:. ... Steven Ericsson-Zenith ... .:

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December 27, 2007

2008 Election Advice

I don't vote, never have. Politics is futile.

So my first advice this election year is, forget it. Focus upon something that will really make a difference.

If you really can't run with that, and this will be because you've been conditioned to believe it is important that you behave a certain way during election season, then I have this advice for you. Don't even consider voting based on personality. It makes no difference.

That's not to say you should not vote for the candidate you like intuitively, you should do that - but ignore whatever you hear about the candidate, trust your instinct.

Will this help?

No, but you'll feel better about it.

If you really do have to put some effort into considering which candidate to vote for then the right thing to do is to consider which set of conventions surrounding the candidates that you want to have in place in Washington, because it is the conventions that rule. The individuals are just players that act out the drama, they have no real say in the outcomes of events.

Will THIS help?

No, but at least you were aware of what is really important. Why does this not help? The truth is that the difference between conventions embodied by the candidates and their parties is not substantively different and statistics is on the side of fate.

And here is the really bad news. The winning candidate is already the inevitable consequence of our society, how you vote is going to make no difference what-so-ever.

So what should you do?

Well the one guy in the field that is actually making a difference and really could affect outcomes, because he is actually evangelizing and advocating a change of conventions, AND HE IS NOT RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT, is Al Gore. So if you really want to make a difference election year then stop glorifying bureaucrats and get behind someone like Al Gore and help them to execute their mission.

Does this mean that you will make a difference in this coming election year?

Well, yes, in bit-part way.

If you really want to make a significant difference in the world next year, if you want to improve our society and make our world a better place, then it is better still that you dissent, that you advocate a position that, like Al Gore's, is deeply rooted in a personal mission. You can make a real difference by simple dissent and advocacy - and it really doesn't matter what your position is, just have one; discover or invent one.

Don't worry, you won't be shouting against a crowd of similar advocates because the number of people that will read this blog and actually go off and do something like this is miniscule, if any at all. But if you want to escape the fantasy of election year drama and actually do something that will improve our society and the lot our our fellow citizens then "dissent."

What do I call this philosophy? Well, it is funny that you should ask because it is called "Democracy." It is a philosophy that advocates the right of dissent and a fair hearing, and it has nothing to do with "the vote" or our current system of government. You may have heard of it.

Try it.

December 26, 2007

AlMusic and Life - Alan Watts

Link: YouTube - Music and Life - Alan Watts.

December 24, 2007

Bah! Humbug! No Scrooge.

I don't celebrate Christmas. I haven't celebrated Christmas, despite being raised a Christian, since I left home in my mid-teens. And as I grew up my general attitude toward binge celebration has made me something of an outsider. If one takes the position of an outsider it should not come as a surprise that one is in fact placed on the outside, excluded.

I have not written before about my philosophy on these matters and I do not generally take the time to explain it because, frankly, most people do not want to hear it. But I am moved this week to write about it because on discussing the matter with a close friend he, albeit affectionately, referred to me as "Scrooge."

The implication is, of course, that anyone that does not comply with the social imperatives of Christmas must be mean and hold those things that the season is meant to celebrate as unimportant. Worse, if that person is a parent and denies their children the celebration of Christmas, or some surrogate of it, they are abusers of children or, at least, they deny their children something of the joys of childhood.

Bah! Humbug!

Let's face it, the modern Christmas is still defined by Charles Dickens. The iconic Christmas celebration is the nineteenth century ideal and the cynic views any denial of the Dickensian model as merely excuses for a mean spirit.

Now I confess that my own rejection of Christmas is in some part the response to my own childhood experience of it. It is true that the Christmas I remember from my childhood is fraught with tension, drama and unpleasantness. My parents made Christmas a war zone. Poverty did not allow us to participate in the nineteenth century ideal and its popular conception and expectations led the entire working-class community into which I was born to consumerism, debt and deep feelings of inadequacy. These pressures, frustrations and simple confusions often manifest by the influence of the excessive consumption of cheap alcohol that is, apparently, a necessary part of numbing the English working-class experience.

But you should not believe that my rejection of Christmas celebration is an emotional response to an unhappy childhood. I assure you that is not the case. It is, rather, a rational response.

Nor is it a bitter rejection of the teachings of Jesus. I am sad that my parents felt as they did but today, with the objective distance that time can bring to these matters, I feel that I do understand what they went through and why it was happening. Like most of the working-class, they did not have the education to appreciate their predicament and the peer pressure to accept the Dickensian ideal is and was overwhelming. They certainly did not have the competence to challenge it.

The truth is that despite my natural positivist and existentialist nature I do hold the teachings of Jesus in very high regard. I take these teachings to highlight the importance of compassion, love of friends and family, and the love of our enemies. The latter of these teachings seems to me to be especially important since it is the foundation of forgiveness and tolerance.

I thought this all out in my mid-teens. For me this was a time of deep reflection during which I began considering my life as a priest. It was my dearest wish until my mid-twenties to find some way into ordained priesthood. Ultimately it was a tradentine Catholic priest, Father Morgan, who helped me realize that, in fact, one did not need to become ordained or dress in a priestly garb to have the sensibilities and life of a priest. "Holy men will be born, not shorn from some theological college." I wrote later.

It was in this context that my views toward Christmas celebration came about. I did not reject the binge mass celebration of the Christian ethics because I rejected the teaching of Jesus, rather I rejected that celebration because I embraced those teaching with a new depth and feeling.

I am not going to repeat the cliche recognition that this time of year historically fails to manifest these teachings in the actions of our fellows. I will let your own experience of it speak to that. I will, however, share with you my own recognition.

Firstly, in my own quest, I recognized the value and strength of individuality and independent spirit, of thinking independently, of rejecting what "society" does by convention for the simple sake of it. It seems to me to be laziness to follow and that it is better to live and be free, better to encourage dissent than to encourage others to blindly follow what others do because it is expected.

But in addition to this, if what you celebrate at this time of year has a sensibility deeper than simple indulgence. If what you seek to demonstrate is your personal recognition of your love and compassion for others in fellowship. If you recognize and advocate the value of the extreme forgiveness that comes from loving your enemies, as Jesus taught, then this is not something to celebrate.

If these things are important to you. If, like me, you have a strong and committed autoaesthetic or spirituality, whatever you like to call it, then surely these are things to celebrate in every single day and surely the sincerest form of excess celebrating these things is that which arises spontaneously and from necessity.


December 19, 2007

Fire sale! New Data Available!


Did I mention that the information I have on 25 million members of the UK public includes their banking information? Buy this data today and I'll throw in the additional details of 3 million members of the UK public that have just passed their driving test. The perfect UK demographic for consumer marketing.

How much are you prepared to pay?

This information is guaranteed by the UK government and comes with a free Englishman's castle (which we are apparently simply giving away).

December 14, 2007

Apple - Get a Mac - Watch The TV Ads

Link: Apple - Get a Mac - Watch The TV Ads.

Now you know how I love the Mac advertising campaign - and the new adds about Vista users downgrading to XP would be funny if only I wasn't considering downgrading to Tiger :-(