Sunday, December 30, 2007

War on Terror

They claim to be fighting terror, but by their actions and by their language all they succeed in doing is furthering it as well as the bleak cynicism that goes with it. The language of threats is now all pervasive, from the right’s constant warnings about terror threats and security threats to the left’s constant warnings about the threat of global warming, environmental degradation and human rights abuses. From all sides in the debate we keep hearing “threats” and the result is an increasingly bitter sense of pessimism among the general public around the world – the elite consistently fails to give them something inspirational to believe in.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Religion and Free-Will

It is truly essential that individuals who choose to believe join a religion by choice upon reaching maturity when they can be counted on to make a rational decision upon such important and life-changing matters. The imposition of a religion and its beliefs upon children not old enough to make this choice and choose their spiritual path for themselves leads to a potentially very damaging process of indoctrination along sectarian lines that is to be discouraged: for it can leave a lifelong scar. Belief must stem from free-will and this is especially crucial if religious violence and sectarian strife is to be combated effectively around the world.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Threats and Fear across the Spectrum

In criticizing the British government’s fixation on Islamic terrorism, former official Richard Mottram merely downplays the terrorist threat only to highlight other threats. The rhetoric of the 21st Century politician is consistently dominated by talk of threats and the language of fear: global warming, terrorism, rogue states, flu pandemics, weapons proliferation and so on. They have raised the ability to scare the public into voting for political parties with uninspiring and unimaginative platforms and leaders to an art form and when they criticize each other it is generally because some take certain threats as being more serious than others. Fortunately, declining voter turnouts show that more and more people are not fooled by politicians whose main point of disagreement is over whether terrorism or global warming represents a greater threat to Western Civilization.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

The Myth of the "Self-Made" Man

"He is a self-made man, and he worships his creator."
- attributed to John Bright, speaking of Benjamin Disraeli

Fame is the peoples’ drug of choice and there is nothing in a society where capitalism reigns supreme that attracts attention more than a story of rags to riches. Millions follow the trends set by the next media icon, the next superstar to catch market attention and public opinion before fading from view to be replaced by yet another. People adore the celebrity, seeing them as the paragon of what is attainable in society - regardless of their actions they are looked up to and everything about them is constantly discussed. The public sees supposedly ordinary men and women rise, seemingly without help, to the heights of fame, luxury and refinement.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Good and Evil

"Injustice is a kind of blasphemy. Nature designed rational beings for each other's sake: to help - not harm - one another, as they deserve. To transgress its will, then, is to blaspheme against the oldest of the gods."
- Marcus Aurelius, The Meditations, Book Nine #1

For a human being, maintaining one's dignity in the face of countless challenges without slipping into alienation is perhaps life's greatest trial. Despite being inherent, dignity can be lost and the human spirit can succumb to lingering malaise and decay. In terms of good and evil it can generally be assumed that dignity represents good and alienation evil though this is a loose definition at best. Alienation is the degradation of ones humanity and while perhaps seemingly benign at first it is the catalyst for all manner of questionable deeds. For the alienated individual is disconnected from humanity, feeling less and less affinity with their fellow human beings. They will increasingly indulge in their desires and obsessions as a means of alleviating the pain of this removal. Excess and imbalance can be considered the root of evil, and alienation the root of excess. Those who obsess over something will inevitably commit questionable and ultimately outright evil deeds that are totally against human morality, such as murder, to satisfy their desires. These can range from an overpowering love of one's country, love of profit and wealth for its own sake, a love of fame and mass adulation, an over zealous love for one's religion and all manner of other examples of obsessive excess. Those who succumb to and come to be defined by their overpowering desires as opposed to their humanity will inevitably suffer moral degradation - Sometimes to shocking degrees.