Favorite Excerpts & Comments

The key to traveling halfway around a planet without leaving tracks is: Pay cash. Never credit, never anything that goes into a computer. – Friday

No matter how lavishly overpaid, civil servants everywhere are convinced that they are horribly underpaid — but all public employees have larceny in their hearts or they wouldn’t be feeding at the public trough. – Friday

I was taught in basic that no place is ever totally safe and that any place you habitually return to is your top danger spot, the place most likely for booby trap, ambush, stakeout. – Friday

If you are ever questioned under pain, do scream. The Iron Man routine just makes them worse and it worse. Take it from one who’s been there. Scream your head off and crack as fast as possible. – Friday

We each have a moral obligation to conserve and preserve beauty in this world; there is none to waste. – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

Self-defense sometimes must take the form of ‘Do unto others what they would do unto you but do it first.’ – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

Friday, one of your weaknesses is that you lack appropriate conceit. – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

It isn’t any one thing; it’s a million little things that are the difference between being reared as a human child and being raised as an animal. – Friday

Friday, brainpower is the scarcest commodity and the only one of real value. Any human organization can be rendered useless, impotent, a danger to itself, by selectively removing its best minds while carefully leaving the stupid ones in place. It took only a few careful ‘accidents’ to ruin utterly the great Prussian military machine and turn it into a blundering mob. But this did not show until the fighting was well under way, because stupid fools look just as good as military geniuses until the fighting starts. – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

Properly regarded, male vanity is a virtue, not a vice. Treated correctly, it makes him enormously pleasanter to deal with. – Friday

Bare feet are as provocative as bare breasts, although most people do not seem to know it. A female packaged only in a lava-lava is far more provocative than one totally nude. – Friday

One might almost define intelligence as the level at which an aware organism demands ‘what’s in it for me?’ – George Perrault

…you would like to run down to the recruiting office, enlist for the duration, and thereby turn your consciences over to the sergeants. This served your fathers and grandfathers, and I am truly sorry that it can’t serve you. – Janet Tormey

There you are. Everybody is Equal, and Everybody has a vote. But you have to draw the line somewhere. Now shut-up, damnit, and don’t interrupt while your betters are talking.” – “Warwhoop” Tumbril

The simplest sort [of code] and thereby impossible to break. The first ad told the person or persons concerned to carry out number seven or expect number seven or it said something about something designated as seven. This one says the same with respect to code item number ten. But the meaning of the numbers cannot be deduced through statistical analysis because the code can be changed long before a useful statistical universe can be reached. It’s an idiot code… and an idiot code can never be broken if the user has the good sense not to go too often to the well. – George Perrault

Field operatives, even common soldiers, are expensive; management does not expend them casually. A trained assassin costs at least ten times as much as a common soldier: she is not expected to get herself killed — goodness me, no! She is expected to make the kill and get out, scot free. – Friday

A credit card is a leash around your neck. In the world of credit cards a person has no privacy . . . or at best protects her privacy only with great effort and much chicanery. Besides that, do you ever know what the computer network is doing when you poke your card into a slot? I don’t. I feel much safer with cash. I’ve never heard of anyone who had much luck arguing with a computer. – Friday

How many people have died because they could not abandon their baggage? – Friday

Geniuses and supergeniuses always make their own rules on sex as on everything else; they do not accept the monkey customs of their lessers. – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

People are so used to the computer net today that it is easy to forget what a window to the world it can be… One can grow so canalized in using a terminal only in certain ways — paying bills, making telephone calls, listening to news bulletins — that one can neglect its richer uses. If a subscriber is willing to pay for the service, almost anything can be done at a terminal that can be done out of bed.

…the absence of Eyes and Ears today simply means that they are concealed. – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

Sick cultures show a complex of symptoms . . . but a dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for other in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot.” – Dr. Hartley M. Baldwin

If you don’t believe that such things can happen, we aren’t living in the same world and there is no point in your reading any more of this… Throughout history the conventional way of dealing with an awkward witness has been to arrange for him to stop breathing. – Friday

To a revolutionist, communications are a sine-qua-non. – Bernardo de la Paz

The trouble with conspiracies is that they rot internally. When the number is as high as four, chances are even that one is a spy. – Bernardo de la Paz

…revolutions are not won by enlisting the masses. Revolution is a science only a few are competent to practice. It depends on correct organization and, above all, on communications. Then, at the proper moment in history, they strike. Correctly organized and properly timed it is a bloodless coupe. Done clumsily or prematurely and the result is a civil war, more violence, purges, terror. I hope you will forgive me if I say that, up to now, it has been done clumsily.

Organization must be no larger than necessary — never recruit anyone merely because he wants to join. Nor seek to persuade for the pleasure of having another share your views. He’ll share them when the time comes . . . or you’ve misjudged the moment in history. Oh, there will be an educational organization but it must be separate; agitprop is no part of basic structure.

As to basic structure, a revolution starts as a conspiracy; therefore structure is small, secret, and organized as to minimize damage by betrayal — since there always are betrayals. One solution is the cell system and so far nothing better has been invented.

Much theory has gone into optimizing cell size. I think that history shows that a cell of three is best — more than three can’t agree on when to have to have dinner, much less when to strike. – Bernardo de la Paz

For example, under what circumstance may the State justly place its welfare above that of a citizen? – Bernardo de la Paz

I’m a rational anarchist… A rational anarchist believes that concepts such as ‘state’ and ‘society’ and ‘government’ have no existence save as physically exemplified in the acts of self- responsible individuals. He believes that it is impossible to shift blame, share blame, distribute blame . . . as blame, guilt, responsibility are matters taking place inside human beings singly and nowhere else . But being rational, he knows that not all individuals hold his evaluations, so he tried to live perfectly in an imperfect world . . . aware that his effort will be less than perfect yet undismayed by self-knowledge of self-failure. – Bernardo de la Paz

Professor, I can’t understand you. I don’t insist that you call it ‘government’ –I just want you to state what rules you think are necessary to insure equal freedom for all.

Dear lady, I’ll happily accept your rules.

But you don’t seem to want any rules!

True. But I will accept any rules that you feel necessary to your freedom. I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. – Bernardo de la Paz and Wyoming Knott

Revolution is art that I pursue rather than a goal I expect to achieve. Nor is this a source of dismay; a lost cause can be as spiritually satisfying as a victory. – Bernardo de la Paz

A revolutionist must keep his mind free of worry or the pressure becomes intolerable. – Bernardo de la Paz

Don’t explain computers to laymen. Simpler to explain sex to a virgin. – Manuel Kelly Garcia Davis

(de la Paz says) stickiest problems in conspiracy are communications and security, and had pointed out that they conflict — easier are communications, greater is risk to security; if security is tight, organization can be paralyzed by safety precautions. – Manuel Kelly Garcia Davis

…most money is simply bookkeeping. [...] bear in mind that an auditor must assume that machines are honest. He will make test runs to check that machines are working correctly — but it will not occur to him that tests prove nothing because machine itself is dishonest. – Manuel Kelly Garcia Davis

(de la Paz) claimed that communication to enemy were essential to any war if was to be fought and settled sensibly. (Prof was a pacifist. Like his vegetarianism, he did not let it keep him from being rational.) – Manuel Kelly Garcia Davis

Since they can inflict their will upon us, our only chance lies in weakening their will. That was why we had to go (to them). To be divisive. To create many opinions. The shrewdest of the great generals in China’s history once said that perfection in war lay in so sapping the opponents will that he surrenders without fighting. In that maxim lies both our ultimate purpose and our most pressing danger. – Bernardo de la Paz

In each age it is necessary to adapt to the popular mythology. At one time kings were anointed by Diety, so the problem was to see to it that Diety anointed the right candidate. In this age the myth is ‘the will of the people’… but the problem only changes superficially. – Bernardo de la Paz

Distrust the obvious, suspect the traditional… – Bernardo de la Paz

You might even consider installing the candidates who receive the least number of votes; unpopular men may be just the sort to save you from a new tyranny. Don’t reject the idea merely because it seems preposterous — think about it! In past history popularly elected governments have been no better and sometimes worse than overt tyrannies. – Bernardo de la Paz

– the more impediment to legislation the better. – Bernardo de la Paz

But in writing your constitution let me invite attention to the wonderful virtues of the negative! Accentuate the negative! Let your document be studded with things the government is forever forbidden to do. No conscript armies … no interference however slight with freedom of press, or speech, or travel, or assembly, or of religion, or of instruction, or communication, or occupation … no involuntary taxation. Comrades, if you were to spend five years in a study of history while thinking of more and more things that your government should promise never to do and then let your constitution be nothing but those negatives, I would not fear the outcome. – Bernardo de la Paz

What I fear most are affirmative actions of sober and well- intentioned men, granting to government powers to do something that appears to need doing. Please remember always that the Lunar Authority was created for the noblest of purposes by just such sober and well-intentioned men, all popularly elected. And with that thought I leave you to your labors. Thank you. – Bernardo de la Paz

But if you really believe that your neighbors must have laws for their own good, why shouldn’t you pay for it? Comrades, I beg you — do not resort to compulsory taxation. There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to pay for what he does not want merely because you think it would be good for him. – Bernardo de la Paz

You have put your finger on the dilemma of all government — and the reason I am an anarchist. The power to tax, once conceded, has no limits; it contains until it destroys. – Bernardo de la Paz

As (de la Paz) says, “If possible, leave room for your enemy to become your friend.” – Manuel Kelly Garcia Davis

…when faced with a problem you do not understand, do any part of it you do understand, then look at it again. – Bernardo de la Paz


This is how humans are: We question all our beliefs, except for the ones we really believe, and those we never think to question. – Orson Scott Card (Speaker for the Dead)

The tragedy of language… Those who know each other only through symbolic representations are forced to imagine each other. And because their imagination is imperfect, they are often wrong. – Orson Scott Card (Xenocide)

The wise are not wise because they make no mistakes. They are wise because they correct their mistakes as soon as they recognize them. – Orson Scott Card (Xenocide)

At the moment when I truly understand my enemy, understand him well enough to defeat him, then in that very moment I also love him. I think it’s impossible to really understand somebody, what they want, what they believe, and not love them the way they love themselves. – Orson Scott Card (Ender’s Game)

[People with] inner strength and outward respect. These are the people who hold a community together, who lead. Unlike the sheep and the wolves, they perform a better role than the script given to them by their inner fears and desires. They act out the script of decency, of self-sacrifice, of public honor–of civilization. And in the pretense, it becomes reality. – Orson Scott Card (Xenocide)

It slowed him down to have his own thoughts move around in circles–without outside stimulation it was hard to break free of his own assumptions. One mind can think only of its own questions; it rarely surprises itself. – Orson Scott Card (Ender’s Shadow)

A man might have plenty of help finding the short path to hell, but no one else can make him set foot upon it. – Orson Scott Card (Seventh Son)

What human life is, what it’s for, what we do, is create communities. (Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus) – Orson Scott Card

All the causes or purposes of all our acts are just stories we tell ourselves, stories we believe or disbelieve, changing all the time. But still we live, we act, and all those acts have some kind of cause. The patterns fit together into a web that connects everyone who’s ever lived with anyone else. (The Changed Man) – Orson Scott Card

For science fiction, at its best, has the capacity to take its readers into societies that have never existed, or give ironic twists to the familiar milieux so that all meanings are transformed. By reading science fiction we are given a different kind of revelation… that gives, not easy answers, but extremely perplexing questions; it is a revelation that, at its truest, shows us a world of extraordinarily complex moral dilemmas in which there are few clear choices, and yet in which choices must be made. (Future on Ice) – Orson Scott Card

The positive development of a society in the absence of creative, independent thinking, critical individuals is as inconceivable as the development of an individual in the absence of the stimulus of the community. – Einstein

Never do anything against conscience even if the state demands it. – Einstein

If you treat people the way they are, you make them worse. If you treat them the way they ought to be, you make them capable of becoming what they ought to be. – Goethe

The most significant development of the last few millenia has been the way human beings have supplemented and supplanted the oral tradition with a written one. The library is the defining symbol of civilization. – Michael P. Kube-McDowwell

If civilization has an opposite, it is war. – LeGuin (Left Hand of Darkness)

To the extent that we applaud and elect governments that regard tax-cuts and personal wealth as the ultimate objects of our political will–in place of investment in peacemaking, economic justice around the globe, and environmental health and well-being–we are all terrorists. – Walkter Pitman (The Ploughshares Monitor)

Any culture will become an obscenity when blown up into a universal world culture to which all must belong. – Daniel Quinn (The Story of B)

I learned something about obsession… I learned it isn’t madness or even foolishness, though madness and foolishness have given it a bad name. How could anyone who wasn’t obsessed compose a symphony or write a thousand-page novel? How could anyone who wasn’t obsessed cross an uncharted ocean in a seventy-foot sailboat? – Daniel Quinn (After Dachau)

People know it is wrong to use violence, but they are so anxious to continue to live a life secured by “the strong arm of the law” that, instead of devoting their intellects to the elucidation of the evils which have flowed and are still flowing from admitting that man has a right to use violence to his fellow men, they prefer to exert their mental powers in defense of that error. – Tolstoy on Civil Disobedience and Nonviolence

Digressions, incontestably, are the sunshine, the life, the soul of reading! Take them out and one cold eternal winter would reign in every page. – Bradbury (Fahrenheit 451)

Tourism is a two-faced giant that, at its best, has rescued many communities from depression and poverty. At its worst, it has created an international market for child prostitution and left a trail of destroyed natural habitats from Mount Everest, with its garbage-littered slopes, to resorts where bewildered sea turtle hatchlings head for the lights of hotels instead of into the sea. – Patricia Bow (University of Waterloo Magazine)

Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. – Asimov (Foundation)

There were so many different ways in which you were required to provide absolute proof of your identity these days that life could easily become extremely tiresome just from that factor alone, never mind the deeper existential problems of trying to function as a coherent consciousness in an epistemologically ambiguous physical universe. – Douglas Adams (Mostly Harmless)

“To be governed is to be at every operation, at every transaction, noted,
registered, enrolled, taxed, stamped, measured, numbered, assessed, licensed, authorized,
admonished, forbidden, reformed, corrected, punished.”
- Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

“The state can’t give you free speech, and the state can’t take it away. You’re born with it, like your eyes, like your ears. Freedom is something you assume, then you wait for someone to try to take it away. The degree to which you resist is the degree to which you are free…”
- Utah Phillips

“The most powerful weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.”
- Stephen Biko

You cannot put a rope around the neck of an idea; you cannot put an idea up against the barrack-square wall and riddle it with bullets; you cannot confine it in the strongest prison cell your slaves could ever build. – Sean O’Casey

“..it does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority to set brush fires in people’s minds”
- Samuel Adams

“Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech.”
- Ben Franklin

“[T]he right of freely examining public characters and measures, and of free communication among the people thereon … has ever been justly deemed the only effectual guardian of every other right.”
-James Madison

The liberties of a people never were, nor ever will be, secure when the transactions of their rulers may be concealed from them.”
-Patrick Henry

“A practical scheme, says Oscar Wilde, is either one already in existence, or a scheme that could be carried out under the existing conditions; but it is exactly the existing conditions that one objects to. And any scheme that could accept these conditions is wrong and foolish. The true criterion of the practical, therefore, is not whether the latter can keep intact the wrong and foolish; rather is it whether the scheme has the vitality enough to leave the stagnant waters of the old, and build, as well, sustain life.”
-Emma Goldman

“Fiction is about everything human and we are made out of dust, and if you scorn getting yourself dusty, then you shouldn’t try to write fiction.” (Flannery O’Connor)

Origin or Pawn: An Origin has a strong feeling of personal causation, a feeling that the locus for causation of effects in his environment lies within himself. . . . A Pawn has a feeling that causal forces beyond his control, or personal forces residing within others, or in the physical environment, determine his behavior. This constitutes a strong feeling of powerlessness or ineffectiveness.  – Richard De Charms

Anarcast #3: Sarah Palin

The Playful Anarchist podcast, with Asher Black (Anarcast #3, AsherCast #3). Warning: audio quality is low. Which is better – the absence of government or the absence of thought in government? Discussing Sarah Palin at National Tea Party Convention in the US, the Politics of Obstruction utilized by Republicans in 2009-2010, and International Adoption as human trafficking. Music: Aeon by Adam Fielding, Magnatune label. Opinions: solely those of Asher Black.

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Concerning Black Asher

From a Haunt Resident:

Asher Black is rumored to have an alter ego.

Black Asher has the voice of a smoker. Not dry, but a little rough. But his voice is also like the bitterest and smoothest of chocolate, the kind one takes in small bits and toasts over the flame of candle late at night. One sinks slightly into that voice whenever he speaks, without quite being aware of it until one must move to extricate oneself afterward.

He has been called “persuasive”, “resourceful”, “ingenious”, “impetuous” and something of a “miscreant”, but he has a penchant for conspiracy. He has a tendency to teach, even when he doesn’t mean to. His style in everything has the flair of the passionate romantic. He is moody, ranging from delirious comedy to fits of dark brooding.

He is tall, very dark haired, limber, always wears all black, down to his exquisite socks and lacy black wingtips or calf-length black boots. Favors trenchcoats, sometimes but rarely wears a “sam spade” hat. Smokes a pipe – generally black sandblast briar.

He will not say where he is from, and is capable of a variety of strange or foreign accents, and bits of language. His parents, he says, are long dead, and he has no family. It is rumored that he has a secret love. He is also a heretic of several churches.

Familiar with the knife, suggesting a rough background, yet his tastes run to fastidious refinery. He cooks, usually Italian, favors certain wines and liquors but is never drunk, prefers a blend of tobacco that is moist pitch black but not overly sweet laced with spicy turkish and pungent American indian varieties. He tends to look angry or unhappy when he is only thinking, which is most of the time.

Black Asher has certain unusual capabilities or tendencies.

From the First Haunt

Asher, like Count Dracula, thought it best to make the way to his Haunt arduous, the path dangerous, and the distance formidable, so that those who actually arrive are those who are capable of … well… shall we say… withstanding certain rigours….

Higher Education – a sham within a scam within a waste of time

I’ve attended a college and four universities, and have degrees from three of them. My experience with what is called education in the US is that it’s largely a wasteland of pretense, control, and pseudo-education consisting roughly of more terminology, illicitly borrowed references from other people’s work, and advancement by fakery. There are few institutions for which I have less respect – corporate life in general, religious life in general, and public education altogether, than “higher education”.

In the college where I had my first experience, a science intructor stood at the front of the class and made the absurd claim that “Einstein’s theory of relativity tells us that whatever power controls the universe, whether you call it God or whatever, one day we will be able to harness that power”. When I questioned whether this was in fact what Einstein’s theory says at all, and whether what we were hearing was science at all, not only was questioning the enthralled class highly unpopular, but the only other man in the class threatened me with violence, the women all vacated the room and refused to return, and the administration arrived on the scene and tried to blame me for the class’ feelings of fear. Of course, I calmly explained that I’d be happy to involve an attorney, and we could go over exactly what happened in a public venue. This is how I knew Science would be a waste of my time.

At the same college, it was common place to decide that someone who’d never taught or studied a subject in his life could teach it, because after all, it’s all just ‘material’. So they’d throw an adjunct in psychology up suddenly to teach a full class on philosophy because, after all, aren’t they pretty similar? My first philosophy teacher read off a list of the philosophers from the syllabus on day one, and mispronounced roughly a third of them. It was the first time she’d ever encountered those names, of course. I made the mistake of correcting her, and the response was “who’s the teacher?” Apparently not desk-r-tez. When, at her suggestion, I tried to drop the class, they told me I couldn’t drop, I could only withdraw. I think it was something like’d they’d started the class two weeks late, having been unable to find an instructor. Again, I had to suggest we make it a legal issue and address the competence of the instructor in the subject matter. I managed to escape still interested in Philosophy.

Again, at the same college, I was awarded an A on a history book report, the grades were handed out to us to see, and then back to the instructor to record. When I received my paper for keeps, the A had been marked out and B added. The instructor had decided that he didn’t like the book I reviewed. When he’d approved it, he thought he was approving a different book with one word different in the title. I was actually proud of his stupidity, and kept both marks without challenging the change. I think that’s why one of the degrees I acquired was in History. When people are willing to punish you for accessing information they don’t like, you take pride in it.

Lastly, in English literature, we were told that *any* interpretation was valid if you could defend it. So I advanced a rather novel theory that Shakespeare’s ideas were influenced by Puritanism, and so accounted for much that occurs in his plays. The class and instructor found this so intriguing that she set the entire class upon the topic, asking me to defend the thesis. I successfully defended it against all comers, and earned an A in the class, clearly foremost among all participants. However, toward the end of the class, as we had moved past Shakespeare, I announced that I had continued doing research, and no longer held to my theory, because of some additional analysis I’d done. The analysis was not requested, but my standing grades were reversed, and I received a C in the class. Instead of being lauded for pursuing the subject with intellectual integrity, I was punished, and told that I’d “made up” the theory, and that I’d wasted the class’ time on something that “wasn’t true”. Since I had changed my thinking, I was told, they could change my grade. In fact, I was given to understand that an “F” for the class had been considered, but they were being merciful. This is how I decided not to be a Literature major.

There were good, useful, and helpful classes during this time, also. You might wonder that I didn’t quit. I have a remarkable tendency to keep pounding away at things when they’re difficult, unjust, and fruitless. Probably a result of surviving my childhood. But certain instructors encouraged me and gave me life-changing information. So that certainly made it easier, and I kept the ideal of education alive.

I started at a university studying special education, and made it pretty far. At one point, though, the most respected faculty member, and certainly the most rigorous, made the statement that “the special ed teacher lives in a world of deprivation”. He went on to explain the relatively short cycle of people staying in the profession – from graduation to burnout. And I knew that it was no longer for me. More deprivation was not what I was seeking. I switched to History and academics shortly thereafter.

One of the universities I attended (and got a degree from) was a traditionally black university. The campus was dominated by an instructor who treated himself like the Phil Donahue of black studies. His courses were required. He started classes talking about threats he received from the Klan. The garbage put forth in those classes was unparalleled. The worst kind of pseudo-scholarship. We had class discussions on whether Adam and Eve were black, and about lost cities of advanced stature, hidden from history by the white man. When I complained to the administration, the adminstrator of the college talked to me of underwater cities built by technologically advanced, ancient black people. A colleague and I were so taken aback by this silliness, that we went so far as to contact a naval base and ask what research had been done on this. The researcher who posed the question to her colleagues was so embarrassed by the response (basically, ‘are you nuts?’) that we were asked not to send any further research questions. It was worth it to be thorough in ruling out the insanity. Recordings of that conversation and those classes still exist. I decided the only way to do history, which was my degree program at the time, was to do an expose of the sources of such nonsense and the truth in refutation of those claims. That’s exactly what I did, discovering that some of their primary “research sources” which they sold in the unofficial campus ‘world studies’ bookstore, included texts dictated by magical apparations (C.F. Volney’s Ruins of Empires, for instance). Needless to say my popularity with the core instructor shlepping out that hooey and his wide following among the student body was nil – there were death threats. I was told if there were any violent incidents of ‘black rage’ in response to my inquries, I would be held accountable. I had to go armed to class a few times, because really there was no other choice. Walking to my car required an escort once or twice, and that was just for asking questions about whether any of this stuff was really history.That experience was one of the reasons I decided not to take a teaching credential along with history – staying another year just wasn’t worth it – but I decided to go to graduate school instead.

Again, as an undergraduate, I had some classes that were really worthwhile. I wish the people claiming Moses was a black man would have taken them, though I gathered from their lack of interest in real research, they would have found them quite difficult to pass. Enough people did who weren’t absorbed in UFO versions of history. In fact, though, a couple of those instructors really ensured that I got an education – something that wouldn’t happen again. I studied philosophy and history and historiography with them and it was what sustained me while dealing with magic and mythology in my “black studies” classes – if you can call them classes. They were more like rampant morning talk shows with lots of calling everyone and everything racist, and lots of esoteric ‘secret knowledge’ that couldn’t, apparently, stand the light of scrutiny. Pamphlets disguised as textbooks, a cult-like preacher of insanity disguised as an instructor, and docile, bewildered, indoctrinated administration unable to tell scholarship from kooky versions of theosophy adapted from nazi sources for use, ironically in an afrocentric program of credit-bestowing, degree-granting nonsense. How many people got their credentials, and still do, in such an environment? It’s one of the main reasons that neither grades nor degrees impress me at all, or represent achievement to me at all. Whether it’s this, or harnassing the power of “god”, or studying ‘desk-r-tez’.

My first experience with graduate school involved the fact that it was on a campus that also offered undergraduate “education”. I decided to study a foreign language, which put me among mostly under-grads. The instructor was … wow. One time I broke ranks and gave a more involved (in the other language) response to his greeting (instead of just being the 20th person to repeat the same thing), and he publicly dressed me down for it – for weeks, every class – I became his running example of the unacceptable – I had done more than was required. Then I discovered that a couple of the instructors in the department were extremely antagonistic toward my religion, which they associated with an ethnicity they didn’t like. I know this because one of them stood in the hallway telling me in animated terms of her “hatred” (yes, she used the word repeatedly) for my faith and that ethnic group. After being made a public ‘example’ of, on an ongoing basis in the language class and even at international student functions, I found myself before the administration again, when I complained and asked to drop mid-semester (it took me a while to realize what psychopaths these were). They threatened to expel me, of course, and I did the usual – I offered to have my attorneys represent me as we went through the process, while our team did research on the sources of ethnic and religious discrimination among the faculty. I was allowed to drop.

I took a special seminar, or was awarded entrance to it, because it was competitive and not everyone was allowed to participate. My credentials were good, and I wasn’t yet known there as a troublemaker. I remember that I was making a point using nanotechnology as a reference in 1996 and, to the amusement of the class, a colleague said I’d been reading too much sci-fi – that nanotechnology didn’t exist. When I pointed out that the nanotech program at M.I.T. had just a few years before graduated it’s first PhD. in the topic, they were unphased. When I pointed out that Scientific American and public affairs journals were running articles on this all the time, my colleagues advised me that not everything in print is true. What I quickly realized is that a thing is not true among academics unless they have heard of it directly from someone they regard as an authority figure. Each of those people now, for some reason, understand that nanotechnology is and has been and was then) a serious branch of science. But I was a kook because, while I didn’t believe in “black Atlantis” I had access to information they hadn’t been spoon-fed. It was a useful lesson in what academia really is, and how it works. Offers to march them to the library and let them choose any sources they wanted from a bibliography search had no impact. A thing could not be real unless a professor told you it was real. And if a professor told you something completely made up, you were a kook if you didn’t believe it.

I could remember a former friend of mine who once said to me, that something “is not true, because it would be too important if it were. And if it were important, my instructors in school would have told me about it.” I could remember a family member who told me that something (some technological information) is something I don’t know because “I work in this field, I know more than you, and I don’t know it – therefore you don’t know it.” I was seeing that these attitudes were not isolated – they were the norm. It was just a year before, in undergraduate life, that a friend of mine was given an assignment to write about three leaders and what they had in common. He chose three heads of state. His “A” was marked out and a “B” put in its place because he had used examples that weren’t in the textbook. The instructor wrote on the cover of his essay that he had “brought in outside sources”. He was warned that if he continued to do so, he would forfeit his entire grade and possibly be removed from the class. A society of academics we founded – in secret, because genuine academics were persecuted – gave the instructor an award for that one. The Latin on the certificate, slid under the door, and proudly displayed for some time by the instructor, said “with his arse, he made a trumpet”. It was the least we could do.

Graduate school was less of a zoo, but still utterly pathetic. Right away, the teaching assistants – which were the plum positions to get as a grad student – informed me that the way to survive was do the instructors’ research for them, never color outside the lines – follow the wide path – don’t strike out on your own and do controversial or new research. Especially, don’t do any research that embarrasses any faculty, or meets with disapproval by anyone, because you might need them on your dissertation committee. When I asked what I could expect in return, I was told a faculty position, after graduation, at some rural college for some years. That’s the best I could hope for, because degrees were plentiful and relevant jobs few. I knew at that moment, I was not cut out for the field, but I stuck with it a while. The other avenue of course was CIA recruitment on campus. They always had some well-placed teachers to spot prospects and you could get in pretty easily if you spoke enough of the right languages. Of course, you had to be OK with invading other countries and bombing villages.

I found that, in grad seminars, as I asked questions about all the built in assumptions I was seeing, how in everything something was assumed that hadn’t been established at all, people found it strange and alien. One professor suggested I pursue a degree in Divinity somewhere, because I was interested in first things. But, he said, we have to assume a lot of things in order to do what we do, otherwise we can’t do it. I found that odd, that the goal of being academic was more important than whether or not any of it were actually real. I began to realize that academia is not where I belonged, either. It was one thing to stomach a constant ration of academic politics that punish brilliance (deviance) and reward mediocrity – or even to stomach it in exchange for a crappy job that no one wants – but to do it and not even believe in the crap you’re dealing is just too much.

I travelled and worked instead. I flirted with library science most briefly, as a return to grad school, but I was making money without academia – it seemed that I didn’t need them. I later returned and got a grad degree through distance learning – at least I didn’t have to deal with some of the nutjobs and the stupid, useless administration. That’s where it really was driven home how much plagiarism is traded for grades and credentials. I’d say 50% of the student work I saw being passed through the system was not only plagiarized, but quite demonstrably so. I know – I put together a report on it, with documented examples – and the university basically just shrugged and said it can’t follow up on every case – which means it wasn’t going to follow up on any of them. I took my degree, and I know I did 100% real work to earn it, but effectively I regard it as a scrap of paper. I was bound for corporate life, and if corporations wanted to pay more for it, I’d hand in that ticket. It’s a deal corporations make with academia – not to produce something of substance – just to produce something that excuses the corporation when failures occur, and gives the illusion of qualifications, due diligence, and a basis for hiring, advancement, salary levels, etc. It’s all an illusion, just like those underwater cities.

When I knew I’d be leaving corporate life, I realized that the degrees I have aren’t tickets to anything outside of corporate life. Nothing. This further reinforced my understanding of degrees as mere corporate passes. You get the stamp, you get it punched, and you get a slot as a cog in an engine. And if you’re OK with that, and that’s one of the major goals in your life, you might as well plagiarize, right? If that were my goal, I never would have set foot on a campus. Distance learning isn’t new – it’s been around since the sixties – accredited degrees, I’m talking about. Paying for the fake ones when you can just fake your way through school and get government to subsidize it is stupid. You see, it’s a collaboration between government, academia, and corporations. It’s the entire apparatus at work in the “education” business – which has, as its end, not education but placement. It is the societal engine for placing people in the slots most useful to sustaining the existing machinery. If you saw City of Ember and thought it was far-fetched – no – that’s exactly how we work already. And it might as well be run by Bill Murray’s character – it is that absurd.

People that know me consider me an ‘educated’ person. I’ve got a library of 15,000 books. A lot of people consider me “well-read”, which should account for my brilliance. Actually, though, I haven’t read them all, but I can summarize the thesis, or offer rough excerpts from most of them. I know that’s not the same as real education, because I know educated people. People who, like Will in Good Will Hunting, did their own research. After a couple of decades in academic pursuits, I look up at the certificates on my walls, and they don’t mean anything to me. I don’t find it tragic to think so. I do find it tragic that anyone wastes so much effort and endures so much insanity and receives very little intrinsic value. I value a few of the instructors and a few of the classes. But those instructors would, in most cases, have given me my education without attending college. I liken the experience of a college and four universities, most closely, to being a member of a succession of religious cults. The shady and dishonest pastor characters are there. The lackeys and opportunists fill the student body. The adminstration are making their living off of an institution that hoodwinks people. The thing has special tax status. And membership conveys a certain respectability in circles that can help you “advance”, if you’re willing to be or become what they are ‘advancing’ you to.

In short, I put the education I pursued in the same category in which I put most of the dating I did as a young man, and most of the religious groups I joined. It was all a colossal waste of time, money, and attention designed to siphon off brilliance and creativity and divert it to activities of dissipation. Moreover, I have about as little respect for academic institutions in general as I do for most of the girls I dated (a lot of them were just contemptible human beings) and the religious groups I participated in (sham artists, in some degree, all of them). You can add to that my participation in politics (same issues) and corporate life (the worst – the meaning, end, outcome, and intent of most of those ‘relationships’, religious endeavours, and political activities, as well as ‘education’). I fault my parents for not preparing me better. They were cogs in the machine, and they raised me to be a cog. It just didn’t take, and it took a very long time to unlearn all the things you absorb at a vulnerable age. I have unlearned most of them and that education, not the pseudo-education of the universities, colleges, and schools, is the one that has been most valuable to me in my life. Maybe i have 60% plus of my life left – more I hope – to really make use of unlearning, and the new things I’ve learned and am learning, but I think it’s better than finding out later than that. I notice people who know it’s a sham late in life, and won’t turn to get off the train, because they’ve got so much invested in it and think it’s too late. I don’t dismiss that – I understand it – but I agree with Ayn Rand that it’s never too late to turn from what isn’t life to what is – you start from where you are – and what you have left is yours, not theirs. By God’s mercy, I’ve been granted a reprieve while I still have some life left, and ideally quite a bit. Even one breath of life, after all that non-life though, is worth it. Completely worth it

When my office moves, the degrees will go in a file, and not back up on the wall. Who knows, maybe they’ll have some kind of advertising pseudo value for the deluded somewhere down the road, but I doubt it. I’ll be retiring them the same way I’ve retired the resume, and for the same reasons. The same reason I quit dating when I was younger. The same reason my relationship with religion is cautious – genuine – but cautious. My identity is not wrapped up in these things anymore. My Faith is good, when it’s good, and I don’t go near it when it’s not being good. I’m out of the relationship circuit. I work for myself. And, as I said, a degree has no real value in most cases if you do that – only when you need it to get a license, and my profession doesn’t bother with licensing yet, though like everything else, I’m sure they’ll probably do that in the future. We’re mostly rogues, renegades, and free agents in the meantime. You get less quality out of some, but we get left alone mostly, too.

So that’s it. That’s what I have to say about ‘higher education’, or what passes for it.

The Hunted

The Hunted is an unforgivably deceptive film. It’s portrayal of events in Serbia is contrary to anything remotely like the facts. No evidence of mass killings on the scale suggested in the opening moments of the film has ever been produced. It is one of the many such examples of a military-industrial propaganda line bolstered by Hollywood. What would be really novel is a few films showing American soldiers slaughtering innocent children as they did in Viet Nam, Serbia, Afghanistan, and Iraq.

Overstate News 02-18-03

The MoP is pushing “Homeland Defense” as a cooperative construct. Naturally, this means a constant siege mentality. A constant state of victimhood. Meanwhile, part of that defense is that we keep coming up with new reasons to attack – new crimes of our enemy. It’s like Snowball in Animal Farm. If the crops fail, it is he. And this justifies our building up of troops along our enemy’s border. Soon we’ll attack out of “homeland defense”. We will move into the assault despite being told we are “paralyzed with fear”. We will bomb cities while talking in superior tones about the cowardice of attacking civilians. We’ll talk about international standards for our enemy, and then do what we want if the other powers don’t agree with us. This is the Overstate. In the end, we’ll shrug our shoulders and simply annhilate them, and then march through as “liberators”.

Brutality

Ya know, the talking heads are going on (yes, I listened briefly) about the 21 people trampled to death in a Chicago nightclub. Not a soul is asking whether the savages who walked on people’s faces should be punished.

I hope for their sake, they find the people resonsible for the dog mutilation in Oklahoma before someone like me does. I’m afraid there wouldn’t be enough left to pull dental records if I caught up w. them.

Overstate News 2-8-2003

Oversoft announced today that it will include a permanent logging function in the new version of its operating system, the latest service packs for previous versions, and as part of its software suites. A spokesman for Oversoft said, “In addition to contributing to the longevity of electronic speech, this will help reduce the rising costs associated with anonymity.” Oversoft has provided a grant of 10,000 classroom licenses for the new operating system version to the Ministry of Education.

We are at Rebel Alert Level 3. The Ministry of Propaganda has announced that are enemies are not only everywhere, but that we’re likely to have explosions in our major cities this week. Meanwhile, the Overstate Defense Forces have received approval from the Executive for a Patriot’s Tax to support “munitions training for peace”.

The policy of continual war… well… continues. The targets are being plotted years in advance, the propaganda showing up in everything from action/spy films to unchallenged news blips, the social engineering ongoing, spokesmen are prepared – wined and dined and treated to prestigious conferences – with underlying assumptions they carry back into the Hive, and the provocation of the designated enemy escalates as the previous target is progressively set off balance and ultimately annhilated.

Pearl Harbor

Pearl Harbor – I refused to see it at the time – is pretty damned awful, all things considered. The tasteless quasi-comedic moments are the worst part. The romance is predictable. All the i’s of diversity are dotted, so one is conscious of being manipulated. But then, the film is one long manipulation anyway. The little speech on “the heart of a volunteer” was wretched. And, of course, it came out at just the right moment, eh?

The Recruit

The Recruit is a puff-piece recruitment flick for the security state. The whole film takes place as an internal drama – the CIA version of E.R. One part action, one part gadgetry, two parts mystery, and a dash of ideology. That’s how the ongoing barrage of spook flicks like Recruit are successful. The story line changes slightly, but the theme is the same: ‘Our enemies are everywhere. Our side is right; the anti-globalist anti-US-hegemony hordes are wrong. We need people with dirty hands and ambiguous moral commitments to fight this ‘war’. The secret police know best.’ Recruit, like so many such flicks, is Zamyatin’s We except that “The Guardians” are the “good guys” or, at worst, the necessary evil, the providers of safety at whatever cost. The twists and turns of the story hold one’s attention, but it requires a suspension of distaste w. the shadow regime, as it were.

How High

Cover of "How High"
Cover of How High

How High is another “in the hood” drug film. You know the genre. The stereotypes aren’t amusing. The constant obsession with the perfect ‘bud’ is as trite as Cheech and Chong, and will mainly appeal to those who are currently feeling the “munchies”. And the ‘stupid stoners go to Harvard on an affirmative action gig’ worn-out plot premise that relies on canned ‘clash of culture’ gags is a real yawner. Another film we’ve seen before under many other titles. Skip this one and check out Spike Lee’s School Daze. While the latter can be tedious in places, when not outright offensive, at least it’s got some substance.

Center Stage

Center Stage is one of those ‘snapshot in the lives of’ films. You know. It’s like most such films about the struggles and affairs of doctors, spies and soliders (the current fashion for the security state), policemen, police women, ice skaters, figure skaters, skate boarders, street dancers, teachers, musicians… etc. If you liked Fame, this is that with ballet dancers. And, of course, it’s got the usual “stick up their butt” (nice imagery) American Ballet Association needs a dose of street dancing ‘soul’ cliches. You know. Shakespeare needs hip hop to make it palatable, and so on. Again, we’ve seen it before; pick your title.