Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Maximx for Revolutionaries -- G. B. Shaw

It is noteworthy that most of these are still valid and apply.  They are still ahead of their time (late 19th and early 20th Century).


Project Gutenberg's Maxims for Revolutionists, by George Bernard Shaw

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Title: Maxims for Revolutionists

Author: George Bernard Shaw

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAXIMS FOR REVOLUTIONISTS ***




Produced by Russell Bell



Maxims for Revolutionists

by

George Bernard Shaw

(1856-1950)



THE GOLDEN RULE

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you.  Their
tastes may not be the same.

Never resist temptation: prove all things: hold fast that which is good.

Do not love your neighbor as yourself.  If you are on good terms with
yourself it is an impertinence: if on bad, an injury.

The golden rule is that there are no golden rules.



IDOLATRY

The art of government is the organization of idolatry.

The bureaucracy consists of functionaries; the aristocracy, of idols;
the democracy, of idolaters.

The populace cannot understand the bureaucracy: it can only worship the
national idols.

The savage bows down to idols of wood and stone: the civilized man to
idols of flesh and blood.

A limited monarchy is a device for combining the inertia of a wooden
idol with the credibility of a flesh and blood one.

When the wooden idol does not answer the peasant's prayer, he beats it:
when the flesh and blood idol does not satisfy the civilized man, he
cuts its head off.

He who slays a king and he who dies for him are alike idolaters.



ROYALTY

Kings are not born: they are made by artificial hallucination.  When the
process is interrupted by adversity at a critical age, as in the case of
Charles II, the subject becomes sane and never completely recovers his
kingliness.

The Court is the servant's hall of the sovereign.

Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation.

The flunkeyism propagated by the throne is the price we pay for its
political convenience.



DEMOCRACY

If the lesser mind could measure the greater as a foot-rule can measure
a pyramid, there would be finality in universal suffrage.  As it is, the
political problem remains unsolved.

Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment
by the corrupt few.

Democratic republics can no more dispense with national idols than
monarchies with public functionaries.

Government presents only one problem: the discovery of a trustworthy
anthropometric method.



IMPERIALISM

Excess of insularity makes a Briton an Imperialist.

Excess of local self-assertion makes a colonist an Imperialist.

A colonial Imperialist is one who raises colonial troops, equips a
colonial squadron, claims a Federal Parliament sending its measures to
the Throne instead of to the Colonial Office, and, being finally brought
by this means into insoluble conflict with the insular British
Imperialist, "cuts the painter" and breaks up the Empire.



LIBERTY AND EQUALITY

He who confuses political liberty with freedom and political equality
with similarity has never thought for five minutes about either.

Nothing can be unconditional: consequently nothing can be free.

Liberty means responsibility.  That is why most men dread it.

The duke inquires contemptuously whether his gamekeeper is the equal of
the Astronomer Royal; but he insists that they shall both be hanged
equally if they murder him.

The notion that the colonel need be a better man than the private is as
confused as the notion that the keystone need be stronger than the
coping stone.

Where equality is undisputed, so also is subordination.

Equality is fundamental in every department of social organization.

The relation of superior to inferior excludes good manners.



EDUCATION

When a man teaches something he does not know to somebody else who has
no aptitude for it, and gives him a certificate of proficiency, the
latter has completed the education of a gentleman.

A fool's brain digests philosophy into folly, science into superstition,
and art into pedantry.  Hence University education.

The best brought-up children are those who have seen their parents as
they are.  Hypocrisy is not the parent's first duty.

The vilest abortionist is he who attempts to mould a child's character.

At the University every great treatise is postponed until its author
attains impartial judgment and perfect knowledge.  If a horse could wait
as long for its shoes and would pay for them in advance, our blacksmiths
would all be college dons.

He who can, does.  He who cannot, teaches.

A learned man is an idler who kills time with study.  Beware of his
false knowledge: it is more dangerous than ignorance.

Activity is the only road to knowledge.

Every fool believes what his teachers tell him, and calls his credulity
science or morality as confidently as his father called it divine
revelation.

No man fully capable of his own language ever masters another.

No man can be a pure specialist without being in the strict sense an
idiot.

Do not give your children moral and religious instruction unless you are
quite sure they will not take it too seriously.  Better be the mother of
Henri Quatre and Nell Gwynne than of Robespierre and Queen Mary Tudor.



MARRIAGE

Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation with
the maximum of opportunity.

Marriage is the only legal contract which abrogates as between the
parties all the laws that safeguard the particular relation to which it
refers.

The essential function of marriage is the continuance of the race, as
stated in the Book of Common Prayer.

The accidental function of marriage is the gratification of the
amoristic sentiment of mankind.

The artificial sterilization of marriage makes it possible for marriage
to fulfill its accidental function whilst neglecting its essential one.

The most revolutionary invention of the XIX century was the artificial
sterilization of marriage.

Any marriage system which condemns a majority of the population to
celibacy will be violently wrecked on the pretext that it outrages
morality.

Polygamy, when tried under modern democratic conditions, as by the
Mormons, is wrecked by the revolt of the mass of inferior men who are
condemned to celibacy by it; for the maternal instinct leads a woman to
prefer a tenth share in a first rate man to the exclusive possession of
a third rate one.  Polyandry has not been tried under these conditions.


The minimum of national celibacy (ascertained by dividing the number of
males in the community by the number of females, and taking the quotient
as the number of wives or husbands permitted to each person) is secured
in England (where the quotient is 1) by the institution of monogamy.

The modern sentimental term for the national minimum of celibacy is
Purity.

Marriage, or any other form of promiscuous amoristic monogamy, is fatal
to large States because it puts its ban on the deliberate breeding of
man as a political animal.



CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

All scoundrelism is summed up in the phrase "Que Messieurs les Assassins
commencent!"

The man who has graduated from the flogging block at Eton to the bench
from which he sentences the garotter to be flogged is the same social
product as the garotter who has been kicked by his father and cuffed by
his mother until he has grown strong enough to throttle and rob the rich
citizen whose money he desires.

Imprisonment is as irrevocable as death.

Criminals do not die by the hands of the law.  They die by the hands of
other men.

The assassin Czolgosz made President McKinley a hero by assassinating
him.  The United States of America made Czolgosz a hero by the same
process.

Assassination on the scaffold is the worst form of assassination,
because there it is invested with the approval of society.

It is the deed that teaches, not the name we give it.  Murder and
capital punishment are not opposites that cancel one another, but
similars that breed their kind.

Crime is only the retail department of what, in wholesale, we call penal
law.

When a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport: when the tiger
wants to murder him he calls it ferocity.  The distinction between Crime
and Justice is no greater.

Whilst we have prisons it matters little which of us occupy the cells.

The most anxious man in a prison is the governor.

It is not necessary to replace a guillotined criminal: it is necessary
to replace a guillotined social system.



TITLES

Titles distinguish the mediocre, embarrass the superior, and are
disgraced by the inferior.

Great men refuse titles because they are jealous of them.



HONOR

There are no perfectly honorable men; but every true man has one main
point of honor and a few minor ones.

You cannot believe in honor until you have achieved it.  Better keep
yourself clean and bright: you are the window through which you must see
the world.

Your word can never be as good as your bond, because your memory can
never be as trustworthy as your honor.



PROPERTY

Property, said Proudhon, is theft.  This is the only perfect truism that
has been uttered on the subject.



SERVANTS

When domestic servants are treated as human beings it is not worth while
to keep them.

The relation of master and servant is advantageous only to masters who
do not scruple to abuse their authority, and to servants who do not
scruple to abuse their trust.

The perfect servant, when his master makes humane advances to him, feels
that his existence is threatened, and hastens to change his place.

Masters and servants are both tyrannical; but the masters are the more
dependent of the two.

A man enjoys what he uses, not what his servants use.

Man is the only animal which esteems itself rich in proportion to the
number and voracity of its parasites.

Ladies and gentlemen are permitted to have friends in the kennel, but
not in the kitchen.

Domestic servants, by making spoiled children of their masters, are
forced to intimidate them in order to be able to live with them.

In a slave state, the slaves rule: in Mayfair, the tradesman rules.



HOW TO BEAT CHILDREN

If you strike a child, take care that you strike it in anger, even at
the risk of maiming it for life.  A blow in cold blood neither can nor
should be forgiven.

If you beat children for pleasure, avow your object frankly, and play
the game according to the rules, as a foxhunter does; and you will do
comparatively little harm.  No foxhunter is such a cad as to pretend
that he hunts the fox to teach it not to steal chickens, or that he
suffers more acutely than the fox at the death.  Remember that even in
childbeating there is the sportsman's way and the cad's way.



RELIGION

Beware of the man whose god is in the skies.

What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the
assumptions on which he habitually acts.



VIRTUES AND VICES

No specific virtue or vice in a man implies the existence of any other
specific virtue or vice in him, however closely the imagination may
associate them.

Virtue consists, not in abstaining from vice, but in not desiring it.

Self-denial is not a virtue: it is only the effect of prudence on
rascality.

Obedience simulates subordination as fear of the police simulates
honesty.

Disobedience, the rarest and most courageous of the virtues, is seldom
distinguished from neglect, the laziest and commonest of the vices.

Vice is waste of life.  Poverty, obedience, and celibacy are the
canonical vices.

Economy is the art of making the most of life.

The love of economy is the root of all virtue.



FAIRPLAY

The love of fairplay is a spectator's virtue, not a principal's.



GREATNESS

Greatness is only one of the sensations of littleness.

In heaven an angel is nobody in particular.

Greatness is the secular name for Divinity: both mean simply what lies
beyond us.

If a great man could make us understand him, we should hang him.

We admit that when the divinity we worshipped made itself visible and
comprehensible we crucified it.

To a mathematician the eleventh means only a single unit: to the bushman
who cannot count further than his ten fingers it is an incalculable
myriad.

The difference between the shallowest routineer and the deepest thinker
appears, to the latter, trifling; to the former, infinite.

In a stupid nation the man of genius becomes a god: everybody worships
him and nobody does his will.



BEAUTY AND HAPPINESS, ART AND RICHES

Happiness and Beauty are by-products.

Folly is the direct pursuit of Happiness and Beauty.

Riches and Art are spurious receipts for the production of Happiness and
Beauty.

He who desires a lifetime of happiness with a beautiful woman desires to
enjoy the taste of wine by keeping his mouth always full of it.

The most intolerable pain is produced by prolonging the keenest
pleasure.

The man with toothache thinks everyone happy whose teeth are sound.  The
poverty stricken man makes the same mistake about the rich man.

The more a man possesses over and above what he uses, the more careworn
he becomes.

The tyranny that forbids you to make the road with pick and shovel is
worse than that which prevents you from lolling along it in a carriage
and pair.

In an ugly and unhappy world the richest man can purchase nothing but
ugliness and unhappiness.

In his efforts to escape from ugliness and unhappiness the rich man
intensifies both.  Every new yard of West End creates a new acre of East
End.

The XIX century was the Age of Faith in Fine Art.  The results are
before us.



THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN

The fatal reservation of the gentleman is that he sacrifices everything
to his honor except his gentility.

A gentleman of our days is one who has money enough to do what every
fool would do if he could afford it: that is, consume without producing.

The true diagnostic of modern gentility is parasitism.

No elaboration of physical or moral accomplishment can atone for the sin
of parasitism.

A modern gentleman is necessarily the enemy of his country.  Even in war
he does not fight to defend it, but to prevent his power of preying on
it from passing to a foreigner.  Such combatants are patriots in the
same sense as two dogs fighting for a bone are lovers of animals.

The North American Indian was a type of the sportsman warrior gentleman.
The Periclean Athenian was a type of the intellectually and artistically
cultivated gentleman.  Both were political failures.  The modern
gentleman, without the hardihood of the one or the culture of the other,
has the appetite of both put together.  He will not succeed where they
failed.

He who believes in education, criminal law, and sport, needs only
property to make him a perfect modern gentleman.



MODERATION

Moderation is never applauded for its own sake.

A moderately honest man with a moderately faithful wife, moderate
drinkers both, in a moderately healthy house: that is the true middle
class unit.



THE UNCONSCIOUS SELF

The unconscious self is the real genius.  Your breathing goes wrong the
moment your conscious self meddles with it.


Except during the nine months before he draws his first breath, no man
manages his affairs as well as a tree does.



REASON

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable one
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.  Therefore all
progress depends on the unreasonable man.

The man who listens to Reason is lost: Reason enslaves all whose minds
are not strong enough to master her.



DECENCY

Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence.



EXPERIENCE

Men are wise in proportion, not to their experience, but to their
capacity for experience.

If we could learn from mere experience, the stones of London would be
wiser than its wisest men.



TIME'S REVENGES

Those whom we called brutes had their revenge when Darwin shewed us that
they are our cousins.

The thieves had their revenge when Marx convicted the bourgeoisie of
theft.



GOOD INTENTIONS

Hell is paved with good intentions, not with bad ones.

All men mean well.



NATURAL RIGHTS

The Master of Arts, by proving that no man has any natural rights,
compels himself to take his own for granted.

The right to live is abused whenever it is not constantly challenged.



FAUTE DE MIEUX

In my childhood I demurred to the description of a certain young lady as
"the pretty Miss So and So." My aunt rebuked me by saying "Remember
always that the least plain sister is the family beauty."

No age or condition is without its heroes.  The least incapable general
in a nation is its Cæsar, the least imbecile statesman its Solon, the
least confused thinker its Socrates, the least commonplace poet its
Shakespear.



CHARITY

Charity is the most mischievous sort of pruriency.

Those who minister to poverty and disease are accomplices in the two
worst of all the crimes.

He who gives money he has not earned is generous with other people's
labor.

Every genuinely benevolent person loathes almsgiving and mendicity.



FAME

Life levels all men: death reveals the eminent.



DISCIPLINE

Mutiny Acts are needed only by officers who command without authority.
Divine right needs no whip.



WOMEN IN THE HOME

Home is the girl's prison and the woman's workhouse.



CIVILIZATION

Civilization is a disease produced by the practice of building societies
with rotten material.

Those who admire modern civilization usually identify it with the steam
engine and the electric telegraph.

Those who understand the steam engine and the electric telegraph spend
their lives in trying to replace them with something better.

The imagination cannot conceive a viler criminal than he who should
build another London like the present one, nor a greater benefactor than
he who should destroy it.



GAMBLING

The most popular method of distributing wealth is the method of the
roulette table.

The roulette table pays nobody except him that keeps it.  Nevertheless a
passion for gaming is common, though a passion for keeping roulette
tables is unknown.

Gambling promises the poor what Property performs for the rich: that is
why the bishops dare not denounce it fundamentally.



THE SOCIAL QUESTION

Do not waste your time on Social Questions.  What is the matter with the
poor is Poverty: what is the matter with the rich is Uselessness.



STRAY SAYINGS

We are told that when Jehovah created the world he saw that it was good.
What would he say now?

The conversion of a savage to Christianity is the conversion of
Christianity to savagery.

No man dares say so much of what he thinks as to appear to himself an
extremist.

Mens sana in corpore sano is a foolish saying.  The sound body is a
product of the sound mind.

Decadence can find agents only when it wears the mask of progress.

In moments of progress the noble succeed, because things are going their
way: in moments of decadence the base succeed for the same reason: hence
the world is never without the exhilaration of contemporary success.

The reformer for whom the world is not good enough finds himself
shoulder to shoulder with him that is not good enough for the world.

Every man over forty is a scoundrel.

Youth, which is forgiven everything, forgives itself nothing: age, which
forgives itself everything, is forgiven nothing.

When we learn to sing that Britons never will be masters we shall make
an end of slavery.

Do not mistake your objection to defeat for an objection to fighting,
your objection to being a slave for an objection to slavery, your
objection to not being as rich as your neighbor for an objection to
poverty.  The cowardly, the insubordinate, and the envious share your
objections.

Take care to get what you like or you will be forced to like what you
get.  Where there is no ventilation fresh air is declared unwholesome.
Where there is no religion hypocrisy becomes good taste.  Where there is
no knowledge ignorance calls itself science.

If the wicked flourish and the fittest survive, Nature must be the God
of rascals.

If history repeats itself, and the unexpected always happens, how
incapable must Man be of learning from experience!

Compassion is the fellow-feeling of the unsound.

Those who understand evil pardon it: those who resent it destroy it.

Acquired notions of propriety are stronger than natural instincts.  It
is easier to recruit for monasteries and convents than to induce an Arab
woman to uncover her mouth in public, or a British officer to walk
through Bond Street in a golfing cap on an afternoon in May.

It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid.

The Chinese tame fowls by clipping their wings, and women by deforming
their feet.  A petticoat round the ankles serves equally well.

Political Economy and Social Economy are amusing intellectual games; but
Vital Economy is the Philosopher Stone.

When a heretic wishes to avoid martyrdom he speaks of "Orthodoxy, True
and False" and demonstrates that the True is his heresy.

Beware of the man who does not return your blow: he neither forgives you
nor allows you to forgive yourself.

If you injure your neighbor, better not do it by halves.

Sentimentality is the error of supposing that quarter can be given or
taken in moral conflicts.

Two starving men cannot be twice as hungry as one; but two rascals can
be ten times as vicious as one.

Make your cross your crutch; but when you see another man do it, beware
of him.



SELF-SACRIFICE

Self-sacrifice enables us to sacrifice other people without blushing.

If you begin by sacrificing yourself to those you love, you will end by
hating those to whom you have sacrificed yourself.




THE END


The Decline of Language

The Decline of the Language


Our facility with and love of language has declined over the decades until it is nothing but a means of manipulation or, at best, communication. 

Let us take, for example, swearing.  That's right, good, old fashioned swearing.  Today, you may hear someone say "Son of a bitch," or some other expletive and consider that swearing.  It is hardly worth considering, much less reacting to.  Look, on the other hand, at this example from the Sixteenth Century:

"You are nothing more than a hundred pound, filthy, high-healed cheat; a whoreson, mirror-mocking, super-serviceable, finical rogue; one trunk inheriting slave; thou art nothing but the composition of a knave, beggar, coward, pandar, and the son and heir of a mongrel bitch."  I've replaced some of the slang with modern terms to make it easier to say.

It comes from Shakespeare's King Lear, which many today consider dull and boring.  But that is swearing!

Another dying art, and the one we are concerned with here, is the aphorism.  An aphorism is a short statement that sums up and is the final word on any topic.  It can range from the usual sentence to an entire paragraph at the most, but it is packed with thought-provoking information and opinion.  I think one reason it has just about died out is that we are bombarded with sound and visual stimulation 24/7 and do not have the time needed to condense everything into a single sentence.  Another reason is that it doesn't pay much.  You need to spend a very long time to come up with enough of them to publish in one place.

One of the greatest examples of this art is to be found below.  You should print out the entire thing and read it at your leisure, a sentence or two at a time.  Digest and ruminate.  I am sending it in the next post so that this little introduction doesn't take up your printer ink.  After that, I will send another by another master if there is an interest.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Guest Writer -- Thoughts and Style That Lasts.



Bernard Shaw


There are a lot of anecdotes and quotations from Bernard Shaw, almost any of which provide a sufficient introduction to him.

Too much of what we see these days is not well-written, is fleeting, and transitory.  However, below, by way of introduction are a few anecdotes I have constructed from memory and then a bunch of collected quotes.  All of these quote are still germane today, while much of what is written today will be worthless and uninteresting in a week.

Once a young Shaw is reported to ask of a rather pretentius lady:  "Lady, would you sleep with me for a million pounds?"

"I would have to think about it, Mr. Shaw," she said, smiling.

"How about for one pound?"

"Indeed not!  What do you take me for?"

"Madam, we have already established that.  We are now merely haggling over the price."

****
Later on, after his fame and fortune had increased, an actress (Campbell or Terry, I think) asked "Mr. Shaw.  Wouldn't it be wonderful if we had a child and it had my looks and your brains?"

"Yes, but what a tragedy if it had my looks and your brains."

***
There are thousands of these, but one of my favorites came in a debate with his opponent (and respected one at that), G. K. Chesterton.  Shaw was very tall and very thin.  Chesterton was short and very portly. 

Chesterton attacked him on the subject for food for the poor:

"If people in other countries heard you, they would think there is a famine in England."

Shaw's instant retort was "And if they saw you, they'd know the reason for it."

***
And the one that sums up his attitude towards life is along these lines: Some people brought him some flowers when the heard he was ill.  He was in his early 90s at the time and refused them.

They were shocked and said "Why Mr. Shaw, we thought you LIKED flowers."

"I do.  I like children too, but I don't chop their heads off and stick them in pots around my house."

***
Finally, getting to society, an English Gentlewoman sent him a card with "Lady Throckmorton Holliday, Thursday, At home." (I'm not sure about the name.).

He wrote on the back, "George Bernard Shaw, Likewise."

****
Here are some stray quotes from his writings.  Next time, I will post an entire work worth printing out:







  • Patriotism is, fundamentally, a conviction that a particular country is the best in the world because you were born in it…
    • The World (15 November 1893)
  • Pasteboard pies and paper flowers are being banished from the stage by the growth of that power of accurate observation which is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it…
    • The World (18 July 1894), Music in London 1890-1894 being criticisms contributed week by week to The World (New York: Vienna House, 1973)
  • My method is to take the utmost trouble to find the right thing to say, and then to say it with the utmost levity.
    • Answers to Nine Questions (September 1896), answers to nine questions submitted by Clarence Rook, who had interviewed him in 1895.
  • We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it.
  • I'm only a beer teetotaler, not a champagne teetotaler. I don't like beer.
    • Candida, Act III
  • We don't bother much about dress and manners in England, because as a nation we don't dress well and we've no manners.
  • The great advantage of a hotel is that it's a refuge from home life.
    • You Never Can Tell, Act II
  • My specialty is being right when other people are wrong.
    • You Never Can Tell, Act IV
  • There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it.
    • Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant, Vol. II, preface (1898)
  • Why should you call me to account for eating decently?
    • The Vegetarian (15 January 1898)
  • The novelties of one generation are only the resuscitated fashions of the generation before last.
    • Three Plays for Puritans, Preface (1900)
  • The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them: that's the essence of inhumanity.
  • Martyrdom, sir, is what these people like: it is the only way in which a man can become famous without ability.
    • The Devil's Disciple, Act II
  • You must not suppose, because I am a man of letters, that I never tried to earn an honest living.
    • The Irrational Knot, Preface (1905)
  • [Chess] is a foolish expedient for making idle people believe they are doing something very clever, when they are only wasting their time.
    • The Irrational Knot (1905)
  • To understand a saint, you must hear the devil's advocate; and the same is true of the artist.
    • The Sanity of Art: An Exposure of the Current Nonsense about Artists being Degenerate (1908)
  • Assassination is the extreme form of censorship; and it seems hard to justify an incitement to it on anti-censorial principles.
    • The Shewing Up of Blanco Posnet (1909): The Rejected Statement, Pt. I : The Limits to Toleration
  • Why was I born with such contemporaries?
    • The Dark Lady of the Sonnets, Preface (1910)
  • The word morality, if we met it in the Bible, would surprise us as much as the word telephone or motor car.
  • That proves it's not by Shaw, because all Shaw's characters are himself: mere puppets stuck up to spout Shaw.
    • Fanny's First Play, Epilogue
  • As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction is death.
    • Overruled (1912)
  • Custom will reconcile people to any atrocity; and fashion will drive them to acquire any custom.
    • Killing For Sport, Preface (1914)
  • All great truths begin as blasphemies.
    • Annajanska (1919)
  • You'll never have a quiet world till you knock the patriotism out of the human race.
    • O'Flaherty V.C. (1919)
  • Scratch an Englishman and find a Protestant.
    • Saint Joan : A Chronicle Play In Six Scenes And An Epilogue (1923)
  • God is on the side of the big battalions.
    • Saint Joan : A Chronicle Play In Six Scenes And An Epilogue (1923)
  • Must then a Christ perish in torment in every age to save those that have no imagination?
    • Saint Joan : A Chronicle Play In Six Scenes And An Epilogue (1923)
  • Our natural dispositions may be good; but we have been badly brought up, and are full of anti-social personal ambitions and prejudices and snobberies. Had we not better teach our children to be better citizens than ourselves? We are not doing that at present. The Russians are. That is my last word. Think over it.
  • One man that has a mind and knows it can always beat ten men who haven't and don't.
    • The Apple Cart (1928), Act I
  • God help England if she had no Scots to think for her!
    • The Apple Cart (1928), Act II
  • It is far more likely that by the time nationalization has become the rule, and private enterprise the exception, Socialism (which is really rather a bad name for the business) will be spoken of, if at all, as a crazy religion held by a fanatical sect in that darkest of dark ages, the nineteenth century. Already, indeed, I am told that Socialism has had its day, and that the sooner we stop talking nonsense about it and set to work, like the practical people we are, to nationalize the coal mines and complete a national electrification scheme, the better. And I, who said forty years ago that we should have had Socialism already but for the Socialists, am quite willing to drop the name if dropping it will help me to get the thing. What I meant by my jibe at the Socialists of the eighteen-eighties was that nothing is ever done, and much is prevented, by people who do not realize that they cannot do everything at once.
    • The Intelligent Woman's Guide To Socialism, Capitalism, Sovietism, and Fascism (1928)
  • No public man in these islands ever believes that the Bible means what it says: he is always convinced that it says what he means.
    • Our Theatres In The Nineties (1930)
  • I have defined the 100 per cent American as 99 per cent an idiot.
  • An American has no sense of privacy. He does not know what it means. There is no such thing in the country.
    • Speech at New York (11 April 1933)
  • You in America should trust to that volcanic political instinct which I have divined in you.
    • Speech at New York (11 April 1933)
  • The sex relation is not a personal relation. It can be irresistibly desired and rapturously consummated between persons who could not endure one another for a day in any other relation.
    • letter, 24 June 1930, to Frank Harris "To Frank Harris on Sex in Biography" Sixteen Self Sketches (1949)
  • The quality of a play is the quality of its ideas.
    • "The Play of Ideas", New Statesman (6 May 1950)
  • The apparent multiplicity of Gods is bewildering at the first glance; but you presently discover that they are all the same one God in different aspects and functions and even sexes. There is always one uttermost God who defies personification. This makes Hinduism the most tolerant religion in the world, because its one transcendent God includes all possible Gods… Hinduism is so elastic and so subtle that the profoundest Methodist and the crudest idolater are equally at home in it.
    Islam is very different, being ferociously intolerant. What I may call Manifold Monotheism becomes in the minds of very simple folk an absurdly polytheistic idolatry, just as European peasants not only worship Saints and the Virgin as Gods, but will fight fanatically for their faith in the ugly little black doll who is the Virgin of their own Church against the black doll of the next village. When the Arabs had run this sort of idolatry to such extremes ... they did this without black dolls and worshipped any stone that looked funny, Mahomet rose up at the risk of his life and insulted the stones shockingly, declaring that there is only one God, Allah, the glorious, the great… And there was to be no nonsense about toleration. You accepted Allah or you had your throat cut by someone who did accept him, and who went to Paradise for having sent you to Hell. Mahomet was a great Protestant religious force, like George Fox or Wesley….
    There is actually a great Hindu sect, the Jains, with Temples of amazing magnificence, which abolish God, not on materialist atheist considerations, but as unspeakable and unknowable, transcending all human comprehension.
    • Letter to the Reverend Ensor Walters (1933), as quoted in Bernard Shaw : Collected Letters, 1926-1950 (1988) by Dan H. Laurence, p. 305; Shaw actually errs here in characterizing Jainism as simply a sect of Hinduism, as it is usually regarded as a separate and independent tradition, though Hindu and Jain philosophers have long had influence on each other, as well as other traditions.
  • I have always held the religion of Muhammad in high estimation because of its wonderful vitality. It is the only religion which appears to me to possess that assimilating capability to the changing phase of existence which can make itself appeal to every age. The world must doubtless attach high value to the predictions of great men like me. I have prophesied about the faith of Muhammad that it would be acceptable to the Europe of tomorrow as it is beginning to be acceptable to the Europe of today. The medieval ecclesiastics, either through ignorance or bigotry, painted Muhammadanism in the darkest colours. They were in fact trained both to hate the man Muhammad and his religion. To them Muhammad was Anti-Christ. I have studied him — the wonderful man, and in my opinion far from being an Anti-Christ he must be called the Saviour of Humanity. I believe that if a man like him were to assume the dictatorship of the modern world he would succeed in solving its problems in a way that would bring it the much-needed peace and happiness. But to proceed, it was in the 19th century that honest thinkers like Carlyle, Goethe and Gibbon perceived intrinsic worth in the religion of Muhammad, and thus there was some change for the better in the European attitude towards Islam. But the Europe of the present century is far advanced. It is beginning to be enamoured of the creed of Muhammad.
  • I hold the Prophet of Arabia in great esteem and I can quite understand that it would have been impossible to restrain and wean that illiterate and perverse race, sunk in the miasma of utter moral depravity, from committing the most heinous of crimes, and imbue its people with enthusiasm to strive after righteousness and assimilate high morals and virtues, without projecting such a terrible and intensely awe inspiring spectacle of Hell and an equally captivating and enticing image of a land flowing with milk and honey to represent Heaven before their vision.
  • A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.
    • Everybody's Political What's What (1944) Ch. 30
  • The road to ignorance is paved with good editions. Only the illiterate can afford to buy good books now.
  • The secret of success is to offend the greatest number of people.
  • Consistency is the enemy of enterprise, just as symmetry is the enemy of art.
    • As quoted in Bernard Shaw : The Lure of Fantasy (1991) by Michael Holroyd
  • The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.
    • As quoted in Leadership Skills for Managers (2000) by Marlene Caroselli, p. 71


Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Time for a Change

We think we have said about all there is to say for now, so we have decided to take a new approach.

After all, Japan just announced that it has a level 7 disaster.  We called it a 6.5 and rising over 3 weeks ago.  Since then, we learned that Greenpeace called it a 7 at about the same time.  Here, however, there are at least 4, maybe 6, in trouble.  Does that make it a 28?  Japan tells us they will have it under control “by the end of the year.”  You may be interested to know that there are “only” less than 100 other reactors on or by earthquake fault-lines.

If we really want to protect human rights and civilians in the middle east, the countries, in order, that we need to deal with are Israel, Bahrain, Yemen, Egypt (again), Tunisia (again), Algeria, Morrocco, Libya, and then Syria.  It will not happen.  Why not a “no-fly” zone over Gaza?

When the mess started in Libya, I said Gaddafi would not go.  Everyone else said he would.  He is still there.  Now, a multinational force is being assembled to attack.  He will not go.

There are other things, but they all remind me of Thoreau’s point that once you know the pattern, what need is there of more examples?  Besides, the examples are fleeting.

So, in the next few issues, at least, I expect to be posting things of most lasting value and, in fact, quality.

Watch this spot.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

An Open Letter to a "Humanitarian" Jewish Publication, Gaza


We will soon be taking a different path for awhile.  The political scene has becomes so polluted and, frankly obscene, that we need a refreshing break from it.  But first, this one recent events in Gaza  Another thought: has Israel ever stated without equivocation where it thinks its Eastern border is?


Subject: I am frankly shocked


To begin with, we the US have vetoed over 80 UN resolutions against Israel for
things relating to its unlawful occupation of Palestinian land. If I am wrong about that,
please let me know.

Because of lobbying pressure, the threat of a charge of 'anti-Semitism' which means
'anti-Jewish' instead of the broader idea that Jews, Arabs and all Semites are being
opposed, virtually no Congressperson will criticize Israel's actions.

Gaza is surrounded by Israel, not even the coastline is open, for fear of arms shipments.
Israel has a very strong military, what,  the 4th or 5th most powerful in the world?  Palestinians
have little with which to defend themselves.   They are occupied, surrounded and virtually helpless.

So why is killing 1400 of them using inhumane weapons like white phosphorous not
a crime?  Israel had the excuse that a dominated indigenous minority dared attack them with
rockets, killing it was reported 14 Israelis.   So a hundred to one killing was called for, apparently.
it reminds me of the darkest days of WWII.

This whole occupation has been a travesty of human rights for decades, has it not?  Is the UN
'anti-Semitic'  in its resolutions?  If you occupy, surround, keep people in misery and
they dare to fight back, are they 'terrorists'?  Of course violence is not to be condoned, or the killing
of civilians.  But what then are Palestinians to do. suffer forever in silence and acceptance?  What
Israel has offered is not anything like a sovereign state on pre-1967 land.

The situation has been stood on its head for far too long. Any honest person can see what is going
on, why the subterfuge and defense of a defenseless situation?

Because Jews suffered horribly in The Holocaust,  can the IDF redress wrongs
by claiming more land?  What exactly does Zionism stand for?   The right based on the Torah or Old
Testament to real estate?

Israel should return to the internationally set Green LIne and Palestine should be a sovereign state.
The fact that these things will not happen brands Israel as a rogue pariah state intent on pursuing its
illegal occupation of Palestinian land.

Why is this so difficult to understand when it would not be anywhere else?

I am sorry to say these things, but I am deeply disappointed in Tikkun at this point.

Sincerely yours,

Dr. Barry M. Wright
Gilroy CA

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

The Constitution 2.0 and Insanity



     
 





Somehow, the Constitution seems to have changed, perhaps with some form of invisible ink.

It now appears that the United States President has the authority to decide who should be the leader of any country worldwide.  I believe we saw the first example of this at work during the Bushes when it was decided that "regime change" (sounds so much better than "overthrow or assassinate" doesn't it?) became important for Iraq.  A figure known as Ahmed Chalabi was chosen to be the next leader of Iraq, despite his enormously widespread reputation of being an international criminal (it was o.k., it was white collar and then Jordan pardoned him).  The Iraqis proved a bit testy about that, but we, or they, had an election after we, or they hanged the previous leader and everything has been fine ever since.

Previous "regime changes" included Daniel Ortega and Noriega, the second of whom we trained at our "School of the Americas."  He apparently skipped a class or two having to do with subservience.  One of Henry Kissinger's favorites was Allende on 9/11.  Somehow, the one involving Chavez seemed not to work, but then he did recently give Barrack Obama a free book, so perhaps he is safe.
The most recent candidate is Gaddafi of Libya who just doesn't seem to understand our Constitution.  He has been told that he must go and even some of the most perceptive left-wing people I know have predicted his departure months ago and still he will not leave.  Perhaps Tony Blair with all of his recent success in the Middle East should contact him and tell him that his people do not like him?  No, bad example.  We do have to understand that the health care system is quite remarkable in Libya as a man given less than 6 months (or was it weeks) to live was sent to Libya and is still alive and well today.  (Yes, I found out about that on the BBC - gotta keep up with things, don't you know?)
Assad of Syria seems to irritate Israel, as he knows that Israel is determined never to make peace and return to the 1967 borders.  Knowing that is not so much a problem as actually saying it.  Additionally, some religious fanatics and others have been demonstrating lately and so, obviously, he is supposed to leave.  He has shown no sign of so doing.


Angela Merkel of Germany did not support the attack on Gaddafi, so there may be a need for regime change there.  So far, Obama has not commented on her so she may be safe.


We are told that there are now CIA agents in Libya.  I am not sure why we have been told that.  We have also been told that a "secret" plan has been signed by Obama, but please don't spread the word around.  After all, the Russians (hi there!) might find out and then where would we be?
I believe, also, that the constitution says that only Congress shall declare war, but hell, with electronic communication, why bother declaring it?  Just go ahead and do it.  Hell, if I had to declare everything before I did it I'd be handicapped no end.  Why restrict the President?
We have a Supreme Court (sounds as if there is none better, does it not?) that has decided that major corporations are people and hence allowed to give bribes to members of Congress.  I am not aware of that provision, but then we must remember the invisible ink.

There are a number of Amendments called the "Bill of Rights" that seem to make the treatment that Bradley Manning is receiving, which has been described as torture, even before formal charges have been filed, somewhat illegal but then our President has asked the military about it and they said "it's ok, we do it all the time," so we needn't worry.  Manning can worry, but leave us out of it.
     
In the surprise of the month, Obama announced that he will run again for President.  Gotta rub it in, eh?  I think he will be surprised by the results.  Only the Republicans can ensure his re-election. However, his Attorney General celebrated the announcement by declaring that the 9/11 trials will be military tribunals outside the U.S., near Cuba. 

  
The firm that owned the platform of the BP disaster just gave its CEO a bonus for the "safest year in history."  I'm speechless.


We seem to support Yemen.  I have to give Jeremy Scahill credit (if that's the right word) for this one: Funniest headline on Yemen today: "Indecent protest slogans brew catastrophe in Yemen" http://bit.ly/hj682N.

Moussa Koussa (Moses Gourd) is now 32 billion dollars richer than he was when he went to England.

There may be movement in Yemen as someone speaking for our government said that people shouldn’t kill their own citizens.

And finally, Obama has received an award for Transparency in government.  Nobody knows from whom, or where the meeting was, or when it happened.

I do not make this up because this is non-fiction.  If it were fiction, as is well known, it would have to be believable.

Oh yes, radioactive waste seven million times what is considered safe is being dumped into the Pacific.

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Our Audience and Friends

Last time, several of you asked that this be published weekly.  Actually, I was going to send users by browsers this time, but I was really surprised to see such an interest in Russia, almost surpassing the US.  I have no idea why, but I'm glad to see them:



Pageviews by Countries
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