43

The Peaceful Revolution

Eddison Flame

Photo by Tim Marshall on Unsplash

How can we fight back against people who control a vast military, financial, information, and surveillance machine?
Fiona Jenkins, via Off-Guardian

The problem is even worse than you suggest. Not only do they control a vast military, the whole financial apparatus, a massive and invasive system for information indoctrination and narrative control, and a sprawling inescapable system of surveillance, but, in addition to all this, we the people are entirely dependent on their system for our very survival. As it stands right now, there is no safe place in the world for anyone to escape this system. You are absolutely right to wonder, what can we do?

I disagree however with your proposal that a potentially viable solution is the one expressed by Moti Nissani in his article The Al-Sabbah Brigade. Anyway, his solution is not my solution. I will say, however, that his formulation of the problem we are facing is excellent. His analysis of the situation we find ourselves in is very good, and I encourage anyone who doubts the claims that a revolution is necessary to read the piece. I disagree with him mostly, almost exclusively, on his proposed solution to the problems we are facing.

First of all, setting the deeply troubling ethical issues with his proposal aside, consider the practical effects his solution would have. If some group of people started going around assassinating people, the main stream media would absolutely have heyday. The assassins wouldn’t stand a chance against the media firestorm that would surely follow. Not only that, but given the capabilities of the prevailing surveillance state, these individuals would be quickly located, rounded up, and made an example of. This solution simply cannot work.

The failure in his analysis, what leads to his adoption of this violent proposal, is a failure to see the progression that non-violent resistance movements have made over the years. Nissani writes,

Pacifist strategies are sublimely appealing, but they too are doomed to flounder. Jesus of Nazareth relied on them, as did Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King, and all three failed to unseat the villains or improve the human condition. Their appeal to non-violence merely led to their own violent demise. All three, and so many others of our best and brightest, were murdered because they had not seen that their enemies were compassion-less.
The Al-Sabbah Brigade, Moti Nissani

First, none of these three failed to improve the human condition. All of them, at the very least, shifted the Overton window. Even more, each of them inspired movements of peoples in their wake dedicated to principles of non-violence, peace, and brotherly love. While an argument can easily be made that there have been successful attempts to subvert the message of peace these individuals presented, one cannot deny that the principles they presented did indeed multiply and spread throughout the world.

Secondly, crucially, Nissani fails to recognize the progress the ideas of peace have made over the years. Where once a man was quickly and brutally killed for preaching principles of peace, love, and equality among men. Now the ideas these men expressed have become more and more mainstream, up to the point we find ourselves today where the majority of people are convinced that peace is the ideal. It is now accepted as fact, almost without exception, what was revolutionary in the times of Jesus Chris, that every human being is created equal. To suggest there is some “lesser” or “evil” race of people has been thoroughly debunked, and is no longer acceptable in modern discourse.

It is this trend that should give us hope. It is easy to see that progress is being made, even if it seems we are backsliding right now. It is true, the masters of the world are pushing back hard against the principles of peace and equality right now. They would very much like to go back to a time when people accepted their right to rule unquestioningly, but this cannot be. Peace will be established on earth, these evil rulers will eventually fall, this is an absolute certainty.

It is a certainty because it is actually, logically, better for people to live peacefully. The principles that Jesus Christ professed, taking care of the poor and the weak, of cooperation and working together, of being peaceful… These are the better way to live, and when people actually consider it, they recognize it is true. What the rulers have been doing for all these years is lying and covering up these truths. They have been working to cover up this truth because they know that if enough people catch on, then the game is up.

As I argued previously in my article, The Kingdom of Heaven is an Idea, when Jesus Christ prophesied about the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven, he was not talking about the magical appearance of a bunch of buildings falling out of the sky like space ships, he was talking about an idea spreading to enough of the minds of Humankind so that Humankind itself would be transformed. The transformation would take place within the hearts and minds of Humans, and would then manifest in the earth as a new and better form of living. This is the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven. As Jesus put it,

He told them still another parable: “The Kingdom of Heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into about sixty pounds of flour until it worked all through the dough.”
Matthew 13:33

The Kingdom of Heaven is an idea, like yeast spreading through dough, this idea is spreading through the minds of Humankind. When enough people become dedicated to the principles of peace and brotherly love, then the Kingdom of Heaven will come on earth. Then justice will truly be established on earth. This is what we are all waiting for, so this is what we must continue working for, to spread and implement these ideas.

However, supposing you agree with me about what I have said so far, perhaps you will complain that I have not offered much in terms of concrete actions. If I have persuaded you not to become an assassin, I have nonetheless offered very little in the way of a solution to the problems I noted at the beginning of this article, (other than the unsatisfying “spreading and implementing ideas of peace”). I will try to remedy that.

In my mind, the greatest problem we face right now is our absolute dependence on an unfriendly system. Right now people are very weak. Most of us are poor. We are required to work a lot, and we receive just enough pay to survive. Few of us have much of or any social safety net to rely on, which means we are effectively enslaved. Therefore, our first steps to freeing ourselves from this situation is to build a community. We need to network, get connected with other people, and we need to get organized as a group. We can find safety in numbers.

How do we do this? I will propose an algorithm for doing this, but first let me just point out the beauty of using such algorithmic solutions to these problems.

The first notable feature is that algorithms can spread. In fact, because we humans are all so well connected these days, an algorithm can spread really quickly. Think of the way a YouTube video goes viral, in a matter of days or even hours a new video can reach hundreds of millions of people. The same is true of an algorithm. It can go viral and spread to the whole world, practically instantly.

The second amazing thing about these algorithms is that they can be designed with decentralization in mind. They can be made general enough to work in almost any situation or location. Designed properly, they are a simple template, which anyone anywhere can implement. Done properly, their use frees us from typical constraints of organizing a movement. There is no need for explicit designation of leadership or of detailed long term planning. If we design this algorithm right, people should be able to simply start doing it, and in a matter of time a movement should materialize from the ground up.

Finally, before I propose an algorithmic solution to the problem, I want to admit that this may not be the solution, it is simply my first draft attempt at a solution. I hope people will consider this as a starting point which can be modified or improved upon.

Algorithm: Start A Revolution

If it’s Saturday:

  • In the morning, get self and if possible the whole family ready to go to a meeting. Dress appropriately, if the only available meeting space is outside, dress for the weather. Pack lunch, bring extra for others.
  • Go to the local meeting area if one has been established, or to a local park if one has not been established.
  • If you’re the first one there, advertize your presence so others can find you. There are a number of ways to signal to others that this is a meeting place. If you’re really well prepared, maybe you put a sign up. If not, just put a flag, or really any bright colorful object, up high in a tree to get people’s attention, then set up a few chairs beneath it and wait.
  • If no one arrives to the park: Check other local parks. Also check social media. The website Meetup.com could be a powerful tool for organizing meetings.
  • At the park, begin networking. Talk. Let kids go play with kids, if necessary with some parental and teenage supervision, and parents talk with parents. Whoever happens to be there gets to work organizing.
  • Initially people should break up into small discussion groups, groups of 5-10 people, where people discuss issues and potential solutions. Then each discussion group nominates a speaker to take part in a larger group discussion with the whole group. The whole group works to identify problems as well solutions to these problems.
  • Prior to leaving the group decides on future meeting dates and locations. Members collaborate to whatever extent possible. Members work together to form a close-knit organization. People within the group collaborate regularly. This local group becomes a kind of safety net, eventually, hopefully, a tight-knit and reliable community.
  • Finally, once meetings are established locally, the group continues work locally, but also begins to establish ties to other groups in the area. The group nominates representatives to attend other meetings in each area in order to establish an even larger and stronger network. Eventually members from local groups travel further to regional meetings, national meetings, and eventually, hopefully, global meetings.

The whole point of this is to bring people together and to establish a real, useful safety net. The long term goal of this, the ideal outcome, would be the development of a self-reliant and self-sustaining community. That goal will take time. It will almost certainly require people to relocate and to join together in a communal way of life where the community works together to sustainably provide for all its members. However, long before that goal is reached, this community group provides another crucially important function. It is shelter from the storm.

A storm is coming folks. There are a couple of events simultaneously occurring in the world right now. Either of them taken alone would be cause for concern, but together they will certainly create a terrible storm.

First, the global economy is going to collapse, it isn’t certain when, but it is now on the horizon. The “Everything Bubble” as many commentators call it, is about to pop, and when it does there will be an increase in social unrest worldwide. This event alone will make a community safety net worthwhile.

Second, there is also a geopolitical shift taking place, U.S. hegemony is being challenged, and is coming to an end. The leaders of the U.S. however are unwilling to accept this, and they will fight to maintain control. Unfortunately, the only real card they have left to play, their ace in the hole, is their military might, (as their economic might is fading). They will almost certainly attempt to utilize their military might to reestablish global dominance, however, in the actual multi-polar world we now live in, their attempt will be resisted and forcefully. This means war is coming, eventually, and this war will be a major one. This is Another reason a community safety net will be necessary. During the turmoil a war will certainly bring, having people to rely on will be priceless.

Also worth mentioning, it isn’t unrealistic to think that martial law will also eventually be established. Violence will likely be done at home as well as abroad. If there is economic collapse and a war, you can be certain that domestic measures will soon follow for “keeping public order”. This is a third reason you want to have a social safety net established beforehand.

Okay, one last thing to consider: How can we know when to start doing an algorithm? Well, suppose I never publish this article, but I nonetheless start going down to my local park every Saturday, hanging some bright colorful object from a tree there and sitting underneath it, I won’t accomplish anything. Though people may give me some funny looks.

Clearly, until enough people are both aware of this plan as well as willing to try it, doing the plan will be ineffective. However, if I do publish this article, it could go viral. At some point, when some minimum number of people have decided they like it and want to try it, then actually doing it will be effective.

What is this minimum number? I don’t know. I suggest we talk about it. Maybe some intrepid individual could do some formal calculations and try to reason about what kind of social media support is likely necessary before an algorithm might work. Maybe we make an educated guess, and then just try it out and see how it goes. Whatever the case, we can use social media popularity as a useful indicator of the likelihood any algorithm has of succeeding if tested. We can consider this factor, and at some point simply decide, “Okay everybody, on Saturday, let the meetings begin”.

Maybe this algorithm isn’t perfect, maybe it needs revising before enough people want to try it out. The point is, it is a start. This is a basic, first draft framework for how to start organizing ourselves into a resilient network. This is my hopeful first attempt at a plan to help us actively prepare for the troubling times ahead.

Thank you for reading, and God Bless you.

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binra
binra
Feb 11, 2019 7:13 PM

The nature of the problem is still seen as in the ‘world’ and so it is enacted over and over upon the body of the world. Everyone contributes their part to such a ‘script’ – until the mind is released of its own negatively reinforcing feedback loop. Definitions and core beliefs are the living Template of a distorted experience of relations. To ‘sweep out’ the interjection’ of false devotions from the ‘Template’ is to be restored to conscious unified purpose – that is a ‘single idea’ infinitely expressed which is already ‘given’ you in your creation – ie: is innate or inherent to your being. The world you see is the world you share or rather teach and learn. Learning to see truly is learning to look at the mind that makes the world even while dealing with the world. Fighting evil is not the same as standing in true… Read more »

Jo
Jo
Feb 11, 2019 3:27 PM

This is what makes sense to me now today The Fatherhood of God By a study of nature, that is, by trying to understand the laws of cause and effect, which govern all that is happening around us, we recognise that there is a creative force in the universe. This force, or energy, not only created the whole universe but life itself in its many forms and is continuing to create today, creating, not from nothing, but of itself, and the effects of this eternal creation can be seen around us today, even in the farthest reaches of outer space, as has been shown in its astounding grandeur by the remarkable photographs taken through the medium of the Hubble telescope. This leads us to acknowledge that God, the Creative Force, manifests directly or indirectly in all things. We know this power as God and, as we are a part of… Read more »

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 11, 2019 7:35 PM
Reply to  Jo

Jo, reminds me of Spinoza: viewing God from outside ourselves (cause and effect) as well as from inside ourselves (conscience). Two new ideas in philosophy / physics since Spinoza / Newton are: 1). Evolution, not only of creatures but of the entire physical (and spiritual?) Universe — Goethe, Hegel, Darwin, modern Cosmology. 2). Quantum theory: Matter as information, blurring the difference between Matter and Mind. “Because we all come from the same universal Life source we are, in effect, one large family.” I heard a molecular biologist give a Keynote Speech on this topic. Our large family includes not only our cousins the chimps but our ancestors the microbes.Or, as St.Francis was fond of saying, “My brother the Ass”. He said Life on Earth is not so much a family as one giant living organism. Reminded me of the Sanskrit quotation by Schopenhauer: “Whatever thou seest, Tat twam asi (That… Read more »

Jo
Jo
Feb 12, 2019 11:15 AM
Reply to  vexarb

Cheers for the thoughts!

Jo
Jo
Feb 12, 2019 11:23 AM
Reply to  vexarb
John
John
Feb 11, 2019 9:11 AM

Violence works peace doesn’t. Theirs a reason the elite push Gandhi on us and hate on the likes of Guevara and Castro etc

dhfabian
dhfabian
Feb 10, 2019 11:52 PM

It is correct to say that for many of us, some ideas presented here (perhaps especially in the comments section) could just as well be from another planet. “Peaceful revolution” is a term used in the 1970s to mean, “passive assimilation.” “If you want a revolution, get a protest permit and meet in the designation protest zone where, within the limitations of these guidelines, you may express your views.” There, we gather to have deep theoretical political discussions that, in the end, have no connection with everyday realities. From there, we leap to the notions of a united push-back against what we can call “the corporate state,” or the “military-industrial complex.” Those in power. We’re way past the point where any of this makes sense.In the US, the bourgeoisie embrace the concept of, “the 1% vs. the 99%.” That’s a fantasy.Since the Reagan/Thatcher era, we have been rich vs. middle… Read more »

bevin
bevin
Feb 10, 2019 6:10 PM

” I don’t know where he lives, but there are absolutely loads of societies, clubs, and communities (groups of friends), where we live, open and welcoming to anyone of a similar interest from mother and toddler groups to (think of any common social interest)..” Tony’s right. But why not try joining the local Labour party? It might be dominated by bureaucrats, careerists or Blairites, but the chances are that it isn’t and in any case there will be people who will welcome those who like them, have ideas to contribute to making a better world. Maybe go to your Union meeting, many people are members of Unions but never dream of going to meetings-guess who benefits from that? If that is too much to stomach and you still want to wander around parks looking for like minded folk, at least wear a yellow/orange jacket like the gilets jaunes. And take… Read more »

BigB
BigB
Feb 10, 2019 6:52 PM
Reply to  bevin

Bevin That’s not fair. You are in Canada, if I’m correct? When was the last time you were at a local CLP Meeting? It’s not all Jam and Jerusalem. I’ve offered you my personal experience before …I was ostracised. Plenty of others have had similar experiences: Tony Greenstein is one that can be verified. I’ve still got contacts within the movement. I don’t want to denigrate the entire movement, sufficient to say it’s not necessarily a family social outing either. People are frustrated, a lot of them don’t trust the major political parties. Even the Greens are neoliberal. Where I live, for some strange reason (ley lines?) there is a significant environmental awareness …that mainstream policies can’t cater for. People don’t just require economic growth: they yearn for spiritual growth. The two are incompatible. Capitalism is anti-holism. Only broken people consume what they (often knowingly ) do not need. The… Read more »

milosevic
milosevic
Feb 11, 2019 8:37 AM
Reply to  BigB

don’t forget your pitchfork.

okulo
okulo
Feb 10, 2019 8:46 PM
Reply to  bevin

I remember that in months preceding the Iraq war, at a meeting of our local Stop the War group, somebody said that we should all join the SWP to which somebody else countered that we should all join CND. Furthermore, it was assumed that anybody who did not consider themselves left wing could not oppose war and as the person responsible for the website, I was instructed that I should remove links to all organisations which were not left leaning. Despite considering myself left leaning at the time, I refused. I have been a member of two political parties and each time, my membership has been brief mainly down to three factors. 1). The party line – that as soon as you become a member, you are expected to toe it. If you don’t subscribe to the party line, it is a struggle. If you surrender to it, you are… Read more »

mark
mark
Feb 10, 2019 9:24 PM
Reply to  okulo

Dear Okulo,

I think your experience is general.
Labour has seen a surge of enthusiasm with Jezza’s election, but who would want to wear out any shoe leather for the Blairite filth who make up 80% of the PLP?
I remember when the 2 main parties had memberships of 2 million each. When there were active Tory and Labour clubs in every town. When most working people were in trade unions. When churches and sports clubs and things like amateur dramatic societies were well attended. Most of the churches have been demolished or fallen down. The local cricket club used to get a crowd of 3-4,000. Now it is 150-200. People used to take part. Now they just couldn’t give a t*ss. They can’t be bothered. And you can’t blame them. Maybe they’re right.

okulo
okulo
Feb 11, 2019 12:44 AM
Reply to  mark

General? You make general sound somehow irrelevant. Labour’s membership peaked and is now falling – not unlike what happened for the SNP after the Scottish Referendum which saw all but two constituencies return an SNP MP. Now the SNP are being seen for what they really are, an authoritarian party with a bizarre understanding of the word independence. But why would I want to have anything to do with Labour? The best thing about Jeremy Corbyn is that he is anti-EU but he leads a party which is pro-EU and has been forced to toe the party line from the ••••ing top. You lament the demise of British culture yet fail to recognise that you are humming the tune of a Brexiteer. You know, some on the left would call you a Nazi for saying stuff like that! Yes, you have identified why the working class voted to leave the… Read more »

mark
mark
Feb 11, 2019 4:00 AM
Reply to  okulo

The point was about participation, then and now. 2 million Tory party members then v. about 100,000 now, average age 85.

okulo
okulo
Feb 11, 2019 7:16 AM
Reply to  mark

Thanks for your informative reply.

intergenerationaltrauma
intergenerationaltrauma
Feb 10, 2019 4:45 PM

I certainly appreciate the overall sentiments of this article. However, the use of “Christianity” as some example of making the world a better place strikes me as patently absurd. I won’t be a buzz kill by pointing out the specifics of an almost endless list of genocides, slavery, torture and mayhem carried out by Mother Church and her various Protestant permutations over the centuries, but I dare say no other philosophic or religious doctrine in human history has been used to justify as much mayhem as Christianity based on “Christ’s teachings,” no matter how twisted those might have become. So why not speak of the “values” that might bind us as human beings going forward, rather than turning to any of the Bronze Age patriarchal invisible sky god religions. I dare say it is “because of” Judism, Islam and Christianity, these three interrelated myth systems from the Bronze Age that… Read more »

techno
techno
Feb 10, 2019 8:42 PM

Oh please. Yes, Christianity has had its bloodthirsty moments (A LOT of them) but seriously, what other culture has so enthusiastically supported scientific learning, campaigned for the abolition of human slavery, raised living standards for the average person beyond any utopian schemer of just 200 years ago. In my heritage, the Lutheran State churches of the Nordic countries helped turn Vikings into Scandinavians—who have created easily the most advanced social orders on earth. I was born into a Lutheran parsonage and was educated by Mennonites. Nothing you say applies to me. I no longer attend devout observances and I most certainly do not believe the unbelievable, but I do still celebrate the Mennonites who have been pacifists since 1534 (I spent two years as a surgical orderly as my punishment for opposing the Vietnam War). As someone who was taught that “continuous revelation” included the discoveries of science—a teaching that… Read more »

mark
mark
Feb 11, 2019 12:31 AM
Reply to  techno

“Christianity has enthusiastically supported scientific learning….” Tell that one to Galileo. “campaigned for the abolition of slavery…..” Tell that one to the 100 million exterminated American natives, enslaved and then slaughtered, the greatest genocide in history, “for the glory of God.” “raised living standards….” Scientific knowledge and human progress were contingent upon ditching absurd bloodthirsty dogma and superstition. Celebrate the flat earth Mennonites as much as you like – so long as nobody else has to. Celebrate ignorance, superstition, dogma and backwardness and the evil they bring as much as you like. The progress that has been made is in spite of religious superstition, not because of it. Look at any of the holy texts, Bible, Koran and Talmud, peddled by Christians, Moslems and Jews, and ask how their absurd and vile content can possibly be a model for humans to live by. They are all a blatant enthusiastic celebration… Read more »

techno
techno
Feb 11, 2019 6:05 AM
Reply to  mark

Galileo?? I’m Protestant so don’t blame that craziness on us. In fact, I would challenge you to name one scientist that has ever been persecuted by us.

Texts. I came from a faith that declared fundamentalism to be a “theological error” in the 1940s. I would happily see that idea spread to all the other fields where fundamentalism has destroyed intellectual thought—most especially law and economics.

Flat earth Mennonites. What the hell are you talking about? The Mennonites I knew flew airplanes and owned ham radios (back in the 50s and 60s.) 1/3 of my grade school class wound up with PhDs.

Ditch your hate-filled ignorance and do some research.

mark
mark
Feb 12, 2019 9:23 PM
Reply to  techno

Whether it was the good Catholic boys like Cortes and Pizarro and their clergy in the south, or the good cheerless Protestant hypocrite boys further north, it didn’t make an awful lot of difference to the hapless Redskins.

intergenerationaltrauma
intergenerationaltrauma
Feb 11, 2019 2:03 AM
Reply to  techno

techno – Wow, seems like I touched a nerve there – eh. 500+ years of the Holy Inquisition, centuries of chattel slavery, the absolute genocide of indigenous peoples around the globe while we white Christians stole everything that wasn’t nailed down, the witch burnings, and two world wars last century fought primarily by Christian nations seems like a rather solid block of historical evidence in my book. How is it that a simple honest discussion of European christian culture and it’s colonies about the globe evokes such massive denial in people who claim “scientific” enlightenment? The world has yet to shake the yoke of the primarily christian Western nations which continue to pillage Africa, Latin America and Asia at every possible opportunity. We may have moved on from earlier colonial rationalizations such as – “saving souls” and bringing “civilization” to the “lesser races,” but the mayhem from Western “christian” nations… Read more »

techno
techno
Feb 11, 2019 6:15 AM

Man! are you confused. Income disparities are most certainly NOT the fault of Christianity—the religion of the slaves of the Roman Empire. Try to name any societies more egalitarian than the ones created by the Lutherans. This holds trues not only for Scandinavia, but the states in USA where we dominate.

And do NOT blame the Inquisition on us Protestants. We were the TARGETS of that madness, after all.

I’m done here. As my mother would say, “Never debate fools—they will only drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience.”

mark
mark
Feb 12, 2019 2:42 AM
Reply to  techno

Whitewash your bloodthirsty religion as much as you like, just so long as it makes you happy.

Jen
Jen
Feb 11, 2019 5:11 AM
Reply to  techno

It’s my understanding that in Norway at least, the trade union movement was one of the major (if not the major) forces in raising living standards and forcing the elite in that country to share its wealth. During the 1930s and early 1940s, when much of Europe fell under the spell of fascism, even Norway was not immune: none other than Vidkun Quisling planned to sweep away parliamentary democracy and put the country under a fascist dictatorship. George Lakey, “Did the Norwegians Have a Revolution?” (May 2012) https://www.commondreams.org/views/2012/05/17/did-norwegians-have-revolution I do not know if other Scandinavian nations and Finland had similar experiences as Norway. I am aware that Sweden had a eugenics policy that lasted some forty years from 1935 to 1975, during which time over 60,000 people (the vast majority of them women) were subjected to compulsory sterilisation on the grounds of genetic or mental inferiority. People suffering from mental… Read more »

crank
crank
Feb 10, 2019 3:16 PM

What Gandhi really said about violence and non-violence: ‘Though violence is not lawful, when it is offered in self defence, or the defence of the defenceless, it is an act of bravery far better than cowardly submission. The latter befits neither man nor woman.’ twitter.com/davidgraeber/status/823207490263384066 ‘Jesus was so filled with anger at the desecration of the holy place that he took some cords and wove them into a small whip. He ran about, knocking over the tables of the money changers, spilling coins on the ground. He drove the exchangers out of the area, along with the men selling pigeons and cattle. He also prevented people from using the court as a shortcut. As he cleansed the Temple of greed and profit, Jesus quoted from Isaiah 56:7: “My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you make it a den of robbers.” (Matthew 21:13)’ ……….. ‘Martin Luther King,… Read more »

Denis O'hAichir
Denis O'hAichir
Feb 10, 2019 3:11 PM

I like this article, it’s appeal would be received by the vast majority of suffering and empathetic people, however it may just be that this appeal is what the coming Antichrist will capitalise upon. The pacifist as mentioned have had a profound impact on humanity and will continue to do so.

Loverat
Loverat
Feb 10, 2019 1:20 PM

‘Go to the local meeting area if one has been established, or to a local park if one has not been established. If you’re the first one there, advertize your presence so others can find you. There are a number of ways to signal to others that this is a meeting place. If you’re really well prepared, maybe you put a sign up. If not, just put a flag, or really any bright colorful object, up high in a tree to get people’s attention, then set up a few chairs beneath it and wait. At the park, begin networking. Talk. Let kids go play with kids, if necessary with some parental and teenage supervision, and parents talk with parents. Whoever happens to be there gets to work organizing’. Just tried this one out in the local park but must admit wasn’t sure if I was talking to a ‘cluster’ of… Read more »

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 10, 2019 12:14 PM

“As it stands right now, there is no safe place in the world for anyone to escape this system…, what can we do?”

Reminds me of a last letter from the ancient world, written by a Graeco Roman who had gone over to the Barbarians. He wrote: “Inside the Empire there is nowhere one can escape the Emperor. But over here, provided one joins in the raids and brings back one’s fair share of loot, they leave you alone.”

Thus Rome fell to German barbarians led by Alaric the Goth. And thus Byzantium’s New Rome fell to Frankish barbarians led by Richard Coeur de Lion.

Where are the Barbarians when you need them? Perhaps Cavafy was right: the Empire has grown dull but there are no more barbarians.

yadvak
yadvak
Feb 10, 2019 4:11 PM
Reply to  vexarb

“Inside the Empire there is nowhere one can escape the Emperor. But over here, provided one joins in the raids and brings back one’s fair share of loot, they leave you alone.”

Who wrote this?

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 11, 2019 8:04 PM
Reply to  yadvak

Yadvak, it comes from “Greek Civilization and Character” by Arnold Toynbee p.92; chapter heading, ‘The Renegade”. Reported by Priscius of Panium who interviewed the Renegade in 448 AD, as part of his diplomatic mission to Attila the Hun from the Roman Government at Constantinople.

BigB
BigB
Feb 10, 2019 10:44 AM

Love the algorithm. Some of us (all of us?) already have networks. I like to think of them as attractor states or ‘basins of attraction’ (and yes, I do know that is a misappropriation of the science – but it is a cool metaphor). But there is no reason not to extend them. There is also the Transition Town network of loose local alliances. If there is not one locally – start one. The revolution starts when good people refuse to be bullied any longer. Assassinations not required. Only peace can bring peace. Peace is the most powerful ‘attractor state’ there is. The post-separatist internationalist state starts in a park nearby. If you are in East Sussex, I might see you there. Peace.

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 10, 2019 12:23 PM
Reply to  BigB

BigB, sounds like the barbarians are already among us, penetrating the Empire as far as East Sussex in a network of loose alliances.

BigB
BigB
Feb 10, 2019 12:46 PM
Reply to  vexarb

Like GCHQ can’t locate me if they wanted to: Forest Row is near where I live. There’s some wierd shit goes on around here, I can tell you – talk about a geo-locational attractor. There’s the world HQ of Scientology (Neil Gaiman used to serve in his parents local shop selling ‘Dianetics’); the world leading Steiner School; and the UK HQ of the Mormons …all within a ten mile radius. We’ve got all sorts, mostly space cadets …but some genuine seekers, trying to find an alternative way out. (It’s not too far from Lewes and Brighton which seem to be geo-locational attractors of their own). It’s not all doom and gloom in the Empire!

BigB
BigB
Feb 10, 2019 12:26 PM
Reply to  BigB

[For the pedantic: social attractor states develop within a system, and when sufficiently formed cause the system to bifurcate into separate sub-systems. Over time – and multiple bifurcation events – the system atomises and dissipates. What I really mean, then, is reverse polarity attractor states – or negentropic basins of attraction – that emerge into systemic autonomous unity (autopoiesis – self-regulating generative systems and nested sub-systems). Social systems are not necessarily entropic (they are open and dissipative – locally negentropic – living). Dualistic conceptualisation is causally socially entropic. Nonduality allows this to be time-independent and reversible. And acausal – subject to the formal causality of casual information exchange (meeting; having a beer and a sandwich!) – and not subject to the material and effective causation of physical force (state ideological and state repressive aparatuses – the Guardian or the paramilitary police!). In other words: the system is more quantum than… Read more »

tonyopmoc
tonyopmoc
Feb 10, 2019 2:31 PM
Reply to  BigB

BigB 99% of people, probably including yourself, wouldn’t have a clue what you are on about. However, I did like some of the article, but think the author needs to get out more. I don’t know where he lives, but there are absolutely loads of societies, clubs, and communities (groups of friends), where we live, open and welcoming to anyone of a similar interest from mother and toddler groups to (think of any common social interest) I’ve never really been into Cults, but I do like the band The Cult. Re where near you live, my wife and I very nearly spent an afternoon and evening at a music event, in the Grounds of the Scientology HQ. If they had allowed camping we definitely would have gone, and still very nearly did, planning to sleep in our car parked in a lane nearby. Of course if we had gone, we… Read more »

BigB
BigB
Feb 10, 2019 8:07 PM
Reply to  tonyopmoc

Tony To be fair, I did two versions – and the second was in brackets (bracketed out of the ordinary language conversation.) To keep is simple: I’m looking to change what we think is possible …even if just for a personal project. The ideas of huge military Frankensteins and nuclear Empires conjures an impossible enemy. But why do we have to define them in their own terms: using their own imposed propagandic definitions? We don’t. When broken down into its quanta – its minimum energy definition – or basic constituent process …there is a little homunculus man hiding behind a curtain of propaganda; projecting a big, scary, image on a screen; talking through amplified media. I won’t bore you with the details. I’m not trying to convince anyone either. I’m just putting my POV. If that catalyses anyones thought, even by opposition, all well and good. As for the technical… Read more »

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 12, 2019 6:47 AM
Reply to  BigB

@BigB: “Why can’t we change the parameters and redefine the way we describe reality?”

That’s interesting; made me realize that I have passively been accepting the 19th century mathematical physicist’s definition of reality: A complex web of thought which intersects with objective events at many points, and can explain some points well enough to make verifiable predictions about the next point of intersection. This 19th century idea is still broadly true — but quantum theory has blurred our idea of a “point”, embarrassed our faith in “predictions”, and begun to erase our distinction between object and subject. Statistics rules, OK?.

“For I looked under the sun and saw, neither is the race always to the swift nor the battle always to the strong, but Time and Chance rule all things”. — Old Testament.

BigB
BigB
Feb 13, 2019 11:00 AM
Reply to  vexarb

The parameters we have determined ourselves by are somewhat out of date. The system is scientific/empiric only when it suits itself. You mention the quantum, but there have been plenty of other parametric inputs into the system that have been and are being challenged. IMO, the system has degenerated into a regime of truth and power – based on ancient, outmoded abstractions and fabrications. The foundational axiom of self and reductive materialist science is the pre-existence of an external objective reality – one that reciprocally confirms both itself and the independent subject (circular causality and subject/object duality). This is the traditional ‘bottom-up’ representational and cognitivist approach. More recent science confirms a transition (in theory) from bottom-up to ‘top-down’ emergence of consciousness. This would infer that spacetime is not an absolute container – but something that emerges with us. Which rather turns science on its head. As for sociology and political-economy… Read more »

eddisonflame
eddisonflame
Feb 10, 2019 3:55 PM
Reply to  BigB

“The post-separatist internationalist state starts in a park nearby. If you are in East Sussex, I might see you there. Peace”

Exciting times ahead, (and I love the name).

Fair dinkum
Fair dinkum
Feb 10, 2019 9:37 AM

‘Life is what happens while we’re busy making other plans’
Spot on John.

Antonym
Antonym
Feb 10, 2019 9:21 AM

The Peaceful Revolution

Finally some Armageddon free article! Then…

A storm is coming folks. There are a couple of events simultaneously occurring in the world right now. Either of them taken alone would be cause for concern, but together they will certainly create a terrible storm.

Are their any non depressed / non scare-mongering writers out there?

Evolution got thus far, who would a few “powerful” and egoistic Homo Sapiens be capable to seriously hamper the next phase & new species?

Virgin Mary
Virgin Mary
Feb 10, 2019 11:03 AM
Reply to  Antonym

There are over 7 billion of us now. No-one is suggesting that Evolution will be halted – but many of us retain the hope of continuity with the human genome.

Darren Allen
Darren Allen
Feb 10, 2019 9:05 AM

The kingdom of heaven is not an idea and certainly not an ‘algorithm’, it is reality itself, ‘spread out over the earth, but you see it not’. Jesus of Nazareth, unlike his Jewish predecessors and Christian followers, profoundly rejected a conceptual basis to life.

See here for more:

http://expressiveegg.org/2017/04/25/christian-nazarene/