Pretty much the way I see those issues Rigsby.  I have often wondered
how Germany managed to 'secretly' re-arm after WW1.  Given how good we
are supposed to have been spotting WMDs, you'd have thought we might
have noticed fleets of aircraft, ships and a massive increase in
soldiers' boots back then.

On 2 Mar, 14:35, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> As soon as my head hit the pillow I remembered the Cold War and its
> impact on the Middle East and Africa.//Will check back as I just
> printed a coupon for 50% off and I feel rich! A new non-stick muffin
> tin and farewell to muffin liners! Yipee!
>
> On Mar 2, 1:37 am, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > One can put much of the blame on French and British mapmakers carving
> > up the Ottoman Empire after WWI- they showed little regard for the
> > natural boundaries of tribes and warlords. Also, the importance of oil
> > was an enormous factor- for instance, I feel Kuwait was created as an
> > ace in the hole since Iraq could be intractable.But one could also go
> > back to Napoleon's expedition to Egypt or the Crusades or the split of
> > Christianity between the West and the Byzantine Empire. At any rate a
> > balance of power failed in Europe as well as the modern Middle East.//
> > Am discovering ancient China as I hadn't known much about it- am up to
> > the Sung Dynasty but the Mongols are right around the corner! I may
> > have to read it twice as it's hard to keep everything straight since
> > this survey of civilization includes a great many examples of the arts
> > and religious influences.//You may also want to think about the
> > inequities between rich and poor nations or even within nations as a
> > cause of conflict and misery.//As for honesty, it depends on ones
> > culture but generally we repress honesty through etiquette and
> > education and dishonesty in varying degrees becomes acceptable. I do
> > understand Molly thoughts about family keeping one straight but often
> > this backfires hence sayings about keeping one's own counsel or the
> > danger of what can't be unsaid, etc.//Back to Eden- first
> > disobedience, then a lie and later a murder- not much of start for
> > us! :-)
>
> > On Mar 1, 7:40 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I was thinking back to an earlier post of yours earlier Slip - the
> > > 'Muslim threat'.  I see 5 American Jihadis have been arrested in
> > > Pakistan.  We had a 'Dispatches' (Channel 4 here) documentary on the
> > > IFE (Islamic Forum Europe).  Very disturbing stuff - infiltration of
> > > the Labour Party and a whole wad of rather nasty, corrupt activities.
> > > The good thing was that Muslims came forward to deplore what they are
> > > doing.
> > > I would go a long way myself down the spiritual route to 'light' if I
> > > could feel more comfortable that the experiences would not be
> > > manipulated.  The idea of meeting God or the Blue Rabbit and thus
> > > living under such authority does not appeal.  Neither does tradition
> > > or just blowing that away altogether in some anarchist binge - yet it
> > > does seem that we could get away from the worst of what we group
> > > together to do in ways that are so traditional all of history can seem
> > > to be about the quagmire.
>
> > > There's a point in Hegel (somewhere - he's truly awful) where he
> > > declares we now have history.  Though I doubt history has any meaning
> > > at all in terms of laws, I am struck that a genuine understanding of
> > > it 'ready-to-hand' is always missing.  One only has to think of posts
> > > in here where a few bits of stuff supporting a particular view are
> > > thrown in - perhaps on a wider scale we have the global warming
> > > debacle and the lack of public explanation of why we did Iraq or are
> > > in Afghanistan.  We end up asserting opinion that can all be
> > > criticised rather than establishing facts.
> > > In academic terms, one can always check the internal validity of
> > > argument, and/or raise external critique that has different root
> > > values or metaphors.  The great bits of science tend to be where
> > > someone or group bridge the areas seemingly incompatible.  Einstein
> > > finds himself with Maxwell's equations and yet contradictory
> > > experimental evidence, so fixes the kinematics underlying both.  Wiles
> > > bridges otherwise incompatible forms of equations to get at Fermat's
> > > last theorem.  We can look at diabetes as a disease, but then find
> > > Dolphins use it as an advantage because they can switch it on and off.
>
> > > One can see this in material Orn often suggests, certainly in Vam and
> > > Molly - to me it's more familiar as Wittgensteinian deconstruction -
> > > looking for similarities deep in apparently opposing arguments.  What
> > > I have trouble with is the assertion of another 'Hegelian moment' in
> > > which to know anything we have to know all or, weirdly, nothing other
> > > than to be in a supposition-less and pre-suppositional state, or 'in
> > > the light'.  It all starts to feel like 'you'll be all right once
> > > we've washed your brain' stuff.  It starts to make me feel the way
> > > politicians do when they say god will judge them.  The often claim to
> > > have met 'Blue Rabbits' to which we have no access - trusty secret
> > > service types and all.  This is a general problem with introspectively
> > > achieved states.  They are not offered to our access, but used as
> > > 'authority'.
>
> > > It's not the short skirts mate - but the tall, athletic women.  Sue
> > > used to play a mean game.
>
> > > I saw some guy say that no one would have guessed that 'dealing with
> > > Iraq' would have led to the emergence of Iran as a regional power.  I
> > > thought we put Saddam in power and armed him to curb Iran?  I heard
> > > plenty of prediction that the problems in Iraq would start after any
> > > basic military victory and that Iran would benefit.  I've read books
> > > dating from 1919 suggesting much the same.  The guy is some kind of
> > > diplomat and government advisor.  Is he lying or just bafflingly
> > > incompetent - or is this more of Gabby's 'what human beings are made
> > > to forget' strategy in action?
>
> > > On 1 Mar, 22:19, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > I would think our reaction to modern day political deceptions makes us
> > > > all realists. The reality of the fallout doesn't leave much else to
> > > > consider and most voters seem unaware their vote is actually going to
> > > > the Machiavellian Party.  Controlling those that are voted in to
> > > > control us, now that is something to think about.  KP may be spot on
> > > > but unfortunately it comes down to our inability and much so our
> > > > impotence in hard line control.  When you vote for Ben Dover that is
> > > > what you get. Fundamentally it has become such a maze to navigate that
> > > > even to consider trying to get hold of the reigns is a dizzying
> > > > prospect.  Sure Molly's piece is very pretty but I found it fodder for
> > > > day dreaming, like getting lost in Debussy compositions on a sunny
> > > > afternoon on the beach but then the reality of course, everyone out of
> > > > the water, the sharks are in a financial feeding frenzy.  Rigs post is
> > > > interesting and I find I'd have to spend more time mulling it over,
> > > > allowing for better absorption of it, the odd angle of viewing
> > > > depression.  Is it really the netball or the short skirt attractions?
> > > > Your right about not being able to recognize our past failures, at
> > > > least in the proper way in order to create real change. This is the
> > > > obstacle that keep us in the vicious cycle of repetitive disasters.
> > > > Are there too many cooks spoiling the brew?  People feign
> > > > dictatorship, authoritarian and totalitarian rule but have we done
> > > > much better and is the suffering that much less?  Would a dictatorship
> > > > be all so back if the dictator was a benevolent soul?  Our pubs are
> > > > too far apart for us to spend some hours further dissecting the arena
> > > > of human quagmires.  Gerrymandering is all over my friend and even on
> > > > the local levels but we have to consider much blame goes to those
> > > > accepting the bounty.  In a way it is as if we don't want honesty but
> > > > only want to know when it is our turn to be corrupt.  I've know some
> > > > really good people that turned rancid when they became politicians and
> > > > others that lost my attention when they made a right turn on to the
> > > > religious highway.
>
> > > > On Mar 1, 10:25 am, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > Commenting on Machiavelli (actually somewhat simplistic when I read
> > > > > the originals), Francis Bacon said he was merely a 'realist'.  I
> > > > > suspect Popper hit the nail on the head when he said it hardly matters
> > > > > who leads, what matters is our ability to control them.  This is an
> > > > > old story from Aristotle.  Science tends to hold everything is
> > > > > complicated and that it's somewhat amazing there ever is any
> > > > > simplicity.
> > > > > Molly's piece in this thread is pretty good, but it's ethos is easily
> > > > > destroyed once thrown into the shark bowl.  Rigsby points to views on
> > > > > depression I find interesting.  The view in the link he provides is
> > > > > that normal thinking is depressive and that focusing on what is going
> > > > > on triggers more of it.  Nearly everything around us is distractive,
> > > > > and this has long been a main function of religion.  Cynicism can take
> > > > > the same distractive form.
> > > > > Thurman only makes me wonder why so few people are remotely bothered
> > > > > with what we are doing here and what a better life might be.  I prefer
> > > > > women's netball to soccer these days, but this is hardly a
> > > > > 'groundswell'.  Life is much less than I was brought up to believe it
> > > > > was or could be, and I find human beings doing remarkably little.
> > > > > Freud's ultimate argument is that we push reality away (under the
> > > > > carpet).
> > > > > My interests are in what we could positively do to live in peace and
> > > > > find some purpose, though I've spent most of my time avoiding this as
> > > > > it is depressing to think it.  We don't seem even to be able to grasp
> > > > > what has already failed, particularly the millennial leader stuff.  In
> > > > > Britain, we still worship the idiots who have have destroyed us and
> > > > > what might have come from the Enlightenment.
>
> ...
>
> read more »

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