Monday, April 26, 2010

What is Wrong With Certainty

One thing struck me researching (aka looking it up on Wikipedia) the topic of this world's largest continent - the subject of a future post - and that is the mistake of trading in certainty.

Although conservatives and reactionaries cling to a model of a time and a place that never was, reality swirls around them; confusing and unsettling.

the Left is ritually lambasted for being "impractical" yet the kind of hot blooded, hot headed type who thinks he can go storming off in any direction depending on how 'determined his resolve' and 'sure his purpose' is the very sort of well meaning (perhaps) idiot who embroiled the West in two consecutive costly and never ending wars, to the tune of a herd of Fox network jackasses braying how the Iraq war would all be over in three years.

For that matter, calculated ignorance that allows room for only one interpretation, also contributed to a succession of unwise appointments that systemically and inevitably failed the administration during the noughties.

From immersing myself in Right wing think (which is not unlike plunging into a greasetrap) it is more important to be right than to know the truth. By this I mean that, whereas you or I might start our investigations of religious faith and/or spirituality by going to the services, reading the tracts, speaking to parishioners, a Right wing blogger will typically come in with his or her viewpoint and gather material to support that.

To a degree that is a rational approach to conducting any debate; choose a side and then shore up your position. But the danger always lies in the fact that you personally may not know certain facts in the case and your judgment is in error, in all innocence but wrong anyway. Then there is the altering perspective opened up by changing eras. We discover more and this informs our view of the past as well as the present and future.

Those wanting 'certainty' - or, god help us, 'a return to certainty' - seem to confuse the pride they feel at not being gullible and falling for quackery or nonsense, with a distrust of all things not certain. They cling to the driftwood of a morality that left much unchecked and hidden, comforting themselves that the outward expression of, say, family values, forgives a multitude of sins.

It is only when we confront the fact that the clean cut cowboy of vintage cinema was a confection bearing little resemblance to the real thing, that we can start to see how manufactured their concept of reality is. Even the church is the very den of iniquity it rails against.

There are varying degrees of certainty and much of these are measured in units of time: from the burning up of stars to the splitting of nucleii. What is science fiction to us and to many future generations, is ultimately reality for the planet, which will not last forever. Yes we are the zygotes and embryos, the infants and adolescents of days gone by, and we are the dust of days yet to come. The 'certainty' that we will live and die is offset by an almost infinite accumulation of variables for 'the road not taken'. While we can be sure that some things were beyond our nature, at least at the time, there are other perfectly reasonable courses of action that would have changed us completely.

Suspending the notion of certainty is NOT suspending our belief. Not at all. If anything 'belief' and 'certainty' go hand in hand.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Land sakes

I was heartened to hear on today's news that the Government has reversed its decision to allow foreign ownership of residential property. I was also bemused to hear the Opposition describe this as backflipping and point out that the situation has returned to that which we had under the Howard government. I guess it's all relative as clearly Howard wasn't too precious about foreign ownership of Australian companies or Australian icons. But I certainly do support any initiative to make it more affordable for people to own their own home. And letting greedy foreigners buy it up in no wise helps.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A-freak Afrique

It's amazing how Africa gets treated like a basketcase. It is larger than our southern regions, larger than Europe, the Americas.


It is the cradle of civilisation, our place of origin.

And it is so large and varied - and not easily classified as 'poor' or 'disadvantaged' as the cant runs - it is divided into regions: Eastern Africa, Middle Africa, Northern Africa, Southern Africa and Western Africa.

Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Canary Islands
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Ceuta
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire)
Djibouti
Egypt
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Guinea Bissau
Guinea
Ivory Coast/ Côte d'Ivoire
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Madeira Islands
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mayotte
Melilla
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Nigeria
Réunion
Rwanda


Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha 
São Tomé and Príncipe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
Somaliland
South Africa
Sudan
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zanzibar
Zimbabwe

Thursday, April 08, 2010

China cabinet

Probably thanks to The Epoch Times, I've become fascinated with the bad behaviour of the Chinese government. They really are a bunch of pricks. And the worst thing is that, thanks to underqualified leaders like Bush jr ramping up debt borrowing, and our own Faustian mining deals, we really can't do anything about it.

I've come to the table with this, though, due to an article about them banning _______________ Bob Dylan. I thought communists were supposed to like socially aware performers. Maybe they aren't real communists, just thug opportunists with a murderous talent for keeping the population under control.

Well, as I always say, fuck the Chinese government.