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skipper wrote a new post, Privacy is the Right to Choose 7 years, 9 months ago
Privacy and choice are
two sides of the same coin
Can’t have one without
the other
Think about it
Ancient Mariner
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skipper wrote a new post, Share First, Bicker Later 7 years, 9 months ago
Will Rogers is mentioned from time to time in past posts. He is a member of mariner’s “Heroes of Human Life Hall of Fame.” In today’s post, mariner draws from Will’s life an example of genuine compassion and true […]
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skipper wrote a new post, On Being a Shut-in – 2 7 years, 9 months ago
Mariner thanks readers who responded with replies and emails. All were supportive. One reader suggested ‘shut-out’ would be a better term because the fact is there is no room for mariner in the state of the […]
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skipper wrote a new post, On Being a Shut-in 7 years, 9 months ago
Each of us knows at least one person who is a shut-in. There are different reasons for being a shut-in. If one is infirm, disabled, or functionally incompetent, obviously one has no choice but to live in the […]
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I am so sorry that Trump has beaten us into the ground, aided and abetted by his base, and the Republican Party that goes along with his repugnant personality and policies in order to get whatever it is they want. Power, I guess. It is a long, strange time in this country. It is no wonder Mariner wants to secede. We used to take cookies to the shut ins at Christmas time, because we thought the cookies would help to make their day a little brighter. I would bring cookies to Mariner’s door, but alas, he is on a carb restricted diet. Maybe that is part of the problem!
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Very, very sad. Almost like our friend Robert Barnes who has chosen to “live”in a nursing home where he has access to cable TV and the internet rather than actually work with a real doctor to regain the ability to get out of a chair or bed and be able to go home. I understand your malaise and feeling of hopelessness. I guess I’m almost with you in staying aloof from politics and preferring to work on language dictionaries and aged records than take part in protests or hand out flyers. I still vote, write scathing comments on Facebook, and sign petitions and occasionally write to Congress people, but that’s about it. But I still can see glimmers of hope and I’ll hang on to these faint hopes until Trump has been re-elected, then I’m pulling the covers over my head.
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Maybe instead of thinking of yourself as a “shut-in” you should use the term “shut-off”. You have shut-off the outside world in order to save your sanity and to better find your inner peace. The chaos and confusion will take care of itself just as you should maybe take the time now to take care of yourself. Focus inward to find the answers, the peace, love and joy that are in your life and get to know “thyself”.
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skipper wrote a new post, Just the Facts, Ma’am 7 years, 9 months ago
‘Fake News,’ conspiracy theory facts, salesman facts, politician facts, personal experience facts, in fact, any facts are not sacrosanct. They are subject to interpretation, pejorative evaluation, dism […]
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skipper wrote a new post, The World is Flat – a Growing Truth 7 years, 9 months ago
The news and other public activities struggle with fake news promoted always with an ulterior motive. It makes it difficult for the average citizen because fact checking, or at least cross referencing, is a new […]
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skipper wrote a new post, Environment as a Change Agent 7 years, 10 months ago
65 million years ago during the early Paleocene, the first primate-like creature evolved from the family Plesiadaptis. It was a small tree-climbing mammal that looked more like an insect-eating tree shrew. It was […]
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skipper wrote a new post, Corporatism – the Overlooked Enemy 7 years, 10 months ago
PBS news covered a story today about the National Football League setting rules for how football players must behave, the issue being whether the players can kneel in protest of racial and law enforcement abuse […]
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skipper wrote a new post, Economic Strangulation 7 years, 10 months ago
It was Jean-Paul Sartre who wrote, “When the rich wage war it’s the poor who die.” This quote comes to mind as mariner reads no less than four sources writing simultaneously about the effect of oligarchical and […]
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skipper wrote a new post, God’s Christmas Garden Redux 7 years, 10 months ago
Such a noise! Mariner is accused of intended obfuscation. Apparently, today’s readers do not need a theistic justification for the powerful mandates of the universe. Nevertheless, mariner used the logic model of t […]
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skipper wrote a new post, God’s Christmas Garden 7 years, 10 months ago
There is a strain of theology that suggests the phenomenon we call history is evidence of a God who is not necessarily a god of intercession but who has set certain conditions in place that cause reaction and […]
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skipper wrote a new post, In Irons 7 years, 10 months ago
Mariner knew the whole of US reality is a circus when the press made fun of how Donald held his water bottle. Funny thing, mariner holds his water bottle exactly the same way. The reason is familial […]
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skipper wrote a new post, Coming of Age Past 60 7 years, 10 months ago
Of all the disruptive suggestions offered by mariner to make life equitable in the coming artificial intelligence age, setting an age limit of 60 rather than setting a limit on elected terms received the most […]
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Maybe I missed it, but it seems to me you omit the very real importance of us ancients passing on the fruits of our experience to young folks. I saw the disasterous results of not doing this at the government agency where I worked. In a cost-cutting effort a buy-out was offered. Many employees with 20, 30 or even 40-years experience left. Little effort was made to interview them or to allow them to mentor younger workers. The result was a huge loss of experience. I don’t think the agency has ever recovered. I’m quite sure that this happens across the spectrum of all work.
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You are correct that bureaucratic managers tend to have no imagination; I, too, have experienced a cost cutting experience. The whole issue of bureaucratic mismanagement is worth a book of posts by itself. For years mariner made a living by visiting corporate organizations that were failing in one way or another. I concur with your opinion about damage to the organizational gestalt by trashing the ‘frontal lobes.’
Mariner wishes to make a special case for elected officials. They have no manager except the public; they have the liberty of feathering their nests in one way or another – consider the abusive, oppressive treatment of women who were assaulted by Congressmen; consider they allow themselves to buy and sell stock with corporations that are affected by their legislation – and on and on. It is a different work environment.
Once the privileges of power and job security are dealt with, it is time to run the nation. At this point, it is the inverse of your perception about buy outs. the elected have secured themselves to be around until they die. Meanwhile, reality marches on and they become oblivious to ethics, knowledge, history and importantly, the ramifications of social upheaval. Even in myself, as I explained, I see inadequacy in my judgment simply because I cannot relate to the new environment. As a metaphor, I cannot help but favor Nat King Cole. Likewise, elected codgers will hang on to old mores and practices until they die. As rapid as change is occurring in the 21st century, we cannot afford a codger’s club in place of energetic and knowledgeable youngsters.
Skipper
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skipper wrote a new post, Coming of Age 7 years, 10 months ago
Mariner has mentioned a number of times that he is an old codger. He is aware that his age has constrained his point of view regarding many of the social, political, economic, ethical and technological changes […]
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This is a very reasoned, thoughtful look at the way things have changed over the years, and will continue to change. I think we need older people–older even than 60–to have perspective and insight. I do not think the electorate can change the entrenched system, especially as the electorate does not speak with one voice. It may have to come from peaceful revolution–or is that an oxymoron? When people are marching in the streets, at some point, issues will have to be addressed. Occupy Wall Street was a step in that direction.
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skipper wrote a new post, Man’s Role on Earth 7 years, 10 months ago
It’s the year 1870. Two American Bison are talking. One says to the other, “It doesn’t look good for us, Bill. We’ve been hit with the Man parasite.”
Yesterday, two Parrotfish are cruising along the Coral Reef […]
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skipper wrote a new post, Another Animal at the Zoo 7 years, 11 months ago
In an effort to remain sane and to maintain rational emotional feelings, for several weeks mariner has avoided American news programming, tolerating only BBC, CGTN (China), selected CSPAN and, with the aid of the […]
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Very interesting insight! Stuart and I watched a documentary recently called “Do You Trust This Computer?” that was about the future of AI and it was interesting, about (among other things) what the role of doctors will be when machines are better at diagnostics and surgeries, and how computers are adept problem solvers without compassion, which is similar to the justice system of the wilderness. I thought it was a bit tantalized by itself, but I recommend it anyway.
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Mariner’s great worry is that humanness will lose control of human history and its future as well. Most of us who take time to ponder these things tend to homogenize all humans into a narrow definition of functionality; this is not true. Ninety percent of humans are virtually identical to other members of the primate family – that is, little skill or interest in conceptual values. This sounds hypocritical but it is painfully true. It will be easy for AI to take the upper hand in all manner of human behavior – including its future.
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skipper wrote a new post, Deep State 7 years, 11 months ago
Mariner bought a black jacket recently and had the words ‘Deep State’ painted in large black letters across the back. The effect was an appropriately discreet appearance which would be apropos for a hidden ope […]
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skipper wrote a new post, A Biopsy of the Christian Faith 7 years, 11 months ago
It all started with Jesus. Today, Jesus might be found in Black Lives Matter or some other rebellious, antiauthority group. He was no saint, for sure. When Jesus said, “The first will be last and the last will b […]
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I have long been concerned by the “undeification” of God. This can be seen in the use of small letters to refer to him vs. Him, by the use of the familiar pronoun “you” instead of an honorific one “thou.” and by putting us on a level with God like he’s just one of the gang. The same thing happened with the Old Irish gods. Deities that were originally potent actors in the affairs of men became diminished and are now leprachauns. Which originally meant “little body.” Many other languages have special vocabularies to speak to or about a God. The sense of awe that I believe we should have toward God is lessened when we address Him as an equal.
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Well spoken, Robert. I have similar grievances about worship services when the litany becomes rote and emotionless. Spirituality in any circumstance requires concentration and self-evaluation. Metaphorically, one cannot reach for the stars if the stars are lying on the living room rug.
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skipper wrote a new post, Philosophy Recipe: Stir and Bake a Long Time 7 years, 11 months ago
Philosophers are underappreciated. To most of us, embroiled in the intense competitions of the present to make a living, raise children, and root for the Chicago Bears, philosophers are too droll, write boring […]
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Interesting and unsettling–as futurists often are. My only question is at the end when you say “In the future it is likely that profit will be built into the corporate model because corporations will control human value without human preferences.” I wonder what that model would look like? And then I have a follow up: from whence do philosophers arise? is it because the culture gets too bloated and unstable so that a change of direction becomes obvious? Does it depend on the arrival of a genius? Or a Jesus?
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Not to beat the devil with a stick but corporations already are well along the path to controlled choice via the smartphone. Regarding whence philosophers, they emerge with time although today, with the disappearance of liberal arts, time for contemplative thought, and the common attitude represented by Steven Pinter who believes that whatever is broken, we’ll fix it, authoritarians, pragmatists and utilitarians seem to be in charge.
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skipper wrote a new post, Did it ever occur to the reader 8 years ago
Did it ever occur to the reader that analog clocks with moving hands and digital clocks with numbers tell different times? Mariner is old enough to remember when only analog clocks existed. Consequently, like […]
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