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From the Archives: On the Failure of Democracy

10/21/2016

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Selection of German and English statements simplifying the decadence of the contemporary democracy and capitalism.

- Austrian comedian Roland Düringer in the late night talk show Club 2 on "anger citizens" and "system zombies"
- British comedian Jonathan Pie rants in the tradition of Little Britain about the incompetence of his home nations politicians

It is always a good advice to read the work of French sociologist Piere Bourdieu or American sociologist Barrington Moore to get substance into these entertaining simplifications.

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Musicalized - Rich Music for Poor Times

10/21/2016

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Have been dreaming of such an interactive musical history for years. Here it is: some ingenious people have set up en.musicalized.com - rich music for poor times. the subtitle of the site must have been chosen with some sarcasm for the contemporary state of society. The contents is pure bliss though: an interactive map, which shows how musical genres have evolved and how they are interlinked. 20 main genres are subdivided in about 200 subgenres, most of them with several examples to listen in. My 8 year old daughter is thrilled and I immediately printed and laminated for her the two screenshots here to keep her going. From now on we will discuss the pedigree of each piece she listens on her ipod; and i hope that her growing understanding of musical history will help her to understand history at large.
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On Democracy and Taoism

10/12/2016

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With the upcoming presidential election in the arguably world’s richest and most powerful democracy as well as in my wealthy but minuscule country of birth, I consider it timely to post these lines, which I found during my Kunming time in the early 2000s in a short book written by New York poet Witter Bynner during WWII and published in 1944. I believe that both the shameful display of the panem et circenses state of modern democracy during the US and Austrian presidential campaigns, which I described in an essay earlier this year, as well as the loss of direction of the individuals subject to these democratic organizations is well captured in the foreword to his translation of the Tao Te Ching. Despite this saddening state of contemporary democracy and the henceforth implicit crisis of modern man, I see in his words a bright sliver lining for both democracy and man.  
 
Herrymon Maurer in a postscript of The Old Fellow, his fictional portrait of Laotzu, notes how closely the use of life according to Laotzu relates to the principles of democracy. Maurer is right that democracy cannot be a successful general practice unless it is first a true individual conviction. Many of us in the West think ourselves believers in democracy if we can point to one of its fading flowers even while the root of it in our own lives is gone with worms. No one in history has shown better than Laotzu how to keep the root of democracy clean. Not only democracy but all of life, he points out, grows at one’s own doorstep. Maurer says, “Laotzu is one of our chief weapons against tanks, artillery and bombs.”
 
Laotzu knew that organizations and institutions interfere with a man’s responsibility to himself and therefore with his proper use of life, that the more any outside interference with a man’s use of life and the less the man uses it according to his own instinct and conscience, the worse for the man and the worse for society.
 
The only authority is “the way of life” itself; a man’s sense of it is the only priest or prophet. And yet, as travelers have seen Taoism in China, it is a cult compounded of devils and derelicts, a priest-ridden clutter of superstitions founded on ignorance and fear. As an organized religion, its initial and main sect having been established in the fist century A.D. by a Pope named Chang Taolin, Taoism has even less to do with its founder than most cults have to do with the founders from whom they profess derivation. Even in modern China a Taoist papacy is paid to exorcize demons out of rich homes … Thus man love to turn the simplest and most human of their species into complex and superhuman beings; thus everywhere men yearn to be misled by magicians [read politicians]; thus priests and cults in all lands and under virtuous guise make of ethics a craft and a business.
 
Confucius had the wisdom to forbid that a religion be based on this personality or codes; and his injunction against graven images has fared better than similar injunction in the Ten Commandments. Hence Confucius continues unchanged as a realistic philosopher, an early pragmatist, while Laotzu and Jesus, his ethical fellows, have been tampered with by prelates, have been more and more removed from human living and relegated as mystics to a supernatural world.
 
Confucius prescribed formalized rather than spontaneous conduct for the development of superior men in their relation not only to the structure of society but to themselves. Laotzu, with little liking for organized thought or recruited action, no final faith in any authority but the authority of the heart, suggests that if those in charge of human affairs would act on instinct and conscience there would be less and less need of organized authority for governing people or, at any rate – and here he is seen as the realist he remains, as a man aware of necessarily gradual steps – less need for “superior men” to show.  In our own time we have had evidence of the tragic effects of showy authority [Bynner referring to A. Hitler, J. Stalin and the likes of his own time].

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