Psycho-Babble Politics Thread 815250

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Burt Baccarach

Posted by Sigismund on March 3, 2008, at 1:01:42

In reply to Re: please be sensitive » Sigismund » caraher, posted by Dr. Bob on March 2, 2008, at 17:22:40

The lyrics to his new song are not that great, but the title is.

It is

'Who Are These People?'

 

Re: Burt Baccarach » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 3, 2008, at 9:33:32

In reply to Burt Baccarach, posted by Sigismund on March 3, 2008, at 1:01:42

> The lyrics to his new song are not that great, but the title is.
>
> It is
>
> 'Who Are These People?'

You can't beat that!

I seldom watch the news as I prefer to read it on internet where I have some control and can leave a page when I get annoyed AND I've often wondered that myself, "who the hell are these ****ed people?"
>
>
>
>

 

Re: I don't know how much more I can take!

Posted by fayeroe on March 10, 2008, at 20:46:24

In reply to Re: I don't know how much more I can take!, posted by fayeroe on February 29, 2008, at 14:55:45

The fighting and mudslinging is causing me to wish I could move to somewhere like Mexico. Hide away in a little village and fish for my supper!

 

Re: I don't know how much more I can take! » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 11, 2008, at 17:29:08

In reply to Re: I don't know how much more I can take!, posted by fayeroe on March 10, 2008, at 20:46:24

>The fighting and mudslinging is causing me to wish I could move to somewhere like Mexico. Hide away in a little village and fish for my supper!

I wish I could avoid lots of the modern world entirely.

I have been reading a book (in part) about a wonderfully reactionary Harvard ethnobotanist (R.E. Schultz) who did not accept the result of the American War of Independance and voted for Queen Elizabeth in the US elections, could not abide the Kennedys and so on. It is possible he was so reactionary that he did not accept Christianity, at least his extrememly empathic relations with the American Indian people, interest in their use of plants (particularly ritual use) does suggest that.

The book is...
"One River" by Wade Davis

 

Re: I don't know how much more I can take! » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 11, 2008, at 17:35:17

In reply to Re: I don't know how much more I can take! » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 11, 2008, at 17:29:08


>
> I wish I could avoid lots of the modern world entirely.
>
> I have been reading a book (in part) about a wonderfully reactionary Harvard ethnobotanist (R.E. Schultz) who did not accept the result of the American War of Independance and voted for Queen Elizabeth in the US elections, could not abide the Kennedys and so on. It is possible he was so reactionary that he did not accept Christianity, at least his extrememly empathic relations with the American Indian people, interest in their use of plants (particularly ritual use) does suggest that.
>
> The book is...
> "One River" by Wade Davis

The book sounds very interesting and I will check it out.
Have I told you about how hard the Mormons are working to win over the Navajoes?

Yeah! Huh?

They have mission centers all over and are working hard to convert the Indians away from their traditional beliefs. I find it very off putting! I could go into more detail, but will put that into an e.mail. :-)

 

Since you seem interested » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 11, 2008, at 20:08:19

In reply to Re: I don't know how much more I can take! » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 11, 2008, at 17:35:17

For both the Ika and Kogi the earth is alive. Every mountain sound is an element of a language of the spririt, every object a symbol of other possibilities. Thus a temple becomes a mountain, a cave a womb, a calabash of water the reflection of the sea. The sea is the memory of the Great Mother.

The life spun into being at the beginning of time is a fragile balance, with the equilibrium of the entire universe being completely dependent on the moral, spiritual and ecological integrity of the Elder Brothers. The goal of life is knowledge. Everything else is secondary. Without knowledge there can be no understanding of good and evil, no appreciation of the sacred obligations that human beings have to the earth and the Great Mother. With knowlege comes wisdom and tolerance. [......]

One is called to the priesthood through divination. As soon as a child is born a mama (an enlightened priest) consults the Great Mother by reading the patterns that stones and beads make when they are dropped in water in ceremonial vessels. Those who are chosen are taken from their families as infants and carried high into the mountains to be raised by a mama and his wife. There the child lives a nocturnal life, completely shut away from the sun, forbidden even to know the light of the full moon. For eighteeen years he is never allowed to meet a woman of reproductive age or to experience daylight. He spends his life in the ceremonial house, sleeping by day, waking after sunset to cross in the darkness to the mama's house where he is fed. He eats twice more through the night, once at midnight and again shortly before dawn. His food is prepared only by the mama's wife, and even she may see him only in the darkness. His diet is a simple one: boiled fish and snails, mushrooms, grasshoppers, manioc, squash and white beans. He must never eat salt or foods unknown to his ancestors. Not until puberty is he permitted to eat meat.

The apprenticeship falls into two distinct phases, each lasting nine years and thus mimicking the nine months spent in a mother's womb. During the first years the apprentice is raised as a child of the mama, educated in the mysteries of the world. He learns songs and dances, mythological tales, the secrets of Creation, and the ritual language of the ancients known only to the priests. The second nine years are devoted to higher pursuits and even more esoteric knowledge - the art of divination, techniques of breathing and meditation that lift one into trance, prayers that give voice to the inner spirit. The apprentice learns nothing of the mundane tasks of the world, skills best left to others. But he does learn everything about the Great Mother, the secrets of the sky and the earth, the wonder of life itself in all its manifestations. Because the initiates know only the darkness, they acquire the gift of visions. They become clairvoyant, capable of seeing not only into the future and the past, but through all material illusions of the universe. In trance they can travel through the lands of the dead and into the hearts of the living. Finally the great moment of revelation arives. After having learned for eighteen years of the beauty of the Great Mother, of the delicate balance of life, of the importance of ecological and cosmic harmony, the initiate is ready to shoulder his divine burden. On a clear morning, with the sun rising over the flank of the mountains, he is lead into the light of dawn. Until that moment the world has existed only as a thought. Now for the first time he sees the world as it is, the transcendent beauty of the earth. In an instant everything he has learned is affirmed. Standing at his side, the mama sweeps an arm across the horizon as if to say, 'You see, it is as I told you'.
(P. 57)

 

Re: Since you seem interested » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 11, 2008, at 20:35:25

In reply to Since you seem interested » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 11, 2008, at 20:08:19

I was ready to turn the computer off when the notification of your post came in my mail.

I clicked and came to read it. I didn't expect you to give me so much..thank you, thank you!

Much of what he writes is what I've learned from the Navajo Tribe. I am amazed that alot of it could be spoken to me by an elder at some time and place. (The Choctaws became very "Americanized" very early and I wasn't around the Cherokee tribe until I was grown.)

It is validating for me to learn that someone else, who doesn't live on a reservation, has spent so much time studying the ways of the Indians. Since I am light-skinned, I am viewed as being very eccentric due to my approach to the belief system that I am most comfortable with.

I don't want to sound silly and I know that you will understand me, my being part Indian means that this is more important to me than I had expected.

I am going to read it again and drift off to sleep picturing the dark cave, the womb and the Great Mother. (Did you know that the wife/mother is the spiritual provider for the Navajo tribe? She is the possessor of all of the answers for her family members)

 

Re: Since you seem interested » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 12, 2008, at 2:20:27

In reply to Re: Since you seem interested » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 11, 2008, at 20:35:25

I'm glad you enjoyed it.

I was very moved when I read it, and am not sure why.

There's no question of truth or falsity with these things.

Perhaps I found the belief system, in its way, very life affirming, especially when compared to a world where money and (unjustified) feelings of superiority are all that matters?

 

No

Posted by Sigismund on March 12, 2008, at 2:39:10

In reply to Re: Since you seem interested » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 12, 2008, at 2:20:27

>Perhaps I found the belief system, in its way, very life affirming, especially when compared to a world where money and (unjustified) feelings of superiority are all that matters?

I don't think it's that. It has something to do with the 18 years in the dark and seeing the dawn.

[Clearly (by conventional standards) it is cruel to children. Yet I believe our world we take for granted is impossibly cruel in ways we do not see.]

Maybe that?

 

Re: No » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 12, 2008, at 15:24:57

In reply to No, posted by Sigismund on March 12, 2008, at 2:39:10

> >Perhaps I found the belief system, in its way, very life affirming, especially when compared to a world where money and (unjustified) feelings of superiority are all that matters?
>
> I don't think it's that. It has something to do with the 18 years in the dark and seeing the dawn.
>
> [Clearly (by conventional standards) it is cruel to children. Yet I believe our world we take for granted is impossibly cruel in ways we do not see.]
>
> Maybe that?


The Indians have ceremonies that blow my mind frequently, definitely unconventional, and still I understand the importance of the traditions for them. One instance would be the sun dance. First time I saw that, I almost passed out.

I really loved the thought of the cave/womb development. It shows a committment to their spirituality that I feel can be sadly lacking in the land of televangelists, megachurches and the rest of that ****. (tomorrow i'll tell you how i really feel about organized religion)
>
>

 

Nice work if you can get it

Posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 16:37:58

In reply to Re: No » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 12, 2008, at 15:24:57

Only $40,000 a pop.

Howard at Harvard

From today's paper....

IN THE icy wastes of their remote alpine redoubt, the hard-core Howardistas keep the flame alive. The latest conceit of the ragged band around the camp fire is that the last election was actually a great victory. We are all conservatives now, they cry. Their fancy is that Howard's prime ministership so changed Australia's political, economic and social landscape that conservatism will be the natural order of things forever, whatever tricks the vile Labor socialists might get up to during their temporary grip on power.

The Hermit of Wollstonecraft (or The <uncivil word deleted>, as Alan Ramsey calls him; I am not sure which I like better) was waffling along much the same lines to students at Harvard on Tuesday.

His government had ended the "pointless debate about our identity" and fostered "a rather positive view about Australian history and Australian achievement," he boasted, as self-basting as ever.

"I think our sense of national pride is stronger now than it was in the 1990s, less ambiguous, and that's tremendously important."

There was no "pointless debate about our identity". There was a rational debate about monarchy and republicanism which Howard contrived to derail with his rigged referendum question back in 1999, much to the fury of Malcolm Turnbull, if you remember.

It is true, though, that there is a stronger sense of national pride. I, for one, am proud that fairness and decency have returned to our national affairs after an absence of 11 years.

 

Re: Nice work if you can get it » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 16:57:20

In reply to Nice work if you can get it, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 16:37:58

Wow! That is about all I can come up with after reading your post.

Delusion is in vogue right now.

 

Re: Nice work if you can get it ))Fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:00:48

In reply to Nice work if you can get it, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 16:37:58

This made me laugh

>a rather positive view about Australian history and Australian achievement

Quite in the spirit of the age.

 

National Pride

Posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:03:46

In reply to Re: Nice work if you can get it ))Fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:00:48

Of course no one (not even the bookies) dared hope that he would lose not only government but his own seat in Parliament.

 

And I used to envy Australia.... » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 17:06:31

In reply to National Pride, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:03:46

After all you have kangaroos to distract you from your government.

We have r*dn*cks. With mullets.

 

Re: And I used to envy Australia....

Posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 17:10:35

In reply to And I used to envy Australia.... » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 17:06:31

> After all you have kangaroos to distract you from your government.
>
> We have r*dn*cks. With mullets.

Can I say "hippies"? (no mullets, but strange hair at times) They are very closely related to "r*dn*cks" in my area. What about "alternative lifestyle"?

This could get to be fun, I could probably come up with these for at least an hour.

 

It's been getting better since the election » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:25:24

In reply to And I used to envy Australia.... » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 17:06:31

Has this kangaroo business been in the news?

(There has been something about it here.)

If we (as a country) really came to grips with living here and wanted to do something for the environment, we would eat them. Emus too.

We have some r*dn*cks. Especially around people of Middle-Eastern extraction (this has become a cliche here, and is perhaps with you too).

Our hippies have grown old and retired to places like here.

There are few ferals. They moved out when the property values went up. We are all going beige around here.

BTW, I saw "Crash" last night.
I shall have to watch it again to quite work out what happened.
It made me realise that I'm not used to more than one black person or couple per film.

 

Re: It's been getting better since the election » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 20:43:51

In reply to It's been getting better since the election » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 17:25:24

You got the first good laugh out of me today!

We eat "Bambi" and Gov. Huckabee still eats squirrels.

I don't know why you don't start a trend, open an emu and kangaroo cafe. "Kangaroo Cafe" has a certain catch to it, don't you think?

Actually, around this part of Texas, hippies are considered "fair game". Now in New Mexico, they were the "state bird". I must email you my favourite photo ever of old hippies. I took it in 1986. With my first Nikon, so it is a very, very legitimate photograph. :-)

Politics here are still very poor and very scary. I am still sick of the commercials and appalled that the Democrats are trying to kill one another off and ignoring what they should be doing to the other party. (trying to avoid a PBC)

I just read a book detailing the Andrea Yates story. It was very disturbing. You can google her. I can't go into details here about her case.

My daughter is a delegate in her county for the elections. She is more than excited! Her first big time political scene! I've been active for so long that I am almost jaded. I am going to the candlelight vigil next week on the anniversary of the start of the Iraq "war".

Let me know how Emu tastes. I am guessing it will be like eating a giant chicken!

 

Restaurant? » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 21:25:46

In reply to Re: It's been getting better since the election » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 20:43:51

One idea for a restaurant would be to call it 'The Axis of Evil' and serve up really good food from the region.

Maybe skip Korean food, though I've had some reasonable Korean food too.

 

Re: Restaurant?

Posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 21:34:38

In reply to Restaurant? » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 14, 2008, at 21:25:46

Don't knock Korean food.

Austin has one of the best Korean restaurants that I've eaten in. The very best one was in Lawton, Oklahoma...I know, why are Koreans in Lawton, Oklahoma? We never did ask as we felt that we were really blessed to know the couple, and their children. that owned the cafe. (I don't believe that the food would be high in calories, if that would help Australians order it>)

So, it's settled. Axis of Evil will serve Korean food.

 

Re: Restaurant? » fayeroe

Posted by Sigismund on March 15, 2008, at 3:04:15

In reply to Re: Restaurant?, posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 21:34:38

I had a very nice pancakey type thing in a Korean restaurant in Japan.

Nice and spicey, and with maybe some sake or scotch.

 

Re: Restaurant? » Sigismund

Posted by fayeroe on March 15, 2008, at 9:31:32

In reply to Re: Restaurant? » fayeroe, posted by Sigismund on March 15, 2008, at 3:04:15

> I had a very nice pancakey type thing in a Korean restaurant in Japan.
>
> Nice and spicey, and with maybe some sake or scotch.


when my FIRST husband was in lawschool, we went to someone's house for dinner and they served sake...i gave sake up that night the first time i tasted it. i salute you for drinking it.

i like bulgoki, yakimundo, the vegetables and especially the cucumber kimchee. very, very hot and cool little dish!

talking about another country's food constitutes "politics", does it not?

 

surely a war has begun over food, right?, S. (nm)

Posted by fayeroe on March 15, 2008, at 9:33:57

In reply to Re: Restaurant? » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 15, 2008, at 9:31:32

 

this was all i read... » fayeroe

Posted by karen_kay on March 19, 2008, at 16:57:57

In reply to And I used to envy Australia.... » Sigismund, posted by fayeroe on March 14, 2008, at 17:06:31

*We have r*dn*cks. With mullets.*

that alone made my day. it's a fairly common haircut around town here. my ex used to boast 'i had the first rat tail in my school' even though i would remind him over and over again that it's not a cool thing to tell people! i guess his was even long enough to braid! wowsa! on second thought, maybe it was pretty cool. i'm stil talking about it. though, i guess people would sneak up behind him and yank it real hard. OUCHIE!

you know, i've often found myself saying, in response to 'how should i get my hair cut?', 'just don't get a mullet' (aka sflb pronounced sfelbee)

 

Re: this was all i read... » karen_kay

Posted by fayeroe on March 19, 2008, at 17:11:21

In reply to this was all i read... » fayeroe, posted by karen_kay on March 19, 2008, at 16:57:57

wanna know what i saw one night in the grocery store in Oklahoma?

i had gotten off work, 12:30 a.m., and was picking up some groceries. a man was walking towards me and i did a double take and cut around some racks and followed him. then i cut around some more racks and met him again.

HE HAD ON A MULLET WIG!!!!!!! i could see some gray by his ears that the wig didn't cover! it was light brown and very long and wavy in the back!

MADE my month!!!! (i have always thought about what his reaction was to this tiny thing popping out from the aisles over and over!)


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