Friday 24 June 2022

Pistis wonders about singing (weekending June 25th 2022)

 

‽istis wonders about singing (weekending June 25th 2022)

In a week when there seemed so much to ponder on and wonder about:

       A devastating earthquake razing homes and schools and hospitals - literally crushing lives and erasing two, three generations and extended families in a land that seems to have seen figurative earthquakes in politics, religion, military and ideology[i]

       A railway strike in the UK; about pay and so much more[ii]

       A French President loses some power to influence, change and enact[iii]

       The Heads of Commonwealth Governments meeting in Rwanda[iv] ensuring that at least one flight landing there this month carries at least one law-breaker[v] who may also be seeking asylum from a potentially hostile home environment

       By-elections - the latest source of the home environment hostility[vi] unless unexpected results somehow manage to relieve rather than increase pressure on a mid-term Government and a beleaguered PM.

 

‽istis turns instead to wonder at singing and particularly group singing – as a final for now, sixth, session is held. Songs for the soul and spirit: of peace, love, justice, light in dark times, peace in times of conflict, safe havens and harbours, keeping good in bad times, keeping soft in hard times, fearing not the pain[vii] – an oasis from hot weather and the news of the week.

 

And words such as: listen, blend, meld, breathe... become newly important and perhaps understood a little more deeply. Contributing but not dominating. Holding a line to build a harmony. Single voices found and then differently lost in a greater whole. Sometimes tears shed. Smiles inside and to others. Reflective. Intentional. And we seem better for it…   And then: cake!

 

So, this weekly oasis is behind us for a while’s more journeying, but ‽istis will remember that it happened and hold the belief that it can happen again - in the world as it is, not just in a world that we imagine and hope for.  Proof as product; product as proof‽

And just maybe we can carry on singing it into being. And if we do not have a voice, then possibly we can dance it into being. And if we cannot dance, then perhaps we can ‘be’ it into being.

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  




Thursday 16 June 2022

Pistis ponders ethics (weekending June 18th 2022)

 

‽istis ponders ethics (weekending June 18th 2022)

To paraphrase shamelessly (1): ‘to lose one ethics advisor, may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose two looks like…’ (2) and ‽istis wonders whether ‘carelessness’ is quite the right word‽

In several past blogs, directly and indirectly, ‽istis has pondered and reclaimed issues relating to integrity, values and what may or may not be considered a resigning matter.

Perhaps there’s a ‘lost in translation’ going on…   The actual or potential breaking of the ‘ministerial code’ seems for some to be not so much a resigning matter but a re-signing matter with the PM and with whoever is the daily unfortunate volunteering minister seeming to claim that it is their duty not to be knocked off course by things that they tell us don’t really concern the general public (those outside the ‘Westminster bubble’). Instead, probably whilst dodging yet again a repeated direct question, there seems to be a re-sign up to the (so-called) ‘people’s priorities’ - an inclusive phrase that ignores we the people who never had confidence; who would not want the current incumbent as friend, neighbour, colleague, current or former or future partner or spouse, or relative, or driver home after a party (especially during a pandemic lockdown); who so often exclaim towards the television, radio, computer or ‘phone: ‘not in my name’!

 

So, uncomplimentary rant over, ‽istis ponders ‘ethics’ and finds some pithy quotations (3), the relevance of which you might decide for yourself:

 

       ‘A man without ethics is a wild beast loosed upon this world.’ Albert Camus

       ‘Divorced from ethics, leadership is reduced to management and politics to mere technique.’ James Macgregor Burns

       ‘The first step in the evolution of ethics is a sense of solidarity with other human beings.’ Albert Schweitzer

       Education without values, as useful as it is, seems rather to make man a more clever devil.’  C.S. Lewis

       'Right is right, and wrong is wrong, and a body ain’t got no business doing wrong when he ain’t ignorant and knows better.” Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

       ‘Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living. We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount.’ Omar N. Bradley

       ‘My biggest problem with modernity may lie in the growing separation of the ethical and the legal.’ Nassim Nicholas Taleb.

       ‘It is impossible, or not easy, to alter by argument what has long been absorbed by habit.’ Aristotle

       ‘Ethics are my veiled mistress; I love them, but know not what they are.’ Robert Louis Stevenson.

       ‘The first and most important field of philosophy is the application of principles such as “Do not lie.” Next come the proofs, such as why we should not lie. The third field supports and articulates the proofs, by asking, for example, “How does this prove it? What exactly is a proof, what is logical inference, what is contradiction, what is truth, what is falsehood?” Thus, the third field is necessary because of the second, and the second because of the first. The most important, though, the one that should occupy most of our time, is the first. But we do just the opposite. We are preoccupied with the third field and give that all our attention, passing the first by altogether. The result is that we lie – but have no difficulty proving why we shouldn’t.’ Epictetus, The Art of Living: The Classical Manual on Virtue, Happiness and Effectiveness.

       ‘Ethical actions can often entail short-term pain, but will always result in long-term gains. By contrast, unethical actions frequently have short-term gains, which make them so attractive. But I guarantee that unethical actions will always result in some form of long-term pain and ultimate collapse, frequently in unexpected ways.’ Kashonia Carnegie.

 Any contemporary resonances are perhaps, possibly, may be completely coincidental‽

 Will the Government appoint another ‘ethics adviser’? Or might we dare to hope that such a role could be unnecessary because laws and codes (and routes to challenge their breaking) are clear and independent and because, perhaps, possibly, maybe ‘the moral compass’ (4) - that points the way forward towards the 'most best' way for as many as possible (and especially for those who need it most) at any moment and on any issue - lies balancing steadfast both within individuals and within the group that collectively has the greatest responsibility.

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

      1)    Shamelessly…   somehow an appropriate word, it seems.

2)    https://newmr.org/blog/to-lose-one-may-be-regarded-as-a-misfortune-to-lose-two-looks-like-carelessness/

3)    https://www.brainyquote.com/topics/ethics-quotes & https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/ethics

4)    For further pondering another week…‽


Friday 10 June 2022

Pistis re-ponders international days (weekending June 11th 2022)

 

‽istis re-ponders international days - or not (weekending June 11th 2022)

This week ‽istis learnt:

  • On World Environment Day (Sunday June 5th) that

There is Only One Earth

In the universe are billions of galaxies
In our galaxy are billions of planets  
But there is #OnlyOneEarth  
Let’s take care of it. (1)

 and on the International Day for the Fight against Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (also Sunday June 5th), that ‘efforts by the international community to ensure the sustainability of fisheries are being seriously compromised by illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities are responsible for the loss of 11–26 million tonnes of fish each year.’ (2)

  • On Russian Language Day (Monday) ‽istis learnt that June 6th was the anniversary of  the birthday of the Russian poet A.S. Pushkin. ‘...as part of the program to support and develop multilingualism and cultural diversity, the UN celebrates the Day of the Russian Language. One of the goals of this program is to maintain the equality of all six official languages ​​of the UN: English, Arabic, Spanish, Chinese, Russian and French. (3). Though  ‽istis wonders what might be spoken about this dominance (and the composition of the Security Council and other arrangements of the UN organisation) in some of the other 6,903 distinct languages. (4)


  • ‽istis learnt on World Food Safety Day (Tuesday June 7th) - that ‘Access to sufficient amounts of safe food is key to sustaining life and promoting good health… Food safety has a critical role in assuring that food stays safe at every stage of the food chain… With an estimated 600 million cases of foodborne illnesses annually, unsafe food is a threat to human health and economies, disproportionally affecting vulnerable and marginalized people, especially women and children, populations affected by conflict, and migrants.’ (5) 


  • On World Oceans Day (Wednesday June 8th) ‽istis learnt that ‘The ocean covers over 70% of the planet. It is our life source, supporting humanity’s sustenance and that of every other organism on earth. The ocean produces at least 50% of the planet’s oxygen, it is home to most of earth’s biodiversity, and is the main source of protein for more than a billion people around the world.’ (6)

But then, on Thursday, Friday and indeed Saturday the UN has something of a rest, with no designated world or international days. 

So ‽istis wondered what awareness-raising, lobbying and consideration might be underway currently to fill those empty days?

What ‘day’ might you wish to bring to the world stage…? 

Perhaps, possibly, maybe international and global days are indeed ‘occasions to educate the general public on issues of concern, to mobilize political will and resources to address global problems, and to celebrate and reinforce achievements of humanity.’ (7) 

Yet ‽istis couldn’t help wonder about the impact of the UN International Days… 

  • Just how more taken care of is #OnlyOneEarth‽

  • What is the possible potential impact of maintaining the equality of all six official languages ​​of the UN (especially Russian)‽

  • How fewer cases of foodborne illnesses will there be next year‽

  • How more protected are the oceans and all of us who benefit from them

World Impact Evaluation Day, anyone‽

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 

  1.  https://www.un.org/en/observances/environment-day 

  2. https://www.un.org/en/observances/end-illegal-fishing-day 

  3. https://www.un.org/ru/observances/russian-language-day and courtesy of Google ‘translate’

  4. ‘The most extensive catalog of the world’s languages, generally taken to be as authoritative as any, is that of Ethnologue (published by SIL International), whose detailed classified list as of 2009 included 6,909 different languages.’ https://www.linguisticsociety.org/content/how-many-languages-are-there-world 

  5. https://www.un.org/en/observances/food-safety-day 

  6. https://www.un.org/en/observances/oceans-day 

  7. https://www.un.org/en/observances

Friday 3 June 2022

Pistis reclaims imperial units (weekending June 4th 2022)

 

‽istis reclaims imperial units (weekending June 4th 2022)

This week when a consultation begins in the UK, crudely: bring back Imperial units? - ‽istis ponders what might be considered to be some ‘units’ of information, albeit with some rather randomly (and no doubt methodologically spuriously) plucked from or hinting at previous, perhaps gilded ages past:

       Unit of measurement - life expectancy‽: UK average age of death: 1950: 68.69 years (coronation); 1974: 72.37yrs (joining the EU); 2020 (leaving the EU): 81.4yrs. And comparisons with other countries across the Commonwealth might be interesting…

       Unit of measurement - reparation‽: ‘If there are about 35 million black Americans who would be eligible for reparations, this minimum (or baseline) estimate would amount to $40,000 to $60,000 per person.’[i]

       Unit of measurement – wage slave pay‽: 'So long as British financiers open coalpits in other parts of the Empire and compel miners to work at 8d. per day, so long will the British miners and their Continental competitors be driven downwards...  so long as this slave labour exists in the Empire, so long as the economic position of the British miner will be one of continual danger.'[ii]

       Unit of measurement - opposition‽: 'Obviously - perhaps even too obviously to mention - one million people do not indulge in open revolt against the existing order unless the times are badly out of joint…'[iii]

       Unit of injustice and (British) values‽: 'British colonialism, like all colonialisms, has a sad history in its denials of personal liberties and human rights. During the last twenty years of national struggles, it has been an almost continuous record of detentions without trial, imprisonment5s on political charges, deportations, enforced periods of exile, and of the repression if freedoms of speech, movement, association and trade unionism.'[iv]

       Unit of measurement – justice and values‽: “Rebuild your world, rebuild your race, rebuild your empire. Rebuild it all. But make sure you rebuild your ideals too. Rebuild the principles that made you a great and honorable galactic power in the first place. Don't prey on the weak. Don't steal from the helpless. Don't murder the innocent. Be a force for good, not a force for yourself.”[v]

       Unit of measurement –  dominance, power and control (i)‽: The British Empire was the world's largest territorial realm. The British Empire ruled over 412 million people in 1913, accounting for 23% of the planet's population at the time.[vi]

       Unit of measurement – dominance, power and control (ii)‽: 'I cannot help remembering that this country (Great Britain) over the last two hundred years has directed the invasion or conquest of 178 countries - that is most of the members of the UN.'[vii] (*7)

       Unit of measurement feudal legacy and Deity appropriation‽: 'O Lord our God arise, Scatter our enemies, And make them fall! Confound their politics, Frustrate their knavish tricks, On Thee our hopes we fix, God save us all!’[viii]

       Unit of measurement – violence, conflict and money spent to attack or defend‽:  Between 1688 and 1968, Britain was arguably involved in more wars than any other nation or empire on the planet. During this 280 year period, the British government's investment into its military strength increased greatly, and this level of investment allowed Britain to become the most powerful nation in the world for the majority of this period.[ix]

       Unit of measurement – a balanced argument‽: A revision balance sheet[x]:

o   Advantages of the British Empire:

         Infrastructure - Britain gave its colonies better developments to the country, such as better roads and railways

         Language - Through the Empire, the English language spread, allowing people to communicate using one language

         Culture - The trade system allowed people to come to Britain, bringing their culture with them, making Britain's more diverse

         Democracy - Britain brought the idea of democracy to its colonies and helped them to build their own

         Commonwealth - The Commonwealth provided the old colonies with help and support after the Empire era

         Law and Order - The Empire brought their law system with them, improving the colonies' systems, even up to now

         Education - The Empire brought their education system with them, improving the children's education

o   Disadvantages of the British Empire:

         Culture - British culture was forced on to the colonists, while the original culture was banned, ignored and forgotten

         Economies - The colonies' economy was falling because most of the profit of goods go back to Britain

         Soldiers - The colonies had to provide soldiers who fought and died for Britain. The soldiers wouldn't have had to fight and die without the Empire.

         Religion - The missionaries sent with the Empire forced Christianity to the colonists, stopping the practice of other religions

         Disease - The British brought with them new diseases to the faraway colonies, killing lots and lots of people as they are unused to it

         Theft - The Empire just took the land and resources from the colonies, leading to the near-extinction of many indigenous tribes, such as the Aborigines

         Slavery - African slaves were taken to America to be sold

And so, consultation dependent, perhaps we might look forward to calculating in 12s, 14s and 16s; possibly look forward to transactions in guineas (and a new reverse route to greater profit might open up for any business, or Chancellor: buying in pounds and selling in guineas!); maybe look forward to all those supposed ‘Brexit benefits’ being wrung out, with the drips proclaimed by those rolling in Denarii, Solidus and Librae using Latin phrases[xi] (how about: ‘capta tergum imperium’[xii] or ‘in diebus illis errant’, anyone?) delivered in at least a lb/454g of Victoria(n) plum-my tones‽ 

Perhaps, possibly, maybe though, we might revisit the past and decide that it is not just another country (after L.P.Hartley), but one in which perhaps the majority of us (maybe even more than 52%?) would not have wanted to live...

Meanwhile, the present may also be similar for many…

And finally, maybe one more ‘unit’:

·        Unit of measurement – changing hearts and minds‽: “Our strategy should be not only to confront empire, but to lay siege to it. To deprive it of oxygen. To shame it. To mock it. With our art, our music, our literature, our stubbornness, our joy, our brilliance, our sheer relentlessness – and our ability to tell our own stories. Stories that are different from the ones we’re being brainwashed to believe. Another world is not only possible, she is on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing.”[xiii]

So yet - just perhaps, possibly, maybe we could at least try to imagine a shared better future: ‘ad se secundum opus; ex singulis secundum’[xiv], anyone/everyone‽

© Pistis                                                                                                                     

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  



[ii] 1926 Cited in  'Insurgent Empire: Anticolonial Resistance and British Dissent.' Priyamvada Gopal 2019

[iii] Elspeth Huxley. Cited: ibid. p.430

[iv] 'Movement for Colonial Freedom', cited in: ibid. p.420

[v] https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/empire.  Dan Abnett, Doctor Who: The Silent Stars Go By.

[vi] https://kidadl.com/fun-facts/facts-about-various-empires-throughout-the-history-for-you

[vii] Prime Minister Boris Johnson cited in: 'Legacy of Violence: A History of the British Empire' Caroline Elkins. 2022. p. 7

[viii] UK National Anthem - composer unknown. https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/british-national-anthem-lyrics/

[ix] https://www.statista.com/statistics/1049865/british-military-expenditure-historical/

[x] https://getrevising.co.uk/grids/the_british_empire

[xi] https://www.wordhippo.com/ Translation feature: English to Latin and vice versa

[xii] Ibid: and interesting that ‘imperium’ is translated as ‘control’‽

[xiii] https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/empire 

[xiv] https://www.wordhippo.com/ Translation feature: English to Latin and vice versa. ‘To each according to their needs. From each according to their means.’


‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and tapping (weekending April 27th 2024)

  ‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and knowing where and how to tap (weekending April 27 th  2024) Various themes this weekending; m...