Friday, 24 July 2015

GREECE AND THE FUTURE

http://www.vice.com/en_ca/read/coupland-greece-and-the-curse-of-leisure

hi marg
ya enjoyed it too, liked how long it was. unfortunately, by the end of it he had said enough contradictory things to amount to not saying much. and even a casual glance reveals a lot of sentences that just aren't true. there is a one-percent in greece. there are blue-collar workers, lots of them, and there are an educated managerial/professional class that live differently than the workers or the one-percenters. there are academics and students, lots of them too, there are fishermen, farmers with very small farms who work hard, alot of it hand labor, and yes, a prominent large crowd of civil servants with too-good too-early pensions compared to everyone else (including apparently german bankers) who seem to be a drag on the economy. but there are worse problems. think of the drag in the US on the economy (in the form of taxpayers) from the huge costs of the military and its adventures in search of secure oilfields and economic world dominance, with no actual return you can point to except alot of defense jobs paid for by the taxpayers, which adventures also cost the rest of the world alot of money each year. or the cost and human waste of their prison system of mass incarceration (again, at the expense of the taxpayers).

i am a practitioner of enjoying nothing to do and have always practiced alot. i value an undirected walk, an unplanned day and time to think and do whatever it occurs to me at the time i suddenly feeling like doing (like writing to you). so does mr. coupland. and he has made his own employment basically out of nothing anyone else wanted him to do, which i heartily approve. just like he talks about the greeks doing.

but i don't think the greeks here that i know are any better at that than any other north american. and most americans promised a good pension at an early age for doing a basically pretty slack job, whether growing up in greece or here, would probably leap at it. in the end, the greeks are just humans like all the others, influenced by the place they grow up in and conditions there, which for greece were pretty benign in terms of being protected from invasion and fed from the sea (and land) and housed in some pretty spectacular scenery. not like germany, which is not a hedonistic paradise by any stretch, and has a history of invasion and conflict stretching back a millenium, embedded as it is in a land mass of many small competing countries all pushing the edge of technology ever upward. and it is the german and british and french and US banks that encouraged greece to spend borrowed money both as consumers and as a nation, because they had idle capital wanting to make a return and they got good interest rates for lending to the greeks and also exported to them some of their production that the greeks then bought with the borrowed money. (i've got an old blog about that i will try to find.)

in the end, the european banks are going to have to eat alot of greek debt (which contains no calories) because they can afford it and greece can't and greece will still be in the euro zone and will still be a hedonistic paradise. and part of them will still secretly wish they were greek.

well, that turned out to be a bit of a rant. ;-)
cheers
h

hi encora

just doing lunch dishes and realized that both mr coupland and i missed what i consider the main point to take from the present ongoing euro quarrels, namely that prior to the post-world war two era there might easily have been an invasion or even a war over this much debt. the real news to take away from the whole dragged-out saga is that they are still sitting around a table talking (or not talking) and nobody's babies will be dead in the street, even though germany has all the arms and all the economic muscle. and that is huge. and that speaks more to the future of human life on earth than anybody's currency or debt decisions, whatever they decide. because as europe goes so goes america, china, russia and even the middle east (eventually) though they all would vehemently deny it.

happy face ;-)

Friday, 10 July 2015

SKEPTICISM NOT CYNICISM

certain activities the human indulges in are definitely beyond the pay-grade, like elaborate edifices built on a foundation of not having a clue what death is, or what life is either, within that tangled mess of neurons and associated electrons we are herding around the planet, beyond the realization that life is physical, death is physical and even human thought is physical. maybe it's good practice for something, though i am not sure what, unless it is learning to convince others, while we ourselves remain profoundly unconvinced, of things that advantage us at the expense of those others.

Sunday, 5 July 2015

NIGHTHAWKS

the sound of the fireworks surrounds me from all the american islands this fourth of july night 2015, but honestly, it's the sound of the nighthawk behind me that thrills me and warms me. i have waited for them through some silent years and to hear them every night now so abundant is like the resumption of a song one had forgotten was being sung in its too-long pause.

Saturday, 4 July 2015

TO YOU

to marg
on sunday i thought i detected a note of criticism or at least surprise when i was talking about my physical health, your words and body language indicating to me you think it is an obsession or a bit neurotic, something quaint and somehow a deviation from common sense or at least the norm. so i want to talk a bit about that in a more organized way, on paper.

life is physical, human life no less than any other expression of life. death is physical too. your moods are physical, involving chemical outputs triggered by other chemicals triggered by events both external and internal that activate gene expression to influence mental as well as physical activity in addition to your feelings, which are thoughts. those thoughts are physical too. they involve electrons in a brain architecture of neural circuitry embedded in a sensing physical body and all their inputs come through that body's sense organs. all life is embedded in a cosmos that is also physical. there is nothing else. as fine as you can cut it, everything is physical all the way down. we are an animal of earth. we have developed uniquely complex neocortical oversight of brain function which has made us what i would call the thoughtful animal. but all animals have thoughts, all animals remember, all animals modify their behavior over time based on experience (otherwise why even have a memory). we are not unique in kind but only by degree.

if you want to have the best life you personally can have (which will not be identical to others for many inherent reasons) it pays most dividends to attend not to your thoughts, which follow, not to your moods, which follow, not even to your ideas, like the ideas i am proposing here, which also follow as an expression of your physical wellbeing. the first requirement of a human who wants to have useful thoughts and feel happy in mood is to be physically fit, strong, with good oxygenation and endurance. i have read a lot of misguided philosophy and a bit of very misguided religion and have found all of it, with the possible exception of george lakoff, to be more or less spastic groping in the dark morass of unsystematic minds. it seems for some reason rather bleak to most people to think of life as "merely" physical. oh, they of little courage! what would they rather it be? the dreams of a wicked god, whatever that is (probably a bit of undigested spinach).

i am having the best life i can muster by paying attention to the one thing i can control in this vast unplanned cosmic manifestation that is self-aware life. i am taking care of my body and it is going to last a lot longer than some others, because death too is entirely physical. even if you don't believe any of this, that would still not be an argument for letting your body decline below its potential for want of simple focus and an uncluttered understanding. most people are victims of themselves, their own worst enemies. i am trying not to be that. and here you can laugh: i think that makes me, even though unusual, the normal one. ;-)