You must have an enemy

Undertoad • Dec 9, 2010 9:41 am
Somewhere deep in our reptile brains, it seems we must have enemies, others we need to destroy or merely hate.

When I was growing up, it was easy; the Russkies were the balance of power, and it was a lot of fun hating them, because they sucked. When the Berlin Wall finally fell, it was strange to find no obvious enemy remaining in the culture; Hollywood returned to the Nazis as the people it was safe to hate on.

For a while it seemed like illegal drug merchants were making a play to be our big enemy but that didn't have much staying power for some reason.

Personally, you must have others you enjoy hating. Many of us enjoy hating the people on the other end of the political spectrum from us. Both sides sometimes get really feisty and sometimes they even wish slow painful deaths on certain politicians or pundits.

What is it with this instinct? Why is it built into us; are we defending ourselves from other tribes, or from dangerous animals that could kill us?
glatt • Dec 9, 2010 9:49 am
It's different. Kill it.
Griff • Dec 9, 2010 9:56 am
On an individual level, I think people can build and progress without an enemy but a civilization needs an enemy to spur progress. We needed Sputnik as a sword over our heads to create the will to go to the moon. Tom Godwin explored the idea in Prison Planet where successive generations of humans were kept focused on progressing by a leader advertising their survival to the enemy Gerns. The problem is that petty politicians know and use this need for short-term gain which often collides with long-term goals.
footfootfoot • Dec 9, 2010 12:22 pm
One of the 16 Buddhist precepts states: "Realize self and other as one; Do not elevate the self and blame others"

Having an enemy is an example of elevating the self by tearing down others. It is rooted in a fundamental misconcept of the self and other as distinct. The ego is extraordinarily powerful and cunning and will stop at nothing to assert and affirm its existence. I suspect, it has to do with survival strategy, hardwire it at the panel so you don't have to worry about replacing batteries or mice chewing through wires. The default is always ON, and on auto repair.

It takes an enormous amount of time, will, desire, and dedication to sit long enough to forget the self even for a moment, much less become adept at it and incorporate it into your everyday life.

For most practitioners (of any religion) I think we "fake it till we make it"
Clodfobble • Dec 9, 2010 1:55 pm
I'm reading (actually listening to) Orson Scott Card's The Worthing Saga right now, and like most of his books it has some pretty lengthy philosophical themes. This one is that without suffering--both emotional and physical--there is no impetus for growth, either as individuals or as a society. If our neighbor has no suffering in his life, then we have nothing to empathize with, and cannot really love him. Great human advances almost never come out of tropical climates where food is plentiful. Perhaps we are hardwired not only to choose an enemy to hate, but to be an enemy to someone who has none.
footfootfoot • Dec 9, 2010 3:07 pm
"[COLOR=black]Hatred:
The gift that keeps on giving.
[/COLOR]"

Let's run it up the flagpole and see who salutes.
Griff • Dec 9, 2010 4:15 pm
footfootfoot;699122 wrote:
"Realize self and other as one; Do not elevate the self and blame others"


footfootfoot;699147 wrote:
"[COLOR=black]Hatred:
The gift that keeps on giving.
[/COLOR]"


[guess]Why do you love anti-democrats?[/who] :)

I can see individuals realizing Buddha nature but for an entire society to do so seems pretty unlikely.
ZenGum • Dec 10, 2010 4:16 am
The following yarn is based on a true historical story, but the names have been omitted because I have forgotten them.

The bishop visits the dieing king.
"Do you forgive your enemies?" asks the bishop.
"I have no enemies" says the King. The bishop smiles, and the King adds: "I've had them all killed."
ZenGum • Dec 10, 2010 4:17 am
Can we take this thread as being cloned already?
ZenGum • Dec 10, 2010 4:20 am
Oh and back on topic, I think that having an enemy is one of the best ways to create a group identity. The unscrupulous and power hungry exploit this.
For individuals, I know the sort of mental state you mean, but it just doesn't appeal to me. There are some individuals I dislike, and some who have pissed me off and needed to be dealt with, but once that is done, I move on and let go. So I have no enemies. And no, I haven't had anyone killed.

Yet.
monster • Dec 10, 2010 10:31 am
Perhaps "the enemy" is all the things you aspire not to be? If you find someone or a group who embodies those "qualities" they become a focus point for your anti-aspirations? Easier to "hate" a named, visualisable object/person/group that a collection of undesirable abstract concepts...
footfootfoot • Dec 10, 2010 12:51 pm
On the other hand, sometimes enemies have all the things you want. But I agree about them becoming the focus point. The beauty of having "the other"
Flint • Dec 10, 2010 1:25 pm
Human brains are wired to regard "us" and "the others."
skysidhe • Dec 10, 2010 3:10 pm
Exactly. There are principles, a standard set, and most importantly who you would invite to a party. [Elle Woods impression]
TheMercenary • Dec 11, 2010 9:43 am
skysidhe;699419 wrote:
Exactly. There are principles, a standard set, and most importantly who you would invite to a party. [Elle Woods impression]
Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer.
skysidhe • Dec 11, 2010 10:21 am
Easy for an Italian mobster to say. I fail at poker face.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 16, 2010 6:33 am
footfootfoot;699374 wrote:
On the other hand, sometimes enemies have all the things you want.
So it's only natural to kill them and take their stuff. :litebulb:
GunMaster357 • Dec 16, 2010 8:27 am
TheMercenary;699477 wrote:
Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer.


24 centuries since Sun Tzu said that... and still true.
Gravdigr • Dec 16, 2010 5:11 pm
Find the book "State of Fear" by Michael Crichton. The story, meh, it's ok. What's worth ten times the story, is the author's eight or nine page theory at the back of the book describing how the gov't tries to keep a handle on us by use of a central fear. The Red Menace. Nukes. Russia. Global warming. North Korea. It's worth the price of the book. A real eye-opener.
TheMercenary • Dec 19, 2010 2:23 pm
Gravdigr;700451 wrote:
Find the book "State of Fear" by Michael Crichton. The story, meh, it's ok. What's worth ten times the story, is the author's eight or nine page theory at the back of the book describing how the gov't tries to keep a handle on us by use of a central fear. The Red Menace. Nukes. Russia. Global warming. North Korea. It's worth the price of the book. A real eye-opener.
Having not read it, I have found through experience that much of that is politically motivated for funding of pet projects through Congress and the chain of dependence from business to politics. It is not the only reason but one of the many. On the other hand there are is a lot of people out there trying to do the right thing to protect us and do the work that is required to do that, regardless of personal risk. We just need to remember that when we speak in generalized terms of how screwed up the military industrial complex works to our benefit as a nation.
SamIam • Dec 20, 2010 11:13 am
I am my enemy's keeper.
footfootfoot • Dec 20, 2010 7:35 pm
Gravdigr;700451 wrote:
Find the book "State of Fear" by Michael Crichton. The story, meh, it's ok. What's worth ten times the story, is the author's eight or nine page theory at the back of the book describing how the gov't tries to keep a handle on us by use of a central fear. The Red Menace. Nukes. Russia. Global warming. North Korea. It's worth the price of the book. A real eye-opener.

See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_of_Nightmares

Part 1/3 (an hour long)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2798679275960015727#
skysidhe • Dec 20, 2010 11:45 pm
No one group of people should be lumped into an all consuming stereotype, and where there is a division in the mind toward a people, and every negative attribute ever conceived branded upon them, that person has categorically demonized them and called them enemy.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 21, 2010 7:23 am
No one group of people should be lumped into an all consuming stereotype...
'Cept them dirty hippies. :haha:
capnhowdy • Dec 29, 2010 9:21 am
xoxoxoBruce;701166 wrote:
'Cept them dirty hippies. :haha:


Yeah. They're ALL taking that pot.
nikole95.7 • Jan 6, 2011 10:23 am
ZenGum;699275 wrote:
Can we take this thread as being cloned already?


For individuals, I know the sort of mental state you mean, but it just doesn't appeal to me. There are some individuals I dislike, and some who have pissed me off and needed to be dealt with, but once that is done, I move on and let go. So I have no enemies. And no, I haven't had anyone killed.
Undertoad • Nov 18, 2019 9:49 pm
But, failing to have an actual enemy, we will always find one - somehow, somewhere.

Our brains are rewarded for having enemies. Identifying the other, and seeing it as deep danger, happens without us knowing it. There was a reason why this was put into us in our evolutionary past; at some point, it was important to our survival. But now, it threatens us every day.

We see that a huge amount of socialization informs the children how to get along with others. Years of repeated experiences and correction are needed. It usually needs to start at a really early age, like at the same time we are learning language. We figure out how our social world works by watching the other people and what they do.

A peaceful civilization is formed in the software of our culture, and it runs against the hardware of our genes. Everything we can possibly do to ensure this peace is very important. But what's needed won't always be obvious, because the instincts are so deep in us that we don't recognize them.
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 18, 2019 10:27 pm
They don't even have to be identified, just having confidence that somewhere out there some person(s) is/are causing me(us) this misfortune.
This relieves me(us) of considering the possibility of having made a mistake or having misunderstood.
Oh, and it's safer, blaming God is a little risky, ya know. ;)
Griff • Nov 19, 2019 7:13 am
I'm going with people who don't like dogs.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 9:18 am
I hate those other bastards over there. Just like any right-thinking American.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 9:40 am
Just change the word brain to ego.

Your brain is a physical tool. Your ego needs conflict and barriers to define it's own boundaries. If you are run by your ego, you think it's you, but.... If you realize that it's only a construct, you don't need edges.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 9:52 am
lumberjim;1041802 wrote:
Just change the word brain to ego.

Your brain is a physical tool. Your ego needs conflict and barriers to define it's own boundaries. If you are run by your ego, you think it's you, but.... If you realize that it's only a construct, you don't need edges.


That sounds good, but the problem is, I am using my brain/ego to analyze it, and my brain/ego says that it has looked into it very carefully and that it's really Those Other Bastards Over There that are the problem.
Undertoad • Nov 19, 2019 10:09 am
I feel like it's so low-level that we'll always find it hard to understand. It will trick us. It's like gay conversion therapy; every technique to suppress it will just come back, maybe even as something else we don't recognize.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 10:18 am
Luce;1041803 wrote:
That sounds good, but the problem is, I am using my brain/ego to analyze it, and my brain/ego says that it has looked into it very carefully and that it's really Those Other Bastards Over There that are the problem.
That's right. You're trying to taste your tongue. See your eyeball with no mirror.

Get below the level of thought. What in you hears the thoughts you think? What is the vessel that holds them?
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 10:58 am
lumberjim;1041805 wrote:
That's right. You're trying to taste your tongue. See your eyeball with no mirror.

Get below the level of thought. What in you hears the thoughts you think? What is the vessel that holds them?


I have been spending my entire life trying to get to the level of thought in the first place. I am a simple man. An I/O card, really. I am a weaponized ape. If I don't have an enemy, I don't actually exist.

The Lakota said that you are judged by the strength of your enemies, and who am I to argue with 4000 years of hunter-gatherers that had all the best enemies?

They also said "the center cannot hold," which was dead nuts on the money, if you just take a look around.

Wait. That last one was Yeats. Still true, though.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 11:30 am
Judged by whom?
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 11:33 am
lumberjim;1041807 wrote:
Judged by whom?


By your other enemies, obviously.

You have basically two choices:

1. Just go with 2 million years of primate programming, or

2. Become a Buddhist monk. Only then your teacher hits you with a stick, and nobody has time for that.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 11:36 am
It is also worth mentioning that the greatest trick ever pulled on people was to get them to view themselves as the enemy.

Examples would be the USA since 1979 and the UK weird Brexit thing.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 3:25 pm
Luce;1041808 wrote:
By your other enemies, obviously.



You have basically two choices:



1. Just go with 2 million years of primate programming, or



2. Become a Buddhist monk. Only then your teacher hits you with a stick, and nobody has time for that.
A bit glib, I would say. Which is fine on a forum where attention spans can be short... But...

3. Recognize your primate urges, but act with compassion.

You don't have to be a monk to have empathy. It's really just a matter of attention. Reduce your walls and don't fear being hurt. It's going to happen. You get better.

My mileage varies, but I try.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 4:28 pm
lumberjim;1041816 wrote:
A bit glib, I would say. Which is fine on a forum where attention spans can be short... But...

3. Recognize your primate urges, but act with compassion.

You don't have to be a monk to have empathy. It's really just a matter of attention. Reduce your walls and don't fear being hurt. It's going to happen. You get better.

My mileage varies, but I try.


Well, how you behave towards your enemies is a different matter than if you have enemies in the first place.
Griff • Nov 19, 2019 4:43 pm
I don't intend to be a shit here but didn't you endorse political violence on another thread? I believe that #devinnunesisanidiot but I'm not calling for his head, his seat is another matter.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 5:18 pm
Griff;1041820 wrote:
I don't intend to be a shit here but didn't you endorse political violence on another thread? I believe that #devinnunesisanidiot but I'm not calling for his head, his seat is another matter.


If people are waving actual swastika flags around, I absolutely endorse violence as the first solution.

But not all of my enemies are outright Nazis, or even bad people. Some people I just don't get along with, and that doesn't call for heaved bricks.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 5:32 pm
you're saying if you were to see a person wearing a swastika armband, violence is your FIRST solution? just to be clear here.
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 5:39 pm
lumberjim;1041823 wrote:
you're saying if you were to see a person wearing a swastika armband, violence is your FIRST solution? just to be clear here.


Yep. You can't let that kind of thing fly.

Karl Popper had something to say about that:

“Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them.


Nazis by definition cannot coexist with people that don't fit their model of what is human. If they could, they would be something else entirely. Nazism is in itself a statement of intent to do violence to people who just want to live their lives.

I will put up with anyone who puts up with everyone else, no matter how much I disagree with them. Nazis and ISIS are the only two groups that I don't feel any need to tolerate on even a provisional basis.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 5:49 pm
so, you would strike without first finding out if they were wearing a costume, or leaving the set of a film, or maybe don't understand what they are projecting.



What kind of arm band do you wear to warn others of the danger they are in if you disagree with their views?
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 5:53 pm
lumberjim;1041829 wrote:
so, you would strike without first finding out if they were wearing a costume, or leaving the set of a film, or maybe don't understand what they are projecting.


If I were at a Halloween party, I would start with the assumption that the person has extremely bad taste, and see how things developed.


What kind of arm band do you wear to warn others of the danger they are in if you disagree with their views?


Given the two groups I mentioned, I don't believe in giving them a warning.

Do you think one is warranted? Both of those groups are pretty odious, and a direct existential danger to everyone around them.
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 6:45 pm
yes, I think a warning is warranted.



hey, good talk, it was informative.
henry quirk • Nov 19, 2019 8:01 pm
Luce wrote:
Given the two groups I mentioned, I don't believe in giving them a warning. Do you think one is warranted? Both of those groups are pretty odious, and a direct existential danger to everyone around them.


As a natural rights libertarian, I absolutely agree: nazis, islamists (along with socialist/commies and thought police) are "direct existential danger(s) to everyone around them".

When one of those jackasses willingly, knowingly, deprives someone of life, liberty, or property, then go to town on 'em (and not one damn second before).
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 8:07 pm
henry quirk;1041841 wrote:
As a natural rights libertarian, I absolutely agree: nazis, islamists (along with socialist/commies and thought police) are "direct existential danger(s) to everyone around them".

When one of those jackasses willingly, knowingly, deprives someone of life, liberty, or property, then go to town on 'em (and not one damn second before).


I didn't say Islamists. I said ISIS.
Gravdigr • Nov 19, 2019 8:11 pm
lumberjim;1041829 wrote:
What kind of arm band do you wear to warn others of the danger they are in if you disagree with their views?


Wh--Wha-

Warn them????:eyebrow:
Gravdigr • Nov 19, 2019 8:12 pm
There can't be no us without a them...
henry quirk • Nov 19, 2019 8:14 pm
Luce;1041843 wrote:
I didn't say Islamists. I said ISIS.


half a dozen of one, six of the other

anywho: kinda missin' my point
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 8:26 pm
henry quirk;1041846 wrote:
half a dozen of one, six of the other

anywho: kinda missin' my point


So you are suggesting that all Muslims are the same as ISIS fanatics?
lumberjim • Nov 19, 2019 8:29 pm
Gravdigr;1041845 wrote:
There can't be no us without a them...



that's wrong.


enemies are like problems. if i solved all your problems and killed all your enemies in a day, you'd invent new problems and create new enemies.



fix your point of view. there are no problems, there are no enemies.


there are situations and other people that are starring in their own realities.


respect them and have peace, or struggle against them and have suffering.


your choice.
henry quirk • Nov 19, 2019 8:31 pm
Luce;1041849 wrote:
So you are suggesting that all Muslims are the same as ISIS fanatics?


nope. muslims and islamists are two different animals.

again: missin' my point (on purpose).
Luce • Nov 19, 2019 8:36 pm
henry quirk;1041854 wrote:
nope. muslims and islamists are two different animals.

again: missin' my point (on purpose).


Not on purpose. It isn't quite clear to me. I made a statement, you added qualifiers for yourself but also put words in my mouth, and now you are saying that I am deliberately missing your point.
henry quirk • Nov 19, 2019 8:53 pm
Luce;1041858 wrote:
Not on purpose. It isn't quite clear to me. I made a statement, you added qualifiers for yourself but also put words in my mouth, and now you are saying that I am deliberately missing your point.


Hey, you wanna go with isis? Okay...

As a natural rights libertarian, I absolutely agree: nazis, ISIS (along with socialist/commies and thought police) are "direct existential danger(s) to everyone around them".

When one of those jackasses willingly, knowingly, deprives someone of life, liberty, or property, then go to town on 'em (and not one damn second before).


I wasn't puttin' words in your mouth; I just see no difference between islamists and isis.

As for my point: don't lay hands on the other guy till he lays hands on you, no matter how odious his thinkin' is.
Undertoad • Nov 19, 2019 9:37 pm
To work hard at identifying the correct enemy, to imagine their evil thinking, to consider the possible attacks, to fantasize about the violence, this all the chimp heritage right here right now

It will be our destruction
sexobon • Nov 19, 2019 10:45 pm
Luce;1041825 wrote:
… I will put up with anyone who puts up with everyone else, no matter how much I disagree with them. Nazis and ISIS are the only two groups that I don't feel any need to tolerate on even a provisional basis.

henry quirk;1041841 wrote:
As a natural rights libertarian, I absolutely agree: nazis, islamists (along with socialist/commies and thought police) are "direct existential danger(s) to everyone around them". ...

Luce;1041843 wrote:
I didn't say Islamists. I said ISIS.

henry quirk;1041846 wrote:
half a dozen of one, six of the other
...

Luce;1041849 wrote:
So you are suggesting that all Muslims are the same as ISIS fanatics?

henry quirk;1041854 wrote:
nope. muslims and islamists are two different animals.

henry quirk;1041860 wrote:
… I wasn't puttin' words in your mouth; I just see no difference between islamists and isis.

(changes in BOLD type mine for continuity)

The definitions can be a slippery slope.

I find it helpful to think of it as the Spectrum of Islam Continuum:

Muslims (have Islam as their religion) > Fundamentalist Muslims/Islamists (have Islam as their religion and politics by peaceful means) > Extreme/Fanatic/Radical Islamists [Extremists] (have Islam as their religion and politics by any means necessary).

Between the terms Muslims and Islamists there's some overlap; but, I don't consider them the same.

Between the terms Islamists and Extremists (like ISIS) there's some overlap; but, I don't consider them the same.

FWIW:

https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/muslims-vs.-islamists

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamism
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 9:28 am
sexobon wrote:
The definitions can be a slippery slope.


True, but kinda beside the (my) point.

Luce wrote:
Given the two groups I mentioned, I don't believe in giving them a warning.

Do you think one is warranted? Both of those groups are pretty odious, and a direct existential danger to everyone around them.


henry quirk wrote:
As for my point: don't lay hands on the other guy till he lays hands on you, no matter how odious his thinkin' is.
Luce • Nov 20, 2019 9:55 am
henry quirk;1041893 wrote:
True, but kinda beside the (my) point.


Okay, I see your point. I just don't agree.
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 10:30 am
Okay, I see your point. I just don't agree.


Really? It's perfectly acceptable to whack the hell outta somebody for 'thought crime'?
Luce • Nov 20, 2019 10:48 am
henry quirk;1041905 wrote:
Really? It's perfectly acceptable to whack the hell outta somebody for 'thought crime'?


Last time we waited for Nazis to behave, they burned Europe down.

And ISIS kinda speaks for itself. Their idea of behaving is to kill a person prior to cutting their head off with a pocket knife.
Undertoad • Nov 20, 2019 10:53 am
You make an excellent and convincing case for more foreign wars.
Luce • Nov 20, 2019 11:00 am
Undertoad;1041908 wrote:
You make an excellent and convincing case for more foreign wars.


Now all I need is for everyone to agree with me, elect me president, and hand me a friendly congress.
Luce • Nov 20, 2019 11:04 am
I mean, in my opinion, we have been in exactly two justifiable wars since the end of the war of 1812, which would be world war two and the Korean war.

On the Iraq thing, our adventures allowed ISIS to become a threat, by creating a power vacuum.
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 11:11 am
Luce wrote:
Last time we waited for Nazis to behave, they burned Europe down.


But we're not talkin' about then, we're talkin' about now; we're not talkin' about an army or government, we're talkin' about some nimrod sportin' a swastika.

And ISIS kinda speaks for itself. Their idea of behaving is to kill a person prior to cutting their head off with a pocket knife.


Okay, you're havin' lunch, at the table next to you a fellow is spoutin' off about his admiration of ISIS and how he plans to join them. You gonna punch him in the head? For bein' stupid?
sexobon • Nov 20, 2019 5:32 pm
You gonna punch him in the head?


Punch him in the head! How crude.

Through the town, we are stalkin'
ISIS recruit, while he's walkin'
A first round kill from the top of a hill
Walking in a sniper wonderland

Or in his dwelling we could plant a time bomb
And we'd set it to go off at twelve
He'd be leaving in a million pieces
When it goes and blows him all to Heh, eh, e...

Later on, we may conspire
Instead to set his place on fire
We'll laugh as he cries
While we burn him alive

Walking in a sniper wonderland
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 5:48 pm
.
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 5:50 pm
sexobon;1041923 wrote:
Punch him in the head! How crude.

Through the town, we are stalkin'
ISIS recruit, while he's walkin'
A first round kill from the top of a hill
Walking in a sniper wonderland

Or in his dwelling we could plant a time bomb
And we'd set it to go off at twelve
He'd be leaving in a million pieces
When it goes and blows him all to Heh, eh, e...

Later on, we may conspire
Instead to set his place on fire
We'll laugh as he cries
While we burn him alive

Walking in a sniper wonderland


:thumbsup:
sexobon • Nov 20, 2019 6:09 pm
For bein' stupid?

plug him after he joins, not before

Either way.

If Allah wills that he be ISIS, he'll survive it.

If he dies, it's because Allah decided he was too stupid to live anyway.
Undertoad • Nov 20, 2019 6:10 pm
"Last time we waited for them to behave" is a case for more foreign intervention. There are power vacuums all over the place, and Nazis of different stripes all over the place.

Kosovo was certainly defensible from that perspective
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 7:14 pm
sexobon;1041929 wrote:
Either way.

If Allah wills that he be ISIS, he'll survive it.

If he dies, it's because Allah decided he was too stupid to live anyway.


HA!
henry quirk • Nov 20, 2019 7:30 pm
Undertoad;1041930 wrote:
"Last time we waited for them to behave" is a case for more foreign intervention. There are power vacuums all over the place, and Nazis of different stripes all over the place.

Kosovo was certainly defensible from that perspective


When we *know a jackhole nation is gunnin' for us or our friends, actin' preemptively can be justfied. When we get all adventuristic that's when we screw up.









*not 'suspect', know...Iggy Rabinowitz: If you know someone is coming to kill you, get up early and go kill him first....know is a high standard and we ought to work hard to meet it, without exception
BigV • Jul 9, 2020 6:22 pm
How about having your heart broken for a little bit today?

Here ya go.

[YOUTUBE]jSwZQ1AzjOg[/YOUTUBE]

From this story on NPR.ORG today. Very, very worthy.

As a school teacher in the small town of Riceville, Iowa, Elliott first conducted the anti-racism experiment on her all-white third-grade classroom, the day after the civil rights leader was killed.

She wanted them to understand what discrimination felt like. Elliott split her students into two groups, based on eye color. She told them that people with brown eyes were superior to those with blue eyes, for reasons she made up. Brown-eyed people, she told the students, are smarter, more civilized and better than blue-eyed people.


She says we're repeating this blue-eyed/brown-eyed experiment every day.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 10, 2020 12:04 am
That experiment is old, I first read about it at least a dozen years ago. Of course it's not an experiment any more, now it's an excellent teaching tool.
Squawk • Jul 31, 2020 12:43 am
I must admit I have hated successive Tory governments here in the UK, and continue to do so.

But I like the quote from the comic strip Pogo:

'We have met the enemy and he is us'

We have a strong tendency to repeat the mistakes of those before us, to blame others rather than ourselves, which reinforces our own sense of normality and self-justification. It is a lot easier to assign some other group as the enemy and offload on them than to deal with our own problems.
footfootfoot • Jul 31, 2020 8:32 am
To inject a humorous angle on this I'll reference Richard Herring (Here's the bit, the first 1:15)


"I chose to live my life by the motto 'My enemy's enemy is my friend.' Unfortunately, as it turns out, my enemy is his own worst enemy. So I have to invite him to barbecues and stuff. It's quite annoying because I don't really like him.


"It's doubly annoying because he lives his life by the motto, 'Keep your friends close but keep your enemies closer.' I'm just helping him out there; it's an annoyance."
Griff • Jul 31, 2020 8:40 am
Ha! Brilliant.