exist precisely because they were apart, precisely because they had,
maybe you could say, a bit of paranoia about trying to stay away --
please don’t quote paranoia.”
Wednesday, 4 November 2015
Romanian witches to cast anti-government spell
The Queen witch Bratara Buzea said she would lead a chorus in casting a spell using a concoction of cat excrement and a dead dog. "They want to
take the country out of this crisis using us? They should get us out of
the crisis because they brought us into it," she said.
Tuesday, 3 November 2015
Ban Ki-moon condemns US position on Syria, endorses Putin
Suckers in the West fall for the Western aristocracies' line that Putin
and not Obama is wrong on this and is the cause of the dragged-out
Syrian war. Such fools don't even ask themselves whether in this dispute
it is Obama, or instead Putin, who is supporting the most basic
democratic principle of self-rule by the people. But the average
individual is that manipulable: so manipulable as to think that black is
white, and white is black; that good is bad, and bad is good. Totally
manipulable.
Labels:
absurdity,
empire,
government,
journalism,
law,
media,
peace,
politics
Migrant crisis pushing Germany towards ‘anarchy and civil war’
"The person who wants to send them to Berlin is Mr. Dreier. He is the
district head of Landshut, a town close to Munich. Usually he does not
have the power, but we are not living in usual times. What we are now
looking at is more and more Germany sliding towards anarchy. In this
situation I think less and less is determined by law, more and more is
determined by who acts. And the person who acts in fact has the power.
So if he sends ... refugees to Berlin, he sends them!"
White middle-aged people in US dying quicker than in any other developed nation
In some sort of nightmarish fashion, organ damage was combined with
rising depression, inability to relate to others and various other forms
of pain – bringing with them often an inability to work. The authors
even found a strict rising correlation between the number of people
reporting mental illness and the number reporting that they had
difficulty in socializing with others.
Sci-Fi’s Hugo Awards and the Battle for Pop Culture’s Soul
So you might be asking yourself: Isn’t there room for everybody under
the science fiction tent? You guys over there can keep reading hard
military sci-fi where the physics of deceleration from 0.5c is a plot
point. And you guys over here can read about a transgendered person with
dark skin and epicanthic folds pondering the existential implications
of sex with an AI.
Labels:
futurism,
literature,
narrative,
politics,
science fiction
Sorry, Social Justice Warriors: Political Correctness Has Peaked
Increasingly, Social Justice Warriors seem to win only on the turf
they already control. And so they’ve begun to turn to the behavior best
calculated to end their cultural dominance, behavior that makes even
their fellow liberals miserable. Liberal comedians won’t perform on
college campuses, liberals disrupt liberal campaign events, liberals
insult movies by liberal directors for failing to comply with
impossible-to-meet liberal gender standards, and liberal professors now
live in fear of their liberal students.
Sunday, 1 November 2015
Ontario High School: Halloween Costume Can’t Appropriate Your Own Culture
Although Sewerynek wanted to dress up as part of what he deems his own
culture, the school stated the reason for rejecting Sewerynek’s costume
was still because “culture is not a costume.”
Saturday, 31 October 2015
Russian media take climate cue from skeptical Putin
The president believes that "there is no global warming, that this is a fraud to restrain the industrial development of
several countries including Russia," says Stanislav Belkovsky, a
political analyst and critic of Putin. "That is why this subject is not
topical for the majority of the Russian mass media and society in
general."
Labels:
climate change,
economics,
media,
politics,
propaganda
Thursday, 29 October 2015
Swedish state TV airs children’s program glorifying the ISIS Caliphate
Known as the “Finger of Tawheed” to represent the
oneness of God, this hand symbol is common among Salafis and jihadis
both in photographic poses and following beheadings. It’s a symbol of
victory.
Wednesday, 28 October 2015
Farming the sea: Prize-winning model to restore ecosystems
The ocean covers seventy per cent of the earth and produces less than
two per cent of our food. To grow the rest, we use almost forty per cent
of the world's land and nearly three-quarters of our fresh water.
Labels:
climate change,
farming,
food,
futurism,
sustainability,
technology
Tuesday, 27 October 2015
German security agencies warn migrants will bring anti-Semitism
“We are producing extremists through immigration. Mainstream civil
society is radicalizing because the majority don’t want migration and
they are being forced by the political elite.” He ended by predicting
that Germans “will turn away from the constitutional state.”
Monday, 26 October 2015
Man fatally beat friend after friend 'changed into a zombie'
The man, identified as 23-year-old Damon Perry, told police he had been binge-watching "The Walking Dead" on Netflix recently.
Friday, 23 October 2015
The Real Reason Why You Haven't Healed Your Trauma/Depression/Heartbreak
This story is totally valid from the human perspective. Entire
industries are built on such stories. Research institutes and Ph.D.
programs are set up to refine this story, to tell it with ever
increasing precision and nuance. This story has helped most of us, at
various stages of life, to make sense of our past, overcome
difficulties, and stay hopeful about the future. But at some point, the
story stops being helpful, and instead becomes a hindrance to your
ultimate freedom.
Thursday, 22 October 2015
How to Succeed in Uncertain Times
Our efforts to contain the world in a system or idea may be doing more to hurt us than help us. Instead of trying to find the answer, maybe we ought to embrace that there isn’t any answer besides what we do and what is.
Labels:
complexity,
consciousness,
history,
knowledge,
philosophy,
psychology
Wednesday, 21 October 2015
School Suspends Student Elections Because ‘Not Enough Minorities Won’
“That should have been something [discussed] prior to elections and
prior to the campaigning process,” parent Bianca Gutierrez told KTVU,
adding that her son who was running in the election is now discouraged
and no longer wants to be part of the process.
Monday, 19 October 2015
Beyond Synchronicity: Mind ≠ Brain
Scientists love
to throw out evidence. It makes them feel powerful and important. They
especially love to throw out evidence from mushy fencesitters who come
to them, cap in hand, tail between legs, begging for validation for
someone's pet obsession, whether it's ancient lost civilizations or psi
or NDEs.
Labels:
conformity,
magic,
memory,
mysticism,
science,
synchronicity
Sunday, 18 October 2015
Police State Stories by “The Onion” that Could Very Well Be True
"Individuals in every country on earth
voiced their frustration that, in spite of generations of mistreatment,
neglect, and abuse they have suffered at the hands of those in positions of authority, they continue to allow control over the world’s
governments, businesses, and virtually every other type of organization
and social group to fall to the most megalomaniacal pricks among them."
Labels:
absurdity,
brutality,
comedy,
community,
government,
law,
politics,
psychology
Psychiatric Imperialism: Exporting Western Mental Disorders
"Looking at ourselves through the eyes of those living in places where human tragedy is still embedded in complex religious and cultural narratives, we get a glimpse of our modern selves as a deeply insecure and fearful
people. We are investing our great wealth in researching and treating
this disorder because we have rather suddenly lost other belief systems
that once gave meaning and context to our suffering."
Labels:
medicine,
narrative,
perception,
psychology,
religion,
science
Friday, 16 October 2015
Portland State course aims to 'make whiteness strange'
The University of Southern California also gave students the chance to study whiteness this semester. “Critical Studies in Whiteness,”
offered by USC’s graduate school, focuses “on how whiteness operates
within specific racial regimes to perpetuate inequality.”
~~~
“Thousand are just too many”, resident Dirk Hammer told the meeting. His family has lived for 400 years in the village. He wants as many as a “reasonable solution” would allow to “minimize disruption” but ultimately the feelings expressed were that residents were not consulted.
~~~
"These findings are very striking, and consistent with the idea that brain mechanisms that evolved for relatively basic threat-response functions are re-purposed to also produce ideological reactions."
~~~
“Thousand are just too many”, resident Dirk Hammer told the meeting. His family has lived for 400 years in the village. He wants as many as a “reasonable solution” would allow to “minimize disruption” but ultimately the feelings expressed were that residents were not consulted.
~~~
"These findings are very striking, and consistent with the idea that brain mechanisms that evolved for relatively basic threat-response functions are re-purposed to also produce ideological reactions."
Labels:
academia,
community,
education,
family,
government,
neuroscience,
politics,
propaganda,
psychology,
race,
religion,
technology
Child sex abuse inquiry testimonies ‘accidently deleted’
"We are very sorry for any inconvenience or distress this will cause
and would like to reassure you that no information was put at risk of
disclosure or unauthorized access."
Canadian Election 2015: Telling the truth costs political candidates their nomination
Regardless of which of the three main political parties in Canada a person belongs to, any
prospective political candidate that chooses to tell the truth about controversial subjects like Israel or 9/11 may quickly find themselves
out of a job.
Labels:
empire,
free speech,
government,
politics,
propaganda,
religion
Panic strikes school after student says ‘gum’
No gun was ever found. No word on if the student ever got the requested gum.
Wednesday, 14 October 2015
Hipsters 'unnerve local' in Sweden, get police called on them
Once officers arrived at the scene, they quickly realized they weren't dealing with terrorists at all. Instead, all they saw was “a bunch of happy bearded guys,” Bearded Villains member Andreas Fransson told the Jönköpings-Posten. He
added that both the group and the cops had a good laugh about the
situation.
Tuesday, 13 October 2015
Coincidence Or Conspiracy? Investigating If Believers Really See So Much Secret Design
"Although negative findings are usually unpopular in scientific
journals, we think our results are valuable because they contradict a
widely held and quite plausible idea of what leads to conspiracist
thinking. By ruling out a very straightforward and cognitively simple
mechanism, we narrow down the range of explanations for the popularity
of conspiracy theories."
Saturday, 10 October 2015
#killallwhitemen “Diversity” Officer Charged by London Police
“I, an ethnic minority woman, cannot be racist or sexist towards
white men because racism and sexism describe structures of privilege
based on race and gender and therefore women of colour and minority
genders cannot be racist or sexist, since we do not stand to benefit
from such a system.”
Friday, 9 October 2015
Western Women Will Be Sacrificed At The Altar Of Mass Migration
What on earth do we expect from the bulk of men who grow up under these rules? How will they view women, and rape? And what on earth do we expect to happen when they come en masse to Europe? They will suddenly become feminists en route? No,
they bring this misogyny with them, and it’s a misogyny that Europe’s
women are about to become very familiar with. Migrants leave behind many
things when they leave their country. Their beliefs are not among them.
Labels:
community,
conformity,
free speech,
government,
human rights,
media,
migration,
politics
Wednesday, 7 October 2015
That Awkward Moment When One Nobel Peace Prize Winner Bombs Another
Doctors Without Borders won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999. President
Obama was awarded his in 2009. As Commander-in-Chief of the military
that bombed the Doctors Without Borders hospital, this makes Obama
perhaps the first Nobel Peace Prize winner to bomb another Nobel Peace
Prize winner.
Tuesday, 6 October 2015
The World's Silliest Empire
The Russian «Ð’Ñ‹ хоть понимаете теперь, чего вы натворили?»
can be more accurately translated as “How can you even now fail to
understand what a mess you have made?” Words matter: this is not how one
talks to a superpower before an assembly of the world's leaders; this
is how one scolds a stupid and wayward child. In the eyes of the whole
world, this made the Empire look rather silly.
Monday, 5 October 2015
How might contact with nature promote human health?
That physical activity is not consistently related to greener environments suggests that our conceptualization of health-promoting greenspaces should center at least as much on oases as on ball fields,
and on greenspaces for walking and quiet contemplation as much as on
recreation areas. The findings here suggest that such oases should
incorporate plants — especially trees, soil, and water (preferably
moving) — and should be designed to induce feelings of deep relaxation,
awe, and vitality. Providing these green oases, especially in areas
where health risks are high and landscaping is sparse, might be an
inexpensive, powerful public health intervention and address persisting
health inequalities.
Labels:
community,
futurism,
health,
nature,
psychology,
sustainability
Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Water on Mars: Score One for Amateur Research
"The information has been on my website
since 2001, and I presented my seeps paper at the 2001 Mars Society
Convention at Stanford U. While it has been gratifying to have NASA
validate that work, it is also frustrating that no credit was given to
the paper and its authors."
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