Sunday, February 12, 2017

DOSTOYEVSKI: “A HEART UNHINGED BY THEORIES”; GORY ORIGINS OF VALENTINE’S DAY; BANNON: APOCALYPSE NOW; KINDNESS: NOT A TRADITIONAL VIRTUE

Arcimboldo: Winter, 1573

**
~ “. . . Here we have bookish dreams, a heart unhinged by theories. Here we see resolution in the first stage, but resolution of a special kind; he resolved to do it like jumping over a precipice or from a bell tower and his legs shook as he went to the crime. He forgot to shut the door after him, and murdered two people for a theory. He committed the murder and couldn’t take the money, and what he did manage to snatch up he hid under a stone. It wasn’t enough for him to suffer agony behind the door while they battered at the door and rung the bell, no, he had to go to the empty lodging, half delirious, to recall the bell-ringing, he wanted to feel the cold shiver over again . . . Well, that we grant, was through illness, but consider this: he is a murderer, but looks upon himself as an honest man, despises others, poses as injured innocence. No, that’s not the work of a Nikolay, my dear Rodion Romanovich!”

Raskolnikov began trembling all over as if he had been pierced through.

“Then... who did... kill them?..” he asked, unable to restrain himself, in a suffocating voice. Porfiry Petrovich even recoiled against the back of his chair, as if he, too, were quite unexpectedly amazed at the question.

“What? Who killed them?..” he repeated, as if not believing his ears. “But you did, Rodion Romanovich! You killed them . . . ” he added, almost in a whisper, in a completely convinced voice.

Raskolnikov jumped up from the sofa, stood for a few seconds, and sat down again without saying a word. Brief spasms suddenly passed over his face.” ~

This is of course Dostoyevski, Crime and Punishment. It isn’t just the character of Raskolnikov that’s marvelously drawn. The cat and mouse game with the police detective, Porfiry, a shrewd psychologist, is nerve-wrecking in a masterful way.

Crime and Punishment is not a who-done-it. We know the perpetrator even before the crime is committed. Nor is it a psychological thriller in the sense of an “inside the mind of an axe-murderer.” Raskolnikov is a highly untypical axe-murderer. Crime and Punishment is a philosophical thriller, so to speak. Raskolnikov sees himself not only as basically decent, but as noble and heroic — superior to the average person. He craves greatness; he has a passion for ideas. He would never kill for money. In order to kill, he needs a special philosophy that grants him the privilege to do so. Surely murder is permissible in pursuit of a great cause . . .  Surely great men — Raskolnikov admires Napoleon — are not to be judged by the same moral standards as an ordinary person . . .

It’s a historical accident that Lenin (and others) would later openly argue that the end justifies the means — think of all the good that could be accomplished while at the same time ridding the world of “enemies of the people”! Dostoyevski was more concerned about the anarchists and other nihilist groups. But in retrospect, great writers can appear prophetic.

It’s been pointed out that tribes and countries used to go to war simply for plunder. No special justification was needed: hey, these people have land, they have gold — let’s invade! But in the 19th century or so — in any case, after the Enlightenment happened, and greater moral sensitivity was beginning to be born — countries began to invent noble-sounding reasons for waging war, e.g. we’re bringing civilization to them.

Even idealism becomes evil when taken to the extreme — putting ideas ahead of the actual humans, who are in the way and need to be destroyed so that a system of ideas can prevail. Whether left-wing or right-wing, the main feature is contempt for the existing order — which Hannah Arendt identified as the beginning of totalitarianism — and contempt for human rights (demoted to "political correctness”).

By the way, Tolstoy was much more aware of this hypocrisy at the national level than Dostoyevski was. Dostoyevski could see the problem with ideologies and self-deception with great acuteness at the individual level, but became blind to the nature of imperialism as soon as Holy Russia was invoked.

Humans are indeed very strange beings — they can kill for the sake of their beliefs. Voltaire remarked that he who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities; Steven Weinberg, a Nobel-prize winning physicist, said, “Without religion you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.” 


This makes sense if the meaning of “religion” is expanded to include passion-arousing ideologies such as nationalism or particular political orientations. Even certain philosophies, e.g. what has been called “vulgar Nietzscheanism,” fall into the category of dangerous religions when they become the center of someone’s life. We tend to forget that these are sets of abstractions that can at best be only partly true — and that should never be used to justify harming others. 
Peter Lorre as Raskonikov; you may also remember Lorre from The Maltese Falcon

We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office. ~ Aesop (621 BC - 564 BC) ~ in case anyone thought that this is a recent development.

Most also assume that the Greeks were the first to define KAKISTOCRACY: “government by the worst.” The term comes from Greek, but it was first used in 1829 by Thomas Love Peacock, and has become trendy only now, since plutocracy and oligarchy don’t seem sufficiently derogatory or abnormal or applicable to the mix of the unprincipled, unqualified, vindictive, and/or unhinged people in the highest positions.

Aesop, cast in Pushkin Museum from original in art collection of Villa Albani, Rome

**
 

“I can indeed hardly see how anyone ought to wish Christianity to be true; for if so the plain language of the text seems to show that the men who do not believe, and this would include my Father, Brother, and almost all my best friends, will be everlastingly punished. And this is a damnable doctrine.” ~ Charles Darwin, Autobiography



THE UNROMANTIC ORIGINS OF VALENTINE’S DAY

 
~ “Originally, the feast day of St. Valentine remembered two 3rd century martyrs by the name of Valentine who were elevated to sainthood in the early middle ages. Both Valentines—one the Bishop of Terni and the other a priest in Rome—were allegedly decapitated by their persecutors on February 14. 

Incidentally, St. Valentine (as the two Valentines seem to have merged into one figure by the 9th century) is the patron saint of epileptics, not lovers.

Medieval miracle plays based on the Bishop of Terni Valentine show him brutally beaten, bloodied, and decapitated before angels transport him to heaven. According to author Leigh E. Schmidt, several locales in Europe claimed Terni’s relics, as they were widely dispersed. Several different shrines claimed possession of his skull.

St. Valentine's alleged skull in Santa Maria in Cosmedian, Rome
 
There was no link between St. Valentine’s Day and love until the 14th century. At that time, some scholars claim that Chaucer associated Valentine’s Day with lovers by describing it as the day on which birds select their mates.

More plausibly, writes Elizabeth White Nelson, the tradition of expressing love on Valentine’s Day comes from the Roman festival of Lupercalia, a fertility rite held on February 15. Typically, the medieval church would try to combine saints’ feast days with pagan festivals, to boost Church loyalty and participation.

Whatever the reasons, by the 1500s the link between Valentine’s Day, courtship, and love was established. The religious meanings of the day faded; its amorous meanings grew.

When Valentine’s Day migrated to the United States, it was well established as a holiday for love, but was scarcely observed in the 1700s.

Then, in the 1840s and 1850s there was a “valentine’s epidemic.” Cards were flying through the penny post, and “Valentine” came to denote the card, not the person. Dismayed defenders of the faith felt that the penny post valentine cheapened affection, and joked that many a postal carrier was crushed under his bag of cheaply-produced letters strewn with cooing birds and hearts.

A rich, hilarious world of romantic charivari—an Anti-Valentine’s tradition—developed parallel to the ornately sentimental and sincere valentines.  The first card manufacturers offered “comic” valentines that engaged in “ritualized mockery” and insult.  These cards ridiculed professions—members of a certain craft, for example—but mostly lampooned old maids, social poseurs, male dandies who refused to marry, and feminists.

Surprisingly, the cultural undertow of satirical, mock valentines sold just as briskly as the tenderly affectionate ones.  Even in the putatively more sincere Victorian age of intricate, lacey, effusive cards, Valentine’s Day had an unromantic, sardonic alter ego.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/marriage-30/201302/valentines-day-its-gory-unromantic-secret-history


going a little further back, to the Roman Lupercalia:

~ “From Feb. 13 to 15, the Romans celebrated the feast of Lupercalia. The men sacrificed a goat and a dog, then whipped women with the hides of the animals they had just slain.

 
The Roman romantics "were drunk. They were naked," says Noel Lenski, a historian at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Young women would actually line up for the men to hit them, Lenski says. They believed this would make them fertile.

The brutal fete included a matchmaking lottery, in which young men drew the names of women from a jar. The couple would then be, um, coupled up for the duration of the festival — or longer, if the match was right.

The ancient Romans may also be responsible for the name of our modern day of love. Emperor Claudius II executed two men — both named Valentine — on Feb. 14 of different years in the 3rd century A.D. Their martyrdom was honored by the Catholic Church with the celebration of St. Valentine's Day.

Later, Pope Gelasius I muddled things in the 5th century by combining St. Valentine's Day with Lupercalia to expel the pagan rituals. But the festival was more of a theatrical interpretation of what it had once been. Lenski adds, "It was a little more of a drunken revel, but the Christians put clothes back on it. That didn't stop it from being a day of fertility and love."






Around the same time, the Normans celebrated Galatin's Day. Galatin meant "lover of women." That was likely confused with St. Valentine's Day at some point, in part because they sound alike.

As the years went on, the holiday grew sweeter. Chaucer and Shakespeare romanticized it in their work, and it gained popularity throughout Britain and the rest of Europe. Handmade paper cards became the tokens-du-jour in the Middle Ages.

Eventually, the tradition made its way to the New World. The industrial revolution ushered in factory-made cards in the 19th century. And in 1913, Hallmark Cards of Kansas City, Mo., began mass producing valentines. February has not been the same since.

http://www.npr.org/2011/02/14/133693152/the-dark-origins-of-valentines-day


Oriana:

The church was a lot more successful with making a Christian holiday out of Christmas than a martyr’s “feast” out of a pagan fertility holiday. Well, Eros has that power.

PERHAPS WE SHOULD BE SAYING “CARING” INSTEAD OF “LOVE”

~ “Morrie Markoff is sitting on the sofa in his downtown Los Angeles apartment next to his wife [of 78 years], Betty. They are delighted that someone from the “Manchester Guardian” has come to talk to them, though these days they are used to a degree of attention. When Morrie was 100, a gallery in the city put on his first art show, exhibiting his scrap-metal sculptures, photographs and paintings. “Ease up on the 100 business,” he remarked at the time. “I’m trying to pass as 90.”

Morrie jokes about trading her in for two 50-year-old women. But whatever arguments they had are a thing of the past. “Now it’s peaceful,” Betty says, her hand touching the back of Morrie’s neck. She dismisses any idea of there being a secret to making a marriage work so long. “Just don’t let every complaint turn to anger. Tolerance and respect. And you’ve got to like them. Morrie would never use the word love; I do, but the actions are the same on either part.”

Why not the word “love”? Morrie replies that “to me, love is possessive; it’s controlling and demanding. The word that I would rather use instead is ‘caring’. You care about people. ‘Care’, to me, has a much deeper meaning. Love is an esoteric word, but one that people also use to mean all sorts of off-hand things. ‘I love playing tennis,’ and such. I hug Betty constantly, I kiss her constantly, I care very much about her.” Morrie assures me that the day they got together was the most fortunate of his life.

They met in New York City in 1938, at the wedding of Betty’s cousin, who happened to be the brother of one of Morrie’s friends. Betty was sitting at the table on Morrie’s left. “On my right,” he picks up the story, “was Rose Lebovsky, a very pretty girl, sophisticated, with wealthy parents. Betty has asked: why did you pick me? And I say: it’s because you ate less.” ~

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/feb/11/the-100-year-old-couple-still-married-still-going-strong?CMP=fb_gu

Oriana:

There is a dark side to romantic love. For the deep attachment love, we might try other terms: affection, tenderness, and indeed — caring.

TOLSTOY: WITHOUT PROSTITUTES, WHAT WOULD BECOME OF DECENCY AND MORALITY?

~ “Should we permit promiscuous sexual intercourse, as many liberals wish to do? Impossible! It would be the ruin of family life. To meet the difficulty, the law of development has evolved a “golden bridge” in the form of the prostitute. Just think of London without its 70,000 prostitutes! What would become of decency and morality, how would family life survive without them? How many women and girls would remain chaste? No. I believe the prostitute is necessary for the maintenance of the family.” ~ Lev Tolstoy, in an anthology of articles denouncing women’s rights.

Oriana:

“Just think of London without its 70,000 prostitutes! What would become of decency and morality, how would family life survive without them?” How surreal these words sound today, too much even for Saturday Night Live . . .


 

Ah, nostalgia for when America was great and girls got smacked if they were warned, but nevertheless persisted. 1911, South Carolina. This is Josie (6 years old), Bertha (6 years old), Sophie (10 years old), shuckers at the Maggioni Canning Co.
 
Oriana: I wonder if Sophie grew up to be a nasty woman. If she grew up, that is — scarlet fever was still taking out many kids. And there was TB, malnutrition . . . 

But let’s imagine she did grow up. She just didn’t get a chance to have a childhood — in our definition of childhood, so recent. The right to childhood wasn’t extend to the poor until very recently indeed; some would argue that it still hasn’t been fully granted.

The most important factor is not whether or not children do some work for money (though the amount of time devoted to it should certainly not interfere with education), but whether or not they receive sufficient nurturing. Studies have found that it’s the amount of early nurturing that has lifelong consequences, not just in terms of future earnings but in terms of health, both physical and mental. Obviously (and this has been confirmed by animal and human research), nurturing affects brain development.

WE CHANGE THE MEANING OF OLD TEXTS

The reader changes the meaning of the text not only because the mentality of each reader is different, but because a modern reader has a mentality vastly removed from that of someone writing long ago. We certainly read the Odyssey, say, very differently than Homer could have conceived it. But even something written in the 19th century is a very different text to us than it was to 19th century readers.

from the preface to the 1964 edition of Labyrinths by Jorge Luis Borges:

~ “Pierre Menard undertakes to compose Don Quixote -- not another Quixote, but the Quixote. His method? To know Spanish well, to rediscover the Catholic faith, to war against the Moors, to forget the history of Europe — in short, to be Miguel de Cervantes. The coincidence then becomes so real that the twentieth-century author rewrites Cervantes’ novel literally, word for word, and without referring to the original.” ~ Then follows this astonishing sentence: “The text of Cervantes and that of Menard are verbally identical, but the second is almost infinitely richer.” ~ 


Borges triumphantly points out that the Quixote that we read is not that of Cervantes any more than our Madame Bovary is that of Flaubert. Each modern reader involuntarily rewrites in his own way the masterpieces of past centuries.
mineralized coyote skull

STEVE BANNON: APOCALYPSE NOW

 
~ “Bannon, who’s now ensconced in the West Wing as President Donald Trump’s closest adviser, has been portrayed as Trump’s main ideas guy. But in interviews, speeches and writing — and especially in his embrace of Strauss and Howe — he has made clear that he is, first and foremost, an apocalypticist.

In Bannon’s view, we are in the midst of an existential war, and everything is a part of that conflict. Treaties must be torn up, enemies named, culture changed. Global conflagration, should it occur, would only prove the theory correct. For Bannon, the Fourth Turning has arrived. The Grey Champion, a messianic strongman figure, may have already emerged. The apocalypse is now.

“What we are witnessing,” Bannon told The Washington Post last month, “is the birth of a new political order.”

Strauss and Howe’s theory is based on a series of generational archetypes — the Artists, the Prophets, the Nomads and the Heroes — that sound like they were pulled from a dystopian young adult fiction series. Each complete four-part cycle, or saeculum, takes about 80 to 100 years, in Strauss and Howe’s reckoning. The Fourth Turning, which the authors published in 1997, focuses on the final, apocalyptic part of the cycle.

Strauss and Howe postulate that during this Fourth Turning crisis, an unexpected leader will emerge from an older generation to lead the nation, and what they call the “Hero” generation (in this case, millennials), to a new order. This person is known as the Grey Champion. An election or another event — perhaps a war — will bring this person to power, and their regime will rule throughout the crisis.

Cyclical models of history are something academics kick around every now and then, said Sean Wilentz, an American history professor at Princeton University. But the idea has not caught on among historians or political actors.

“It’s just a conceit. It’s a fiction, it’s all made up,” Wilentz said about cyclical historical models. “There’s nothing to them. They’re just inventions.”

Michael Lind, a historian and co-founder of the New America Foundation, a liberal think tank, has called Strauss and Howe’s work “pseudoscience” and said their “predictions about the American future turn out to be as vague as those of fortune cookies.”

But Bannon bought it.

“This is the fourth great crisis in American history,” Bannon told an audience at the Liberty Restoration Foundation, a conservative nonprofit, in 2011. “We had the Revolution. We had the Civil War. We had the Great Depression and World War II. This is the great Fourth Turning in American history, and we’re going to be one thing on the other side.”

The “Judeo-Christian West is collapsing,” he went on. “It’s imploding. And it’s imploding on our watch. And the blowback of that is going to be tremendous.”

War is coming, Bannon has warned. In fact, it’s already here.

“You have an expansionist Islam and you have an expansionist China,” he said during a 2016 radio appearance. “They are motivated. They’re arrogant. They’re on the march. And they think the Judeo-Christian West is on the retreat.”

“Against radical Islam, we’re in a 100-year war,” he told Political Vindication Radio in 2011.

“We’re going to war in the South China Seas in the next five to 10 years, aren’t we?” Bannon asked during a 2016 interview with Reagan biographer Lee Edwards.

To confront this threat, Bannon argued, the Judeo-Christian West must fight back, lest it lose as it did when Constantinople fell to the Ottomans in 1453. He called Islam a “religion of submission” in 2016 — a refutation of President George W. Bush’s post-9/11 description of Islam as a religion of peace. In 2007, Bannon wrote a draft movie treatment for a documentary depicting a “fifth column” of Muslim community groups, the media, Jewish organizations and government agencies working to overthrow the government and impose 

Islamic law.
An evangelical family feels blissful that the destruction of the world has begun at last. 
 
The “aristocratic Washington class” and the media, Bannon has claimed, are in league with the entire religion of Islam and an expansionist China to undermine Judeo-Christian America.

This sort of existential conflict is central to Strauss and Howe’s predictions. There are four ways a Fourth Turning can end, they argued, and three of them involve some kind of massive collapse. America might “be reborn,” and we’d wait another 80 to 100 years for a new cycle to culminate in a crisis again. The modern world — the era of Western history that Strauss and Howe believe began in the 15th century — might come to an end. We might “spare modernity but mark the end of our nation.” Or we might face “the end of man,” in a global war leading to “omnicidal Armageddon.” 

“We’re gonna have to have some dark days before we get to the blue sky of morning again in America,” Bannon warned in 2010. “We are going to have to take some massive pain. Anybody who thinks we don’t have to take pain is, I believe, fooling you.”

“This movement,” he said in November, “is in the top of the first inning.” ~

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/steve-bannon-apocalypse_us_5898f02ee4b040613138a951


Oriana:

This is so demented. The “Grey Champion” is going to lead the Millennials? Bernie has come closest, but surely Bernie is the opposite of a right-wing apocalypticist. Millennials in general are not into the Evangelical zeal for the Armageddon. If Millennials do rise to the occasion, it would be in opposition to deranged apocalyptic leaders.   

Still, the fact that this alcoholic nihilist is manipulating the fake president is quite unnerving.

Nihilists like Bannon despise humanity as a whole. Only the select few, those with views like their own, deserve to survive. And even they might not make it (if the next "inevitable" war turns into an omnicide), but that's OK, since this nihilistic bunch prefers annihilation to modernity with its offensive ideals like Social Security. Pure insanity, yes, and yes, we've seen it before.

It’s also very striking that Bannon called himself a Leninist — because Lenin’s goal was to destroy the existing order. He believed that the end justifies the means and that words are more dangerous than bullets (so no free press).

We don’t really have just ordinary thugs here, or men who’d say, “I'm miserable and want to die — but that’s not enough to satisfy me. Why should others live and be happy? Why should women love them when they refused to love me? No, let others die too. I want to take as many others with me as I can.” No, there has to be ideological window-dressing, a messianic complex — I am defending traditional values against the perversions of modernity. I am defending the Judeo-Christian ethics (in its PURE, medieval edition). I am defending true Islam. The Hindu way of life. Insert into the blank — the details don’t matter. It seems you can’t just embrace murder — you must have an ideology to go with it, a whole complicated philosophy. Preferably, archaic religions are invoked. 


Lenin’s monument in St. Petersburg (one of the more than fifty in the city)
 
BANNON WANTS WAR TO FULFILL A CYCLICAL THEORY OF HISTORY 

 
 ~ “According to Strauss and Howe, roughly every eighty years—a saeculum, or the average life-span of a person—America goes through a cataclysmic crisis. Marked by savagery and genocide, and lasting a decade or more, this crisis ends with a reset of the social order and its survivors all vowing never to let such a catastrophe happen again. Each of these crises, Strauss and Howe posit, have been formative moments in our nation’s history. The Revolution of 1776–83, followed roughly 80 years later by the Civil War, followed 80 years after that by the Great Depression and World War II.

Inside each 80-year saeculum, Howe and Strauss argue, there are four turnings, each a generation long, and each as inevitable as the coming of the seasons. In the first turning, for the generation that survives the prior catastrophe, the newly restored society reaches a collective apex of social order and economic power. Think of America in the post-war boom of 1945 to 1965. Then comes the awakening, as the first new generation of post-catastrophe children enter adulthood and, unlike their traumatized parents, let loose with their emotions and take risks that their forebears would never have imagined. Hello to the long 1960s. Then comes the unraveling, as the once robust order starts to fall apart, people question the eternal verities and institutions weaken. The fourth turning is kicked off and punctuated by ongoing crises, out of which a whole new order is born.

Strauss and Howe are essentially pop historians—there’s just enough in their framework to make it seem compelling, but nothing that you can prove or disprove with any assurance.

Bannon doesn’t just believe that we are in an existential conflict with Islam or with China. It seems he wants to exacerbate those conflicts into a new world war. As a believer in Strauss and Howe’s theory of history, Bannon fantasizes that he can use that cataclysm to forge a completely new order. He is now in a position to make that a reality.” ~

https://www.thenation.com/article/steve-bannon-wants-to-start-world-war-iii/


Milosz described the problem with historical determinism: just because something happened, people assume that it had to happen. Thus the claim that there was no way to stop WWI from breaking out. No way to stop Lenin, or Hitler. Never mind that of course we can imagine plenty of alternative scenarios. The fact that something happened is taken as proof that it HAD to happen.

And yet before a disaster happens, there are many who argue at length why it will NOT happen. Any views to the contrary are dismissed as “alarmist.” Thus, the German Jews urged calm because the German Constitution would protect their rights. 


By the way, it turns out that Strauss and Howe took their theory from the ancient Greeks:

~ “William Strauss and Neil Howe theorize that the history of a people moves in 80-to-100 year cycles called "saecula." The idea goes back to the ancient Greeks, who believed that at a given saeculum's end, there would come "ekpyrosis," a cataclysmic event that destroys the old order and brings in a new one in a trial of fire.

Ultimately, the danger of writing about the past at the same time one writes about the future is that it can be hard for an author to separate the two. The steps and missteps of the past seem so easily repeatable that the future seems to march in lockstep. But this is not what history has shown us. The catastrophes of every era have always materialized in their own unique ways.” ~

http://www.businessinsider.com/book-steve-bannon-is-obsessed-with-the-fourth-turning-2017-2
 

The statue of Lenin in Seattle, relocated there from the Czech Republic by a private American buyer.

BANNON ALSO LIKES JULIUS EVOLA, A FASCIST IDEOLOGUE

 
~ “Evola, who died in 1974, wrote on everything from Eastern religions to the metaphysics of sex to alchemy. But he is best known as a leading proponent of Traditionalism, a worldview popular in far-right and alternative religious circles that believes progress and equality are poisonous illusions.

Evola became a darling of Italian Fascists, and Italy’s post-Fascist terrorists of the 1960s and 1970s looked to him as a spiritual and intellectual godfather.

They called themselves Children of the Sun after Evola’s vision of a bourgeoisie-smashing new order that he called the Solar Civilization. Today, the Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn includes his works on its suggested reading list, and the leader of Jobbik, the Hungarian nationalist party, admires Evola and wrote an introduction to his works.

In the days after the election, [white nationalist leader Richard] Spencer led a Washington alt-right conference in chants of “Hail Trump!” But he also invoked Evola’s idea of a prehistoric and pre-Christian spirituality — referring to the awakening of whites, whom he called the Children of the Sun.

Mr. Spencer said “it means a tremendous amount” that Mr. Bannon was aware of Evola and 

other Traditionalist thinkers.
Two Jains get a ride during a Hindu religious festival.
 
“Even if he hasn’t fully imbibed them and been changed by them, he is at least open to them,” he said. “He at least recognizes that they are there. That is a stark difference to the American conservative movement that either was ignorant of them or attempted to suppress them.”

Some on the alt-right consider Mr. Bannon a door through which Evola’s ideas of a hierarchical society run by a spiritually superior caste can enter in a period of crisis.

“Evolists view his ship as coming in,” said Prof. Richard Drake at the University of Montana, who wrote about Evola in his book “The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy.”

For some of them, it has been a long time coming.

“It’s the first time that an adviser to the American president knows Evola, or maybe has a Traditionalist formation,” said Gianfranco De Turris, an Evola biographer and apologist based in Rome who runs the Evola Foundation out of his apartment.

Born in 1898, Evola liked to call himself a baron and in later life sported a monocle in his left eye.

A brilliant student and talented artist, he came home after fighting in World War I and became a leading exponent in Italy of the Dada movement, which, like Evola, rejected the church and bourgeois institutions.

Evola’s early artistic endeavors gave way to his love of the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, and he developed a worldview with an overriding animosity toward the decadence of modernity. Influenced by mystical works and the occult, Evola began developing an idea of the individual’s ability to transcend his reality and “be unconditionally whatever one wants.”

Under the influence of René Guénon, a French metaphysicist and convert to Islam, Evola in 1934 published his most influential work, “The Revolt Against the Modern World,” which cast materialism as an eroding influence on ancient values.

It viewed humanism, the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation and the French Revolution all as historical disasters that took man further away from a transcendental perennial truth.

Changing the system, Evola argued, was “not a question of contesting and polemicizing, but of blowing everything up.”

Evola’s ideal order, Professor Drake wrote, was based on “hierarchy, caste, monarchy, race, myth, religion and ritual.”

That made a fan out of Benito Mussolini.

The dictator already admired Evola’s early writings on race, which influenced the 1938 Racial Laws restricting the rights of Jews in Italy.

Mussolini so liked Evola’s 1941 book, “Synthesis on the Doctrine of Race,” which advocated a form of spiritual, and not merely biological, racism, that he invited Evola to meet him in September of that year.

Evola eventually broke with Mussolini and the Italian Fascists because he considered them overly tame and corrupted by compromise. Instead he preferred the Nazi SS officers, seeing in them something closer to a mythic ideal. They also shared his anti-Semitism.

In his Vatican talk, Mr. Bannon suggested that although Mr. Putin represented a “kleptocracy,” the Russian president understood the existential danger posed by “a potential new caliphate” and the importance of using nationalism to stand up for traditional institutions.

“We, the Judeo-Christian West,” Mr. Bannon added, “really have to look at what he’s talking about as far as Traditionalism goes — particularly the sense of where it supports the underpinnings of nationalism.”

As Mr. Bannon suggested in his speech, Mr. Putin’s most influential thinker is Aleksandr Dugin, the ultranationalist Russian Traditionalist and anti-liberal writer sometimes called “Putin’s Rasputin.”

Mr. Dugin sees European Traditionalists as needing Russia, and Mr. Putin, to defend them from the onslaught of Western liberal democracy, individual liberty, and materialism — all Evolian bêtes noires.


This appeal of traditional values on populist voters and against out-of-touch elites, the “Pan-European Union” and “centralized government in the United States,” as Mr. Bannon put it, was not lost on Mr. Trump’s ideological guru.

“A lot of people that are Traditionalists,” he said in his Vatican remarks, “are attracted to that.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/10/world/europe/bannon-vatican-julius-evola-fascism.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=b-lede-package-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=1

Oriana: Pronunciation aside, just looking at the words: an odd coincidence, "Evola" and "ebola" — both virulent. And think of Enola Gay. Yes, this taking for granted that millions would die, and that's just fine — who cares about all this human trash? There is such incredible CONTEMPT here. Hannah Arendt was right: totalitarianism begins with contempt.

Julius Evola

And I would add: To have totalitarianism, you have to make another value (e.g. loyalty, or purity) more important than kindness. Perhaps that’s the main root of evil: putting the loyalty to anything (often abstract, like religion or ideology) ahead of the actual human beings.

KINDNESS: NOT A TRADITIONAL VALUE
 

Oriana: I'm pondering Kent Clark’s statement: today, if we asked people what quality is most important, most of us would say “kindness.” Yet Dante or St. Francis would not say that. St. Francis would have probably replied, “Chastity, obedience, and poverty.” Chastity more important than kindness? Apparently so.

Others in earlier centuries might have named courage, virtue, piety. Or endurance and self-control (Stoicism). John Milton would probably put obedience first. Depending on social class, other possible supreme values might be hard work and thrift. It was not until the 19th century that revulsion against cruelty (including slavery) began emerging. The novels of Dickens had an immense social influence — perhaps the most proud chapter in the history of literature, a showcase of how a novel can expand empathy.

Recently I was astonished by an article insisting that Christianity is not about kindness. All those years I thought that Christianity WAS about kindness. In fact the teachings on kindness were Christianity’s saving grace, outweighing the barbarous human sacrifice, the “bloody ransom” that stood as the foundation. But it was possible to put that out of one’s mind and just follow the teachings on kindness. Forgiveness, compassion, non-revenge, helping the less fortunate — that, I thought, was the beauty of Christianity.

How misguided and un-Christian, the article argues. This sentence says it all: “To make kindness into an ultimate virtue is to insist that our most important moral obligations are those we owe are to our fellow human beings” (and to animals, I would add, who are also our brothers and sisters).

Our most important moral obligations AREN’T to our fellow human beings??
Well, no. To use my own lingo now, according to religious conservatives, your highest moral obligation is not to real beings, but to an imaginary being. 


And it’s tricky to define our moral obligations to that imaginary being. Are we to wage crusades? If, according to the Catholic church, not going to mass on Sunday is a mortal sin, is going to mass a greater obligation than taking the time to play with your children? Or — let me push this — walking your dog? A dog too needs love. (And who gives us real love? Dog or god?)

Obviously everything depends on interpretation, meaning which century you happen live in, and which church you belong to.

I also remembered that for a long time numerous thinkers have argued that the divinity of Jesus was open to question, and he should rather be honored as a teacher of ethics. After all, that was the premise of Unitarianism.

Perhaps not surprisingly, though somehow I was surprised, what followed was a sermon on sin and fearing god and obeying the commandments. As for kindness, the author reminds us that “Jesus did not heal everyone who asked to be healed.” Sometimes, apparently suffering from kindness fatigue, Jesus would go off by himself to rest and pray. (True. Christianity doesn’t insist on excessive, pathological altruism that would destroy our health. Only “Love thy neighbor as thyself.” Not more so.)

But somehow the commandment of love is never mentioned — though I admit that the command to love god caused me much grief since I could not feel the slightest affection for the monster who threw children into hell by the million (all the non-Catholic children, back then). But I loved St. Paul’s “though as speak with the tongues of men and angels . . .” If only it had occurred to me back then (as it did much later) that a nun threatening children with hell is like the clashing of cymbals.

But at the time, it didn’t yet occur to anyone that threats of hell were a form of child abuse. A mild form, I admit, compared to severe beatings, and worse, that used to be normal child rearing practices in past centuries. The levels of stress had to go down for cruelty to lessen too. Dickens and Victor Hugo had to write his novels about the sufferings of children and the poor, so that “kindness” could take root in the collective psyche.

The early deities were cruel. Times were harsh, and this was reflected in the various religions. The preaching of loving kindness by the Buddha and Jesus was indeed revolutionary. But for kindness to become more of a reality, life had to become less harsh — and that is fairly recent. The levels of violence had to go down, as has indeed happened in a significant portion of the world. When we feel secure and when our physical needs are taken care of due to greater prosperity, we then have the luxury (in contrast with the past centuries) of practicing kindness. We can even speak out against spanking and other cruelty against children. We grow intolerant (and justly so) of even petty violence and malice. We start imagining a world at peace, a world where everyone is kind.

Pessimists might reply that that is an unachievable ideal. Cynics might laugh — but not as loud as they would have during the Middle Ages. Against many odds, progress has been made. One indicator of it is indeed the high value we place on kindness. The gap between the ideal and the practice is undeniably there, but I argue that the very visibility of the ideal is already a fact to be celebrated.

As for the concept of hell, I'm told that in liberal Protestantism hell is not even mentioned anymore. Mark my words: eventually hell will go. Theists still believe in angels, but the percentage believing in the devils is decreasing. It is a trend, one that reflects the great value that put on kindness. 


Can Christianity survive the abolition of hell? Some don’t believe so. They point out that the most successful churches — those that have managed to increase membership — are not shy when it comes to mentioning hell. As one former fundamentalist minister put it, they “keep the level of threat high.”

Ah, nostalgia. This used to be one of my favorite hiking trails.

ending on beauty:

Below Freezing

One can’t say it out loud, but there is a lot of repressed violence here. That’s why the furniture seems so heavy. And why it is so difficult to see the other thing present: a spot of sunlight that moves over the house walls and slips over the unaware forest of flickering faces, a biblical saying never set down: “Come unto me, for I am as full of contradictions as you.”

~ Tomas Tranströmer

 


Sunday, February 5, 2017

WE SAY “LOVE ME” TO EVERYONE; SARTRE: FREEDOM LIES IN COMMITMENT; HANNAH ARENDT: TOTALITARIANISM STARTS WITH CONTEMPT; RASPUTIN; SCHIZOPHRENIA INCREASES THE RISK OF AUTOIMMUNE DISEASES AND VICE VERSA

The Eternal Feminine: Tripoli, Libya: laundry prevails over bullet holes.

THE QUILT

       He had stopped believing in the goodness of the world. ~ Henry James

 
I think it is all light at the end, I think it is air.

Those fields we drove past, turning to mud in April,
Those oaks with snow still roosting in them. Towns so small
Their entire economy suffered if a boy, late at night,
Stole the bar’s only pool cue,

In one of them, you bought an old quilt, which, fraying
Still seemed to hold the sun, especially in one
Bright corner, made from what they had available in yellow
In 1897. It reminded me of laughter, of you. And some woman
Whose faith in the goodness of the world was
Stubborn, sewed it in. “There now,” she might as well
Have said, as if in answer to the snow, which was

Merciless. “There now,” she seemed to say, to
Both of us. “Here’s this patch of yellow. One field gone
Entirely into light. Good bye…” We had become such artists

At saying good-bye; it made me wince to look at it.
Something at the edge of the mouth, something familiar
That makes the mouth turn down. An adjustment.

It made me wince to have to agree with her there, too.
To say the day, itself, the fields, each thread
She had to sew in the poor light of 1897,
were simply gifts. Because she must be dead now, &
Anonymous, I think she had a birthmark on her cheek;
I think she disliked Woodrow Wilson and the war;
And if she outlived one dull husband, I think she
Still grew, out of spite and habit, flowers to give away.

If laughter is adult, and adjustment to loss,
I think she could laugh at the worst. When I think of you both,

I think of that one square of light in her quilt,
Of women, stubborn, believing in the goodness of the world.
How next year, driving past this place, which I have seen
for years, & steadily, through the worst weather, when
the black of the Amish buggies made the snow seem whiter,
I won’t even have to look up.
I will wince and agree with you both, & past the farms
Abandoned to moonlight, past one late fire burning beside
A field, the flame rising up against the night
To take its one solitary breath, even I

Will be a believer.

~ Larry Levis

If I had to condense the poem to its essence, it would be this:

You bought an old quilt, which, fraying
Still seemed to hold the sun, especially in one
Bright corner, made from what they had available in yellow
In 1897. It reminded me of laughter, of you. And some woman
Whose faith in the goodness of the world was
Stubborn, sewed it in. “There now,” she might as well
Have said, as if in answer to the snow, which was

Merciless. “There now,” she seemed to say, to
Both of us. “Here’s this patch of yellow. One field gone
Entirely into light. Good bye…”

It made me wince to have to agree with her there, too.
To say the day, itself, the fields, each thread
She had to sew in the poor light of 1897,
were simply gifts. Because she must be dead now, &
Anonymous, I think she had a birthmark on her cheek;
I think she disliked Woodrow Wilson and the war;
And if she outlived one dull husband, I think she
Still grew, out of spite and habit, flowers to give away.

. . . I think she could laugh at the worst. When I think of you both,

I think of that one square of light in her quilt,
Of women, stubborn, believing in the goodness of the world.

Please indulge me as I repeat these are the summary lines:

I think of that one square of light in her quilt,
Of women, stubborn, believing in the goodness of the world.

Of course just making a quilt is an act of hope, optimism. “First, you need a warm blanket,” as my mother memorably said, she who knew about survival. It’s said that a society depends for its continuation more on its women than its men (aside from women doing the child-bearing). If that’s true, then perhaps it’s due to women’s greater involvement in the domestic side of life — cooking, cleaning, taking care of others in a myriad of ways. “Life goes on” women seem to be saying simply by keeping busy with their usual chores.

This is an exquisite poem, marvelously worded and imagined. It makes the unknown 19th century woman who made the quilt come to life again, with her stubborn belief in quilting and gardening and life in general. I apologize for oversimplifying it by focusing on “central meaning.”

It is a multilayered poem. There is of course mortality — winter and maybe “going into the light” — dying into the light, dying into god if we want to substitute a a cosmic and more or less benevolent god for the archaic tribal tyrant still peddled by those who think that only their small group deserves eternal life (after death, that is). And not just life, but warmth, bliss, unfailing affection — knowing you’re good, you belong.

The poem also mentions the constant saying of good-bye, including the break-up of relationships. Why would two people put time and energy into creating a complex pattern of cooperation, only to start tearing at the costly fabric? Or, to shift metaphors, wouldn’t that be an amputation an arm or a leg, bleeding and hurting? Do people get better at it, or is the cost ever greater with age?

Still, the central issue remains — can one believe that the world is good? That life, at bottom, is good and worth living? There may come a time when it isn’t — and that’s when the unconscious makes the decision to die. Not all life is worth living. But on the whole, there is an elemental pleasure in simply existing. Because anything might happen. And that’s interesting.

“The Quilt” is the kind of poem that can be read again and again — which is highest praise.

Bronze statue of a woman, 3rd century b.c., found in 1994 in the sea near Kalymnos, Greece

Tadeusz Rozewicz has a wonderful poem about old women. Here is an excerpt:

Hamlet flails in a snare
Faust plays a base and comic role
Raskolnikov strikes with an axe

old women
are indestructible
they smile knowingly

god dies
old women get up as usual
at dawn they buy bread wine fish
civilization dies
old women get up at dawn
open the windows
cart away waste
man dies
old women
wash the corpse
bury the dead
plant flowers
on graves

. . .

their sons discover America
perish at Thermopylae
die on the cross
conquer space

old women leave at dawn
to buy milk bread meat
season the soup
open the windows





The woman quilter could also be Captain Ahab's wife in the cartoon.


WE SILENTLY SAY “LOVE ME” TO EVERYONE
 
~ “There have been times that I’ve nearly canceled a teaching trip because I just didn’t want to leave my dog. There’s so much research now that having a pet — experiencing that sense of warmth and connection — increases longevity and happiness. The other side of the equation is that when there is a deficit of connection, there is loneliness and depression.

The wounds in our lives are so often related to severed belonging and the ways that we, in some way, get split off from the feeling that who we are is okay. Through our families and our culture, we get the message that something is wrong with us. We split off because we get hurt or because another has not been able to stay with us.

In the earliest phases of our lives, what we most need from a parent is the sense that we are known and loved. In Buddhism, these expressions of awake awareness—understanding and caring—are often described as the two wings of a bird: they are interdependent, and intrinsic to our wellbeing. On this path of healing and awakening, bringing these two wings to our own inner life and to our relationships with others is what I sometimes think of as spiritual re-parenting.

The beginning of healing is recognizing suffering and asking the question: Where does it hurt? Seeking to understand, offering our interested presence, is the first wing of spiritual re-parenting. Just as the concerned parent, seeing their child upset, angry, withdrawn, would want to know what’s going on, we can learn to bring interest to our inner life and gently ask ourselves: What is going on inside? Where does it hurt?

A challenge is that, while we might get in touch with feelings of loneliness, shame, or being unloved by others, when we don’t know how to be with those raw emotions, we are quick to leave. Judgment is one of the main ways that we leave when things feel difficult. We blame ourselves, get angry, judge others. Or we numb out. Or we distract ourselves.

There’s a story of a wise old sage who lived deep in the wilderness. The people seeking wisdom from him had to travel through dangerous jungles and forests for days to get to him. Once they arrived, he would swear them to silence and then he would say, Okay, I have one question for you. What are you unwilling to feel?

The second part of spiritual re-parenting — expressing our care — arises as we learn to stay. When a child is angry or upset, what do we do? We stay with them until they can get in touch with what it is they are really needing. In the same way, we can commit to staying with our own inner experience, no matter what it is. And as we get in touch with what those hurting places really want or need, our caring can naturally flower into an engaged, nurturing presence.

Admit something:

Everyone you see, you say to them,
"Love me."

Of course you do not do this out loud;
Otherwise,
Someone would call the cops.

Still though, think about this,
This great pull in us
To connect.

Why not become the one
Who lives with a full moon in each eye
That is always saying,

With that sweet moon
Language,

What every other eye in this world
Is dying to
Hear.

~ Hafiz

**

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/finding-true-refuge/201702/where-does-it-hurt



 Oriana:

It’s been suggested that few people grow up the feeling they are OK. Many of us worry about hidden and obvious flaws, defects, and incompetencies. Now imagine becoming an immigrant. Even if you don’t encounter outright prejudice (though that’s usually just a matter of time), your feeling that you are an OK person is bound to be shaken. Simply being different can do it. Having trouble with the language and social customs is bound to do it.

And this brings me to . . .

ONE MYTH ABOUT REFUGEES   

~ “Myth: Psychological distress among refugees is primarily the result of war-related violence and loss. 
    Fact: Distress among refugees is related just as powerfully to life in exile as it is the violence and destruction of war.

In study after study, it turns out that distress among refugees is related as strongly to so-called “post-migration stressors” as it is to experiences of war-related violence and loss. What happens to people after they become refugees affects their mental health just as powerfully as whatever they experienced during the war. It’s counter-intuitive, but true, and a consistent finding across studies of refugees from numerous war zones living in diverse settings.

For refugees in camps, life entails continuous exposure to overcrowded and inadequate housing, a lack of access to adequate nutrition and medical care, unemployment and severe poverty, heightened family violence, sexual assault in and around the camps, separation from relatives left behind, and a chronic sense of uncertainty regarding the future—life on indefinite hold. These stressful conditions are powerfully linked to depression, anxiety, and trauma. They also deplete people’s psychological resources for coping with war-related traumatic experiences. It’s a lot tougher to heal from the violence and loss of war when confronted with high levels of chronic stress and uncertainty.

And what about refugees living in more highly developed Western nations? The findings are surprisingly similar to those for refugees in camps. In a recent review paper, my colleague Andrew Rasmussen and I identified a consistent set of post-migration stressors that threaten refugees’ mental health and undermine their resilience and capacity to heal from experiences of war-related trauma and loss. Social isolation, discrimination, heightened family violence, poverty, the loss of social networks, and especially indefinite detention while their applications for asylum are pending, all take a powerful toll on mental health. Although war-related violence clearly contributes to distress among refugees, a narrow focus on war trauma can lead us to overlook current stressors that may account for much of the distress we are seeing.

Psychiatrist Allen Keller and colleagues found that being granted asylum and gaining release from detention markedly reduced depression among asylum seekers in the U.S. Psychologist Jessica Goodkind and her colleagues have shown that helping refugees develop new social networks can significantly improve their psychological wellbeing and reduce emotional distress. And researchers at the International Rescue Committee have shown through a randomized controlled trial that a community-based intervention was able to significantly reduce harsh and abusive parenting in refugee families, a key source of toxic stress affecting children that often spikes among refugees as a result of chronically heightened parental stress.” ~

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-refugee-experience/201701/5-myths-about-refugees?collection=1098426


Oriana:

I’ve given a lot of thought to "immigrant trauma," and found my best clue in the finding that the "loss of the familiar" sets off all the alarm bells in the amygdala region. After the anxiety stage comes depression, or at least an immense sadness, as if mourning multiple deaths. Talk about the loss of connection!

Then there is the feeling of no longer being an OK person. There can also be a lot of embarrassment since at first you — not long ago a competent, well-skilled person in your native culture — don't know how to do the simplest things in the new place. For instance, I didn't know the meaning of "dime" and "nickel," so paying for things and receiving change turned out to be challenging (until one kind person taught me about coins).



Section of the Seasons of the Year, fresco by Petras Repšys at Vilnius University
 

BOOKS BY REFUGEES
 
Refugee writers and poets have given us works such as Lolita, Doctor Faustus, The House of Spirits, the essays of Joseph Brodsky and the poems and essays of Czeslaw Milosz (including The Captive Mind). Here are just two entries:

Theodor Adorno, “The Authoritarian Personality” (1950)
Country of origin: Germany
Reasons for leaving: After being dismissed from his teaching position in 1932 by the Nazis, Adorno left to study at Oxford and then moved to the United States in 1938.

Adorno wanted to understand what kind of personality type was susceptible to fascism. He found his answer, via Freud, in a harsh parenting style that led to the kind of person who would crave the approval and guidance of an authoritarian.

Wikipedia:

The personality type Adorno et al. identified can be defined by nine traits that were believed to cluster together as the result of childhood experiences. These traits include conventionalism, authoritarian submission, authoritarian aggression, anti-intellectualism, anti-intraception, superstition and stereotypy, power and "toughness", destructiveness and cynicism, projectivity, and exaggerated concerns over sex.

(Oriana: I think “anti-intraception” here means “anti-empathy.”)


Tukuhnikivatz Arch, near Moab, Utah; Mark Stacey

more from Wiki:

“Parents who have a need for domination, and who dominate and threaten the child harshly, and demand obedience to conventional behaviors with threats, foster the characteristics of this personality. In addition, the parents have a preoccupation with social status, and communicate this to the child in terms of rigid and externalized rules. The child then suffers from suppressed feelings of resentment and aggression towards the parents, who are instead, idealized with reverence.

Alfred Adler provided another perspective, linking the "will to power over others" as a central neurotic trait, usually emerging as aggressive over-compensation for felt and dreaded feelings of inferiority and insignificance. According to this view, the authoritarian's need to maintain control and prove superiority over others is rooted in a worldview populated by enemies and empty of equality, empathy, and mutual benefit.”

(Oriana): George Lakoff has the same interpretation: the authoritarian personality reflects the “strict father morality,” with its subjugation of women and minorities and emphasis on obedience and punishment, hierarchy rather than equal rights. Liberals tend to come from nurturing rather than punitive families.

Of course there is also the left-wing authorianism:

Cristina Garcia, “Dreaming in Cuban” (1992)
Country of origin: Cuba
Reasons for leaving: Her family was among the first wave of people to escape from Cuba in 1961 shortly after Fidel Castro took power.

Garcia’s first novel looked at three generations of women exiled from Cuba, all with complex feelings about the country, from love and nostalgia to revulsion. For the daughter of a revolutionary, now living in New York, her memories are of being raped by one of Castro’s young followers. “She wants no part of Cuba,” Garcia writes of this young woman, “no part of its wretched carnival floats creaking with lies, no part of Cuba at all.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/30/books/review/25-great-books-by-refugees-in-america.html?hpw&rref=books&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0


Oriana: Famous books by refugees include Nabokov’s Lolita (I also strongly recommend Pnin), Thomas Mann’s Doctor Faustus, and Isabel Allende’s The House of the Spirits. 


Thomas Mann, drawing by David Levine


HANNAH ARENDT ON TOTALITARIANISM

 
~ "Totalitarianism begins in contempt for what you have. The second step is the notion: “Things must change — no matter how. Anything is better than what we have.” Totalitarian rulers organize this kind of mass sentiment, and by organizing it articulate it, and by articulating it make the people somehow love it.

*

I found in Brecht the following remark:

The great political criminals must be exposed and exposed especially to laughter. They are not great political criminals, but people who permitted great political crimes, which is something entirely different. The failure of his enterprises does not indicate that Hitler was an idiot.

Now, that Hitler was an idiot was of course a prejudice of the whole opposition to Hitler prior to his seizure of power and therefore a great many books tried then to justify him and to make him a great man. So, Brecht says, “The fact that he failed did not indicate that Hitler was an idiot and the extent of his enterprises does not make him a great man.” It is neither the one nor the other: this whole category of greatness has no application.

*

The moment we no longer have a free press, anything can happen. What makes it possible for a totalitarian or any other dictatorship to rule is that people are not informed; how can you have an opinion if you are not informed? If everybody always lies to you, the consequence is not that you believe the lies, but rather that nobody believes anything any longer. This is because lies, by their very nature, have to be changed, and a lying government has constantly to rewrite its own history. On the receiving end you get not only one lie — a lie which you could go on for the rest of your days — but you get a great number of lies, depending on how the political wind blows. And a people that no longer can believe anything cannot make up its mind. It is deprived not only of its capacity to act but also of its capacity to think and to judge. And with such a people you can then do what you please.

*

Nobody knows what is going to happen because so much depends on an enormous number of variables, on simple hazard. On the other hand if you look at history retrospectively, then, even though it was contingent, you can tell a story that makes sense…. Jewish history, for example, in fact had its ups and downs, its, enmities and its friendships, as every history of all people has. The notion that there is one unilinear history is of course false. But if you look at it after the experience of Auschwitz it looks as though all of history—or at least history since the Middle Ages—had no other aim than Auschwitz…. This, is the real problem of every philosophy of history: how is it possible that in retrospect it always looks as though it couldn’t have happened otherwise?" ~

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/1978/10/26/hannah-arendt-from-an-interview/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=NYR+Trump+Is+Violating+the+Constitution&utm_content=NYR+Trump+Is+Violating+the+Constitution+CID_b91aa8db00a30afa8a5b12b581fdad39&utm_source=Newsletter&utm_term=From+an+Interview



“We are not reliving the 20th century, for how could we? Rather, ideas from the past have melted and reformed into a postmodern fascistic style; a fascism with a wink in its eye and a bad-boy smirk on its face.” ~ Nick Cohen
 


FREEDOM LIES IN COMMITMENT ~ Sartre (paraphrase)

Why don’t we know what we “really” want? Why is making choices so stressful?

~ “The basic problem is this: Most of us consider making decisions to be an analytical skill, a rational weighing of pros and cons. But applying intelligence is not enough because choice is intimately tied to emotion. If we want to be happy and not drive ourselves crazy second–guessing, then choices need to be attuned to context, desire, and temperament. It sounds daunting when framed this way, perhaps too abstract, but it isn’t hard. You simply learn to self–observe.

The brain contains multiple minds. Briefly, the consciousness we think of as “me”—a singular, in–command self—is not the only agent acting on our behalf. Like the Wizard of Oz, other actors are busy behind the curtain. The various and separate aspects of mind, however, are inaccessible to conscious introspection.

Think of a magician’s trick: The audience never perceives all the steps in its causal sequence—the special contraptions, the fake compartments, the hidden accomplices. It sees only the final effect. Likewise, the real sequence of far flung brain events causing a thought or an action is massively more than the sequence we perceive. Yet we explain ourselves with the shortcut, “I wanted to do it, so I did it,” when the neurological truth is, “My actions are determined by forces I do not understand.”

Ironically, the very anatomy of the brain assures that we often act at cross–purposes with ourselves. While it is not necessary to wade through the neurological details behind this strange but fascinating way our heads are constructed, it is necessary to appreciate that an invisible force exists that pushes you in certain directions. It is beyond the scope of this column to illustrate how one discerns what those directions are. But it can be learned. Once you get oriented to where your true desires lie, you can better align your choices in order to achieve them.” ~

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-fallible-mind/201302/prepared-say-no-mastering-the-art-personal-choice

Oriana:


DOES IT ENLARGE ME OR DIMINISH ME?




The message that I take from this article is that the brain contains multiple minds (competing neural networks). That multiplicity makes it more difficult for us to figure out just what it is we “really” want. Yet to accomplish things we need to settle on something (Again, Sartre: Freedom is found in commitment) and use the power of focus. Are we the slaves of passions? Yes, but by becoming more aware we can become more coherent, and use the passion as energy and determination.

And we absolutely need to close options and commit to one course of action. Keeping too many options open is paralysis. Commitment is the only way to accomplish anything.

Ah, you say, but that’s just the problem: we don’t know what we really want. We have multiple minds and those minds COMPETE. Fortunately there is a question that can guide us: Does doing X enlarge me or diminishes me?

This is an amazingly effective question. The answer is often instant. It’s also frightening because it often points to action rather than comfortable inaction. But experience indicates that we regret not the things we’ve done, but mostly the things we’ve failed to do.



WILL CAPITALISM DESTROY DEMOCRACY?


 From a year ago, this very thought-provoking talk. Yanis doesn't necessarily have answers guaranteed to work, but the issues need to be discussed. “He believes that the mega-rich and corporations are cannibalizing the political sphere, causing financial crisis. Hear his dream for a world in which capital and labor no longer struggle against each other, “one that is simultaneously libertarian, Marxist and Keynesian.”

I think he raises a good point about the mountain of idle cash that's not being invested for the good of humanity (into green energy, for instance). Unless we work for change, we’ll see a “post-modernist 1930s dystopia.”

It’s also interesting that he brings up the brief Athenian democracy to point up that it is NOT the source of modern democracy. The Athenian democracy included the poor (as long as they were non-slave males). The “liberal Western democracy”  is rooted in Magna Carta and the Enlightenment; it was born as the “democracy of the masters.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GB4s5b9NL3I

"Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of State and corporate power.” ~ Benito Mussolini



RASPUTIN WAS NOT POISONED

~ “[Rasputin’s] table manners were alarming. His beard was flecked with food, he licked the spoon before using it to serve others, tore the bread and fish apart with his fingers and wiped them on the table cloth. Some were revolted by his crudeness, others saw it as part of his charm, and it's quite possible that he exaggerated his gaucherie to set himself apart from the effete and mannered aristocracy. He cast such a spell on his worshipful female followers that they were known to kiss his freshly licked fingers, and vie for the leftover crusts of bread on his plate.

It was Rasputin's rootedness, however, that made him sensitive to the hunger pangs of ordinary Russians. He immediately recognized that the serpentine bread lines in Saint Petersburg – the food transportation system had broken down as a result of the First World War – were dangerous and contained the seeds of revolution.

Genuinely stricken to learn that corn was rotting in the imperial warehouses while the people starved, he sent telegrams to Czar Nicholas II, who was away fighting the Germans on the front line, begging him to increase food supplies. But Nicholas – despite Rasputin's missives, the labor strikes, the 300 percent inflation, and simmering anger in Moscow and Petrograd (the city 's new name that replaced the German-sounding Saint Petersburg) – did nothing.

Rasputin tried to get Alexandra to distribute food in the streets to show that she felt the people's pain, and though she seemed agreeable, it never happened. He even wrote to senior government officials appealing for action – short, unpunctuated notes that testify to the sincerity of his pleas:

    kind dear apologies forgive me much meat is needed, let Piter [Petrograd] eat, listen help rosputin

    kind dear apologies allow oats taken, much woe in zlaenburg province, lots of oats, Petrograd cart drivers are worried, that's not good, Siberia is full of lard please feed Petrograd and Moscow

"His notes were often scribbled and hard to decipher. His grammar and spelling were atrocious. His meaning was often hard to make out," says Smith. "But yes, Rasputin was very serious about the food problems in Petrograd. The czar did not heed his advice, regrettably.”

Rasputin proved fatally prophetic. The February 1917 Russian Revolution was ignited by food riots, when hungry marchers stormed the legendary Filipov Bakery, whose delectable black breads, piroshky, kopeck buns, and chocolate cakes were daily delivered to the czar's palace. The Cossacks, called out to quell the riot, refused to open fire. A petulant Alexandra, sounding like Marie Antoinette, relayed it all in a letter to her husband: "They smashed Filipov's bakery completely. ... A hooligan movement, young boys and girls running about and screaming that they have no bread, only to excite..."

By then, Rasputin, whom Alexandra lovingly called "our dear Friend," had been dead for two months — murdered in the early hours of Dec. 30, 1916 (Dec. 17, according to the Russian calendar then in use).

Rasputin's excessive fondness for Madeira is undisputed. "Go on, drink, God will forgive you," he would urge his dinner companions. "I love wine," he declared in 1916, by which time he had become a functioning alcoholic.

His daughter Maria, while admitting that her father's drinking was out of control, said he was far from a typical booze-hard. "She noticed," writes Smith, "how he never spoke so beautifully about God as when he was drunk."

Nor dance so well. After a few glasses, Rasputin was known to leap to his feet in his tall, patent leather boots and dance with ecstatic abandon to the music of three minstrel gypsies who accompanied him to his evening parties.

What comes as a surprise then, is to learn that the Madeira Monk supported the temperance movement, speaking out against the scourge of vodka and endorsing the Sobriety Society in his village. Smith spotlights this paradoxical nugget:

"I would not say I'm the first to write about this, but no previous biographer has explored it in such depth," he says. "It is a definite puzzle, given his own troubles with the bottle in his latter years. I'm still not fully certain how much of the press coverage about his support for the temperance movement was genuine or 'fake news.' It's difficult to say for certain.”

Several biographies state that Rasputin was exceedingly fond of sugar – with one even citing his black teeth as proof. But his daughter Maria flatly states that her father disliked sweets. A trivial point of discrepancy — except that it has a bearing on how he died. The standard version is that Rasputin's murderers, a group of monarchists led by Prince Yusupov, knowing of his supposed weakness for sweets, laced cakes and wine with cyanide and served them to him, and, when he miraculously survived the poison, shot him dead.

So whom do we believe? Smith is unequivocal. "I believe his daughter," he says. "The stories that he loved sweets come from less-than-reliable sources. Black teeth? Hard to say. I've never seen a single photograph of him with his mouth open. The love of sweets belongs, I would say, to the realm of myth."

And while it's true that the 48-year-old Rasputin was lured to a cellar and served cake and wine on his last night (perhaps Yusupov & Co. bought into the sweet-tooth myth as well) while Yankee Doodle played on the gramophone, neither contained any poison. The autopsy report said as much.

Smith's comprehensive biography portrays an intriguingly multifaceted figure who enjoyed power and had a seductive vitality, but who was also an earthy and compassionate family man. It's a far cry from the demonic Rasputin of the irresistibly catchy 1978 Boney-M song, with its fantastical claim that Ra-Ra Rasputin was a "lover of the Russian queen" and "Russia's greatest love machine." The former is salacious gossip. The latter is hard to prove, but in the succinct words of another historian, Robert K. Massie, "He would send out for prostitutes late at night as people might send out for pizza.”’ ~

http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/01/31/510802220/fact-or-fiction-even-when-it-comes-to-food-its-hard-to-tell-with-rasputin



Rasputin with his followers
 
from The Smithsonian:

“The autopsy reports do not mention poison or drowning but instead conclude that he was shot in the head at close range. Yusupov transformed the murder into an epic struggle of good versus evil to sell books and bolster his own reputation.

The responses from the public were mixed, reflecting Rasputin’s checkered reputation. The elite, from whence Yusupov and his co-conspirators came, rejoiced and applauded the killers when they appeared in public. The peasantry mourned Rasputin as one of their own, seeing the murder as one more example of the nobility controlling the Czar; when a peasant rose to a position of influence with the Czar, he was murdered by wealthy men.

To the dismay of Yusupov and his co-conspirators, Rasputin’s murder did not lead to a radical change in Nicholas and Alexandra’s polities. To the emergent Bolsheviks, Rasputin symbolized the corruption at the heart of the Imperial court, and his murder was seen, rather accurately, as an attempt by the nobility to hold onto power at the continued expense of the proletariat. To them, Rasputin represented the broader problems with czarism. In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, Provisional Government leader Alexander Kerensky went so far as to say, "Without Rasputin there would have been no Lenin."

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/murder-rasputin-100-years-later-180961572


Rasputin's body

~ “Divers brought up the frozen body of Gregory Rasputin from beneath the ice of the Malaya Nevka River in St. Petersburg on November 18, 1916. The wooden supports of the Large Petrovsky Bridge from which his body had been thrown into the water  were stained with blood where he had hit his head on the way down. For several days a crowd of women gathered on the riverbank with bottles, pots, and buckets to collect the “holy water” sanctified by the contact with his flesh.” ~

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2016/12/08/rasputin-close-friend-family/


AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE INCREASES THE RISK OF SCHIZOPHRENIA, AND VICE VERSA (the causal link may be infection)

Researchers have long known that people with autoimmune diseases, such as hepatitis, Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and psoriasis, are at greater risk of developing schizophrenia.
But this new research shows that the development goes both ways: People suffering from schizophrenia also have an increased risk of contracting autoimmune diseases, especially if they have suffered from a severe infection, according to scientists.

The researchers found that a person suffering from schizophrenia has a 53 percent higher risk of contracting an autoimmune disease compared to people who are not suffering from schizophrenia. Moreover, those who have schizophrenia and have been hospitalized or received treatment for a severe infection have a 2.7 times higher risk of getting an autoimmune disease.

According to Michael Eriksen Benrós, M.D., Ph.D., a senior researcher at the National Centre for Register-Based Research at Aarhus University and the Psychiatric Centre Copenhagen, “this information will be very useful for psychiatrists working with schizophrenics. That’s because six percent of schizophrenic patients have an autoimmune disease that requires treatment in a hospital,” he said.

“But the actual occurrence is significantly higher, seeing as our study does not incorporate all the people who are being treated by general physicians or have not been diagnosed yet,” he said. “This means that psychiatrists should be on the lookout for signs of physical illness among their patients with schizophrenia, including autoimmune diseases.”

According to Benrós, a lot of the data points to infections as a determining factor.

“It could be that people with schizophrenia are genetically vulnerable to infections, which increases the risk of getting schizophrenia but also autoimmune diseases,” he said.

He explained that the immune system reacts to an infection by producing antibodies that do not just react to the infection — they also start breaking down the body’s own tissue. This is how autoimmune diseases develop.

“Another possible explanation could be that symptoms diagnosed as schizophrenia are the first signs that an autoimmune disease has developed, but has not yet been detected,” he said.

“If you have a family member with schizophrenia, there is a six percent higher chance that you yourself will develop an autoimmune disease. The genetic factor does not look to be so significant, even though genetic studies have shown a correlation between genes and schizophrenia,” said Benrós.

https://psychcentral.com/news/2014/02/22/those-with-schizophrenia-more-apt-to-get-autoimmune-diseases/66265.html


baby mountain bluebird

ending on beauty

. . . paradise was when
Dante
regathered from height and depth
came out onto the soft, green level earth
into the natural light

~ A. R. Ammons

For me the clarity became perfect when I read the title of one of Jack Gilbert's poems: "We have already lived in the real paradise." Visions of celestial paradise, e.g. Dante's White Rose, or the biblical City Paved with Gold, seem like the last thing we'd want.