It's even worse when people start to believe in the demagogues
pounding out the message, with that vicious circle of presenter and
audience whipping each other up BB.

On 1 Sep, 00:56, BB47 <[email protected]> wrote:
> I guess the new world order is just the best flowery speech of the day
>
> On Aug 31, 10:32 am, Vam <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > This was a great read ( alongwith a couple of your other recent
> > posts ), Neil !  You are finally shedding the politesse you instinctly
> > dislike in the first place.
>
> > Indeed, the vision must precede thought and talk, which otherwise
> > bumbles forth without substance. Even evidence must link to defined
> > values in the vision, not to tell us how impossible it is to realise
> > those values for all of us in practice. We already know that. Instead,
> > we would like evidence to point to ways along which we may proceed to
> > make a start with, say, minimising the waste competition is inflicting
> > on our present or the cost liabilities we are incurring today on
> > humanity's account in future. As is required, we could look at '
> > exceptional ' experiments already being conducted ( e.g. Gramin Bank
> > in Bangladesh ), or even create experiments, to show us what would be
> > best to start up on towards realising those envisioned values. The EU
> > experiment is a case in point.
>
> > Finally, I suppose, we need to be able to do something ( different
> > from what has gone on and brought us so far ) so as to be able to
> > honestly tell ourselves that we indeed deserve a better collective
> > life. In fraternity, as Fran admirably says.
>
> > And, I can see even with the mini - world we have on this forum, we
> > each need to examine our self for long merely to know why that '
> > vision ' is preferable and worth it. I might not agree with Pat's
> > dogma but we all can see how empowering his well - examined vision
> > is !
>
> > On Aug 31, 9:38 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I'll come back on that one BB - it does strike me we ought to be
> > > considering the Kennedys and Bushes as the same thing.  I guess I'd
> > > have to vote Democrat, but it would be a lesser of two evils thing.
> > > Karl Popper wrote 'The Open Society and Its Enemies' long ago - one
> > > can clearly see 'dirty hands' is an enemy of openness.  The mother of
> > > modern Parliaments is English and  stems from a very restricted notion
> > > of representation and even who should be represented (following
> > > earlier models from classic times).  I think we can make a good case
> > > our elections are not free and open and not geared to modern ideas of
> > > freedom.  Mentioning conspiracy is dangerous as one is instantly
> > > branded a nutter believing we are run by lizards or such - often the
> > > term 'deep politics' is used instead.  The most loony conspiracy
> > > theorist (other than boring UFO nutters) in my time was the CIA
> > > Director in the 60s convinced Russia and China were only bombing each
> > > other to convince the west they weren't communist buddies
> > > (Angleton?).  The underlying science is that of thought experiments,
> > > which can be very wild indeed.  Physics relies on them.
>
> > > I may as well yawn on a while.  Magna Carta addressed the Freemen of
> > > England, which meant not many people and no women.  The Demos in
> > > Athens was also restricted and had no problem ethnically cleansing
> > > neighbours to increase grain production.  The Soviets, with their
> > > alleged Marxism had no such problems either, nor the Maoist China.
> > > The eventual question is whether we are held in conspiracy - there
> > > have been many religious ones and I don't see the capitalist-communist
> > > ones as much different.  Even in science, 'evidence' requires faith
> > > and understanding of approximation (the Ludwig and Snell programmes).
> > > I'd say the classic conspiracy theory takes the form of Bishop Usher's
> > > notion that the world began in 4004 BC complete with fossil record and
> > > memories.  Such a theory is impervious to evidence as anything can be
> > > made to fit it.  We don't see UFOs because they hide them and lie to
> > > us about sightings.  There were WMDs in Iraq but we couldn't find them
> > > when we got there because they moved them ...
>
> > > Generally in science we don't put of faith in the truth of theory, but
> > > rather take the less risky stance of belief in evidence (even knowing
> > > this is in spin with theory).  In the history of science, theories get
> > > falsified or amended as we understand the evidence differently.  What
> > > we are short of in a theory of political economics as if people matter
> > > is an understanding of this.  I can't explain in abstract in the space
> > > here.
>
> > > I'd want a vote that put people in charge of relatively small regional
> > > systems of fairness and representation in legal matters - almost local
> > > law centres.  These people could largely remain local and vote
> > > electronically in national-international matters - we'd vote for more
> > > centralised Parliaments too.  The overall aim would be to control
> > > people given power and stop us getting hung up on 'great leaders' and
> > > get on creating viable, sustainable, local working and living
> > > practices whilst working to wither away war.  I can see many problems,
> > > but this is what I would want to vote for and cannot.  I tend to
> > > believe we could have plenty in the world through more work for fair
> > > pay, intelligent uses of technology and so on.  I'd like to see this
> > > as a world issue - groups of us committing to it and forming a
> > > policing-military umbrella designed to protect the democracy entailed.
>
> > > This would be the beginning of my thought experiment.  It needs
> > > refinement.  We could then look at what evidence fits.
>
> > > One could do the same with the idea that Blair, Brown and Mandelson
> > > are 'CIA' .  The idea might not be to prove they are, but just how
> > > exposed to such infiltration our system is.
>
> > > We lack these debates in public discourse - they are stopped by forms
> > > of ad hominem attack (often silent) and because we are so interested
> > > in UFO drivel.  We should know how are politicians get on and how
> > > anyone or any vested interest might influence that.  We should be
> > > interested in other forms of representation - perhaps much more direct
> > > forms in the daily detail of living.  I think we if surveyed TV, film
> > > and newspapers for a month we'd find only evidence of the absence of
> > > ideas other than business as usual and opiate programming.  A survey
> > > of academic ideas would be a bit different (abolish poverty with one
> > > cent income tax - in an accounting journal and so on).  We might even
> > > be able to understand the protocols on which people do vote and what
> > > people do think is fact (we sort of know but it's frightening).
>
> > > What we generally get is arguments that are not intended for anyone
> > > interested in evidence and those that are commercially attractive.
> > > That and the patronising repetition of drivel by presenters too stupid
> > > to think of anything other than their image and high salary.  I'm not
> > > arguing here - just putting a few touches out.  There is a question
> > > about whether we have any forum for real dialogue and how quickly
> > > anything we could create would last if it showed glimmers of success
> > > (Baudrillard's 'black hole').
>
> > > On 31 Aug, 16:16, BB47 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Do you have any thoughts on conspiracy theories?
>
> > > > On Aug 31, 7:44 am, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > I wonder what May Jo's family thought of the air time given to the
> > > > > great senator?
>
> > > > > I go with Orn on what at bottom is a lack of honesty in our systems.
> > > > > I go with Molly in that we have to believe in something to create
> > > > > anything, though I don't see the dynasties as having any solutions -
> > > > > they are very much part of the problem to me, preventing people being
> > > > > connected for the right reasons.
>
> > > > > We conflate issues in 'dirty hands'.  Knowing one has tracked down a
> > > > > miserable kidnapping killer, it's hard to justify not using his foul
> > > > > engines on him or his female familiar to find out where the victims
> > > > > are to save them or bring closure for relatives, but it is rare
> > > > > outside literature to be in such a position.  More likely, the cops
> > > > > and other agencies will screw up (as in Baby P or the recent US case
> > > > > currently in the news) and not act on the evidence and criminal
> > > > > records in plain view.  In the Detroux case in Belgium, the cops
> > > > > actually sealed the last victims to their fate by sealing up the house
> > > > > they were captive in.  When it comes to terrorism, the authorities are
> > > > > clearly demonising (as does literature) whilst the only people we are
> > > > > catching are either totally innocent or pathetic.  We have seen one
> > > > > bungle after another - and this is surely the longer case in a history
> > > > > in which imperial plunder has continued.  Here, even in military
> > > > > terms, Europe (then including Russia) blundered in 1861 because it was
> > > > > blind to the real threat (the USA) because we were more concerned to
> > > > > plunder Africa, the sub-continent, China and the middle east.  This
> > > > > continued after WW2 with the US as the only major player, able to swat
> > > > > the old European players like flies.  Think of the lies about Vietnam
> > > > > (in the UK this was a much more secret time of wars against Indonesia
> > > > > and so on).  What one would like to see before engaging in dirty hands
> > > > > is real evidence of what the problems are.  Given the record of our
> > > > > authorities in small-scale stuff like criminal cases, it appears we
> > > > > can't even see the obvious.
> > > > > I've met 'Jihadis' around the world and in my classrooms - some
> > > > > nutters, but generally decent people swayed by their own version of
> > > > > the propaganda oused around us - the decency taken advantage of.  Many
> > > > > of
>
> ...
>
> read more »
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