Sunday, August 16, 2015

Aurelius


Nietzsche...


Global necessity...

In order for a state to be a state, it should provide for the necessities of its individuals. Individuals also have the responsibility to provide for themselves. If the state cannot provide opportunity when you are capable of working, that is the problem of the state. If you cannot work when the opportunity is available, that is the problem of the individual. But, since the state speaks for the many, it has to play the role of benevolent council. While the state may have provided many opportunities to you for work, you may have a disability particular to you. In order for the state to carry its responsibility to provide necessities for its citizens, a fund for disability has to be taken into account. It is absolutely immoral to allow an individual, who could have become injured by chance, to become crushed under a system for the many. If you exploit opportunities provided by the state, within its infrastructure, of course, in the interest of fairness, and even business principle, a tax is in order, or in business terms, a share holder profit. For some reason, business does not want to play its part in this. Private business does not want the state to care for you, the business does not want to care for you because the business does not want to pay to do so. Businesses have to become state entities. Not that the state should own the business, but the businesses should sit on top of revocable charters, that are reviewable. A credible threat. Right now, private business has fractured the world. We should gain control over the necessity of the planet, while maintaining the freedom to create, and profit. But, profit should never come at the expense of global necessity.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

It is because you wont be...

Do you lead your life with a dream, or are you focused on the seemingly practical? If I create a system, that is meant to sustain human kind, but that system falls short of sustaining humans, what do I do? Do I say, "Well, that's good enough.". "This is the way life is, deal with it." The very same people who say, "That's just the way it is.", are the very same people creating a situation of impossibility for change. The very same people who look around and point to that guy over there. I can't change him, so why should I try, when I know that. Well, the system falls short. Things are the way they are, because of people like you who say, "Well, that's the way that it is." If everybody was like the common humanist, filled with hope, and the drive to create an optimum system for ALL men to thrive together, nobody would be saying, "That's just the way it is." We would say, "Things are great, but we can do better."

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Society in the near future...

There will be a time when encryption will become full proof. At that time, the unraveling of the perfect system will take place. Cryptocurrencies will be efficient. The laws that govern us will be voted on by the individual, not by a representative. The education system will be directly linked to labor, and unions will be unnecessary, as the people, globally will be gathered into one voice, electronically, free to express their pleasures and displeasures. The people will submit their own solutions to issues. The integrity of the corporations in the market system will be regulated by charters, subject to threat, by the people. While corporations should compete and create, they will also be accountable to pay attention to the indirect effects of their production, and privatization of power. Also, as robotics build equity in society, a global universal income becomes a conspicuously obvious solution for a sustainable future, both for technological development, and global human necessity.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Alien peace...


True beauty...


Atheism for the clueless Theist....

There's an accusation out there that Atheists are mean spirited people. It's not true. If you bring up the subject of God, yes, they are likely to have no consideration of your feelings on the matter. Often, this is taken as an inherent attribute of the "immoral atheist". In fact, Atheist tend to study A LOT about ethics because they feel responsible for their actions, and don't want to do the wrong thing to others. Religious people look for people to coincide with, indirectly. They pad themselves with people of their values, and pretend that they are good natured, but, how they think of others, or how they act around those who are different is the true measure of who they are. Atheists spend time to really evaluate these relationships. The hostility comes from thousands of years of illegitimate power, effecting the humans on this planet. We are aware of YOUR history, even though you don't seem to be. Don't blame us if that history is shit, and you chose not to notice.
I pulled the graphic below off a religious website. First, morality is partly objective. You can't even understand your reality, without objects, and their being, including yourself. You are a body. Your body is an object, with perceptions. Life is not generated BY your perceptions, which is how religious people always want to see it, for their opportunistic agenda. Your perceptions allow you to view patterns in nature, OUTSIDE yourself, BIGGER than yourself, billions of years OLDER than yourself. Your perception of these things, much larger and older than you is what is subjective. Don't be so ridiculous as to think that since YOU chose to pretend that these things change to the individual, that they actually do change. Your belligerance in seeking the idiots path to hedonism, and your crackhead like desire to preserve that at any cost is what drives you to the conclusion that YOU ARE SPECIAL, and THE UNIVERSE EXISTS FOR YOU......it doesn't! That's how Atheists understand morality. Because we let life BE life. We don't tell it how to be for us.

Belief is illegitimate....

The workplace is the perfect microcosm of meritocracy. If someone is made a lead, but that person is not a hard worker, or effective, yet they are paid more because they are liked, personally, rather than functionally, that is entitlement. It follows that the people who are functionally good workers SHOULD not respect the lead in any real sense. What happens is, believers add their own belief driven paradigm where nothing real matters. All that matters is I sprinkle pixie dust on your shoulders, and I give you the authority to be the lead, even though you don't deserve it functionally. Then, the believers come with pure authoritarianism to enforce their arbitrary appointments. These two different systems are not two sides of the same coin, or qualitatively equivalent in any sense at all. One is illegitimate, belief based power, and one is legitimate, functionally based power. Now, belief has the power of physical contingency, and can cause real physical difference, and, in that sense illegitimate power is just as potent as functional power, BUT power of belief IS illegitimate, and will always be illegitimate and should not be respected in any way, shape or form. It's the difference between giving a loaded gun to a child, or giving it to a trained gun owner. Believers, when the child blows himself or someone else away, will say it's all part of the plan, while the functional power says "You can't give a gun to a baby, idiot."

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Alien annihilation....


A formulaic representation of humanism...

Here's my first attempt to finalize a formulaic representation of humanism, based on a Buddhist style seed that promotes individual growth, rather than caging a person in prohibition.
1. Follow these simple steps:
1. Provide for yourself.
2. Don't block another from providing for themselves.
3. Help the less fortunate.
4. Don't block another from helping the less fortunate.
2. The second step is: Understand, in the simplest sense of morality, and practicality inherent in life itself, it is to your benefit to get along with your neighbor.
3. Understand the 3 apple problem. Know what causes conflict, how justice and fairness emerge, and understand that which we will forever be learning.

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Dissipate corporate culture....

Life in the industrial age, in a country like America is sooooo mundane and repetitive. Monotony is insanity, I'm convinced of that. Humans are born absolutely unique, yet proportionately similar. We desire change, but, we want desirable change. Also, we want desirable change to happen to us, and for us, but we want change. In our mundane lives, we have to seek out the change, at much risk to our livelihoods. It gets to the point where, just to have some change, we actually find ourselves wishing for UNdesirable change, just to have SOME kind of change happen. We wish for a large earthquake, or asteroid. We don't necessarily want anybody hurt, but if society was somehow shaken up, and it generated SOME kind of adventure, at least it seems to us, we would gain our spirit of change back from the great industrial age cleansing of human spirit. Art, music, books, and movies keep us alive. Without entertainment, we would literally go crazy in our industrial age world. You know America, other countries have a social connection to their families, and their neighbors. Their rule of law, medical and schooling may not be up to our standards, but their human spirit, and their social connection is alive and well, while ours, if it comes back at all, will definitely have to be rebuilt in a new age, after our corporate culture is dissipated.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Nanny algorithms...

To study history and philosophy was to understand how to use the past, to project into the future. When technology moved along at a snails pace, planning using the recent past, and even the distant past was a reasonable proposition. Now, as technology permeates society, the more effect it has on our daily lives, the more unpredictable our daily lives become. The governments we live under now are antiquated. We keep marching ahead full speed, and nobody has enough control of the beast to back off, and make an evaluation of the situation. We just keep marching full speed into the future, answering the call of market capital. Pretty soon, we wont be able to even function without nanny algorithms.

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Neighbors....

Basic empathy, and humanism come of a very simple idea. We don't need years of book study to understand it. Pretend there's only two people on the planet earth, who live near each other. I know the other can kill me, and I can kill the other. The other also knows this. Now, we can live in fear of what the other MIGHT do, or we can live without fear, but just with the anxiety of the unknown, but it's just a basic fact of life, that if I communicate with the other, and we find common ground, there is comfort. I know, that since I just brought my neighbor some food the other day, and we sat and talked for two hours, all is good. Of course, there's always the possibility of an anamalous freak out, where my neighbor will become dangerous to me at random, but, ultimately, a friendly equilibreum is practical. It's a NECESSARY mutual agreement between two people who have the ability to annihilate eachother. I know this is bleak. People come together, because they want companionship. They need companionship, but to those who only see life as a quantitative, coincidental coexistence, even for them, the minimum survival practicality is communion.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

The odd humanist.....

So, it seems I might be quite an odd humanist indeed. I totally see how other humanists may see me as odd. I have a formulaic view of humanism, which, I think as far as humanists go that's rare, or non existent. What I'm seeing mostly is appeals to history, and appeals to authority, compiled in heaps of information describing "something" called Humanism. My question is this though, is that simple enough to gain adherents without years of study? It seems like these well studied, pedantic humanists, while on the right track themselves, may not be creating a simple situation for those who don't sit around reading all day. Recently, a friend said I was a reductionist. Something I wasn't sure how to take, but after seeing some others in action, I actually think it's a compliment. I've been able to reduce all the humanist generalities, and categories into a couple simple formulas, and patterns. My goal has always been to simulate Buddhism. Develop a seeding model, rather than a prohibitive cage, like other religions. Humanism has failed to provide a simple set of conditions for the non-bookworm. I hope to move forward with that on this page.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Gambler's fallacy...

The gambler's fallacy, also known as the Monte Carlo
fallacy or the fallacy of the maturity of chances, is
the mistaken belief that, if something happens more
frequently than normal during some period, it will
happen less frequently in the future, or that, if
something happens less frequently than normal
during some period, it will happen more frequently in
the future (presumably as a means of balancing nature).
In situations where what is being observed is truly
random This belief, though appealing to the human mind, is false.

Friday, July 3, 2015

God....

God is the generalization of generalizations. God is everything, and in that everything, is actually nothing. Faith is necessary when attempting to particularize God, because particularizing God is actually a crime. Particularizing an absolute generalization is impossible, so, it must carry the caveat "Just trust me." Annihilate idiosyncratic faith based oppositions to necessity. Annihilate the impossible as possible, God the object. God, as object can only exist, in the way Universe as object exists. Pantheism. The generalization of generalizations shouldn't even have a name. Even religious people understand that. Once you give it a name, you generate an impossible scenario. You have belligerantly used language to objectify, the un-objectifiable. The significance that has had the name God thrown at it is pure power. It reflects magnified back to us the significance we project on to it. It's not conscious. It doesn't care about you. It's not listening to you. It's pure power. Pure significance. We have got to refine what we project, so we can receive in return kalokagothia, and ataraxia.

Racism...

Posts about racism can easily turn into essays for me, so, shortly, let me say, racism is a lot like life, not entirely relative, not entirely known. If I say, "I like Mexican food.", that's a racist comment. Most people don't have a problem with that comment, so they don't consider it racism, because they don't understand exactly what racism is. Racism is basically making judgements good or bad about races of people. So, should we all not talk about different foods we like because it's racist? Saying "I like Mexican food." does promote division believe it or not. But the subject, food, is a benign subject, so we let it go. Ethics works like this. The closer you get to necessity, the stronger the focus becomes on erradicating the division. If I were to say, "Mexican food is terrible.", that judgement of inferiority takes on more power than just a passing "I like Mexican food." Why? Both statements are about food. I believe, in general, people want to get along. So, acknowledging division in praise of something, while still perpetuating racial division, is not even noticed as racism though it is, but, making judgements of inferiority along racial lines is frowned upon, and called "racism" even though it's only half what racism is. Let me cut it off there.....lol

Monday, June 29, 2015

Little emperors....

Not many people know, that America used to issue charters for people to start businesses, which could be revoked if those companies engaged in less than reputable activity. We need to enact this on a global scale. How much control could we have on climate, pollution, and other massive issues of our day if we could just threaten to revoke the charter of the culprits.