A Diatribe, Some Lost Thoughts, Etc.

Well, this was going to turn into some ingenious post, cannibalizing my own pursuit of life and everyone else around me. But the slightly intoxicated diatribe turned into a slightly uninspired loss for words. So I’ll save you from my inability to reestablish my point of view with a little prose:

I was once you, I am you, I will be you: I regret every moment and I despise every second. I was the idealist youth, I am now the young, I will soon lose the ability to distinguish fact from fiction, and I will consequently act on my flawed logic for the rest of my existence. Welcome to your homogenized, desparate American life. You have as much to look forward to as I do.

Moving on, I never wrapped up some thoughts on a noteworthy event. Some lost thoughts by Jeffrey Stottlemyer about a Levy/Kristol/Fukuyama event:

This evening I attended an event at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Service, downtown, a dialogue between Henri-Bernard Levy and William Kristol, with Francis Fukuyama moderating. Three influential thinkers, for sure. Warned even by my father of Kristol’s extremism, he came off intelligent and, indeed, eloquent (though squarely in the conservative camp). It was refreshing to listen to a rational, informed commentary on conservatism, even if I strongly disagreed. Be made some admittedly astute comments. At one point, he stated that Lenin was analytically superior to Marx, as he, correctly, believed proletarian revolution would occur wherever there was sufficient political will. The culmination of capitalistic society, seen at the turn of the century in the fully industrialized nations of Western Europe, was not the breeding ground Marx believed it would be. Rather, the agrarian backwater of Russia proved the catalyst. A debatable statement (the bit about analytical superiority), but one I am inclined to agree with.

However, admitting Kristol’s eloquence and coherence, I came away in Levy’s camp. Though Levy was sometimes hard to follow, his discussion of the role and duty of an intellectual seemed particularly insightful. He stated that an intellectual’s role is to submit unceasing critique, the classical gadfly. At first Levy left his statement in very general terms. He was helped, however, by Kristol’s rebuttal, after which Levy expounded on his original statement with greater lucidity. Kristol said “intellectuals” (in quotes even in his talk, a symptom of typical conservative distrust of the label…a distrust at times well founded, but abused by most current proponents), and the habits of objective criticism and prophecy, are at times (grudgingly) necessary, but that when it comes to policy making, one must take ones head from the clouds and make some real life decisions.

This argument plays well with a large demographic, but I believe, and Levy said something similar, that the two functions (hypothetic pondering and objective criticism versus decision making, policy creation) should not, indeed cannot, be separated. To claim that there is a demarcation between reality and philosophy, to me, is dangerous business. Concepts like collateral damage and real politick infused definitions of national interest (see: Reagan’s Latin American freedom fighters) are close behind such a realist assertion. The results are philosophically unacceptable, and thus, in my opinion (and Levy’s), cannot be viable.

In short, Kristol eloquently defended falsely utilitarian policies that beget disenfranchisement for those on the bottom, self-aggrandizement by those in control, and an avoidance of any policy implications, often intangible and far away (physical or socioeconomic) and thus easily ignored. Levy spoke on behalf of rational liberalism, humane and humanitarian. He spoke of the true duties of a state, as opposed to the false precept of government on as local a level as possible and with little interference by meddling national or international behemoths. Such a precept is no longer tenable, and though Kristol, I feel, truly believed in what he said, he is wrong.

Levy’ discussion of poverty summed up the difficulties of his worldview, but reinforced its necessity. Asked if poverty was the new irreconcilable force in international politics, taking the place of the Cold War’s ideological divide, he answered a qualified yes and no. Acknowledging the fact that poverty had always existed, and that man will likely, almost certainly, never eradicate it, he emphasized the necessity of fighting it, of trying. This is the catch. There are no certainties, other than, perhaps, failure. There are no defined endings. However, we must try; we must fight for what we know is good in the midst of the absurd. That is the duty of the intellectual, and it is our collective duty as well. It is the only tenable path.

Email

Hypocrite de Jour

“When I think I have it bad, or when I’m feeling down or complaining or trying to place blame on certain things, I think about what Christ did for me.” — Scott Stapp

Scott, as we know, is the raging drunk slash hypocrite Jesus freak lead singer of Creed. And now he has very own sex video!

Email

Some new favorites

Some minor updates and goings on:

The company I was working for almost closed up shop. But as quickly as I was unemployed, I am once employed again (and it looks like I’ll be working in DC).

One of my new favorite sites is the Coming Anarchy, named after a Robert Kaplan book about democracy in the 21st century, spefically with the power vacuum created after the fall of communism (one of the essay’s, “Is Democracy Just a Moment”, is my favorite and also highly controversial). Anyway, they touch on NUMEROUS subjects, and give a lot of time to regions that you don’t hear a lot about (the Stans and Eastern Europe).

I think one of the problems with the “blog world” is that there are far too many. And at times, I have a really difficult time discerning whats worth exploring and what isn’t. And I only stumbled on ‘Coming Anarchy’ after doing a Google search for the term. Otherwise I’d still be ignorant. I guess a lot of the blog world is just cluttered, and I’m doing my part!

Email

Joe Blog Part Deux

I really think this blogging phenomenom has gone too far. Everyone from your spastic teenage girl to your antiquated intellectual has a forum to air their stupid opinions.

This opinion is also stated on my blog. Discuss.

Email

You guys sicken me

Ok, first I exposed Clarissa explains it all, then I tried to expose Little Pete who is secretly a grocery boy for the Reagan Administration.

Has anyone thought of Pete & Pete in depth? There are some serious SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS IN THIS SHOW. First, there are two Pete’s, a mother with a plate in her head, and.. AND, artie, the strongest man on the planet (I think that’s bogus, I bet he couldn’t even bench the bar).

In all seriousness, LL Cool J DID star in one episode, as did Salma Hayek. Also there was a person who had huge pit stains because of a gland problem. I’m pretty sure this was plagarised in Salute Your Shorts by the character of Donkey Lips. Can we get verification of the problems this may have caused?

Also, does anyone have any direct ties to regime change in South America else than Oliver North and Little Pete? I’m pretty sure Nickelodeon warped children’s minds with backwards Conservative goon speak. Bigger Pete has also been recently indibted in killing a homeless person. Coincidence? DOUBTFUL.

Email

Hot On The Web