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A World in Denial of What It Knows
COULD there be a single phrase that explains the woes of our time, this dismal age of political miscalculations and deceptions, of reckless and disastrous wars, of financial boom and bust and downright criminality? Maybe there is, and we owe it to Fintan O’Toole. That trenchant Irish commentator is a biographer and theater critic, and a critic also of his country’s crimes and follies, as in his gripping if horrifying book, “Ship of Fools: How Stupidity and Corruption Sank the Celtic Tiger.”
He reminds us of the famous if gnomic saying by Donald H. Rumsfeld, then the United States secretary of defense, that “There are known knowns... there are known unknowns ... there are also unknown unknowns.” But the Irish problem, says Mr. O’Toole, was none of the above. It was “unknown knowns.”
What he means is something different from denial, or evasion, irrational exuberance or excess optimism. Unknown knowns were things that were not at all inevitable, and were easily knowable, or indeed known, but which people chose to “unknow.”
Unknown knowns were everywhere, from Wall Street to Brussels, from the Pentagon to Penn State. Ireland merely happened to offer an extreme case, where “everyone knew.” They just chose to forget that they knew — about the way that Irish banks ran wild, how easy credit fueled a monstrous explosion of property prices and speculative house-building. Bertie Ahern, the Irish prime minister at the time of the rapid economic growth, merely boasted, “The boom is getting boomier,” preferring to unknow the truth that booms always go bust.
Beginning in 2008, the skies were lighted up by financial conflagrations, from Lehman Brothers to the Royal Bank of Scotland. These were dramatic enough — but were they unforeseeable or unknowable? What kind of willful obtusity ever suggested that subprime mortgages were a good idea? An intelligent child would have known that there is no good time to lend money to people who obviously can never repay it.
Or recall how we were taken into the Iraq war. That was the origin of Mr. Rumsfeld’s curious words 10 years ago. When he murmured about “things we do not know we don’t know,” he was touching on the unconventional weapons that Saddam Hussein might — or might not — have held.
In a sense, Mr. Rumsfeld was more right than he realized. Those of us who opposed the war may be asked to this day whether we knew what weaponry Iraq possessed, to which the answer is that of course we didn’t. Nor, as it transpired, did President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Mr. Rumsfeld or Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain.
But that was the wrong question. It should have been not “what weaponry does Saddam Hussein possess?” but “Is Saddam Hussein’s weaponry, whatever it may be, the real reason for the war, or is it a pretext confected after a decision for war had already been taken?” The answer to that was obvious and could have been known to all, but too many people chose to unknow it.
Then there was another unknown known: the likely consequences of an invasion. Shortly before it began, Mr. Blair met President Jacques Chirac of France. As well as reiterating his opposition to the coming war, Mr. Chirac offered the prime minister specific warnings. Mr. Blair and his friends in Washington seemed to think that they would be welcomed with open arms in Iraq, Mr. Chirac said, but that they shouldn’t count on it. It was foolish to think of creating a modern democracy in an artificial country with a divided society like Iraq. And Mr. Chirac asked whether Mr. Blair realized that, by invading Iraq, they might yet precipitate a civil war.
This has been described in a BBC documentary by someone present, Sir Stephen Wall, a Foreign Office man then attached to Downing Street. As the British team was leaving, Mr. Blair turned and said, “Poor old Jacques, he just doesn’t get it,” to which Sir Stephen now adds dryly that he turned out to get it rather better than “we” did.
At that time, Mr. Chirac was reviled in America, and his career has just ended in disgrace, with a court conviction for embezzlement. But who was right about Iraq? All the calamities that followed the invasion were not only foreseeable, they were foreseen. And yet for Mr. Blair, as well as Washington, they were unknown knowns.
One more such, bitter as it is to say so when many people have been ruined, was the Bernard L. Madoff fraud. For years, his investors gratefully and unquestioningly accepted returns that were strictly incredible. Loud warning voices sounded. Harry Markopolos, a former investment officer, exhaustively back-analyzed Mr. Madoff’s supposed figures by computer. He spent nearly nine years repeatedly trying to explain to the Securities and Exchange Commission that these figures were not merely incredible but mathematically impossible. And still the S.E.C. chose to unknow it. Leos Janacek wrote a harrowing opera called “The Makropulos Affair”; Peter Gelb at the Met should commission someone to write “The Markopolos Affair” as a fable for our times.
In a very different kind of scandal, not everyone at Penn State, and certainly not every fan, knew what had happened in the showers. But quite enough was known by people who could have acted. They chose instead to unknow. And so to another classic unknown known, the euro. The recent summit in Brussels turned into a silly melodrama, with a British prime minister, David Cameron this time, once more playing the pantomime villain. But Mr. Cameron was right, if for the wrong reasons, to oppose the European Union’s latest frantic (and doomed) plan to prop up the euro.
If truth be told (but it so rarely is!), the euro cannot work and could never have worked. That is, a single currency embracing countries as diverse in social culture, productivity, work practices and taxation as Germany and Greece, or the Netherlands and Portugal, is economically impossible without much closer fiscal and financial union — which is politically impossible. Anyone could have known that at the time the euro was introduced, but for the rulers of the European Union it was their very own unknown known.
“The Cloud of Unknowing” is a medieval classic of mystical writing, and unknowing still hangs over us. It will be a happier new year if we can dispel some of that cloud, try to unknow less, and know a little more.
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71 Comments so far
Show AllThe biggest unknown known of all? Global warming. The "Major Powers" have chosen to unknow the reality of this and blithely push forward toward a massive global catastrophe.
Good point. I was very surprised to read this article in todays NYT and find that it made no mention of the most obvious 'unknown known' of them all: climate change. However, NYT redeemed itself on its editorial page with a prominant mention of how disastrous this year has been for weather disasters and how Republicans have blocked even the most reasonable changes to NOAA to help accommodate the increased public demands for more information on how AGW will be affecting their businesses and locales in the near future. Ya thunk Joplin, Missouri coulda used information like that a year ago? How about Central Texas? Tea Party Republicans are telling increasingly panicked Americans to pound sand.
Global Warming is the biggest KNOWN threat to the planet, animal life -- and
humans.
Shall we continue to pretend that it's an "unknown"?
We've KNOWN for more than 125 years the damage that capitalism and industrial
revolution have done to nature.
The glaciers began melting in the 1940's as a result of the industrial revolution and
build up for WWII.
We've KNOWN for more than 50 years the damage that burning fossil fuels was
doing to nature/planet.
And it is a KNOWN now -- except among the public.
Our journalists and corporate press have KNOWN -- the NY Times has KNOWN --
all of our scientists have KNOWN and tried to tell us in their 'WARNING TO HUMANITY" which was met with silence by the corporate press.
The most important assignment of capitalists and oil industry and governments
under their control over the last 50 years has been to ensure that the truth of
Global Warming was kept from the public.
Until it was too late ... !!
Global Warming is well KNOWN among those put in place to stop the discussions
of it -- to stop any actions to cure it because all such actions would impact negatively
on capitalists and elites -- on control of our natural resources by elites.
Cultural changes would have also negatively effected organized patriarchal
religion which gave license to "Manifest Destiny" and "Man's Dominion Over Nature"
and the few who profited from this arrogant and immoral permission to destroy
nature and animal life -- to exploit everything on the planet.
Let's not pretend we did not KNOW!!
Global warming has become a distraction in that there are reasonable people with a grounding in reality who validly dispute on scientific grounds whether man is truly responsible for climate change.
What is beyond dispute is the pollution and environmental destruction caused by our extraordinary effort to extract every last BTU of hydrocarbons from the earth's crust. We are well past "Peak Oil" in reference to "conventional oil," oil that is easily extractable by merely poking a hole in the ground and pumping it out, cheap oil. That we have discovered far more unconventional hydrocarbon sources in the form of tar sands, deep sea deposits and shale gas does not disprove peak oil theories. It confirms them. These sources are far more expensive to tap. They are expensive both in direct expense to the corporations extracting them and for the externalities their extraction creates, for which those corporations are granted limited liability. Peak oil theorists did expect a rapid decline in energy consumption on the back side of the curve. They may have been wrong about that and a feared rapid collapse of industrial society. They were not wrong about the decline of conventional sources for oil, higher oil prices contributing to economic stagnation or resource wars.
If we would focus on the obvious environmental destruction we are directly causing, we would be better able to convince skeptics of the need to focus on renewable sources such as solar and wind. Focus on ignitable tap water, massive oil spills and nuclear disasters. That's where you'll get some traction.
at least from a scientific sense, there is no way of knowing anything absolutely. the uncertainty principle has allowed for doubts to persist for just about everything. faith or religious conviction, never needing scientific proofs, probably has had more impact on the fate of the world.
moral and empathetic feeling, in addition to knowledge of the way the world works, when in balance, gives us the best chance of coexisting as a species and with all others - to say nothing of treating the planet with the utmost respect.
I think you are on the right track, starkraving. I would say a combination of intutive knowing, which is not reductionist, and knowledge gained through experience and observation and reflection.
Peace.
"at least from a scientific sense, there is no way of knowing anything absolutely. the uncertainty principle has allowed for doubts to persist for just about everything" misapprehends the uncertainty principle. The uncertainty principle applies to simultaneous measurements of pairs of properties of elementary particles. We can be quite certain that if a Mack truck driving at 50 miles / hour collides with a boy on a bicycle it will be the boy and the bicycle that will be damaged. We can also be quite certain that the ability of NASA to get the Apollo 13 lander back to earth safely was the product of very smart people working with Newton's laws of motion, not -- fortunately for the astronauts and their families -- with "faith or religious conviction" -- and without any effect from the uncertainty principle.
this was a general reference to scientific "explanations" of the world which will always have gaps - things for which no explanation is ever found or which when they are found, lead to other questions.
for all the appropriate deference to scientific discovery and the ways in which our quality of life has improved over the ages due to it's emphasis in worthy technological developments, there also can be little doubt as to its misdirected application.
...on the other hand, one could say that Rummy was applying Heisenberg the way creationists apply Darwin (survival of the fittest being used as an ersatz rationale to employ violence against 'other' who might be in the way of something one wants). There is perhaps an ' known unknown' trend here that is appropriate to the theme of the article.
My understanding , and this is flagrantly generalized - the more you know about an electron's position the less you know about its energy - and the opposite is true as well. Personally, i think it has something to do with one's perspective. However,
I also had the belief that the very instruments that are utilized in the measurement of said electrons, ie. the use of photons, itself changes the state of the electron being observed. On a personal note, i have found that microcosm and macrocosm tend to reflect each other. And i am not alone in this, i know - as can be beautifully understood through fractal geometry.
The 'scientific method' has become its own religion in my opinion. The idea of any human being fully 'objective' about anything is as absurd as any religious dogma. All assumptions, prior beliefs and blindspots are brought to the table as long as the 'scientist' is human. Even what our 'science' chooses to investigate is highly selective and reflects the prevailing cultural biases, attitudes and interests.
peace.
---"also had the belief that the very instruments that are utilized in the measurement of said electrons, ie. the use of photons, itself changes the state of the electron being observed."---
Actually, that is a common misunderstanding. Quantum uncertainty is _not_ a consequence of ability to measure (aleatoric) nor is it of an epistemic nature (known-knowns/unknowns). it is an actual property of things when you get to very small scales. When you get down to the atomic level, either momentum or position - i.e. existence itself - is "smeared" out as a probability density-function in accordance with the Shroedinger equation. Or, that is, it behaves in such a manner until an observation is made, then the particle (which simultaneously also follows wave mechanics) "snaps" to a certain momentum or position within the probability function.
The following experiment shows this. Send a monochromatic light source (photons) through a very closely spaced pair of slits - even at levels so low that only one photon is being being shot at the slits at a time, and per wave-particle duality, you get an interference pattern on a screen beyond the slits. This means that the particle is literally passing through both slits at once and interfering with itself to produce the pattern. So, much for it simply being a matter of an imperfect observing method, becasue the diffraction slits are completely passive. But it get weirder. Aim a sensitive photon detector at one of the slits, and the diffraction stops, and instead you get a pattern of photons hitting the target in the manner of marbles thrown, hit of miss, through the slots. The photons, electrons, neutrons etc. "know" when they are being looked at and, like a disobeying child cease this smeared out wave/particle behavior.
Then there is quantum non-locality, where interacting particles get "entangled' by a conservation rule, will "know" the state of the other particle even if they wander billions of light years apart. In other words, at the quantum level, time and space is "optional". The "arrow of time" also does not exist at the quantum level. interactions can and do go both forward and backward in time.
No wonder physicists like Nils Bohr and Oppeheimer took up an interest in eastern mysticism (while still remaining rigorous scientists, of course).
Even electrons react to consiousness. The Observer is always part of the experiment.
Absolutely! consciousness is energy.
Thank you for an elucidation that is beyond my own logical understanding - yet makes deep intuitive sense.
The main reason the 'Celtic Tiger' went down was the government imposing austerity on the population for the banking mistakes of the financial industry.
Somehow, this quite British author, slyly inserts a bit of Irish racism into this article. Typical and an excellent example of the unknown knowing of bigotry.
The very British author first quotes a term from a very Irish critic discussing a specific -- in time and place - state of affairs in Ireland. Then the British author, after praising the utility of the Irish critic's term, applies the term to a number of non-Irish phenomena. Neither the Irish critic nor the British author quoting the Irish critic is claiming any general truth about "the Irish" or suggesting that the term applies only to things Irish. Where is the "Irish racism" here?
The Irish and the British are cousin populations with a very shared history and a crossed over mixed pedigree, anything and everything the Irish did in the 90s and 00s, Britain did merrily too, the cultures are indistinguishable apart from flags and country boundaries (when you take away top level nationalism).
"He reminds us of the famous if gnomic saying by Donald H. Rumsfeld, then the United States secretary of defense, that 'There are known knowns... there are known unknowns ... there are also unknown unknowns.' ”
This idea is one that is expounded by and may well have originated from Nassim Nicholas Taleb which he details in his book "The Black Swan".
Sh*t, did he really say that? No wonder the Shrub never made any sense. Ha!
"The book counsels a young student to seek God, not through knowledge and intellection (faculty of the human mind), but through intense contemplation, motivated by love, and stripped of all thought. This is brought about by putting all thoughts and desires under a "cloud of forgetting", and thereby piercing God's cloud of unknowing with a "dart of longing love" from the heart. This form of contemplation is not directed by the intellect, but involves spiritual union with God through the heart:"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cloud_of_Unknowing
----------------
Yes Sir - How to produce and maintain hell on Earth, or !!!
How to destroy a planet
Brought to you by yours truly - Fearful Mankind
Manysummits - furious in Calgary
=========
I suppose one could call the 'unknown knowns' the choice to not use one's own mind. I think the term 'mindlessness' may be , for me at least, a more accessible way of saying what i believe is being said here.
I'm waiting for the next book: How Corruption, Denial, and Stupidity Sank the Human Race. Might be a chapter about how with 40+% of Americans waiting to choose a republican candidate and 40+% going to chose (republican) Obama, that being proof of"democracy" being a sick joke. Might be a chapter about how congress, the MIC, The MSM, FBI, TSA, etc. weekly making this a more fascist totalitarian state, really proves we are a great freedom-loving nation. Might be a chapter about giving a score for which nations are the biggest users and sellers of weapons of mass destruction. Might be a chapter about how capitalism is always so much better than socialism. Might be a chapter about how "the people" will believe any lie if it's told often enough. Might be a chapter about how the 8 billion people on this planet are here 95+% because of "cheap" oil and that maybe isn't a problem that is going to go away by the ignoble actions of corrupt, lying politicians - ain't hardly any other kind, my friend.
The nature of reality is that it gets in the way of functioning, so we have evolved religion and other forms of denial. The nature of denial is that it prevents us from solving or even seeing critical problems.
Look around, it's all going away; because it's all based on cheap energy, and because lies, greed, corruption, and denial win for a while.......
George E
ps google George Carlin + social security
Boston MA
“Unknown knowns were things that were not at all inevitable, and were easily knowable, or indeed known, but which people chose to 'unknow'.”
________________________
The treacherous and perilous aspects of “unknown unknowns” were briefly touched upon in Tom Engelhardt's "The Unknown Unknowns of War American-Style" last August.*
To perhaps belabor an important point Wheatcroft makes in this article, "willful obtusity" typically seems to be a matter of taking an epistemological (perceptual) or intellectual (analytical) path of lesser, if not least, resistance because it is more congenial and emotionally congruent.
I think of it as cognitive dissonance's employing a false "Occam's Razor", a pathological perversion for accepting the least troubling version, or interpretation, of reality as the simplest and most sensible truth of the matter. This results in a safe, smug, and supercilious habit of denying or interpreting "dots" of salient and troublesome truth so as to explain away connections instead of making them.
Thus, the abundance of ready-made, convenient, pre-fabricated memes and innocuous, rationalized explanations available for Serious, Sensible, and typically conformist, authoritarian or authoritarian-following minds to seize upon and propound.
There's a surrealistic universe of groupthink-friendly comic-book characters floating out there for the taking in the cultural ether: Lone Nuts, Psychopathic Terrorists, Utterly Evil Mad Foreign Dictators, Whiz-Kid Technocrats...
And speaking of the Madoff scandal, I just happened to recently channel-surf into a rerun of the 2009 "Frontline" episode, "The Madoff Affair".
Check out the interview with hedge fund founder Sandra Manzke** for a perfect illustration of a person practiced and adept at self-serving "unknowing". Just watch that impassive, controlled mien and those almost-unblinking dead eyes
It's exactly the kind of face that could say, "Oh, we saw the smoke rising from the camps every day... but we didn't know what it was."
________________________
* http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/05-3
** http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86SjfBEDHF4
This post is nothing short of brilliant, O.S. and that is not a term i use very often.
Yes, the link to Occam's Razor is indeed creative and brilliant.
The political culture of 'plausible deniability'.
OS...Excellent post and thanks for the links! Your astute appraisal of Sandra Manzke and her face is right on.
and remember Madoff had 200 people working for him in his 'company', it was not just one rogue trader/broker, but two hundred people working/stealing for three decades.
http://investment-advisors.findthebest.com/q/30775/299/How-many-employees-does-Bernard-L-Madoff-Investment-Securities-Llc-have
Most likely most of them are working at other companies now doing what they know best...
Robert W. Howarth of Cornell University tells us shale gas well fracking and the natural gas industry vent enough fugitive methane to tip the planet into runaway over-heating. We will continue to unknow this.
Igor Semiletov has found a ten-fold increase in sea-bed methane emissions in the vast shallow Siberian sea. This will remain unknown.
The clear and present magnitude of danger these two items represent will remain unknown. We are too stupid to live.
"We are too stupid to live." (Robert Callaghan)
You know, I was turning this over in my mind just today.
If we manage to extinct ourselves - it will in fact be true.
I've never seen anything like this - this NOW.
We are all in unknown territory - dangerous, but strangely exciting.
Is the tired old world finally about to give way to the new?
Manysummits
=======
"Those of us who opposed the war may be asked to this day whether we knew what weaponry Iraq possessed, to which the answer is that of course we didn’t. Nor, as it transpired, did President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Mr. Rumsfeld or Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain."
Although I agree that most of those who opposed the (illegal occupation) would indeed never have known what weapons Iraq possessed, it would be downright irresponsible to overlook the FACT that President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Mr. Rumsfeld and Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain ALL knew what weapons the Iraqi dictatorship possessed because they sold those weapons to Iraq!!
A number of people who were in a position to know have argued that Blair and Bush knew full well that Iraq did not have "weapons of mass destruction", biochemical or nuclear. I found and find those who made that argument credible. But in any event, knowing that Iraq DID have the weapons that the US and UK sold them is not a means by which to know whether Iraq also had any other weapons.
Yeah, denial. Obama signed NDAA yesterday and CD ignores it.
Just a trivial matter, the horse race is more substantive.
Better yet, the Occupiers took back Zuccutti Park last night. There were massive arrests, mostly women, journalists, people with phones/cameras and even Lawyers Guild observers. It was quite the show! There's a complete media block out on all of it. CD is just following the pack.
Maddening, isn't it? I've tried sparking conversations with friends and family about NDAA, Socialist, and all I've received in return are blank stares. No one (that I know personally) even knows what I'm talking about. Worse, when I try to explain it to them, or recommend material for them to read other than the abysmal L. A. Times or, even worse, the dreadful San Diego Union Tribune, they don't seem to care. By the way, these are all "liberal" Obama/Democratic Party supporters who would have been apoplectic with outrage if NDAA had been signed into law by George Bush.... In fact, other than trashing the Republican presidential candidates as "dangerous" and "crazy", I haven't heard a peep of concern out of these people since Obama was elected.
I agree with you, socialist.
So I'm not excusing, much less justifying this heinous omission when I point out that we'll probably see this story popping up in CD "News", "Views", and perhaps even "Further..." after the holiday, when business as usual resumes.
Again, that's not intended to blunt or deflect your pointed question about CD's editorial priorities. Just because Obama's signing this legislative abomination was a foregone conclusion doesn't make the actual misdeed less noteworthy.
I wonder what aspects of 9/11 the American people have decided to "unknow"
Gravity for starters
Those who still believe in a "conspiracy-free America" are ignoring all
common sense --
especially when it comes to 9/11.
As the conspriacies pile up -- from coup on JFK and taking of our people's
government -- to 9/11 -- and suppression of the truth of Global Warming --
it becomes easier and easier to see.
Unless you're still watching "I Love Lucy"and putting the Xmas tree up/down while ignoring all that your inner voice,conscience and common sense are trying to tell you to pay attention to.
Voices of the "experts" delivered on the TV screen are not to be ignored!!
Interesting comments. This New Years, for me, is a very existential moment as I see so many wishing to toss the old year (and all its problems) away, and rush with optimism towards the "fresh slate" signified (at least in media circles) by the New Year. There's that not-knowing aspect applied to the true state of U.S. politics, our nation's collapsing economy, and worse still, the ecological nightmares cascading towards us at silent, breakneck speed... as the leaders play Nero while the Amerikan imperium of the 21st century Rome symbolically burns.
I think it stems from the fear of our own mortality, the reality of death that most persons submerge. On a subtle, if visceral level, any sentient mind would link the inevitability of its own death with the glaring death of nature taking place through the rabid decimation of species, the growing ocean dead zones, the creeping deserts, burned forests, and bleached coral reefs. It's as if by pushing away these heart-rendering Truths, we can also push away the hour of our own imminent passing. I think this is the abyss few dare to peer into... and it may explain why the multitudes cling all too adroitly to the Art of Pretending.
"Fresh slate"- in this case actually being a palimpsest (erased - but not entirely - and overwritten).
I always enjoy and appreciate your comments, Siouxrose...your perspectives are very important to point out. I believe fear of one's own mortality has influenced us for as long as we've inhabited this planet and accounts for more instances of humanity's bizarre and destructive behaviors than there is space here to list.
Thank you, Fed up. What may be escalating a collective exodus away from reality, and/or "hiding from truth" is the fact that our mortality may well be on the line, sped-up, that is. This methane phenomenon which has exceeded all climate models is indeed foreboding. Then, too, with Dr. Strangeloves at the helm in a number of Western Judeo-Christian nations, most itching for yet more war, the threat of death potentially closes in on us.
I had an expensive New Years dinner because in the back of my mind, it hit me that this may be the last New Years where such an indulgence is possible.
In the writings of Carlos Casteneda, he learns that every moment his own death is stalking him. This understanding is intended to prompt him to waste no time and honor every moment. In other words, to live in a mindful manner. Similarly, during the very sacred experience of praying daily with Buddhist monks in Nepal, one afternoon's meditation was specifically centered on facing our own death.
Few in the West ever think about these things. As much as the spiritual practices I've observed in the East lead towards sincere self-reflection, most of the ways of the West are geared towards outer action.There's a real Yin-Yang, in-breath, out-breath to this. And both action and reflection are necessary for a world In Balance.
Here in this forum, often when I mention the spiritual facts that millions take for true, a few confuse that understanding with an inhibition of the spark to take action against injustice. (As if spiritual realization is the antithesis to informed political acts or commitments.)
One particularly ill-informed individual actually has tried to say that the spiritual quest for self-knowledge is the thing that has sunk the left! Not the purchase of DC by the hordes of lobbyists, not the deregulation of media that allowed the pro-corporate mantras to be relayed 24/7, not the corrupt elections, nor capital's influence over higher education... no, the problem is spirituality!
In any case, thank you for your kind words. May 2012 be kind to you... and our like-minded friends of Progressive Causes and Ideals.
Many fine comments indeed. SR may be right again; peering into the abyss with all of you in 2012. Death is an illusion as is this Holographic Universe" we live in, imo;
I don't fear it anymore after 62yrs, bring it on. Peace and Happy NewYear all.
A world in denial or a country (namely the USA) in denial? They're not one and the same. And just because Americans demand to live in Lalaland, unable to face the reality of their actions, it doesn't mean that the rest of the world can't see it as it is. No need to generalize, take responsibility for yourselves if only once in yours lives!
Intellectual gobbledegook that states the obvious and replays only the big ones that are incredibly obvious. Who's denying? We are still waiting for these intellects to say something meaningful and useful, to do the research and find the rest of all these stories of corruption and bring to light all these dastardly deeds, to court...unless there is a continual belief that all is well and not really all that bad. The insane believe we have found the the cheats and liars. The really bad denial are these people who think they do know something, when in truth, they are in denial of their own stupidity. Like people who still believe they get all the information of what is really going on ...from the tv and Internet, but have no idea of the war going on down the street..
Anyone who hasn't been struck, at some point (earlier better) as I was in college, by how little they know, how many of the thousands of Journals and books I had'nt read in the library and really just how little all those volumes of man's knowledge actually represents vs infinity-zip!
They are the real idiots. in denial of their own stupidity, and proud of it; the only truth to American Exceptionalism, is we've got too damn many (66.6%) of 'em here!
Shall we still call 'em Sheeple? Virulently self-delusional, irrationally fearful, willfully obtuse, cowards is too long. VSDIFWOC ? never mind
Vsdifwoc is unusual-sounding word that describes a common malady in Amerka. It reminds me of a word the IRS (or maybe the census bureau) concocted about 30 years ago for unmarried heterosexual couples who lived together: posslq (People of the Opposite Sex Sharing Living Quarters). Both are very effective and descriptive words.
Unfortunately, posslq slipped into obscurity, but perhaps vsdifwoc will survive. :-)
"What kind of willful obtusity ever suggested that subprime mortgages were a good idea? An intelligent child would have known that there is no good time to lend money to people who obviously can never repay it."
How nice, we have a new euphemism, "willful obtusity", for the criminal activity of Wall Street hucksters who DESIGNED the machinations of the real estate bubble, i.e., securitized mortgage derivatives that turned the international banking system into their own personal casino knowing that the the eventual bust would result in a redistribution of wealth TO THEM, via a monetized masturbatory climax of bailouts and free money.
But no, to this author it was merely "willful obtusity", of some unknown known.
BANG! Thank you. Tony