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~ Free Thinker.

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Painting the snowflakes red: The insanity of capitalism in 500 words

24 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

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Good on you honeythatsok. Happy Xmas. The battle will be long. Unfortunately there is only one way to make Capitalism contribute and that is to cap it cold heart as I suggest.

honeythatsok's avatarhoneythatsok

Alice in Wonderland strikes again. Over the past 65 years, millions of children have marveled at the absurdity of the Red Queen making her minions paint the white roses red, or lose their heads. Unfortunately, the same children grew up and became mindless consumers of plastic junk, not giving a second thought as to who made their peculiar trinkets.

But this Christmas, a stunning article by Oliver Wainwright at The Guardian made it impossible to ignore. No art director in the world could come up with more unforgettable images of Santa’s workshop from hell. Wainwright writes: “Wai is 19. Together with his father, he works long days in the red-splattered lair, taking polystyrene snowflakes, dipping them in a bath of glue, then putting them in a powder-coating machine until they turn red – and making 5,000 of the things every day. In the process, the two of them end up…

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Why put up with a world you would be ashamed of to show to anyone.

19 Friday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Why put up with a world you would be ashamed of to show to anyone.

In a few days time if you are lucky you will be celebrating Christmas oblivious to the world you live in.  May the Blessings of the season be on you as it not intention to spoil your Christmas by reminding you that we live in a world where inequality is deeply entrenched and widely supported, and where most efforts seem to contribute to the efficient management of inequality.

The path of economic development that defines early 21st–century globalization is associated with growing inequalities of wealth and power within and between states and it is a path toward greater and greater inequality.

In other words, the current direction of globalization is increasing the economic and social injustice being done to the vast majority of the human family today.

Billions of people trapped in poverty worldwide feel the injustice intensely as they glimpse the lifestyles of the rich and famous of the world.

And you ask why is Terrorism growing, and what can be done about it?

In fact, the question, “what causes terrorism?” is not quite the right question to be asking, because we will never be able to answer it.

Since the 1960s a plethora of studies have been published on the topic. However, despite the proliferation of academic studies and political discussions calling for a closer look at the root causes, there has been no real improvement in understanding.

Kofi Annan said it best – “[w]e should not pretend that […] the decision to resort
to terrorism is unrelated to the political, social and economic situation in which
people find themselves.

Many people around the world perceive an unjust social and economic order imposed on them by forces that are, at best, indifferent to their needs. But we would be mistaken if we assume, equally, that terrorists are mere products of their environment.

Now don’t get me wrong I am not highlighting or justifying terrorism in all its barbaric actions. I am interest in removing it from the face of the Globe and how it might be possible to achieve steps in the right direction.

It is by no means a new phenomenon and “today society faces not one terrorism but many terrorism.

”Terrorism is considered one of the gravest dangers to our society, particularly because the highly publicized events of 9/11 demonstrated the consequences of terrorist acts.

Extremist ideologies of a secular or religious nature are at least-an intermediate cause of terrorism, serve to dehumanize the enemy and justify atrocities.

It may be true that religious fanaticism creates conditions that are favorable for terrorism. But we know that religious zealotry does not ’cause’ terrorism because there are many religious fanatics who do not choose terrorism or any form of violence. Although many people today believe that religious fanaticism “causes” terrorism, it isn’t true. We cannot say that the presence of one factor provokes terrorism in the same way that we can say with scientific certainty that certain toxins cause diseases.

Terrorism is a complex phenomenon; it is a specific kind of political violence committed by people who do not have legitimate army at their disposal. People that have become violent criminals, or nut cases using political arguments to justify their pathological need to be violent. A recent example in Australia where a certified Iranian nutter was classified as a terrorist by the world media, when in fact he was a deranged dangerous criminal.

Political terrorists are driven to commit acts of violence as a consequence of psychological forces, and that their psycho-logic is constructed to rationalize acts they are psychologically compelled to commit” terrorists live in the
divinely decreed future, a point in time where the ultimate realization of their
political destiny can be attained. This is the reason that we will never be able to eradicated it completely.

So what can be done?

Lessons from the past will provide a manual for handling the present challenges appears to be unrealistic with “knee-jerk” responses.

We all know the Illegitimate or corrupt governments frequently give rise to Terrorism. Repression by foreign occupation, unwillingness by the state to integrate dissident groups ethnic minority discriminated against by the majority lack of opportunity for political participation revenge or action, may trigger terrorist action.

However I believe that a large part of the real causes can be found in other quarters.

For instance;  Free media helps perpetuate terrorism in a society; without publicity, the actions of terrorist groups may ineffective and counterproductive in achieving their end goals. a free press will almost always assure maximum returns for terrorism and in turn will overestimate the relationship between democracy and terrorist activities. They should stop labeling ever violent act as terrorist. Remove the description and revert to naming the group.

If we can remove black money from this world and reduce poverty, terrorism disappears.

Terrorists can do nothing without money. All their purchases and transactions are illegal. For illegal purchases, they need to pay more than market price. Terrorists cannot operate without support from local people who are purchased. Poor people are the low-cost manpower for terrorist groups.

Education as the key to eradicate terrorism.

The United Nations should pass a resolution that all Companies commercial or otherwise quoted on the stock exchanges of the world  (with a value of £1 million and over) must provide two free Apprentices places at the start of their financial year.

The United Nations should get all the nations that it represent to agreed to a free United Nations Youth Touring Visa. To enable all University Graduates in the world to travel for two years.

And last put not lest.

The United Nations should pass a people’s of the world resolution’s to Cap Greed. Creating a perpetual source of funds so it does not have to beg. ( see previous posts: 0.05% World Aid commission)

The United Nation could open an App Called The UN Role of Shame. In which it could track and name countries/ organisations that commit human abuse, sell arms, don,t pay their subscription. make promises of Aid and don’t deliver.

The fertilizers of terrorism is poverty, poor people or hungry people who can do anything for food. we need a sincere effort to reduce inequalities and particularly opportunity inequalities. This can only be achieved by tapping into Capitalist Greed.

So when you lift that glass of Champagne to ring in the new  year  ( 110,000,000 bottles world-wide) you toast should be  ” Here to the future World a place we are proud of and willing to share with all.”

When we experience a life changing event the universe gives us a peek to who we are and what we are made of.

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WordPress

18 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on WordPress

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Wordpress, WORLD LEADER

WORD PRESS IS LACKING ON INGREDIENT TO MAKE IT A WORLD LEADER

And that is.

INSTANT TRANSLATION:

TO ENABLE IT USERS TO CONVERT THEIR POSTS AND COMMENTS INTO THE LANGUAGES OF THE WORLD.

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MY CHRISTMAS CARD 2014 – TO ALL WORLD ELDERS.

17 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on MY CHRISTMAS CARD 2014 – TO ALL WORLD ELDERS.

Xmas WallpapersFrom space, we see a small and fragile ball.

All nations have a role to play in changing trends, and in righting an international economic system that increases rather than decreases inequality,.

There are no military solutions to ‘environmental insecurity’.

We’ve never been on a planet with no Arctic ice.

Changes in climate may trigger transformations that are simply not reversible within our lifetimes.

The only way that a 2015 agreement can achieve a 2-degree goal is to shut down the whole global economy.

National and international law is being rapidly outdistanced by the accelerating pace OF GREED.

GET REAL AND PASS A RESOLUTION PLACING AN 1% AID COMMISSION ON ALL

– HIGH FREQUENCY STOCK EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS

– FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS OVER $ 20,000

– SOVEREIGNTY WEALTH ACQUISITIONS.

MAY THE BLESSINGS OF ALL GODS BE ON YOU.

In the short-term,

If you can make it in the economic interests of people to do the right thing HAPPY CHRISTMAS.

 

FEEL FREE TO PASS IT ON.

 

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IS DEMOCRACIES OUTDATED AND DYSFUNCTIONAL ?

16 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on IS DEMOCRACIES OUTDATED AND DYSFUNCTIONAL ?

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Democracy, FOUNDATIONS /FORUM THINK TANKS, Globalization, Government

 

As far as I know I have written on this subject before.

Although Democracy may be a universal aspiration it is a culturally rooted practice.

Perhaps it time to recognize that its aspirations (especially presented by American Democracy which is for sale by lobbyists and donors) is not an expression of free speech and is causing extremism.

Here is short overview at where we at.

The Euro was introduced by technocrats in 1999 only two countries held referendums Sweden and Denmark both rejected it.

Italy and Greece have replaced democratically elected leaders with technocrats.

The European Parliament is both ignored and despised. It is a breeding ground for extreme parties such as Marine Le Pen’s National Front in France, Golden Dawn in Greece ( A Nazi Party) U KIP in England, a Raciest party hiding behind the very word Democracy.  There are plenty of other examples.

Democracy is clearly suffering from serious structural problems which can be seen in its institutions that are meant to provide models for new democracies.

It has been infiltrated by big business money with voters becoming if not all ready disenfranchised.

Globalisation is and has changed national politics.

More and more power is surrendered to trade and financial flows resulting is Manifesto promises not been kept. Not surprising.

Single countries can not deal with Climate Change never mind micro powers within their boundaries which are disrupting traditional politics. (NGO’S , brake away’s such as Catalans, Scots, city mayors etc.)

The Internet is making it easier to organise and agitate while people are vetoing on reality TV. With a click of a mouse you can support a petition.

Elections are no longer the biggest challenge to Democracy the deficits are.

France and Italy have not balanced their budgets for more than thirty years.

England and America can only watch as their debt clock tick fast and faster fostering unsustainable. While Sovereign Wealth funds compete for limited resources world-wide.

In the mean time Western population are getting older and more expensive creating a future between inherited entitlements and future investment.

World wide membership of political parties is falling. (1% now compared to 20% in 1950 in England.) More than half of the votes in Europe have no trust in their Governments. 62% of English votes consider there politicians to be liars. A quarter of the votes in Italy recently voted for a party founded by a comedian. In Iceland they voted in the Best Party to run the Reykjavik’s city council a party that openly proclaimed itself to be corrupt.

Across the water President Obama can even pass a budget, paralysed by 9/11, rogue regimes and Jihadists he has no choice but to swallow the ISSI Pill and look on while Mr Putin calls the Worlds bluff.

Not good reading any of it.

So the questions is what can be done.  Here a few suggestions.

  1. Change the vote system to reflect the people and not Majoritarianism.
  2. Put limits on the power of Governments, by written constitutions that reflect the rights and protects individual rights.
  3. Stop Corruption by Lobbyists.
  4. Up date our world Organisations.
  5. Name all donors to Political parties.
  6. Stop handing or selling off resources to profit.
  7. Introduce Fiscal legal rules to balance the budget.
  8. Transparency.
  9. Introduce e Democracy to create direct democracy where the Government is obliged to consider any citizens initiative that attracts 50,000 signatures.
  10. Cap Greed ( See previous Posts)

Democracy has always been a powerful but it has always been imperfect due to human creativity and perversity. It will remain so till we remind our leaders that they only borrow power.

With the state of the world and where it is going we are already in need of bright ideas. 

 

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THE BEADY EYE. Did September 11th 2001 put a lasting dent in civil liberties? Welcome to Legal Torture. ( This post is from an unknown quest writer)

15 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

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Torture

178895728

rsz_164073814

 

As we all know Torture comes in many forms. Is sleep deprivation torture? Is a prostate exam or a colonoscopy torture? Is going to the dentist torture?

What I want to address here is premeditated torture inflicted on you against your will.

This is a Tortures subject to write on. Forgive the Pun:

How does one approach it without being bias? If you are the bloke on the receiving end it goes without saying that you would say never. If you are the one that has had your love one blown to pieces you more than like to say Yes.

I can envision situations where, as a last resort only, it is probably warranted. The problem is how does one define this threshold of acceptability?

Maybe the acceptance threshold for the application of torture is best defined in a similar manner as justifying going to war.

This is where I think I stand.

Torture cannot be justified because I would not justify torture for myself.

Why?

Because it’s not just the thought of the extreme physical suffering I don’t want to be tortured and I don’t want others to be tortured in the name of ideologies like “the greater good”, or “the ends justify the means”. No amount of lives saved is worth our humanity.

However, people are for the most part constrained by the attitudes of their society and their times. So, what we may hold as immoral in our society may not necessarily be true, but only appears true in our time.

Protection against torture is a universal an non-negotiable human right and its use is prohibited by international law without exceptions.

To date, 144 countries have ratified the Convention against Torture. (The hold-outs include such usual suspects as Sudan, North Korea, Myanmar and Zimbabwe, but also India.) And yet, the UN’s special rapporteur told the Security Council in June, torture remains widespread. Amnesty International noted cases of state-sponsored torture or other inhumane treatment in 102 of the 153 countries included in its 2007 report. The worst offenders were China, Egypt (both of which are parties to the convention), Myanmar and North Korea, along with several African countries. America’s transgressions are trivial by comparison. The worry, argues Kenneth Roth, director of Human Rights Watch, is that when America breaks the rules it encourages others to do the same.

The United Nations Convention Against Torture bans torture of all civilians, combatants, prisoners of war and terrorists alike. This is an unambiguous piece of international law, which forbids the use of torture in all circumstances;

The Geneva Convention bans the use of “violence to life and person, in particular, murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture. It applies to prisoners of war but not to spies or terrorists.

The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights does not approve of torture. “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”

Today 66 per cent of Americans believe torture can be justified — either “always,” “sometimes,” or “rarely.”

In England, torture was outlawed in 1660, and for most of the past 350 years, that seemed to be a final verdict. In 2004 Britain’s Court of Appeal ruled that information acquired through torture was admissible as evidence in court. David Blunkett, then Britain’s home secretary, welcomed the ruling. Although the government “unreservedly” condemned torture.

Torture had been a barbarous relic of the dark ages. But the dark ages are not over.

Could torture ever be justifiably made Legal?

There many who insist that the answer must be an emphatic ‘No’: that if we were to use torture, we would destroy any claim the West might have to moral superiority.

We cannot torture, in other words, because of who we are, we hold ourselves to humane standards of treatment of people—no matter how evil they may be. In other words, it undermines some of the key foundations and values democratic societies rest upon.

In the Middle East, there are fanatics who seem to despise death as much as they despise the West. Their challenge has to be confronted, and it would be fatuous to assume that this can be achieved within the constraints of the Geneva Convention.  ISIS – Al-Qaeda and its Taliban allies are not a states party to the Geneva Conventions. They were not covered by its ban on torture and other maltreatment.

For those who hold that killing is not an absolute moral wrong, ( The Electric Chair for instance ) it is very difficult to see how torture could be an absolute moral wrong, given that killing is sometimes morally worse than torture.

The use of torture in order to protect human rights from terrorist threats leads to the paradox that human rights are violated by their protectors themselves.

The protection of human rights from terrorist threats, and the counterterrorism efforts that follow from it, needs to be in accordance with human rights standards in order to keep their legitimacy.

If the terrorist sees some moral point that we do not in our society, then he cannot be tortured on the presumption of guilt.

Justifying torture in exceptional cases bears the risk of dissolving its moral dam ability and undermines the rule of international law and human rights standards, a very dangerous slippery slope. Those who employ the methods of barbarism to deal with barbarians, themselves become barbarians.

While torture is not an absolute moral wrong in the sense that the evil involved in performing any act of torture is so great as to override any other conceivable set of moral considerations, nevertheless, there are no moral considerations that in the real world have, or ever will, override the moral injunction against torture.

The principle of refraining from torture has always, and will always, trump other morals.

Consider this well-worn real-life example of the five sailors on a raft in the middle of the ocean and without food. Four of them decide to eat the fifth—the cabin boy—in order to survive. This is a case of both murder and cannibalism. Was it morally excusable to kill and eat the boy, given the alternative was the death of all five sailors? Arguably, it was morally excusable and the sailors, although convicted of murder and cannibalism, had their sentence commuted in recognition of this.

Right, I know that the above scenario is not torture but it shows the moral dilemma we face if lives are in stake.

The present-day scenario in favour of legalizing torture is:

What if a bomber had placed timed bombs in public places? If the bomber is captured. Is torture justified to stop the bombs exploding in order to save innocent lives?

This is where it becomes difficult, putting aside morality I think torture would be necessary and justified as I can’t imagine knowing that the bomb could kill not just Innocent bystanders but perhaps near and dear loved ones.

We would not only have the right to use torture. We would have the duty to do so.

Where does that leave me? In favour.  No.

There may well be one-off emergencies in which the use of torture is morally justifiable but there simply are no real or imaginable circumstances in which torture could be morally justified.

We should not look at the justifiably of torture based on our emotions but rather on the “net benefits” gained from torture. E.g. information retrieved from interrogation. Torture is way more effective than other interrogation techniques with the exception of the use of leverages. E.g. threatening to rape/kill their wife and kids if they don’t cooperate. Nobody has the right to deliberately harm another human being with the intention of causing the maximum physical and emotional pain. No, because people will say anything to get the torture to stop, rendering it useless.

The Convention Against Torture only applies to a country’s own soil, which is why torture of prisoners in Guantanamo Bay is legally acceptable.

The concept of autonomy, somebody being in control of their own life, is a major part of our concept of what it is to be free. When you use someone as a means to an end, the way torture uses a terrorist as a means of finding information, you take away from that person’s autonomy. They are no longer ruling themselves, but being used for a gain that is not their own.

Nelson Mandela was famously considered a terrorist by the elite in apartheid South Africa, but he was another man’s freedom fighter.

The terrorist may be right. It is a false assumption to claim that any act of terrorism is necessarily unjust. The terrorist may have a utilitarian calculus of his own, that the benefit of achieving their goal benefits everyone overall and is worth the cost of a number of other people’s lives.

Torture is the ULTIMATE violation of another human being’s basic human rights, and nothing and nobody has the right to violate them. Imagine torture being legally implemented? The USA, one of the most powerful and influential countries in the world, the right to torture for information? Along with genocide, torture is the only crime that every country must punish, no matter who commits it or where.

Different people will have different definitions of morality but we all live within the sanctity of life.

In my opinion, torture can be both justified and unjustified, depending on the situation it can be used on a  judgment call based on the situation at hand to avoid tragedy.

Where do we go from here?

I do not find myself equipped to answer the question. There may well be one-off emergencies in which the use of torture is morally justifiable namely that torture is morally permissible in some cases and on the other hand torturing anyone—however guilty they might be—is never morally justified.

Despite there being too numerous reasons for forbidding torture, both practical and moral, for me, it all comes down to this. Ethics and morality are subjective.
rsz_2004-6-27-la-show-8

 

The CIA that has been responsible for the “extraordinary rendition” of suspects to clandestine prisons in third countries for “enhanced” interrogation practical moral absolutes”

Question is that torture is an absolute moral wrong.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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What makes a good politician?

13 Saturday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on What makes a good politician?

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Career politicians, politician

 

There is no answer to this question as Politics is a word with multiple meanings.

The definition of a “good” politician is therefore highly subjective.

It is therefore very difficult to know whether current cohorts of politicians are the best that society has to offer, and if not, who else might be a better prospect.

The dead giveaway of a political person is when they rarely share information.

Information is power and politics equals power.

” He knows nothing; and he thinks he knows everything. That points clearly to a political career.”― George Bernard Shaw.

So what makes a good Politician ? What makes a good candidate for electoral office?

Is it someone that nails his or hers colors to the mast.

Is it understanding what it takes to represent others.

Is it someone who acts for the greater good of the country,

Is it someone who defends the interests of the constituents who elected him.

Is it someone who has virtues of fair-mindedness, critical trust building, and good gate keeping.

Is it someone who finds peaceful resolutions to conflicts and enhancing the legitimacy of democratic institutions.

Is it someone that allows citizens a maximum of autonomy and self-governance.

Is it someone with Professional experience.

You could go on asking till the lights go out.

I suppose the only all round Politician is a biennial Dictator with the only remaining loaded gun. Flippant answer I know.

So we left with someone with excellent interpersonal skills, who is able to fight for a cause and influence others while also being able to listen to others and negotiate compromises with the powers of communication and persuasion.

Unfortunately these are traits rather than objectively measurable qualities.

Where does this leave us.?

If we focus on management of the economy as the central role of parliaments, rather than thinking about making effective policies across the full policy spectrum, we subscribe to the dominant masculinity model of politics and hence perpetuate the status quo.

Correct me if I am wrong that’s what we got. Career politicians who are disconnected from reality and from their constituents.

These politicians are only concerned with securing their seats in Parliament and gaining power. They aren’t willing to take a stand on certain issues for fear it’ll cost them votes in the next election. Career politicians lose interest in the people who got them into in the first place. They lose sight of the fact that many people are living paycheck-to-paycheck and struggling to make ends meet because of failed policies their very representatives failed to stop. Yet, they end up re-elected because they know that the people are stuck between a rock and a hard place, and must simply resort to voting for the lesser of two evils.

So what we get is a endless war where the weapon of choice is words before breaking promises.

How do we change this?

Rather than elite politics we should open the opportunity to be elected to people from all walks of life by allocating a realistic salary sufficient to the elected individual from our taxes.

Career politicians who run retail politics which is about who you know should be made to stand down for at least two years between terms.  Make them return to the real world, before standing for re-election.

Then you might get a Parliament that represents the people and the country and not the Economy.

The public, simply want someone who can recognize, understand and defend their views.

Everyone benefits when those who represent us are the best
possible people for the job. How are they? Your guess is as good as mine.

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THE BEADY EYE: Here’s a Question. Is it time to redefine what it means to be a Nation. Part Two. ( This post is from unknown quest writer)

12 Friday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE: Here’s a Question. Is it time to redefine what it means to be a Nation. Part Two. ( This post is from unknown quest writer)

 

Part Two:

Right:  In this post lets look at the question from a different angle, and I have to say that there are so many components to this subject it is difficult to stay on one track at a time.

The Statement below confirm the above.

The first democratic government was established in Athens in 490 BCE and we are still embroiled in the same controversies that have raged from the earliest days of the Holy Roman Empire. How much power should the church influence on the state? Where is the balance between personal freedom and interests of the state? How much regulation of religion should government impose?

I think it is reasonable to say that we will all agree that the role of the state has changed profoundly in recent years. So much so that it is insufficient that we simply need to find a new language to describe the changing interface between democracy and collective identity?

National identity has also been weakened and is now just one of a number of significant ways in which people think about themselves.

Why should nationhood be understood as intrinsically tied to hegemonic notions of identity?

Are we all going to end up as Digital Citizen?

The worsening crisis of austerity is coming hand in hand with a collapse in democracy and the erosion of freedoms effecting  the very constitution of our identities, national or otherwise.

As second and third generation of immigrant children are born immigration modifies the political vision of nationhood – citizenship is the last step in the journey from immigrant to identity.

We need to think outside of the state and we need ‘the nation’ to do it.

States have become much more interdependent and are no longer able to regulate political, economic and social processes within their borders, despite a continuing pretense of sovereignty they are driven more and more by their Economies rather than by their people.

This also means that nation-states may constitute a terrain upon which the increasingly autonomous nexus of state and corporate power can be challenged, and some measure of democratic agency reclaimed.

If the nation-state can embody a heterotopic space that permits identification through processes of willed negotiation and division, guaranteeing the possibility of the present to always be changed, then it might still serve as a tool for resistance against states becoming Corporate Bodies driven solely by profit at all costs.

Oil is what drove the industrial revolution and since then the world has already consumed half the available supply on the planet. Potable water is also running out, as are other raw materials. In this scenario a rags to riches story is the icing on a cake that few will actually taste. For those seeking to construct an alternative against the determined pursuit of infinite growth? We need to look into our own religious and national identities to find pathways toward peace and equality in the world.

Sovereignty of nations and Citizenship rights gained now present an impediment for profit-mongering for global business. They are a threat in the path of wresting complete control of fast dwindling resources. Sovereignty Wealth Funds are the glowing example of what is going on.

The ‘New World Order’ under WTO-GATT was launched to ensure that the rich would continue to get richer even as the pie began to crumble.

The destructive power of neoliberal globalization—which confidently pronounced nation-states to be redundant along with the modes of political agency associated with them—now seems not only willfully blind, but recklessly passive and reactive in the face of neoliberalism’s agenda-setting activism.

Nation-states are used by elites as key drivers of neoliberal globalization, often in concert with (rather than in opposition to) transnational structures oand institutions.

To ignore the contestation over what it means to be national, is to play into the hands of those across the political spectrum who, precisely because of the two-faced trickery of the ‘neoliberal nation’, have found themselves abandoning democracy for the imperial illusions of certainty, security and purity.

Ever since 9/11 a new public enemy had to be invented. Islamic jihad stepped up just in time. Overnight, friends became foes and vice versa. The Bin Ladens were partners with George Bush Sr. in an oil company in Texas. Osama Bin armed and abetted by the CIA became a champion jihadi in the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan.

After the defeat of the Soviets, Osama turned against America and soon graduated to the post of the elusive arch enemy, taking care to pop up on videotape a few days before Bush’s precarious re-elections, to guarantee him victory.

In oil rich countries that dared to nationalize, the fatwa was out. So fell Mossadegh in Iran in 1956, Saddam Hussain in Iraq in 2003, and Gaddafi in Libya in 2011.

The coup in Venezuela to displace Hugo Chavez failed but in the Middle East the sectarian conflicts of Islamic jihadis could be used to weaken any nation state.

Today Osama is dead but his Al Quaeda, morphed into ISIS, can still be used in various theaters to serve the interests of America, Saudi Arabia, Israel and their allies, as it was in Libya and now in Syria.

If occasionally they behead some white reporters it only adds to the dread of the jihadi and serves to sell weapons, or buy sovereignty.

In the 20th Century, of the estimated (and this is hardly a firm figure, understated if anything) 120 million people who were killed in wars and war-like acts (terrorism is war, generally upon civilians, by a non nation-state)

So faced with the fluidity of neoliberalism, what role remains for the nation?

These hasty observations of mine fail to acknowledge the continuing role of Capitalism in propping-up invisible forms of state domination and its function as part of a critical bio politics of the world.

It has being my option in other postings that the power of Social Media is going to lead to more integrated forms of urban protest and industrial action to combat the flexibility of neoliberal capitalism: As frustrating as it can be to define, and particularly for those ashamed to belong to a particular nation, ignoring the national as a key political category per se is to fall for a trick that the global citizens of the 1% have exploited in securing their version of globalization.

Take Europe for example.

Here we are all continuing in denying the basic reality that Europe’s tomorrow depends upon how immigrants and their children experience Europe today.

The functioning of the European welfare state depends upon the labor and indeed the civic good will of immigrants—which in Europe often means Muslim immigrants.

The problem for modern states is to reconcile state power and social diversity, so that the relation between the state and the individual can be more direct.  This is what Social Media is capable of achieving.

In the mean time we have  Fundamentalist movements with symbiotic relationship with modernity. They may reject the scientific rationalism of the West, but they cannot escape it. Western civilisation has changed the world. Nothing – including religion – can ever be the same again.

The global modernising forces of technology and commerce are locked in a profound struggle against the backward-looking ethno-religious forces of religion and localised culture (“Jihad”).

Identity within a society provided people with a context that made sense of their day-to-day lives.  The more people manage to have their basic needs met, the more interested they become in actively self-governing themselves.

The birthplace of modern democracy America is systematically being dismantled through a crises of identity that is defining it image in the world.

It recent wars, torture, drones and the continuing existence of Guantanamo Bay all contribute to its present day image.

Because of this America seems unable to collaborating together to stalemate any functional democratic process that could substantially improve people’s lives and move towards a just, peaceful and fear-free future. The very model of how democracy is supposed to work in America is not allowing it to be America again.

There is no argument that our Identities need to be reconfigured, as do our world organisations in order to put peoples first and material wealth second. 

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Here’s a Question. Is it time to redefine what it means to be a nation?

10 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Here’s a Question. Is it time to redefine what it means to be a nation?

Tags

Citizenship., Communities, Community relations, Europeans, global climate change, Globalization, Identity, Immigration, Interculturalism, Multiculturalism, National borders, National identity, Nationhood, Politicians, Population mobility, Sovereignty, transnational relationships, Tribalism, Western economies

This is a vast subject governed by innumerable historical beliefs some of which are set in concrete and blood so I am going to discuss this subject in two parts.

Part One:

If I happen to offend anyone that has lost or might suffer the loss of a love one in defense of their Nation with anything I write in these posts I apologize.

I am not advocating that we should abolish the sense of Nationhood rather that we must look at what it means as there is going to be in the next hundred years a massive remix of people whether we like it or not. 

Population mobility is accelerating and across the globe, people have become far more able and willing to re-locate in search of better employment prospects and a higher standard of living; or increasingly as a lifestyle choice where borders have remained open to them.

The theory of development that has been force-fed into dominant economic discourse all over the world is now contributing as to one of the main reasons we see immigration. With the predictions of climate change in the future this immigration can only increase.

In 2010 there were 214 million international migrants and if they continue to grow in number at the same pace there will be over 400 million by 2050 (IOM 2010).

Forced migration, where people have to move as a result of climate change, conflict and war, threaten to dwarf these numbers.

For the world as a whole at the moment 13% primarily considered themselves as “citizens of the world”, 38% put their Nation-State first, and the larger remainder put local or regional identities first.

There is no getting away from it that Identity is becoming more multi-faceted and whereas multiculturalism has been firmly rooted in racial constructs, ideas about difference has developed in other directions.

Sexual orientation, gender, faith and disability and other aspects of identity are now firmly in the public sphere and contributing to notions of personal identity alongside national identity.

Identity is increasingly complex. As well as the now routine hyphenating of nationality, faith and ethnicity, the consequence of people from different identity groups sharing the same society has also led to the growth of ‘mixed race’ or multiple identities.

This group is now the fastest growing minority in Britain and many other countries.

Inter-marrying, building new virtual networks, and creating real and tangible personal relationships at all levels is currently changing nations from the inside out.  ( What once was Christian will be Muslim. What once was American will be Spanish Mexican, What once was German will to Northern African and so on.)

States – and especially their political elites – have inevitably tried to cling to the idea of clear national boundaries and governance and any suggestions of the loss of sovereignty or the advent political plurality are quickly contested. (For example the recent Resignation of the Israel Government over changing its Constitution to place Jews in a privileged position of citizenship. )

There are now 20 cities with more than 1 million foreign-born people and another 59 cities worldwide with a presence of 100,000 or more foreign-born residents.

These include 11 cities with an immigrant presence of between 500,000 and 1 million people, for example in Argentina, Canada, USA, Russia and Israel (Clark, 2008,).  This is not simply about numerical growth however, migrant communities are also increasingly diverse and this inevitably leads to much greater complexity within nation states, particularly in the Western economies, which are often the target countries for migration.

The extent of population movement is such that all western economies are now characterized by ‘super’ or ‘hyper’ diversity with cities, like London, Stockholm, Toronto, New York and Amsterdam with over 300 language groups.

This is beginning to re-define our notion of multiculturalism which had previously been seen as the then essentially White countries coming to terms with migrants from a limited number of former colonies.  Relationships are now much more complex and community relations are multi-faceted, no longer simply revolving around majority/minority visible distinctions underpinned by distinct sociology-economic positions (Cantle 2012).

The reality is however that national and cosmopolitan identities now also need to sit alongside each other – they are not opposed – something that multiculturalism has never acknowledged.

Governmental responses to date have been ambivalent.

The changing nature of personal identities, with the separate components shaped by increasing diversity in terms of faith, present locality, and ethnicity – as well as an apparently declining sense of nationality is changing what it means to be Irish, English, French, American. Take your choice from Australia to Canada and you finds this taking place.

For the most part, Governments have attempted to reinforce their view of national identity through such measures as the teaching of national history and promoting national citizenship and identity. By steadfastly retaining the pretense of the integrity of national borders and governance, and by attempting to deny the interdependence brought by globalization, they reinforce a fear of ‘others’.

They appear not to want to grasp or lag behind the current reality of multi-faceted identities within their communities and may well find that the new phenomenon of social media will begin to create new transnational relationships which transcend traditional power structures.

Already there is clear evidence of a decline in traditional democratic traditions across Europe, with election turnouts and political party membership in decline. There is also some evidence of the growth of new political movements from the indignados in Spain to that led by the comedian Grillo in Italy and the current lack of trust and disconnection from mainstream parties suggests that these movements could grow still further.

In the UK, along with many other countries, there have been attempts to restrict immigration and to ensure that those immigrants that do come are able to speak the native language and past various tests based on attitudes and knowledge of customs and history (Cantle, 2008).

There has been little by way of any systematic attempt to engage with globalization through intercultural education and to enable people to become more at ease with diversity and globalization

Identity remains promoted on the basis that it is fixed and within boundaries.

Sen, Suggests that conflict and violence are sustained today, no less than the past, by the illusion of a unique identity (Sen, 2006).

He argues that, the world is increasingly divided between religions (or ‘cultures’ or ‘civilizations’), which ignore the relevance of other ways in which people see themselves through class, gender, profession, language, literature, science, music, morals or politics. He challenges ‘the appalling effects of the miniaturization of people’ and the denial of the real possibilities of reasoned choices.

Interculturalism should be part of this response and has been proposed on the basis of a progressive vision (Cantle, 2012) to support the necessary changes, replacing multiculturalism which became completely out of step with this new world order.

The era of transnational relationships, the growth of diasporas, new and pervasive international communications and travel, mean that such policies are no longer tenable. ‘Interculturalism’ can provide a new positive model to mediate change across regions and nations and recognize the multivariate relationships across all aspects of diversity.

When power resides with a global elite, and the economic crisis links our fate across borders, we are, it seems, all ‘citizens of the world. A ‘global village’ mediated through electronic communication.

Globalism, global civil society, global consciousness and cosmopolitanism were to sweep away tribalism of nations to clear the path for a new and better world in which humanity would finally achieve unity and share happiness.

Globalization frees and unites us. Increased freedom of movement, a revolution of communication, the hyper-acceleration of cultural production, have together created a fertile ground for innumerable imagined communities, unrestricted by the limits of geography.

What is now called globalization is only the backlash of an age-old process, constantly fostered by capitalist expansion, which started with the constitution of rival national units, at least in the core of the world economy.

It is very hard to find any trace of this optimistic view of globalization

For me the world economy is evidence of the pervasive ideas of Liberalization, Privatization and Globalization as panacea for all the problems our countries faces today.

World-wide solidarity among workers, disadvantaged and oppressed appears to remain an ideal than a reality and anti-immigrant sentiment is on the rise in the many parts of the world.

The world is certainly globalized and is still globalizing but the old nations and nation-states have not withered away.

If you take Europe it does not exist except as a discursively constructed object of consciousness so it follows that Europeans also do not exist as a people with shared past, other than conflict. Europeaness consists as much in the way of values, interests,and beliefs, modes of justification, etc are mediated and negotiated as in a specific set of identifications. European identity or being European has not seriously undermined the centrality of nationalism in the modern world.

There is little point in contesting the  ‘emptiness’ of so many arguments for global citizenship. It is easier to be a global citizen if you are secure in your rights as a national citizen.

The logic that ‘only if the rich get richer will the poor live better! is a joke.

So why are Nation-states forfeiting their sovereignty in order to support global and regional markets, by selling their natural resources and future infrastructure to Sovereign Wealth Funds. The idea that the Welfare State has failed its citizens is sold through the mechanism of the Public Private Partnership, to pave the way for the take over of public assets by private interests.

The handing over common owned resources by interlinking of rivers, mining projects and disinvestment corroborated by the stock market fly in the face of Nationhood. (see previous Posts) For example in 2007, the total volume of trade by private corporations world over was over $1171 trillion. The sum of the earnings of all countries was a mere $66 trillion, almost twenty times less!

It needs to be understood that the financial power of the multi-nationals’ private business is huge.

The sovereignty of the state is no longer linked to a territory, nor are today’s communication technologies or military strategy, and this dislocation does in fact bring about a crisis in the old European concept of the political Nation.

The nation’ is frequently presented under the banner of Globalization as an outdated inconvenience, a domain of racism and intolerance.

New kinds of national identity are being forged.

A conversion from an ethnic to a multicultural and cosmopolitan community are evolving with alternative forms of belonging. That modernity is almost unthinkable without capitalism (despite any such attempt to render modernity as a democratizing force tied to a conception and experience of time).

Divisions in society are no longer based on citizenship, but rather on economic factors: access to employment, housing conditions and education opportunities.

So is it time for us to redefine the meaning of Nationhood. To rewrite and rethink our individual and collective destinies. Can we turn away from the future of the past and embody the logic of a future to come.

States now need to come to terms with the new circumstances that confront them.

The composition of western societies has become far more dynamic and complex. Ideas about personal and collective identity have inevitably begun to change as a consequence.

While states attempt to assert their relevance in a global age through both multiculturalism and top-down nationalism, new models of identity and strategies of participation need to be developed to deal with the co-existing phenomena of national experience and cosmopolitanism.

We all know that it is all but impossible for races and cultures that have differences going to the root of their immigration to be assimilated into a united whole.

It is my view that a Nation without a written Constitution that enshrines equality across the board can no longer offer Nationhood.

Because the concept of Citizenship and Sovereignty that emerged during the 17th/19th Century have become outdated and remains to this day significantly flawed.

The state remains a very powerful force in the lives of many people and is the most significant unit of democracy in the developed world. For many, being a citizen of a particular state, having absorbed the traditions and cultures, being subject to its laws and economic regulation and taking part in the polity, a sense of belonging is still very evident. This is a key point.

As an elite of politicians, businessmen and media executives literally fly over the great unwashed it is important to recognize that the nation, by now understood as both an antagonistic and unequal grouping as well as the potential for collective sovereignty, really is dead for many of those in positions of global power.

Nationalism will have to develop a new way of comprehending the world.

The answer to all of this will have to wait for the next post.

Why?

Because our Politicians are driven by the economy and not by what their people need to live fulfilled lives.

In the Corporate world Nations only exist in the contested space of conversation. In part two we will address this concept.

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WHERE DO WE GET OUR Thought’s FROM:

08 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on WHERE DO WE GET OUR Thought’s FROM:

Tags

Artificial Intelligence., conceptual thinking, global climate change, positive thinking

Increasingly today, we are being asked to analyze environmental projects or activities whose effects will be spread out over hundreds of years. Prominent examples include: global climate change, radioactive waste disposal, loss of biodiversity, thinning of stratospheric ozone, groundwater pollution, minerals depletion, and many others.

Recently I posted some thoughts on Artificial Intelligence and the changes that technology will bring to our existence.

Now before I go any further perhaps this post should carry a warning that you might end up confused.

WHERE DO WE GET OUR THOUGHT FROM.

Here I am not talking about what frames our thoughts.  Like your present circumstances or your culture, your education, and the like. What I am interested in is exploring the source of thoughts.

You might ask why.  The answer is that there is not much mental shelf space left in the world to tackle its problems as we are all attracted by anything that commands our attention.

So lets hope the following commands your attention.

I suppose the first thought is that Human beings require language in order to become conscious of a thought. Language is indispensable for us in order to get access to thought. On the other hand, language – because of its sensible character – obscures thought (which by itself is insensible).

Perhaps Artificial Intelligence will be able to circumvent the obstacle of language and access concepts and thoughts directly.

Now there is a thought for you.

There are multiple versions of reality science but very few of them address or make comments on the purpose of the universe or the reason for life.

You are today where your thoughts have brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you. – James Allen (author of As a Man Thinketh)

THAT LEADS ME TO THE GREATEST THOUGHT OF ALL:  Creation itself must have been an act of thought.

Long before the Big Bang which is mathematically indescribable there had to be a thought that brought the BIG BANG into consciousness?

From where did it come?  Not the Big Bang, but the thought to create it in the first place.

These things are not explained by science. Consciousness does not come from a combination of chemicals as it is a non-material energy.

So we must ask ourselves just how we can convey a certain piece of information to someone else if we are not able to represent this information to ourselves in conscious thought.

The Big Bang as a single point or particle falls well short of supplying any conceptual thought of what caused it in the first place.

For years, we’ve heard about the power of positive thinking, but without the ability to communication of one’s own thoughts to another which appears to be entirely dependent on representing and recording one’s own thoughts to yourself we can never raise ourselves to the level of specifically conceptual thinking.

If we disregard how thinking occurs in the consciousness of an individual, and attend instead to the true nature of thinking, we shall not be able to equate it with speaking.

Power of thinking denote a special mental capacity.

First, language is used to assist memory, or the representation and recording of one’s own thoughts; and second, it is used as a required vehicle of communication of one’s own thoughts to other people human. Language is needed to develop and/or employ our faculty of reasoning, on the one hand, but at the same time reason has to be presupposed to a certain degree in order for language to be possible.

But then again language is not required to grasp or become aware of thoughts about invisible things – does not by itself imply that the thoughts themselves could not be without language. Like the slips of the tongue, a blush full face, or mere movements of a face muscle, can only too well convey information about the thoughts or attitudes of the conveyor, and even indirectly about what these thoughts and attitudes are about.

Therefore thought depends in certain ways on language, or on symbols in general.

If you consider it we cannot find a convincing reason for the indispensability of language for thought.

However sense-impressions determine almost by themselves the course of our ideas, as is the case in animals.

So is it going to be possible for Artificial Intelligence to invented language without reason? Through symbols that we use to memorize ideas in such a way that we can call them up more or less at will.

So where does that leave us.

Without senses we would never think of them. So does it mean that language constitutes thought, so that the latter could not be without the former?

The power of pure thinking can set the stage for some inspiring change.

O! Just in case you have had a thought don’t blame me.  Shut down the left hemisphere of your brain that controls speech and thought and perhaps you will have discovered Artificial Intelligence.  As positive thinking changes the brain in a physical way, pure thinking can do the same.

 

Let’s have your THOUGHTS.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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people generally discount the future

there are that the universe consists of pure thought

 

 

 

When you understand how the brain works somewhat better, you can use that information to literally enhance your own perspective, broaden your own sense of your capacities and, with that awareness, learn to focus on other things knowing that if you focus on other things consistently you can change what’s there. You can change the way that real estate is used.

”When you understand how the brain works somewhat better, you can use that information to literally enhance your own perspective, broaden your own sense of your capacities and, with that awareness, learn to focus on other things knowing that if you focus on other things consistently you can change what’s there.

You can change the way that real estate is used.”

how to reboot our brains in a positive, pure direction

 

 

 

 

 

Or does it merely mean that we could not become aware of our thoughts or could not grasp them without language?

 

A new perception would let these images sink into darkness and allow others to emerge. without symbols we would scarcely lift ourselves to conceptual thinking.concept is first gained by symbolizing it; without symbols we could not become aware of things that are physically absent or insensible.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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