http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-07-2 ... ngary.html
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he wants to abandon liberal democracy in favor of an “illiberal state,” citing Russia and Turkey as examples.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he wants to abandon liberal democracy in favor of an “illiberal state,” citing Russia and Turkey as examples.
matrimc wrote:jhineeG: if I understand n.sukta universe is not created deliberately. But my understanding may be deficient.
I will post more details in a bit after I pull together the relevant verses in both the n.sukta and p.sukta as well as from the Smriti - The smaller part (known unknown) of the Purusha that is manifest is what is in cyclical time, where as the larger part that is non-manifest (better english words here... unknown unknown) is beyond us. The manifest Purusha was so due to primal desire. Thus we (unlike Christianity which was from original sin) were from original desire. All that is manifest is born from the original kama of the one that breathed alone without air. This is important as this is what gives rise to the Purushartha and to the Gunas, therefore spawning the Varnas. Jatis subscribe to this framework to enable the convention to fit into this declarative setup. This is the model - the masterplan, but what I have here is very crude explanation, it needs to be articulated in greater detail and precision.A_Gupta wrote:We have to understand the differences in the models as the first task. We should not confuse the model with the application of the model.
Pulikeshi these are valid observations. I have mentioned the "scaling problem" from time to time (mostly not on this thread) but had not managed to coin such an elegant expression.Pulikeshi wrote:There are other things to consider as well - why if the model was as described above - has it broken down today?
Ironically, the answer lies not only in Islamic and Anglo-Saxon Colonization, but more importantly, because of another problem, I described before of scaling when answering the issues of Ganesha idols and eco friendly marketing of the same today.
The Varna-Jati system worked fairly well for a long time, but was breaking down prior to even the arrival of heterodox systems within the Dharma framework. The challenge was one of scaling, as the population moved from contained groups to large empire and mega-cities, the enforcement needed to become more declarative and less conventions based. Purely Declarative systems inevitably suffer from entropy, given they lack the power to regenerate like those that consume food. This means the rot of the said system had set in long before today. This has not been studying with the seriousness that the subject demands. Simple politically correct lip service is payed by claiming that originally there was more mobility and later it became rigid, until the saviors appeared in the form of Gandhi, Nehru & Ambedkar (etc.) This trivializing and lack of depth in understanding the forces at play is perhaps due to colonial effects, but the original and the continuing decay is not. The culprit is scaling, now before you think I am another Malthusian, let me disabuse of such a notion. All I am suggesting is that newer models and framework is required to handing the scaling and change in context.
If you agree with my proposal, you may think the West immune to the problems of scaling. Again ironically, it can be shown that what the West is dealing with today are also problems due to scaling. If success itself is its worst enemy, the adoption of WU itself seeds its demise. WU is brilliant at tactical solutions, but it has no overarching framework that enables natural markets like SD does... this means as it tries to scale, random unintentional technological, often contradictory, innovations can occur. This has continued to the point today where most individuals have less power, while the promise of is more rights. The individual is less connected to each other, while the promise is of lower cost of transportation, communication, etc. The individual has more gadgets, while her mental condition is no more stable. The criticism along these line can continue, but I stop here hoping to have made the point. When folks like Kurzweil pitch the idea of the Technological Singularity by 2040 - "wherein artificial intelligence will exceed human intellectual capacity and control, thus radically changing or even ending civilization in an event called the singularity." These predictions are done with no idea on what is contributing to the said trajectory, therefore ironically contributing to its predicted direction. WU is leading humanity close to extinction if one were to believe these intellectuals. Whereas the developing world is being increasingly goaded to join this end.
I've highlighted the key points above. We are trapped in this idea of religion, and forget we Hindus are totally free to invent. We are ***not Abrahamic***, and that is our strength. (Well, not totally free, in the sense that we do want to maintain identity and continuity, and that puts constraints on our innovations.) Apart from the Veda Samhita for the aastikas, everything else we Hindus have boils down to "human invention" (I count avataars as human.). So what are we afraid of? Why have centuries of Islamics and Christians successfully been able to browbeat us with "my God is bigger/truer than your God"? so that we get stuck in a textual fundamentalism?While re-reading certain passages from Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion (2006), I was so shocked by his combination of ignorance and arrogance. Forgive me for some Dawkins- bashing:
1. In a memorable passage, Dawkins discusses the problem of Trinitarianism in Christianity and extends it to other forms of “polytheism,” such as the cult of the Virgin Mary and the saints in Roman-Catholicism. “What impresses me about Catholic mythology,” he shares with the reader, “is partly its tasteless kitsch but mostly the airy nonchalance with which these people make up the details as they go along. It is just shamelessly invented” (Dawkins 2006: 35).
As a reader, try to bracket away all presuppositions about religion and reread the sentences. If you succeed in doing so, the impact of Dawkins’ claim dissolves. So what, if certain details of Roman-Catholicism are human inventions? What is the problem in aspects of religion being “shamelessly invented”? From a non-Christian, neutral point of view, it is unclear why Dawkins bothers to mention this. However, anyone with a basic understanding of the history of Christianity will note where his claim comes from: Dawkins himself reproduces a piece of theology in this sentence (apparently without knowing it). From its earliest beginnings, Christianity claimed that it was the original and pure revelation of God, first given to Adam. This original revelation had been corrupted by sinful idolaters, seduced by the Devil into the worship of the false god and his minions. This corruption, according to Christian theology, took the form of human additions to the pure divine revelation: rites and myths, fabricated by priests and prelates.
During the Protestant Reformation, Luther, Calvin and their followers began to accuse the Roman-Catholic Church of the same sin of idolatry. They cried that the pope and his priests had invented a plethora of dogmas and rituals and imposed these on the believer as though they were part of God’s revelation and necessary to salvation. In this sense, the worst accusation one could make against Roman- Catholicism was that it consisted of “shameless human inventions.” The Enlightenment philosophes extended such charges of idolatry to all of Christianity and to all “religions” of humanity. All of these, including the notion of God itself, were human fabrications, the atheists among them claimed. Ironically, Enlightenment atheism thus presupposed and built on the claims of Christian theology. Without the background belief that there is something intrinsically wrong in religion being a human invention—very much a Christian belief—the impact of such charges simply disappears into thin air.
At this first level, Dawkins reproduces Christian theology, even though he masks it as an atheistic insight that is supposed to liberate humanity from religion.
My thinking on the why comes down to one word. "Organization" or the lack thereof. This lack of organization has two dimensions. 1. Lack of organization amongst our spiritual/philosophical structures to evolve our smritis, shastras, puraanas and itihaas as per times, which would reiterate a bond through common principles, values and objectives for individuals and society in a more structured manner.A_Gupta wrote:So what are we afraid of? Why have centuries of Islamics and Christians successfully been able to browbeat us with "my God is bigger/truer than your God"? so that we get stuck in a textual fundamentalism?
You should speak to what you know about. American Indians had slaves a 1000 years ago primarily from intertribal warfare. They also had things like ceremonial torture of their captives. They would kill a selected child if they thought a great sacrifice was required. they also, like everybody else, had their good side, made peace and traded with each other. In short, they were and still are, humans. They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".shiv wrote:For a few days now - ever since someone pointed to a link that led to my enlightenment that rapes are common among the indigenous peoples (Injuns) of Alaska, I have been trying to find out why black American society has lost the plot.
If you go back 1000 years - you will find that American Indian tribes had a thriving culture in which they were at peace with themselves - their deities, spirits and their environment. The same holds true for the tribes of Africa.
In both cases the original culture has been replaced by a European Christian culture that has morphed into a monster "secular individualistic culture with white European Christian roots".
Googal tells me that the last slave ship entering the US was around 1860ish. My own paternal grandfather was born in 1888 - so there must be people today in the US whose grandfathers were born in 1860 and grew up in an environment in which slaves were segregated but retained some elements of their old African tribal culture as a straw to clutch at a time of great upheaval.
The structure of the brain itself (interconnections) gets modified depending on language and culture and I am certain that American Indian and African culture would probably suit those people if only it would somehow magically com back. But it may be too late. The peoples have been raped - and a different culture imposed. To an extent - Indian Macaulayites become that way - but they are protected by solid links to the old languages and culture within India - although our education system is disruptive of both language and culture - inculcating a sense of shame in one's past and pride in copying western norms of Individual greed over-ruling responsibilities to the group.
Brishit barbarians and Mogul barbarians were the first to kill non-combatants and civilians in India. In most of ancient India, according to historical records, civilian deaths and rapes are unknown. Warring is common in ancient India, but it never descended to rape/torture of non-combatants or civilians. The Brishits and Moguls changed it, just like the Spaniards and the Brishit folks did in the Americas. Technological advancement does not come automatically with cultural advancement. Going around with a sniper rifle killing innocent people makes you a technologically advanced barbarian and nothing elseChapter 7 deals with what Restall calls "The Myth of Superiority" — the belief that the success of the Spanish conquest was due to either the supposed technological superiority of the Spaniards or a kind of inherent cultural superiority — and that Spanish victory was therefore inevitable. Restall claims that such technological advantages as handguns, cannons, steel armor, horses and dogs weren't of great consequence in the actual fighting since they were all in short supply, and that the Aztecs were not daunted by this new technology for long. He also refutes the notion that the Indians' lack of alphabetic writing constituted a major drawback. Nor were the Indians childlike, naive or cowardly in comparison with the Spanish such as many early Spanish sources have painted them. Restall argues that the factors behind the success of the conquistadors were mostly the devastating effect of European diseases for which the Indians had no resistance, the disunity between indigenous groups some of which allied with the Spaniards early, the technological advantage of the steel sword, native battle practices that were not upheld by the Spaniards — such as killing non-combatants and civilians, and most importantly the fact that the Indians were fighting on their own ground with their families and fields to care for, which made them quicker to compromise.
Native Americans are one of the most obese folks in the US now, the reason is they cannot take sugar/HFCS due to insulin resistance. Sugar/HFCS is the cheapest thing that poor people can afford that gives them biggest caloric bang for the buck.TSJones wrote: You should speak to what you know about. American Indians had slaves a 1000 years ago primarily from intertribal warfare. They also had things like ceremonial torture of their captives. They would kill a selected child if they thought a great sacrifice was required. they also, like everybody else, had their good side, made peace and traded with each other. In short, they were and still are, humans. They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture{ever read about the spanish inquisition and the Pope's pear} and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
Point 1 on its own never stopped the society to define new smritis. Point 2 leads to point 1.ShauryaT wrote:A_Gupta wrote: 1. Lack of organization amongst our spiritual/philosophical structures to evolve our smritis, shastras, puraanas and itihaas as per times, which would reiterate a bond through common principles, values and objectives for individuals and society in a more structured manner.
2. Lack of large political entities to defend and protect against external aggression and cohesive functioning in the Indian land mass (until ROI).
Stone Age! See these are characterizations based on what the white race was accustomed to, of associating permanent settlements with fences with settled civilization. However, for the natives the concept of "settling" down in one place was an alien concept. A concept ill suited to their way of life, which moved to different lands due to seasons and the idea that after harvesting a crop in a given land mass, to let the land recover. The white races not only invaded their lands but sought to evaluate their culture to be "inferior" to the way the whites lived - leading them to be called uncivilized. This process of hounding their way of life continued, until they were decimated and driven to narrow or god forsaken lands. I hope god forgives you all.TSJones wrote:They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
Stone Age in that they had very little use of metal. vs. Iron Age, etc. You don't like classification, too bad.ShauryaT wrote:Stone Age! See these are characterizations based on what the white race was accustomed to, of associating permanent settlements with fences with settled civilization. However, for the natives the concept of "settling" down in one place was an alien concept. A concept ill suited to their way of life, which moved to different lands due to seasons and the idea that after harvesting a crop in a given land mass, to let the land recover. The white races not only invaded their lands but sought to evaluate their culture to be "inferior" to the way the whites lived - leading them to be called uncivilized. This process of hounding their way of life continued, until they were decimated and driven to narrow or god forsaken lands. I hope god forgives you all.TSJones wrote:They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
1. The organization exists, but it does not resemble what we would recognize it to be as one. The ascetic and monastic folks of SD are not recluses from society, on the contrary, they have complete access to society irrespective of where they came from originally. They are agents of change, but not in a organized way that one would recognize. Once in a rare while this organization becomes visible. Like the Yagna altar and support structures, everything goes back to nature after displaying its organized state. What is unfortunate is none of them have taken up this cause... I am still trying to learn what triggered them to act historically... typically one or more of them worked with learned folks to request that they clarify the law books again for all. Another cycle began...ShauryaT wrote:1. Lack of organization amongst our spiritual/philosophical structures to evolve our smritis, shastras, puraanas and itihaas as per times, which would reiterate a bond through common principles, values and objectives for individuals and society in a more structured manner.
2. Lack of large political entities to defend and protect against external aggression and cohesive functioning in the Indian land mass (until ROI).
You make it so easy, perhaps you enjoy the pain, why not just paint a target on yourself?TSJones wrote: You should speak to what you know about. American Indians had slaves a 1000 years ago primarily from intertribal warfare. They also had things like ceremonial torture of their captives. They would kill a selected child if they thought a great sacrifice was required. they also, like everybody else, had their good side, made peace and traded with each other. In short, they were and still are, humans. They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
Wiki mamu has this:TSJones wrote:Stone Age in that they had very little use of metal. vs. Iron Age, etc. You don't like classification, too bad.
Indigenous Americans have been using native metals from ancient times, with recent finds of gold artifacts in the Andean region dated to 2155–1936 BCE. and North American copper finds dated to approximately 5000 BCE. The metal would have been found in nature without need for smelting techniques and shaped into the desired form using heat and cold hammering techniques without chemically altering it by alloying it. To date "no one has found evidence that points to the use of melting, smelting and casting in prehistoric eastern North America." In South America the case is quite different. Indigenous South Americans had full metallurgy with smelting and various metals being purposely alloyed. Metallurgy in Mesoamerica developed from contacts with South America
You make it so easy, perhaps you enjoy the pain, why not just paint a target on yourself?Pulikeshi wrote:TSJones wrote: You should speak to what you know about. American Indians had slaves a 1000 years ago primarily from intertribal warfare. They also had things like ceremonial torture of their captives. They would kill a selected child if they thought a great sacrifice was required. they also, like everybody else, had their good side, made peace and traded with each other. In short, they were and still are, humans. They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
Like the stench of a hypocrite that calls all descendants of the British people racist and Nazis?LokeshC wrote:I am gonna be a bit un-PC here. There is a game I used to play in my mind when I visit any kind of forum, and it is: Identify the whitey.
I dont play it these days. The reason is that I can "smell" the stench of the standard "defenses" of their ancestors excesses. The colonial apologist, Eurocentric historian, slavery justifier, the "I am white and therefore sup-e-rear", and "my ancestors effed you over, deal with it" types. I have become so sensitive to that stench, that I dont even have to play the game, I can guess almost right away.
Specimen here:TSJones wrote:Stone Age in that they had very little use of metal. vs. Iron Age, etc. You don't like classification, too bad.
No thanks for the gratuitous advice about what I should speak about - you can stuff it up your Sunnyvale.TSJones wrote:
You should speak to what you know about. American Indians had slaves a 1000 years ago primarily from intertribal warfare. They also had things like ceremonial torture of their captives. They would kill a selected child if they thought a great sacrifice was required. they also, like everybody else, had their good side, made peace and traded with each other. In short, they were and still are, humans. They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
Shiv,shiv wrote: You have repeated your version of someone else's history. You will see, on this thread and other threads, others' versions of your history.
Flights of imagination need to have some basis, no?ShauryaT wrote:Now, if I say, how to do this, I will run foul of MatrimC's caveat of "Practicality".
It's funny that you reserve the right to say things that you know nothing about while you ask me to write about things that you think I don't know about. That is so much like an evangelist preaching to a potential convertTSJones wrote:Stone Age in that they had very little use of metal. vs. Iron Age, etc. You don't like classification, too bad.TSJones wrote:They were basically a stone age people, visited and invaded by a modern technical culture and they were not adapted to the diseases that came with the invaders. May God forgive us. Read the book "1491".
"Very little use of metal" eh?The era around 3000 BC saw more than 500,000 tons of copper being mined in the so-called Upper Peninsula, in the American state of Michigan.
Enough with the presumptions - generalizing them all into one category itself displays ignorance.TSJones wrote: I can't help it if you guys don't know or understand native American tribal history but still feel compelled to spout off about it. Try reading up on it first.
I can see that and I can also see the cognitive dissonance in the instant reaction.LokeshC wrote: To these folks any alternate "competing" history will immediately be dismissed.
That is the last resort of a western universalists when they lose arguments. Its almost a pattern, start with a "mighty whitey" quote, when countered go to "benevolent imperialist" quote, when challenged go to "well, we won, deal with it".shiv wrote: Ultiimately the only argument that works is "Well, we won"
I would accept that argument. In fact that is what I am trying to point out here. Victors erase the history of losers. But some losers do not lose all their history.
rsangram wrote:1) It is a fact that the Native American Tribes, many of them, although not all of them, had slaves. And there were many many tribes.
I am going to be a bit crass here:rsangram wrote: 3) It is also a fact that a lot of non-europeans have been extremely racists towards the "other" and have perpetrated atrocities against "others" including committing genocide against certain people.
I can sympathize with what you are saying (although I may not agree with some of your points), but that is not what this thread is about.rsangram wrote:Forget it folks. No amount of European bashing is going to save India now. The native Americans may have had their slaves and the West may have committed not one, not two but three genocides, but none of them really caused India to be where it is today..........down in the gutter..........doing that to the Indians was......all their own doing......and continues to be their own doing, and unfortunately, will continue to be their own doing...........and all these clumsy attempts to get the Indians all riled up on the drug called "other bashing", is not going to get the Indians out of this gutter....
His posts don't show up on my machine - but I saw what you quoted.LokeshC wrote: but that is not what this thread is about.
Shaurya - your post and thoughts I had set off by two pf Pulikeshi's posts are related.ShauryaT wrote:My thinking on the why comes down to one word. "Organization" or the lack thereof. This lack of organization has two dimensions. 1. Lack of organization amongst our spiritual/philosophical structures to evolve our smritis, shastras, puraanas and itihaas as per times, which would reiterate a bond through common principles, values and objectives for individuals and society in a more structured manner.
2. Lack of large political entities to defend and protect against external aggression and cohesive functioning in the Indian land mass (until ROI).
We have item 2, for the most part - the task at hand is to change the nature of the state and promote better organizational unity amongst our sampradayas along with newer thinking groups to form a nation-state, which looks like an evolution of the Indian land mass as opposed to a foreign imposed construct.
Now, if I say, how to do this, I will run foul of MatrimC's caveat of "Practicality".
The buddhists are democratic by default. However, those who enforced denial of democracy to millions of budhhists have never been declared PNG (personna non grata) in 'international' matters. Compare it with Indian PM who has been elected with hugh mandate and who is 3 times elected CM of a state.U.S. officials and Pope Pius XII agreed the south should remain under the control of wealthy anti-communist Catholics although the Buddhist majority was estimated at between 70% and 90% of the population. Both Pius and New York Cardinal Francis Spellman lobbied for Ngo Dinh Diem, whose brother was archbishop of Hue, to be installed as the CIA-approved “pliable leader” in South Vietnam.
"Diem’s suppression of free speech, promotion of Catholicism and persecution of his political enemies including many Buddhist religious leaders dashed any hopes of the South Vietnamese for a democracy,” driving many Vietnamese to the communist cause.
Change in value systems and governing laws. What needs to happen is an inversion of value systems and objectives in play. Without respect and appreciation of SD values and objectives, we would be lost. While the pursuit of knowledge, wealth and power is a necessary exercise for individuals and nations - the idea of yagnya of these pursuits by individuals for the larger good, needs to recognized - again, valued and codified. This recognition of an older set of values and objectives is a two pronged affair between the society and the state. The state needs to provide incentives to society to promote these values and objectives through recognition and rewards and even reservations, if it is deemed that important, e.g: To be a Judge of a court, have to forsake the pursuit of wealth or power. The state also needs to impose penalties on some behaviors that violate such values and objectives. The state can promote such change in values through education and programs. People react to incentives by the power structure just like Indians reacted to the creation of "caste" by the colonial powers.shiv wrote:What means can be used to change that?