The Three Tenets of Existential Terrorism

Words are not things or actions. They are vibrations of the air molecules or squiggles on a page. Mistaking words for reality is the mistake that puts politicians in office and sells all of the products, religions, and systems of government on the planet. Saying "Tree" is no more a tree than saying "I love you" means that someone loves you. To perceive reality as it is, one must accept that words are a vehicle for the transference of our perception of reality, not reality itself.
God is dead. I killed him (it, them, her, et al) on November 5th, 1991. Justifiable Homicide. The idea that the universe is run by some cosmic supra-hero concept of ourselves is absurd and unproven. The idea that the creator of the universe put us here in these bodies to satisfy some moral experiment is offensive. The God question; "What are we doing here?", may or may not be valid. At this time, we are here because the physical laws of the universe are not completely against our existence. Our short time of consciousness would be far better served ensuring our survival rather than posturing before some misanthropic cosmic deity.
The only government, the only rule of law, is economics. However our societies are structured, whatever religion or ethnicity, we have all decided that those with relatively more assets have better lives than those with less relative wealth. All measured value is economic value in this system.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Terrorism is Doublethink


The recent act of terrorism in Boston highlights the Doublethink of the terrorists but you will never hear about it in the mainstream media.  The terrorist organizations use guerilla warfare techniques to fight against an enemy they can never defeat.  Conventional warfare would be a lost cause against the United States so the terrorists try to inflict some physical casualties and psychological damage.  Unfortunately, terrorism actually has increased the resolve of the United States to defeat the terrorists.  While they have certainly inflicted a certain degree of existential damage to the citizens of the United States, the terrorists are nowhere near anything that could be called a victory.  The state of Israel has been under nearly constant terrorist attack for nearly 65 years and is solidly viable.  So, the terrorists cannot win, and yet they persist.  Much like the United States, having a perpetual enemy and a perpetual war keeps the people in power in power. The energy and money spent on terrorism, converted to education and industry, would actually give Islamic extremists more influence over the policies of the United States, much in the way China has leveraged its economic prowess.  But that would cause a change in the power structure.  It is far better to keep waging a war that will never be won.  

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