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Because of, in Spite of

9/7/2021

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Are you where you are today “because of” or “in spite of” your ethnic background? A mix of both?


Stanford University released a study by Thomas S. Dee, Sade Bonilla, and Emily K. Penner that suggests “because of” can be a significant driver of success under certain educational curricula, specifically, a ninth-grade ethnic studies course. * Not a haphazardly thrown-together course, the ethnic studies class was planned carefully in a collaboration between university and high school teachers. The students who took the class had higher rates of graduation and better success in their high school classes, and a higher percentage of them went on to enroll in college. Sounds like a success story based on “because of” since the course was designed to incorporate ethnic information germane to the lives of the students, supposedly taught by staff in a sensitive and tactful manner that allowed debate without contentious ideological biases or condemnations.


So, having read that, I reminisced about my own ninth-grade history class, except I could not remember it. Instead, I recalled my eighth-grade history class. The teacher—I’m not good at names—was a middle-age woman who spent most of, if not all of, the classes facing the board on which she daily copied her notes in a neat and level handwriting. Having used chalk on a chalkboard, I can say that her writing in horizontal lines was a task beyond my abilities. Invariably, my writing slanted upward to the right as I wrote—but that’s a matter for another blog. Anyway, I recall the class of usually jumpy eighth-graders as being quiet, all the heads bouncing up and down as though we watched a vertical tennis match, our bobbing going from looking at the board to looking at our notebooks on which we wrote exactly what she wrote in chalk. And from that class I developed a love of ancient history, having learned about the following ethnic groups: The Sumerians, the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Romans. And since the Romans were by composition largely a multicultural group—what with all the imported slaves, the remnant Etruscans and Greeks, and the eventual inclusion of Lombards, Goths, Visigoths, Vandals, and other invaders and migrants—hold that thought…


“No Italians?” you ask. Where was the ethnic group from which your immediate family derived, a group you can trace to the eighteenth century and one that ranges from the middle to northern Apennines?


No, not really. There was some note-taking about the Renaissance, about Galileo and DaVinci, but not much that I can remember. I wish I could find those notes to see what I learned about my own ethnicity. I don’t think I learned much. And then, having gone to a “German” high school in the neighboring state, I had even less “formal” instruction on my own ethnicity. The languages taught there? Latin and German. How in the world did I become what I became? Where was the encouragement based on my heritage? My immigrant grandparents spoke a flawless western Pennsylvanian dialect, my parents and their siblings, also. The only hint of an Italian dialect I heard was from the little old priest in the neighborhood, Father Albanese.


Maybe the times have changed beyond my comprehension. I grew up thinking my ethnicity was “American.” I grew up with historical knowledge of the cultures that had made the “melting pot” of my youth, and for whatever reason and in spite of an insidious bias that kept “Italians” from joining the local country club, I thought of all my contemporaries as “Americans.” I thought of my dad and uncles who volunteered to serve in WWII. Such is the naïveté of youth. My eighth-grade history teacher of forgotten name and face—hard to remember a face when all I ever saw was the back of her head—had made me intellectually a “citizen of the world” and culturally a citizen of America.


That’s not the whole truth, of course. She made me a citizen of the Western World and its Mesopotamian origins. I learned little about Native Americans save the Aztecs, Incas, and Maya in the following year. I felt a tie to histories not my “own,” and not to a single history. Essentially, my eighth-grade history teacher set me to thinking as a “Greek,” to learning about Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, and to appreciating writers like Homer, Vergil, and Cicero. She opened me up to appreciating the Hall of Architecture at the Carnegie Museum, and also to its Egyptian collection of sarcophagi and those mysterious markings called hieroglyphs.   


So, I think I might have become what I am today “in spite of” my lack of ethnic studies. But I can’t ignore that those on the other side of the country, the students of San Francisco, profited from a course that incorporated their ethnic histories. I suppose that I might have benefitted from a little “Well, if-your-ancestors-could-do-it, then you could, too.” Encouragement mixed in with knowledge is mostly a good thing—depending, of course, on the knowledge imparted. I believe that if I had a Native American heritage, I might have profited from tales of pre-Columbian civilization. Certainly, there was greatness in the cultures of the Mound-builders, the Pueblo, and in other ethnic groups. Certainly, I would have found ethnic pride if my teacher noted the positive traits of my ancestry.


But would it have made a difference? Yes, the kids who took the ethnic studies class in San Francisco did better than their classmates not enrolled in the class, but what of those outside the general assessment? To say that one group had a graduation rate of 90% vs the other group’s 75% doesn’t acknowledge the successes of individuals in the 75%. Were there not successes “in spite of”? Let’s make it personal: Are you one who succeeded “in spite of”?


The complexity of our personal histories makes “because of” and “in spite of” a Gordian knot. We can engage in historical introspection in an attempt to untwist the intertwined influences of encouragement and indifference to find the roots of our present. But to what end? Will indifference we met along the path of learning stand as a greater influence on who we are than the encouragement we garnered? Encouragement is the “because of,” whereas indifference is the “in spite of” in our personal histories.


Of course, encouragement is a good thing. Applause enhances performance. There’s even the effect of a cheering crowd on a weightlifter, a home team, a runner. I think of the kids’ animated show Dora, the Explorer and what one of my granddaughters said on a trip to the park. She climbed onto the monkey bars. Pretending that she had scaled a Mt. Everest, I said, “Oh my! You’re taller than the sky. I don’t know if I can get up there.” A fan of Dora, she echoed the key line repeated in that show. “Come on PapPap, you can do it. Yes, you can.” With that encouragement, I ascended the monkey bars. And she exclaimed, “I knew you could!”


Did I need such encouragement in eighth or ninth grade? Could I have been more than what I am if I had been encouraged to do more on the basis of my ethnic heritage that included Galileo, DaVinci, all those great artists. architects, writers, philosophers, and people like Marconi and Fermi? Maybe. But then there’s something to be said for succeeding “in spite of.”


*Stanford University. 6 Sept 2021. Ninth-grade ethnic studies helped students for years, researchers find. Phys.org. Online at  https://phys.org/news/2021-09-ethnic-student-engagement-high-school.html  Accessed September 7, 2021.  See also:  San Francisco State University. 23 Dec 2020. Ethnic studies curriculum tied to increased graduation, retention rates, study finds. Phys.org. Online at  https://phys.org/news/2020-12-ethnic-curriculum-tied-retention.html  Accessed September 7, 2021.
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A Modern Epic

9/6/2021

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PROLOGUE:


In twenty-twenty or the year prior,
A virus was the modifier.
It ran the world and did its best
To kill Chinese and all the rest.
It changed the world we’d come to know
As Death turned joy into our woe.
The world back then had a new plague
As lethal as a Black Death phage,
But this one altered human cells.
The sounds we heard were great death knells.
The virus COVID-19 spread,
While in its wake we suffered dread.
Each day we heard the grimmest tolls,
A longer list, departed souls.
Was this the end of humankind?
Would anyone be left behind?
Like other news, it had town criers,
Some spoke true; others, liars.
I think this day in young September,
Of a tale we won’t remember;
Some newsmen wrote of lines of sick,
Who stood outside the health care center,
The newsmen said they could not enter
Because John Bull gave Ivermectin
As though it were a simple pectin.
Another story, false not true,
Enough, however, to stick like glue.
Once out a story does take hold,
The pundits think that they’ve struck gold.


When we look back, what will we see?
We drank the vinegar, not chablis?
When all is written years from now,
Will we then know who did allow
A deadly virus to escape
And human culture to reshape?
And will we see how we had acted
As lives and business were impacted?



THE PAN-EPIC


Should a pandemic be declared
For number sick or number scared?


Let’s take some numbers for a drive
To see what newsmen can derive.
We’ll go to inns that cure the sick
The ICUs that do the trick.
We’ll see the “overwhelming facts”
That forced us into unfree acts
Like closing schools and lots of stores,
The businesses like mine and yours.
 


“We have some facts behind the curtain
“The COVID cases: These are certain.
“In winter back some months ago
“We saw the Alpha variant grow.
“And yet, among the kids we know
“The numbers were so very low.
“More recently those numbers peaked
“That got us newsmen highly freaked.


“We need to publish numbers now
“And tell the people news so foul
“They tremble at each others’ sight
“When some wear masks and others might.
“The data show what all should know
“Formidable our viral foe.


Officials say that Death’s upon us,
Deutschland’s Spahn makes quite a fuss.
In other countries, it is the same,
All are Faucis with different name.
They beg us all to be wise:


“The unvaccinated is he who dies.
“It takes the old; it takes the weak.
“This disease makes life quite bleak.”


Befuddled readers now abound.


“Should I go out and walk around?
“What are the numbers of which you speak?
“And do they count the strong and weak?
“Is there some med I should take
“A prophylactic that’s not fake?
“Help me please; I’m very frightened;
“You seem to be the one enlightened.”


The fear is real; the newsmen know.


“We’ve got ourselves quite a show.”


And so from newsroom to TV:


“The gurneys line up in a quay.”
“We work our way through all Greek letters;
“Alpha first took all our betters;
“The old that died before their time,
“And others, too, just in their prime.”


An alphabet of killers now
From A to D; Greece to Macao.
“The Delta kids hospitalized
“Began this month to see a rise.
“Some 9.8 per tenth of million
“Now breathe with help; these are civilian.
“And of those so hospitalized,
“One point eight have really died.
“One point eight per tenth of million,
“Our anger turns us to vermillion.
“Whom can we blame, who’s at fault?
“How can we get this all to halt?”


While in back rooms, we hear discussed


“How can we make them all nonplussed?
“We’ll show them that each one in four
“Of kids that walk through doctor’s door,
“And of those now in ICU
“We count much more, not less or few.
“That’s a number that scares them, sure;
“We will warrant facts and adjure
“That they are never circumspect,
“That they are numbers we can respect
“Yes, we’ll show kids twelve and more
“With Delta likely pass Death’s door.”


But still the readers seek to reason:


“Is this worse than each flu season?
“Is there really a big change
“As the Delta data range
“Like numbers that the flu makes sick,
“Or is this just a data trick?
“Where did you get your numbers from,
“How’d you subtract; how count the sum?
“Are these the numbers absolute,
“Do they reveal disease acute?”


The newsmen pound their drums much louder,
Their news is like some lit gunpowder.


“The children now have the infection
And worse there’s now a new projection,
That in the fall of one and twenty
They’’ll be more; they’ll be plenty.


“But if we’re frank, we have to say
“No stats we cite should you dismay.
“A study found that for Greek letters,
“The Delta is not the one that betters.
“Though current data show Delta worse,
“Than Alpha was.  Despite the burst,
“The cases do not signify,
“That Delta kids more likely die.
“The jury’s out; the data’s thin;
“But we’ll shout and make a din”
“If in this year of twenty-one
“Each ICU is overrun.
“We’ll let you know; we’ll then broadcast,
“We hope to keep psyches aghast.
“We won’t make light of what we see
“Some children die; all do agree.
“Sure, we might have stretched the truth
“But COVID sure attacks our youth.
“If what we say makes you afraid,
“We’ve done our job; we have conveyed.
“We spread our news just like the virus,
“We’ll use TV; we’ll use papyrus.”


The public still in quandary lie,
Will each of us be next to die?


“As we suspected, as we thought,
“The deaths are not what you have taught.
“And yet we can’t manipulate,
“That some have died as of this date.”
“That’s true, we guess, and one point eight
“Is one too many if that’s the rate,
“And even if point eight’s a few,
“It’s a tragic number, too.
“So, you report and we decide
“If what we think is truth or pride.
“Reality is hard to know
“When some conflicting data show
“The jabbed are just as feebly weak
“In recent news that is so bleak
“About the fully vaccinated,
“About those masks so fully hated.
“You preached that herds would be immune,
“That was your song; that was your tune.
“We heard that soon as all are pricked,
“The virus won’t with Death inflict
“The human race. Vaccines will save
“Us all from yet another wave.
“Yet, now we hear of some breakthrough,
“A new mutant, this one called ‘mu.’”


The public now does some research,
And some facts do the news besmirch.


“Here are the words researchers write
“About this COVID Delta’s blight:
“Because the recent number’s small
“We can’t say that we trust them all.
“At the time, though, this seems true,
“That some respond as to the flu;
“Some get sick, and others don’t
“Some get jabbed, and others won’t.”


“This mess is something, that’s for sure
“When data smell just like manure.
“In June the numbers were quite low,
“Point O three kids, no overflow,
“In August now, the number’s higher,
“Some one point four, if you aren’t liar.
“So, I looked at what was said,
“Three years ago about the dead.
“From late teens to twenty-four
“One point seven died, not more.
“Per hundred thousand every year,
“We always lose those we hold dear.
“Between the ages 5 and 9,
“Eleven point six in death recline.
“From ten to ten plus four
“Some 15 knock on Reaper’s door.
“That’s quite a loss you never write,
“You only state the COVID blight.
“You’ve made this tragedy a fright.
“We’ve listened and then listened more,
“Become accustomed to hear a score,
“As though we watch a game you play,
“You revel as the COVIDs slay.
“When we look back, what will we see
“That you put blame on all and me,
“As though there was no human cause,
“A lab, a diet, or anchor’s hawse,
“Some site where all COVID started,
“Where first we learned of the departed.”


Will this tale become an epic
About the deadliest pandemic?
Will the tale in some years hence
Beget in us some common sense?
Or will this tale always renew
The fear that runs us now quite through.
And will we hear from calmer voices
That still allow for different choices?
Whatever lessons we must learn
Must keep us from a funeral urn,
But short of that, reduce the fear
That stems from facts that are unclear.
Will future leaders be aware,
And the people then prepare
For more than closures of all kinds
And work for cures and calmer minds?
Some Melville hence will sing this tale,
A sickness now become White Whale.
He’ll sing of newsmen, all new Ahabs,
That from the lowlands to the Punjabs
Will chase the tales that scare us most,
Like COVID turning us to ghost.



I’ll leave you now with one more thought,
What might have been is just an ought.
The world we thought would never change,
Has now become for us quite strange.
Is there naught to hold together?
Does life just shift as the weather?
We can’t get back the lives we lost,
Or the businesses that cost
The wealth of many to decline.
“Rejoice,” I say, and “do not pine.
“One constant was the news deadline.”




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Marsha, Marsha, Marsha

9/5/2021

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Ever get the feeling you are watching an endless version of The Brady Bunch that runs on every news channel? Well, that’s how I feel every time I switch channels to see the news. On one channel, the “Jans” cry, “Everything is Marsha, Marsha, Marsha.” Switch the channel, and different “Jans” cry identically. It’s a constant sibling rivalry. I want to say, “If you two don’t quit, I’m stopping this car and coming back there.”


The cry of “Marsha, Marsha, Marsha” isn’t always simultaneous. No, it alters with elections, one side seeing undeserved favor for the other side until the next election when the roles are reversed. Today, I happened upon a Left-leaning person who said, “All the Republicans want is power.” Yesterday, I heard a Right-leaning person who said, “All the Democrats want is power.”


“I’m telling you, if you two don’t quit, I’m coming back there.”
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Why Do We Listen when Pundits Speak?

9/3/2021

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Apparently, the word pundit derives from “a Hindu versed in the Vedas,” a “wiseman” of sorts, a learned person. Not having grown up Hindu, I have only an outsider’s knowledge of Vedic scholarship and meaning. From that perspective, I understand that the word veda itself derives from “to know,” or “knowledge,” but probably borders on “wisdom” though pundits could cite from memory complete passages from the Vedas. So, a Hindu pundit (so-named in the late seventeenth century), imparts what he has come to know, the sacred texts, early on through oral traditions and later on through written texts.


Part of the Vedic tradition lies in the roots of knowledge about the universe as expressed in mantras, sounds that underlie the meaning of the world. To an outsider, such sounds, like Ommmmm, are meaningless as mesmerizing music in a spa. Sure, they relax through simple vibration, but, also sure, they impart no specific meaning. Repeating a mantra can connect one to some inner feeling and possibly even connect one to insights, but listening is another matter. Hallucinatory sounds produce hallucinations in the hummer, but, frankly and again from an outsider’s perspective, produce no specific and verifiable explanations about why the world is as it is. This is not, of course, a criticism of Hinduism’s core because the idea of connecting a being IN the universe TO the universe in which it lies actually seems rather logical. It is also rather widespread among other cultures, as in the “back-to-Nature” crowd that emanated from English Romanticism and its poets and artists. That kind of connection to the universe continues today: I have recently read articles on walks in the woods and communing with Nature as legitimate therapies for those of us living under the duress of the twenty-first century. One more note on this: Many people are moved to feel a connection to the universe by both the sights and sounds they experience in “Nature”—but not all people, apparently, are so moved or care to be moved.


Hindu pundits can serve as guides to understanding the universe, and mantras can serve as connections to greater, yet nonverbal, understanding of one’s place in the universe—understanding that is not reducible to the level of a freshman essay for a Composition 101 class or even to some Hegelian dialectic. Saying “Ommmmm” is neither précis nor debate.


Hmnnnnn!? After centuries of placing pundits in the context of Vedic wisdom, we place them not in the temples of religion, but rather on the stage of television. And when we hear them utter their sounds, we believe them to be understandable, literally understandable. We listen as TV pundits explain the universe all of us already understand, a universe with which we have our personal connections that we derive from our own mantras. But unlike the sounds hummed or sung in the temples of our minds, the sounds we hear from pundits are repetitions of texts that focus on this or that political point of view and not on connecting us to some all-encompassing wisdom.


Pundits on TV generally spend their precious few moments of air time in reading their Composition 101 essays to us, always predictable by the network, always predictable by the personal history of the pundit. “We turn now to So-n-So. She worked in the Administration of So-n-So as the Secretary of Such-n-Such and is now a contributing editor.” And as the camera swings Right or Left to the pundit, we hear the expected Ommmmm that means more to the pundit than to the listener and that leads to no deep Cosmic meaning, nothing more lasting than the chirps of birds heard in the woods, each generation passing, and each generation still chirping recognizable songs: “That’s a bluejay. And, did you hear that? A mockingbird!”   


Unlike those sacred sounds that might connect us to the universe, what we hear is more like the “oompa” of marching bands performing on a football field at halftime. One side of the stadium listening as its band plays and the other side ignoring the performance; and then, the other side of the stadium listening as its band plays and the opposing side ignoring the performance, neither side remembering the song beyond the performance, the entertainment lying in the moment of the sounds, in some brief vibrations with no lasting meaning, and next year’s band, composed of different individuals, primed to play the same tunes.


Already imbued with some understanding we believe is our connection to Universal Meaning, we might consider asking ourselves why we bother to listen. Punditry? Hmnnnnnnn…
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“The inequalities of Andes and Himmaleh are insignificant in the curve of the sphere”—Emerson, “Self Reliance”

9/2/2021

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Let’s do a little experiment. Take a flat map of the world, put it on a table. Flatten any wrinkles. Now, run your fingers over the great mountain systems. Feel anything? Any bumps or protrusions? No? Okay, let’s run the experiment again, this time with a relief globe, one that has mountains “sticking up” above the smooth gores of lowlands and oceans. Yep. Now you feel those little protuberances. But not by much.


I suppose there are numerous analogs for this experiment, but you and I, being on such friendly terms that you know much about what goes on inside my mind, yes, you and I, might consider just one: The bumps of tragedies on the broad world of personal history are like those mountain ranges.


Both of us have witnessed directly and indirectly numerous tragedies from the loss of loved ones to the deaths of the unknown, from destruction of cities by storm to destruction of cities by war, and from abandonment by protectors to abuses by the same. In fact, any list of tragedies runs long, and all such lists have the gaps imposed by the forgetfulness that erases the unpleasant from our memories. In short, when you and I run our figurative fingers over the spans of our lives, we cannot feel all the bumps even though we have, like constant explorers, encountered many of significant elevations. In fact, like the Andes, Rockies, and Himalaya, only the big bumps strike the nerves in those fingers.


If we were to research the days of our lives as they have been recorded by various news sources and historians, we would be hard pressed to find one without some human tragedy. The road of our lives has been bumpy, but strangely, not so much in memory. When there are many bumps, our brains look to average, to smooth. That leaves just the larger ones in our memories.


It’s a common experience to note where one was during some significant, or mountainous, event. I was in my kitchen getting a cup of coffee when terrorists crashed planes on 9-11. I was in a college hallway when I heard that President Kennedy had been shot. Those mountainous events stand above the plains of everydayness in my mind, but they are not the only highlands my mental fingers can feel. I’m sure that you also have such elevations that protrude noticeably from your mental map of history.


What intrigues me today is that in “feeling” those bumps, I have to acknowledge the inadequacy of personal scale. I assume, for example, that a young child’s pudgy little fingers can sense bigger bumps on a relief globe that my calloused old fingers can—too many cuts and bruises accumulated in my personal history (and probably in yours). I’ve become a bit insensitive in this regard because I cannot solve all the world’s problems, right all the wrongs, or smooth over the bumps in the lives of billions of other people, hundreds of millions of who undergo tragic conditions daily or almost daily. Hundreds of millions who have lived tragedies that I have experienced only indirectly, tragedies that I know only from reading, hearsay, or news reporting.


May I get emotional here? Is there a way to feel all those bumps, those elevated tragedies in the lives of others? Or should I simply flatten out the map and go on walking over an Earth’s curvature as though the world is flat?


It’s not flat, of course. And it’s not without those bumps: Cities destroyed, for example, cities like Pompeii and St. Pierre on Martinique, both destroyed by volcanic eruptions; Cities destroyed, for example, by conquest and war, like Jerusalem in the first century, Dresden, Hiroshima, and London in the twentieth century; lives lost in crimes and storms; persecutions, enslavements, impoverishments, injustices…


Of course, there are those who seem to have no feeling, no sense of touch: The insensitive that refuse to feel the bumps that lie on the map of others’ lives. Some even appear to ignore that such bumps even exist. And others appear to relish, even applaud, the tragedies of others and to look on their mountainous climb through life as entertainment, or worse, as inconsequential.


The map of the mind might be smooth and unwrinkled, but the real world is not.
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Imagine

9/1/2021

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That famous John Lennon song encapsulates the world of political and social idealism. But it begs a question derived from history.


Is there a gene for idealism? Are some people just hard-wired for softness in a world of hardships and brutal realities? Do you envision your life in a land of wishes? Think for a moment as Lennon thought:


    You may say I'm a dreamer
    But I'm not the only one
    I hope someday you'll join us
    And the world will live as one


Do you count yourself among the people who want the world to behave according to principles they derive not from experience, but rather from imagining: People who believe, for example, that all bad guys can be reformed, regardless of the depth of their social and psychological pathologies? 


Is it possible that your social and political ideals aren’t practicable? And if they aren’t, then why entertain them except for entertainment?


Recall these lines from A. E. Housman’s “Terence, This Is Stupid Stuff”:


    43   Therefore, since the world has still
    44   Much good, but much less good than ill,
    45   And while the sun and moon endure
    46   Luck's a chance, but trouble's sure,
    47   I'd face it as a wise man would,
    48   And train for ill and not for good.


Might we draw a lesson on worldview from Ezekiel (Ezechiel)? No, you say, that bespeaks of religion, and Lennon asks us to imagine “no countries” and “no religion, too.” “Deer droppings!” I say. There are evil-doers, and those who flutter above imaginary fields of flowers always have to learn their lessons the hard way. History reveals that appeasement is an ineffective defense of ideals. History seems to indicate that protecting “ideals” often requires the action of brutal men.


The Book of Ezekiel is a harsh book filled with threats against evil-doers. Here’s one that captures the threat of vengeance that the pathological eventually face at the hands of brutal men who protect idealists like Lennon: “And I will execute great vengeance upon them, rebuking them in fury”… Ch. 19, v. 17). Sure, elsewhere in the book, Ezekiel has God say that if the pathological change their ways, he will forget and forgive, but always in the background lies that overt threat: Perpetrate evil and you can expect some rough times in return. That is, of course, if someone is there with the will to exact vengeance. Lennonites need not apply.


And now, in September, 2021, we can see once again that only under the protection of brutal men do idealists find their imagined world in which people live in harmony. Armies of the “Just” have to exist to protect innocent idealists when armies of the “Unjust” attack. Keep Housman’s lines in mind: “..trouble’s sure,/I’d face it as a wise man would,/And train for ill and not for good.”
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    REPOSTED BLOG: √2
    REPOSTED BLOG: Algebraic Proof You’re Always Right
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