19/12 – 25/12/22 – The Universe, SEL & Revenge

news on the march

Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.

Alan Watts – Just Trust the Universe
Audio presentation at Spiritual Wheels

Alan Wilson Watts was an English writer, speaker and self-styled “philosophical entertainer”, known for interpreting and popularising Japanese, Chinese and Indian traditions of Buddhist, Taoist, and Hindu philosophy for a Western audience. (Listen to entire presentation here)

WTF is SEL?
Audio presentation at New Discourses

Behind all the flowery language is a history, and that history demands looking at. Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) and its chief lobbying organization, CASEL (the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning) emerged in the mid-1990s from a place called the Fetzer Institute. What is the Fetzer Institute, though? Created by a twentieth century radio magnate named John Fetzer, the Institute was devoted to Fetzer’s devoted pursuit of New Age Spiritualism and occultism. (Listen to audio presentation here)

Trauma, Revenge and Redemption – Clark Fredericks
Video interview at Soft White Underbelly

Soft White Underbelly interview and portrait of Clark Fredericks, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. This was parallel to watching a movie but in interview format. One of the most immersive experiences I have had just hearing someone speak. (Watch full interview here)

news on the march the end
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Posted in News, politics, Reflections

The Small One – A Christmas Story (Bing Crosby)

The Small One

Happy Christmas all! To celebrate this year’s Christmas festivities, I would like to present a narration by Bing Crosby of a moving Christmas story called The Small One like I did the last 2 years and will continue doing on the 25th of December. I loved listening to this as a child around Christmas time. It was on the same LP (image above) as Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince which I posted about May 3 years ago.

According to Wikipedia: The Small One is a Charles Tazewell story with musical accompaniment from Victor Young and His Orchestra. Charles Tazewell was a radio playwright and children’s book author, whose work has been adapted multiple times for film…..

I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who has been so supportive of my blog. I feel grateful to have conversed with you in blogger-sphere because it has made this venture all the more satisfying. I wish you and all your families a very Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

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Posted in Reading, Reflections

Confirmed by Mother no Less, ‘David Hobson is the Greatest Singer at Australian Christmas Carols’

My favourite Christmas carol O Holy Night sung by my favourite Christmas carol singer David Hobson. There is another post I wrote about his mesmerising performance of The Holy City. Nothing jolts me into the festive spirit more than listening to these two performances. I hope you enjoy.

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Posted in Music

Do you Believe in Santa Claus?

I will be reposting my favourite XMAS posts over the next 3 days. I would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your families a very Merry Christmas. Ho Ho Ho!!!!

How Jordan Peterson might respond to the question (From Dr Beckerwood on Reddit):

Santa lobsterI act as if Santa Claus exists.

People have often asked me (especially around this time of year) if I believe in Santa Claus… and I don’t like that question because it’s an attempt to box me up, to put a bow on me in a sense. It’s like, what do you mean, “believe”? We know what Santa looks like. We know what he sounds like. We know how he behaves. We put up pictures and statues of him. We even make offerings to him! Do I believe the man at the mall with the white beard is the one and only Santa? Crowds are addressing him as Santa and he is responding to the name “Santa” and answering AS Santa as such, so some extent at least, he is real. To the degree he is a “good” Santa he is transcending his material substrate to give rebirth to the neurological patterns of the eternal spirit of Santa as it has descended across time. It’s like, is that “real” enough for you? In the Jungian sense you could argue that in that moment he is more real than real.

Look, any smart 11 year old can point out the logistical problems with time zones, flying reindeer, and countless cubic tons of milk and cookies, but, you know, perhaps that’s the wrong level of analysis. When a child sits on Santa’s lap it’s an intimidating thing because Santa is a judge. It’s like, are you on the good list or the naughty list? Because you certainly don’t want to be on the naughty list, that’s for sure, so how about we avoid that; how about we avoid the coal in the stocking? So what do we tell our kids? It’s like, clean up your room! Straighten yourself out and try to be a good person. Then maybe Santa judges you favorably and you get a few decent toys out the deal, eh? I don’t know, maybe Red Dead Redemption 2 or maybe a Hatchimal. But you’re not getting anywhere by stepping up on your soap box and announcing “I’m so smart, I figured out that the physical manifestation of the spirit of giving isn’t real.” I mean, you can think that if you want, but it’s not the proper way of looking at Santa Claus. There’s way, way more to him than that.

And there are actually not a lot of people, percentage-wise, who are ok with saying out loud that they don’t believe in him. Why is that? It feels like a sin to even suggest something like that. On the contrary, people go door to door singing songs about him. So some folks might say he doesn’t exist maybe just because they’re afraid of appearing foolish, but I’m not convinced. It’s like, you know what you truly believe, eh? You’re transparent to yourself? Guess again, sunshine. We act as if Santa Claus exists. And that’s right. That’s true, and it is good. And that’s all I have to say about that.

Merry Christmas Buckos

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Posted in Reflections

Just Give Me A Reason (2013) – Pink, Nate Ruess

This unlikely pair made a fine pop – ballad which I enjoy listening to on the odd occasion. I don’t know how I became aware of it, but I’m glad I did. I like hearing Nate Ruess’ entry into this song. He has a great voice and his retort to Pink’s words and expression is invigorating. Just Give Me a Reason is another song where according to my listening enjoyment the verses far exceed the chorus’, yet the producers or whoever makes that decision (songwriters?) perhaps for commercial reasons want to play the Chorus to death. It’s a shame this happens so often in modern music.

Right from the start
You were a thief, you stole my heart
And I, your willing victim
I let you see the parts of me that weren’t all that pretty
And with every touch, you fixed them


Now you’ve been talking in your sleep
Oh, oh
Things you never say to me
Oh, oh
Tell me that you’ve had enough
Of our love, our love

Originally, Just Give Me a Reason was just a song writing session, but Pink realized she needed someone else to sing the song with her because she thought that it was more of a conversation than a one perspective song. She asked Ruess to sing the song with her as a duet. The problem to me from a visual perspective, this duo doesn’t fit at all – in fact they have the least physical connection (live video). But in audio below, it sounds more realistic.
Nate Ruess is an American singer and songwriter. He is best known as the founder and lead singer of the indie pop band Fun, and of The Format. As of 2015, he also performs as a solo musician.

The song Just Give Me a Reason was chosen as the third single from Pink’s sixth studio album, The Truth About Love (2012). The song received critical acclaim, with many critics deeming the song as the best track on the album. Prior to its release, the song charted in many regions due to strong digital sales, which was the reason for its release. The song attained worldwide success, topping the charts in twenty-one countries including the United States, Australia & Canada.

Reference:
1. Just Give Me a Reason – Wikipedia

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Posted in Music

The AnkiDroid Collection (Part 29) – Communism & The Council of Nicaea

Ankidroid additions related to Science, History and Philosophy. More information about Anki can be found in this article.

Communism

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

Key Communist Theorists and Movements – History Until Present

  • Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Karl Marx are two prominent 19th-century German philosophers who are often mentioned together. That’s mainly because Hegel had a widely recognized influence on Marx. Hegel with Dialectics mentioned here before and Marx with Dialectic Materialism.
  • Leninism was a political ideology of Vladimir Lenin which proposed the establishment of the dictatorship of the Proletariat led by the Revolutionary Vanguard Guard as a prelude to implementing Communism. The Proletariat is the class of wage earners possessing neither capital nor production and living by selling their labour. The policies allowed the Bolshevik Vanguard Party to realise the October Revolution in the Soviet Union in 1917.
  • In the West, Herbet Marcuse published One Dimensional Man in 1964 and championed minority groups towards radical thinking. A new left movement then took shape throughout the Vietnam War and thereafter the Brazilian educator Paulo Freire led ‘Critical Pedagogy‘ which has become the benchmark for the United Nations backing of ‘Social and Emotional Learning‘ in schools and community.
  • In 1989 Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the term ‘Intersectionality‘ meaning an analytical framework for understanding how aspects of a person’s identity (race, class and gender) combine to create different modes of discrimination and privilege. It is the basis of Critical Race Theory and thereafter we have the Woke Movement.

Council of Nicaea

Council of Nicaea (When, What and by Whom?)

(325 AD Turkey) The council was the first ecumenical – worldwide Christian Church organised by Roman Emperor Constantine. This was the first effort to attain consensus in the church through an assembly representing all Christendom. It’s important to add here, this was NOT to discern which books should remain in the New Testament as Dan Brown of the De Vinci Code might have many to believe. The 27 books chosen were only publicly recognised 40 years later by a member of the Council – Saint Athanasius.

The council instead were deciding in ‘what sense’ Jesus was the Son of God. There were 300 Bishops who came together for this the first of 7 ecumenical councils of early Christianity that made decisions about Theology and practical matters. Constantine had converted to Christianity in 312 and he did not want a ‘split – church’.
It was decided here that Christ was not a subordinate divinity who is less powerful than God the Father. Christ, they determined is fully equal with God. He has the same power, the same grandeur and honour as God the Father and he always existed. Despite this, Christians were insistent they weren’t polytheists (The Holy Trinity), but monotheists that God is manifested in 3 persons.
You can find a brief presentation about the Council by Theologian Bart Ehrman here.

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Posted in politics, Reading

The Most Important Video I Have Seen in Modern Times – James Lindsay

I cannot tell you how significant this video is to the future of Western Civilization. If James Lindsay loses and Klaus Schwab from the UN wins… well, we are in for Brave New World in the real world which is already happening. What I found dispiriting is realising how these companies and Universities are bending over backward to meet and accede their ESG scores.

This is not how markets operate. This is not Western Corporatism. We live in an autocratic state directed by the UN and their billionaire stakeholders. If a business or Corporation doesn’t cooperate with Klaus Schwab, then they are done for, and it explains why nearly all are becoming more ‘Woke‘ instead of ‘broke‘.

James Lindsay, if he comes out of this struggle alive deserves a medal of Sanity in an age of unreason and delirium brought on by the UN and corporate elitists who shadow them. It’s difficult to see the world getting out of this. Every State, Company & University / School is doing this at exactly the same time.

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Posted in Movies and TV

Just Can’t Get Enough (1981) – Depeche Mode

Just Can’t get Enough is one of the first Electronic Pop music songs I remember hearing. The minute you hear that iconic beginning you are immediately transported back to the sweet sounds of the 80’s. Still sounds fantastic after 40 years. Depeche Mode were formed in Basildon, England in 1980 when Dave Gahan (lead vocals) was recruited to join Vince Clarke (keyboards), Andy Fletcher (keyboards), and Martin Gore (keyboards, guitar, vocals). The punk scene was winding down and London club kids were looking for music they could dance to that was less aggressive. Depeche Mode fit the bill perfectly, and would soon be seen to be leading the charge for electronic music.

When I’m with you baby
I go out of my head
And I just can’t get enough
And I just can’t get enough
All the things you do to me
And everything you said
I just can’t get enough
I just can’t get enough


We slip and slide as we fall in love
And I just can’t seem to get enough of

Just Can’t Get Enough was recorded during sessions for their debut album Speak & Spell. This happened in the summer of 1981 at Blackwing Studios, housed inside a deconsecrated church in South-East London which had been partly destroyed during The Blitz in 1941. Vocalist Dave Gahan their early days as a band:”That’s the only album (Speak & Spell) where the songs had already been performed for a year and a half beforehand, and we went into the studio and recorded them as we would live.

Vince Clarke was the main songwriter of the band, and he had just turned 20 when he wrote Just Can’t Get Enough. It was a new song for the album session and had been inspired by To Cut a Long Story Short by Spandau Ballet, which was released in 1980. This is pop music in every sense, both lyrically and musically. Things are not meant to be deep or serious all the time, but that does not make them any less sincere. The plea is genuine, but playful.

Just Can’t Get Enough was the synth-pop band’s third single but their first hit, hitting #8 in the UK charts. It did well elsewhere too, making top 20 in Belgium, Ireland, Spain, and Sweden. It went all the way to #4 in Australia!

Reference:
1. The Story Behind the Song: «Just Can’t Get Enough» by Depeche Mode

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Posted in Music

Jungleland (1975) – Bruce Springsteen

Jungleland is the second song to feature here from my favourite Bruce Springsteen record Born to Run released in 1975. I consider it one of the cohesive and influential albums I have ever heard in contemporary – music. Nearly every song from the record will appear here. I wrote in my post about the song Backstreets: ‘I was so taken aback by Born to Run (the album) I wrote a lyrics booklet in my youth of the whole album complete with a little nice string to thread the pages together. Lyrics weren’t so accessible back then like they are today, so I transcribed what I thought he sung as if I was doing something unprecedented. I felt like a devoted scribe of a great musical sermon‘.

Jungleland is fittingly the closing song on the album. It could be described as a noir – theatrical musical piece about street sub-culture. Springsteen used this song to showcase Saxophonist Clarence Clemons talents. Clemons also known as ‘the big man’ passed away in 2011 and his nephew Jake Clemons, joined the E Street Band for the Wrecking Ball Tour in 2012. He played the saxophone in versions of Jungleland in recognition of his uncle. I think Jungleland contains some of Springsteen’s best writing, although his catalogue in this regard is expansive.

The Rangers had a homecoming in Harlem late last night
And the Magic Rat drove his sleek machine
Over the Jersey state line
Barefoot girl sitting on the hood of a Dodge
Drinking warm beer in the soft summer rain
The Rat pulls into town rolls up his pants
Together they take a stab at romance
And disappear down Flamingo Lane

Though much is made of the six months it took to record Born to Run, Jungleland was not completed until 19 months after its first rehearsal take on January 8, 1974 in New York. It was played live regularly, losing its jazz influences, adding Suki’s violin to the introduction, and Springsteen making many lyrical modifications. “All we could do was hold on. Smoke a lot of pot and try to stay calm,” said Clemons, who spent sixteen hours playing and replaying every note of his Jungleland solo “in order to satisfy Bruce’s bat-eared attention to sonic detail…’
In concert, Jungleland is usually played towards the end of shows. During the E Street Band’s reunion tour in 1999 and 2000, it was part of a revolving “epic” slot, alternating with Backstreets and Racing in the Street.

In popular culture, John Malkovich used the song, among a nearly all-Springsteen theatrical soundtrack, in his 1980s Steppenwolf Theater production of Lanford Wilson’s play, Balm in Gilead. It served as the background for a choreographed tableau of street denizens miming a tragic slice-of-life. Also, the American educational children’s program Sesame Street featured a parody of Springsteen about addition called “Born to Add“. The post-apocalyptic horror/fantasy novel The Stand by Stephen King opens with three epigraphs, one of which is the final lyrics from the song.

Reference:
1. Jungleland – Wikipedia

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Posted in Music

Jubilee Street (2013) – Nick Cave

I went into two musical appreciation ages of Nick Cave. I discovered his music in my late teens and devoured his records The First Born is Dead, The Good Son and Henry’s Dream and then much later in 2014 I saw his musical documentary 20000 days on Earth which featured today’s song Jubilee Street. Just prior to that I saw Cave singing Leonard Cohen’s Susan in the music concert – documentary ‘I’m Your Man‘.

Asked by The Sun if he is referencing the Jubilee Street located in his hometown of Brighton (England) Cave replied: “If people think they’re going to have a good time down Jubilee Street, I’d say forget about it unless they’re particularly interested in going to the library or Yo Sushi. When I was writing that, I had it in my mind that Jubilee Street was another, more colourful street. Then I was actually walking along it, looked up and went, ‘Oh no, this is f—ing Jubilee Street‘.

And here I come up the hill
I’m pushing my own wheel of love
I got love in my tummy and a tiny little pain
And a ten ton catastrophe on a 60 pound chain
And I’m pushing my wheel of love on Jubilee Streets
Oh, look at me now

The problem was she had a little black book
And my name was written on every page
Well, a girl’s gotta make ends meet even down Jubilee Street
I was out of place and time, and over the hill
And out of my mind on Jubilee Street
I ought to practice what I preach

I’m glad I returned to Nick’s music. He would later compose the modern-day classic album ‘Ghosteen‘ (2019) about the sorrow of the death of his son. I wrote about his remarkable song Bright Horses which remains the most viewed article on my blog by far. I count Nick Cave’s poetry and value to music up there with the contemporary-modern greats including Dylan, Cohen, and Waits. Cave seems to do with style and class what the beatniks could only do on paper and then deliver it on stage.

I have to relay below Cave’s reflections of music and his performance of Jubilee Street at the Sydney Opera House. Below that is the original music video directed by John Hillcoat and featuring Ray Winstone. Cave wrote the screenplay of Hillcoat’s Australian Western film – The Proposition (2005) which Hillcoat directed and Winstone starred in.

Reference:
1. Jubilee Street (song) – Wikipedia

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