Monday, 8 October 2007

Answers for Yankee Doodle

Just as I promise myself to do less ‘serious’ blogging, Yankee Doodle sends me a birthday present of five questions to answer! So here goes……


1) You are turning 80. Congratulations, and Happy Birthday! During the Battle of Britain , Prime Minister Churchill commented that he hoped that the courage demonstrated by your countrymen during that battle would mark that period as Britain's finest hour. You were alive during that time period. What are your thoughts on World War II, and the character and substance of the peoples of the British Isles during that time? How would you compare the character and substance of the peoples of the British Isles then with now?


Churchill’s actual words [as France fell in June 1940] were: “Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour’.” Although the British Empire did not last another 50 years, 1940 was indeed England’s finest hour. As a teenager growing up through the war years, I wasn’t aware of any defeatism, even when things were at their blackest. Remember that 40,000 people were killed in a single year during the German Blitz on British cities without shaking our resolve. Practically the whole nation – there were of course a few exceptions – was united in its conviction that we were bound to win, not least because the Nazi regime we were fighting was so evil. Hardly anyone had doubts about that! And Churchill’s war speeches and broadcasts were more inspiring than anyone who did not hear them at the time can possibly imagine.


Today we are a different nation with a different generation and a different, more variegated, racial and cultural mix. It is difficult to generalise about the prevailing mood. I do not think that most people - including people in government – yet realise the seriousness of the developing 21st century global situation. There is a great deal of disillusionment with bad leadership, mainly over the flawed decision to invade Iraq and the clumsy mishandling by America of the campaign there. Most British folk are not anti-Americans as people, but we are much more critical of American attitudes and policies than we were before 9/11. The sterling quality of the British character hasn’t changed – we will rise to the challenge of an emergency when it’s almost too late, as we did at Dunkirk – but far too few people yet realise that there is a crisis, or what its nature is. And the media’s constant ‘dumbing down’ and focus on trivialities doesn’t help.


2) When you were a young adult, what was communication like? What are your thoughts on the changes you have seen in your lifetime in this field: the expansion of the telephone system, the improvements in television, and, of course, the advent of computers and the internet? These things have opened up possibilities for people. What, in your opinion, are the most significant, and why? What, if any, dangers do you see resulting from these technological improvements?


When I was young, there were far fewer cars and no motorways. We mostly travelled long distances by steam train – very smoky and dirty, especially when going through tunnels! Civilian air flight was in its infancy. We had no television until after the war, and only limited public service radio. [My grandfather, in the 1920s, had been fascinated by the primitive early crystal-and-‘cat’s whisker’ sets]. People still read a great deal more than they do nowadays, and there were excellent pubic libraries [many endowed by Andrew Carnegie]. There was very poor reception for ‘long wave’ broadcasts from America and the rest of the world, and nothing like the instant global communication we have become used to during the past couple of decades thanks to computers and the internet. The creation of this virtual ‘global village’ opens up exciting possibilities of drawing people closer together and increasing mutual understanding, but it also carries great dangers to personal freedom because of the technical ability to eavesdrop and censor which is bound to be used [and misused] by authoritarian governments. We are already seeing a growing tendency toward this, not only in still partially closed societies such as China but also in our so-called free democracies.



3) What changes in the demographics in Britain during your lifetime are most noteworthy to you? What kind of impact do they have?


Britain has always been a haven for political refugees, and we are proud of this tradition. However, the mass economic migration of the past 30 years, mostly from Asia, is creating social problems and cultural dissonance which did not previously exist. The debate about ‘multiculturalism’ has proved a red herring and led us to a dead-end. No-one wishes to deprive immigrants of what they cherish in their own cultures and way of life, but there has to be a willingness on their part to blend into the host community harmoniously and not to challenge its core values. This is not always the case now – especially with Muslims. The character of many British cities and towns has changed markedly in recent years. When I was growing up in Yorkshire, there were scarcely any Muslims in the nearby city of Bradford. Now, the Muslim population there is approaching 100,000 [20 per cent.]



4) You have commented on my blog about Islam. Islam has spread significantly into the West in your lifetime, and has become associated with violence. As a reader and a thinker who has seen a share of history, do you feel this is association is a fair portrayal? Please put the current situation with the spread of Islam and the violence that has been associated with it into historical perspective for us.


I bear no personal hostility to Muslims as human beings, and value the friendship of the former chairman of our local mosque, who used to live next door to me. But I am apprehensive that the doctrines of Islam, by which they set so much store, are incompatible with Western notions of a free, tolerant, and open society. It is obvious from the claims being made and the arguments advanced that there is no room for compromise between Islamic values and Western democratic values. You cannot blend chalk with cheese, or mix oil and water. Most people in the West are still in a state of denial about this, and accuse those of us who point out these obvious truths of being ‘Islamophobic’ – a meaningless term, because there is nothing ‘phobic’ about being frightened of intolerance and unreason. Violence is not the main problem at the moment, though it could become so if sensible preventive policies are not quickly put into place. There will always be spasmodic violence perpetrated by hot-headed youths, whatever their belief-systems. The proper way to deal with it is through firm policing – not military adventures in a spurious ‘war on terror’. There should certainly be much tighter curbs upon further immigration into Europe, and stricter repatriation of illegal immigrants except for those who are genuine political refugees.


5) Comments that you have made indicate you feel it is not just Islam that poses a threat to humanity. Please explain your views on religions in general, then on various religions in particular. What are your thoughts on Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and any others that you may have encountered?


Historically, religion has played a key role in the development of human society and provided the bedrock of our culture. But with the development of more rational thinking and scientific methods of advancing knowledge and technology during the past three centuries, religious belief, if adhered to literally and not just metaphorically, has now become a hindrance to human progress. And also to peace – because all religions cannot possess the sole ‘truth’, which is what each of them claims to do. So inevitably they will fight each other, as well as ‘unbelievers’, and unless the trend towards self-righteous intolerance which seems to be burgeoning in all three Abrahamic religions – Judaism, Christianity and Islam – at present can be halted and reversed, the 21st century seems set for a series of catastrophic religious wars. Hinduism and Buddhism also have their fanatical and destructive sides, as we see, but they - especially Buddhism - have a great deal of constructive spiritual insight to offer, as indeed do the ‘mystics’ of other religions, including Christianity and Islam [the Sufis]. I personally don’t believe in the ’supernatural’, but I do find much wisdom in the Eastern scriptures.

Saturday, 6 October 2007

Anticant is 80

Today I’ve been on this planet for eight decades. Survival is worth celebrating, I suppose, and a couple of years ago I didn’t think I would last this long. But I’d rather be 40 than 80, and I don’t expect to reach 90. So the question is: how best to spend the relatively brief remainder of my life?


Eric Berne, the wise ‘father’ of Transactional Analysis, once said that the most important problem every human being has is how to pass the time between being born and dying. In the wicked world we are living in, far too many people don’t have much choice in the matter, and the majority of those who can choose make what to my mind are some pretty rotten choices.


One choice I am making on this birthday is to spend less time in future on the supposedly serious blogosphere. I’m getting increasingly fed up with the ceaseless outpourings of anger, intolerance, and irrational opinion which clutter up so much blogging, and in particular the inability – or unwillingness – to follow a line of discussion through without veering off into irrelevant and intemperate rants and slanging matches. We are living through a self-tormented period when what Jung called the ‘dark shadow’ seems to have taken over the bulk of humankind, who purblindly see nothing but good in themselves and project all badness onto the supposedly demonic ‘other’.


With such almost universally one-sided views being peddled from conflicting standpoints, and so little inclination to compromise, I’ve almost given up hope of finding much constructive thinking or sensible answers on the internet [or anywhere else] to the increasingly menacing self-made plight of humanity, and reluctantly conclude that as the lunatics and thugs are well on the way to taking over the global asylum, there’s not much point in bashing my feeble brains around serious issues in the few short years I may have left to me.


Anyway, I’ve said most of what I want to say in previous posts, so anyone interested in my views can browse the Arena archive. No doubt I’ll be popping up every now and again here, but mostly I shall indulge in sheer escapism by frolicking in my Burrow, which I increasingly find a much more congenial place than the real world.

Tuesday, 2 October 2007

Burma - world roar update

Dear friends,

Our emergency petition to stop the crackdown on peaceful protesters in Burma is exploding, with nearly 500,000 signers from every nation of the world. But the situation in Burma remains desperate, with reports of hundreds of monks being massacred and tortured. Burma's rulers have also killed and expelled international journalists, cutting off global media coverage of their cruelty.

China is still the key - the country with the most power to halt the Burmese generals' reign of terror. We're delivering our message this week with a massive ad campaign in major newspapers, beginning Thursday with a full page ad in the Financial Times worldwide, and in the South China Morning Post. The strength of the ad comes from the number of petition signers listed - can we reach our goal of 1 million signatures this week? The link to sign the petition and view the ad is below, forward this email to all your friends and family!

http://www.avaaz.org/en/stand_with_burma/u.php

China continues to provide key economic and military support to Burma's dictatorship, but it has been openly critical of the crackdown. Now we need the government to match words with actions. Our ad paints a powerful moment of choice for China in its relationship with the world: will it be a responsible and respected member of the global community, or will it be associated with tyranny and oppression?

People power, on the streets of Burma, and around the world, can triumph over tyranny. Our strength is in our numbers, spread the word!

With hope and determination,

Ricken, Paul, Ben, Graziela, Pascal, Galit and the whole Avaaz team.


For the best local reporting on the situation in Burma, try these links:

http://www.irrawaddy.org

http://www.mizzima.com

_____________________________________

[-525.374034-]

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Avaaz.org is staffed by a global team of campaigners operating on 3 continents. We have administrative offices in London, New York, and Rio de Janeiro. Please direct mail to our NY office at 260 Fifth Avenue, 9th floor, New York, NY 10001 U.S.A.

Monday, 1 October 2007

Burma - a global roar

I have received this from a friend, and hope all my readers will support it and pass the link on to as many others as they can.

Burma's generals have brought their brutal iron hand down on peaceful monks and protesters -- but in response, a massive global outcry is gathering pace. The roar of global public opinion is being heard in hundreds of protests outside Chinese and Burmese embassies, people round the world wearing the monks' color red, and on the internet-- where our petition has exploded to over 200,000 signers in just 72 hours.

People power can win this. Burma's powerful sponsor China can halt the crackdown, if it believes that its international reputation and the 2008 Olympics in Beijing depend on it. To convince the Chinese government and other key countries, Avaaz is launching a major global and Asian ad campaign on Wednesday, including full page ads in the Financial Times and other newspapers, that will deliver our message and the number of signers. We need 1 million voices to be the global roar that will get China's attention. If every one of us forwards this email to just 20 friends, we'll reach our target in the next 72 hours. Please sign the petition at the link below -if you haven't already- and forward this email to everyone you care about:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/stand_with_burma/t.php

The pressure is working - already, there are signs of splits in the Burmese Army, as some soldiers refuse to attack their own people. The brutal top General, Than Shwe, has reportedly moved his family out of the country, and he must fear his rule may crumble.

The Burmese people are showing incredible courage in the face of horror. We're broadcasting updates on our effort over the radio into Burma itself and telling the people that growing numbers of us stand with them. Let's do everything we can to help them! We have hours, not days, to do it. Please sign the petition and forward this email to at least 20 friends right now. Scroll down our petition page for details of times and events to join in the massive wave of demonstrations happening around the world at Burmese and Chinese embassies.

With hope and determination,

Ricken, Paul, Pascal, Graziela, Galit, Ben, Milena and the whole Avaaz Team

_____________________________________

[-525.463781-]
Please add avaaz@avaaz.org to your address book to make sure you keep receiving emails from Avaaz, or go here to unsubscribe.

Avaaz.org is staffed by a global team of campaigners operating on 3 continents. We have administrative offices in London, New York, and Rio de Janeiro. Please direct mail to our NY office at 260 Fifth Avenue, 9th floor, New York, NY 10001 U.S.A.

Sunday, 30 September 2007

Big Brother Britain

Some interesting comments. The sheeple are starting to get restive at last!

Saturday, 29 September 2007

Sobering but stimulating

JOHN GRAY: Black Mass. Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia

[Allen Lane, 2007]


If you think, as I do, that this first decade of the 21st century is one of unparalleled moral, mental, and political lunacy, do read this book. John Gray surveys the historic roots of our current follies with magisterial sweep.


The prime culprit, he avers, is apocalyptic thinking, both religious and secular, whose myriad offshoots have dominated most of the West’s concepts and actions for the past four centuries. He traces these complex threads and their mutations with minute yet elegant precision: the chiliastic strain in the Puritan faith of the Pilgrim Fathers which still animates today’s US neoCons; the bastard offspring of 18th century Enlightenment belief in ultimate human perfection which misled Hegel and Marx, and ultimately surfaced as totalitarian Leninism in Russia and Nazism in Germany.


The myth that perfect individuals and societies can be created through political action and social engineering leads inevitably, says Gray, to the doctrine that the end justifies the means; and so all kinds of injustices, and even atrocities such as torture, can be justified by those who believe they are acting in good faith. Whilst deprecating the destructive delusions of ‘God-driven’ politicians like Bush and Blair, whose self-assumed hotlines to God impel them to brush aside uncomfortable or inconvenient facts, Gray nevertheless thinks that the desire of secularists to privatise religion and decouple it from politics is unrealistic. For the religious impulse is endemic in humankind, and has existed since the dawn of history. “Suppressing religion does not mean it ceases to control thinking and behaviour. Like repressed sexual desire, faith returns, often in grotesque forms, to govern the lives of those who deny it.”


He is scathing of the Bush Administration’s invincible ignorance and multiple blunders in Iraq, and cites Robespierre – of all people! – as a witness against the faux-Macchiavellian doctrine of ‘liberal interventionism’: “The most extravagant idea that can be born in the head of a political thinker is to believe that it suffices for people to enter, weapons in hand, among a foreign people and expect to have its laws and constitution embraced. It is in the nature of things that the progress of reason is slow and no-one loves armed missionaries; the first lesson of nature and prudence is to repulse them as enemies. One can encourage freedom, never create it by an invading force.”


Gray’s vision of the future is sombre. He forecasts decades of wars as ferocious as any we have yet known, fought with all the violence of conflicting faiths using increased technical know-how to control declining natural resources. It is not a comforting thought. But the enduring lustre of his book is the brilliance of his analysis of our Western intellectual heritage and its use and abuse by politicians who aspire to be statesmen but show themselves up as historical ignoramuses and moral pygmies.

Calling all bloggers!

Please see this post on Tygerland, and add your blog to the list of those supporting free speech.