Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Vicious circles.

Sorry, I do have a few things on the back burner... But I'm distracted at the moment so I'm not in front of my PC enough. Doesn't mean I'm not knocking back rumbos and getting my rant on.

I just thought I might post some musings I had concerning some anti-muslim shit my far fetched facebook mates thought was appropriate. Feels to me like a subtle form of hate speech and I just didn't want to let it fester. Fuck em, they don't have to agree with me, but someone should break the cycle of intolerance.

So this is my post, and it's cheating cause it's cut and paste, but feel free to comment or review. You can hate it, or repost it or print it out in wingdings and burn it. It's your life and you only get one crack at it..


www.youtube.com
Watch this video about the shocking similarites between Muslim and Nazi beliefs. Listen to a former Palestinian terrorist. What is being taught to Muslim chi...
    • Morgan Parkinson 
      I haven't watched this video, but be careful not to broadly generalize yourself. There are courts in Kuala Lumpur who recently used the internationally recognized Nuremburg principles to successfully prosecute war crimes (as the Americans did against the Nazis), that the American government simply shrugged off. In their absence George Bush and Tony Blair were found guilty of war crimes.

      There is more than enough war and violent crimes against humanity already, whether it's legitimate or not depends on whose laws you subscribe to. There is a more common law of nature which teaches that, instead of hatred, we should foster understanding. Instead of division, we should focus on compassion and instead of perpetuating violence, we could attempt co-operation as fellow humans.

      Since there literally are Australian troops abroad, training guns at foreigners (including muslims) right now, in your name, make sure you are capable of deciding for yourself if we are doing the right thing ourselves. As I said, I don't know what the video is, but I have no interest in watching anything that inspires hatred and division, which probably utilizes carefully selected footage to perpetuate a world of war and terror of which I feel no connection.

      It disgusts me that westerners have subtly been ingrained with a racial superiority, which makes it impossible to understand why there is literally an entire world of people who are fed up with our arrogance. We pollute the planet, we are out there killing people with technologically superior weapons and we will be in relatively air conditioned comfort eating caviar until the world breathes its last gasp. It'd be nice if occasionally someone showed some humility..

    • *********** Morgan soumds like a liberal fool

    • ************* Hey *******l. This is total B&^*Shit!! Don't believe the hype.
    • ************* Skillful editing can make any story you want...
    • ********* 
      I know what you mean ********, but i don't underestimate what fundermentel Religion can do, Look what is happening all over the islamic world,Its a little to cute to blame it solely on the west. what is your idea of an infidel,? Seems to me theres a lot of people in the west with there head in the sand, and if none of this is true, why do we seem to get such a response about it. and if none of this is  true, then we have nothing to worry about, ay.?
    • Morgs, havent watched this vid,? man you wrote plenty, You very articulate bro,I reckon you would rather live with us disgusting superior arrogant western types though,not you ofcouse, but judging from where you live,you should feel pretty comfortable.

    • Morgan Parkinson I have no problems with my own lifestyle. I am free to eat, take shelter, work and vote. I am very happy. I try to give to charity where I see fit and I try to educate myself better and avoid resorting to self-righteousness. I understand what you are hinting at, that fundamentalism of any kind is dangerous. But there may well be many good things about Islamic life that you will never know, because the kinds of emails, links and shares you receive are from people who would rather criticize and smear other cultures than understand them.

      I think there would be a lot of parallels between Islam and Western culture, that we would both see the value of human life and look towards moral and ethical pursuits. I have heard the Quran is actually a very beautiful book and that the fundamentalists read far beyond its words to give creedance to their minority belief systems, much the same as Christians have always refuted scientific discoveries that don't align with their mythological beliefs.

      The major disparity arises when westerners fail to realize the influence that our way of life has on countries outside our own. We don't have bombs dropping here, we don't have fundamental factions armed to the teeth who turn our neighborhoods into warzones, we have food on the table and for the most part feel safe in our streets. Yet we harbor a deep seeded widespread cultural apathy and choose to ignore that fact that we are a cog in the wheel of the global problem. Our schools don't meaningfully teach second languages, learning about other cultures is more of a peculiarity and our privilege to learn about other cultures through travel is far too often left unpursued.

      The US and Australia take credit as the biggest polluters per capita worldwide, together we have installed countless puppet dictatorships and kept them in power with our money, weapons and increasingly cyber technology which has facilitated large scale human rights abuses. After decades of maltreatment I can see how other cultures may see westerners as an evil influence, seeing as how it's our bombs killing their families, our money feeding their corrupt governments and our technologies rooting out champions of human rights and seeing them imprisoned, tortured and killed. This is without mention that it our business practices that have decimated the environment and the global economy, the effects of which we are comfortably insultated from.

      Fundamentalism is wrong, but we should understand that it is a reaction. A desperate reaction to an unfair world by others who may never be fortunate enough to share our freedoms. They're starving, they're being killed by the hundreds of thousands and they don't have a fucking shining light at the end of the tunnel. If that shit was happening here it would be the end of the world, but their blood is cheap to us. That is why I refuse to watch a video which is hand picked to perpetuate a climate of indifference towards our fellow man, which capitalizes on the most basic human emotions. Anyone can be conditioned to hate. It will be the links of those among us who seek to teach and bridge the cultural gap, who inspire peace and understanding, that I choose to spend my time on.

      I'm sorry to take the ball and run with it, but I just cannot stand that people are brainwashed to rationalize our aggressive military behaviour overseas. Can't we just stop dropping bombs on each other?

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Random Rant Re: Rights

So I've tackled some of the book I referred to in the comments section of my last post; Monoculture by F.S. Michaels. He's outshone me in every sense so it's back to the drawing board. I'll take solace that there are smarter people who are thinking along the same lines and play catch up by reading the rest of his book. In the meantime though I'll post one of todays rants so those willing to critique my speak may do so.

In response to this picture:



"Whenever you are confronted with an opponent. Conquer him with love." -- Mahatma Gandhi

  • Well if i had to be brutal to the populace for my profession i would probably wanna payrise too :-p
  • Morgan Parkinson
    Well yeah, but there is no answers in further segregation. Progress will be made through compassion, understanding and education. At first glance the NSWPD protest is understandable. If I had a job which involved regular dealings with crazies and the prospect of real physical harm, the least I would expect is that I would be financially supported in the event that I was injured as a result. That's the kind of "perk" that everyone should enjoy.

    Not all cops are brutal. Granted some may be, but there are systems in place to pursue these offenders and they should be adhered to. If they aren't, that's not to say that honest cops should take the blow of working without a safety net.

    The honest cops who will be able to support their families after being injured as a result of their good work will surely be thankful for the support of the people who stood up for their rights. This is why the people in your shared photo are cuddling right? Break down this false illusion of division, people helping people, that's powerful stuff!
  • Yeah man love the lot of them. But they gotta ask themselves why they are ordered to control crowds of people they are supposed to protect. How many people actually respond to seeing a cop car by thinking 'i feel so safe cos they there to protect me' rather than feeling vaguely threatened or intimidated?
  • Morgan Parkinson
    Well in Surfers for Schoolies right now there is a surplus of feet on the beat. I'm sure it makes the school girls walking back to their apartments barefoot at 4am feel a little more secure.

    Unfortunately good cops will be asked to enforce bad laws. There's no real safety net for them to make their own moral judgements when push comes to shove. Maybe that should be another stipulation in their employment contracts? Otherwise the real game changer will be understanding which laws are overly oppressive and unjustly victimizing legitimate freedoms and then rewriting or removing them from the rule books.

    I don't believe there will a catharsis which will signal the end of all societies ills. There will need to be reforms, people will need to dispense of their apathy and embrace these changes. We will need to be patient, persistent and principled.

    Fight the power! Not the cops..
  • Let's get em to teach the young gals kung fu and teach the blokes some respect and restraint?

Monday, November 21, 2011

Improvement

This is my first real blog entry and I'm gonna try keep it short and sweet.

I've got a lot of ideas swirling around in my mental quagmire, interesting concepts and connections I've had impressed on me and that I've made from the material I immerse myself in. There probably won't be an overabundance of coherance, most of these thoughts are only partly fleshed out and I'm sure they're all laced with naivety. I'm also prone to waffling off on a tangent, so don't be surprised if my train of thought derails mid-way. In short, this could just end up being a whole bunch of bullshit.

But, since your still reading..

I get to spend a lot of my time thinking. One of the benefits of having a mundane job. A lot of my daily thought revolves around the theme of improvement. How can I make myself a better person? How can I have better, more satisfying interactions with others? Who can I look to learn from as a role model? And ultimately how can I help make my world a better place?

My current ideas of personal improvement hinge on finding better quality, more relevant information to draw better conclusions from. But it could mean many things as far as interpreting external influences to predict their effects. Before I get too carried away though, I thought that it's important to unravel my own internal influences, past experiences, prejudices and nuances which inadvertantly change my experience of the world. Having a thorough feedback mechanism to give an unbiased reflection of your own internal workings helps you better understand who you are and makes understanding the world around you more accurate and rewarding. I guess that's why we all need good friends and family, who will tell us honestly when we are oblivious to the ingrained cues that betray our own internal inefficiencies and shortcomings.

I suppose I mean that we should never take for granted that our opinions will mature as we learn, even if they're only refined, but especially if they are entirely reformed. The way we view our world today will invariably change as we do, and as we look back from tomorrow. The important issues we face today will become history. As we reflect on ourselves, the more constantly things impress upon us, the more fundamental these premises, the more it would appear that we have stumbled upon something of inherant, personal value. Something worth exploring and drawing strength from.

Combining this ability to recognize our character strengths with the desire to root out any weaknesses will inevitably lead us down the path towards personal improvement. Simply removing ourselves from our prejudices may even be as easy as recognizing them, understanding them and refusing to let them cloud our future judgement.

As we better understand ourselves we're also better positioned to then understand others. Our experiences will be vastly different, but by sharing our experiences and interpretations we collaborate our strengths, refuse to be at the mercy of our weaknesses and together explore the fundamentals of our lives to build better relationships, better communities and ultimately a better world. We need not get along all the time, but we should respect our differences and work together to improve things generally.

Intolerance and division has destroyed so much of what is good about humanity, especially in recent years and while our tendency to goodness, empathy, compassion and humanity will never be abandoned, its mechanisms have become more obscure and the frequency of these experiences seems to have declined. So much progress has been made in our human evolution. Now that we're surrounded with the technology to better forge our own "utopia, it seems improper to submit, to rest on our laurels, especially when there is still so much to accomplish. There is so much hope in our world, yet we are remain apathetic. There's definitely room for improvement.

I'll leave it at that.