That trip to Disneyland isn’t happening any time soon...
Friday, July 11, 2025
Wicked Witch Sin Visa
Saturday, June 21, 2025
Might almost certainly won't make right...
Indeed, it’s not nuclear projectile science, so to speak.
The region has become locked in a loop where the violence is either enacted to forestall further, greater violence or worse, entirely pathological.
Adding to this violence will never unlock a new level, featuring a possible conclusion to it all.
This would require one side to renounce violence, and in a sense I do really mean ONE side, because from the outset only the Islamists have shown absolutely no willingness to relent, to forge a stable, shared future.
Right now one side is suffering terrible violence largely owing to their continued obstinate determination to perpetrate it or at least project it onto the other.
The moment they declare an intention to stop, it all stops.
This war is grounded,
has always been grounded, in their refusal to settle for anything less
than everything. Compromise, and a form of peace will almost certainly
ensue quite rapidly.
One can all
too easily become distracted by all the piled on complications (and
commentary and politicised confabulations therewith) from appreciating
that it really is that simple.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Can decisive action wait?
There surely cannot be any semblance of peace in the Near East until those who live and die for the dream of eradicating Jewish civilisation in the Levant have either sufficiently softened their perspective to the point of functional cohabitation or have been effectively contained by the combined actions of the majority of the interested nations around them.
Regime decapitation is the responsibility of relevant citizens, not outside parties.
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Mountainhead (2025)
Is
it me or are they really making movies these days in such a way that
audiences are going to really struggle to decide whether they’ve seen
something half decent or utterly dreadful?
Before
watching this I’d seen a fragment of a review that described the
dialogue as a ‘barrage’, and that’s basically all you need to know here.
Like a game of buzzword bingo set to the pace of a bid caller at a
Sotheby’s auction.
At times the
words seem to detach themselves from the characters, leaving one with
the sense that a familiar actor has been left stranded in the scene, his
artificial soul having abandoned him.
There are a few laughs. The amoral tech bro caricatures are done well enough, but the drama feels superficial and forced.
Maybe
it didn’t help that I live with someone who cannot abide scenes with
loads of food and everyone appears too busy talking to eat, or indeed
chopping away at an orange, but whenever the camera looks down, it’s
still only in two pieces.
The Surfer (2024)
Wednesday, June 04, 2025
The Wrong Candidate
You can often identify an extremist simply by spotting how bad they are at affecting to be reasonable.
This week I came across one of those diversionary, bad-at-being-reasonable posts which in essence claimed that Sharia courts in the UK are no different from Jewish and Catholic equivalents, the inference being that if you specifically take issue with Muslim community tribunals, you are basically a xenophobe or a racist.
This one of those false-analogy / hidden straw man arguments so beloved of contemporary 'progressives', grounded in a misrepresentation of both the underlying situation and any apparent concern being voiced about it.
To illustrate how this is really an anxiety about potential variations of culture and not about religious affiliation or indeed the nature of such institutions, I will relate a story from the Maldives in the fifteenth century.
These islands in the Indian Ocean were then governed under an Islamic political entity which could broadly be described as colourful. A vibrant society to be sure.
In 1460 they had an unexpected visit from the period's most famed scholar-traveller, Tangier-born Ibn Battuta.
To the Maldivians this appeared like an unmissable opportunity. How could they not want this man of almost unparalleled learning and knowledge of the world from the university of medieval life to be their most senior judge in Male?
They hoped to sweeten the offer with gold, assorted jewels, an official horse and litter, high-status wives, even a bevy of young slave girls.
The itinerant Mahgrebi reluctantly accepted...and then the whippings, amputations, dress-code impositions and all-round clamp down on the community's sexual mores commenced.
The problem, if indeed it’s a problem that one divines here, wasn't the court, it was the judge. (Or maybe the human embodiment of certain interpretational tendencies.)
Designated Foreigners
Anti-Colonial theory — which at its most simplistic and fanatical is little more than a binary moral judgment concerning the populations left behind as a legacy of imperialism, with precious little effort at analysis — possesses one really perverse stream whereby an ostensibly indigenous people, often a minority with a peculiar history relative to the previous situation, are assigned the role of foreign colonisers.
This might be most obvious today in the Middle East, but in fact it has often taken its most toxic forms in Africa. If I had the time I would explain here why the Rwandan genocide could not have occurred without an imposition of some of these often deliberately muddled perceptions (along with essentially bogus ethnic categorisation) but another, easier-to-outline case is that of the Swahili peoples of the East African coastline.
For hundreds of years before the ‘scramble for Africa’, these Muslim converts had acted as middle men between the trans-oceanic traders to their east (mainly Indians and Arabs, then later on, Portuguese) and the hinterland to their west, with its gold and other desirable commodities which were traded for Asian silks and such like.
It is this long-term connection with the dreaded C word, commerce, or worse, Capitalism, that can prove deadly to any population once the post-colonial Marxist ideologues show up. The Swahili had emphasised to the Europeans that they were different, and once the Europeans had gone, demagogues from amongst the other Bantu-speakers were more than happy to designate them as foreign settler colonists, worthy of violent expulsion.
In fairness, the historical choice they had made, avoiding the dangers of actual maritime trade, but exploiting their control of coastal access meant that they were also driven to exploit their pagan neighbours inland simply in order to maintain a certain lifestyle within their wealthy emporia, which included slaves.
History is necessarily complicated, and it would be a fine thing if we could always so easily decide who the oppressors and the oppressed have been in any given situation, but that is basically the starting point of a certain ideological MO, and the irony is that it often leads to terrible conflicts between the people left behind after the most obvious oppressors have departed the scene.
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
Enraged vs Deranged
Terrorism is not a euphemism for a non-white person with a grudge. (And this usage, even by inference, should definitely be avoided in the mass media and by government spokespeople.)
Instead it might be said to refer to any individual (or group) that initiates a mass casualty event for reasons decidedly beyond the personal. In this case the Police have insisted that the Liverpool suspect’s actions are ‘not being treated as terrorism’ and yet they have revealed that he gained access to the restricted area by following an emergency vehicle, which does suggest to me a more than basic level of planning and intelligence.
And let’s face it, if he turns out to be an enraged Everton fan, and did this for (albeit disturbed) tribalist reasons, that would still be a form of terrorism, wouldn’t it? The fundamental drive does not need to be a geopolitical obsession.
And we’d then have to confront a further breakdown in the social order, whereby just about any extreme take on identity can lead to this explosive, culturally-absorbed kind of violence, albeit in copycat format.
I think we should be wary now of attempts to put this one down wholly to mental illness. The enraged and deranged parts of this act need to be identified and understood apart.
This individual drove a large vehicle into a crowd, including children, intent on causing harm indiscriminately, stopping only because of people trapped beneath it, and if there were any motivations for this beyond any private peculiarities of psychology, then the UK authorities really ought to treat it as a watershed, ‘iconic’ moment in the public expression of hatefulness.
But if he really was just a random loon, there still need to be some significant learnings for all future mass gatherings, especially those which are inherently grounded in the expression of tribal identity. (See also Canada’s recent trauma at a Filipino food fair.)
Monday, May 26, 2025
The Myth of Tordesillas
One myth this map reinforces is that these two were global superpowers of the era.
Instead they were relatively impoverished small nations in a relatively impoverished section of western Europe.
This was an age of political and economic innovation and around 1494 the most expansive and successful empires in these respects were operating elsewhere: the Ottomans, the Russians even, but most of all the Aztec and Inca plus two in Africa we hardly ever hear about: Mwene Mutapa in the east and the empire of Muhammad Touré in the Niger valley.
The Ming were nicely consolidated as well.
What distinguishes the Iberians is their sudden and startling global reach, but this exploration was very much needs driven.
The Portuguese, for instance, were welcomed into the wealthy commercial system of the Indian Ocean at first because they brought extra shipping capacity and were rather desperate and cheap, and it was thought at the time that this would ultimately benefit everyone. The Indian Ocean was a lucrative and predictable, self-contained system. Nobody had much incentive to push out beyond.
Only later did it become apparent that the newcomers would use their superior ship-borne firepower in order to establish a kind of protection racket.
Saturday, May 24, 2025
A word for the watermelon mob…
Please stop comparing Israel to the Nazis. Everybody knows why you do it and it is thoroughly obnoxious and offensive and you cannot pretend otherwise.
Sensible, important, ethical people — like the Pope, say — seem able to refrain from doing it, and that has to tell you something.
In fact, while you’re at it, stop comparing anybody with the Nazis (unless like Elon, they almost certainly appear to be self-Hitlerising.)
Any point thus made is inherently trite and it comes with the cost of trivialising history that surely needs to be remembered and understood correctly.
When it comes to Gaza, there is one big fat blockade from WWII that you might just want to latch onto — Leningrad — but even there the scale is quite staggeringly different. (1m dead civilians). I’ve visited the mass graves outside the city and I know that if I had family connections there today, I would not want the experience of any immediate ancestors to be appropriated willy-nilly for someone’s contemporary demonisation project.
That leaves one potentially appropriate modern historical parallel for habitual users and abusers of historical parallels.
Not Germans…but Brits, in Malaya in the 1950s, where starvation was used cynically, and appallingly, as an almost unconscionable counter-insurgency tactic.
But be warned. Unlike the Nazis, us Brits are not off-the-shelf avatars of cosmic evil — at least not all the time — and if you do adopt this chunk of our history as an alternative ‘never again’ mace to wield against the dastardly Jewish state you will need to look beyond the strategy to the consequences. Nasty it most definitely was, but on some levels it was successful.
Weaponised Crybullies
Is 'Free Palestine' responsible for the murder of innocents in Manhattan? It kind of depends on how it is conceived and then expressed, and the lines here are not so easy to draw.
It can be the verbal expression of either a political or a trans-political idea. In the latter case the very last thing those who say it are looking for is a conversation.
In this way it can be one of those almost pure expressions of want, detached from need, and as such reflects a posture which is broadly common on both sides of this divide right now, sometimes formalised into a set of dogmas.
Those who speak this way are, consciously absolving themselves from having to engage with the achievable.
Yet most have no discernible relationship with the achievable to begin with: they are, in the main, harmless if pushy windbags whose opinions seem not to actually matter, at least in regard to the real world events they ostensibly refer to. Julie Burchill has amusingly characterised this mindset as that of the 'crybully'.
Yet for a minority, this absolute and abstract discourse leads to a far from funny self-weaponisation, which can have genuinely unpleasant real world consequences, and there are two main sub-groups worth mentioning, both of whom appear to discover quite rapidly that the only available outlet for them is viciousness.
These are, strangely enough, poles apart — those who are in a position to wield power without restraint, and those isolated by a perceived lack of any kind of power at all.
The lashing out which results can be dressed up as 'self-defence' or 'resistance', and so on, but in this case it is nearly always maniacal and usually also self-defeating, owing to its essential disorder.
I find myself asking if there is something 'in the air' right now feeding these pathologies and certainly the cultural air we breathe these days is irredeemably cybernetic.
Jean Baudrillard would undoubtedly have seen the problem here quite quickly: technology is making everything seem startlingly up close and personal with all events occurring in 'real time'.
In such an environment, what he referred to as the 'phantasies' in our heads cannot easily be contained by these heads, they escape out into the immanent technologically-mediated world, where the distinctions between flawed reality and perfectibility have already broken down.
We'd struggle to keep them in even if we wanted to, because we always have a way to expel them, almost immediately.
And Baudrillard would have noted, I think, that it is precisely in that technologically-mediated instant when we simultaneously realise that the phantasy cannot remain just as phantasy — and that it will never fit snugly (and thus peacefully) with the material circumstances outside of our minds — that a usually limited number of us are driven to 'act up'.
Can It
Palestinianism and Zionism both have groundings in non-extremist, reasonable and realisable yearnings.
The 'Phantasy of Artificial Intelligence'
Jean Baudrillard’s The Perfect Crime reads like a dire warning about technology as an ‘extreme phenomenon’ from way back in ‘96, similar to pieces we can find today, relentlessly scaremongering about AI, though rather more idiosyncratic, philosophical and French.
“The phantasy of Artificial Intelligence, of the brain’s becoming a world, the world’s becoming a brain, so as to function without bodies, unfailing, autonomised, inhuman. Too intelligent too superhuman to be true. There is in fact no room for both natural and artificial intelligence. There is no room for both the world and its double.”
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Particular Skills
In a recent interview Bible-bashing actress Sydney Sweeney helpfully reminded everyone that the Crusades were “defensive”.
Friday, May 16, 2025
Grand Communion
As I have examined in the previous posts, Dostoevsky’s antisemitism was in a sense a side-effect of his belief in the imminent arrival of a final, just order on Earth. This ultimately is the essence of antisemitism: the notion that Jews are somehow fundamentally in the way of the new order. It has always been the same whether we are talking about medieval Catholics, Protestants or indeed the last century’s seemingly unbelieving totalitarians, and it was also the case with Dostoevsky’s peculiar millennarian vision for Russia.
The latter is deserving of some exploration on its own, not just in terms of those who were implicitly excluded, because it differed markedly from all the other aforementioned antisemitism-generating systems of thought in a number of significant respects.
The way history subsequently played out in Russia might lead us to conclude that Dostoevsky’s apparent belief in the coming of a ‘great and open-hearted communion’ was completely wrong, almost laughably so, but people still turn to The Brothers Karamazov, because the vision expounded by the dying Elder Zosima continues to intrigue, not just as one of what might be, but of what might be wrong with all the other programmes for societal change that we currently possess.
Dostoevsky's Russia does tend to sound like a bit like something off the pages of Spiked! There are the people, and there are those deluded metropolitan elites. The latter are liberal, rational and atheist. They imagine themselves as free, but they are 'isolated'.
When the poor rise up against the elites they are often led to do so with bloodshed by a discourse that is fed to them by dissident elements of those same liberal, rational, atheistic masters. "Their wrath is accursed, because it is cruel."
The insistence on the need for non-violence is explicit: He who draws the sword will perish by the sword.
Instead, the people have to be true to their own essential selves, to their faith and humility, acting without vengeance or envy, in a manner likely to eventually sort of shame the rich into allowing a society grounded in equality.
This is a new order to be won by 'humble love' not by force of arms. Salvation must come from the people in effect swallowing those who would be their masters, economic or political, into their big blob of love.
When confronted by the wicked, the Elder Zosima advises that the best approach is to 'shine' on them.
Earlier on in the story he had perplexed many of those present when he threw himself down at the feet of the town's best known wrong-un, seemingly responding to the 'pride of Satan' with performative grovelling.
In his deathbed Talks and Homilies Zosima explains his approach...
"If the wickedness of people arouses indignation and insurmountable grief in you, to the point that you desire to revenge yourself upon the wicked, fear that feeling most of all; go at once and seek torments for yourself, as if you yourself were guilty of their wickedness. Take these torments upon yourself and suffer them, and your heart will be eased, and you will understand that you, too, are guilty, for you might have shone to the wicked, even like the only sinless one."
Reaching this part of TBK is rather like coming across one of those unusual somewhat stand-alone episodes in the middle of a favourite TV series, which will initially generate significant frustration as one comes to terms with the realisation that there will be a further extended delay before the cliff-hanger from the conclusion of the previous episode is resolved. And yet, once everything has been wrapped up, one starts to look back on it with greater fondness.
And here at least we get a lot more than a bunch of flashbacks and character backstory padding. One might say that these observations lie at the very heart of what Dostoevsky was trying to say and that the wider 'plot' is the padding, really.
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Jewlaks
Dostoevsky, literary poster boy of universal brotherhood and compassion, was also a really horrid antisemite.
Hatefulness goes against my profoundest principles, he would say, and in this he did seem to have a point. He also had his own version of the ‘some of my best friends’ get out clause. This is one the racist’s oldest subterfuges, whereby they highlight specific individuals they like, while demonising certain salient forms of the collective.
The Dostoevsky Problem
The name given by scholars to the phenomenon whereby individuals who appear to define themselves by their compassion, somehow withhold it from Jews.
While he’s very much not the only example of this phenomenon, he has given his name to it.
When pushed, he would say he had no ‘preconceived’ hatred of Jews, which permitted him to hate specific real world examples, usually collectives rather than individuals, and perhaps even ‘the Jewish idea’.
You often witness something similar today with identity politics and anti-racism movements, which tend to regard Jews as a threat rather than as fellow travellers, and this is in part because Judaism is relatively isolationist and does not easily lend itself to more universally conceived movements of liberation or salvation. It is the one monotheistic faith which has not gone out of its way to make converts.
A lot of antisemites today share his apparent obsession with children and yet appear absolutely unwilling to see how Hamas has been applying the utilitarian logic against the Jewish state, sacrificing their own people so that their cause might better thrive.
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
Quatermass (Thames TV)
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
Dumbfounding
During the 2-3 year period when we were working through the deal underpinning the sale of our company, I was exposed on numerous occasions to the basic pattern of 'hard-nosed' American negotiation, especially as epitomised by NYC lawyers.
For almost anyone who has grown up within a different culture, Brits and Scandinavians in particular, these machinations are often profoundly shocking.
No obvious attempt is ever made to establish mutual goodwill or indeed an opening position not far from that which either side might be content to settle on. Instead, the first move is always almost ludicrously extreme, morally highly suspect, and often enough, seemingly self-defeating to boot.
I see rather obvious signs of this in Trump's administration and it is clear that many outside observers are not quite getting how this works.
There's a pattern emerging of a spectacular gnashing of teeth whenever he indicates an approach to a possible 'deal' — even prior to any formal discourse — and then a form of semi-relieved gloating when he later appears to cave in.
But this is how it always goes. He is not some sort of outlier in this respect, at least not within the environment he has always operated in.
Traditional politics have tended to be more like a marketplace than a Manhattan lawyers’ office. But Trump, Netanyahu and others are adopting — with mixed success so far — an alternative strategy which always begins with an attempt to dumbfound the opposition with its basic unreasonableness.
Resisting it is going to have to involve a bit more than acting dumbfounded.
Sunday, May 11, 2025
Potted History
These potted histories of the subcontinent and its currently sub-nuclear discords, usually delivered via animated infographics, are starting to proliferate on social media.
Two common themes; well, one theme and one kind of glaring non-theme.
Firstly, it's all the Brits' fault. In this particular clip the AI voiceover in Spanish tells us that India was basically minding its own business until, in 1820, it was forcibly Raj-ified by 🇬🇧 and then had little alternative but to descend into murderous, religiously-motivated conflict once the imperialists had departed in a great hurry in 1947.
Listen to the extremist voices amongst the Arabs and Jews in the Levant and a broadly similar refrain will emerge: their raging mutual animus has developed at least partly as a side-effect of clumsy British colonial interference.
But the way that the big picture allegiance of Pakistan has been illustrated here is unintentionally oh-so-telling.
And this is how we intuit the theme that seemingly nobody wants to openly discuss, either in the case of the Indian subcontinent, or indeed in the case of the Levant — what exactly have Muslims, specifically expansionist Islamic fanatics, been doing there in the first place?
Might there have been an earlier history of brutal, faith-based conquest prior to the arrival of everyone's favourite historical villains: nineteenth century Europeans? And is the situation implied by the term 'post-colonial' a little more complicated than many amongst the semi-literate will allow it to be?
Hinduism looks fairly indigenous to the territory, just like Judaism does. Islam, on the other hand, comes over a bit more like that chap up there, top left: a 'peaceful', smiling visitor from the Arabian Peninsula.
Free luxury Jumbo…anyone?
VE Day(s)
This has been a week where, after eighty years, it has become clear that our culture is losing a bit of clarity around how and when (and where) WWII ended. Though a measure of ambiguity has always been present.
The Donald is here referencing a not especially relevant event which took place in the Pacific in February 1945.
Germany meanwhile would surrender largely as a result of defeat to the Russians in the Battle of Berlin and the suicide of Hitler on April 30. The relevant docs were signed at Rheims on May 7 and formalised in Berlin the following day, which became VE Day for us.
Though the Russians continue to celebrate on the 9th, owing to some procedural delays both sides kicked up, for Stalin didn’t believe Jodl, the general who’d signed up to unconditional surrender in France, was senior enough to do so — though he’s one of those allowed to stay in the bunker office room to witness the Führer going ape in the Downfall memes — or indeed, that the location was appropriate.
And Keitel started nit-picking over a single clause, which meant the war would end — and for the Russians and Germans REALLY end — after the ceasefire had formally commenced.
For London civilians like my mother, the experience of war would wind down both sooner and later. The last V2 rocket struck on March 27, but emergency conditions like the rationing of basic foodstuffs would persist a further nine years. The general election of July 5, 1945 was perhaps the greater watershed moment.
My uncle’s Division, the ‘desert rats’ (into which his regiment, the 8th Royal Irish Hussars fitted) had accepted Hamburg’s surrender in March and he’d reached the Elbe in his tank at the time of ceasefire, and would later participate in the Berlin victory parade at the end of July.
My father, then just 18, was also in the army and stationed in Sinai, in charge of a courier company within the Royal Fusiliers. He was not especially demob happy as the news reached him, fully expecting to be redeployed out to Asia. For most British soldiers in active service, the prospect was fairly terrifying.
In May 1945 hardly anybody had an inkling of those goings on at Los Alamos and so there was no sense of imminent surrender in the Asian theatre as there had been in Europe after the failure of Hitler’s last offensive in the Ardennes during the previous winter.
The war, it was presumed, might drag on for a while. Elation was tempered.
Saturday, May 10, 2025
Locked (2025)
Friday, May 09, 2025
Intransigence
In as much as whenever someone chants 'Free Palestine' what I usually hear - according to context, though actually not really - is 'Destroy Israel', and as I could never support the latter proposition, you could tar and feather me as a Zionist, but it would be churlish to do so, especially as I am very much on the record for my abhorrence of all forms demented ideology and childish sloganeering as ways of dealing with the world's problems.