Saturday, 13 December 2025

Creative engagement is the positive purpose of this mortal life

I have often written here that the purpose of this mortal life must account for the extended nature of life - the fact that our life may continue for many decades. 

This implies that it is not enough to regard mortal life as a matter of what happens at the end of it - i.e. for Christians a matter of attaining salvation - although it is partly that.

Also that mortal life is not just a matter of having experience of incarnating, of "getting a body" - although it is partly that.   

If salvation was the only reason for being alive, then we would die as soon as we had accepted the gift of Jesus, and determined to follow Him


Given that we all must die eventually; this implies to me that God always has reasons for sustaining us alive. 

If we are alive, now - there is divine work for us to do, now. 

In other words, that for as long as a person lives, he has something (at least one thing) he ought to do, something that he would benefit from doing. 


I have usually expressed this in terms of learning from our experiences. The idea here is that God shapes our lives such that we have experiences from which we can learn significant (perhaps vital) life lessons. 

These life lessons include making the choice of salvation; and that is my understanding of why so many Western people have been living such long (indeed "over-extended" lifespans in recent decades. 

Such people are being kept-alive for longer than in the past (despite increased decrepitude of body and/or mind) because they have so far rejected salvation. Their living experiences are being shaped to give them individually-tailored further opportunities inwardly to reject (i.e. repent) their false and self-harming ideologies; and to embrace a future of everlasting resurrected life in Heaven. 


I continue to regard this analysis as correct, but it is not the whole story - because it makes the purpose of life almost entirely passive; a matter of God setting the curriculum, albeit a curriculum unique for each individual - and then each person trying to do as well as possible to learning what this curriculum dictates. 

But life is not supposed to be a wholly passive business of dealing with the experiences that life brings to us. 

As each of us are Beings who existed as spirits for an eternity before we were incarnated into this life; we all bring our unique natures and possibilities into this mortal life...


In other words; just as God has an agenda, a curriculum, for each of us in this mortal life - towards which we have a formally negative and reactive role...

In a complementary fashion; we also each have a positive agenda that we bring into this life.

Because every individual Being has potential to add his own unique perspective and qualities to the growth of divine creation. 


It is important to recognize that we are all unique beings, and the fact is therefore that it is our nature that each can, in principle, add something to divine creation that - if we do not contribute it - cannot therefore will-not be contributed by any other Being. 

Put different; we are each, by our nature, unique creators - and because unique, our creative engagement with reality will necessarily make an irreplaceable difference that reality.

In engaging our life and the world; our innate creative potential will enlarge divine creation in ways that otherwise will not happen 


I don't mean to assert this positive creative engagement as "a duty" - because that would just be another external curriculum item! 

But we don't just "react to" - we also have potential to "act-upon".

I mean to emphasize that this mortal life is not just a matter of us "negatively" learning from life experiences that are presented to us; but also a matter of our divine-selves entering-into and engaging positively with this mortal life...

Us, our-selves; having thoughts, grappling with understanding, engaging in loving relationships, making and doing, freely committing to purposes etc. - each in our innately distinct way; and from the depths of our ultimately divine natures.


And thereby making a positive difference, a better reality; and not just to this mortal world and while we are alive; but a difference to divine creation and therefore eternally. 


Thursday, 11 December 2025

The late poet Tony Harrison and the beliefs of characteristic 1980s liberalism

The poet Tony Harrison, who lived near me in Newcastle upon Tyne, has recently died (1937-2025); and then we also met some of his relations by marriage.
 
So he has been somewhat in mind lately, since there was a time in the late 1980s when I was on the left and also had a high regard for his writing. For a few years I probably regarded him as the best of living British poets. 

(Although - to provide context - I did not, and do not, rate any living poets very highly; so it was more a case of being the best of a relatively mediocre bunch!)

Consequently, I stumbled across this rather interesting discussion of Harrison as a representative of a type of Leftist writer with working class origins who - via education - became middle class and Establishment-approved - and who spent the rest of their lives brooding (without ever reaching a coherent conclusion!) on their own subsequent class alienation. 

There are many such writers, indeed just about all writers with such a social trajectory - another who I have discussed here is Alan Garner


This "problem" (if it is one) seems to be restricted to writers and certain other analogous types; because the many, many more people who not writers (such as my parents, many of my relatives and their circle of friends) who also experienced this class change - do not seem to have been much troubled by it! 

We lived a middle class professional family life for most of the year, and then spent visits and holidays staying with our working class grandparents, aunts and uncles and cousins; without any of the angst or social friction so obsessively described in the post-war literature of Britain.


But my focus here is on the description of Harrison as a typical Leftist intellectual of the 1980s - a grouping to which I also belonged at that time (broadly, with a few reservations - as is usually the case). 

The author lists a set of beliefs that such people as Harrison and myself espoused: 

  • strongly anti monarchy 
  • strongly anti censorship 
  • strongly anti religion 
  • anti capitalist 
  • anti racist 
  • anti British Empire 
  • anti America passively 
  • pro feminist passively 
  • pro gay passively 
  • pro multiculturalism 
  • pro democracy 
  • pro welfare 
  • pro miners / trade unions 
  • pro learning, education, civilisation, civility 
  • pro European Union

It can readily be seen that the 1980s was therefore a time of inflexion, between the (British originated) Old Left - focused on economics and class; and the (US originated) New Left (political correctness or "woke") that we have today - focused on antiracism, feminism and sexuality...

And "environment" - not mentioned in this list, but actually already very significant - albeit not near-exclusively focused on CO2/Climate manipulated delusion - which only became important from the 1990s. 

The Old to New shift also went from (supposedly) aiming at equality of opportunity; to (supposedly) aiming to enforce equality of outcome - and then to inverting outcomes to favour individuals who claim to be members of groups that were (supposedly) "historically under-represented". 


The fact that the 1980s Leftists beliefs were mutually incoherent and incompatible seems more obvious now than it did then - yet hostile incoherence somehow never did, or does, seem obvious to those of the Left. 

Extremely few people who were "socialists" in 1980, subsequently abandoned the Left over the next decades; despite that Leftism all-but inverted from idealizing native male working class men (e.g. in the 1984 national Miners' strike)...

To demonizing and attempting socially to annihilate (by multiple means) exactly the same group of people, accelerating from about a decade later (especially the Blair "New Labour" government of 1997 onward).  


This accomodationism of Leftists ought to be a matter of shame; because it was motivated by little more than unprincipled expedience and sheer mental laziness.  

A typical post-millennial Leftist is nowadays much more likely to idealize and aggrandize members of the hyper-wealthy "Davos" multi-billionaire class - than a coal miner or other manual worker!  

The history of Tony Harrison shows some detail of how this inversion happened; how these writers of working-class origin were co-opted into the globalist totalitarian strategy; a process marked by Harrison's lavish 1969 UNESCO "travelling scholarship" (six months fully-paid international travel for the whole family) - for a poet who who hadn't even published a book! 

In other words; Harrison had already been identified as a promising subversive New Leftist "asset", in his twenties - whether he realized it or not; or else (very probably) he would never have been awarded this luxury freebie in the first place. 


It is a sad reflection of the value-bankruptcy of Leftism that vanishingly few of the ex-working class writers who were used as totalitarian assets were in the slightest degree aware of their role, of their "raison d'etre" among those who published, praised, paid and awarded status to poets and other authors. 

Typically, such writers instead mistook their own chronic, obsessive, class-based resentments and spite - for anti-Establishment radicalism and righteous anger! 

And were encouraged in this by social incentives. 

And the same situation nowadays applies to writers who are - instead of being socialist ex-working class men - are women, racial or ethnic "minorities", or sexually non-biological.
 

I suppose one of the main jobs of such writers - from the perspective of those who "manage" their careers and sustain their livelihoods; is to spread through books, plays, TV, movies etc the typical and pervasive Left-intellectual milieu of negation, resentment, atheist-materialism, and a moralistic focus on this-worldly gratification. 

A skilful and cultured author like Tony Harrison performed this role very effectively. 

As do many of his less-skilled and uncultured successors. 


Well; we at least can observe such people across time; analyse and learn from their experiences - including when they themselves did not learn. 

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

When people behave much better than their beliefs: The reverse-hypocrisy of atheist-materialism

Mainstream, normal, modern Western people are atheist materialists, who believe (assume) that there is neither purpose nor meaning in the universe - and that death mean annihilation. 

This strongly implies that nothing really matters

Yet they behave much, much better than would be implied by their assumptions would entail. Indeed, some of the best behaved and most virtuous people are atheist/ materialist/ nihilists. 


In other words, they are reverse hypocrites! 

That is: they fail to live down to their beliefs!


While this is, of course, overall A Good Thing - it is in tendency a bad thing. 

Because over time this reverse-hypocritical atheist materialism has no principled grounds on which to oppose the continual erosion of morals and values

And therefore morals and values have not just become corrupted, but in many instances inverted: such that evil is advocated as good, and good demonized as evil. 


Furthermore; reverse hypocrites see no need to revise their beliefs; because at any moment in time they can plausibly deny the implications of their own assumptions. 

They can argue (to themselves) that (for instance) although they have no reason to refrain from lying and exploiting 24/7; they often tell the truth and genuinely try to help people.

They always behave much better than they need to ("need" according to their beliefs) - from which they infer that it doesn't matter that their own asserted values permit, or even encourage, short-term selfishness, and justify living for personal gratification here-and-now.    


Probably it is this reverse-hypocrisy of the Godless majority that has helped make ordinary hypocrisy into something regarded as an extreme form of wickedness...

Such that mainstream modern media stories have a common narrative trope; that excoriates "respectable" religious people for failing to live up to their public spirited high ideals; while heaping praise upon selfishly hedonistic people when they - very occasionally - behave altruistically.

Thus: an habitually altruistic and hard-working individual who preaches idealistic honesty but lapses from it into a selfish lie is a common villain of hypocrisy; while an habitual con-trickster or thief can become the reverse-hypocritical anti-hero by a single courageous act of truth-telling at the climax of the tale!  


In other words, reverse hypocrisy has become a cardinal virtue, while the hypocrisy of having higher ideals than can be reached in practice is treated as a cardinal sin.   

What is needed is for the reverse-hypocrites to do a bit of hard-thinking about why they behave so much better than their beliefs; and whether this is a good thing, or not. 

Because if we really do regard our good behaviour as really a good thing; then surely we ought not to embrace fundamental beliefs and assumptions that actively contradict our good behaviour?


Jesus made things worse - as well as better

It has been noticed (even including by me!) that a hell of torment seems to have arisen after Jesus offered the possibility of Heaven. 


Apparently, before Jesus; the Jews (mostly) had a common destination of Sheol, a ghostly underworld to which all souls went after mortal death. 

But this wasn't a place of hellish torment - rather a place of semi-conscious insensibility, forgetting of identity. 

It seems to me that the choice to reject the gift of resurrected eternal life, in which personal identity is retained and Love is the basis - therefore had spiritual consequences that did not exist before (or perhaps only seldom).  


The consequence of rejecting Heaven is not necessarily hell - there are other possibilities; and the choice to reject resurrected eternal life need not be annihilation after mortal death - there are other possibilities. 

( e.g. Reincarnation of some kind, Nirvana, some kind of paradise, ghost-hood; and obedient servitude to Satan that does not - at first - involve inhabiting hell.)

Nonetheless, the usual reasons, typical motivations, behind rejection of the offer salvation - may be what leads to worse outcomes than if salvation had never been offered and never been available.

The choice to reject Heaven has spiritual consequences that would not otherwise have arisen.  


Another potential way that Jesus made things worse is for those (many) who "use" Christianity - i.e. they use the religions that purport to define and administer the "following" of Jesus by individual people -  to pursue selfish and worldly goals. 

Under this category can be put all the many appalling characters who have been bishops and other church leaders; and who used the excuse of Christianity mainly to pursue wealth, power, cruelty and resentment; and the masses and mobs who have done the same kind of thing - either by their own choice, or by enthusiastic obedience. 

I don't suppose Christians are materially worse than other religions in this respect, and not as bad as some atheist totalitarian regimes of the past century  - although they were surely very bad, and from early in church history. 


But spiritually, it may be that there is something especially harmful about subordinating and deploying a kind of "public-Christianity" from motivations of personal gratification and this-worldly ends. 

This, in the sense that the dishonest abuse and distortion of what is essentially good, has a particularly nasty quality - as when truly spiteful or sadistic people affect the attitude and emotions of kindness and compassion.  

Probably; this is far more deeply damaging to the soul than would be an acknowledgement of one's own evil tendencies. 


In these ways; it may be that the advent of Jesus Christ, and the choice he gave us to attain a resurrected eternal Heavenly life of Love; served to divide more sharply the saved and those who rejected salvation, the sheep from goats... 

Even though there are possibilities other than sheep or goat - the rejection of sheep-affiliation may well be associated with an increased embrace of the goat-option. 


Tuesday, 9 December 2025

Mercy versus Justice, and Mary the Mother of Jesus



I am still reading Geoffrey Ashe's The Virgin - his dense, fascinating, and very stimulating book about the historical development and meaning of the Catholic veneration of Mary, Mother of Jesus. 

(Ashe was himself a Roman Catholic, and deeply involved with Marian societies - especially the Carmelite Friars' shrine to Mary at Aylesford in Kent.)  

This passage was one I found very striking. Ashe is describing the theology of Saint Germanus, who was Patriarch of Constantinople in the early 700s. 


Mary, Germanus maintains, does not simply put requests to the Deity on matters they could agree about; she actively and successfully opposes him. "You turn away the just threat and the sentence of damnation, because you love the Christians... Therefore the Christian people trustfully turn to you, refuge of sinners." 

The universe is split at the summit. God stands for Justice, and since we are all sinners more or less, most of us have little to hope for at his hands. 

Mary stands for Mercy, and it is only because of her influence at court, not because of love or goodwill on God's part, that Heaven is within reach for more than a handful of human beings...

The Byzantine Virgin seems the only friend close to the throne and the only rescuer from utter awestruck despair...

The Greek church agreed that Mary was indispensable to salvation. An edict issued from Constantinople in 724 condemns anyone who withholds worship from her... 

She is no longer the gentle Lady to whom Christians may turn for help. She is the unique being... to whom they must turn or be in peril of losing their souls forever.    


[From before 1233] the norm of Marian miracles in hardening. The people concerned are apt to be commonplace and sometimes repellent. 

The sole redeeming feature they have in common, "redeeming" quite literally, is their love for the Virgin. This protects them against the consequences of wrongdoing. Her devotees seem able to get away with anything....

It is unfair to treat this mythology as a license to sin; by saving misguided mortals the Virgin enables them to repent. 

But the moral is not always conspicuous... 

The medieval popular Virgin represented the all-too-human, the irregular, the exceptional. She was superior to the system and could break through every rule. Humanity had her on its side in its perpetual protest against divine law and human ordinance. 

For her, every case was a special case. She could draw "her" sinner up out of hell itself, giving him another chance.


Such considerations stimulated various thoughts. One is that - however theologically alien and contradictory the role of Mary in Catholic devotion; the effect of Marian devotion has often been exemplary from what I regard as a strictly Christian perspective (as well as this-worldly-expedient - in terms of sustaining and strengthening the churches). 

I understand the above descriptions to represent a spiritual correction to the not-Christian (i.e. not Jesus-derived) emphasis on Justice that has so often overtaken Christian churches of almost every kind. 

When Jesus is made into a divine ruler of the universe, he has often been attributed with the characteristics of an idealized human ruler in some particular society - hence the de facto primacy of justice, defined legalistically - despite this being multiply-contradicted in the Gospels. 

Furthermore, the tortured theology of Original Sin (which was only required because early theologians made it mandatory to conceptualize and define God as Omni) - led to the weird double-negative explanation of Jesus's work; as having been accomplished by a vicarious sacrifice (torture and death) demanded by Divine Justice to compensate for sin. 


Against this historical backdrop of systemic misrepresentation of the fundamental nature of Jesus Christ's work and the paths to salvation by love of Jesus; Mary seems to have emerged, with the consequence of  re-creating the truth of Jesus's salvation by personal love.

With the difference that the necessary love is displaced from Jesus, to his mother (but his mother having been re-conceptualized to possess the salvific attributes of Jesus). 

But I don't doubt that this displaced or indirect love was none the less effective in attaining salvation for Marian adherents ; so long as the motives were true. 


The simple heart of Christianity - i.e. resurrected eternal heavenly life to those who follow Jesus - has always been open to the kind of "license to sin" misrepresentation Ashe describes in the second excerpt above. 

This is a kind of parody of Christianity, along the lines of: I can do what I like, be as selfish and gratification-seeking as I like... yet Mary will save me if I love her... 

Such is the exactly the same type of criticism made of Jesus's teaching during his life, by those whose real concern was social order and sustaining the power of their church...

Popular with those who do not really believe that All Men are sinners including themselves; and that no Man good enough for Heaven without first passing through death and resurrection*.

(Or who may regard following Jesus as less a matter of love than of following rules.)

 

The parody is untrue, because it ignores that motivation is primary, and that the love really must come first. 

Salvation is not attained by using love as an excuse to enable the primary motivation of doing evil. That is to put this-worldly gratification first. 

But, on the other hand, salvation really is - not for those who successfully past some test of following some laws; but salvation is for all those who love and desire to follow Jesus more than anything else.


Or, in this instance... love and desire to follow Mary more than anything else - so long as Mary is conceptualized in the way she has been by some ancient (and some modern) Catholic Christians, as described in Ashe's book. 


*I suppose I should state that I regard it as theologically incoherent from a Christian perspective to claim that Mary was conceived and existed without sin, and was assumed into Heaven without going through death and resurrection. The necessity and work of Jesus - and the requirement that we are all  incarnated into mortal life - only makes sense when it is understood that death and resurrection was and is the only way to "fit us for Heaven". Nonetheless (fortunately for all of us!) theological coherence is not a requisite for salvation! 

Sunday, 7 December 2025

"The future belongs to those who show-up" is both pragmatically futile, and spiritually counter-productive

It was in 2007 that I began to take an academic interest in the gross and worsening sub-fertility of native people in the entire developed world, and I did some research into what seemed like a possible exception (Mormons) from 2009. I have also written about the genetically catastrophic problem of human reproduction over the past several generations. 

So it would be fair to say I am aware of the problem*. 


But being aware of this biological problem, and doing something significant to reverse it; are very different things. I used to believe that certain kinds of religion pointed the way forward; but this has been hope has been dashed by the events of the past fifteen years. 

For instance, my positive example of US Mormons have now slid into substantial sub-fertility; and the events of 2020 demonstrate (as a strong generalization) that all religions across the world are now subordinate to the destruction-motivated global totalitarian strategy. 

My conclusion is that this matter of biological degradation and extinction, with the inevitability of civilizational collapse - while real - is insoluble; mainly because nobody At All is serious about even trying to solve it at the requisite large scale, plus that there are no known effective answers.  

Any plan to "save our civilization" is therefore futile - either ignorant, deluded or deceptive**


This has the effect of dissociating spiritual and Christian concerns. When the large-scale future is not going to be saved by our spiritual imperatives; this means that we are free to focus upon our personal situation - which is probably something that we ought to be doing anyway.  something that  

We need not, we should not, continually be trying to extrapolate from what we ought spiritually to be doing in the here-and-now; according to our deepest analysis and convictions. 

We need not, we should not, be trying to link our personal spiritual quest into some practical/ material/ "real world" supposedly-groupish benefit... 


As when people talk about some kind of imagined Christianity as the basis for some kind of future and viable Western civilization. 

That's all nonsense; because it is way too late for such palliations. 

Because things are much worse than such people believe.   

+++


* Indeed, the problem is that a few people are very-belatedly waking up to a situation that has been a solidly-established and relentless trend since the 1990s, and roots that go back considerably before that. These people have only recently noticed the top-down and multi-pronged and purposive quality of globalist strategies against Western nations. Consequently, they grossly underestimate 1. the profound and extensive damage already done; and 2. the extent to which the whole process has been driven by cowardice, self-loathing, and suicidal motivations among the hedonistic-godless-nihilistic Western masses. Such a situation does not respond to common sense suggestions, angry exhortations, or desperate pep talks.   

** One kind of deception comes from people whose real and mastering concern is to have a safe, comfortable, convenient, pleasurable, prosperous, or high-status life for themselves - but who want to dress-up such (understandable, but blatantly self-centred) motivations in some pseudo-tribal concern of a civilizational kind. 

Saturday, 6 December 2025

Sussex Carol plus: Saturday Christmas music from "Magpie Lane"



A very nice version of the Sussex Carol follows an excellent syncopated instrumental version of Christmas Day in the Morning; from a folk band called Magpie Lane; after a narrow ginnel off the High Street in Oxford, where they live. More of their music can be found here



*

The first performance of Sussex carol I heard was broadcast live (and rough and ready) on radio from The Etchingham Steam Band - with vocals including the first lady of Sussex folk music - Shirley Collins



In Europe it's "whip the children" day!









In parts of Europe such as Germany and France; today is "celebrated" as St Nicholas Day in which children who do not conform to adult standards of cleanliness and tidiness (e.g. failing to polish shoes, and present them for inspection) are variously whipped, kidnapped, or otherwise tortured - either by the "Saint", or else his authorized accomplice and helper. 

Apparently an expedient alliance of Heaven and Hell...

Above are some documentary illustrations recording the kind of thing that has been going-on on over the channel on December 6th for generations... 


Good clean fun? Harmless folklore? 

I think not... 

Look at the kids' faces in the above pix. 


All this strikes me as very much in the spirit of the EU leadership class. 

I can just imagine U von L cheering-on the lashings: "Hit 'em harder, put your back into it" she'd be shouting.  

I fully expect our UK-Europhile politicians and legislators to be introducing these same practices in England, as soon as they can. 

The unlife assumption: The spiritual trap of assuming an unalive universe

Nearly everybody nowadays (except young children, and maybe some residual tribal people) believes that the universe was originally unalive, and most of it is still unalive. 

And this is a shared assumption among mainstream modern materialists, and all of the major Western religions. 

The assumption that there was a time when the universe was just physics, biology came along much later - and consciousness later still. 

The addition of God doesn't make all that much difference; because God is supposed to have created unalive physics first, then plants then animals; and only to have added conscious humans at the end of the process...

So that the unalive world of physics is still asserted to be the first and predominant reality. 

Modern people - religious and atheistic - conceptualize themselves as islands of life (plus or minus consciousness) in a vast ocean of unlife


This unlife-assumption is one of the iron chains that unbreakably binds modern Man's soul to the ideology of atheistic materialism. Because the assumed possibility - and even worse predominance - of unlife, negates the divine in ways that are crippling.

For instance, the unlife-assumption renders the individual here-and-now powerless whenever that individual lacks the material power to change the unalive environment. 

the sheer mass of the unalive seems to be a colossal inertia, such that (with such a picture of reality in our minds) it feels like an individual spirit cannot overcome that mass. 

If the physics world of the unalive is given temporal priority and spatial predominance (i.e. the unalive came first and comprises most of reality); then the spiritual is thereby rendered secondary in importance and minority on influence.


These assumptions make it very hard to believe, to convince ourselves, that the spiritual in me (e.g. here and now); can really affect the vast ocean of unlife in which I am supposed to be dwelling. 

Little me thinking versus All That Stuff... How can "I" possibly make a significant difference? 

It is so hard to believe, because it is so hard to understand - we can't make sense of it, with such a world-model we can't think of a plausible mechanism of action. 

Thus, the context of a prior and predominant unalive universe; makes it very hard to grasp how "the individual spirit", - for example my own current conscious aspirations and commitments - really can and does make an ultimate difference to reality-as-a-whole...

Yet surely that is what Jesus taught as the truth? That what you or I think or want, here and now, can make an eternal and universal difference?


It seems to me that we need to drop the assumption of an unalive universe, and to return to that assumption with which we entered the world; the assumption of all reality being alive and conscious (to various degrees).


We need, therefore, to discard the "physics, biology, humanity" sequence of creation - whether that model comes from from the Old Testament, or from "science". 

If we can then (and it is difficult indeed! Or, at least, I find it so) develop the original and true habit of regarding reality as alive, conscious, purposive etc - then Theism and Christianity begin to make understandable sense, we can grasp how the assertions may actually "work".

If we can recognize and discard the unlife assumption; can re-learn to think of everything as alive; and thereby relegate physics to the realm of more, or less, expedient models, but never "real-reality"...

Then I think we will find that claims and promises of Christianity can make a kind of obvious, "common sense". 


After which clarity and grasp of understanding is attained; salvation becomes a simple matter of whether or not we personally want what Jesus offers. 

  

Note: The above is a different and somewhat novel way of describing the "metaphysics of beings" that I have been propounding on this blog and elsewhere, for the past several years.) 

Friday, 5 December 2025

How can modern people becomes sure enough about their beliefs, for this to be strongly motivating? Example from my earlier life as a scientist

We need to be sufficiently sure of our bottom-line convictions that they will serve strongly to fuel our personal motivation - so that we have the clarity and courage to aim at good; and to discern and navigate through life. 

But we modern people, in this modern world, find it very hard to believe in - anything!

At least, we moderns don't believe in stuff strongly enough that we can be truly free, and choose God and divine creation, and have the courage to stick with this --- in the face of a world that continually subverts, ridicules, suppresses, persecutes... and even inverts such intentions. 


We need true beliefs - i.e. beliefs that reflect reality (divine reality); and we also need to be subjectively sure about these beliefs in order that they can be positively motivating.

So how can we discover, and become sufficiently-convinced, by such things?  

The short answer is "intuition" - but I need to explain what I mean by intuition. 

For this I will here use the example of my earlier life as a scientist. 


When I began learning science, in the "early" phase;  it was learning "about" science; and I learned it in just the same way that we learn most other things about this world: we are told it we absorb it in terms of the assumptions that lie behind the functioning of our world. 

And we generally believe what we are told, especially when it comes from socially-defined authority figures.


But such "early" learning is superficial and passive - and such beliefs are not strongly held, not least because they have never really been understood, and we have never invested anything very personal into them. 

Consequently, these early beliefs concerning science were easily revised, modified, even reversed - when some "higher" authority said so. 

So: this early kind of passive and external belief about science was only very weakly inwardly motivating, and was unstable.

The same applies to all such beliefs - and this accounts for almost all proclaimed political, social and religious beliefs. They are shallow, impersonal - and very easily redirected or reversed by a change in what "authorities" are currently-saying. 


When I became a professional scientist, and began to do research; I entered an intermediate phase. I soon became much more discerning about what I believed, and more active in choosing who I would personally regard as authorities.  

My own understanding became deeper; albeit in externally derived terms. 

The doing of science became much more selective - but what I selected-from, and the criteria for regarding something as true; was something I assembled from that selective sample of what "authorities" stated.

I was not doing original or creative work in science; rather I was trying to be more professional, more discerning, and to do my work at a higher level than others. 


At this intermediate level; the work I was doing was not really anything to do with "reality" - rather it was dictated by the scientific literature - and was a matter of filling in gaps, extrapolating from what had already been done - and refuting pieces of established science that were (I believed) refuted by better authorities. 

It could be said I had "faith" in science as a process, as a social activity. This is analogous to most Christians "faith" in their church. 

I changed my mind less often than in the early phase, because I was more motivated - but this motivation was very much bound-up with and shaped-by the professional scientific environment - which was regarded as the ultimate arbiter. 


So, at this intermediate level; science was what the best scientists were saying (or had said) - and the intent was to become one of these "best" - and this was determined by the higher professional structures. 

Such a vision of science is this-worldly, and its standards and motivations are of this-world - even if rather idealized within this-world.

The motivations are stronger, because of the personal investment in the process; but the motivation is still ultimately external - and when the external consensus of those I regarded as "best" scientists changed, then so would my own purposes and motivations. 

I could (I hoped!) stand in a select company which I had partially chosen to ally-with; but I could not stand alone.  


The highest level of science was concerned by transcendental ideals that looked beyond the scientific milieu; ideals to do with reality (not just the relevant scientific literature) and truth (not just professional standards. 

At this highest level I was compelled to take personal responsibility for my beliefs; and might therefore need to "stand alone" when I thought that "the external world of science" (even of the best scientists, and by my evaluation) was wrong and misguided. 

For these evaluations to become beliefs that were strong enough to motivate; I needed to have criteria for conviction that went beyond my interpretations of the external world of the professional scientific literature. 


At this point, as may be clear, I had actually moved outside of the professional system of science. 

I had come to recognize that science had its assumptions that were not really true; that it was a matter of models not reality; and that for science to be true and real, required that science be understood in terms of ultimate reality...

Which included God and divine creation, and myself as having some personal significance in this.  

This was the point at which I developed sufficiently strong a personal motivation that I could, where I regarded it as necessary, maintain my convictions and direction without support from other scientists. 

I was, in other words, innerly-motivated, and also (consequently) more strongly motivated. 


This stronger inner motivation came from a different quality of conviction concerning what was true. 

At the early and intermediate levels of science; I was dependent on external authority as expressed in external communications and externally-validated interpretations of these communications - i.e. my belief (hence motivation) was rooted the observations and theories to be found in some selective sample of the scientific literature...

To reiterate - this understands science as communications that are externally derived and externally validated. 


At both early and intermediate levels; my convictions could be no different-from, deeper-than, or more-solid-than these external factors.  

And when these external factors vacillated, or even apparently reversed - then there was no alternative but for me to revise my convictions. 

This situation is demotivating! - especially when, by criteria external to science (and to do with truth and reality) science is being corrupted, as was very obviously the case.

(Science began explicitly to serve the needs of bureaucracy, careerism, politics etc. I could not fool myself other than that this really was corruption!)   


For me to have a personal conviction and motivation in science; I needed to have an inner sense of truth and reality; what is more this inner sense needed to be direct, not a communication; needed to be self-interpreting - not dependent on observations and theories. 

In other words "intuition". 

Actually, I have put matters the word way around; because it was only after I had recognized that intuition was and ought to be the root of science, that I moved to the higher level. 

What happened was that I would be thinking about something, working on something; when I realized that "this was it". 

From the stream of superficial thinking and doing, there sometimes emerged, there was discovered, a solid sense of conviction and surety; a "this is it".  

  

After a while, the intuition of "this is it" became the final validator of my work - unless I got it, and unless the sense of this-is-it was solid enough to survive repeated consultations; then I was not convinced. 

Lacking such an intuition; I remained unsure. 

I knew that "more work was needed". 

But with this intuition, and so long as it lasted and was operative - I was highly motivated, and could withstand any amount of external contradiction. 


To generalize from this specific experience; when we regard the external world as corrupt, and increasingly taking the side of evil; then unless we are to be drawn-into that; we need to move "above" considerations of the external, the communicated

We need, I think, to operate from the kind of deep intuition I eventually found in doing science...

Because only this intuition can be the basis for us to be free and positively-motivated by something outwith "society" that is both solid and potentially real.  


Thursday, 4 December 2025

Why are modern people indifferent to eternal life?

I remember the answer to this question from personal experience, from remembering my earlier self.


Modern people are indifferent to eternal life because it is pictured as "more of the same - but forever"...

As nothing more than a continuation of this-life, as it actually is experienced by modern people...

Which life is purposeless, meaningless; and ultimately isolated and disengaged.  


Why, asks a modern Man, would it be regarded as good thing, eternally to continue a meaningless and purposeless existence? 


In other words, when my personal Life is already pre-assumed to be something that Just Happened as a culmination of science and randomness...

When my life exists against a backdrop of "the universe is dead and going-nowhere and I am a brief-insignificant nothing within this vastness of time and space". 

This is the official conviction of our civilization - taught from the highest to lowest levels, by those with greatest status and conferred authority.

And it forms the functional basis of all public and "objective" explanations and justifications from the major social institutions (politics, law, military, police, mass media, economics, science, medicine, arts, education etc, and also the churches). 


When human life is regarded as as thus futile; its continuation forever seems to most people like a prospect that would be more of a torment than a thing to be desired. 

In such a context, the core promise of Christianity has lost its appeal to the extent that most people think that - even if resurrected individual life beyond death could somehow be proved to be a real and genuine possibility - they wouldn't want it!

And would prefer the (supposed) assurance of a swift and painless death (i.e. euthanasia) followed by utter annihilation of consciousness. 


Such is the depth of our modern sickness of soul. 

Too deep to be touched by evangelism or apologetics - too deep to be touched even by the devout practice of any strict church Christianity.

Because the modern belief in purposelessness, and meaninglessness, and ultimate personal insignificance - is larger and more profound than our professed religions. 

Until we - as individuals - are able to build our religion on a foundation of ultimate reality having a direction, personal meaning, individual significance that we can choose from ourselves; then we shall not escape the vortex of modernity.


Word spells from theoretical models: How something is supposed to work, versus how it actually works

Peoples' understanding of the world around them is substantially a matter of their explanatory models - to the point that experience and observations are essentially ignored. 


For example, there is a model for how "democracy" works; then there is what actually happens. And people continue, decade after decade, to believe in the theory rather than their observations and experiences of what actually happens. 

Same with laws and regulations: there is a model of what these are supposed to be aiming at, and are observations concerning how the law/rule is actually deployed in practice - which may be very different indeed, and yet the law/rule continues (usually successfully!) to be defended on the basis of the theoretical model. 

Likewise with technology: there is the explanatory model of how some bit of technology is supposed to work - and then there are our observations about what it actually does... From which may sometimes be inferred that the bit-of-kit is not, and never was - and never could, be working in the manner of the model. "AI" is a topical instance of this.   

Another example from medicine, is that once a drug has been marketed as an "anti-depressant", then people (doctors as well as patients) cannot seem grasp that drug's thus classified can and do cause depression (and suicide) in some patients. 

The consequences of the Birdemic lockdowns and peck were another example of the same phenomenon - most people believed that theory that these "would help"; and apparently could not grasp that they would inevitably cause harm - even if they also helped (which, in the event, they did not).  


But these are just specific examples: this way of thinking permeates our lives right down to the deepest levels. Consider ideologies such as feminism: people still talk about feminism as if it was 1880, and this was a new theory that "must work" and is intrinsically A Good Thing. A century and a half of actual personal experiences makes no apparent difference. (The same applies by close analogy to socialism or racism.)

Religions are the same as ideology in this respect. Once a model-of-realty of a religion is accepted; nothing could ever happen that would necessarily refute it.  

And the same applies to people (like the recent New Atheists) who talk about the liberation of mankind from religion as if this was a new, untried theory of human happiness - that must surely work! When in actuality we already live (as did our parent, grandparents and back) in the least religious society in the history of the world, and it is continually getting less religious


We are back at that old favourite theme upon which I repeatedly harp: that metaphysics is prior to science; that theory is prior to experiment etc.

This just is the reality of human existence. 

Totalitarian controllers are far more concerned about controlling the theoretical models by which we interpret the world, than they are about controlling specific "information" - because once the models are established, they cannot be refuted by any new information.  


Once someone has assumed that there is no God and this is a purposeless and meaningless universe; nothing can ever happen to compel him to recognize the reality of God, purpose or meaning - everything possible can be explained away as random, the product of delusion or fraud - and so forth. 

Once somebody has decided that their church is blessed by God and can never be corrupted and will last until the end of time/ Last Judgment - then no amount of corruption or evil done by that church and/or its members will make any difference to the assumption. 


The lesson I draw from this is that we should be very careful what we assume! 

Because upon our theoretical models of reality depend our experience of reality. 

And we can only learn that which is learnable within the context of our assumptions. 


Therefore; we ought, as a minimum, to become (as far as possible - which can only be known by sustained trying) explicitly aware of our own assumptions - of those "models" by which we understand and explain reality.

 

Wednesday, 3 December 2025

"Owning" change - and "AI"

Current attitudes to "AI" are an example of the way that hierarchical power elicits compliance, by psychological methods and the hope of personal benefit. 

This is seen in organizations, when management talk about "owning" change. 

The desired change (i.e. currently, the implementation of "AI" technologies) is presented as (and may actually be) inevitable.


Therefore the choice presented to those upon whom change is being imposed; is either to suffer the (asserted) humiliation of being compelled kicking-and-screaming into compliance - and thereby having one's helplessness revealed to all and sundry...

Or else "owning" the change; which means accepting its inevitability and adjusting one's own psychology to embrace the valuation that "this change is good! 

Or, at least, that the change can be made good... 

Or, at least such change can be made good for-me". 


The psychological appeal is obvious - instead of being visibly subject to miserable compulsion, one who "owns" the change can pretend to be in control of the process - and happy about it! 

And - by pretending the change is good - one can (with a superficially clear conscience!) make the best of it for oneself - in pursuit of money, status, attention, sex... or whatever motivates. 

One who "owns" change can "ride the wave" - be a cool surfer! instead of one upon whom the wave crashes. 


Indeed, "owning change" is almost wholly to the short-term and this-worldly benefit of those who can perform this psychological act; which is why the process is so common as to be nigh universal. 


Owning change is just seen as common sense - making the best of the inevitable...

Pretending to oneself that evil is actually good - until we actually do believe that evil is good...

And surely nobody can be blamed for doing that? 


Tuesday, 2 December 2025

Experience is more significant than knowledge - but what kind of experience?

Experience  > Knowledge

Reality > Truth

Thinking > Feeling


The above are notations or summaries of what may be chosen as ways of understanding the human condition, including mortal life; on the basis of metaphysical decisions. The intent is that the first term is distinct from and superior to the second - but that the second is usually preferred.

Mots people focus on "knowledge" - including, nowadays, the debased forms of information or even "data". I am suggesting that these are secondary forms, without participation. Knowledge is "about" something, and the tendency is to regard it as abstract and separable from the person who knows. 

But I am saying that the only real knowledge is in (or from) the experience of the knower - all knowledge includes the subjective, the knower. Knowledge is not all in the knower, but always includes the knower.  

It could be stated that what we "really" known must always be a matter of our experience. 


Truth is only a partial view of reality; because reality is what-is, whereas truth is a description of what-is.

This relates to my conviction that the most fundamental philosophy is metaphysics - which is concerned with the nature of basic reality. 

Any stated metaphysics (any philosophy) is, of course, secondary and therefore a description of something, not the something itself.

But underneath that ought-to-be a direct experience of reality. 

That personal experience should the basis of the knowledge that is metaphysics.  

(Against this is the idea that the most fundamental philosophy is epistemology - the philosophy of "knowledge"; which is often focused on asking what are the valid criteria of knowing, or how can knowledge become objective. I regard epistemology as a blind alley. )


Having said that personal experience is primary, and that experience of reality is the basis of that philosophy I aspire to; the question arises as to the nature of that experience.

What kind of experience is sought? Well, here I am suggesting that it is a kind of thinking, rather than a kind of feeling. 

Although having said that, the kind of thinking includes feeling... In other words, the ultimate activity is not the sort of mundane "voice in my head" thinking in which most people engage most of the time that they are awake and conscious. 

Neither is it intense unthinking feeling; of the kind that most people regard as powerful emotions - the feeling that is driven by some external event or input; and that "overwhelms" us.


Instead I am attempting to describe a feeling-thinking (a feeling-reinforced thinking, perhaps?) attaining its objective of experiencing reality in a direct and primary way independent of words, or pictures. 

What I hope to get across is that we should regard conscious and purposive thinking (a particular kind of thinking) as the situation in which we may experience reality directly.   

This conviction (which I derived from Rudolf Steiner, with modifications) is very different from many or most religious or spiritual ideas about where and how we may encounter truth; and different too from mainstream scientistic-materialism. 


It is neither the subjective and passive revelation or imposition of truth in traditional religions - requring obedience to legitimate church authority...

Nor is it the idea of truth as objective and out-there (something established by experts that we can only passively obey)...

Nor is it the "my truth" subjectivism of new Age affectations - I say affectation because nobody remotely lives up to it, but instead New Agers are relativistic about their spirituality which is regarded in a "lifestyle" way, while being serious and objective about the truths of current-leftist politics (which they regard as mandatory; and opposition to which is the only "evil" they (in practice) recognize and oppose with vehemence. 

(A New Ager may be relativistic about which religion is true, or "anything goes" concerning the validity of spiritual practices such as acupuncture, crystals, channelling, meditation etc; but highly objective and very coercive in their opinions about "right wing" politicians, or "fundamentalist Christians" - and what ought to be done with/ about them!) 


The idea that we need to experience reality, and that reality may be experienced in thinking; is therefore something qualitatively different from any of the mainstream perspectives. I can only point it out as a possibility. Whether you (or anyone else) chooses to adopt such a point-of-view, is (and can only be) a matter for individual spiritual responsibility. A matter of your ultimate freedom. 


Monday, 1 December 2025

"Possible in principle" - Some paranormal phenomena should be regarded as aspects of baseline reality

I recently reviewed Andy Thomas's book about the "paranormal" experiences reported by ordinary people. 

It is a common response to such reports to demand a plausible "scientific" explanation - but I would assert that several paranormal phenomena do not require any explanation, because they are natural and spontaneous aspects of normal human experience.  

As such, they ought to be regarded as baseline aspects of real life, rather than things that are unacceptable unless explained in terms of what is  2025 mainstream-acceptable (i.e. regarded as valid by official bureaucracies and "legacy" mass media). 


Thomas's list of the "strange" phenomena covered in his book include: 

1. Ghosts and poltergeists 2. UFOs 3. Out of body and near death experiences 4. Psychic phenomena (such as telepathy) 5. Premonitions 6. Synchronicities 7. Crop circle events 8. Prehistoric-site events (stone circles etc) 9. Sighting of "cryptids" or anomalous creatures. 

Of these; I would regard ghosts, poltergeists, psychic experiences, premonitions, and synchronicities; as being, broadly speaking, merely natural and spontaneous phenomena. 


These are the sort of thing (albeit without applying such categories to them) of a kind that it is likely to happen to pretty much all young children and tribal peoples.

They are something that ought, therefore, to be regarded as normal (even if unusual) aspects of everyday life. 

They are indeed, not merely normal - but a kind of baseline for human beings

These can be part of the background assumptions with which we enter this life; and which it is unnatural and distorting for us to discard as impossible on the basis of "currently-acceptable theories". 

What is normal and baseline does not need to be explained before being accepted as potentially valid. 


By contrast; phenomena like UFOs and crop circles are much more restricted (by persons, and by location) in terms of experiences. 

In other words UFOs and crop-circles are not necessarily (although they may sometimes be) "normal happenings" - and often seem absent from the experiences of many people and cultures. 

They are also theoretically-constructed phenomena, in the sense that that defining them requires significant background knowledge. 

To perceive a UFO implicitly requires an idea of what is normal in the skies; which is something that must be learned. And crop circles are usually often properly apprehended from above, or by walking through fields of corn to find them (which, agriculturally, doesn't usually happen!). 


But to return to the "normal paranormal" phenomena like telepathy, feeling the presence of spirits - perhaps of the dead, "out-of-body" travelling, actions by invisible beings and the like... 

These should be accepted as possible in principle and therefore not requiring explanation - even though some (or most) specific claims of such occurrences may be mistaken or dishonest. 

I mean that we ought not to demand some kind of explanation of how such things can occur, before believing them. 


To repeat: We should work on the basis that reports of ghosts or telepathic events (for instance) are a possibility; on the basis that it is natural to believe in ghosts, and to experience telepathy. 

We can then evaluate reports on the basis of the honesty and credibility of witnesses; and specific contextual details of the report; as with any other second-hand information. 

After all; all public knowledge is derived from eye-witness testimony! 

Nations have, for example, gone to war on the basis of credible reports of enemy military activities from, for example, competent and trustworthy naval Captains. Why then should we doubt the same kind of people when they report a sea-serpent, or some other "cryptid"?

We do not need, and should not demand, an up-front and "satisfactory" explanation of how ghosts are possible and what they are made-of. And likewise the possibility of telepathy does not require an explanation of how it might happen. 


I would go further. 

To take the example of telepathy - or the experience "mind to mind" contact, of knowing another being's intentions, nature etc  -- actual experience may go far beyond, or actually contradict, mainstream "scientific" understanding of what is possible.  

Thus; I think it likely that our basic experience of telepathy is one where it is not just humans that are telepathically-known; but potentially other animals, plants, and even things such as planets and stars. 

Yet, the telepathic experience of "contact", is one that is instantaneous contact. There is no "time lag" - even over very large (or vast) distances - such as would be the case with planets and stars. 

In other words; telepathy, when valid, is apparently not constrained either by the speed of light or by problems of "translation". We just know - directly, without mediation - what is happening in another being now

Such experience is, of course, contrary to the assumed constraints of current-physics - and indeed contrary to how it is assumed that any communication "must" occur (e.g. needing an encoder, transmitter, receiver, decoder etc).


In this sense, the implications of some paranormal experiences are profound and wide-ranging; because accepting their validity entails that reality is qualitatively different from that described by current "science" and affirmed as valid by official authorities. 

In other words; the acceptance of the validity of some paranormal phenomena is subversive with respect to the claims of our society and civilization to be sole arbiters of what is real and true - and whose evaluations we ought to believe and obey.

This is probably one major reason why paranormal experiences - including those that are normal to the point of being almost universal - have not so-far been, and probably never shall be; regarded as real, true, serious, and sometime important. 


Sunday, 30 November 2025

"AI" is a "Magic 8-Ball" (i.e. obfuscated dice-roll or coin-flip)



The current primary global strategy for replacing people with "AI" programs; amounts to the substitution of a "Magic 8 Ball" for human judgment. 

This statement is hardly an exaggeration!


The Magic 8 Ball is actually a yes-no dice* with a verbal output, which is indeed just an elaborated coin-flip. 

To set-up the analogy with "AI"; here are three aspects of the Magic 8 Ball mechanism:

1. Functionally; M8B is an obscuration and complication of a simple device for generating positive and negative responses. A child does not realize that the (relative) complexity of operation, functions to confuse the user about what would otherwise be obvious. And the verbal nature of responses (e.g. "As I see it, yes", "Don't count on it") merely provide a more human-like output than would numbers or symbols. 

2. The other point of the 8 Ball is that it is supposed to be "magic". In other words; the M8B user has had the idea planted that the ball is (something like) sentient, conscious, has innate wisdom, and even predictive power. 

3. Finally; the complexity of the structure enables much more money to be charged for the device; than if it was a die, or a coin. 


The analogy between the Magic 8 Ball and the global totalitarian "AI" project is very close:

1. The colossal computational complexity of "AI" obscures that it does not understand anything - any more than does an M8B. And "AI" in its post-November 30th-2022 iteration, has been specifically-engineered to generate pseudo-relevant, human-like verbal outputs. 

2. By means of a vast propaganda PSYOP - "AI" has been attributed with "magical" powers of intelligence, wisdom, creativity etc; so that people are inclined to treat its output as having (or very soon about to have) literally superhuman capabilities.  

3. Nobody would pay much for dice; but the global establishment have spent many trillions of dollars (of "our" money) in "AI" technologies and its infrastructure (which, functionally, merely amounts to an eight ball on steroids with plastic surgery); of which most has gone into the pockets of pseudo-"investors"; with significant sums spread among their managers, propagandists and minions.  


The question arises as to what will happen if or when significant decision making is taken from humans and given to the output of a Giga-Magic Eight Ball? 

The answer depends on whether the real decision makers (i.e. the ones who chose to develop the obfuscation in the first place, and who oversee its implementation) take any notice of the "AI" decisions, or just make their own decisions as usual, but pretend that the "AI" was responsible...

This seems the likely intended scenario. 


But maybe, instead, many people really will believe their own propaganda (it surely looks like it!); and the M8B will actually, in real life, be used to generate decisions that humans will then obey!

And maybe the leadership class of the world will allow or encourage this to happen - probably from motivations such as spite, sadism and destructive zeal - and will them will "sit back" in their secure and provisioned shelters, cackling at having so grossly fooled so many people; to "enjoy the show" of what eventuates. 

In which case civilization will crumble and collapse... and more rapidly than would otherwise be the case.  

 

*Magic 8 Ball is a 20-sided dice suspended in fluid, which is shaken, and then provides ten "Yes" and five "No" themed verbal answers - the other five answers are essentially "roll again". All of which ultimately reduces to a die with only yes/ no responses (in this case; double the proportion of "yes" than "no" answers) which could further be reduced to coin-flips. 

Commenting suspended


The number of comments has recently declined to the point that it has become rather a waste of my time periodically checking e-mails in order to moderate them. So I am suspending comments for a while, so I can have a break from the process. I have done this by "hiding" comments - this means earlier comments are still preserved, and will again be shown when I have finished my leave of absence.  


Saturday, 29 November 2025

Why monetizing corrupts

Setting-aside arguments about economic necessity (which very seldom hold water*) it is surely a blazingly obvious fact that monetizing of blogs and videos, by whatever means, is corrupting. 


We can all see this for ourselves (especially if there is a before and after) - even when the scale of earnings is (presumably) negligible.

Indeed, this is what is striking; that even a small scale blog-video is distorted in predictable ways by monetization - in other words, monetization induces and enforces this-worldly short-termism in service to the mainstream agenda. 

The mechanism of corruption is analogous to that which leads to the "convergence" that afflicts all charities in the UK (and I mean All charities) - which is that engagement with The System (in this case the economy) is intrinsically corrupting. 


Which means, of course, that we are all (more or less) corrupted by the fact that we all depend on The System for our survival. 

That is true. But it is also true that every time we choose to increase our integration with The System, we increase our corruption. 

We can negate such spiritual harm if we explicitly acknowledge (to ourselves, in particular) that we have chosen to do what corrupted us because it seemed more expedient (i.e. if we take personal responsibility for our corrupting choice); and acknowledge too that we have actually become more corrupt as a result of our choices.

In other words; we are all sinners and cannot cease from sinning and indeed often choose to sin more and gratuitously.  


But what usually happens is that we lie to ourselves; first that we "have to" engage-with and subordinate-to The System in this particular instance; and that "it won't make any difference". 

With monetization - it takes the form of justifying that we "deserve" to be paid for the input of our time and effort...

OK; but that means we are selling our time and effort (even when we get very little back from that sale); and we cannot validly then claim that we are writing (or otherwise creating) in pursuit of truth, beauty and virtue.    


In sum: as of 2025 (with our national and global totalitarian system) - if you are writing for money then you are, to a significant degree, Writing For Money; writing so as to be more compatible with making money; hence you have chosen to place your writing and its content within the totalitarian system

One sign of corruption is when the writing engages with the monetization, another when the writing become PR for other system-affiliated activities: selling books or other merchandize, supporting your business; or promoting your-self, your career, your worldly-projects. 

All that's fine if you support the evil-motivated actuality and aims of the global totalitarian system. 

In that case you presumably want to become more corrupt, and selling your writing (or using your writing to sell) will help with this. 


But insofar as you desire to take the side of God, divine creation and the good; then the decision to monetize your writing is one that will surely have adverse consequences on you personally, relative to how you otherwise would have been - and more so insofar as you try to deny this.      

To put it the other way around; if you are genuinely serious in your motivation of wanting to align with the divine and enable good via your writing; then you should avoid (insofar as possible) inserting an economic interface between your writing and those who may read it. 

In conclusion; I think we have recently reached a point when the old possibility of valid compromises between this-world and the spirit, have broken-down. 

Things have come to a point

We must make choices - one way, or the other.


The choice whether or not to monetize one's writing is only one of these choices; but it is one of these choices.  


*If one is writing for money, in order to live; then it should be considered whether money may be got some other way - so as to liberate the writing. There are few less-efficient ways of making money than writing; so that a smaller amount of some other kind of work will nearly-always make money more reliably and efficiently than monetizing the writing. Also; most of the best writers in history have been "amateurs" who made money from some other work than writing; and their best writing was done without expectation of payment (even if that writing later made some, or a lot of, money). 

"AI ethics" scaremongering is part of the totalitarian PSYOP

The global Establishment "AI" project began almost exactly three years ago - with the multi-national, multi-pronged, coordinated mega-launch on 30th November 2022.

The "AI" project has, of course - like all such*, tried to capture both of the side of the "debate" - by using some portion of its multi-trillion dollar budget to fund courses, qualifications, conferences, books, and jobs; that purport to discuss the "ethics" of this technology. 

Some of these "AI"-employees are techno-utopian apologists for "AI"; while others have the task of scaremongering.

"AI" scaremongering is done in such a way that the realities of this vast totalitarian project are obscured; and the categorically false assertions of "AI" are instead simply being-assumed to be true - by being used as the basis for the scaremongering!


In other words; the discourse variously called "AI ethics" (like the related field of "AI governance") is part of the PSYOPS that attempts (and successfully, it seems) to manipulate the masses into a state of bemused, terrified, passive and resigned acceptance of... whatever bad things "AI" brings


Some of the "ethicists" base their "concern" on evaluations of what is coming - very soon! 

These include assumptions that are smuggled in covertly, because they form the taken-for-granted basis of the ethical hand-wringing: 

1. Inevitability

2. Takeover from humans

3. Destruction caused by the technology


The assumption of "inevitability" hides the unimaginable trillions of tax dollars confiscated from the masses to fund the "AI" project - its massive computational infrastructure, the massive energy consumption, the countless reallocated and recruited "AI"-personnel in innumerable organizations...

And to bribe/force compliance upon all the major social institutions and corporations by a vast and coordinated program.

The assumption that "AI" will "takeover" from humans; hides that all actual decisions to (allegedly) "replace" people with computers, are made by humans.

Yet the background-assumption is that this planned takeover of human activities by "AI" technologies will - somehow - happen because of the technologies innate alleged-"power". 

The simple fact is that people make the decision; and when these humans decisions lead to "AI" takeover, this is because that human choice has been heavily propagandized, incentivized (by subsidies, tax-breaks etc), driven by legislation changes - and so forth. 

If "AI" is in any sense "inevitable" - then that inevitability is merely because enough people will respond to the enormous pressures and incentives that have been created via the colossal funding of the project and the compliance of the leadership class.  


Destruction: Software is stated to be the cause of the inevitable (i.e. planned) personal and social damage confidently-predicted to result from the "takeover" of "AI".

This tries to hide that the whole process of "AI"-replacing has been driven and enforced, top to bottom, by people.

And this includes the common appeal to "market forces" and geopolitical competition, that supposedly compel corporations and governments to implement "AI" technology - or else be overwhelmed by those who adopt "AI"...

This assumes what is false: that "AI" really does or soon-will replace humans more efficiently and effectively in significant functional roles. 

It also takes no account that the "market" for "AI" has been deliberately and artificially constructed by totalitarian fiat using coercively-confiscated resources. 

If the marketplace had instead been orientated towards effectiveness and efficiency in achieving real-world outcomes; then it would not, indeed could not, have led to "AI". 


So; the "AI" project serves to conceal and deny a vast program of (yes - inevitable! if the totalitarian Establishment get Their way) planned personal and societal harm; under cover that all this has been done "by the AI" - and in a way that is unstoppable and impersonal.

In a way that is nobody's fault. 

No person or group is to blame for anything!

It All Just Happened..

(And "how sad", say the AIethicists...)


The lie is that this is not really people who are doing the destroying by means of a colossal organized and resourced international strategy; but instead it is the software that is doing this to us humans!

(When we suffer or die; we are meant to cry out from our hearts: "Woe is me, my heart bleeds! But what can mere Men do against such impersonal necessity?")

Behind the advertised ethical "concern" lies a raft of made-up, dishonest and propagandistic assertions about the functional efficiency and effectiveness of (post-November 2022) "AI". 

The truth of these assertions is another thing which is assumed, in the face of a complete lack of serious and honest evidence; and fundamentally rooted in the categorical impossibility of the claims.

  

My point here is clarify that those who are put-forward in mainstream discourse as "ethically concerned" by the "implications" of "AI" - including those who scaremonger on the basis of false assumptions concerning the technology's effectiveness and impersonal-inevitability - are themselves part of the coordinated AI-PSYOPS. 

+++


*It seems that "AI" project (in all its facets) has been the primary - single largest and most sustained - strategy of the globalist leadership class over the past three years. 

"AI" is the current main mechanism of progressing Ahrimanic evil; those in the leadership class who desire a wholly materialist society of omni-surveillance and micro-control. 

Meanwhile, since early 2022, the "Agents of Chaos" (who pursue the spiteful and destructive agenda of Sorathic Evil); have been focussing their efforts on escalating everywhere-wars abroad plus intra-national violence at home

Although these two types of evil are increasingly in conflict among the leadership class of the world; they seem to have reached an uneasy truce on the subject of "AI"; based on opposite understandings of what "AI" will actually do. 

The totalitarians (falsely) believe that AI can be the basis of a world-administering bureaucracy that is both cheaper and more controllable than the current armies of managers and clerks.

On the other side, the Agents of Chaos (correctly) realize that "AI" cannot - therefore will not - perform this functional job; but will instead destroy social functioning, generate mass misery and death, and collapse civilization into that disorder they crave.

So, at present; both sides of the Global Establishment have reasons to continue to facilitate, fund, and propagandize the ongoing "AI" takeover - which is why you never hear an Establishment voice that is critical of "AI" for the right reasons and from the right assumptions

Friday, 28 November 2025

"Being a Christian" is hierarchically-above practicing any specific religion

It seems to me that Christianity - as I understand it, is qualitatively different from "religion".

I regard Christianity as in essence the commitment to accept Jesus Christ's offer of resurrected eternal life in Heaven, through following Jesus post-mortally. 

For a Christian, therefore, life after death involves both a personal transformation (resurrection) and also (implicitly) a qualitatively different existence in a Heaven that is understood in terms of a Second Creation - a creative Heaven entirely motivated by love; and without death, entropy or evil. 


This post-mortal expectation therefore provides a frame for everything else in reality; and especially for this mortal life of ours.

But Christianity does not fill our mortal life

Being a Christian does not provide us with a blueprint, rule-book, ethical code, or detailed external and objective guidance for all important matters...

In other words (properly grasped); it seems that "being a Christian" is not really "a specific religion" 


The "religion aspect of life" has been provided by many and various churches through history and today - some of which churches include following Jesus to resurrected life in Heaven as a core element - and these are validly "Christian churches"; but who all in addition offer various and detailed blueprints for daily living. 

Guidance overlaps among validly Christian churches, but it also varies. 

But each church offers, to a significant degree, that specific and detailed life-guidance in terms of principles, practices, necessary obediences etc. which religiously-inclined people seek; and that complex societies and civilizations required in order to function, and be sustainable. 


What I am saying is that "being a Christian" is distinct from being religious; because being a Christian focuses on what happens after we die; while a religion focuses on what we do during this mortal life. 

I am also saying that the relationship between the direct Christianity of what happens after we die, and the "blueprint" religion of what we do in this mortal life; is indirect and uncertain. 

On the one hand; Christianity-itself does not have many very hard entailments -- and on the other hand; most of the multitude of detail in rule-books, ethical codes, and theologies lacks any solid basis in Christianity. 


The true relationship between Christianity and religion is that Christianity comes hierarchically first, above all else, and is the framework for understanding our life and ultimate reality. 

Within that framework of aspiration and faithful expectation; there will inevitably need to be something like a religion.

But the scope and details of any religion, even a genuinely-Christian religion, are-not and cannot-be an entailed consequence of Christianity. 


Note added: This does not mean that all religions, or even all validly-Christian and self-identified-Christian churches, are equally valid. Some will be more Christianity-compatible than others. But it does mean that one could probably be-a-Christian (i.e. by intending to accept the post-mortal offer of Jesus Christ) while practicing a pretty wide range of religions. And this was, of course, the actual situation among the earliest Christians, before a distinct "Christian Church religion" arose - who, after conversion, seem to have continued practicing (for example) their Jewish, Samaritan and Roman Pagan religions. 

Thursday, 27 November 2025

It's Christmas, and in England that means compulsory Rucking Futter


Looking very pleased with himself - And No Wonder!


There is an composer of church music, including some Christmas carols and songs, called John  Rutter - and it is mandatory that at least one of his songs must be performed in every Christmas concert throughout England - as well as in every evensong in every cathedral every week. 

Rutter was very prolific, and his work is of a consistent standard - and that standard is meh.

His music is not terrible, but it is never much good. 

Rutter seems to have been around forever, or maybe that is just what his music makes me feel. Yet apparently the old cove is still with us, and only eighty years old!

How he achieved such a vice-like grip on Anglican choral music, I'm not sure; but my suspicion is that he has incriminating photographs of every Vicar in the Church of England.