Re: Mind's Eye Re: The Truth and Nothing But...

Yes Rigsy Gore Vidal passing leaves a great vacancy open ,,  where else will we get great lines like...
"The United States of Amnesia"
Allan

On Aug 1, 2012 1:50 PM, "rigsy03" <rigsy03@yahoo.com> wrote:
Sport is a tamer form of war, isn't it? Wrong Bond for me- but one
wonders how Sean would have handled that stunt. Am not keeping track
of the Olympic Sinophobia- really, the editor-zingers are pathetic
delivering their soundbites.

Ah, sadness. Gore Vidal has died- age 86. Another approach to history
is silenced.

Haven't read 50 Shades. Should I? :-)

Must get to a cuke today- subcs. active. Will make gazpacho and a cold
cuke-yogurt to bide the heat.

Have my own take on the Opium Wars and the put down of the Boxer
Rebellion- pure opportunist trade there. Merchants cannot stand
indifference. Plus the decline of the Dutch. Oh well...

On Jul 31, 9:33 am, archytas <nwte...@gmail.com> wrote:
> There is a point at which one has to accept that celebrating history
> as truth would be extremely difficult in public events like the
> Olympics.  A re-enactment of, say, the joint action of British,
> French, German, American, Russian and Japanese navies putting down the
> Boxer revolution in China (1902 ish) is probably something to leave
> behind at such moments.  The Queen leaping out of a plane and arriving
> by parachute with James Bond is at least obvious fantasy.  At least we
> were spared, as in Fifty Shades of Grey mode, the jump as some form of
> bondage sex.  Sport is rather tiresome - how long before the prone
> full-bore is advertised in the obvious innuendo?
>
> On Jul 31, 1:19 pm, rigsy03 <rigs...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > True. The truth can hurt- maybe that's why we avoid it- or try to. And
> > it takes time/maturity/experience to weigh and judge facts. The best I
> > can do is get back to those imaginary scales I try to manage- weighing
> > the good against the bad- and hoping they will balance and bring me
> > some kind of acceptance.
>
> > On Jul 28, 10:10 pm, Vam <atewari2...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Things might be in books, papers, media, or other people's minds.
> > > Yet, it is YOU who is central to everything, including facts you are aware
> > > of.
> > > Facts are truths of the moment, as it is in your insight and conviction.
>
> > > Even whether a 'story' is complete, or not, is a matter of your perception.
> > > Of course, it depends upon how much details you've gone on to acquire
> > > and place in your awareness, analysed it and obtained a consistent insight
> > > with a critical eye.
>
> > > The elephant in the room can be known for what it is.
> > > But it takes focus, the opposite of dissipation,
> > > and hell of a lot of going through.
>
> > > We've generally lost the motivation for going after facts
> > > and the art of going through !
>
> > > On Sunday, July 29, 2012 1:49:51 AM UTC+5:30, rigsy03 wrote:
>
> > > > Was thinking more about Vam's statement about facts. Well, who
> > > > presents the facts and how are they edited or censored? Many were
> > > > content to think of American Indians as Tonto(Lone Ranger) until "Bury
> > > > My Heart at Wounded Knee" by Dee Brown came out. When facts have a
> > > > political, religious or social purpose, you can bet you are not
> > > > getting the complete story. Same with families who whitewash family
> > > > history. No one who has read British history believes the Olympic
> > > > opening ceremony selections are the full story- that's entertainment-
> > > > otherwise fisticuffs and tears.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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