Archive for the 'Thoughts' Category

Illuminatus

March 10th, 2009

There was a silence that seemed to stretch into some long hall of near-Buddhist emptiness—George recognized a glimpse, at last!, into the Void all his acidhead friends had tried to describe— and then he remembered this was not the trip Hagbard was pushing him toward. But the silence lingered as a quietness of spirit, a calm in the tornado of those last few days, and George found himself ruminating with total dispassion, without hope or dread or smugness or guilt; if not totally without ego, or in full darshana, at least without the inflamed and voracious ego that usually either leaped forward or shrunk back from naked fact. He contemplated his memories and was unmoved, objective, at peace. He thought of blacks and women and of their subtle revenges against their Masters, acts of sabotage that could not be recognized clearly as such because they took the form of acts of obedience; he thought of the Shoshone Indians and their crude joke, so similar to the jokes of oppressed peoples everywhere; he saw, suddenly, the meaning of Mardi Gras and the Feast of Fools and the Saturnalia and the Christmas Office Party and all the other limited, permissible, structured occasions on which Freud’s Return of the Repressed was allowed; he remembered all the times he had gotten his own back against a professor, a high school principal, a bureaucrat, or, further back, his own parents, by waiting for the occasion when, by doing exactly what he was told, he could produce some form of minor catastrophe. He saw a world of robots, marching rigidly in the paths laid down for them from above, and each robot partly alive, partly human, waiting its chance to drop its own monkey wrench into the machinery. He saw, finally! why everything in the world seemed to work wrong and the Situation Normal was All Fucked Up. “Hagbard,” he said slowly. “I think I get it. Genesis is exactly backwards. Our troubles started from obedience, not disobedience. And humanity is not yet created.”

Captialism

March 2nd, 2009

I wonder why as a society we don’t work less: then we would merely have less things, but we would gain more time…. Personally, I’d choose time over things.  But it seems that human society actually reveres the creation and peddling of crap wares.  If we’re not doing that we might as well not be alive.  But why?  What is everyone afraid is going to happen?  Why must we build everything and anything above and beyond basic food and shelter?  I’m not saying I’m completely against doing this, I’m simply questioning that we MUST do it, or do it to the extent that we do now.  Why do we put so much value in such valueless things?  “You get to have a home and food becuase you make ipods or websites”  but not “you get to have a home and food because you are a human being“  that never happens.  It’s as if we posit material goods and the destruction of the planet as more valuable than human life.  Can someone please tell me why it’s this way?  Why does our society seem only to function on and reward the consumption of more resources when it seems obvious that we need to be using less resources?  Maybe it’s the elites that put us on our empty task; an army of workers shoveling gold into the mouths of a few elite capitalists…

Sometimes a Great Notion 3

February 20th, 2009

And as far as I was concerned, hindering something meant–had always meant–going after it with everything you got, fighting and kicking, stomping and gouging, and cussing it when everything else went sour.  And being just as strong in the hassle as you got it in you to be.  Now that’s real logical, don’t you think?  That’s real simple.  If You Wants to Win, You Does Your Best.  Why, a body could paint that on a plaque and hang it up over his bedstead.  He could live by it.  It could be like one of the Ten Commandments for success. “If You Wants to Win You Does Your Best.” Solid and certain as a rock; one rule I was gut-sure I could bank on.

Yet it took nothing more than my kid brother coming to spend a month with us to show me that there are other ways of winning–like winning by giving in, by being soft, by not gritting you goddamn teeth and getting your best hold … winning by not, for damned sure, being one of the Ten Toughest Hombres west of the Rockies.  And show me as well that there’s times when the only way you can win is by being weak, by losing, by doing your worst instead of your best.

And learning that come near to doing me in.

-Hank Stamper

The Symposium

January 21st, 2009

In fact, whenever I discuss philosophy or listen to others doing so, I enjoy it enormously, quite apart from thinking it’s doing me good. But when I hear other kinds of discussion, especially the talk of rich businessmen like you, I get bored and feel sorry for you and your friends, because you think you’re doing somerhing important , when you’re not. Perhaps you regard me as a failure, and I think you’re right. But I don’t think you’re a failure, I know you are.

-Apollodorus

The Obama Generation

November 6th, 2008

When Bush “won” the election in 2000 it was so close and questionable, that when he started doing crazy shit we were extra critical of it.  Not that he didn’t deserve extreme critisism, but it was even easier to hate him and be angry becuase of the 2000 election.  Also the contrast with the prosperous ninites made it easy to hate him.  On the other hand, the election of 2008 comes right after Bush’s reign and the psyoclogical mindfuck he put us all through, so Obama’s presidency will probably look great by comparison and maybe cement the popularity of liberal ideals for a generation.  Yeah.

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