Last Debate between JB and Jalglish (I’m done). Facebook’s
format is not suitable for the kind of verbal jousting and polemic that has
cropped up between JB and me. So I decided to use my blog –while reformatting
for a dialogic style. –Keuka lake, NY, September 6, 12
Jamil: "bla, pontificating my left foot .... &
basically, we just simply disagree ...
Jalglish: Yes, disagree but not so
simply…I am essentially anti-totalitarian whereas you appear to be a cultural
relativist but a strange cynical one with no positive beliefs. I do have such beliefs
such as that tyranny is wrong, and it is my business to oppose it since as
somebody said (I misquote) “wherever there are men living in slavery I am not
free.”
i think that all systems & governments are basically set
up to oppress & exploit their respective subjects & democracy is as
much a joke as communism, since most people are ignorant & like Nietzsche
warned, don't get trapped into being part of the herd, but be careful about
appearing different than the herd ....
Here’s where you start out with a half baked but half way
coherent thought – all governments stink – a sort of anarchist, Bahkuninist
sentiment – then seguing into elitist disdain for the unwashed… total
incoherence.
as to your Chinese expertise, forgive any slight on that, but
you do seem to somewhat express what sounds like old cold war us vs. them
rhetoric...
in what? And you cite no examples?
If I’m concerned about Chinese aggression in the PR this makes me cold war era?
Or is that China has never emerged from the cold war???And if this is the case
why is that politically correct ideologues such as yourself never criticize the
Middle Kingdom?
my position is that all governments are corrupt, its only a
matter of degree difference..
this
again is a boring truism. it's better to be an old fashioned liberal like myself. At least you have something to fight for.
& China has
never known anything but totalitarian state system in the past 4000 years
While blithly pontificating,
Jamil, this bit on China shows how ignorant you actually are – there was a
Chinese Republic under Sun Yat Sen who was a democrat! Hey where’s you history?
I studied China in depth while I lived there and for many years after. I’m not
so easily brushed aside.
... so whatever they do is their business, not that or the US
or UK, etc ..
sure, what they do is their
business of course no one would dream of interfering with what is truly
domestic matters – but if China is in fact the “interferer” then what? We may
have some responsibilities, especially if old allies and friends ask us for
help. The US is already involved in the Pacific and has responsibilities which
so far it has handled carefully & well.
Jamil: I'm not a pacifist, but do not support military
adventurism & Syria is nobody's business but their own & their
neighbors ... sorry, but i don't live in that neighborhood ... so it's none of
my business, nor of any Americans
JD Sorry but I submit on the other
hand that wherever a civilian population is oppressed and deprived of other
rights by an unwanted unelected government then it may be my business to
support the rebellion – other wise I’m in contradiction with my principles that
all people want and deserve freedom. (JJ Rousseau, Le Contrat Social).
...compost happens & the people get the government they
deserve, so if Obama loses this election, the the American people have just
screwed themselves ... ciao ...
This propagandistic onslaught is almost
incomprehensible –an
impasto of clichés & slogans standing in for thought, lacking clarity or
originality, again verging on total incoherence, almost impossible to
disentangle and probably not worth the effort … you contradict yourself by
implying that Obama would be the better choice – so at the heart of your
cynicism is just another disappointed liberal. Instead of honestly supporting
Obama which you can’t due to your doctrinaire assumption– you pose as the world
weary cynic --while other people unpretentiously work for Obama knowing that he
won’t work miracles but that his adminstn will deliver a thicker slice of that
basic bread we all need – remember Orwell’s wise saw about “a half loaf is
better than no bread at all.”
let's take literature next time & forget politics, its
your idealistic interventionism on behalf of some abstract human rights to which
i respond, as in the case of Syria, its just a mess & getting messier &
bloodier & will keep going in that direction even well after Baseer is gone
... & can't no outside power do anything to make things better as its gone
too far ... all losers, no winners ... that's civil war, whatever the
country"
This last
bit is typical of Jamil’s lack of concern for real people – to him human rights
are an abstraction; also remarkable is his forced, almost hysterical pessimism
behind which you sense his fear that his predictions won’t come true.
The
greatest proof of his disenfranchisement from street reality and casual
suffering is his amazing failure to mention the immediate historical context of
the Syria revolution – The Arab Spring. This is the basic denial/blind spot behind
all JBs comments on Syria – for some bizarre perverse reason he wants to deny
Syria a positive outcome modeled on the revolutions in sister countries. This
kind soul seems to be very afraid they might break free of Basher.
I wonder
why this no doubt brilliant, creative and imaginative mind doesn’t occupy
itself with something else? Why does he bother to attack me I wonder? How have
I lucked out? Literature? fine with me, because I don’t find Jamil’s political
ideas very interesting – they are mainly an assemblage of slogans and
commonplaces with a big blank space for the changed and changing political reality
in the Middle East. There is also a surprising amount of disdain for the “common”
people in his musings– an almost Ayn Randian hauteur. Sadly, our discussions
don’t and won’t progress – so I’m hoping he’ll call it quits, declare a truce
and I can get back to real life.
6 comments:
No comment Professor? Has your font of verbosity finally dried up? In that case, maybe I should get the Nobel Peace Prize.--Jalglish
Yes it seems the verbose windbag otherwise known as the pompous, pontificating professor (PPP) has finally given up staulking my posts. I kind of miss him in a way - but why?I think I was on the point of defeating him and now may never have the chance.
And that all Americans were about to be screwed by a horrible electoral farce that neither Obama nor his opponent could deflect? The results of the election indicate that the common American voter wasn't about to submit to that apocalyse -- and that patient plodders like myself who sent 5$ to Kos or Blue Line had a much clearer idea of reality. That's what the PPP wrote below tyhe election -- that all Americans were going to get screwed. How disappointing for him that this out to be false prophecy.
And when will he repent of his (politically correct) idiocy?
Yes, we miss the pious, preposterous pontificating prof!
Post a Comment