The Fallacy of laser Wielding Aliens
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This
issue contains two articles. The first one has it's title below.
The second one is entitled "America's Salmon Rushdie".
Click here to to be taken there now.
The
Fallacy of Laser Wielding Aliens.
A
week ago, I was listening to a BBC radio broadcast, as I usually
do when I am tucked up in bed. It helps put me to sleep. The program
that was airing at the time was about science and discovery.
The topic was the Dogon tribe in Africa.
I
thought it was going to be the usual stuff that the BBC is always
broadcasting about Africa in the realm of science and discoveries;
a new wind-up radio that works without batteries, a cheap, fuel
efficient car that could be very effective in Africa, a new,
cheap, more effective treatment for malaria, and the like.
What
I heard, however, shocked the daylights out of me.
It
so happens that the Dogon tribe has prior knowledge of the existence
of superdense matter, a new, and largely unknown phenomenon even
by the latest western scientific standards. The branch of science
that engages in such esoteric pursuits is called super science.
Superdense matter is matter that is so compacted that it can
have the size of a tennis ball, but will weigh as much as our
entire planet. This matter doesn't exist anywhere near our solar
system, nor does it in the nearer galaxies, or else the gravitational
pull that the matter creates around it would suck us into it.
Knowledge
that this matter exists was only gained lately by study of the
skies, of black holes to be more specific, using the latest
in telescopic technology, and the latest scientific knowhow.
So
how could a spear wielding, pierced ear, thatched hut inhabiting
group of tribesmen have knowledge of such a phenomenon?
Towards
the end of the program, they inserted the explanation of laser
wielding aliens into the argument, and then, suddenly, I realised
something that has escaped me on all the other occasions that
they have put forward this explanation to explain things that
are found in the hands of black people, but are considered too
complex to be made by them, which I actually half believed,
including the Egyptian pyramids, the equally precise pyramids
of south America, the stones that could not possibly have been
cut by beings using simple, primitive tools.
The
implicit message is this that knowledge of such complex processes
and phenomenon can only be attained by thinking, fully developed
human beings. Since Africans are also human beings, the implicit
message is that they are not mature enough as humans to be capable
of such feats, otherwise, if the BBC doesn't think this way,
then the obvious explanation they would have given of the Dogon
tribe phenomenon would be that they are a product of a lost civilization,
a civilization that was so advanced that it internalised complex
knowledge into the very genetic makeup of the people.
In
this case, it would be impossible to push in another common
explanation that pops up now and then, that white people lived
in these regions, for example the Zimbabwe ruins, because the
Dogon tribe's feat is actually too advanced to be found anywhere
on this planet. We are no longer dealing with stone constructions
which can easily, and convincingly be associated with particular ethnic
standards. No group has such complex knowledge internalised
in their cultural framework to give as an example.
Try
to beat this.
You
will realise the dimensions of this feat if you asked how many
of us today, living in this civilization, would know the answer
to simple questions like: what are the mechanics of a transistor
radio, an electric motor, let alone what matter the planet Saturn
consists of? And yet here we have an African tribe with knowledge
so complex, so distant in the past, and yet still alive in the members
thousands of years later.
This civilization actualised a feat no society today is even
close to emulating.
Here
is the fallacy.
Let
us take the present situation as the way things are. Let us
imagine that the BBC and the like are right. Then we can go
on and imagine civilised aliens landing on this planet thousands
of years ago.
They
are intelligent, they are sophisticated, they can travel (they
came all this way from their planet, and left advanced knowledge
all over our planet, so there is no reason to believe that they
were stranded in one part of our planet). They manage to somehow
communicate on a very high level with any tribe they come in
contact with, otherwise it would be impossible to relay such
complex knowledge to the natives. Now here is the vital question:
why would they give such advanced knowledge to groups that are
less advanced? Wouldn't they, with all the capacities they have,
see the obvious? Wouldn't they give higher forms of knowledge
to those who can understand and appreciate them? Is it not logical
to conclude, by using the very yardstick the BBC so readily applies to such matters,
that, since they didn't come to Europe, they didn't
see forms of humankind worthy of their attention in this homeland
of more advanced forms of humanity?
Hallo!
It
is useless to exhort such vanity to change.
America's
Salmon Rushdie.
I
am assailed enough as it is already that I would not wish to
give those who keep me in their sights the excuse they need
to openly blast at me. This is why, to avoid such an eventuality,
I have held out on a written response to the tragedy in America
in which thousands of innocent people lost their lives, even
if, as an activist, there is a lot to relate about the issue.
I break my silence over the issue because I am conscious of
the many issues that will remain sacrosanct and keep this race
on the precipice to self destruction as long as humanity refuses
to confront these issues, as long as humankind stays obedient
to this barbarism which masquerades as a civilization.
My
heart felt condolences go to the next of kin of all who lost
their lives that fateful day, and indeed, to all Americans,
and not least, to the citizens of this entire planet, because
this tragedy, like any other that confronts humankind, has been
experienced and shared by all.
I
wouldn't hesitate to scold and be derisive to anyone who is
led to believe that the events on that dark morning, watched
by most people around the world, affected only Americans and
Europeans. They were saddening and horrific to the whole of
humankind, most of all because of the portentous nature of the
whole episode when it was unfolding, which left many wondering
whether they would see the same tomorrow they were used to.
It
is utterly childish to imagine, or be of the belief that this
is about pride, innocence, or the security of the west. This
is about control of our lives, and in that instance all of mankind
knew who had lost it, and the consequences to the rest of us
if the fears turned out to be right.
It
didn't happen this time, and we were happy to go on with our
lives again, trusting, like the weak beings we are, in hope.
We
can no longer be comforted, not least by the way the adults
talked and acted in the aftermath.
Sometime
ago, Vanessa Williams, a very popular female artist in America,
sung a song whose title I cannot recollect, which starts with
the following lines:
You
think that the only people who are people
Are people who look and think like you...
Later
in the song, if not right after this, she sings:
But
if you walk the footsteps of a stranger
You will learn things you never knew you never knew...
Another
lyric goes:
Do
you know how tall a sycamore tree can grow
If you cut it down then you will never know...
This
is a touching, creative song, whose message, if I am not mistaken,
is much too wise for the ears it is intended for, a song that
becomes more relevant in light of the September the eleventh tragedy,
and the kind of followup that this tragedy has engendered, as
I will explain.
The
insertion of religion into the issue I will dismiss here as
a simple attempt to unite and mobilize as many people as is
possible to fight the other side. There is strength in numbers
when confronted with such an issue, when up against such a formidable
enemy, and a General who knows the strategies and tactics of
war well, knows no moral restraint in his attempts to recruit
men.
The
claim by many Americans that this act was an attack motivated
by jealousy and envy of success, that it is as such an attempt
by savages to crash that which they consider as more advanced,
I will also dismiss, by saying that a civilised, advanced country
has no right to disrupt and negatively influence other, less
advanced countries because it is advanced. Being civilized is
not a passport for this kind of terrorism.
When
all is said and done, we are left with the quite valid positions
held by the sides created in this issue, many of which existed
way before this tragedy unfolded.
One
argument which made me question this world's political priorities
was the issue of refugees. The world has an asylum program in
which people fleeing persecution in their own lands can seek
refuge from that persecution in other countries, and have sometimes
been known to launch attacks on their own countries of origin,
against the authorities they are fleeing from, using the protection
provided by the host country as a cover, and the funds earned
in this same country as the wherewithal, if not by direct, blatant
support of concerned, protecting governments.
If
we keep this in mind, then we will see that the Taliban are
confronted with a tricky situation. Should they yield to western
pressure? If the west were in their position, would they hand
over a refugee they consider to be genuine, to an alien government
that doesn't want to deliver the proof, a government they have
their own reservations of, which, before all is discussed, proceeds
to bomb them.
Seeing
why the Taliban are hardheaded about this issue is easy. It
is for them, and for anyone in a like situation, an issue of
honour.
Another
scenario that I should bring to your attention is the fact that
terrorist organizations are alive and active within the confines
of the European and American borders, committing acts of terror
which the twin tower bombing only outdoes in the number of fatalities,
who hide in residential areas, and in provinces known to the
local authorities.
Imagine
if one such European government that regularly gets such so
called terrorist attacks asks another to hand the responsible
individuals over. Now, the authorities of the lands where these
terrorists operate from rule over people who would not have
an idea of where these individuals hide out, and what their
terrorist agenda is, what the profits and losses are, let alone
understand these, and most of the time they wouldn't care less,
until the terrorism visits them.
The
authorities, who give tacit support to these terrorists, would
definitely refuse to have them handed over. Now imagine a scenario
in Europe where this impasse leads to the kind of bombing that
is going on in Afghanistan. On European soil? Against European
citizens? This would be an outrage. An outcry would get many
paraded before the human-rights tribunal in The Hague.
This
is where the song by Vanessa Williams becomes relevant.
I
can imagine Afghanistani women tearing their hair out, wondering
why they have to suffer so much. I can imagine Afghanistani
men who have nothing to do with the bombing in America, sitting
in their houses while the country side around them gets bombed,
not knowing whether the next explosion will be the last sound
they will ever hear, having absolutely nothing to do with the
presence in their country of a man wanted dead or alive, but
getting bombed nonetheless.
To
date, all kinds of accusations have been leveled at the Taliban
and their Osama Bin Laden, including the possession of nuclear
weapon potentials. Which terrorist group on this planet wouldn't
have access to this technology? If we were to be realistic,
then we would place such suspicions on more complex groups living
right in the center of nuclear powers in Europe.
We are aware that the retreated Taliban are oppressive,
especially against women, but didn't like to hear these reasons
used as a cover, or as substantiation for the barbaric bombing
of the country. For this, we ask the side without sin to throw
the first stone.
We
will never know the truth of the present events in Afghanistan,
and even though we cannot trust the news agencies running the
show, we can get an idea of events on the ground from some mistakes
they make in their enthusiasm to mislead. On the CNN, the retreat
of the Taliban, itself smooth considering the bomber and fighter
filled skies, was followed by confusing images of a city devoid
of women and children, a city bombed to the ground. Has the
CNN lost it? In their attempt at propaganda they have fed us
with a piece of hype that is much too big to swallow. In their
attempt to hail American victory, they showed revealing scenes
of a deserted Kabul that was actually, unlike had been promised,
bombed right down to the civilian quarters, images that have
since curiously been edited. Apart from this are the largely
ignored, but disturbing, more newsworthy developments in cities
where the very allies of the Americans seem to be more barbaric
than the Taliban had ever been.
There
is no better way of creating a more volatile world environment
than to start such a campaign which reeks of double standards.
It becomes more distressing when one realises that other options
are even more effective in protecting Americans, and the entire
world for that matter, from such attacks in future, which they
are simply ignoring. On top of it all, the move seems to have
been hurried to this tragic state to placate dissent in the
local, American population, to prevent people from thinking
that their government and law enforcement bodies are idle and
incompetent.
If
we justify this move by America, then we should also consider
it as legitimate for Iran to bomb England in an attempt to flush
out Salmon Rushdie. The threat felt by this group held together
by the religion he had offended was sufficient, if we understand
it, to warrant such bombing of England. It would be normal for
England to bomb parts of Ireland in an attempt to flush out
IRA hardliners, etc., and ultimately, by logical deduction,
we should extend this right to those who were behind the bombing
of the WTC.
Accepting
such a precedence means accepting that international bullying
is legal. It is unto the one with more power to set the order,
to destroy those others who, by vice of their weaker positions,
cannot protect their interests; and L. Farrakhan's warnings
about western domination, and the fate of mankind with regards
to this, becomes very real indeed.
With
the kind of arms available to governments all over the world
today, it doesn't take a very gifted mind to see that the stage
for an apocalypse has already been set.
Finally,
I would like to set the record strait. I am against terror tactics,
but, like any sentient being, wouldn't hesitate to use them
against anybody who puts me in a confined position. This is
asking for it. Those who perpetrate unprovoked, purely evil
acts of terror should be sought out and punished. Extenuating
circumstances should not be sought for such individuals. Doing
so would allow entire populations to feel justified to spend
their entire lives reacting to reactions to their own actions,
and are inclined to overlook the sorry state of their community
which has become totally dependent on another community, refusing
to acknowledge this fact when they squeal and murder when the
other threatens to cut the umbilical cord, content, and believing
the self propagated lie that he who is fat, he who lives in
plenty is the provider.
The
failure of the so called developed world to provide for the
poorer parts of this planet, and help them out of their misery,
which would have been very easy if they were really as developed
and rich as they profess, is testimony to this fact. The cost
is simply too much to bear.
The
imperial dream succeeded to fail in this dramatic way, but this
is the way of tactics and strategies. Like a game of Chess,
a promising move may lead to a premature checkmate. Accepting
this reality, and making amends for the harm done will do more
good than harm to the entire world community. If the entire race of
man takes this route, the true, primitive terrorists will find no place to hide.
They will be seen and silenced before they can do such harm to anyone.
Such a group of terrorists will simply stand out in such a world.
If,
in a neighbourhood, it is wrong to kill a neighbour so that
one can have access to his pretty wife, then destroying a land's
supporting pillars to get an advantage over them should be wrong
in international dealings. If accusing Bill Gates of unfair
trade practices is right, then it should be wrong to have Kwame
Nkruma removed because he was mobilizing to fight a like evil
in his time.
Such
a world would not tolerate a situation where men put hoods on
their heads to prevent others from recognizing them while they
go about their own convictions, perverse and evil they may be
but one is expected to stand by his beliefs, to mingle with
the local community after the heinous acts have been carried
out, to continue for centuries to terrorize powerless, dispossessed,
disadvantaged, innocent people, and regard those who launch
movements for self defense against these same hooded men as
terrorists, and burn them into the ground as fast, and as ferociously
as possible.
In such a world, I wouldn't be told by strangers I meet on the
streets whenever, and only when I am "alone", personal,
private truths, or, even more sinister, reminded by strange
men whenever I have forgotten my mobile phone, and though I
do leave it at home on purpose most of the time, I have nothing
to hide. If I am doing wrong things, then attempts to correct
me should not be done surreptitiously. Wrong is wrong.
These
are the tactics of the hooded men who wage this silly war of
attrition on a select few, who maybe are employed by people
who do not believe in such methods, or are neighbors to such, or
run societies that pretend respect for human rights,
and wouldn't like the rest warned of their true nature.
Mukazo
Mukazo Vunda