The Michael Jackson documentary / accusation I think could be another 
self-reflection as to what is What is Wealth For?   
The momentum he could have been using, in his mind, was to override the norms 
of society and to share affection with children -- affection that he lacked as 
a boy.   I believe it was Bill Maher that put this into perspective noting that 
some pedophiles dismember their victims.   Neverland Ranch may have been to 
create a new world with different rules.  It has different properties than 
Musk's new world, but at some level the impulse could be the same.   Neverland 
seems like too much of a production *just* to be for a shallow deviant purpose. 
  It may have had a more complex deviant purpose.   And you know, the 
Unabomber's remarks aren't the most insane thing I've ever heard, either.

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of u?l? ???
Sent: Friday, March 12, 2021 10:22 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] great man theory

OK. But a) I don't think there was any snark in the caricatures. Your 
perception of it is, I think, an instance of imputation ... aspects of your 
model being attributed to the words. But, more importantly, b) Yes, of course 
it's caricature. That's the point.

Your bringing up Linda Rondstadt, Pierce, and Feynman is important. I'm sorry 
if I glossed over that too much. But as my trailing comment about Oprah's 
evolution (and Jackson's evolution) should hint toward your point. Yes, we can 
take a deeper look into the *actual* people (as opposed to their names as 
symbols Oprah is not Oprah). And assuming we're not sociopaths, we can find the 
humanity in there ... see the victims as people.

But that's not what we do. And we do it less and less every day, every year, 
every decade. Republicans are horrible monsters that need to be eradicated. 
That's our new touchstone for "accuracy" in caricature. And Marcus' 
contribution may well be even more accurate, as a socio-cultural comment, that 
we *must* caricature these people and things in order to build wealth/momentum 
to do difficult work. If that's the case, getting accurate, hours long 
descriptive quality, into the mix *defeats* the purpose.

The reason we put the Bohms and Gödels of the world through the wringer, so 
that they end up suicidal, is so we can wring our objectives from their 
desiccated little souls. To look at our victims as full-blown humans gets in 
the way of our progress.


On 3/12/21 10:07 AM, Steve Smith wrote:
> 
>> What is the quote "Methinks the lady doth protest too much"? >8^D
>>
>> Dave's post held zero resentment, as far as I can tell. Maybe Steve resents.
> I was reporting on my own experience/introspection of/on/with 
> resentment, yes.   I was also noting that such lists are compressed 
> caricatures.   I don't know if Glen or Dave resents these people their 
> success, but it sure sounds like whomever did the caricaturing was 
> looking for a (not inaccurate, but possibly very carefully contrived) 
> low-dimensional silhouette of a high-dimensional 
> person/phenomena/career/movement.
>> I don't and I don't think Dave does. What's at work, here, isn't resentment. 
>> It's an attempt to point out a fundamental flaw in our highly connected 
>> world ... watching as GroupThink churns from one celebrity to the next, from 
>> celebrity like Trump to the more sedate celebrity of Biden ... from the 
>> celebrity of AI to the more sedate celebrity of ML.
> Sure, there is a pop-collective over-estimation of value going on in 
> all of these examples.    We here variously give folks like Pearce or 
> Feynman caricatured celebrity status which in turn might evoke the 
> desire in some to create a less flattering caricature.   Caricature all.
>> If we replaced the people in Dave's list with technologies, we'd see the 
>> SAME pattern.
> And some have called out the signifier "Science" and the things it 
> pretends to point at as being a broad example  as well.
>> And Dave explicitly said, and Jon remarked on, the fact that *we* make these 
>> celebrities. They're the victims. And if we want to come to terms with our 
>> highly connected world, we need to look hard in the mirror.
> 
> I think that was my fundamental point as well.  I wasn't trying to 
> contradict or impugn Glen or Dave or anyone else, just noticing that 
> when there is snark there is ego.  If those lists of traits of "Great 
> (wo)men" were not dripping with snark then you may be accurate that I 
> projected my own stuff into it and I'm entirely off-base.  Wouldn't be 
> the first time.
> 
> - Sieve

--
↙↙↙ uǝlƃ

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