ICH |Who Is President Duterte, Really? Why Does He Swear So Much, Why Does He Insult Everyone, From President Obama To Such Mighty Institutions Like the U.N., the EU, Even the Pope?
“He comes from the South”, explains Ms. Luzviminda Ilagan, a former member of the Congress, and one of the country’s leading feminists:
“He is a Visaya. In Luzon, they speak Tagalog, they are ‘well-behaved’, and they look down at us. Politically, here we say ‘imperialist Manila’. Ironically, Mindanao contributes greatly to Manila’s coffers: there is extensive mining here, there are fruit plantations, rice fields; but very little is shared with us, in terms of the budgets.... And suddenly, here comes a Mayor from Davao, from the South, and he is even speaking the language that they hate. He is angry at the situation in his country, and he is swearing and cursing. It is cultural; after all, he is Visaya! In Manila and abroad, it is all misinterpreted: here you don’t swear at somebody; you just swear, period. Yes, he is different. He tells the truth, and he speaks our language.”
Why should he not be angry? Once the richest country in Asia, the Philippines is now one of the poorest. Its appalling slums are housing millions, and further millions are caught in a vicious cycle of drug addiction and crime. Crime rate is one of the highest on the continent. There is a brutal civil war with both Muslim and Communist rebels.
And for centuries, the West is mistreating and plundering this country with no shame and no mercy. Whenever the people decide to rebel, as it was the case more than a century ago, they are massacred like cattle. The US butchered 1/6 of the population more than a century ago, some 1.5 million men, women and children.
‘Dynasties’ are ruling undemocratically, with an iron fist.
“In the Congress, the House of Representatives and the Senate, some 74% of the seats are taken by members of local dynasties”, explains Prof. Roland Simbulan. “This is according to serious academic studies”.
Before President Duterte came to power, most of the social indicators were nearing the regional bottom. The country lost its voice, fully collaborating with the West, particularly against China.
An angry man, a socialist, President Duterte is outraged by the present and the past, but especially by the ruthlessness of Western imperialism.
He talks but above all he acts. He takes one decisive step after another. He pushes reforms further and further, he retreats when an entire project gets endangered. He is steering his ship through terrible storms, through the waters that were never navigated before.
One error and his entire revolution will go to hell. In that case, tens of millions of the poor will remain where they were for decades – in the gutter. One wrong move and his country will never manage to rise from its knees.
georgiebc | One of our most overwhelming impulses as humans is to belong to a
society. The pain of shunning is the most powerful coercive tool we
employ against each other. Shunning can motivate people to take their
own lives or the lives of others. Solitary confinement can rapidly
destroy mental health. An infant left without human contact can have all
of their physical needs met and still grow up with physical and mental
damage. The need to belong can be used to overpower principles, deep
rooted morals and self-interest. History has repeatedly proven that the
majority of people can be coerced to do almost anything to themselves or
others by the need for social inclusion. The desire to be a part of
something bigger than themselves is frequently expressed as a motivation
for action and duty to society a frequent excuse for compliance.
Most people are born with ambition to reach their own full potential
in the areas which interest them. Autonomy, the ability to choose ideas
and society for ourselves and the freedom to spend our lives in the way
that seems best to us is a basic human need. A society which locks
people in or out due to location of birth or ethnicity and roles which
are presented as the only acceptable paths require rigid conformity
which does not suit our wide diversity of characters and abilities.
Accepted diversity is not just morally just or strategically wise, it is
also necessary for a complete society to fulfill all the roles required
or desired. Diversity gives society the benefit of as many viewpoints
and potential solutions as possible.
We once had a chance to achieve a balance between autonomy, diversity
and society. Many societies of interwoven dependencies worldwide had
the potential to evolve and allow both autonomy and society for all.
Instead we created a global, sectarian, stratified class system where
everyone must strive for the same goals and all but the few setting the
goals would fail.
The trade economy has denied the value of any work benefiting those
in need of assistance and denied the value of resources in non-western
countries. Both caregivers and resource rich continents are depicted as
being in a state of perpetual begging for handouts from the wealthy
despite the obvious fact that no one needs the wealthy and everyone
needs caregivers and resources. The same power that once denied
ownership by the commons with the homesteading principle now denies the
rights of homesteaders in favour of foreign multinational corporations.
Laws are stratified to ensure the powerful have superior versions of
everything, including immigration rights at a time when much of the
world will need refugee status from drought, pollution, conflict and
natural disasters. Even natural life expectancy is unapologetically
higher for the chosen strata. The world is being funneled through a
eugenics program of a previously unimagined scale.
This callous and deliberate exclusion of most of humanity, even for
moral nihilists, is ignorant and ill-judged. Our only hope of a livable
future is in a singularity produced not from technology created by a
population of self-appointed Übermenschen but from the collaborative
creativity and experience of all of the diverse minds in the world.
Where very recently a qualified tradesman could, and was expected to,
understand everything related to their field, it is now increasingly
difficult for one human brain to comprehend the overall workings of any
complete system much less the interlocking detail of every system
globally. Given the required tools and societal structure, we could
create a resilient collaborative network that could act as a real hive
mind. We could audit, bridge and develop complex original thought and
create solutions with the speed required to solve the urgent problems we
face today.
Every revolution in history has simply installed new faces on top of
the same paradigm. Societies ruled by the majority create oligarchies of
Great Men, those two standard deviations above the mean in every field,
just advanced enough to impress and not advanced enough to baffle,
always from the tiny demographic group accepted as rulers. The voices
and ideas outside the circle of demagogues, the ones that need and drive
revolution in every case, sink back into oblivion. It is evident that
if we are to stop the endless cycles of revolution, or even survive
another cycle, we will have to change the paradigm. The current
corporate empire is eager to install the latest messiahs who will
promise reform which will retreat to moderation and then back to the
status quo or worse. As we can already see, this population is once more
leading us past democracy and back to the deeper prison of fascism.
This time it is essential that we go deeper and create a genuinely new
system, not just new messiahs and new names for old tricks.
unz | Now, at this stage of the exposition, I feel I have to make a general point, which is this: just because I am writing about a phenomenon, even inventing a term for it (ARRF) does not mean that I presume to understand it fully. For example, inan earlier essay, I defined the term “High IQ Idiot”, orHIQI. I described the phenomenon and tried to provide some framework of analysis, but I certainly do not claim to fully understand why so many high IQ, highly educated people are so helpless against the propaganda matrix and all of its cartoonish, synthetic narratives. Similarly, I have often wondered how many people really believe — I meanstronglybelieve — in the various politically correct,ARRFpropositions, like same-sex marriage. For example, I have heard the claim that support for gay marriage is now the majority viewpoint, but I don’t know whether to believe that. If one’s source of information on something like that is the mainstream media, that is problematic, given the MSM’s pro-ARRFbias.
I don’t think it is easy to know. You see, a lot of people will proclaim (even loudly) their belief in all sorts of dogmas when they feel it is in their interest to do so, that this is what is expected of them. That is true now just as it was in Medieval Spain or Soviet Russia. That is one way that elites can become pretty disconnected from reality. Surely a lot of rich, powerful people believe themselves to be very witty and funny because everybody always laughs at all of their jokes. They would believe it because they want to believe it and also because nobody ever tells them that they suck.
I’m writing this not long after the 2016 presidential election, and like so many others, I am still trying to absorb the news, make sense of Trump’s win. I have to admit that I had long assumed that a Hillary Clinton presidency was inevitable. That’s what the mainstream media was telling us and I believed them, silly me. So, yeah, they had me conned, but that is of little importance, of course. More importantly, they had themselves conned! Basically, Hillary and the people running her campaign must have believed that they would have an easy victory if they configured the contest as a sort ofARRFreferendum. I guess this is because the wholeARRFnarrative is so dominant in the mainstream media that it was kind of an echo chamber and they were there believing their own bullshit. Well, Marie Antoinette allegedly said: “Let them eat cake.” That showed how out of touch she was, but that’s already a lot more realistic than “Let them eat feminism and gay rights.”
Hillary’s entire campaign message was very much a sort of progressive,ARRFnarrative — that she, Hillary Clinton was going to fulfill historical destiny by becoming the first woman president. Actually, I guess it was part of a larger, triumphantARRFnarrative. She was the logical progression from Obama, the first black president. Not that the order was necessarily that important, I suppose. Had Hillary prevailed in 2008, then they would have had Obama waiting in the wings this time round. I also reasoned that, after Hillary was done and we’d had a black and a woman, we were going to have an openly gay president after that. I felt it was, as the Muslims say:Maktub. (It is written.) Or as the Borg say: “Resistance is futile.” Whatever. It was divine destiny, the next inevitable chapter in the world according toARRF. Okay, it wasn’t so inevitable after all, but that is how they were trying to present it, and they certainly had me fooled.
Actually, it almost worked! Trump’s margin of victory was really razor thin. I mean, when you lose the popular vote but then eke out a win in the electoral college, that is something very close. If Hillary had got an extra 1% in Florida and Pennsylvania, she would have made it. Trump won by a hair really, but it wasn’t supposed to be close at all. Hillary was supposed to win in a landslide.
When Hillary referred to the core of Trump’s support as coming from a “basket ofdeplorables”, the deeper meaning was that these people were heretics or infidels, blasphemers against whatever sacredARRFdogma — a motley crew of racists, sexists, homophobes… the “alt-Right”… All these infidels were standing in the way of progress. (Well,herprogress, anyway…)
“YES, THEY DESERVE TO DIE! AND I HOPE THEY ALL BURN IN HELL!!!”
“OH, SHUT UP, HILLARY!”
Not only was Hillary’s candidacy anARRFcandidacy, Trump was very much the anti-ARRFcandidate. Time and again, the mainstream media claimed that Trump was committing political suicide by saying whatever politically incorrect thing he said and, in retrospect, it only seemed to make him stronger. But this can be understood. If much of Trump’s appeal was that he was the anti-ARRFcandidate, then he was hardly hurting himself by being politically incorrect! (It’s not a bug! It’s a feature!)
So Trump’s victory was, to a large extent anyway, a triumph of anti-ARRFheresy. That is my own way of expressing it, other people will doubtless express the same approximate idea using other terminology. Regardless of the exact language one uses, this paradigm can help explain why there is such a diverse group of people, not just in the U.S.A., but around the world, who take such delight in Trump’s win. Within 24 hours of Trump’s victory, a visibly elated Dieudonné put up a video congratulating Trump.
At 0:19, he says: “Quelle bouffée d’oxygène!” What a mouthful of oxygen! Of course, in English we would say “a breath of fresh air”. (Actually, Dieudo said:“Quelle bouffée d’oxygène, putain de merde!”. But I won’t translate the latter part.) A breath of fresh air, just an expression, but if you think about it a bit, if the victory of Trump, the anti-ARRFcandidate is a breath of fresh air, that means that theARRFcandidate, orARRFitself, is the opposite of that, i.e. there is something suffocating aboutARRF. And isn’t there? Isn’t political correctness terribly mentally oppressive? “You can’t say this, you can’t say that…” So when Trump did say this and did say that and won anyway, for many people, there was something very liberating about that.
I think it’s safe to say that, for the most part, people are far happier about Clinton’s defeat than Trump’s victory. The practical consequences of a President Trump remain to be seen. For many people it is more about thesymbolismof the event.
catholicherald.co.uk | Many Western conservative Christians have been seduced by Kremlin-funded propaganda presenting Putin as a model of bravery and virility. They relish his hostility to homosexuals (though in the interests of public relations this has recently been toned down). You can even find traditionalist Catholic websites praising him as the chief enemy of a Satanic new world order.
An openly pious man, Putin’s own religiosity appears genuine, despite his past as a servant of the anticlerical Soviet state. After a career as a KGB officer based in East Germany, he claims to have converted to Christianity. Several well-informed writers have noted the progressively strong influence of Russian Orthodoxy on his worldview – a malodorous blend of Eastern Christianity, Russian nationalism and conspiracism that he has already put into practice in Ukraine.
For most of Russia’s history, Orthodox Christianity and the Russian nationality were inseparable. To be Russian was to be Orthodox. As strong as the connection was, there still existed those who thought Russia had lost its way, surrendering its Christian morality to nefarious Western concepts like individualism. (For a notable example of this perspective, read Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s jarring commencement address at Harvard University in 1978, when he criticised Western culture as godless and materialistic.)
It is all very well to dismiss the Moscow patriarchate as a client or even a puppet of the president, but the fact remains that powerful Russian officials routinely meet with church leaders.
When Putin speaks as if he were the spiritual leader of Russia, is he being entirely insincere? And are those Orthodox who believe him simply seduced by the Kremlin’s world-class propaganda machine?
The answer to these questions cannot be a simple “yes”. In the Russian tradition, religion and politics are intertwined in ways that non-Russians find difficult to understand. And, amazingly, that tradition – which incorporates the concept of “spiritual security” against Western contamination – seems to have survived 70 years of overtly atheist Communism.
theintercept |nearly half of all programming on broadcasting and cable is unscripted, moving Hollywood away from its labor roots.
Those producers, editors, and writers who transform thousands of
hours of footage into something coherent, if not watchable, are
typically contract employees who move from job to job, none lasting more
than a few months (this makes union organizing extremely difficult).
Independent production companies create and sell the shows to the
networks, and their profits increase with how much they can exploit their workers. Freelancers get no health care or pension benefits, vacation or sick days, and often no overtime, amid hazardous field conditions. Time sheet falsification and wage theft run rampant.
Perhaps most important, your future career depends on good working
relationships with production companies and supervisors. If Mark Burnett
threatens to prevent you from working again if you cross him, that’s a
credible threat, since employees find their next jobs through
recommendations and repeat business. Even though staffers could have
leaked material anonymously, the risk of ending their careers loomed
larger, because nobody in the industry is looking out for the individual
worker, who competes with hundreds of others to land a gig.
Blackballing in such an environment is simple.
Unions can protect workers from blackballing threats by raising
grievances. They can ensure the fairness of contracts like
confidentiality agreements. They can police industries on behalf of
workers. Their absence pushes all the power to producers like Burnett,
which can collude on wages and threaten workers to bring them to heel.
The lack of bargaining power for nonunion contract workers has become a hallmark of the U.S. economy. New research
from Harvard’s Lawrence Katz and Princeton’s Alan Krueger finds that 94
percent of the 10 million jobs created in the Obama era were temporary,
part-time, or “gig economy” positions. This hands tremendous power to
employers to dictate terms of employment, and to even break the law,
without pushback. And blackballing threats are perhaps the
quintessential example.
Threats that “you’ll never work in this town again” should not have
been an impediment to anonymous leaking of material on Trump that
someone may have considered in the public interest. The fact that it
was, that people didn’t think their identities would remain hidden and
that their career would end, speaks to the climate of fear that grips
the unscripted TV industry. And it increasingly characterizes the U.S.
workforce, where the boss has disproportionate power and control.
TechnologyReview | Carl Woese published a provocative and illuminating article, “A New Biology for a New Century,” in the June 2004 issue of Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
His main theme is the obsolescence of reductionist biology as it has
been practiced for the last hundred years, and the need for a new
biology based on communities and ecosystems rather than on genes and
molecules. He also raises another profoundly important question: when
did Darwinian evolution begin? By Darwinian evolution he means evolution
as Darwin himself understood it, based on the intense competition for
survival among noninterbreeding species. He presents evidence that
Darwinian evolution did not go back to the beginning of life. In early
times, the process that he calls “horizontal gene transfer,” the sharing
of genes between unrelated species, was prevalent. It becomes more
prevalent the further back you go in time. Carl Woese is the world’s
greatest expert in the field of microbial taxonomy. Whatever he writes,
even in a speculative vein, is to be taken seriously.
Woese is
postulating a golden age of pre-Darwinian life, during which horizontal
gene transfer was universal and separate species did not exist. Life was
then a community of cells of various kinds, sharing their genetic
information so that clever chemical tricks and catalytic processes
invented by one creature could be inherited by all of them. Evolution
was a communal affair, the whole community advancing in metabolic and
reproductive efficiency as the genes of the most efficient cells were
shared. But then, one evil day, a cell resembling a primitive bacterium
happened to find itself one jump ahead of its neighbors in efficiency.
That cell separated itself from the community and refused to share. Its
offspring became the first species. With its superior efficiency, it
continued to prosper and to evolve separately. Some millions of years
later, another cell separated itself from the community and became
another species. And so it went on, until all life was divided into
species.
Now, after some three billion years, the Darwinian era is over. The
epoch of species competition came to an end about 10 thousand years ago
when a single species, Homo sapiens, began to dominate and
reorganize the biosphere. Since that time, cultural evolution has
replaced biological evolution as the driving force of change. Cultural
evolution is not Darwinian. Cultures spread by horizontal transfer of
ideas more than by genetic inheritance. Cultural evolution is running a
thousand times faster than Darwinian evolution, taking us into a new era
of cultural interdependence that we call globalization. And now, in the
last 30 years, Homo sapiens has revived the ancient
pre-Darwinian practice of horizontal gene transfer, moving genes easily
from microbes to plants and animals, blurring the boundaries between
species. We are moving rapidly into the post-Darwinian era, when species
will no longer exist, and the evolution of life will again be communal.
In
the post-Darwinian era, biotechnology will be domesticated. There will
be do-it-yourself kits for gardeners, who will use gene transfer to
breed new varieties of roses and orchids. Also, biotech games for
children, played with real eggs and seeds rather than with images on a
screen. Genetic engineering, once it gets into the hands of the general
public, will give us an explosion of biodiversity. Designing genomes
will be a new art form, as creative as painting or sculpture. Few of the
new creations will be masterpieces, but all will bring joy to their
creators and diversity to our fauna and flora.
nationalhumanitiescenter | First, some terminology and background, especially for the
nonspecialist. “Evolution” has different meanings to different
scientists; a population geneticist, for example, views evolution
simply as changes in allele frequencies (that is, the frequencies of the
variant forms of a gene) over time. Such changes are usually random,
reflecting the fact that not everybody leaves offspring, so by chance
some alleles increase in frequency and others decrease in frequency over
time. These random fluctuations, known as genetic drift, occur more
rapidly in small populations than in large ones. Genetic drift results
in loss of genetic variation within populations and increases in genetic
differences among populations over time, and is countered by migration
among populations, which restores genetic variation within populations
and decreases genetic differences among populations. Thus, to a
population geneticist, since allele frequencies are always changing
because of drift and migration, by definition evolution is always
happening, and it therefore makes no sense to say that humans are no
longer evolving.
But to most people who are not population geneticists, biological
evolution means natural selection, in the Darwinian sense: increase in
the frequency of an inherited trait which enhances the survival and/or
reproductive success of individuals with that trait, also referred to as
genetic adaptation. Often, this is expressed as a response to a change
in the environment, which in turn leads to a change in those traits
that confer enhanced survival/reproduction. Familiar examples of genetic
adaptations that resulted in human evolution include bipedality,
increased brain size, loss of body hair, and variation in skin
pigmentation. To say that humans have stopped evolving, then, is to say
that such inherited traits no longer matter when it comes to how humans
respond to their environment. This is the view that I often hear:
culture acts as a barrier or a buffer between us and the environment,
thereby preventing human evolution.
However, if culture is a buffer, it is an imperfect one. For
example, humans are plagued by a variety of infectious diseases, and for
every success story (e.g., eradication of smallpox and polio) there are
diseases that resist our efforts at finding vaccinations or cures
(e.g., malaria and AIDS). And you can be sure that if our culture is
unable (or unwilling) to do what it takes to prevent or cure a disease,
then genetic resistance will indeed occur and will increase in
frequency. Some classic examples of natural selection in humans involve
genetic variants that increase resistance to malaria, such as
sickle-cell anemia. Genetic variants that increase resistance to AIDS
have been identified, and it is a safe bet that such variants will
increase in frequency if there is no cure/vaccination for AIDS – but
such increase comes at the expense of individuals who do not carry such
genetic variants. Evolution in response to infectious disease is thus
an ongoing story in humans.
But there is an alternative view to that of culture as a (leaky)
barrier to human evolution, which can be expressed as follows: humans
have been evolving and continue to evolve, not just in spite of culture,
but because of culture. That is, cultural practices have
actually caused humans to evolve, and a classic example is lactose
tolerance. The story goes as follows: lactose is the major sugar
present in mammalian milk, and most mammals stop making lactase, the
enzyme that digests lactose, shortly after weaning because they are
never again exposed to lactose in their diet. This, incidentally, is a
nice example of the evolutionary principle of “use it or lose it”:
there is no need to continue making lactase if there is no lactose in
the diet. Some humans are weird, however, in that they retain the
ability to digest lactose into adulthood. It turns out that the
frequency of this trait, known as lactose tolerance (or lactase
persistence), is highly correlated with milk-drinking populations in
Europe and Africa, and was apparently driven to high frequency by
natural selection in those populations. Thus, a human cultural trait –
domestication of cattle, thereby providing cow’s milk as a new source of
nutrition – resulted in human evolution (namely, an increase in lactose
tolerance).
WaPo |This morning Sari Horwitz has what may be the most comprehensive account yet
of what happened behind the scenes as FBI Director James Comey decided
to essentially hand the 2016 presidential election to Donald Trump. It’s
an extraordinary story, one that provides an important lesson that goes
beyond this one election: Political events with sweeping consequences
are determined by individual human beings and the decisions they make.
That may not sound surprising, but it’s a profound truth that we often
forget when we look for explanations in broad conditions and trends
(which are still important) or theories about dark and complicated
conspiracies that don’t exist.
Let’s
start with this summary of what happened when the FBI informed the
Justice Department that Comey wanted to go public with the news that the
bureau was looking into some emails found on a laptop belonging to Huma
Abedin, Clinton’s close aide, which would end up happening nine days
before Election Day:
One of the points that comes through
in Horwitz’s account is that both Comey and Lynch were consumed with
fear that they’d be criticized by the Republican outrage machine. Comey
worried that if he didn’t immediately go public with the fact that the
FBI was looking at these emails, then Republicans would say he was
covering up an investigation in order to help Clinton. And Lynch worried
that if she ordered Comey to adhere to department policy and not go
public, then Republicans would say she was covering up an investigation
in order to help Clinton.
So
both of them failed to do their jobs, Comey with an act of commission
and Lynch with an act of omission. You can sympathize with the pressure
they were under and say that hindsight is always 20/20, but the fact is
that they failed, and it was because they didn’t have the courage to do
the right thing. The next time you shake your head at the sight of
Republicans yelling into cameras or talk radio microphones about how
terribly angry they are at whatever they’re supposed to be angry at
today, remember how politically useful all that noise can be.
thearchdruidreport | The conviction that politicians, pundits, and the public
would be forced by events to acknowledge the truth about peak oil had other
consequences that helped hamstring the movement. Outreach to the vast majority
that wasn’t yet on board the peak oil bandwagon, for example, got far too
little attention or funding. Early on in the movement, several books meant for
general audiences—James Howard Kunstler’s The Long Emergency and Richard
Heinberg’s The Party’s Over are arguably the best examples—helped lay
the foundations for a more effective outreach program, but the organized
followup that might have built on those foundations never really happened.
Waiting on events took the place of shaping events, and that’s almost
always a guarantee of failure.
One particular form of waiting on events that took a
particularly steep toll on the movement was its attempts to get funding from
wealthy donors. I’ve been told that Post Carbon Institute got itself funded in
this way, while as far as I know, ASPO-USA never did. Win or lose, though,
begging for scraps at the tables of the rich is a sucker’s game.In social change as in every other aspect of
life, who pays the piper calls the tune, and the rich—who benefit more than
anyone else from business as usual—can be counted on to defend their interest
by funding only those activities that don’t seriously threaten the continuation
of business as usual. Successful movements for social change start by taking
effective action with the resources they can muster by themselves, and build
their own funding base by attracting people who believe in their mission
strongly enough to help pay for it.
There were other reasons why the peak oil movement failed,
of course. To its credit, it managed to avoid two of the factors that ran the
climate change movement into the ground, as detailed in the essay linked
above—it never became a partisan issue, mostly because no political party in
the US was willing to touch it with a ten foot pole, and the purity politics
that insists that supporters of one cause are only acceptable in its ranks if
they also subscribe to a laundry list of other causes never really got a
foothold outside of certain limited circles. Piggybacking—the flipside of
purity politics, which demands that no movement be allowed to solve one problem
without solving every other problem as well—was more of a problem, and so, in a
big way, was pandering to the privileged—I long ago lost track of the number of
times I heard people in the peak oil scene insist that this or that high-end
technology, which was only affordable by the well-to-do, was a meaningful
response to the coming of peak oil.
There are doubtless other reasons as well; it’s a feature of
all things human that failure is usually overdetermined. At this point, though,
I’d like to set that aside for a moment and consider two other points. The
first is that the movement didn’t have to fail the way it did. The second is
that it could still be revived and gotten back on a more productive track.
medium | The Cultural Evolution Society
is now off the ground and ready to soar. We have an ambitious agenda to
bring much-needed synthesis to biology, the social sciences, and
humanities.
This is what our founding members called for in a survey they filled out as we set out last fall.It is the rallying cry for birthing the field of cultural evolution with intellectual and cultural diversity that spans the globe. We have taken great care to ensure this diversity is present in the leadership structure of our governing body.
Cultural evolution is a field that studies the historic development of all social behavior.
It takes the tools and frameworks of biological evolution and adapts
them to the patterns of cultural change — both for human societies and
across the non-human world. It’s researchers study everything from
anatomical changes that enable tool use to cooperative behaviors that
give rise to the complex organization for social insects.
This
kind of work is deeply interdisciplinary. It requires sophisticated
practices of social organization in its own right to tackle the hard
problems of cultural studies across such a great diversity of
situations. How is it that everyday people can get “radicalized” to
become terrorists? What are the factors that make technology innovation
flourish in regional economies?
Questions
like these have historically been approached within the silos of
traditional academic fields. Adequately addressing them requires
approaches that are integrated and holistic. Our solutions — so
far — are not. They are fragmented and piecemeal because the knowledge
we use to approach them is fragmented and piecemeal.
Now
is the time to navigate the many islands of scientific knowledge and
weave them into a constellation of landmarks in the same landscape. This
is one of the primary tasks for our newly formed Cultural Evolution
Society.
If a map of
knowledge for all the sciences were created, what shape might it take?
Would it be like a spider web with linkages in multiple directions for
every node? Or perhaps a labyrinth of maze-like pathways leading to lots
of dead ends?
We
asked this question in a more narrow domain — for the 351 members of
our fledgling Cultural Evolution Society who provided information, we
gathered data on the other associations and societies they are currently active in. This led to the map above with its distinctive archipelago structure. It is like avast sea of possibilities populated with branching arms of clustered islands where people already gather.
The
field of cultural evolution is uncommonly vast in its meshwork of
relationships to other fields. This creates an advantage for the mission
identified by our membership last year when we conducted a survey of
grand challenges for the field.
The
message was loud and clear that the highest priority for our community
is to achieve knowledge synthesis across biology, the social sciences,
and humanities.
All academic
societies should strive to include a diversity of backgrounds and views
in their membership and leadership. This goal is an imperative for a
society dedicated to the study of cultural evolution. The CES is
therefore taking special steps to include four kinds of diversity: 1)
Gender; 2) Age; 3) Academic background; and 4) Nationality and
Ethnicity.
To
make sure that diversity is represented in the leadership in addition
to the membership, we formed special committees around bylaws and
electoral policy in preparation for our inaugural election — drafting a diversity mandate appropriate to the mission and agenda outlined above.
cbc.ca | The Canadian government is also revising its policy for the North.
The Liberals said they are replacing the previous government's northern strategy with an "Arctic policy framework."
Former prime minister Stephen Harper's northern strategy put an
emphasis on asserting Canadian sovereignty through the Canadian Rangers
and addressing economic concerns through natural resource development.
There will be a specific component of the policy geared toward Inuit people.
Canada and the U.S. also announced they will start a process to
identify low-impact shipping corridors. The process will include
determining where vessels will not be allowed to sail and gauging what
kind of infrastructure and emergency response systems will be needed for
northern shipping routes.
WaPo | President Obama moved to solidify his environmental legacy Tuesday by
withdrawing hundreds of millions of acres of federally owned land in
the Arctic and Atlantic Ocean from new offshore oil and gas drilling.
Obama
used a little-known law called the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act to
protect large portions of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas in the Arctic
and a string of canyons in the Atlantic stretching from Massachusetts to
Virginia. In addition to a five-year moratorium already in place in the
Atlantic, removing the canyons from drilling puts much of the eastern
seaboard off limits to oil exploration even if companies develop plans
to operate around them.
The announcement by the White House late
in the afternoon was coordinated with similar steps being taken by
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to shield large areas of that
nation’s Arctic waters from drilling. Neither measure affects leases
already held by oil and gas companies and drilling activity in state
waters.
“These actions, and Canada’s parallel actions, protect a
sensitive and unique ecosystem that is unlike any other region on
earth,” the White House said in a statement. “They reflect the
scientific assessment that, even with the high safety standards that
both our countries have put in place, the risks of an oil spill in this
region are significant and our ability to clean up from a spill in the
region’s harsh conditions is limited.
PCR | The use of the presstitute media to deny Trump the Republican presidential nomination failed.
The use of the presstitute media to deny Trump victory in the presidential election failed.
The vote recount failed.
The effort to sway the Electoral College failed.
But the effort continues.
The CIA report on Russia’s alleged interference in the US
presidential election ordered by Obama is in process. Faked evidence is
a hallmark of CIA operations.
In their determination to seal Trump’s ears against environmental
concerns, a group of environmentalists plan to disrupt the inauguration.
This in itself is of little consequence, but chaos presents
opportunity for assassination.
Trump himself seems to think he is in danger. According to MSNBC,
Trump intends to supplement his Secret Service protection with private
security. As there is evidence of CIA complicity in the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy (film shows Secret Service agents ordered
away from JFK’s limo immediately prior to his assassination), Trump, who
is clearly seen as a threat by the military/security complex, is not
being paranoid. MSNBC implies that Trump’s private security is to
suppress protesters, as if government security forces have shown any
compunction about suppressing protesters. http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc-news/watch/will-trump-use-private-security-as-president-837040707540
Global Research’s Michel Chossudovsky has explained that Trump’s
peaceful approach to Russia aligns him with oligarchs, whose wealth
benefits from business deals with Russia, and puts Trump at odds with
the military/security oligarchs, who benefit from the one trillion
dollar annual military/security budget. The latter group have been in
control since President Eisenhower warned us about them and can muster
deep state forces against a Trump presidency.
Guardian | The actor Tom Arnold has claimed to have video ofDonald Trumpusing racist language, obscenities and denigrating his own son in outtakes of The Apprentice.
“I have the outtakes toThe Apprenticewhere he says every bad thing ever, every offensive, racist thing ever. It was him sitting in that chair saying the N-word, saying the C-word, calling his son a retard, just being so mean to his own children,” Arnold told the Seattle-based radio station KIRO.
The actor and comedian said a contact from the reality TV show passed him the material before last month’s election, but he did not release it because of a confidentiality clause and the expectation that Trump would lose.
“[When] the people sent it to me, it was funny. Hundreds of people have seen these. It was sort of a Christmas video they put together. He wasn’t going to be president of the United States.”
Arnold said that the Sunday before the election Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Hollywood agent asked him to release the material on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
medium | There has
been propaganda for centuries. Misinformation campaigns are not new.
What IS new is the decentralization of media creation that enables each
community to remain isolated and separate. Also new are all of the
digital data trails that make this ecosystem of information something that can be studied in detail.
Why Does This Matter? The Media “Monster” as the Cannibal
Humanity
is dealing with major crises like global warming, the sixth mass
extinction, extreme inequality, political corruption, and an economic
system built on greed and short-sighted wealth hoarding. So why is it
that so many of us keep getting caught up in the celebrity worship of
politicians in the top 0.1% wealthiest people on Earth?
If
we were to somehow measure the total amount of attention that humans
are giving to topics they care about, how much would be on the systemic
threats to our civilization? To what extent would the focus on celebrity
culture (including political candidates and electoral races) be a distraction from what is really important?
“Cloud has been a godsend for folks trying to implement systems quickly and for us to secure workloads better,” said CIA Chief Information Security Officer Sherrill Nicely, speaking Thursdayat an event hosted byNextgov.
“We’re very happy with it,” Nicely added. “Our agency and other [intelligence community] components are busily working to move their workloads into the cloud, and off legacy and into the new.”
ICH | News media should illuminate conflicts of interest, not embody them. But the owner of the Washington Post is now doing big business with the Central Intelligence Agency, while readers of the newspaper’s CIA coverage are left in the dark.
The Post’s new owner, Jeff Bezos, is the founder and CEO of Amazon -- which recently landed a $600 million contract with the CIA. But the Post’s articles about the CIA are not disclosing that the newspaper’s sole owner is the main owner of CIA business partner Amazon.
Even for a multi-billionaire like Bezos, a $600 million contract is a big deal. That’s more than twice as much as Bezos paid to buy the Post four months ago.
And there’s likely to be plenty more where that CIA largesse came from. Amazon’s offer wasn’t the low bid, but it won the CIA contract anyway by offering advanced high-tech “cloud” infrastructure.
Bezos personally and publicly touts Amazon Web Services, and it’s evident that Amazon will be seeking more CIA contracts. Last month, Amazon issued a statement saying, “We look forward to a successful relationship with the CIA.”
counterpunch | What stood out most during theverbal broadsideunleashed by Washington’s ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, at her Iranian, Syrian and Russian counterparts over the fighting in Aleppo, was her ability to do so with a straight face. It was testament to the ability of US exceptionalism to keep its proponents cocooned from reality.
“Aleppo will join the ranks of those events in world history that define modern evil, that stain our conscience decades later. Halabja, Rwanda, Srebrenica, and, now, Aleppo,” Power said, from the vantage point of a moral high ground resting on foundations of quicksand.
Rather conveniently, the US Ambassador neglected to add Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, or Libya to her list, countries ravaged and destroyed in service to US and Western imperialism. Or how about Gaza and Yemen, where Israel and Saudi Arabia, Washington’s closest Middle East, have engaged in the mass slaughter of civilians? Yes, there was no mention of that either by Ms Power.
When it comes to Aleppo’s suffering, thescenes of celebrationby thousands of its citizens over their liberation refutes the attempt by Power and others in the West to paint the Syrian Arab Army, made up of soldiers from every sector of the country’s religious, ethnic, and cultural mosaic, as a latter day Waffen SS, an army of occupation executing women and children at random. At the same time, of course, Salafi-jihadist groups such as the Nusra Front (now Jabhat Fatah al-Sham) and Jaysh al Islam have been painted as the modern day equivalent of the French resistance or Partisans.
It has been preposterous to behold, part of an intense campaign of demonization motivated not by any concern for human rights or civilians, as maintained, but over the fact that Washington and the West’s objective of regime change in Damascus has been denied.
antiwar | If it’s not a pipeline war, why is the US intervening in Syria? The US decision to support Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia in their ill-conceived plan to overthrow the Assad regime was primarily a function of the primordial interest of the US permanent war state in its regional alliances. The three Sunni allies control US access to the key US military bases in the region, and the Pentagon, the CIA, the State Department and the Obama White House were all concerned, above all, with protecting the existing arrangements for the US military posture in the region.
After all, those military bases are what allow the United States to play at the role of hegemonic power in the Middle East, despite the disasters that have accompanied that role. The degree to which the US determination to preserve its present military profile in the region is illustrated by the case of US-Qatar relations over that tiny monarchy’s arming of extremist Sunni groups in Syria in 2012. The Obama administration was very unhappy with Qatar’s choice of proxies in Syria, and the National Security Council discussed a proposal to pull a squadron of US fighter planes from Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar as a way of putting pressure on the government over the issue,according to a story in the Wall Street Journal.
But the US Central Command (CENTCOM), which had moved its headquarters to Al Udeid in 2003, argued that the base was critical to its operations in the region, and that it was about to renegotiate its agreement with Qatar over the use of it. The Pentagon supported CENTCOM’s opposition to any move that would disturb relations with Qatar over the issue and vetoed any such pressure on Qatar. The administration ended up doing nothing about the issue, and in 2013, the US-Qatar Defense Cooperation Agreement originally reached in 2003was renewedfor another ten years.
The massive, direct and immediate power interests of the US war state – not the determination to ensure that a pipeline would carry Qatar’s natural gas to Europe – drove the US policy of participation in the war against the Syrian regime. Only if activists focus on that reality will they be able to unite effectively to oppose not only the Syrian adventure but the war system itself.
WaPo | President Obama used one of the last news conferences of his
presidency Friday to lament the country’s deep political divisions,
asserting that they make the United States vulnerable to foreign
manipulation, and to warn President-elect Donald Trump to be less
casual in his dealings with foreign leaders.
“My advice to him
has been that before he starts having a lot of interactions with foreign
governments other than the usual courtesy calls, that he should want to
have his full team in place,” Obama said. “. . . He should want his
team to be fully briefed on what’s gone on in the past and where the
potential pitfalls may be. You want to make sure you’re doing it in a
systematic, deliberate, intentional way.”
For the past five
weeks, Obama has tried to hide his disappointment about Trump’s win and
to remain publicly upbeat about the country and its institutions. On
Friday, the optimistic facade began to crack.
He worried that the
political discourse had been degraded to a point where “everything is
under suspicion, and everybody is corrupt, and everybody is doing things
for partisan reasons, and all of our institutions are, you know, full
of malevolent actors.”
WaPo | FBI Director James B. Comey and Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. are in agreement with a CIA assessment
that Russia intervened in the 2016 election in part to help Donald
Trump win the White House, officials disclosed Friday, as President
Obama issued a public warning to Moscow that it could face retaliation.
New
revelations about Comey’s position could put to rest suggestions by
some lawmakers that the CIA and the FBI weren’t on the same page on
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intentions.
Russia has denied
being behind the cyber-intrusions, which targeted the Democratic
National Committee and the private emails of Hillary Clinton’s campaign
chairman, John Podesta. Trump, in turn, has repeatedly said he doubts the veracity of U.S. intelligence blaming Moscow for the hacks.
“I
think it’s ridiculous,” Trump said in an interview with “Fox News
Sunday,” his first Sunday news-show appearance since the Nov. 8
election. “I think it’s just another excuse. I don’t believe it. . . .
No, I don’t believe it at all.”
At a “thank you” event Thursday
night with some of her top campaign donors and fundraisers, Clinton said
she believed Russian-backed hackers went after her campaign because of a
personal grudge that Putin had against her. Putin had blamed Clinton
for fomenting mass protests in Russia after disputed 2011 parliamentary
elections that challenged his rule. Putin said Clinton, then secretary
of state, had “sent a signal” to protesters by labeling the elections
“neither free nor fair.”
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