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Monthly Archives: July 2013

Short Note – Malignant Narcissism – From Complaint to Confrontation

05 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Politics, Psychology

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dictators, Erdogan, Mugabe, narcissism, political psychology

U.S. diplomats report that the Prime Minister gets almost all his information from Islamist-leaning newspapers, ignoring the input of his own ministers. The Turkish military and intelligence services no longer share with him some of their reports. He trusts no one completely, surrounding himself with “an iron ring of sycophantic (but contemptuous) advisors.” Despite Erdogan’s macho behavior, he is reportedly terrified of losing his grip on power.

Sassounian, Harut.  “Despite Lavish Public Praise, U.S. is Deeply Troubled by Erdogan.”  Asbarez, July 2, 2013.

Once armed with a widget like the term “malignant narcissist” to bundle all of the world’s dictators together, or, my favorite (because it’s mine) “Facsimile Bipolar Political Sociopathy (FBPS)”, we may reach a point where knowing how such personalities work and the harm they bring to themselves, their gulled peers and supporters, and the world beyond their glorious and tightly controlled bubble full of pleasing mirrors demands some response.

In Egypt, I doubt Morsi & The Brothers got the message, denial and resistance to criticism partially defining this syndrome in personality, but The People of Egypt finally got ahead of what was being done to them and that with a military perhaps equally prescient as regards both cultural and institutional “human factors” and corresponding administrative and management choices and wisdom as regards good leadership well anchored and strong.

Not all autocrats are alike — Putin’s my favorite; Mugabe’s the worst — nor or all military organizations alike in their affection, alignment, and integration with the greater spirit of the people they defend (to keep this parallel, Egypt’s infernal opposite might be Syria’s defense forces whipped on by Maher al-Assad — there hasn’t been much display of affection or regard for noncombatant Syrians on the part of that murderous outfit).

Where people come to know what they are seeing when confronted by a personality exhibiting a dangerous narcissism, then they become responsible for keeping themselves from too easily following the same.

In developing states afflicted with potential or already self-serving “presidents for life”, how to drive this perception of the peacock through the streets with either the language or technologies available becomes a challenge.

It’s not easily done or Zimbabweans would have it done it a long, long time ago.

&

FTAC – Metonymy – “Zaani” and “Rape”

05 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Philology, Psychology

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language, linguistics, metonymy, weighted symbolic relationships

Is everyone familiar with the term “metonymy”?

I use it in regard to “weighted relationships” between nouns such that the term “rape” calls also to mind “force” and that concept is reinforced in turn by its (potentially statistical) relationship with dominance and humiliation.

IF “Zaani” is intended to reference forced sexual submission (“rape”) but most closely relates to “adultery” and “fornication” (social conditions, not individual experiential concerns), it may then absent — with consequent legal and social realities congruent with this hypothesis — the consideration of humiliation, i.e., the erasure or taking of the victim’s dignity.

From the above, there may open a great conversation about the absence or centrality of the concept “dignity of man” — of each member of family, clan, tribe, and nation — as embedded in each of the world’s separable languages.

“Kavod HaBriyot” seems to be the Hebrew term — it’s new to me — but with the “People of the Book” recognized elsewhere, that too might be worth a visit.

I’ll copy this to my blog as the conversation so perfectly fits “conflict, culture, language, psychology.”

When I reach this point in specialization, the foaming fringe of an ocean featuring for currents engineering and related research interests in artificial intelligence and cybernetics and humanist interest in linguistics and poetry, I find I long for both independent funding and project integration.

🙂

While I may wait to hear the echo on that, possibly forever, as much would seem a critical corner within the intellectual space in which I live.

This is the realm of art, the “glass beads game”, the continuous manipulation of symbols and mind to beautify and ennoble experience and, as a natural behavior, to channel through expression a glimpse of the divine in nature and the universe.

Every human does this a little bit in self-concept and organization; poets may do it a little more and with reach to others.

Not all conflicts live so in the head — some really do have to do with natural and industrial resource allocations — but cultural and religious wars do as they would seem inseparable from “habits of mind” formed of particles drawn in language and repeated and inculcated throughout each culture-and-language system community wide.

# # #

Egypt – Next! ‘About More Than Elections’ – A New Landscape

04 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Egypt, Middle East, Politics, Regions

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Egypt, politics

President Barack Obama has been reluctant to meddle, but the White House reported he told Morsi on Monday that “democracy is about more than elections.”

Time Staff: “RECAP: As Morsi Languishes in Detention, Egypt Wakes Up to New Interim leader.:”  Time World, July 3, 2014.

See also, for example,  “Obama to Morsi: Democracy is more than elections” — USA Today; “Egypt’s Morsi says he won’t step down, vows to protect his legitimacy” — NBC World News (yesterday).

So what else is it about?

One might suggest it’s also about living in a world with fewer communication and trade boundaries and, at the same time, with either more dangerous (nuclear) or more fragile (solar panel) essential civilian and military technologies that demand of the earth’s human cargo greater overall cooperation and security.

Basically, democracy, which is reliant on the development of conversations as broad, inclusive, and open as possible, is about (I’m unbelievably about to borrow from the Chinese on this one) “harmonious relations”.

🙂

That’s what democracy — but also, heavily, modernity — is about, and however I / you / we create the next advanced political ecology that attends to improvements in “Qualities of Living” (physically, psychologically, spiritually) in defined areas and regions of interest, we may not have as much choice as we think, and certainly today not the choice of contributing to empires built around the grandiose delusions and narcissistic excesses of a very few individuals absolutely full of themselves and convinced they can do no wrong.

Those have reached the end of a certain part of their script, but as perhaps signaled by the British Monarchy and others, people are not going to stand for being flattened out Soviet style either — that course in human affairs lost its luster some decades ago.

****

I myself live inside a mansion tucked inside a cabin outfitted within an apartment of approximately one-thousand square feet, including the balcony: well equipped also with “champagne tastes and beer money”, I’ve done what Walter Mitty could not and crammed into the space a theater, library, news desk, production facility, bar, grille, and motel.

(One may do a lot with a little given imagination).

It would seem comfort attends a prince — who isn’t a prince and knows it — however poor he may be (will work for compensation while attempting to maintain life and work style).

How about power?

I employ — rather deploy — only myself.

I don’t even own a whip.

*****

To a Sudanese Woman:

Some months ago, I watched a video of punishment meted out to you—a lawfully mandated public whipping that I understand is not uncommon in your country. I have seen many instances of human brutality, but this one was particularly harrowing.

In the midst of my revulsion, certain thoughts surfaced.

Morrison, Toni.  “Dignity and Depravity: You shouted.  You fell.  But you kept rising.”  The Daily Beast, September 18, 2011.

There seems to be on YouTube at least a few recordings of similarly dehumanizing, humiliating, and altogether sadistic behavior, even, so claimed, a Saudi boy whipping a garbage man until he cries and laughing about it.

This next, a BBC clip, also more up to date (July 3, 2013), is about the Al Qaeda types contributing to revolutionary forces in Syria:

Aside: I have no idea what Qatar or the United States government are doing even remotely associating themselves with the above in Syria.  If such represent proxy forces on the front of a potential Islamic democracy in Syria, the same need to be regarded as the first enemy of it and curtailed with finality.

*****

Egyptians, by seeing through the deposing of a dictator in early development, have walked past the gates of hell (as perhaps featured in the above clip) and if taking one step backwards to military rule may well go on to take two forward into the more dignified grace of a a more civil, honest, inclusive, and productive democracy.

Egypt – Brief – As Greeted in the Morning

04 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Egypt, Fast News Share, Middle East, Politics, Regions

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Morsi has been forced out, and it’s because the armed forces, plus the police and the intelligence services, decided that it was in their interest to ditch him. And that’s a victory for army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and his associates, not for the Tahrir Square passionaries who were shouting themselves hoarse.

Taheri, Amir.  “A coup by any name.”  New York Post, July 4, 2013.

No matter who is in charge in Egypt, the nation of 85 million people remains a strategic concern for the United States. And although the U.S. has poured more than $70 billion in military and economic aid into Egypt since 1948, the U.S. government’s ability to influence outcomes there remains very limited.

Curry, Tom.  “With Morsi toppled, Egypt remains US strategic worry and destination for aid.”  NBC News, July 3, 2013.

*****

In the wake of massive protests – both for and against Egypt’s current Government – Mr. Ban noted the delicate nature of the situation following the army’s announcement that it is suspending the Constitution and appointing the head of the constitutional court as interim head of state – “decisions that have not been accepted by President [Mohamed] Morsy”.

UN News Centre.  “Egypt: Secretary-General appeals for calm, non-violence to overcome ‘deep difficulties’.”  July 4, 2013.

What will happen to Morsy, who insists he remains the country’s legitimate leader, and his key supporters? Will the sporadic outbreaks of violence that reportedly killed at least 32 people on Wednesday spread into wider unrest? And what hopes remain for Egypt’s messy attempts to build a multiparty democracy?

Wedeman, Ben, Jethro Mullen, Chelsea J. Carter.  “A day after coup, a new and uncertain order in Egypt.”  CNN, July 4, 2013.

*****

Egypt’s military holds the cards x cohesion x education x experience x muscle and may make short work of teaching the Muslim Brotherhood that it is not God’s gift to Egypt but rather just another — and not particularly good looking — organization, however large, on a more varied and sophisticated Egyptian political landscape.

In fact, with the “Botherhood” shunted aside for a moment, other self-determining ideas about the relationship between citizens and the state in which they live and about national lifestyle — how Egyptian will life and what they will and will not do — will have time, finally, to percolate and coalesce into genuinely competitive and forward looking movements.

So much has revolved recently around the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood — which observation also relates well to the concept that is “political narcissism” (even negative attention can be breathtaking) — that little has been said about other movements and parties.

Wikipedia this morning lists more than 50 such.

The Carnegie Endowment maintains an undated page also listing parties and alliances: Guide to Egypt’s Transition.  “Parties and Alliances.”  Carnegie Endowment, n.d.

I’m not much interested in the fate of the “Egyptian Nazi Party” (where I live, that doesn’t even rate a link) but am curious about how Egyptians feel and think in political terms and how that may aggregate into powerful organizations contributing to the representative course of the state.

At the moment, there may be not much in good shape.

Of the brand named “Constitution Party” associated with the distinguished Mohamed El-Baradei, Ahram Online noted back in April, “On Monday, a group of the party’s young members stormed its headquarters in Cairo and occupied it. They demanded dismissing the party’s leadership and creating a new steering committee.”

Whether earlier or later than that youthful dumb move, but close to concomitant with it, thirteen party members resigned.

Game over.

However, there is a restart button — and Egypt’s military has pressed it.

Game on!

Additional Reference

Ahram Online.  “More political parties join anti-Morsi petition campaign.”  May 16, 2013.

Guide to Egypt’s Transition.  “Parties and Alliances.”  Carnegie Endowment, n.d.

Wikipedia.  “Constitution Party (Egypt)”.

Wikipedia.  “List of political parties in Egypt”.

The Referendum by Military Fiat – Egypt at the End of a Day in the West

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Fast News Share

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Egypt, global new media, military governance, political expectations, politics, Revolution

CAIRO — Mohammed Morsi, in office only a year as the first democratically elected leader of Egypt, was rousted from power by the military Wednesday as a euphoric crowd in Tahrir Square cheered his exit.

The former leader was placed under house arrest at the Republican Guard Club, a senior adviser to the Freedom and Justice Party and spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood said. Most members of the presidential team have also been placed under house arrest.

Engel, Richard, Charlene Gubash, and Erin McClam.  “Morsi ousted, under house arrest as crowds celebrate in Cairo.”  NBC News, July 3, 2013.

At the end of the day — actually, three of them — Egypt may not have the functioning, open, and vibrant democracy it thought it would have a year ago, but it probably has its first genuinely moderating and constituent-oriented government ever: General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi did not appoint himself president but rather a judicial appointee of Morsi’s choosing, Adli Mansour.

For Egypt, I believe this is a new dawn and more true to the formation of a sound democracy than the mere deposing of an old dictator with dynastic ambitions and the replacing of the same with the nearest available surviving spoiler, the Muslim Brotherhood.

Also changed forever today may be the perception of Egypt’s presence in the modern world, for not only did Egyptians take to the streets by the millions, and not only did tens of millions watch them do it, but no more thorough a display of indigenous political culture and popular will has the world so broadly experience before this.

This revolution is not something I read about in a newspaper down at the coffee shop.

The experience of this revolutionary moment I shared with friends from Saudi Arabia to Pakistan by way of Facebook, by tweeting, and through this blog, and that experience multiplied by the tens of thousands similarly engaged (maybe not — I might be a unique act, but I doubt it) makes Egypt’s unfolding story larger than Egypt by far.

* * *

I’m watching a live feed on the World News link and hearing honking horns and sirens while watching the crowds, fireworks, and green laser lights.

* * *

When Egyptians who have actually slept into July 4 wake up in a few hours, it may be in a changed cultural environment, one met by the largest live international audience and press ever.

With the rape stories associated with the event and related abuses relayed during the now truncated takeover by the Muslim Brotherhood, we’ll be wondering how Egyptians address their gender-related issues from this point forward.

With the psychology and style of an Islamic autocrat laid out in the sun, if lightly on this site, if implicitly elsewhere, the world watching may want to see how the relationship between constituent and political and other authority may change as well.  Most certainly, while the Muslim Brotherhood may have wrangled a majority in Egypt’s first election, it has not won the hearts or minds or loyalties of all of Egypt.

In one year of abysmal and egotistical power grabbing, it had practically all of Egypt up in arms and ready for a fight — God forbid those passions now go further than this occasion.

As pro-Morsi students chanted anti-Semitic slogans at Cairo University today, and such hate has been a part of the Muslim Brotherhood character and agenda, the world as witness may wonder if Egyptians will move on to question their attitudes about Jews, the Jewish-majority State of Israel, and the spirit of Judaism itself, with which region in thought perhaps they may have been manipulated, misguided, or unfamiliar.

Finally, in light of the want of a good, responsible, and responsive democracy and the discrepancy between a state subject to military oversight and what a democratic system should be, we who may have no other role than witness may wonder if Egyptians will exchange polarized divisions in favor of a broad, civil, and open conversation about everything, so many things, that need to be discussed, explored, understood and more soundly addressed for themselves and for others beside whom and with whom they may live in peace for a long time.

Reference

Balousha, Hazem.  “Hamas Lies Low on Egypt Crisis.”  Al Monitor, July 3, 2013.

JTA.  “Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood tops anti-Semitic rhetoric list.”  Haaretz, December 28, 2012.

Kirkpatrick, David D., Ben Hubbard, Alan Cowell.  “Army Ousts Egypt’s President; Morsi Denounces ‘Military Coup’.”  The New York Times, July 3, 2017.

Stoter, Brenda.  “Egyptians Form Human Shields To Protect Female Protesters.”  Al Monitor, July 3, 2013.

The Algemeiner.  “Report: Morsi Supporters Chant Anti-Jewish Slogan at Cairo University.”  July 3, 2013.

Egypt – To Do What the Generals Have Done

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Egypt, Fast News Share, Middle East, Politics, Regions

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blogosphere, coup, Egypt, journalism, online, politics

Ex-president Mohamed Morsi issued a statement on his official Facebook page saying that the Wednesday military announcement amounts to a coup.

“The procedures announced by the general command of the armed forces represents a full coup d’etat that is completely unacceptable,” the statement asserted.

Ahram Online.  “Morsi refuses army road map, says he remains Egypt president.”  July 3, 2013.

As stated to some of my Facebook friends, “Again, the hope, and this perhaps part of the expression by Egyptians opposed to Morsi’s Administration, may be that the military will prove more responsible than kleptocratic, which has been too often the case, more moderating in the political discourse than strident in its own right, and more capable than the Muslim Brotherhood of returning to Egyptians a true democracy working through an open conversation with the broadest possible participation.”

However, to get from here to there with a president out in front of a party devoted to the possession of power for the experience of it — only God knows how little it has done to further the interests and improve the lives of, at minimum, the millions of Egyptians who have come out on the streets in opposition to it — has meant risking civil war.

Now the question turns to the military’s own best foresight and planning with regard to getting in the way of the development of that kind of bloodshed.  If it is overwhelming in intelligence and force, it may well attenuate the polarization evident on the streets and forestall the kind of “brush fires” that would threaten to become a sullen low-intensity conflict; if it has miscalculated and the Muslim Brotherhood reaches for significant arms and war materiel and comes up with both, it could produce the kind of melting away of law and security experienced elsewhere in states hosting their portion of the Islamic Small Wars.

Quite unlike the Assad regime in Syria, which military in the hands of Maher al-Assad has been something worse than merely fascist in its devouring Syrian civilian assets and lives — the possessions of its own constituency — with a minimum of concern or discrimination between enemy combatants and those simply not involved with the politics, Egypt’s military appears both experienced and responsible.

* * *

Are you in Egypt? Send us your experiences, but please stay safe.

Cairo (CNN) — Egypt’s military deposed the country’s first democratically elected president Wednesday night, installing the head of the country’s highest court as an interim leader, the country’s top general announced.

Gen. Abdel-Fatah El-Sisi said the military was fulfilling its “historic responsibility” to protect the country by ousting Mohamed Morsy,

Sayah, Ben Wedeman and Matt Smith.  “Morsy ou in Egypt coup.”  CNN, July 3, 2013.

From the Second Row Seat to History

If you’re in Egypt and sharing the experience with CNN, let me know if they pay you.

🙂

Honestly, when I moved out of the Washington, D.C. area, I thought I’d be shooting weddings on the weekends and out dancing in the evening.  In my wildest dreams I’d have never imagined developing a global life online and then, here I / you / we are (if you’re reading close to the publishing date and time on this post) communicating about the same thing from every location at about the same time across the planet at the speed of light.

Gone is the poor sod sent to the telegraph office to get the latest communique from the revolution, run it up to an editor for write-up, down to a department for layout, and, later, on to the press for the run on to broadsheet — and the “crank” on the other side of the process who reads of that communique and goes to the writing desks with a pen, later a typewriter, to fire off a missive to the editor on the matter.

Ah, the good old days!

And some of them were mine.

What I can’t do, CNN knows, from the second row seat to history is control my own live link where something’s happening.

I’m on the outside, nose pressed to a transparent wall — invisible “shields up” would be the Star Trek perspective — looking in and looking on.

* * *

The president of the supreme constitutional court will act as interim head of state, assisted by an interim council and a technocratic government until new presidential and parliamentary elections are held.

“Those in the meeting have agreed on a roadmap for the future that includes initial steps to achieve the building of a strong Egyptian society that is cohesive and does not exclude anyone and ends the state of tension and division,” Sisi said in a solemn address broadcast live on state television.

Reuters.  “Egypt’s military leader suspends the constitution, appoints interim head of state.”  The Jerusalem Post, July 3, 2013.

Here’s a powerful headline from the Huffington Post (July 3, 2013): “Adly Mansour, Chief Justice of Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court, Named Interim President.”

Referencing Adly Mansour

Enein, Ahmed Aboul.  “SCC approves new chief justice appointment.”  Daily News Egypt, May 19, 2013.

Taylor, Adam.  “Here’s the New Acting President of Egypt.”  Business Insider, July 3, 2013.

According to sources (“Profile of Adly Mansour: Who is Egypt’s interim President?” the Independent, July 3, 2013), Adly was appointed to the Supreme Constitutional Court by Morsi and had taken up the position on June 1, 2013.

# # #

Egypt – In Brief – Plus Notes On Related Psychology and Spirituality

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Egypt, Fast News Share, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Regions

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Egypt, political, political psychology, politics

Egypt’s Tahrir Square has seen nearly hundred women falling victim to “rampant” sexual attacks during the past four days of protests against President Mohamed Morsi, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said.

The global rights watchdog said on Wednesday that the mobs sexually assaulted “and in some cases raped at least 91 women” in Tahrir Square amid a climate of impunity.

Al Jazeera.  “Women sexually assaulted in Egypt protests.” July 3, 2013.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) is recommending against all but essential travel to Egypt following widespread protests.

At least 23 people have been killed and more than 200 injured following clashes between supporters of president Mohammed Morsi and those who want him removed.

Haydon, Harry.  “Brits warned away from Egypt as violence grips nation.”  The Sun, July 3, 2013.

Mr. Morsi insisted he was the legitimate leader of the country, hinted that any effort to remove him by force could plunge the nation into chaos, and seemed to disregard the record numbers of Egyptians who took to the streets demanding he resign.

Kirkpatrick, David D.  “Morsi Defies Egypt Army’s Ultimatum to Bend to Protest.”  July 2, 2013.

* * *

Here comes our Egyptianity (a term I am coining); this is the aspect that many people won’t understand all over the world! It is a fact that I did not watch President Mubarak as an American might watch Obama. In my conscious, I was not taught to treat him in a firm rigid manner; judging each and every corrupt order issued by him! I watched him as if my father! Yes, call me naïve, but I remember he is an 82 year old man, regardless of the fact that this does not count for me. It counts for me; he is dying and I was taught to have merci on the old! I watched his features that are very Egyptian and that resembles many dads I have! I did not think of the corruption, I did not think of the regime. I just cried like my 58 year old mom for the poor leader who wants to die in his country! This is called political naïve minds, I know. But I can assure that millions of Egyptians have this same mentality.

Nofal, Imane.  “The Egyptian Political Psychology”.  CNN blog, not vetted.  February 3, 2011.

* * *

As acquaintance — or let’s call it even “pre-acquaintance” — may learn, I’m wicked fast when it comes to learning by way of the web a little bit more about people whose writing I enjoy.

Journalist Imane Nofal’s reaction to the revolution deposing Hosni Mubarak speaks within all of us as regards the affections and comforts associated with “The Father”, and, of course, the same fits well with the psychology involved within current Egyptian President Muhamed Morsi: what father would wish to fail or be humiliated before his children by seeming to back off his most passionate area of conviction?

To get this down into something schematic, the father-become-“malignant narcissist” seeks control of his social surrounds to ensure himself a continuing and energizing “narcissistic supply”, i.e., adoration, affirmation, approval, and love without cause nor end apart from the continuing aggrandizement  and glorification of his own existence.

With an old dictator who steps down, with a bear of a father who grows old and infirm, both freedom from the tyrant and affection for the “Old Man” mix in the heart, so even with the father-as-antagonist, adult children most often bring themselves to the displays and duties attending the care of old lions.

With more vigorous national leaders in their prime, conditions and cautions may attend the same relationship.

In families, depending on the mix in souls actually present, a healthy child may be expected to rebel against a too constraining and implacable “fatherly” (tyrannical) will — and such a father might well find himself abandoned (and questioning the cause of the animus).

In countries, contemporary leaders, generally narcissistic enough to believe in their own messianic sensibilities and put themselves “into the ring” bidding for leadership of a state, may enjoy the affections of their close backers and larger public who see in them the “good father”, but they face challenges and responsibilities larger and more profound than merely making their people feel good and parading themselves as the paragons of their respective civilizations.

In politics, the good father must leave the family and become the good man in the public sphere and among other equally beloved and fatherly adult men — and it should be not hard to add in here also the strong mother who may also engage in the public sphere as equally indispensable in the development of the life of the community.

* * *

The mouth is the medium through which we arrange or define our relationships with others, and our perception in self-concept may be part of each interior “back channel” conversational monologue about reality.

When I taught English many years ago, I referred to this as “The story we tell ourselves about ourselves when we wake up in the morning.”

In the middle east, the father’s tendency to allow his mouth to paint him into a corner may summon disaster.

Add a little black and white thinking for extra kick: either Allah is with Morsi or is not, and Morsi, by way of personality (build it up from the infant’s acquisition of a social grammar along with language uptake to the adult’s beliefs about himself and the world), sets out to test God believing himself an exemplary believer worthy of proven — i.e., tested — divine favor.

How does one call off that test?

I suppose one might consider leaving God’s work to God.

One might also choose to accept that a presidency really is just another and temporary executive position requiring great and rapid decision-making invested deeply in the practical interests of a whole constituency and its experience of “qualities of living” (another term on which I need to get to work).

In other words, becoming the president of a state is not as big a deal as one might think, and most certainly not an excuse to license putting into motion a grandiose messianic vision certain to lead constituents into violence among themselves or with others.

Along with the virtues of compassion and integrity in living and in speech, one might also work in humility and ever the possibility that no matter how strong one’s conviction, one might be wrong and better corrected by way of a conversation with the world than by setting out to test the will of the Almighty — or alternatively, the nature of nature.

* * *

Here a Beginner’s Note About Contemporary Judaism

I suspect — and welcome Yeshiva-type affirmation and criticism — that much that informs the contemporary Jewish ethos goes back to the decisions and methods developed and defended by Hillel the Elder in the First Century CE.

Credited to Hillel: “That which is distasteful to thee, do not do to another”; “Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world.”  Hillel, for those who may read Telushkin’s book about him, would hew to two paths in his living a Jewish life: tendency to include rather than reject others — for me, there has been a real life preparation for this notice by way of chatting with Mobarak Haider about Islam and “civilizational narcissism” (Haider’s term — see on these pages “Mobarak Haider’s Diagnosis — Taliban: Tip of a Holy Iceberg”); and then encouragement of challenge and criticism involving one’s ideas rather than rejecting either as hostile out of hand, the thought being that if an idea or rule is truly good, it will stand up to examination from many directions.

Whether at start or end, compassion, humility, integrity, and spirited inquiry may better serve the “humanity of humanity” — abundant with invention in myriad cultures and languages — and that in its totality than the grandiose and monolithic figure of the powerful father whose voice may be greeted with affection but an affection laced also with deep fear.

# # #

A close up to the rape scene in Egypt

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Uncategorized

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“And now under the weak reign of the Muslim Brotherhood, girls are being flagrantly raped and harassed for saying ‘no’ and protesting. I am not saying this has never happened before, but it was not so open, systemized and ugly.” Note: the blog was posted back in February (2013).

imanetranslator's avatarExpress it 2 live it

Simply, we are selling our car and buying a new one. It was past midnight when my husband finished emptying the clutter in the old car and brought all his cartoons home. I insisted I go down to give the old car one last look as if embracing it, or maybe thanking it. I had just finished watching a talk show about harassment (or rather raping) female revolutionists in Tahrir. I switched off the TV, put on my scarf and went down. The cold air hit my face. The distance wasn’t far, it was just there. One look and I would be back. It was too dark and quite. None was in the street. And I heard a scribble! My heart thumped faster while my mind was reassuring me there is nothing. I looked at the car but couldn’t utter my last words to her. The air blew harder, the…

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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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