by havanagilla » Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:46 am
alice, I agree with you, on both counts. however, it has become very difficult recently to distinguish between struggle over ideals and raw tribal/resource conflicts, some are disguised as others. (some cynics would doubt the validity of the distinction to start with, and they too have a point). I am speaking, then, theoretically, in simplified terms. A pitfall to watch for is the spiritual falacy that the righteous MUST prevail or that there are any assurances in being on the good side, this sometimes leads to "joining the other camp", on a slippery slope. The challenge of being on the weaker side, yet in what one perceives as the morally superior side, is tricky. This is where many slide...into finding moral rationalizations for survivalist, immoral acts. ("I am doing this for the "light" people; i am doing it for god, for the higher cause..what not). Now there's a false "light" to start with, in some cases, but assuming this is really the true light, still, it has no temporary guarantee of victory. Minorities in these losing situations, over the centuries developed some coping strategies, some are mystical bordering on infantile magical . You can see Tibetan buddhism struggling with the severe loss, and of cousre judaism passed through 2000 years of questioning etc. Ghandi, MLK etc., were defeated by a gunshot. So, I was raising it re today's world, when some people feel overpowered and disempowered BECAUSE of a moral stand. Perhaps it is almost true as well. So, what do you do. Playing the martyr is wrong, morally ! in my opinion, because if you carry an important MeMe, you are responsible for keeping it alive, after the storm. So you might appear like a "sell out", right ? but then, what is your real responibility ? its a hard one. there is no glory in creating a martyr myth, rather than bending and waiting a BUsh-scale disaster out. these are tough questions. <br>Personally, I feel like an individual failure to hold up to MY very little responsibility, which I now perceive as protecting my very BEING from harm by PTB's, no matter what the cost or appearance is. My pitfall was thinking short term. One is easily lured into trading the important things for temporary false victories. It plays on some megalomania, in me at least, as well as in everyone else. <br>--<br>So, we were talking about the bad law of holocaust denial. I think we both agree it is a bad law. I think also that at this point, the political odds are difficult. I think we are looking at a situation that has a lot in common with the WW2 (which is denied :-)), and so what are the lessons ? <p></p><i></i>