Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts

Monday, April 21, 2025

Kill it before it glows

 

¨

A motley collection of "cryptid" sightings. Some are barely believable stories about bioluminescent spiders and frogs. Others are frankly unbelievable. A glowing lake monster in Lake Erie? A pterodactyl which looks like a UFO? Yeah, that´s likely...

But sure, it´s entertaining.      

Saturday, February 22, 2025

The scam of slavery

 


It seems a new form of trafficking and slavery has developed in Southeast Asia. Hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world are virtually imprisoned in "scam centers" in Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. Tricked by promises of good office jobs, they are forced to work with various Internet and phone scams. The centers are often controlled by Chinese crime gangs.

However, it seems that both China and Thailand have decided to move against the gangs after a high profile abduction of a Chinese actor (!) in Thailand (he was trafficked to Myanmar) and Thai fears that Chinese tourists might avoid their country unless something is done stat. The Chinese government is of course entirely hypocritical, due to the slave-like conditions in China´s seafood industry, not to mention Tibet and Xinjiang. I suppose the crime syndicates messed with the wrong officials.

The Myanmar military is apparently also sick and tired of the scam centers at their side of the porous Thailand-Myanmar border, since they have decided to aid the Thai efforts to clean up the place. So I suppose you could say that this story has a "happy ending" of sorts...for now. Something tells me the scamming will continue elsewhere. 

Speaking of which...

The YouTube clip above tells a somewhat bizarre story connected to the scam center issue, this time from Cambodia. An attention-seeking influencer from Taiwan staged an incident in Cambodia, claiming to have been kidnapped and tortured by a gang operating a center. The Cambodian authorities weren´t amused and sentenced both him and an accomplice to a long prison sentence. Even the Prime Minister of Cambodia Hun Manet condemned the hoax. One thing the YouTube clip doesn´t tell us is whether or not the Cambodian police also took action against the scam centers...

Slavery never really went away, did it?  

Tens of thousands could be held in illegal scam compounds

Thousands rescued from illegal scam compounds

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Sheikh Hasina has the floor

 



Sheikh Hasina claims in her first statement from the Indian exile that the United States orchestrated her overthrow. My impression is that her government tried to maintain good relations with both China and India, and that the pro-Chinese connection angered the Americans. 

There are also various conspiracy theories floating around, such as Hasina´s claim that the United States wants to create a "Christian state" on territory poached from both Muslim Bangladesh and Buddhist Myanmar! 

The article linked below also mention Indian claims that the protests against Hasina were organized by China to pull Bangladesh out of India´s orbit, but that seems very unlikely. The new figurehead leader, Muhammad Yunus, strikes me as the centrist-liberal-globalist type. 

To be continued? 

Sheikh Hasina accuses the United States of overthrowing her

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Zoning out

 


Mindfulness has taken the world by storm. I happen to know that mindfulness exercises have even been offered to unemployed in Sweden – not clear how on earth that would increase their chances to get a job?! Inevitably, there are people who believe that mindfulness is dangerous and cultic. Like the story about a guy who was followed straight into the men´s room by a chaperon during a meditation retreat. Or what about the urban legend that Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 POTUS elections due to her, or perhaps her staff, constantly meditating according to this method? One of these days, some ethnologist should write a paper about all this!

Meanwhile, we can try to decode two overlapping scholarly articles by Robert Sharf: “Is Mindfulness Buddhist? (And why it matters)” from the journal “Transcultural Psychiatry” 2015 Vol 52(4), and “Mindfulness and Mindlessness in early Chan” from the journal “Philosophy East and West” Volume 64, Number 4, October 2014. Both are available for free at Academia.edu (registration required, but that too is for free). I admit that decoding the articles were quite hard, but I think I got the gist of it.

The practice known as mindfulness isn´t *really* a form of vipassana or Theravada insight meditation, rather having modern roots in a Buddhist revival in Burma (Myanmar). It´s mostly associated with Mahasi Sayadaw (1904-1982), who apparently developed the most well-known techniques. Mahasi wanted a form of meditation that was suited for laypeople, including those who knew next to nothing about Theravada philosophy or liturgy. The result was “bare attention”, a term coined by Mahasi´s disciple Siegmund Feniger. The technique is easy to learn and was rapidly exported to many other Buddhist nations from Burma, both those following Theravada and those practicing Mahayana. Even later, it conquered the world in a secular form and can be used by essentially everyone: Buddhist modernists in the Western world, Christians, prison inmates, hyperactive children, and (perhaps) Madame Clinton´s campaign staff. It´s seen as part and parcel of a universal and non-sectarian Buddhism. It also has a “perennialist” angle, treating spiritual mind-states as cross-cultural. The mystics really did have exactly the same raw experience, although their way of expressing it was culture-bound. And now *you* can get the same experience, almost in your own backyard! Indeed, you can actually get enlightened without following the rather complex and demanding Buddhist path.

Not so fast, argues Sharf. The word translated “mindfulness” is the Pali “sati”, which in turn is the same as the Sanskrit “smriti”. The original meaning is something like “to remember” or “to recollect”. It turns out that the meditative technique bearing this name in Theravada has very little to do with modern mindfulness. In Theravada, “sati” doesn´t mean to observe your thoughts and feelings as they come and go, effectively dismissing them all (the mindfulness approach). Rather, it seems to be the exact opposite: “sati” entails a careful analysis of each thought or feeling, learning to discriminate good “dhammas” from bad ones, according to the moral precepts of Buddhism. Also, the practice of “sati” can´t be isolated from studies of Buddhist scriptures, proper rituals, the communal life of the monks, and so on.

The author further points out that mindfulness is based on a view of the mind not found in Theravada. Mindfulness seems to imply that there is such a thing as “pure” cognition of an object, without any interpretations of the discursive mind. Our consciousness can therefore be trained to look at these qualia dispassionately “from without” (so to speak) and then simply dismiss them. The highest state would presumably be one of entirely pure mind, unsullied by any qualia whatsoever. But according to Theravada philosophy, there is no state like this. Consciousness and its objects arise co-dependently, so if consciousness of objects cease, consciousness itself ceases. At least in this world, that way madness lays. Sharf also points out that modern mindfulness is all about positive thinking (and, I suppose, glossy magazines), while traditional Theravada also sought to cultivate an attitude of world-weariness often bordering depression (by modern American standards). Meditation on corpses is a well-known example. One meditative state was known as “knowledge of appearance as terror” and was likened to a mother witnessing her three sons being executed! No safe space here, bro.

While mindfulness is thus a very modern thing, similar movements have arisen within Buddhism before. For instance within Chan Buddhism in medieval China (Chan is usually known as Zen in the Western world, Zen being the Japanese form of the name). Chan masters who had a substantial lay following developed techniques which seem to resemble “bare attention”. The techniques were attributed to a certain Layman Fu, promised instant enlightenment, did away with monasticism and ritualism, and so on. Sounds familiar? Sharf also speculates that the esoteric Tibetan practice known as Dzogchen may have been another example of such a “dumbed down” practice. He then describes what kind of criticism was leveled against the Chan “bare attention” approaches by more traditional Chan groups. They believed that the radicals couldn´t distinguish between right and wrong, and that their practices led to “falling into emptiness” and “meditation sickness”. This was apparently a dramatic euphemism for the practitioner being cut off from everyday life and society, everything that makes us sane and human. To retain our balance, we have to actively engage with Buddhist doctrine and forms of life. An Indian master named Kamalashila criticized the Chan master Heshang Moheyan during a debate in Tibet by saying that yogis who put an end to thinking end up in the realm of “beings without minds” for 500 eons as mindless zombies!

In sum, then, Sharf´s point is that mindfulness is modern, that similar movements in the past were heavily criticized from more traditional quarters and probably only represented a minority, and that “bare attention” is based on perennialism, erroneous notions about the human mind, fake positive thinking, a chase after sensual pleasure, and commercialization. Almost anything than the actual Buddhadharma. Well, yes, that does sound very modern indeed…

Perhaps we should be mindful of mindfulness? Ashtar Command, zoning out!


Monday, April 29, 2024

Scaring the little girl

 


Some fun facts (or factoids?) about "The Langoliers". 

The behind the scene footage is almost priceless. Yes, most of the mini-series was taped at an actual airport, Bangor International in Maine. You can see the actors and crew surrounded by (perhaps annoyed) airline passengers! The plane used was apparently sold to a Swedish airline at one point, but eventually ended up on a scrap heap in Burma. 

The actor starring the crazy Mr Toomy, Bronson Pinchot, was apparently quite the mad hatter IRL, as well. Weirdest of all is that Bangor is Stephen King´s hometown. Never been to Maine but, dude, is it really *that* scary? Even during rush hour?

Monday, January 15, 2024

Where Melford Spiro at?

 


"Where is that damn anthropologist, there is no bloody contradiction between being a werecat and being a Buddhist!"

Friday, December 29, 2023

Caste and class

 



This unsympathetic man is apparently the 145th "Shankaracharya" of the Govardhan Mat in Puri, Orissa, India. In the first clip, he attacks the Hare Krishna (ISKCON) as a bunch of unclean LARP-ers, undesirables and interlopers. In the second, he defends the caste system (or strictly speaking the varna system, which the caste system grew out of). 

Still, it *is* funny when he exposes the hypocrisy of those who "oppose caste" while having a class society of their own. For instance, the British, who still have a monarchy. Didn´t they make Victoria the Empress of India? Or the Muslims in the Indian sub-continent, who apparently have a de facto caste system. Or the Buddhists in Burma, who claim to be peaceful, but then create their own "kshatriyas" to fight the Muslims!

Browsing the YouTube channel of Govardhan Mat, I have to say that No 145 often comes across as a militant political agitator, apart from being a very "traditionalist" Hindu. 

Make of this content what you wish.   

Friday, March 10, 2023

CIA asset

 


“Dalai lama” is a book in Swedish about the Tibetan god-king. The author is Bertil Lintner, a Swedish foreign correspondent resident in Thailand. Lintner met and interviewed the Dalai Lama a couple of times.

While his book is about 100% pro-Tibetan/anti-Chinese, it´s not a pure hagiography of the exiled Tibetan leader. Quite the contrary, Lintner reveals that the peaceful Buddhist “socialist” was once a CIA asset, and that the CIA conducted a large-scale secret war against China using armed Tibetans as proxies. The Dalai Lama can´t have been unaware of the situation. Indeed, the escape of the Dalai Lama from Chinese-occupied Tibet in 1959 was aided and abetted by the CIA.

When Lintner met the Dalai Lama for the first time in 1984, the Tibetan leader revealed that he originally wanted to go into exile in Burma (Myanmar), a predominantly Buddhist nation which at the time was neutral. However, the Burmese turned him down, so the Dalai Lama went to India instead. There is just one problem with this story: how on earth could the Dalai Lama´s traveling party on the run in Tibet get a message across to the Burmese government? The method used, or so Lintner believes, was radio communications with the CIA at Okinawa (then controlled by the United States). The Americans then radioed Rangoon. Officially, none of this happened, and the Dalai Lama supposedly sent a messenger on foot (or was it yak) to India to ask for asylum there – something Lintner believes can´t have happened, the whole thing being too risky. So the contacts with the Indian government probably also went through Okinawa.

The Dalai Lama had to call off the armed struggle in 1974 (I think), due to the thaw between the United States and China (the US needed China as an ally to contain the Soviet Union). It seems he successfully transitioned to a peace apostle and international lobbyist after that, and no longer calls for a fully independent Tibet, but the Chinese government obviously still see him as a potential threat to the “unity of China”.

Lintner wonders what will happen when the Dalai Lama passes away. He is 87 years old, and although he has stepped down from his political positions in the Tibetan exile government (based in McLeod Ganj close to Dharamshala in India), most Tibetans still see him as their rightful leader. Traditionally, the new Dalai Lama is appointed through a peculiar system in which a small boy is found by monks from the Geluk sect of Tibetan Buddhism and declared to be the reincarnation of the former Dalai Lama, but this means that it takes decades before the new Dalai Lama can start functioning as a real leader. Lintner fears that the Chinese Communist regime will “find” their own “Dalai Lama”, in effect setting up a kind of anti-Pope, something they already done with the Panchen Lama. The Dalai Lama may have tried to reform the system, perhaps proposing that the Tibetan government in exile becomes wholly secularized, but it´s possible that the traditional-minded Tibetans will refuse to accept such reforms.

As for China, the only Chinese Communist leader who has expressed any kind of understanding for the plight of Tibet is Hu Jintao, who seems to have been finally purged from the CCP leadership in 2022. Everything points to repression in Tibet becoming worse in the near future. Lintner speculates that the armed struggle may erupt again after the current Dalai Lama is gone, since an important Tibetan exile organization, the Tibetan Youth Congress, is more militant and demands full independence. I also wonder how the creeping neo-cold war between the PRC and the US will affect the Tibetan question. The Dalai Lama has met all US presidents since George Bush senior (except Donald Trump), so the United States clearly haven´t forgotten their old allies in this particular geopolitical theatre…

If Swedish is a language you can actually read, “Dalai lama” is a good introduction to modern Tibetan history and politics (the book is 170 pages short). And, of course, to the life of the 14th Dalai Lama. One thing the book doesn´t describe very well are the actual religious beliefs of Tibetan Buddhism, but then, that´s an extremely complex topic and I don´t fault a foreign correspondent for not understanding them!

Recommended.


Monday, October 31, 2022

In the land of the fighting peacock

 


“Burmas Historia” (The History of Burma) is a book by Bertil Lintner, a Swedish reporter who is something of an expert on South Asian politics. “Burmas Historia” is probably the only book in the Swedish language dealing with the colorful but tragic history of Burma or Myanmar, as the nation is usually called these days. The book was published in 2014, and therefore doesn´t cover the latest eight years of the Burmese tragedy.

Lintner begins the story in 1057, when King Anawratha of Pagan created the First Burmese Empire. Important figures of Burmese history mentioned in the book include King Mindon, Queen Supayalat, General Aung San, U Nu, Ne Win, Thein Sein and Aung San Suu Kyi. Most of the chapters deal with 20th century developments, when Burma went from being a British colony to becoming an independent state, only to succumb to military rule from 1962 onwards (with a short period of ostensible liberalization circa 2011-2021). Around 1988, the military regime changed its political spots from “socialist” to “capitalist”, but little seems to have changed in practice.

One of the problems of modern Burmese society is that the military (Tatmadaw) functions as a de facto political party, and directly controls not only politics and the media, but also the economy, not to mention the black market trade. This is the system then-dictator Ne Win passed off as “Burmese socialism” during the Cold War. (The Maoist CPB or Communist Party of Burma regarded the system as “fascist” and fought a people´s war against it, which may perhaps tell us a thing or two!) Another very obvious problem is that Tatmadaw has essentially zero popular support. Every time the military has allowed free elections, the democratic opposition party NLD and its allies have won essentially every contested seat. And yet, military rule always manages to reassert itself. One reason is surely its extreme brutality and total disregard for international public opinion, but other explanations also suggest themselves.

Burma or Myanmar isn´t an ethnically or religiously homogenous nation. The majority is Burman (also called Bamar) and Buddhist, but the large “border regions” are populated by other ethnic groups: Karens, Karenni, Shan, Mon, Chin, Kachin, Wa, Rohingya, etc. While some of these are Buddhists, others are Muslims or have adopted Protestant Christianity. Animism is also strong. Many of the ethnic minorities have long-standing grievances against the Burmans. One example are the Karens, who supported the British colonial power against their erstwhile Burman oppressors, only to become an oppressed minority group again when Burma finally regained its independence. Some of the Karens have converted to Christianity. A peculiar legend exists among Western missionaries about the Karens believing in a “older White brother” who would return one day and give them knowledge of the true god.

Opposition to the military regime is often made difficult by mutual suspicions between the ethnically Burman democracy activists and the minorities. For instance, many Burmans consider the Muslim Rohingya to be “illegal aliens” and didn´t really care when Tatmadaw attacked their settlements. Meanwhile, there is a plethora of armed rebel bands based on other ethnic minority groups. The military is smart enough to enter peace agreements on-off with such rebels, thereby weakening any united resistance against its rule. Mutually beneficial deals concerning illegal trade, or geopolitical considerations, have played a role in these agreements. For instance, the Wa people have a de facto independent state in close alliance with China, something tolerated by Tatmadaw since China is an important backer of Burma. An ironic twist to the story is that China permitted the Wa to overthrow the Communist Party of Burma in this region, when the militant CPB became too much of a nuisance to the more pragmatic Chinese leaders…

Still, the NLD and the ethnic minority groups have been able to unite from time to time, so there is probably still a chance that Tatmadaw will fall one day at the hands of a general popular insurrection. What will happen the day after, is another question entirely!   


Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Saigon has fallen




This is a somewhat peculiar field guide, first published in 1975 and regularly reprinted since. “My” copy is from 1995. Since it’s a reprint of the original edition, Ho Chi Minh City is still called Saigon, while Myanmar is still Burma. The guide covers Myanmar, the Malaya peninsula, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos. Presumably, the book was rushed to the printer shortly after the fall of South Vietnam! Curiously, it also covers Hong Kong (not a part of South-East Asia) and contains checklists of birds found on the islands of Hainan and Taiwan (not part of South-East Asia either). A total of 1198 species are presented.

The book is obviously written by “nerds”, and like true nerds, they have spent considerable time sorting out the English vernacular names for the various birds, and occasionally invented new ones. The four page long explanation as to how this was done is at least good for comic relief: “All compound group names composed only of nouns were hyphenated or joined into a single word…Wherever a group name is used for more than one species, each species in the group is indicated by a different adjective”, et cetera. You grok? The addresses to societies of bird-lovers are also funny. One of them is the Oriental Bird Club…in Bedfordshire! Still, that may be easier to find than Hoi Dieu Hoc Viet-Nam in “Saigon”…

The field guide itself is downright annoying and has all the traits users of field guides love to hate. Texts and illustrations are not on facing pages, the color plates are not found in one single section but interspersed throughout the book in a bewildering fashion, and many plates are in black-and-white! Nor are the birds shown in the same order as in the text, although on this point there is a logical explanation: the authors wanted to group similar-looking species together for easier identification.

I admit that I don't like the layout of this volume, and I will therefore only give it two stars. And I still don't understand why Hainan and Hong Kong are included in a guide to SE Asian Aves…