cookie-cutter comments

PersonalThursday, 4 August 2005 10:05 pm

I’ve seen filters work a dozen times; pour sludge-like substance into elongated, conical funnel, and the dross is left behind, leaving a homogeneous looking liquid in container of choice. Does memory work that way? The elusive and forgetable are condensed from the significant through our synapses and reified in our strorage bank of ideas and thoughts. It’s as if the abstractions we are so used to reading on pages evokes concrete scenes from your past, or scenes that you put together like a mish-mashed collage of meaning.

You become a by-stander to your own memory, as if participating is the essential yearning or the essential horror of a past lit or blighted by actions that you simultaneously reject and affirm as your own; reject because bad memories are like the sting at the tip of a tail poised to strike, or affirm because good memories allow us the necessary fiction of having once been happy.

And as soon as you veil your mind’s eye with analytical lenses, you might see that not all good memories lived in that same joyful milieu in which they were born. There’s always that remaining smudge of the stains that would have adorned any present moment; but it’s easier to live in bad faith, don’t you think, believing that these were happier times, and happier moments.

Perhaps there is a mysterious system of classification that delineates between a good memory and a bad memory, sytematically cataloguing or good times or bad times, everytime our daily lives are forced through the strainer of our own synapses.

Thoughts, Current 9:25 pm

Al-Zawahri, Al-Qaeda’s no. 2 man, has made an announcement via video tape (so lo-tech!) that Blair’s to blame for the bombs in London…

What a twist, don’t you think? Terrorists bomb the living hell out of subway passengers, and Blair gets blamed for it because of his policies. However you feel about his policies, what reasonable justification is there for killing innocents? Fine, we’re way beyond principles of just war here, and fine, it’s all about asymmetry in this particular conflict, but this willful targetting of civilians only hurts the terrorist’s aims.

A link here for the newsbit.

I wonder if the right antecedents are being identified in this current conflict. Western governments are demanding, in the first place, that terrorism be ceased or no dialogue will be forthcoming. The same follows for the terrorists who, it appears, have a list of demands of their own before they cease their depredations. The problem is, just what are these demands? I don’t know them. Do you?

And perhaps that’s the problem as this conflict plummets off the edge of reason; just what do these terrorists want? Are their needs or demands inchoate? I don’t know what they seem to want; do they want a new, islamist theocracy in Saudi Arabia? Troops off their land? The expulsion of jews from ‘Israel’? A Palestinian state?

Which is it? And of the above, which seems the most achievable, and in whose interests, really?

Sometimes I think to myself that terrorists might have legitimate demands; my friends point to the pillage of Middle Eastern wealth by the rich nations and the general ’slough of despond’ muslims in that region live in. But such a general malaise would require a solution that cannot and should not be delivered up in absolutist terms: they kill dialogue, they leave no room for discussion, they leave no room for conversation.

Which makes these so-called rich nations all the more adamant about killing off terrorism: when there seems to be no way to reason with the enemy, retaliation with deadly force is the only option left. Some may appear to be ok with this, the most extreme factions of both sides of the conflict (are there sides? perhaps).

But here again, we have another MAD scenario, guaranteed Mutually Assured Destruction. Who wins?

Btw, as an addendum, wanna scare yourself? Check out the Report from Iron Mountain. See this wiki entry for more information here. I read it when I was pretty young, easily influenced and didn’t know it was a hoax at the time. But read it for what it is: a chilling insight into the way scenarios and scenario-resolutions are worked out. It kinda inspired, for a short spell, wargaming scenarios amongst my friends and I.