Friday, November 28, 2008

Conspiracy all around

A couple times a week, the coffeehouse culture calls to me. It's more a matter of just wanting to talk with someone than anything else. My work is lonely stuff. Sitting in front of a computer for long hours gets old - or just boring.
So I end up outside some coffeehouse with a cappucino in hand.

Middle-aged men suffer from their own maturity.
Where women seem to think the biggest issues in their lives are their husbands and children, middle-aged men start seeing conspiracies everywhere. It's an easy thing to do. "They" are responsible for everything: every failing, problem, frustration, and failure in life can be assigned to the ubiquitous "they".
Thing is, some of the conspiracies are real. Which is a straw man is hard to pick out. All of these groups are a bit like Pinocchio: It's easy to tell when they're lying; but very hard to tell when one becomes real.

  • al Quaida
    Reactionary terrorists intent on destroying western values. These terrorists are newcomers to the list of conspiracies. Some conspiracies have been around for thousands of years.
  • Corporations
    Bankers, corporate executives. Business-minded, looking to replace government with corporate structures around the world. These people would define everyone in a secular legal system.
  • FreeMasons
    A conspiracy going back to the Knights Templar, influencing governments and power brokering on religious principles
  • Catholics
    Catholics are trying to return the power to the Papacy, and their fiats, the royalty (according to the conspiracy theories, anyway); and trying to gain control of all the money and governments.
  • Synarchists
    Royalists and neo-Royalists, Fascists. Looking to return the power to those who have the inborn "right to rule" (see all above)
  • anti-Synarchists
    Oppose the Synarchists based on the principles of the American Constitution. FDR, or Lyndon Larouche, is their god. Some people think LaRouche invented Synarchists to give himself a career.
  • Neo-Conservatives
    A mix of cloistered busines and religious groups across the world These are the folks that put the two Bushes into power.
  • CIA/NSA
    A fearsome power center mostly supporting American interests, but very defensive of their own power and control.
  • Mafia
    These guys just want the money and the women. Manipulating governments and agencies is just a means to an end. Everyone seems to know someone in the Mafia, but no one seems to know where they are.
  • Socialists
    Under the guise of terms like "progressive" and "reform", these folks either come off as anarchists or just plain old Communists.
  • Communists
    For most of the world, communism is dead. The 1.6 billion+ people who live in China would stridently disagree.
  • Capitalists
    This one is probably a straw man created by the Socialists and Communists. I doubt there's a group out there who calls themselves "Capitalists".
  • Feminists
    These folks don't even try to hide their conspiratorial actions. They publicize it and invite others to join. The modern radical Feminists sound a lot like early 20th century Socialists though.
  • Americans
    To much of the world, Americans are synonymous with the CIA. There are all sorts of irrational characteristics assigned to Americans to dehumanize them.
  • Politicians
    Many people think Politicians join some sort of club that requires them to be good liars. The sad part is, most people become politicians, at least in the West, to try to "make a difference."
  • China
    China is often referred to as one vast conspiracy threatening to take over the World. A little like the perception of America (or the US anyway).
  • OPEC
    OPEC is another of the public conspiracies. It's a closed club though. These folks just want everyone to know they are thinking about them - while collecting money from them.
  • Media
    A sort of new royalty of intellectuals conspiring to teach the whole world new lessons every day.
Most these groups share a common characteristic: They want everyone to think like they do.
To my mind, that pretty much defines a fanatic. And, if these groups exists as they're characterized, they are all groups of fanatics. Most of the characterizations are intended to dehumanize, depersonalize, and whoever is suspected of being a part of one or more of the conspiracies.

The list is far from complete, of course.
Palestinians would name Israel, the ADL, and Mossad. Israelis would name the PLO, Syria, and Iran. Blacks have formed reverse-racist business groups in the US. Blacks in Africa still blame the Europeans for everything. Any sort of racism, even the Hawaiians and Haolis, can be seen as a conspiracy.
In a two-party system, extremists in each party point to the other as a conspiracy that supports other conspiracies. All in the name of making each other into boogeymen. Every political party wants to name the other as a dark, secret conspiracy.

It's interesting how many dismiss all conspiracies as necessary in order to keep others informed of different points of view. Then go into denial about the actions of extremists.
Down through history, many groups were seen as conspiracies. The goal of all conspiracies is to control and influence the levers of power: economic, military, religion and government.

Secrecy is the key to longevity for conspiracies. The threat of an invisible hand is far more effective than open warfare, or even open declarations of goals.
When a conspiracy turns to violence, it's ready - or thinks it's ready - to take the reigns of power. The resource all require is a near hysterical fear of some sort. Al Quaida is an example. They're usually fooling themselves.
Few radicals are as disciplined and organized in their plans as Mao laid out in his Little Red Book.
The Feminists have found the hysteria about domestic violence and abuse.

There are just too many.
After a while, it becomes hard to imagine anyone who is not a part of some conspiracy or another. Even if One conspiracy feeds into another. Middle-aged men see every action as the result of the influence of one conspiracy or another; if not a conspiring group of conspiracies.
Sheesh.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Disgustingly Trustworthy

The lady who runs the convenience store around the corner tells me I can take anything I like, even if she isn't there. She's Egyptian. In her words, "You can pick up the ... things .. if I'm not here, just pick up."
"You can write down for me. .. Here.", and she points to a pad next to the cash register.

In this little coastal town, I doubt 10 people know my last name. -- They all know me as Paul (the big American).
The cafes I go to for lunch or breakfast, or just to do the coffee house thing, don't mind if I get distracted and walk out once in a while. They know I'll be back and pay up - even if I really did forget to fix it up.

I'm disgustingly trustworthy.
Sometimes I think I keep too many secrets. Business secrets, personal secrets, my own secrets, .. all of them kept. Probably even a few national security secrets I forgot long ago.
No one will ever hear them.

Characteristically, my work is something personal. Too personal really.
I want every character in a program exactly as it should be; the best possible code to accomplish the task. I'll refactor over and over until I get it right.
Back to the requirements, adjust, then look it over again. One of the bains of my existance is TDD.
Half the time, I end up with the same code I began with.

I hack and question each line, each method and strategy, until it feels and looks right.
Just a little more effort, and this would be obsessive.

Being trustworthy has its upside and downside.
The upside is I don't have the stress of stringing one story onto another. My memory might get faulty, but it is as close to the truth as I can get at the time - and people know it.
On the other hand, being trustworthy means being trusting. The air goes out of the room at times when I read a look in someone's eyes or face. But, like the dangers of freedom, that's a risk I choose to take.
The Golden Rule applies both ways to a few.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Dinner and ...

A woman invited me over for dinner with her brother and his girlfriend as a fee for looking at her laptop. I set myself up for this one. She's a great cook and I was fishing for a home cooked meal...
It'd taken me two months to find a cafe cook who'd make my omelettes the way I wanted them, and she gave me a discount to boot!
Sitting around while the roast was cooking, my eyes roamed her form. I couldn't help wondering what would happen when her brother and his girlfriend left.
Then she told me her age: 27.
It's hard to believe there are full grown women literally half my age. -- Oh well.
After dinner, and her brother had left with his girlfriend, I cleaned up a little then just went home. Was it really that long ago I would have tried to give her a juicy night to remember?
I must be getting old.

I have to admit I despise maturity. Ignorance may not be bliss, but it sure is a lot more lusty.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Barack Obama, Democratic Nominee for President of the United States

What is that expression, Mr Obama?
Determination?
Courage?
A sense of Destiny?
Belief?

Whatever it is, it has taken you to the Presidency of the United States of America.
And the World sees my country in a whole new light as a result.
Bravo. Bravo! Hurrah!!

Barack Hussein Obama is the President-elect

America has elected a President, and people are celebrating in Kenya, Indonesia, Hawaii, and Harlem. These are groups related to the new President.
There's even a few who claim to be related in Ireland!
Parties are erupting across the US, France and Germany.
It's wonderful to see.

There is a sense of something lifted from one, something to smile about, all across the world.

When I was a child, I'd never see a black President in my lifetime. They also told me I'd never live to see the end of the Soviet Union too...

The ironies of life will never cease to amaze me.
America the Great Satan, commonly dismissed as incurably racist, still apparently ruled by fear and loathing of all things Islam or Muslim because of the fear of terrorism, -- has elected the son of a Muslim whose middle name is ... Hussein.
I don't know whether to cry or sing. Or both.

People are celebrating Obama's victory in many ways.
A man from Belfast living in Australia is roaming the streets telling everyone he meets that this is a victory for Franklin Delano Roosevelt and citing the US Constituion: "Government for the People; of the People and by the People."
He says the whole thing send chills up his spine.
The same man showed his bullet wounds to a young man saying, "I took those for this day."
We spent a couple of hours telling the young man about the silent, unsung heroes of past wars. Not many will remember the Murmansk run. His father was one of the few sailors who survived.
The old man would have been proud of America today.

Another man went to see his 4-year old grandson for the first time. He thinks his daughter has never been better. - To him, that 4-year old cuddling close to his neck is far more important.
But he's still glad Obama won.

This is something too long coming. America has shown itself again as a light to the World. A light of Hope.

Obama has so much Hope to live up to. All we can do is pray, and offer what we can of ourselves to help and support, that he is able to live up to half of what's expected of him.
You have our prayers, Mr Obama. You have our Hope, and Faith.
May God bless you and keep you. And all who are there with you.

The NYTimes put together a list of the top 25 blogs about the election. Click the slideshow link and drink it all in.