FTAC – Intuitive Statement on Cultural Transmission

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Our cultural and language differences have a breadth to them defined by the wild nature of nature. From my intuitive perspective, our cultural programming begins when the ears are turned on, if not before, and that’s in the womb. We hear — and we start “taking statistics” on sound. Correlation — with our own chemistry and mood; with the timbre and meaning of noise, so that we may discern what is important in listening and set aside similar data to focus on it — would seem a part of that process. By the time we get around to speaking ourselves or, later, reading, we have learned — or come to believe — an awful lot about cultural and physical aspects of our environment. Most fascinating, albeit again intuited: without language, we cannot suspend our cultures in time by transmitting the same through the tongue.


What’s up there is not such a bold new thought.  Linguists have been long submerged beneath the surface of it and “taking statistics” themselves from observations of behavior in relation to language uptake in infancy.

What may be new given our access here to the Awesome Worldwide Conversation may be our adult ability to become both introspective and observing across language cultures faced with or hosting significant conflict-related violence and querying the sources of development of related psychological contributors.  “Cognitive style”; “listening style”; “manners in speech”; “attitude-behavior correspondence” and its ancillaries in the individual’s interior development of beliefs and their emotional and logical primacy and weight.

Across cultures, do we hear and listen, read, and speak as if the same — or are we differentially programmed?

Down to households and up to high office, cultures support and perpetuate intellectual ecologies familiar to their residents but perhaps alien beyond themselves.  That’s something to think about when launching an app, choosing movie or television program to watch in the “home theater”, or when opening a book or game with which one covertly, privately, interacts, mind-to-mind or mind-to-minds.

Mommy sends – baby receives: what do mothers send?  What do babies get?   Examine x dyad x household x community x region x state?  Are things we may suppose universal actually so?

In the middle east conflict, there seem always to be things “everybody knows” that turn out not in the least true.

Better ask the flat earth believers: what are the effects of social conformance, fear, or anti-authority protest on what may be observed, argued, and measured (and re-observed, measured, and tested) as true?

Is there a difference between “political cant, propaganda, and rhetoric” and plain honest, valid, reliable, and responsible speech?

Addendum – FTAC – June 4, 2015

What’s relevant could be described as global ethnolinguistic survival and self-determination. Baloch, Kurds, Hebrews, Pashtun, and others (the earth’s inventory of living languages stands at around 7,000 speech communities, albeit with far fewer major language groups) share this interest in common. If you’re going to go after the Hebrew soul — as long as we’re confessing: I don’t speak Hebrew: I am solely an English-speaking American, and I am still Jewish — whose soul in being is to be dispensed with next? Arab heritage? Persian?

For various reasons, beginning with the discussion-inducing qualities of the Torah — whatever its injunctions, it sets out the broadest range of ethical and moral dilemmas and puzzles (what if Eve hadn’t eaten the “fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil?) — and moving on to figures like Maimonides and Hillel the Elder, the latter deliberately setting out to make Judaism more accessible to converts, what “Jewish” is remains ever arguable (except with simpletons like Hitler who thought it had to do with blood and measured that for murder — and theft — by distance from the legacy of Jewish family). Moreover, the same allows Jewish culture and life to grow and adapt to times over time without losing its essence, despite the occasional complaint from the presumptuously and magically more “authentic, pure, or real” Jew. In place of “Jew” place “Christian” for “Muslim” or “Buddhist” or “Hindu” and the same effects may apply: identity becomes more important than character; ritual supplants principle.

Language cultures may be a little different on the global landscape. Each is a part of our human library and inventory in manners, speech, and thought corresponding to the experience of life in some unique cultural space. While “updating” to access a modern (vs feudal / medieval) worldview and enjoy the benefits of that, we may also appreciate one another’s very different cultural adventure and experience to date — and be careful not to lose any.


Shall the earth’s dominant politics pit all against all?

Or shall we instead drift toward “harmonious relations” and see what might be achieved with “all for all” ascending and predominating?

The remark was prompted by listening to a colloquy on the heritage acquired by (imparted to; experienced by) the Jewish People as a people — but with reference to, I suppose, one might say, less authentic Jews.

Are Jews who don’t speak Hebrew still Jews?

Reference on YouTube (posted May 31, 2015): “BEIT MIDRASH LAVI – What is Israel’s Oral Law?”

Out of our abundant human adaptive and intellectual abilities, metaphysical thought puts up an astounding construction, if you will, in language: beliefs, miracles, legends, myths, fables, homilies, epigram, witticisms . . . all of those words — words, words! — shaping our outlook on existence itself.

Of late, I’ve been asking myself what it means to be an American these days, that as opposed to a hyphenated-American, an American modified by race, color, creed, religion, income, fitness level (“healthy American”), gender, sexual habits and preferences, preferences in housing style (are there “Cape Cod Americans”, “Rancher Americans”?), or location-based Americans (“urban Americans” vs “rural Americans”), not to mention Americans modified by political identity — “Red State Americans” vs “Blue State Americans”.

American.

That’s it.

But put the ring on her finger and make the baby, and no matter what, and one is smothered back in the folds of priestly robes: baptism? Or bris? What church?  Which synagogue?

And oh yeah — “Where did your people come from?”

Best answer to that: passion.

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Assad or Burn It? Assad Burns It.

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The United States has accused the Syrian military loyal to President Bashar Assad of carrying out air strikes to help Islamic State fighters advance around the northern city of Aleppo, messages posted on the US Embassy in Syria’s official Twitter feed said.

Reuters via YNet News.  “US accuses Assad of backing Islamic State’s Aleppo advance.”  June 2, 2015.

Related on BackChannels: “Ali Khamenei and the Letter from Near Mosul – A Speculation.”  January 16, 2015.

Reminder with reference to how the Syrian Revolution began:

Syria is burning — scorched for nearly a year by tenacious political resistance, a merciless security crackdown and cries for democracy.

The spark that lit the flame began about a year ago in the southern city of Daraa after the arrests of at least 15 children for painting anti-government graffiti on the walls of a school.

The community’s blunt outrage over the children’s arrests and mistreatment, the government’s humiliating and violent reactions to their worries, and the people’s refusal to be cowed by security forces emboldened and helped spread the Syrian opposition.

Sterling, Joe.  “Daraa: The spark that lit the Syrian flame.”  CNN, March 1, 2012.

Related.  Human Rights Watch.  “Syria: Crimes Against Humanity in Daraa: Killings, Torture in a Locked-Down City Under Siege.”  June 1, 2011:

“For more than two months now, Syrian security forces have been killing and torturing their own people with complete impunity,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “They need to stop – and if they don’t, it is the Security Council’s responsibility to make sure that the people responsible face justice.”

Fat chance then and no better now.

Twice elsewhere today, the editor has been online noting the perversion of the 2011 Syrian protest movement against absolute power into an immensely aggrandizing narrative that one might title, “Assad vs The Terrorists.”

How did “The Terrorists” get to play such a large role in the region?

Evidently, the Assad regime — this with the cooperation of Moscow and Tehran — simply prefered to barrel bomb the living daylights out of business districts, hospitals, schools, residential housing, and the like rather than impede the development al-Nusra (early Syrian Civil War) and Daesh (late Syrian Tragedy).

In this blog’s laziest short form:

http://www.businessinsider.com/this-is-what-its-like-to-have-the-assad-regimes-barrel-bombs-dropped-on-your-city-2015-5 – 5/5/2015.

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/4/30/syria-children-killed.html – 4/30/2014.

http://www.businessinsider.com/barrel-bombing-in-syria-graphic-2014-3 – includes video of a bombing – 3/11/2014.

http://www.aawsat.net/2015/05/article55343292/major-hospital-in-syrias-aleppo-shuts-because-of-bombing – 5/5/2014.

Point made?

Granted, the field has been a mess from very near the Assad regime’s initial show of brutality with the arrest and torture of children.  The response to the outrage plus the deflecting of a people’s revolution drew from the population and from around the world drew a world of volunteers into a mixed bag of Islamic / Islamist warrior bands.

While Bashar al-Assad’s Syria remains in power, the damage wrought to the state has been profound.  In addition to dead, injured, and refugee and added to the insults done to business, cultural, and religious assets, the Assad regime appears to have lost control of about a third of the country.

Related: Charron, Guillaume.  “Syria: Forsaken IDPs adrift inside a fragmenting state.”  Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, October 21, 2014.

Does Bashar al-Assad even have a state?

Has Syria not been burned?

The growth of The Terrorists and their expansion in conceptual and real presence in the Syrian and Syrian-Iraq theaters has deflected attention from other failures in the regimes involved, served to redefine Assad’s challenge from 2011 children’s protest movement (in part) into a fight in 2015 as dramatic as it has been heartbreaking and absurd: “Assad vs The Terrorists” — and there remains no near end in sight.


On Friday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Isis was now in control of all six border crossings between Iraq and Syria – even with the constant presence of US air force jets. Nearly 1,000 miles of frontier is now out of the control of either country, with Isis enjoying complete freedom of movement, except when the warplanes are around.

Though 20 of its 43 top-tier officials have been picked off by US drones and jets, Isis leaders can still travel freely across the large tract of land, roughly the size of Jordan, that they now call an Islamic caliphate.

Chulov, Martin.  “Amid the ruins of Syria, is Bashar al-Assad now finally facing the end?”  The Guardian, May 23, 2015.

Additional Reference

AFP.  “Iraq allies vow support for plan to regain ground from ISIS.”  Al Arabiya, June 2, 2015.

BBC News.  “Syria: The story of the conflict.”  March 12, 2015.

Charron, Guillaume.  “Syria: Forsaken IDPs adrift inside a fragmenting state.”  Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, October 21, 2014


Chulov, Martin and Julian Borger.  “Syria: Isis advance on Aleppo aided by Assad regime air strikes, US says.”  June 2, 2015:

“It has become a matter of fact since 2013 that the Syrian regime has bombed us to stop us fighting Isis properly. Isis have never attacked Syrian planes. They owe their success to the regime.”

A second opposition leader from the Suqr al-Sham group said: “They have hit us with Grad rockets, artillery, air strikes and everything else since Sunday. They have not hit an Isis position.”


Coalition for a Democratic Syria via Daily Mail: map of ISIS land gains, reposted by Daily Mail, January 17, 2015.

Drury, Flora.  “Revealed – how the threat of ISIS is spreading: Extremist groups has DOUBLED the land it controls in just a few months despite more than 800 coalition airstrikes.”  Daily Mail, January 17, 2015.

Harris, Shane and Jamie Dettmer.  “Spies Warned White House: Don’t Hit Al Qaeda in Syria.”  The Daily Beast, November 6, 2014.

Reuters.  “Satellite images show 290 heritage sites in Syria damaged by war: U.N.  December 23, 2014.

Sommerville, Quentin.  “Islamic State militants ‘filmed torturing Syrian boy'”.  BBC News, June 1, 2015.

Strategic Culture Foundation.  “100,000 militants, fragmented into 1,000 bands, are fighting in Syria: Study.”  September 16, 2013.

The Economist.  “Creeping toward Damascus.”  April 11, 2015.

Update – FTAC – Latest News – June 4, 2015

The Assad regime is in bad shape in every way: it has established its reputation for being murderous and sadistic at breathtaking scale — hundreds of thousands dead; millions displaced by its own bombing and other (including chemical weapons) actions; in the passion play “Assad vs The Terrorists”, it has had to call in Hezbollah’s troops and move them to meet al-Nusra and Daesh and others; it has lost control of about a third of Syria’s former land space; and having laid siege to the Palestinian Yarmouk Camp and through fighting with Daesh worked it into a state of destruction, it has reduced itself altogether to the status of an embattled feudal kingdom. Adrift in time today, where is Bashar al-Assad’s Syria to go?

Related Reference: Ginsberg, Mitch.  “Assad regime in its ‘most grave predicament’ – 
Syrian army defunct, rebels 100 yards from Israel border, senior officer says: 
Hezbollah has lost 100 men in past two weeks, says officer; terms non-conventional threat from Iran as ‘in decline’ in short term.”  The Times of Israel, June 4, 2015.

Link – On the Magna Carta

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Eight hundred years ago next month, on a reedy stretch of riverbank in southern England, the most important bargain in the history of the human race was struck. I realize that’s a big claim, but in this case, only superlatives will do. As Lord Denning, the most celebrated modern British jurist put it, Magna Carta was “the greatest constitutional document of all time, the foundation of the freedom of the individual against the arbitrary authority of the despot.”

Hannan, Daniel.  “Magna Carta: Eight Centuries of Liberty.”  The Wall Street Journal, May 29, 2015.


‘No free man shall be arrested, imprisoned,
dispossessed, outlawed, exiled or in any
way victimised, or attacked except by the
lawful judgement of his peers or by the
law of the land’

This right is most famously contained in the American Bill of Rights embodied in the constitution of the United States of America.

Hereford Cathedral.  “Magna Carta: An Introduction”.


Posted to YouTube – 6/19/2015.

Posted on this page with permission.

Additional Reference

British Library.  “Magna Carta: Law, Liberty, Legacy”.

United Nations.  “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.

United States Bill of Rights.  Wikipedia.

United States Constitution.  Wikipedia.

United States.  Bill of Rights.  1789.  National Archives.

United States.  Constitution.  Authenticated.  PDF.  Government Printing Office, July 25, 2007.

United States.  Constitution.  Transcript of original.  National Archives.

United States. Declaration of Independence.  July 4, 1776.

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FTAC – New Boundaries – Normative Adaptation

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International trade and the Internet have altered the world’s boundaries in many ways, and with associated processes irreversible — some things cannot be turned backward — change in how we think about ourselves and others and our social and spiritual perception may be due.

“Google” has turned out a pretty good name for the past two decades of democratized intellectual exploration.

I’ve been calling “Time the New Space”.

We know what has been bothering (and bloodying) the world from the past: what lies ahead? What can be put ahead, i.e., developed now and placed in the future?

This whole conversation is a miracle.


The New Global Intelligentsia is going to be “new” for a while longer. It may be fragile too — too few where needed most — but perhaps growing peace is what time is for.


Time is the New Space.

When one can call in a pizza, Skype with a Facebook buddy 9,000 miles away, build a library, and fill a closet with one click (often enough), “space” — real space, earth space, physical space — becomes a little bit more recreational space and separate from common intellectual and social operations, including social and political projects.

No matter where one lives on this planet, very practically so, one may have a Great Conversation with countless others.

When the conversation turns to culture and conflict (for fun: add “language and psychology”) and the more callous mudslinging subsides or may be eluded by way of our aggregated and collective choices in conversational partners, watch out: change would seem to be in the offing.

Timeline for transiting from where we are (take a bearing) to where things are “a little bit better”?

Unknown.

Perhaps unknowable.

Nonetheless, whatever the differences may be in our sources of laughter and moans, those with whom we “chatype” online or, perhaps, who stumble across this blog, are traveling together on one blue pearl of a planet now thoroughly wrapped in talk.




Loose Additional Reference

Tetterner, Stuart James.  “Norms Perspective”.  Confluence, Cornell University.  Last updated September 5, 2007.

DiMaggio, Paul and Eszter Hargittai, W. Russell Neuman, and John P. Robinson.  “Social Implications of the Internet.”  27:307-36.  Annual Review of Sociology, 2001 (PDF).


. . . we believe that the internet activism of today is best perceived as informed by the spirit of the EZLN, the ‘Battle of Seattle’, and the diverse amalgams of social movements and subcultures that have matured along with the new media over the last five years. This is the internet as a living, historical force and one of the keys to understanding and shaping the political and cultural life of the present age.

Kahn, Richard and Douglas Kellner.  “New media and internet activism: from the “Battle of Seattle’ to blogging.”  New Media and Society, Sage Publications, 2004.  PDF may be found online.


Before the revolution, the Tsar in Russia had a system of internal passports. The people hated this system. These passports marked the estate from which you came, and this marking determined the places you could go, with whom you could associate, what you could be. The passports were badges that granted access, or barred access. They controlled what in the Russian state Russians could come to know.

The Bolsheviks promised to change all this. They promised to abolish the internal passports. And soon upon their rise to power, they did just that. Russians were again free to travel where they wished. Where they could go was not determined by some document that they were required to carry with them. The abolition of the internal passport symbolized freedom for the Russian people — a democratization of citizenship in Russia.

Lessig, Lawrence.  The Laws of Cyberspace.  Draft 3.  Essay presented at Taiwan Net ’98 Conference, Tapei, March 1998.


Because you may have heard this in the background of the video clip on the Family of Man exhibit (a related hardcover became my first book about photography).

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Update to “Shimmer”

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Primary Page Address:

Shimmer

Update – May 29, 2015

After first believing in this predator’s lies, Lessing eventually began suspecting something about him is not right and after some detective work found out his real name and the fact that he is a cleric who works at Shi’a Association of the Bay Area (SABA) in San Jose, California and that he is actually married.

Lessing wondered whether she should go to his mosque and expose him publicly. This tells me how little non-Muslims know Islam and the Muslim mind. What do you think would happen if you tell them? At first they deny it categorically accusing you of smearing the name of a good man and vilify you. If they see the undeniable proof, they change tactic and condemn him in your face assuring you that Islam does not allow that. Once you leave, they pat him on the back and laugh heartily.

Sina, Ali.  “Muslim Men Preying on Western Women.”  Faith Freedom Organization, May 17, 2015.  http://www.faithfreedom.org/muslim-men-preying-on-western-women/

Primary text: Lessing, K. M.  God Has Failed Me: A True Story, Part I.

The BackChannels response to the correspondent who sent the piece: “I wanted to share the link with (name withheld) because it so mixes themes toward a demonizing that leaves no channel out for the Muslims who would themselves revile the cleric on display.

Earlier today from The Awesome Conversation: ” . . . a part of the American / North American / NATO / western public responds to Islam as represented by al-Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah, et al., plus any number of western writers who emphasize the medieval qualities embedded in texts and taken up by the organizations mentioned. That’s what they see. It’s too little — not the whole thing — but that’s what they see.”

Shimmer.

With every act of disrespect — betrayal, deception, desecration, intimidation, libel, murder, seduction, slander, and theft — toward another person or group, Islam, through one person or many, displays itself exactly as its most vociferous critics describe, which makes the work of the Ummah’s more conscionable, introspective, and reforming adherents that much more difficult to impossible.

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Link – Ukraine – On War

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War robs you of everything including your humanity. After the war, things are never like they used to be – it takes several generations to eradicate or simply to forget its tragic consequences.

However, all the valuable things, including peace, have their price. Most Europeans naively believe that it’s been paid by their grandparents and great-grandparents during WWI and WWII, but the truth is that this valuable thing is extremely fragile and requires continuous work to keep it alive.

Lidžita (Translator: Albina Griniūtė): “War at our doorstep, or what we are calling for.”  Free Ukraine, May 28, 2015.

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