- 09 Jan 2025 03:17
#15335447
@Verv :
Great to talk to you, this is important, more important than perhaps either of us realize.
A " Sovok" is a term for a person who basically thinks that the USSR was a paradise, everything was great, and that we need to go back to exactly that....
When i say that i'm a Soviet instead, the context is the historical " Sobor" of the people, councils united. The horizontal that by no means is a denial of the vertical, hence my adaptation of the Mladorossi " Tsar and Soviets" catchphrase.
I guess that is better than being crucified between two nations as some can be.
At some point it could well be though that the " Anglosphere" could start to cohere together again at some point. What do you think?
Very frequently. But less so legacy Americans in their perspective, some might say. Or i should clarify, that the root stock descendants of the British American colonists have a pretty good idea of the " original intent" of the American Revolutionaries, while others would comprehend less than they in general.
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But Liberals are universally judgemental precisely because of their one dimensional view of humanity.
Specifically regarding the Second Amendment, i'd say it does have Revolutionary as well as Rebellious potential ( recall my distinction between the two) but resembles too the ancient and medieval Levy of troops of commoners for wars, a Militia or Fyrd for a country and not just a republican one. There is continuity.
It's a wise idea i think. But then, Korea is a Nation, whereas the liberal vision of the United States is that it is an Idea, a " Melting Pot" with " Magic Dirt" that turns everyone who lives there automatically into Jeffersonian democrats
From the Korean girlfriend i had decades ago, i was under the distinct impression from her that the terms " Buddha" and " God" were essentially identical in her heart; that " Cosmic Buddha" and " Buddha" were connected but distinct. Reincarnation/Metempsychosis is a real troublesome doctrine that does not lessen the personal confusion.
In any case, i can almost guarantee that your example of a Thai Buddhist grandmother with her Eastern sensibilities could better suss out the Eastern truths of Christianity than others perhaps in a more Modernist secular environment, maybe.
For a very long time i made a study of the Vedas and Vedic Mythology/Culture, for certain reasons. I made a particular reading of Vedic scholar Bal Tilak in my research;
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bal_Gangadhar_Tilak
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Arc ... _the_Vedas
https://archive.org/details/b24864882
The West has nothing to say to me. The East even when wrong still hits closer to the mark.
Great to talk to you, this is important, more important than perhaps either of us realize.
Very well said, Annater... I am not familiar with what a 'Sovok' is?
A " Sovok" is a term for a person who basically thinks that the USSR was a paradise, everything was great, and that we need to go back to exactly that....
When i say that i'm a Soviet instead, the context is the historical " Sobor" of the people, councils united. The horizontal that by no means is a denial of the vertical, hence my adaptation of the Mladorossi " Tsar and Soviets" catchphrase.
I would also clarify that the context of a people is very important to the ideological solutions that one would put forward for that people, and this does not just have to do with their economic or current political situations or crisis, but even has to do with their collective heritage. That is why I am also always shy to prescribe anything about a society that I am not a member of...
I guess that is better than being crucified between two nations as some can be.
Even societies which are significantly like my own, such as Canada or Australia, have their own unique circumstances and histories and a political and economic heritage that is 100% relevant to their context that I just don't have a lot of access to.
At some point it could well be though that the " Anglosphere" could start to cohere together again at some point. What do you think?
But I think it is the case that if I did extensive interviews with Canadians and Australians and also read dozens of books specifically on their history, politics, and economy, I could probably formulate opinions and policies for them that were quite agreeable and sensitive to their concerns, which is why so many foreigners commenting on American politics is always welcome. It is frequently the case that there are foreigners who are better informed than Americans on these things...
Very frequently. But less so legacy Americans in their perspective, some might say. Or i should clarify, that the root stock descendants of the British American colonists have a pretty good idea of the " original intent" of the American Revolutionaries, while others would comprehend less than they in general.
[
i]Yet,[/i] an American's relationship with something like the 2nd Amendment is quite unique. A British person who has never owned a firearm or grown up with one in their home may not be able to relate, and a Norwegian who has never walked through a poor neighborhood in Chicago's southside would likewise have difficulties understanding both the desire for self-protection and the exact nature that American poverty can take on...
But Liberals are universally judgemental precisely because of their one dimensional view of humanity.
Specifically regarding the Second Amendment, i'd say it does have Revolutionary as well as Rebellious potential ( recall my distinction between the two) but resembles too the ancient and medieval Levy of troops of commoners for wars, a Militia or Fyrd for a country and not just a republican one. There is continuity.
So, until I get citizenship in Korea, I will balk to be overly prescriptive... and, even when I do, I must admit that on many issues I will still have to defer to those who are Koreans by birth & nature, particularly those within the very typical lifestyles.
It's a wise idea i think. But then, Korea is a Nation, whereas the liberal vision of the United States is that it is an Idea, a " Melting Pot" with " Magic Dirt" that turns everyone who lives there automatically into Jeffersonian democrats
I would also suggest that most academics would agree with this...
There are non-Buddhists that have read far more sutras and far more Buddhist philosophy than laypeople, and they have even perhaps attended a greater variety of Buddhist services, even maybe meditated longer, than the 50 year old auntie from northern Thailand who is a devout Buddhist...
But the auntie is only a Buddhist, has only ever been a Buddhist, and has been a Thai Buddhist doing Thai Buddhist things in the Thai language and Thai context, and it may even be that her general ignorance of different forms of Buddhism and her completely non-academic understanding of it provides a very special insight into Thai Buddhism that an academic can never give... And thus she is the resource for the academic as much as an academic is a resource for her...
And the worst thing that a very learned outsider can do is tell an insider how to be an insider.
From the Korean girlfriend i had decades ago, i was under the distinct impression from her that the terms " Buddha" and " God" were essentially identical in her heart; that " Cosmic Buddha" and " Buddha" were connected but distinct. Reincarnation/Metempsychosis is a real troublesome doctrine that does not lessen the personal confusion.
In any case, i can almost guarantee that your example of a Thai Buddhist grandmother with her Eastern sensibilities could better suss out the Eastern truths of Christianity than others perhaps in a more Modernist secular environment, maybe.
For a very long time i made a study of the Vedas and Vedic Mythology/Culture, for certain reasons. I made a particular reading of Vedic scholar Bal Tilak in my research;
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bal_Gangadhar_Tilak
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Arc ... _the_Vedas
https://archive.org/details/b24864882
The West has nothing to say to me. The East even when wrong still hits closer to the mark.