Woman killed by DC cops tied to pro-Obama elements

Daily Caller:

“Despite assertions by liberals that the problematic individual at the center of Thursday’s shooting episode was probably a tea partier, Carey was described as a “non-political person.” And her family doesn’t seem to be composed of Rush Limbaugh fans.

Carey’s sister Valarie Carey, a retired New York City police sergeant, is the founder of the menstural cycle-themed company TOTM! Time of the Month! and author of “the essential calendar planner for girls and women of all ages.”

Valarie Carey also hosts a radio show offering menstrual-cycle advice and expertise that has featured former WNBA legend Kym Hampton and other notable guests. Valarie Carey has appeared on the Lifetime network. She is on the board of Brooklyn CARES, a chapter of the National CARES Mentoring Movement founded by Susan Taylor, who co-hosted a 2009 Washington awards dinner featuring President Obama. Taylor also joined first lady Michelle Obama, Spike Lee, Magic Johnson, and others at a 2010 youth leadership event in Detroit.

Valarie Carey posted a message Thursday from her family’s attorney and spokesman on her Facebook page.

“Attention Media: I am representing the family of Miriam Carey, the woman involved in the DC shooting incident. From this point, please refrain from trying to contact the family and direct any inquiries to me. We will be giving an official statement in the near future,” wrote Eric Sanders, Esq.

Friends and family speculate that Carey thought President Obama was stalking her. As The Daily Caller’s Jim Treacher noted Friday, this is “probably because she saw his face wherever she went. Just like the rest of us.”

Slate: “Revenge Porn” is a crime of control, like stalking

Slate has an excellent piece on “revenge porn” as an act of stalking.

Revenge porn is, as I blogged earlier, very similar to the crime of acid-throwing. It is essentially a crime of force and aggression. Someone wishes to control a woman’s behavior or “punish” her for leaving them.

In other cases, someone wants her to say nothing and uses some information to threaten her to shut up (blackmail) or to do something other than what she wants (coercion):

“There’s a growing body of evidence showing that the key to battling domestic abuse is to get into the assailant’s head, figure out what motivates his behavior, and tailor the legal response accordingly. Even though revenge porn website purveyor Hunter Moore may pretend the motivation is nothing but an opportunity “to look at naked girls all day,” in reality, the act of uploading a nudie picture to punish a woman for leaving you is less an erotic act and closer to the criminal behavior of stalking. Despite the word porn, it’s clear the point is to humiliate and dominate and to send the message to the victim that she is not allowed to leave you just because she wants to. With that in mind, we should amend stalking and other anti-harassment legislation to reflect our new digital lives. Just because the abusive acts are happening in “virtual” spaces doesn’t mean the terror of being stalked and harassed by a man who thinks that he has a right to punish you is any less terrifying. Our laws need to reflect this new reality.”

I can’t tell you how happy I am to read about the new legislation. It is surely inadequate but a step in the right direction. I have signed Ms. Jacob’s petition, and I urge any reader who can to do so.

My life from about 2008 onward has been overshadowed by cyber-stalking, electronic snooping, covert threats via the internet, some delivered in the most sophisticated and untraceable fashion.

[Added: I should make it clear that my case had nothing to do with “revenge porn” but involved hacking into personal emails and then deliberately falsifying the content  to threaten me.  But the principle is the same and tackling the issue led me to understand just how difficult it is to enforce existing laws with regard to cyber-harassment. The motives of my harassers were related to professional concerns, not personal. But the techniques and the goal of coercion/infliction of distress were the same.]

A conspiracy too far?

1. I made the blog post about Heleen Mees private. I think my thesis is not wrong…..but there were things I’d like to research more before putting then out in public.  Or  maybe not.

It might be a conspiracy too far…

2.  I want to note some things that have happened to me this year.

Not all the things that have happened, but a few of them.  I have to write about them in a somewhat veiled way, so I don’t give away too much, but at the same time, I want a public record.

Someone has been trying to send things my way, either to identify my exact physical location or to set me up in some way. I don’t think I am being paranoid.

A couple of “customers” who came my way gave me a bad feeling almost instantly. They turned out to have backgrounds in the military or government, related to telecommunications. One had a connection to intelligence. They were working in private business though. Both were too insistent to do business.  One made many peculiar statements, as if he wanted to entice me to agree with him. He had a cell phone with him. You can record with those things, you know. I said nothing much of anything.

Someone masqueraded as being from the government.

Another person trespassed on my property, with a plausible excuse at the time. Later, I had second thoughts about him. After that, I found certain settings on my computer had been changed, whether accidentally, or by this person, I can’t say.

Certain comments on my blog make me suspect that some people are still keeping an eye on me via phone and computer.

That is another reason I made the Heleen Mees post private. Maybe I crossed the line there a bit.

Remember this guy? Mark Lombardi.

He connected dots…literally. He chronicled BCCI, the Bush-Bin Laden connection in 1999. The next year he was dead, apparently a “suicide.” The FBI photographed his work after his death….

Uri Dowbenko on Mark Lombardi:

Artist Mark Lombardi (1951-2000), whose business card ironically read “Death Defying Acts of Art and Conspiracy,” was found dead in his studio, officially declared a suicide in the police report. Or as government whistleblower Al Martin, author of “The Conspirators: Secrets of an Iran Contra Insider” (http://www.almartinraw.com) says, “The guy put together one chart too many.”

Martin was retained by attorney Frank Rubino, defense counsel for Panamanian strongman Antonio Noriega, to produce a chart for the courtroom, which would explain the complex relationships between individuals and offshore companies, etc. The 5’ x 9’ chart was topped off by a color photo of former president George Herbert Walker Bush and Antonio Noriega embracing one another, both giving a victory sign to the camera. It should be noted that US troops under George Bush invaded Panama, then hijacked Noriega to Florida, where he was convicted of drug charges. Noriega is still in prison to this day.

“When they set up this chart in the courtroom, the judge said, what’s that? We had Bush connected to this drug operation,” recalls Martin.

Martin says that later CIA operative Frank Snepp joined the defense team (Rubino himself was a former CIA agent) and gave daily reports to George Bush Sr. on how the trial against Noriega was proceeding. Martin says he overheard him on the phone talking to Bush in Rubino’s office.

“I was real naive,” says Martin about his participation in the Noriega trial. “I made the assumption that this is what they wanted” — to have a flow chart of personnel, covert operations, as well as banks and other front companies and how the schemes actually worked. Martin notes that they didn’t really expect him to use the real names of people and front companies

“Investigative reporter Dave Lyons from the Miami Herald told me this is what people can understand,” Martin continues. “Graphs and charts help the average person understand complex conspiracies

Martin jokingly concludes, “Charts and graphs — bad. Shredders – good.”

MAKING POLITICALLY INCORRECT ART

In a video of the artist shown at the exhibition, Andy Mann asked Lombard in February 1997, “Do you fear for your life?”

Lombardi didn’t answer the question. Instead he said, “This is a way I can map the political and social terrain in which I live.”

According to his friends, Lombardi told them that he was being followed — just before his death.

Lombardi also described his work as “visualized fields of information [which] started out as corporate diagrams.”

In the end, Mark Lombardi’s contribution to culture is his relentless search for the truth. He was a pioneer in the cartography of realpolitik, mapping international networks of crime which include high-level government officials and shady so-called “business” men.

Lombardi’s legacy is his depiction of geo-political realities, the essence of global criminal conspiracies. No theory, just conspiracy –- conspiracies that continue to haunt the planet into the 21st century. ”

Lila:

I hope I’m not being melodramatic..or self-aggrandizing.. here.  Usually I don’t worry. But then, something happens and for a few days I’m jumpy. This is one of those days.

Just keeping a paper trail going.  I’ve always thought I could get away with more by not climbing up too high on the food-chain, but there are pros and cons to that argument….

Anyway, “ammo” is always useful, whether you’re a little guy or a big one. I keep some “ammo” around (intellectual ammo, to spell that out for any morons looking for trouble-makers here).

Willem Buiter’s Bunny Boiler: Finance Capital Takes Down Its Foes?

Willem Buiter, an eminent economist, has been the victim, so it seems, of a stalker.

Heleen Mees, once on the short list for Secretary of Finance, has been charged, and now jailed, for harassing Mr. Buiter and his family, in the aftermath of an affair between the two.

At first reading, it seems to be a “Fatal Attraction” situation.

You remember the movie?

Attractive, talented, overly intense mid-life career woman has a brief affair with a married man.

Once the hormones have run their course, married man (the palpably lecherous Michael Douglas) wants to move on.

But horny, opera-loving mistress (Glenn Close) wants “happily ever after.”

Love deteriorates swiftly into obsession (her) and revulsion (him).  The obsessed lover turns into a stalker prone to hanging out on her victim’s lawn who, ultimately, cooks his kid’s pet rabbit.

[The term “bunny boiler” has since entered the lexicon as a hip signifier of (a tad too) crazy love.]

The movie managed to appeal to both piety and prurience by mixing a morality fable (see what happens when you cheat on mommy? – frown) with x-rated scenes in elevators (see what happens when you cheat on mommy!! – smile) .

So is Willem Buiter just suffering the aftermath of “crazy love”?

Or is something more going on?

On this blog, I’ve said I think about 85% of everything going on in the major media in the West (and thus all over the globe) is related to intelligence. Most of it is a psyop or propaganda/ disinformation of some kind.  The rest is commercial pumping or gossip intended to overpower more significant news.

How does the Buiter story rate?

Well, it sets off all of my BS-detectors. Here’s why:

1. Buiter is not just any “eminent” economist. He’s the chief economist of mega bank, Citigroup, the home of former Goldman Sachs honcho and Treasury Sec, Robert Rubin.

Buiter has also chaired the World Economic Forum and been a member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee. He was also the chief economist of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

It doesn’t get more “elite” or connected than that.

Buiter has also been a professor at the London School of Economics, at Princeton, and at Yale. He’s written books. He’s voiced his opinions at a Financial Times blog and in articles in the major media.

Given that high profile, you’d think he’d take care of his private life a bit more.

2. Buiter is not just extraordinarily highly placed, he’s also been a vocal critic of the loose monetary polices of the Fed, more specifically, of Sir Alan Greenspan. Here’s a sample:

The Greenspan Fed: A Tragedy of Errors (April 8, 2008):

“………

1. The Greenspan Fed (August 1987 – January 2006) did indeed contribute, through excessively lax monetary policy, to the US housing boom that has now turned to bust

2.The Greenspan-Bernanke put is real. It is an example of an inappropriate monetary policy response to a stock market decline……….

3. Nonetheless, Buiter was no anarcho-capitalist, keen on defending finance capital even in its criminal  manifestations. He was smart enough to see through this brand of market fundamentalism as a ploy whereby finance capital seizes power.

In his now defunct blog at the Financial Times, Maverecon, he has a piece about Greenspan in which he attacks Greenspan’s “naive” belief that capital markets are self-regulating.

Notice, however,  that Buiter apportions only a part of the blame to interest-rate manipulation.

Instead of seeing opportunism and very likely malicious intent in what Greenspan did (it’s considered anti-Semitic conspiracy theory to even suggest malice in the Fed Chairman), he also palms off Greenspan’s misdeeds onto his (Greenspan’s) view of capital markets, ostensibly a “libertarian” view.

Actually, the idea that Greenspan was a  “libertarian” at any time in in his political life (as opposed to his youth) is so much disinformation put out by the mainstream press. As Ayn Rand immediately recognized, Greenspan, after his Objectivist phase, was nothing more or less than a careerist, more interested in power than in principle of any kind.

Despite this error, a large part of  Buiter’s analysis focuses – correctly, in my opinion – on “too big to fail” institutions and the problem of “regulatory capture.”

The latter term has been popularized by regulator William Black, as well as by Deep Capture blog, which supports Black’s approach strongly.

I’ll repeat once more that I support Black’s (and Deep Capture’s) work on regulatory capture and think Austrians do themselves a disservice by dismissing that analysis. Regulatory capture is much more than just froth floating on top of the ocean of interest rate manipulation.

So my point is not to denigrate Buiter’s work, but to say that in effect it constructed a via media between the Austrian critique and mainstream economics, making it very effective.

Yet, though he was mainstream enough to be given a visible platform in the major media,  Buiter spoke truth to power as he saw it. He launched a sustained attack on elite financiers and bankers.

He called them out even by name (links to follow).

In April 2008, he and his wife Anne Sibert, herself an eminent economist at Birbeck College, London, wrote a paper about the Icelandic banking crisis that was presented in July to the government of Iceland. It was considered too market sensitive to be presented publicly and was  kept under wraps until August (W. Buiter, A. Sibert, The Icelandic banking crisis and what to do about it, CEPR Policy Insight No. 26).

Buiter wrote about it in a post called “All in the Family” on his Maverecon blog in March 2009:

My wife, Anne Sibert, has just been appointed an external member of the provisional Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank of Iceland (CBI).  The five-member provisional MPC has three executive or internal members:  CBI Governor Svein Harald Øygard, Deputy Governor Arnór Sighvatsson and Þórarinn G. Pétursson, the CBI´s Chief Economist, and two external experts, Anne Sibert and  Gylfi Zoëga. This Monetary Policy Committee will operate on a provisional basis, with formal appointments for the next five years likely to be made following national elections in Iceland in April.

Iceland’s largest three internationally active banks collapsed during the autumn of 2008; its currency collapsed and tight capital and foreign exchange controls are now in place.  That this was the likely outcome of Iceland’s unsustainable credit boom and banking sector over-expansion had been predicted in a paper by Anne Sibert and myself, written in April 2008 (for fruit flies, a shorter version can be found here).”

Now for my theory of an elite take-down:

It was later that same year,  in the summer of 2008, that a pulchritudinous, multi-lingual ultra-feminist lawyer and doctoral economics student, Heleen Mees, approached the eminent economist for help with her dissertation (I’m not sure in what capacity).

Ms. Mees would have been 39 then. Buiter would have been 58. That is not unheard of, certainly, but are ultra feminist theoreticians prone to taking up with men twenty years older than they are, who are, moreover, married with children? I don’t know. Perhaps they are.

But there is not only a large age gap, there is an ideological gap. Mr. Buiter is a liberal.

Ms. Mees seems to be a radical, who wants quotas for women mandated by the state. She has argued that 35% of top jobs should be set aside for women. She has attacked women who stay at home and do not take up independent careers:

“Women’s contribution to the Dutch economy is around 27%. A raw estimate shows that if women would work a bit more outside the home and thus increase their contribution to the Dutch economy to, say, 35%, this would generate an additional 11% in GDP growth, some €60 billion per year. Women would still be working only half as much as men outside the home. With the extra money women would generate, the government could take care of the aging population and still have billions to spend on education and childcare.” (The Cost of the Gender Gap)

Note: Finance capital is a major supporter of gender set-asides in the work-place.

Radical feminist lawyers I’m sure have jumped into bed with men of differing ideology, but let’s add it to the oddities in this case.

So not only does Ms. Mees approach Mr. Buiter, a prominent and very married man 20 years older than she is, to help her, she boldly dedicates her thesis to him (“For Willem – May You Live in Interesting Times”), even though a lawyer, even a feminist lawyer, would know that her own credibility might suffer if her professional achievements were intertwined with her sexuality.

“Women on Top” – the female empowerment group she founded – was surely not intended to represent the sexual modus operandi of women who reach the top.

Now take a look at Ms. Mees’ thesis, “Changing Fortunes: How China’s Boom Caused the Financial Crisis,” published last year, 2012.

It is an argument that the financial crisis was the result of a savings glut caused by the Chinese.

But when I read an article from 2011, Ms. Mees is definitely blaming loose monetary policy for the financial crisis,

In fact, at least in that article, Ms. Mees blames the financial crisis solely on monetary policy, and dismisses entirely any narrative about the misuse/criminal use of financial instruments and the misbehavior of the rating agencies.

In other words, Ms. Mees, remarkably, for someone of her gender feminist proclivities, seems to be blaming the government solely for the financial crisis and dismissing any criticism of bankers, financiers, and regulatory bodies.

A pure Austrian position from a statist.

Now isn’t that interesting? Whereas Mr. Buiter blames and attacks major financiers and bankers (including Mr. Paulson), in addition to interest rate manipulation, Ms. Mees does not.

She dismisses regulatory capture.

That, as I’ve blogged before, is a hall-mark of the financial establishment, some part of which embraces Austrian theory out of its own self-interest. Ms. Mees, you can be sure, is not blaming the Federal interest rate policy because of any hatred of government.

Even more interesting, Ms. Mees has contributed frequently to the Soros-funded Project Syndicate website…….

Returning to the love-affair, if such it was, we don’t know much so far about its history, but it seems that it was some time in 2010 that Ms. Mees began emailing Mr. Buiter in a harassing fashion.

That would be the year  Mr. Buiter left his bureaucratic posts and became the chief economist of Citigroup.

In 2011, the emailing escalated. From July of 2011, more than a thousand emails were sent to Mr. Buiter, including explicit self-portraits, erotic offers, and even subtle and overt threats to him. It seems that it was fear for his wife and kids, who also got emails, that finally pushed Mr. Buiter to go to the courts and get a restraining order.

One of the emails was a picture of dead birds. “Fatal Attraction” with an added overlay of “The Birds”?

Seems a little “stagey” to me.

And a thousand emails, some with naked women in them, would seem as if someone were trying to entrap Mr. Buiter? That is, if there ever was a “relationship” that was not set up by Ms. Mees in the first place.

Now another oddity: Didn’t Ms. Mees, an attorney and scholar who specialized in gender issues, know she was engaging in criminal behavior? Why didn’t she stop after Mr. Buiter sent her a cease and desist letter in February 2013?  She is, I repeat a 44 year old activist lawyer and PhD economics scholar/teacher at some of the world’s most prominent universities, a polyglot comfortable in 5 languages, including Mandarin, the published author of several influential books, an outspoken feminist, a fit attractive woman with a major media platform.

That is a life of self-discipline that is hard to reconcile with the complete loss of control shown in the emails.

And yet another strange aspect of this strange business is that Ms. Mees, a lawyer and NYU professor, doesn’t have $5000 for bail and needs a legal aid lawyer?

Even if she doesn’t have money herself, doesn’t she have friends and family who can spring for the money? She did move in rather well-educated professional circles.

But what if Ms. Mees wants to go to jail to get maximum mileage from the whole scandal?

That would also be psychologically in keeping with someone who wants to destroy an ex-lover.

But it is also what someone who wanted to get Mr. Buiter for other reasons might do. Keeps the story in the public gaze.

Another thought occurs to me.

If someone wanted to publicly diminish Mr. Buiter, provoking him into asking for a restraining order would make sense. It puts Mees’ raunchy emails into the public domain.

Forcing the situation into the legal realm also and more crucially makes Mr. Buiter’s own private emails a legitimate target for legal discovery.

If someone did “take down” Buiter in retaliation for his criticism of certain big names, there is precedence for it.

Remember what happened to Eliot Spitzer when he started getting too close to some of the financiers/bankers (Hank Greenberg, Hank Paulson) whose misdeeds shaped the financial crisis?

(To Be Continued)

Screw Snowden; Spam The Matrix YOURSELF!

Attrition.org (William Knowles…which coincidentally just happens to be one of the nom-de-plumes of my cyberstalker) has an idea worth a hundred cyberspoo-er-warriors/heroes/titans etc.

Do It Yourself:

“The idea here is that if lots of people add suspicious words to their messages, the world’s intel agencies will be too busy with spurious input that they will have to give up reading it all.

Anyone who has read the source code of my homepage or Prayers Pay will see the list below with some additions here and there, You might want to sprinkle some of these words into your X-headers for a little fun. Most to nearly all of these words have been collected using open sources, (books, online, seminars, conventions, broadcasts, movies, etc…)But I am always looking for more. Mail me if you have any.

William Knowles erehwon-at-c4i.org

Last updated 1.18.98


Waihopai, INFOSEC, Information Security, Information Warfare, IW, IS, Priavacy, Information Terrorism, Terrorism Defensive Information, Defense Information Warfare, Offensive Information, Offensive Information Warfare, National Information Infrastructure, InfoSec, Reno, Compsec, Computer Terrorism, Firewalls, Secure Internet Connections, ISS, Passwords, DefCon V, Hackers, Encryption, Espionage, USDOJ, NSA, CIA, S/Key, SSL, FBI, Secert Service, USSS, Defcon, Military, White House, Undercover, NCCS, Mayfly, PGP, PEM, RSA, Perl-RSA, MSNBC, bet, AOL, AOL TOS, CIS, CBOT, AIMSX, STARLAN, 3B2, BITNET, COSMOS, DATTA, E911, FCIC, HTCIA, IACIS, UT/RUS, JANET, JICC, ReMOB, LEETAC, UTU, VNET, BRLO, BZ, CANSLO, CBNRC, CIDA, JAVA, Active X, Compsec 97, LLC, DERA, Mavricks, Meta-hackers, ^?, Steve Case, Tools, Telex, Military Intelligence, Scully, Flame, Infowar, Bubba, Freeh, Archives, Sundevil, jack, Investigation, ISACA, NCSA, spook words, Verisign, Secure, ASIO, Lebed, ICE, NRO, Lexis-Nexis, NSCT, SCIF, FLiR, Lacrosse, Flashbangs, HRT, DIA, USCOI, CID, BOP, FINCEN, FLETC, NIJ, ACC, AFSPC, BMDO, NAVWAN, NRL, RL, NAVWCWPNS, NSWC, USAFA, AHPCRC, ARPA, LABLINK, USACIL, USCG, NRC, ~, CDC, DOE, FMS, HPCC, NTIS, SEL, USCODE, CISE, SIRC, CIM, ISN, DJC, SGC, UNCPCJ, CFC, DREO, CDA, DRA, SHAPE, SACLANT, BECCA, DCJFTF, HALO, HAHO, FKS, 868, GCHQ, DITSA, SORT, AMEMB, NSG, HIC, EDI, SAS, SBS, UDT, GOE, DOE, GEO, Masuda, Forte, AT, GIGN, Exon Shell, CQB, CONUS, CTU, RCMP, GRU, SASR, GSG-9, 22nd SAS, GEOS, EADA, BBE, STEP, Echelon, Dictionary, MD2, MD4, MDA, MYK, 747,777, 767, MI5, 737, MI6, 757, Kh-11, Shayet-13, SADMS, Spetznaz, Recce, 707, CIO, NOCS, Halcon, Duress, RAID, Psyops, grom, D-11, SERT, VIP, ARC, S.E.T. Team, MP5k, DREC, DEVGRP, DF, DSD, FDM, GRU, LRTS, SIGDEV, NACSI, PSAC, PTT, RFI, SIGDASYS, TDM. SUKLO, SUSLO, TELINT, TEXTA. ELF, LF, MF, VHF, UHF, SHF, SASP, WANK, Colonel, domestic disruption, smuggle, 15kg, nitrate, Pretoria, M-14, enigma, Bletchley Park, Clandestine, nkvd, argus, afsatcom, CQB, NVD, Counter Terrorism Security, Rapid Reaction, Corporate Security, Police, sniper, PPS, ASIS, ASLET, TSCM, Security Consulting, High Security, Security Evaluation, Electronic Surveillance, MI-17, Counterterrorism, spies, eavesdropping, debugging, interception, COCOT, rhost, rhosts, SETA, Amherst, Broadside, Capricorn, Gamma, Gorizont, Guppy, Ionosphere, Mole, Keyhole, Kilderkin, Artichoke, Badger, Cornflower, Daisy, Egret, Iris, Hollyhock, Jasmine, Juile, Vinnell, B.D.M.,Sphinx, Stephanie, Reflection, Spoke, Talent, Trump, FX, FXR, IMF, POCSAG, Covert Video, Intiso, r00t, lock picking, Beyond Hope, csystems, passwd, 2600 Magazine, Competitor, EO, Chan, Alouette,executive, Event Security, Mace, Cap-Stun, stakeout, ninja, ASIS, ISA, EOD, Oscor, Merlin, NTT, SL-1, Rolm, TIE, Tie-fighter, PBX, SLI, NTT, MSCJ, MIT, 69, RIT, Time, MSEE, Cable & Wireless, CSE, Embassy, ETA, Porno, Fax, finks, Fax encryption, white noise, pink noise, CRA, M.P.R.I., top secret, Mossberg, 50BMG, Macintosh Security, Macintosh Internet Security, Macintosh Firewalls, Unix Security, VIP Protection, SIG, sweep, Medco, TRD, TDR, sweeping, TELINT, Audiotel, Harvard, 1080H, SWS, Asset, Satellite imagery, force, Cypherpunks, Coderpunks, TRW, remailers, replay, redheads, RX-7, explicit, FLAME, Pornstars, AVN, Playboy, Anonymous, Sex, chaining, codes, Nuclear, 20, subversives, SLIP, toad, fish, data havens, unix, c, a, b, d, the, Elvis, quiche, DES, 1*, NATIA, NATOA, sneakers, counterintelligence, industrial espionage, PI, TSCI, industrial intelligence, H.N.P., Juiliett Class Submarine, Locks, loch, Ingram Mac-10, sigvoice, ssa, E.O.D., SEMTEX, penrep, racal, OTP, OSS, Blowpipe, CCS, GSA, Kilo Class, squib, primacord, RSP, Becker, Nerd, fangs, Austin, Comirex, GPMG, Speakeasy, humint, GEODSS, SORO, M5, ANC, zone, SBI, DSS, S.A.I.C., Minox, Keyhole, SAR, Rand Corporation, Wackenhutt, EO, Wackendude, mol, Hillal, GGL, CTU, botux, Virii, CCC, Blacklisted 411, Internet Underground, XS4ALL, Retinal Fetish, Fetish, Yobie, CTP, CATO, Phon-e, Chicago Posse, l0ck, spook keywords, PLA, TDYC, W3, CUD, CdC, Weekly World News, Zen, World Domination, Dead, GRU, M72750, Salsa, 7, Blowfish, Gorelick, Glock, Ft. Meade, press-release, Indigo, wire transfer, e-cash, Bubba the Love Sponge, Digicash, zip, SWAT, Ortega, PPP, crypto-anarchy, AT&T, SGI, SUN, MCI, Blacknet, Middleman, KLM, Blackbird, plutonium, Texas, jihad, SDI, Uzi, Fort Meade, supercomputer, bullion, 3, Blackmednet, Propaganda, ABC, Satellite phones, Planet-1, cryptanalysis, nuclear, FBI, Panama, fissionable, Sears Tower, NORAD, Delta Force, SEAL, virtual, Dolch, secure shell, screws, Black-Ops, Area51, SABC, basement, data-haven, black-bag, TEMPSET, Goodwin, rebels, ID, MD5, IDEA, garbage, market, beef, Stego, unclassified, utopia, orthodox, Alica, SHA, Global, gorilla, Bob, Pseudonyms, MITM, Gray Data, VLSI, mega, Leitrim, Yakima, Sugar Grove, Cowboy, Gist, 8182, Gatt, Platform, 1911, Geraldton, UKUSA, veggie, 3848, Morwenstow, Consul, Oratory, Pine Gap, Menwith, Mantis, DSD, BVD, 1984, Flintlock, cybercash, government, hate, speedbump, illuminati, president, freedom, cocaine, $, Roswell, ESN, COS, E.T., credit card, b9, fraud, assasinate, virus, anarchy, rogue, mailbomb, 888, Chelsea, 1997, Whitewater, MOD, York, plutonium, William Gates, clone, BATF, SGDN, Nike, Atlas, Delta, TWA, Kiwi, PGP 2.6.2., PGP 5.0i, PGP 5.1, siliconpimp, Lynch, 414, Face, Pixar, IRIDF, eternity server, Skytel, Yukon, Templeton, LUK, Cohiba, Soros, Standford, niche, 51, H&K, USP, ^, sardine, bank, EUB, USP, PCS, NRO, Red Cell, Glock 26, snuffle, Patel, package, ISI, INR, INS, IRS, GRU, RUOP, GSS, NSP, SRI, Ronco, Armani, BOSS, Chobetsu, FBIS, BND, SISDE, FSB, BfV, IB, froglegs, JITEM, SADF, advise, TUSA, HoHoCon, SISMI, FIS, MSW, Spyderco, UOP, SSCI, NIMA, MOIS, SVR, SIN, advisors, SAP, OAU, PFS, Aladdin, chameleon man, Hutsul, CESID, Bess, rail gun, Peering, 17, 312, NB, CBM, CTP, Sardine, SBIRS, SGDN, ADIU, DEADBEEF, IDP, IDF, Halibut, SONANGOL, Flu, &, Loin, PGP 5.53, EG&G, AIEWS, AMW, WORM, MP5K-SD, 1071, WINGS, cdi, DynCorp, UXO, Ti, THAAD, package, chosen, PRIME, SURVIAC, [Hello to all my friends and fans in domestic surveillance]


Scholar’s discovery reignites controversy over Jesus’ “wife”

Theologian Mark D. Roberts explains why he’s not overwhelmed by new research that has turned up a 4th century fragment that refers to someone named Jesus having a wife. Notice how many of these “fragments” of later centuries keep showing up in revisionist texts. Before this, there was the Secret Gospel of Mark, which was used to argue that Jesus had homosexual relations with Lazarus and other young men who “loved him.”

I’m now waiting for “Fifty Shades of Jesus,” wherein it will be proved, in the style of all those sites promoting Christian porn or Christian BDSM, that Jesus was actually a sado-masochistic cannibal, who invited his followers to eat him and enjoyed his flagellation, torture and killing on the cross. [Note: THIS IS SARCASM]

The disturbing fact is that in an age of multiple-choice tests and zero-sum debates, the ability to place things in context, balance the weight of a piece of evidence against contradictory claims, the ability to study a text on its own terms without projecting onto it the prejudices and obsessions of the contemporary world, has vanished.

No matter how carefully a scholar frames a question, all the nuances are thrown aside when the media gets hold of a piece of information.

Mind you, I wouldn’t be surprised if Jesus was married.  It was a requirement among Jewish rabbis. Perhaps he was married when he was younger and his wife died. Or she herself became a teacher.  Or maybe she was a silent part of his ministry.  Who knows. Even, if against all odds, this new research finds support in the future,  I fail to see how it affects Jesus’ explicit teaching about sexuality. Nor does it alter the judgment of his contemporaries, as recorded in the Gospels, that “there was no sin found in him.”

Since they were looking very very hard for it, I think that’s fairly conclusive just there.

However, knowing that there are many people who have an axe to grind with the traditional Christian teaching that elevates celibacy (which is also elevated in Buddhism and Hinduism), I also know that it isn’t dispassionate scholarship or intellectual curiosity or respectful disagreement that drives these debates. Rather it is political activism that wants to rewrite the people and events of the past into forms more palatable to modern sensibility.  I have advice for them. If  you don’t like what Jesus had to say, don’t read him or follow him or try to follow him. Get a teacher after your own heart.

Dr. Mark D. Roberts:

“Did Jesus have a wife, after all?

Major news outlets, such as the New York Times, are reporting on the discovery of a new document that refers to Jesus’ wife. More precisely, a small fragment from a previously unknown document contains a statement by a character named “Jesus” referring to “my wife.”

Does this give us new historical evidence for the literal marriage of Jesus of Nazareth to some woman, perhaps Mary Magdalene?

Professor Karen King displays the fragment of the so-called Gospel of Jesus’s Wife. Photo from http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/090512_AncientPapyrus_1714_605.jpg

No, says Karen L. King, the scholar who recently revealed the existence of the manuscript fragment in which “Jesus” speaks of “my wife.” In an article to be published in the Harvard Theological Review, King writes:

This is the only extant ancient text which explicitly portrays Jesus as referring to a wife. It does not, however, provide evidence that the historical Jesus was married, given the late date of the fragment and the probable date of original composition only in the second half of the second century.

Near the end of her article, King, with contributions by AnneMarie Luijendijk, reiterates:

Does this fragment constitute evidence that Jesus was married? In our opinion, the late date of the Coptic papyrus (c. fourth century), and even of the possible date of composition in the second half of the second century, argues against its value as evidence for the life of the historical Jesus.

Of course, King’s measured judgment here will do little to stop the coming tidal wave of claims that we now have definitive evidence if not proof that Jesus was actually married. Dan Brown and his spokesman, Sir Leigh Teabing, appear to have been right all along! At least this is what we’ll hear in the days to come.

In fact, as Karen King rightly observes, the discovery and publication of the fragment known as the Gospel of Jesus’s Wife in fact tells us nothing about the first-century man we know as Jesus of Nazareth. If it is genuine, the fragment of the otherwise unknown document will tell us something about the beliefs of people who lived a century or two after Jesus, though what exactly we should conclude on the basis of this small piece of an ancient manuscript is yet to be determined.”

The three qualities of action and the chakras

From Hinduism Today:

“Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, my Gurudeva and founder of Hinduism Today, gave” a succinct description of our divine nature: Deep inside we are perfect this very moment, and we have only to discover and live up to this perfection to be whole. We have taken birth in a physical body to grow and evolve into our divine potential. We are inwardly already one with God. Our religion contains the knowledge of how to realize this oneness and not create unwanted experiences along the way.”

These opposite perspectives on man’s nature–sinner and divinity–were candidly juxtaposed during a 2012 interfaith panel discussion in Midland, Texas, at which I represented Hinduism. The issue arose as clergy from five faiths responded to the question “In your faith, is humanity considered a one family?”

My answer was: “The Hindu belief that gives rise to tolerance of differences in race and nationality is that all of mankind is good; we are all divine beings, souls created by God. Hindus do not accept the concept that some individuals are evil and others are good. Hindus believe that each individual is a soul, a divine being, who is inherently good. Scriptures tell us that each soul is emanated from God, as a spark from a fire, beginning a spiritual journey which eventually leads back to God. All human beings are on this journey, whether they realize it or not.”

The next speaker, Dr. Randel Everett of the Baptist Christian faith, put forth a distinctly different perspective. “The idea of the oneness of humanity–this is where Christianity would differ from some of the religions. We do believe in the oneness of humanity but that the oneness of humanity is that we are a fallen people. We do not believe that we are inherently good. We believe we are inherently selfish and self-centered, and that’s why we need to be rescued or redeemed–that Christ rescues us from the domain of darkness.” (You can view the entire 2-hour interfaith panel discussion here.)

Looking more closely at the Hindu belief that man is not inherently sinful–rather, the essence of man is divine and perfect–a further question arises: “What is the Hindu view of sin?” Gurudeva responds in Dancing with Siva: “Instead of seeing good and evil in the world, we understand the nature of the embodied soul in three interrelated parts: instinctive or physical-emotional; intellectual or mental; and superconscious or spiritual…. When the outer, or lower, instinctive nature dominates, one is prone to anger, fear, greed, jealousy, hatred and backbiting. [Lila: This is tamas guna. I would say fear, envy, and sloth are tamasic. Anger seems rajasic to me.)

When the intellect is prominent, arrogance and analytical thinking preside.

{Lila: Rajas. It also includes greed, ambition).

When the superconscious soul comes forth, the refined qualities are born–compassion, insight, modesty and the others. {Lila: Sattvic).

The animal instincts of the young soul are strong. The intellect, yet to be developed, is nonexistent to control these strong instinctive impulses. When the intellect is developed, the instinctive nature subsides. When the soul unfolds and overshadows the well-developed intellect, this mental harness is loosened and removed.”

This understanding of man’s three-fold nature–instinctive, intellectual and spiritual–explains why people act in ways that are clearly not divine, such as becoming angry and harming others. There is more to man than his essence or inner nature. We also have an outer nature. However, man’s actions, whether beneficial or harmful, sinful or divine, are all expressions of a one energy. That energy finds expression through the chakras, fourteen centers of consciousness within our subtle bodies.

[Lila: seven chakras in front and seven corresponding in the back, I assume]

Many of us have seen the system for water usage at temples in India: a long pipe with faucets along its length from which many people draw water to wash their hands and feet before entering the temple. That’s a nice analogy to energy and the chakras. Our subtle body is like a pipe with fourteen spigots. Water is water; it can come out of any of the spigots. It’s still water. Energy can come out through any of our chakras; it’s still energy.

Energy flowing through the higher chakras expresses the superconscious or spiritual nature. How do we control or direct our energy to keep it flowing through the higher chakras? Gurudeva used to say, “Energy goes where awareness flows.” We control our energies through consistent meditation and devotional activities in the home shrine, chanting, performing puja, attending puja and going to the temple on a regular basis. Listening to and playing refined music and performing traditional dance and other creative arts are also ways of channeling the energies through the higher chakras.

Our regular activities determine how our energy flows. If we are engaged in spiritual pursuits, occasionally we might get up to the chakra of divine love. And hopefully we frequent the chakra of direct cognition, in which we are able to look down on our mind and understand what we like and don’t like about ourselves, and work steadily to change what we don’t. And we get into the chakra of willpower. These are the qualities we tend to manifest if we are engaged in regular spiritual/religious activities.

If we are not elevating the energies, we are just living an ordinary life in the force centers of willpower, reason, memory, maybe fear and occasionally anger. If we see the flow of energy impersonally, then we can control it through the activities we choose to engage in.

I like to say that we have an inner perfection and an outer imperfection. We can take heart in identifying more with the inner perfection, our soul nature, and realize the outer has its problems, which we can work on–and that is the purpose of our life on earth, to work on ourselves, to learn, evolve and ultimately know God. With this attitude, born of the belief in our divinity, we are more detached from our shortcomings and difficulties. It’s just energy flowing through our various chakras, more water flowing through one spigot or another. It is not who we are. We realize that we can control that energy flow. “Which spigot shall I turn on today? How do I want my energy to flow? Which negative habit do I want to improve today?” It all becomes easier to tackle because we look at it in an impersonal way.

The concept of the fourteen chakras can help us put our failings into perspective so that we do not become discouraged by them. Shortcomings, such as occasionally being hurtful toward others, do not at all change the fact that our essence is divine. We can deepen our experience of inner divinity and overcome shortcomings by consistently following the various practices found in the Hindu religion. When we feel good about ourselves, we can more readily identify negative patterns and change them. If we have a negative concept of our self, believing that we are inherently flawed and sinful, we are not in such a good position to advance on the spiritual path. And one thing we can all feel good about is that Hinduism assures us not only that we are not sinners, but that every human being, without exception, is destined to achieve spiritual enlightenment and liberation.”

Claus von Stauffenberg: The Plot Against Hitler

A movie about Operation Valkyrie – the plot to overthrow Hitler, headed by the aristocratic German officer, Claus von Stauffenberg.

This is what real resistance look like.
Compare his character and his actions to the people who claim to be leading resistance today.

I’ll save you the trouble by going down the list.

One won’t make a move without asking you for money which ends up in his family coffers.
Another poses in an evening dress before being arrested for jay-walking.
A third sells t-shirts and mugs to college students.
A fourth plans to vote fascists out of power.
A fifth doesn’t dare name any names.
A sixth identifies them as lizards.
A seventh hides in a mansion, emerging only for photo-ops in night-clubs, to sign books, or discuss movie deals.

I could go on, but you get the picture.

Vedic polytheism reflects infinity better than monotheism?

Update:

I posted this piece because I’m interested in exploring the sources of the need to dominate others and many have located it in religion, specifically, in monotheism.  That is the tenor of the piece below.

However, on second thoughts, I want to add that this doesn’t accurately portray my thoughts on the subject, or the Hindu world view, which is not simply polytheistic, any more than it is monistic.

The Hindu view is best defined as radical pluralism based on dharmic principles.

Contemporary moral relativism or multiculturalism would be unacceptable to Hindus, since dharma categorically forbids certain actions and attitudes.

Because of neo-paganism, many associate polytheism with hedonism or alternative life-styles. But Hindu polytheism is firmly grounded in a traditional way of life and if anything requires a “stricter” and more austere life-style than that allowed by the monotheist.

Drinking, gambling, and eating meat, for example, are traditionally forbidden to Hindus.

ORIGINAL POST

Dr. Vijaya Rajiva argues that Hindu polytheism is a more faithful reflection of the universe’s infinite energy than the “one-godism” of the Abrahamic Middle Eastern faiths.

[I don’t endorse Rajiva’s criticisms of Rajiv Malhotra, whose work I think is extremely effective and does NOT concede the intellectual terrain to his Christian interlocuters, as she contends, see here.]

“The 1008 plus hymns of the Rig Veda are invocations to multiple male and female divine energies, Agni, Indra, Varuna, the Viswa Vedas, Saraswati (invoked 78 times), and they together represent the Vedic comprehension of terrestrial, atmospheric and cosmic powers. At various times, various deities are invoked without the least feeling that only one or two or groups of them are more important than the rest. Agni is invoked as the chief messenger who carries the worshipper’s message to the rest of the pantheon, but there is no rift or rivalry with the other deities in the pantheon.

The Vedic universe’s innumerable deities convey an impression of richness and variety, a deep spirituality absent in the limited monotheistic framework. Historically, the practitioners of a monotheistic faith (chiefly Islam and Christianity) have forced their belief in THEIR one god on peoples of other belief systems. This has been so since the inception of these monotheistic creeds, from the Nicene Council of 325 AD for Christianity, and since the 8th century AD in the case of Islam. In India, this process can be dated from the 7th and 8th centuries onwards and continues to this day through jihad and conversion.

Hindus need to question why the belief in ONE (Abrahamic) god is superior to polytheism or even whether such a belief is necessary. The ONE god is an abstraction. No mortal has either seen or heard this entity. There is only the testimony of other mortal individuals. Above all, Hindus must question WHY this one god of Abraham cannot coexist in peace with other faiths and belief systems? And when this one god is actually only a political weapon of the power wielding it, it has to be rejected without hesitation.

As a system of religious belief per se, the ONE god-ists are searching for an unattainable goal, as argued by French Indologist Alain Danielou in Hindu Polytheism (1964). Contemporary Hindus can use this methodology creatively to start an inquiry into the nature and structure of Hindu spiritual diversity and the limitations of a frantic search for the ONE god, as opposed to the UNITY of God. (The 1984 edition’s first chapter is available on the internet under, Indian Gods: Hindu Polytheism). Danielou himself creatively appropriated the work of Kant.

Briefly, Danielou rebuked those who dogmatically describe God as the ONE:

A supreme cause has to be beyond number, otherwise Number would be the First Cause. But the number one, although it has peculiar properties, is a number like two or three, or ten, or a million. If “God” is one he is not beyond number anymore than if he is two or three or ten or a million. But although a million is not any nearer to infinity than one or two or ten, it seems to be so from the limited point of view of our perceptions. And we may be nearer to a mental representation of divinity when we consider an immense number of different gods than when we try to stress their unity, for the number one is in a way the number furthest remove from infinity (Hindu Polytheism, Chapter one, p.7)”.

Fr. Bede Griffiths The Rig Veda celebrates these gods and goddesses and invokes them in profound Yagnas (ritual prayers). It is relatively easy for the determined non-Hindu with philosophical training to work his/her way into the profound philosophical speculations of Vedanta and even try to subvert them to his/her purposes by the process known as Inculturation. Bede Griffiths, after a prolonged study of Vedanta, eventually returned to the Christian Trinity. But the Vedic rituals cannot be so subverted; this is also the formidable obstacle faced by Islamic scholars. (See my article on Bede Griffiths, ‘Inculturation: The Frank Morales Jesus videos’)

The oral ritual tradition of the four Vedas may seem to be ‘regional’ and has been so dismissed in the past, as pointed out by American Vedantin Dr. David Frawley (aka Vamadeva Shastri) in his BIRD lecture of 24 March 2012. Dr. Frawley says that the universalism of Vedanta is gaining recognition in today’s world. But on the other hand, as the present writer has been stressing, it can be subverted owing to the nature of philosophical speculation, whereas the authenticity of Vedic mantras (and mudras) remains immutable.

Contemporary Hindus, therefore, must pay special attention to the preservation of this aspect of our Vedic heritage. – Vijayvaani, 4 April 2012

<

Johnny Cash: When The Man Comes Around

When The Man Comes Around

– Johnny Cash

And I heard, as it were, the noise of thunder:
One of the four beasts saying: “Come and see.” And I saw.
And behold, a white horse.

There’s a man goin’ ’round takin’ names.
An’ he decides who to free and who to blame.
Everybody won’t be treated all the same.
There’ll be a golden ladder reaching down.
When the man comes around.

The hairs on your arm will stand up.
At the terror in each sip and in each sup.
For you partake of that last offered cup,
Or disappear into the potter’s ground.
When the man comes around.

Hear the trumpets, hear the pipers.
One hundred million angels singin’.
Multitudes are marching to the big kettle drum.
Voices callin’, voices cryin’.
Some are born an’ some are dyin’.
It’s Alpha’s and Omega’s Kingdom come.

And the whirlwind is in the thorn tree.
The virgins are all trimming their wicks.
The whirlwind is in the thorn tree.
It’s hard for thee to kick against the pricks.

Till Armageddon, no Shalam, no Shalom.
Then the father hen will call his chickens home.
The wise men will bow down before the throne.
And at his feet they’ll cast their golden crown.
When the man comes around.

Whoever is unjust, let him be unjust still.
Whoever is righteous, let him be righteous still.
Whoever is filthy, let him be filthy still.

Listen to the words long written down, When the man comes around.

Hear the trumpets, hear the pipers.
One hundred million angels singin’.
Multitudes are marchin’ to the big kettle drum.
Voices callin’, voices cryin’.
Some are born an’ some are dyin’.
It’s Alpha’s and Omega’s Kingdom come.

And the whirlwind is in the thorn tree.
The virgins are all trimming their wicks.
The whirlwind is in the thorn tree.
It’s hard for thee to kick against the pricks.

In measured hundredweight and penny pound.
When the man comes around.

And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts,
And I looked and behold: a pale horse.
And his name, that sat on him, was Death.
And Hell followed with him.