The blog to end all blogs. Reviews and comments about all and everything. This blog is NOT affiliated with YouTube, Wikipedia, Microsoft Bing, Gemini, ChatGPT or any commercial vendor! Links don´t imply endorsement. Many posts and comments are ironic. The blogger is not responsible for comments made by others. The languages used are English and Swedish. Content warning: Essentially everything.
Not sure what this is. Some kind of "alternative" take on the Hungarian elections?
>>>Lots of weird takes on the Hungarian election result from both left and right here. >>>Peter Magyar is a socially conservative immigration restrictionist who wants to cut taxes and double the defence budget. He criticized Orban for admitting too many guest workers, and wants to increase Hungary's already generous pro-natal incentives. >>>On virtually every issue, his platform is well to the right of centre, by European standards. >>>His foreign policy is to end Orban's alliance with Putin, remove the Hungarian veto on EU loans to Ukraine, normalize relations with the European Union while opposing more Euro integration, and strengthen relations with Eastern Europe's anti-Russian governments, e.g. Poland. >>>His election was not a sudden shift to the left, but a rejection of Orban's corruption, the failure of his interventionist / statist economic policies, and the humiliation of his relationship with Putin.
Previously posted on May 5, 2023.
I assumed I had reviewed the Song of the Lord before, but either I´m just imagining things, or it mysteriously disappeared (and perhaps merged with Brahman)…
It´s difficult to review a religious scripture, but after reading most of the Bhagavad Gita (in the Wordsworth Classics edition) in one sitting, I´m nevertheless tempted to give it a try. I´m not sure what the scholarly consensus says at the moment about the Gita´s date of composition, but the editors of this particular translation place it around 500 BC. Since a few verses sound “Buddhist” (the ones advocating a middle path for ascetics), a post-Buddhist date seems likely, unless of course we´re dealing with later interpolations. The dates and historicity of the Mahabharata, the epic the Bhagavad Gita forms a small portion of, are also hotly debated questions. It´s probably not difficult to suspect that we may be dealing with composite works that evolved over a larger period.
The social milieu of the Bhagavad Gita doesn´t seem Brahminical. The main characters, Krishna and Arjuna, are presumably both from the warrior “caste” (Kshatriya). Of course, Krishna later turns out to be God! The setting of the story is the battlefield of Kurukshetra, where Krishna serves as Arjuna´s charioteer. When Arjuna refuses to fight, Krishna admonishes him and explains that everyone must carry out their caste duty. Ascetics are another important part of the Gita´s social universe. The scripture also states that anyone – even women and outcasts – can carry out devotional worship of the Lord and hence be saved. The Vedic sacrifices (associated with Brahmins) aren´t repudiated, but the reader is told to be indifferent towards the fruits of ritual action. The sacrifice is seen as a spiritual technique, rather than a method for gaining worldly boons.
Famously, the Bhagavad Gita claims that there are several different paths to liberation. I guess this was an attempt to create a “Hindu synthesis” out of the varied strands of Indian religious traditions available at the time: Vedic sacrifices, Upanishadic asceticism with the goal of merging with an impersonal Brahman, theist devotionalism, perhaps even a kind of theist mysticism. In modern times, Western readers have interpreted the message of the Gita as one of universal religious pluralism and hence tolerance. Implicitly or explicitly, this is a polemic against Christianity and the “Abrahamic faiths” more generally. While I suppose you could view it that way, it´s also important not to be anachronistic. While everyone can be liberated by Krishna, the god-man never abolishes caste and is clearly on a first-name basis with rulers and their elite warriors. That´s not how moderns conceptualize “tolerance”! Still, I suppose it´s interesting that a “Hindu” synthesis was attempted already during the Iron Age…
Other modern misinterpretations of Krishna´s preaching seem to include the idea that “karma yoga” (the path of action) is the most important aspect of the Bhagavad Gita, and that this somehow corresponds to the Protestant work ethic described by Max Weber. And “jnana yoga” (the path of knowledge), clearly a reference to asceticism and meditation, has very little to do with getting an American college education! A more reasonable take is that the Bhagavad Gita sees “bhakti yoga” (the path of devotion) as the highest path (it´s even described as “secret”), while nevertheless trying to incorporate karma yoga and jnana yoga into its system. Sacrifices to demigods or spirits aren´t rejected either, but the boons from such worship are said to be temporary and of a lower order than worship of Krishna. The Lord´s devotees should concentrate on Him only. Nor is it wrong to be a normie who simply does his best to follow rules and regulations of society, since such a person might get a better rebirth, perhaps in a spiritual family. There are also temporary heaven-worlds where people might end up after their physical deaths, until their merit is spent, and they have to be reborn on the physical plane again.
The Bhagavad Gita places strong emphasis on the maintenance of social order. As already indicated, karma yoga means the carrying out of one´s caste duty without complaining and without expecting any fruits from such a course of action, indeed all fruits should be handed over to God. Caste circulation is criticized: it´s better to carry out one´s one dharma imperfectly, than to carry out another person´s dharma perfectly. The reader is admonished to follow the laws and regulations found in the Dharmashastras. Krishna is said to appear on Earth under various guises every time the dharmic order is under threat, defending it. More interestingly, karma yoga is also a spiritual method of sorts, since those who follow this path come across as a kind of worldly ascetics. It´s their perfect equipoise that will eventually enable them to merge with the divine.
Within Hinduism, the Bhagavad Gita has been interpreted in many ways. Does the text say that the divine is the impersonal Brahman of which Krishna is merely one manifestation, or does it suggest the exact opposite, i.e. that God is personal? And who is this personal god? Is it Krishna himself, or is Krishna merely a humanoid avatar of the cosmic deity Vishnu? At least from this English translation, I get the impression that the text is deliberately multivalent on these rather crucial points! It´s also panentheist, since Krishna (or Vishnu, or Brahman…) is said to permeate the entire cosmos and somehow be identical with it, while also going far beyond it. Indeed, the world is “in God”, rather than God being “in the world”. A panentheism in which God is nevertheless personal is intriguing, to be sure. My rather strong impression is that the Bhagavad Gita reflects a religious sensibility in which strong and unswerving devotion to a personal god is seen as central. And since he is mostly referred to as Krishna, the Hindu groups who see Krishna as the Supreme Personality of Godhead (rather than just a temporary avatar) aren´t entirely off topic, either.
From an atheist viewpoint, virtually everything is wrong with this text, including its strong condemnation of atheism (presumably the Charvakas). Christians may have objections, too. The time scale is vast, the universe is said to be cyclical, and the cycles are never-ending. After each destruction, the universe is simply recreated, with “new” creatures who are really reincarnated souls from a previous universe, being forced to work out their karma in the newly minted universe. Only a few souls in each cycle seem to reach liberation, and it´s possible to interpret the text that some demoniac souls either can´t be saved and/or will be completely destroyed (perhaps this is less objectionable to Calvinists who believe in predestination). From a Christian viewpoint, there is no real redemption in the Song of the Lord. Of course, a Hindu might respond that many people are eternally lost in the Biblical drama as well, while many others get a second chance in Hinduism…
With that reflection, I end this review.
Woke-vänstern stretar på. Att elbilar och vindsnurror skulle vara geopolitiska maktmedel är såklart skitprat. För det första kan man inte driva militären på batterier. För det andra blir man beroende av Kina om man "ställer om". Tyskland blev som bekant beroende av rysk gas när *de* ställde om till en grön ekonomi! Ironin. Men fortsätt ni med era löjliga utopier. Det är underhållande, på ett sardoniskt sätt.
PS. Notera stödet till kärnkraft i sista meningen. LOL. Försök få Miljöpartiet att gå med på *det*, din jävla tönt! Och jag antar att du vet att uranbrytning inte förekommer i Sverige, va?
Låter ju som en pseudo-nyhet, men okej då, vi lägger ut! Verkar *inte* vara kopplat till situationen i Hormuz-sundet.
| Credit: Bernard Gagnon |
ChatGPT, please teach me astrology (advanced class).
Yes, please.
Great—this is where sect becomes really powerful, because it explains why the same “difficult” planets can feel very different in different people.
We’ll focus on the two classical “malefics”:
👉 Therefore:
Each behaves more constructively in its own sect, and more problematically outside it.
Mars is more balanced and useful.
“I can act, push, and assert myself without losing control”
But generally:
👉 manageable and productive
Mars becomes more volatile.
“My drive can turn into frustration or aggression”
👉 Classic pattern:
Saturn becomes constructive and stabilizing.
“I can تحمل (carry) responsibility and grow through it”
Saturn becomes heavier and more difficult.
“Life is hard, and I feel burdened or blocked”
👉 Common themes:
This is not random—it follows a logic:
👉 So:
👉 So:
Modern astrology often says:
But sect refines this:
The same planet can feel like:
depending on context
This mirrors a deeper idea you’ve been exploring:
👉 Just like:
Mars and Saturn switch roles depending on whether you’re born in a day or night chart—Mars is more constructive at night and more volatile by day, while Saturn is more stabilizing by day and more burdensome at night.
If you want, I can show you something even more concrete:
👉 how this plays out in relationships (it gets surprisingly specific and revealing).
| Credit: Beccabubu |
ChatGPT, please teach me astrology.
Yes, please.
Great—this is where the idea of sect becomes very experiential. It changes how you feel your Sun and Moon, not just how you interpret them abstractly.
👉 So:
Your “center of gravity” shifts between Sun and Moon depending on birth time.
The Sun (☀️) is “in charge.”
“I lead with identity, and process emotions afterward”
The Moon (🌙) is “in charge.”
“I feel first, then define who I am”
👉 Often:
“I have to figure out who I am”
👉 “Become who you are”
👉 “Feel your way into truth”
This mirrors:
👉 And even connects loosely to:
Ask:
“I am this person, regardless of circumstances”
→ more day-chart style
“My sense of self shifts with how I feel and relate”
→ more night-chart style
In a day chart, the Sun gives a stable sense of identity and the Moon plays a supporting role, while in a night chart the Moon becomes the center of experience and the Sun must be consciously developed.
If you want, I can go one level deeper:
👉 how this interacts with Saturn and Mars (it becomes especially interesting and much more predictive).