Sunday, September 29, 2019
Friday, September 27, 2019
Heart And Mind
They say that love is blind,
But my love for you isn't:
My heart is with my mind,
My soul is with my reason.
I know why I love you,
And it's completely real:
And unified and true:
I think it, and I feel it:
I love you for your heart,
Your sweetness and compassion,
I love you since you're smart
And filled with joy and passion,
I love you for your warmth
And excellence and wisdom;
For lights that through you course
In every time and season -
For beauty that you are
Both outside and inside,
Because you are a star
In nature and in mindset -
I love you for you will
To help, and for your honor:
For where you've gone and been
And came out all the stronger:
I love you for your grace
And for your dedication
To good deeds; your soft face
And glorious inspiration -
For your resplendent gifts
And what you're doing with them -
And all you are - it is
Completely true to reason:
I love you for your light
And unremitting kindness
All times of day and night -
No, my love is not mindless:
I love you for I see
The wonder that you're truly
And from it comes to be
The passion reasoned fully:
My heart and mind are clear
And doubt they both cast out
And there is nothing here
That's blind or not thought out:
I love you with my mind
And heart and strength and spirit
No, my love is not blind -
It's unified: So feel it.
https://sites.google.com/site/ibshambatpoetry
Friday, September 20, 2019
Russia And China: Who Is More Worthy Of Respect?
In 1985, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union elected a noble-minded leader named Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachev promised to make the Soviet Union more humane and democratic. His reforms - glasnost (political openness) and perestroika (economic reconstruction) - became world-known. He signed a nuclear disarmament agreement with Ronald Reagan and allowed the satellite countries in Eastern Europe to secede from the Communist Bloc. In 1991, the communist hardliners deposed Gorbachev and put him under house arrest. The people poured into the Red Square, and the hardliners sent in tanks. The military however refused the orders to shoot at the people, and the Soviet Union was no more.
In 1989, a large group of people in China poured into the Tiannamnen Square demanding democratic reforms. The hardliners sent in tanks, and the military obeyed their orders to shoot. China remained as it was and still remains as it was. And yet America, and the rest of the West, continue to treat China and the Chinese respectfully even as they continue to spit on Russia. And my question is, what signal does this send to the rest of the world?
One country's leadership and the military make a noble and rightful decision, and their country becomes the toilet of the world. Another country's leadership and military make a barbaric decision, and the country continues to grow in power and wealth. This is not only bad ethics; it also is bad politics.
Just how bad? Well let's look at Iran. In 1997, a moderate leader named Mohammad Khatami was elected the President of Iran. The Guardian Council had sucess in thwarting his reform agenda by saying that he was the Gorbachev of Iran. Iran after that was led by a madman who was aggressively pursuing nuclear weapons. The hardliners in Iran came back by floating before the Iranian people the spectre of Iran going the way of the Soviet Union.
There are many in America and elsewhere who claim that they won the Cold War. They are wrong. The Soviet Union could have gone on indefinitely, as have the much smaller Cuba and North Korea. Instead the leadership and the military of the Soviet Union made rightful and noble decisions. And the reward for that rightful and noble choice has been the country being plundered and its people being treated like trash.
This is something that needs to be said in any number of circles in order to put matters into perspective. To reward noble and rightful choices with plunder and ugly behavior creates a perverse set of incentives in which any villain can stay in power by referring to people what happened when the Soviet leadership went on a rightful course. Russia, China and places such as Iran, will continue to exist. What matters is the form in which they exist and what it means for their people as much as what it means for America and its allies. The policy regarding these places must be reworked to incentivize noble and righteous behavior and disincentivize barbarism. One can start by recognizing the goodwill and righteousness that had been shown by Russian leadership and its military and treating Russia and Russian people with respect.
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
"Perversion" And Tyranny
Someone on the Internet said that
perversion is written all over me. My response: Tyranny is written
all over you.
He, like any number of others, wants to
dictate to people their sexual behavior. He is doing this in a
country that is intended to be free. This makes him more dangerous to
his country than any number of “sociopaths” and any number of
“perverts.”
Most of these people do what they do in
the name of society. In this is created an authority that is
unlected, unaccountable, unbalanced and unchecked. This authority,
being unelected, unaccountable, unbalanced and unchecked, has nothing
to keep it from becoming tyranical and corrupt. It becomes a way to
sneak in tyranny into a free country. And that, once again, is more
dangerous to the country than any number of “sociopaths” and any
number of “perverts.”
In some circles, people who do this are
referred to as fascists. To this they usually respond that fascism is
something that is done by the government. It does not matter whether
it's done by the government or by private entities. In either case,
oppression is done. In fact government fascism is less obnoxious than
private fascism. Governments in the West are bound by constitutional
law and subjected to accountability, check and balance. Private
fascists are bound by no such thing. This allows them to get away
with greater oppression and corruption than is allowed the
government.
When I was at UVA, the libertarians
posted a sign saying “Smash the chains of statism.” There is no
statism in America. Oppression in America is done by private
entities. I mean groups such as Jehovah's Witnesses and Westboro
Baptists. I mean fathers who like to rape their children and beat
their wives. I mean the mafia and the gangs. I mean corrupt networks
in law and medicine. And – yes, I mean people who want to dictate
to people their sexual behavior and their personality.
The libertarians are therefore wrong.
It is not the government that is the source of tyranny in the West;
the tyranny here is private. And rather than smashing the
non-existent chains of statism, people should be smashing the chains
of real oppression perpetrated by private fascists such as the above.
Thursday, September 12, 2019
Spirituality And Reality
There are many people who see artistic
or spiritual interest as being based in failure to deal with reality.
They have an inadequate understanding of what reality is. Reality is
not just what you can see, touch or smell. There are all sorts of
invisible powers that are completely real. Dealing with these powers
is not a result of failure to deal with reality; it is a result of
experiencing these powers.
We also see such things being seen as
mental illness. It is mental illness if it exists inside your head
and only inside your head. It is not mental illness if it corresponds
with things that exist outside of your head. Spiritual powers do not
exist solely inside of one's head. They exist absolutely.
In my case, my spiritual experiences
have been so numerous and so intense that I would have to be
completely psychotic to deny them. I will list some of them here.
In 1995, I had a beautiful romantic
relationship with a woman named Michelle, who finished Harvard in 3
years and who was a poet. In 2000 I wanted to have it recapitulated,
so what happens but that I start corresponding with a woman named
Michele, who finished Caltech in three years, who was a poet, and who
in 1995 had had a similar relationship with a man from Bulgaria whose
last name was similar to my middle name.
My girlfriend woke up in the middle of
the night, complaining that her ex-husband was talking to her in
spirit. In the morning she decided to test this, so she said in her
head, “OK Todd, if you have been talking to me in spirit call me.”
30 seconds later Todd called and said that he had been talking to her
in spirit.
In a mediation I saw an outpouring of
sorrow in Argentina. Shortly after that I picked up a paper and read
that there was an outpouring of sorrow in Argentina because someone
famous had died.
I see master numbers on the clock –
numbers such as 3:33 and 12:12. One day I decided to set up an
experiment. I set four different clocks to four different times
around the house and recorded every time that I looked at the clock.
1 in 10 of what I got was master numbers when by chance it would be 1
in 60.
I was asked inside my head what kind of
woman I wanted, and I said the best artist. Shortly after that I met
Julia, who was a magnificent artist and who was in the middle of
leaving her husband, which is the only time a woman as beautiful as
her would be single.
And there are more.
Once again, I would have to be
completely psychotic to deny spiritual experience. There are simply
too many.
When faced with an experience that
contradicts one's worldview, the logical solution is to correct the
worldview, not to deny the experience. And if it does not fit into
one's notion of what is reality, it is to adjust one's definition of
what reality is. We see logic being used as a code word for denying
spirituality. That is a wrong definition of logic. Logic is a tool,
not a mindset. And when faced with undeniable spiritual experience,
the logical thing to do is adjust one's definition of what is real.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Analyzing Ayn Rand
With Ayn Rand, either you love her or you hate her. I have read a number of her books. What follows is an analysis of she was right about and what she was wrong about.
First, what she was wrong about.
Probably her most destructive stance was her condemnation of environmentalism. She saw nature as only resources for human consumption and thought that environmentalism was against progress. While there are some in the environmentalist movement who are in fact against technology, any number of others aren't; and I am friends with a scientist and an engineer named Arindam Banerjee who has a pioneering energy technology invention (http://htnresearch.com). There is no contradiction between environmentalism and progress; a progress toward smarter technologies will allow people to have everything that they have now and more while making the burden lighter on nature. An argument that needs to be made is that people have not created nature or anything approaching nature in intricacy or complexity; and it is wrong to blindly plunder the magnificent masterpieces in the forms of animals and forests that one cannot recreate. I have not seen this obvious argument being made; but if nobody else wants to make it, I will.
Another wrongful stance was claiming the government to be the sole source of tyranny and corruption. In fact there are many entities that are capable of tyranny and corruption. There are corrupt and tyrannical bosses; corrupt and tyrannical parents; corrupt and tyrannical religious sects; corrupt networks in law and medicine; all sorts of shady organizations. In Western democracies, governments are elected, official, accountable, checked and balanced; these other entities are not. And this allows them to get away with greater acts of tyranny and corruption than are allowed Western democratic governments.
Still more wrongful was her equation of the totality of rational interest with economic self-interest. In fact there are many forms of rational interest. A scientist who is driven by interest in acquisition of knowledge, or a teacher who is driven by interest in nurturing the minds of future generations, is coming from completely rational considerations; and it is wrong that such people be seen as less rational or responsible than people who are driven by money.
Also wrongful was her equation of altruism with totalitarianism. This is confusion between a legitimate value and its misuses. Anything that has appeal to people – and that includes things that have moral appeal – will see some scoundrel or opportunist wanting to use it for wrong. That does not mean that the value is wrong in itself. Patriotism can be used for wrong, but that does not mean that patriotism is bad. Money can be used for wrong, but that does not mean that money is bad. Peace, justice, beauty, you name it. That Stalin appealed to altruism to create a totalitarian state does not impugn altruism; it impugns Stalin. I am acquainted with a number of altruistic organizations such as Salvation Army and Medicins Sans Frontiers, and none of them are remotely totalitarian.
She was wrong to portray psychology as a pseudoscience. Psychology has become better in recent years than it was at her time, and now even conservative people in business constantly use psychology in marketing, management and human relations.
She was also wrong to dismiss out of hand religion and spirituality. I started out as an atheist just like her; but reality has proven me wrong on that count. I have had any number of experiences with less than a billionth chance of happening whose only explanations were spiritual; and so have any number of credible people I know, including successful entrepreneurs, distinguished scientists and successful highly educated professionals in fields from software to medicine.
Now on to what she was right about.
She was very spot on in describing the situation that is encountered by people with original ideas or original contributions. Her depictions of that in Fountainhead were brilliant.
She had very useful insight on love and relationships. Her definition of love – a passionate approval of the next person with your whole being – is probably the best that I have ever encountered; however it is not only about approval. You also care about the person, and you also want her best interests even if it's not the same as your own interest – a concept which is alien to Ayn Rand.
She was right to affirm reason and to confront ideologies such as relativism and Kantianism. Reason is very important once you do away with anti-spiritual and anti-emotional bigotry that is practiced by many people claiming to be rational. Probably her most useful and most original contribution is the claim that there is a rationality to feelings that is a function of what the person is. To the best of my knowledge, this argument is original to Ayn Rand. It is a very important argument.
She was right to stick up for the entrepreneur at the time that held a low view of private enterprise. There are plenty of highly decent people in business, and I have a high view of most of the bosses that I have had. I would especially single out for that Page Basheer and Dave Petersen at Retrieval Systems; Milan Bhatia and Manju Juneja at Oracle; and Ron Kahlow at Business Online. The anti-entrepreneurial attitude that was had by many intellectuals at the time was wrong, and it has discredited intellectuals. Ayn Rand was an intellectual who did not have that ruinous attitude, and she has influenced me not to have it either.
She was right to affirm ego in face of ideologies and religions that demonized it. The statement that an individual's ego is a bulwark against tyranny is correct. Fascist ideologies of the time wanted to subsume individual's ego under the ego of the totalitarians; and affirming the individual's rightful prerogatives was the correct solution to that problem.
She was right to state that there is no inherent contradiction between idealism and realism. There are realistic ways to achieve positive outcomes, and there are ways to inform ideals with better understanding of reality. This is likewise a highly original argument, and one that is uniquely right.
On sacrifice she was both right and wrong. There are many situations in which sacrifice really is evil and something that tyrants want. There are other situations however when neither is the case. There are many people who sacrifice themselves willingly for their children or for causes or people they care about. In these situations sacrifice is neither an act of tyrants nor evil.
After she published her bestseller Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand was disappointed at all the shallow readings of her work. Most people who have taken interest in her work are interested primarily in her defense of capitalism; but they overlook the more profound elements of her work. I am interested in these profound elements, and I find her most widely read concepts to be incorrect ones. Her more profound elements have value for many and should be communicated to others. Whereas those of her followers who use her work for wrongful purposes should be confronted with refutations such as the ones that I made above.
https://sites.google.com/site/ilyashambatthought
Monday, September 09, 2019
Refuting Marxism Once And For All
Many people have written both in favor of Marxism and against Marxism. As a child in the former Soviet Union, I adopted it as gospel. At this point I seek to refute Marxism once and for all.
Marx used the concept of the dialectic, which he got from German philosopher Hegel. According to Hegel, a force – a thesis – is met with its opposite – an antithesis. The two forces struggle among one another to create a synthesis: A mix of the two. This synthesis is then met with another antithesis. According to Hegel, this process lead human history to spiritual betterment of humanity.
Marx took the dialectic and “inverted” it. He said instead that this process lead to material betterment of humanity, and that communism was going to be an inevitable result.
Dialectic is a useful concept, and one that has applications in all sorts of pursuits. However there is absolutely nothing inevitable about it working for any kind of betterment. Sometimes one force conquers the other. Sometimes there is an ongoing conflict with no resolution. Sometimes the forces combine to give one another their worst traits.
Marx was a historian, and he should have studied his history better. No dialectic was accomplished when Vandals sacked Rome. No dialectic was accomplished when the Spanish conquered the Incans, whose agriculture, architecture and infrastructure was vastly superior to their own. No dialectic is being accomplished now in the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine. And in the contemporary dialectic between America and Islam, so far the results have been mostly destructive. Muslim men have been coming to places like Oslo and Sydney and gang-raping Western girls and teaching young men in disadvantaged communities to be even worse to women than they had been before. Marxist scholars in academia do not get the results of this. The people who fund them do.
To believe in such a thing as historical inevitability is ridiculous. We have seen all sorts of orders rising, falling and changing for all sorts of reasons. In a world of 7 billion people, each possessing capacity for choice, nothing at all is inevitable. World changes, all the time, in all sorts of directions and for all sorts of reasons. That has always been the case; that will always be the case.
Nor is it in any way correct that history is driven by class struggles. History is not driven by any such thing. History is driven by choices that people make. That always has been the case. It always will be the case. Not every place had classes or anything like classes. There were no classes among Australian aborigines. As for America, it is intended to be a classless society in which anyone can rise - or fall - as far as their efforts would take them. Such ideas may have been credible in 19th century Europe, where bosses and their employers rarely mixed. It is not at all the case in places where there are no rigid class lines, where there is social mobility, or where employers and workers are working closely with one another.
Marx also claimed that religion was "opium for the masses." This is completely untrue. The Christian and Muslim religions started from "the masses" and then converted both the rulers and the ruled. Maybe some of the rulers were using some claims of St. Paul - such as that slaves should be obedient to the masters - to justify exploitative conduct; but that was never the intent or the founding of the religion.
He also claimed that people, if freed from their chains, would start a revolution and overthrow capitalism. The behavior of American people completely refutes the claim. Not only did they not agitate for a Communist revolution, but they lead the charge against Communism even when many among the elites were warming toward it. These people did not see Communism as a way toward liberation; they saw Communism as a way toward having to give away their liberty and follow the state. What some people in the "elites" believe people to be, and what people actually are, can differ greatly.
Another famous claim was that workers should control the means of production. What Marx failed to understand is that, at least in America, most of the people who are in control of the means of production started out as workers and then worked their way up. They were not a part of a "propertied class." They were people who for the most part started from little and then became wealthy through their own efforts. His argument was credible in places where dynasties ruled; it is not credible in places that seek to accomplish equal opportunity.
What Marx was right about was affirming the interests of the worker. At that time workers were treated like trash, and Marx's idea of propertied classes exploiting the working classes was credible. In much of the world – particularly in the Western countries - business has since then learned its lesson. When I worked in the corporate world, I did not feel exploited. I was being paid right, and I was being treated right. I have maintained good relations with a number of my former managers and employers, and none of them have been treating me as someone lower than themselves.
I do not reject Marxism, as did for example Ayn Rand, because it is not capitalism or democracy. I reject it because of its own glaring intellectual errors. Not everything in history is dialectical; and even in situations of dialectic there is nothing inevitable about it working for any kind of good.
Just that something has been a part of Marxism does not necessarily make it wrong. Similarly, “anything that Hitler or Nazis did” is not a workable definition of evil. Hitler was a fitness buff and a vegetarian, but that does not mean that every fitness buff and a vegetarian is going to kill 50 million people. Nazis built the Autobahn, but that does not mean that Eisenhower was a Hitler for building the Interstate. That Marx used the dialectic wrongfully does not mean that the idea of the dialectic is useless. The idea of it leading inevitably toward the betterment of humanity, however, is completely useless, and very obviously wrong.
Now I have heard it said by some people that the dialectic is a superior form of cognition to logic. I no more believe that than do I believe the people who think that logic is the higher function or that emotions are a lower function or that religion and spirituality is a delusion. It is a form of cognition. It is a useful form of cognition. But it is just that: A form of cognition – one that can go right, wrong, or in any number of ways.
To say that all history is driven by the dialectic, and that it has one or another inevitable result, is ridiculous. History is driven by choices that people make. When you have 7 billion people on the planet, each capable of choice, absolutely nothing is inevitable at all. Some idiot could come to power and blow up the planet. A major power could impose its ways upon everyone, or another major power could try to fight it – something that of course is happening already. Christians, Muslims, Hindus or Buddhists or New Agers may have a success in converting everyone to their religion. Anything can happen.
It is very much rightful to affirm the interests of the worker. However using a ridiculous ideology is not the right way to go about doing that. Use the Biblical Golden Rule. Use rational reasons – that workers are working at least as hard as their bosses and should be treated and compensated appropriately. Use simple compassion. Do not discredit yourself by adopting an ideology that is absolutely wrong.
I do not understand for one moment why so many people, many of them intelligent and many of them ethical and compassionate, bought into Marxism. Maybe they had rightfully had it with those in capitalism who thought that business was the only root of prosperity and that science or labor or education wasn't. Maybe they did not like the way in which workers were being treated. Maybe they took objection to “traditional” roles of women. All these attitudes are totally understandable. But why did they not see just how wrong Marx's central contention was?
The countries that did adopt Marxism did not end up treating workers better than did the countries that didn't. Instead Marxism was used to impose totalitarianism. Whereas capitalist democracies, although after very much struggle, ended up improving conditions for their workers and by so doing saved capitalism and democracy.
At this time in history, the interest in Marxism has increased. The American Dream has not been working for many people, and many in business have gone back to bad habits that business had had before. I caution them against doing such a thing. You re-create the conditions that preceded Marxism, you will be met with something like Marxism. Similarly the people who want to re-create 1950s will re-create the conditions that lead to 1960s and will be met with something like 1960s further down the road.
Personally, Marx and I have a lot in common. We are both nerdy overbearing Jews, and it takes one to know one. Marx had legitimate insights, but what he did with them was wrong. He created a terrible ideology. And many people died or suffered as a result.
It is legitimate to seek improvements in the lives of workers, women, etc. But it has to be done in the right way rather than the wrong way. Do not do it according to an obviously wrong ideology. Do it with rational arguments. Do it with arguments toward compassion. Do it with the actual Christian value that is the Golden Rule.
Any number of my former bosses have treated me according to Golden Rule, and I have maintained with them solid friendships. We see the same done with many businesses in America, both large and small. These people have learned their lessons from history, and they have made the correct improvements in their behavior. These improvements are partly credited to the efforts of liberals and partly to intelligence on the part of business itself. It is essential that business maintain these improvements if the world be spared a resurgence of Marxist ideology.
https://sites.google.com/site/ilyashambatthought