The Mind Scourge

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The Mind Scourge

The Mind Scourge

@TheMindScourge

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United States Katılım Mart 2011
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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
It's Marvels Superheros, all the way down; today, we're all just actors There's a peculiar post-modern quality to many events these days. A sense that we perform history rather than act out (and in, and on) history. The appearance that we curate our actions for our social media feeds, rather than conducting ourselves for the sake of the act itself. Perhaps the truth is that we've internalized the camera, the truest emblem of our present moment. We act to see ourselves acting rather than act in order to do. You see this in farces such as Prigozhin's pseudo-putsch, and whatever Yoon attempted in South Korea. You see this in every protest since camera phones and file sharing became ubiquitous. The people present don't behave like live players - like people who hold history's balance in their hands. They aren't fully committed. They haven't burnt their ships, or cast the die by crossing the Rubicon. Their actions aren't real: they're performative, with an eye to how others will view them, and to create an indelible record of your presence, your participation, in the happening that you're currently in the midst of. It's a scene. What it isn't is History. Contrast this with (to take but two signal examples) Mussolini's March on Rome, and Franco's pronunciamiento. In 1922, Mussolini declared before a crowd of tens of thousands that he wanted power and then sent a column of Blackshirts to Rome while he received delegations from the Italian great and good. He was invited to form a government by the king in short order. In 1936, Franco took direct command of the Spanish Army of Africa, then moved 30,000 men into Spain directly, initiating a brutal civil war in which he ultimately emerged the victor. What neither of these men did - and there are many other examples I could cite - was spend their time printing out handbills or filming blurbs for the cinemas or faffed around polishing how their actions were memorialized. They simply did. Today, however, our Men of Action aren't made of the same stern stuff. Prigozhin certainly looked like a tough guy, but tough guys don't back down at the gates of Moscow. They take the Kremlin. Yoon is supposedly this tough patriarch - he won in part on a wave of popular backlash to feminism - but he doesn't have any children (though he does have plenty of pets), and his declaration of martial law lasted barely a few hours, his special forces got pushed around by tiny unarmed women on the steps of the South Korean legislature, and he folded almost immediately in the midst of arguing over points of proper procedure for lifting military control. If this is the patriarchy, it's fallen on very hard times. The truth is, under modern information conditions, it is very hard to build institutions of lasting value. Contrast the success of the gay rights movement (a slow process of incremental gains over many decades) versus the (to-date) failure of trans activism. Entirely separate theories of change were behind each of these; one worked, and one didn't. A coup is hard work. In the 20th century, you needed careful planning. You couldn't WhatsApp someone. You needed to figure out a way to communicate clandestinely in person; you needed to identify likeminded individuals. All this was hard. The friction points were numerous, and very real. Now guys just issue a press release, and get spicy in the DMs. I blame Marvels. Partially tongue-in-cheek, but also partly in complete earnestness. Capesuit stuff is the great cultural unifier of our times. Everyone has seen at least some examples. These are the pictures that people have in their heads. What they imagine they are acting like. It's very shallow stuff of course, and completely deracinated and ahistorical. But it's nonetheless real. This is how people imagine themselves to be. No wonder they all fail.
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ハセン حسن
ハセン حسن@hasen_95dx·
@TheMindScourge Wait, this is referring to how it's just a compilation of "ijtihad" of a decentralized network of judges, right?
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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
Common law is just Anglo sharia but you’re probably not ready to hear that just yet
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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
How many times will this piece be written? How many times will this story be retold? Who here remembers that leftist scourge of Greece, Syriza? The hard right reign of Meloni? That hammer of the East, the latter day Attila, Orban the Hun? None of this matters. But our system requires the perception amongst the electorate that it is on the cusp, the very precipice, of some radical and revolutionary change in order to sustain engagement with the periodic polling mechanism that we call “elections”. It’s product of confluence between our information ecosystem which needs attention (and nothing sells better than fear) and our political class, which demands an entourage and acclamation for its legitimacy It’s all just window dressing and the substantive equivalent of a consumer entertainment offering in an environment overcrowded with such experiences
Pimlico Journal@PimlicoJournal

🚨NEW: France seems poised to elect its first right wing government, but what can we expect from such an administration? And as multiple crises bite, is the condition of the French Republic terminal? ✍️: @tfromthemeadow 📖: pimlicojournal.co.uk/p/france-our-p…

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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
Interesting thing about this design is that at the time it looked futuristic, whereas now this would appear dated (all that reinforced concrete would not weather well) Whereas the Art Deco of the Golden Gate ended up Lindy and iconic You have to be very careful with “up to date” design; nothing ages faster
Cambridge H. Lutèce@cam_lutece

Frank Lloyd Wright once designed a second San Francisco Bay Bridge... the result was beautiful. Six lanes, walkways, and rapid transit would have been swept over the Bay on angelic arches. At the center? A "hanging garden," with sweeping vistas of Oakland and SF.

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Phryne Astynome
Phryne Astynome@PAstynome·
I have no clue why the developed world is going through an arms buildup when they don’t have the demographics or the finances to support it.
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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge

I have 4 kids, so a few things to consider: Having one kid is a bit like having none. You can still keep up with old friends and habits. Your wife can go out and you can watch the kid, and vice versa Where things really change is when you get two or more kids, plus when they get older. Infants and up until about 18 months or so is its own world. They don’t really do much and they sleep a lot. So it’s easy to take your baby with you and you can (mostly) focus on other things Once you have two or more it becomes harder. Your first will be older and much more of your attention will be on him or her. Going out with friends is still possible but now you’re leaving your wife with two kids. She’s now outnumbered and the older of the two is much active. The mental load is higher. It’s more of a burden to ask your wife to do this and so you’ll start doing it less often The other thing is that interests diverge. Your kids are this really important new thing in your life. It’s your major topic of conversation outside work. If your friends don’t have kids there’s just this huge area of your life you now can’t discuss. You can try, but it rarely works in practice. You’ll think that you’ll be the exception, but probably you won’t. Your friends no matter how understanding just won’t get it Again, with one kid most of the above doesn’t really apply. Most things will continue unchanged, at least for awhile

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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
I posted on this a month ago, to some controversy I’ll link it below, but the gist is this: You think you’ll be different, you think you’ll be the parent who keeps all your old friends, but you most likely won’t be the exception The world steadily divides between those with kids, and those without, and as understanding as your friends without might be, they won’t really get it, and you’ll no longer have this reference point in common that is now the biggest single thing in your life.
New York Magazine@NYMag

Our friendship survived bad dates, illness, marriage, fights. Why can’t it survive your baby? "The friendship divide is not some dramatic breakup but a slow-rolling tectonic shift that neither side notices at first (especially the parents). The fissure often starts as an abstract fear of unknown agents of change (an emerging baby and an emerging parent) and the shared realization that two lives, which had been more or less plodding along a similar path, are about to diverge." Revisit Allison P. Davis’s story on the impact of parenthood on adult friendships: nymag.visitlink.me/8PAnue

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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
@StatisticUrban Wong Tsu, born in Beijing in 1893, then went to MIT and became Boeing’s first aeronautical engineer, would be another such
The Mind Scourge tweet media
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The Mind Scourge
The Mind Scourge@TheMindScourge·
I would love something like this in my neighborhood but I’m not typical I hope everything works out well for her but I’m certain she’s going to get a lot of complaints with those lines People in the suburbs don’t want to see other people outside. You’re supposed to be in your car, windows up, heading to the drive up x.com/JulieChangRE/s…
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