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Media Faction
Saturday, 29 January 2005
A WAREHOUSE OF SOCIAL DEVIANCE
http://www.feastofhateandfear.com/archives.html

Posted by mediafaction at 4:49 PM EST
Thursday, 27 January 2005
USS Flatley
USS Flatley (FFG-21)

USS Flatley (FFG-21), thirteenth ship of the Oliver Hazard Perry class of guided-missile frigates, was named for Vice Admiral James H. Flatley. Ordered from Bath Iron Works on 28 February 1977 as part of the FY77 program, Flatley was laid down on 13 November 1979, launched on 15 May 1980, and commissioned on 20 June 1981. Decommissioned on 11 May 1996, she was leased to Turkey on 28 August 1997 as that nation's TCG Giresun (F 491).

Flatley (FFG-21) was the first ship of that name in the US Navy.

Posted by mediafaction at 11:50 AM EST
Saturday, 22 January 2005
"madness" and the visionary experience.
Topic: by Lenny
from Sanity: Friend or Foe.

Laing was revolutionary in valuing the content of psychotic behaviour and speech as a valid expression of distress, albeit wrapped in an unusual personal symbolism. According to Laing, if a therapist can better understand the person they can begin to make sense of the symbolism of their madness, and therefore start addressing the concerns which are the root cause of their distress.

Maybe if “the content of psychotic behaviour and speech” is “a valid expression of distress” then the content and behavior of madness are a valid expression of the visionary experience?

…for Laing, madness could be a transformative episode whereby the process of undergoing mental distress was compared to a shamanic journey. The traveller could return from the journey with importan insights, and may even have become a wiser and more grounded person as a result. – Wikipedia entry on RD Laing.

My own reality-smashing experience has told me that the danger of “madness” is not in that you may go “mad,” it is the danger that you may go mad worrying about whether or not you are going mad!

The subjective nature of much of magic seems to me to be wholly at odds with the order the ego is trying to impose on this chaotic existence. And the ego is strong enough that when you think you are cracking it open you may actually be feeding it!

Regardie’s the Middle Pillar, Wilson’s Cosmic Trigger... all lend some important perspective on how to avoid this.

One thing I try to remember is that the spectrum of “sane” is very wide, that the poles of “cold, hard, rationality” and “stark raving mad” are very far apart indeed.

Comment by j. lenny flatley — 1/22/2005 @ 4:48 pm

Posted by mediafaction at 4:11 PM EST
Friday, 21 January 2005
Inauguration.
Topic: by Lenny
I blew off the inauguration this time around. Four years ago, when Bush was swore in, the temperature dropped fifteen degrees. It didn’t matter to the Republicans, however, as they were all snug in their fur coats and cowboy hats.

This year I’m watching the festivities on TV. I don’t feel like I have the proper perspective when I am part of history so today, like the rest of America, I merely watched history. And I wanted to sleep in.

The image is shocking: a gloomy Thursday, the public address and helicopters drone. A city full of angry militants, all victims of a war, that dull George W. Bush smile beaming away, oblivious to all, causing so much damn anger among those of us who know, who are not smiling. Smug.

I am reminded of another "War President," this time a real Texan, Lyndon B. Johnson: "In our home there was always prayer-aloud, proud and unapologetic."

And later: "I’m tired. I’m tired of feeling rejected by the American people. I’m tired of waking up in the middle of the night worrying about the war."

Now, compared to "W," LBJ, the man that referred to his political opponents as "pigfuckers," was an intellectual. But, my God, "W" looks just like a 55-year-old Scooter Hanson!

The TV news is calling the dissenters a "vocal minority," and they’re having Fundamentalist Christians on the news to blast the separation of church and state.

Fundamentalist Christians are the followers of a bizarre cult that had it's heyday about a thousand years ago. It spawned thousands of other religious movements that wrought havoc on the planet for generations, having yet to recognize the Aeon of Horus.

I have been back and forth, trying to reconcile my sort of "magick humanist" beliefs and my political activism, and I think this is where I am at: one can remain aloof, and not buy into second circuit, emotional-territorial "politics." Still, you must see the game for what it is, as long as eating, sleeping and fucking are required to live.

...and here’s to another four years!

Posted by mediafaction at 12:56 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 21 January 2005 1:02 AM EST
Rebellion.
Topic: Philosophy

"I don't preach revolution. I am utterly against revolution. My word for the future, and for those who are intelligent enough in the present, is 'rebellion'. Rebellion is individual action; it has nothing to do with the crowd. It is spiritual metamorphosis." - Osho, Religion, Rebellion and Righteousness.

"Evolution of personality starts only when we can muster up the courage to say 'no.' As a matter of fact man's soul asserts itself only when he is capable of saying 'no.' When one can say 'no' even though one's very life may be at stake in such a denial, and when once an individual starts saying 'no' and learns this art, then for the first time, due to such denial, his individuality begins its evolution. This dividing line to say 'no' invests a person with his individuality. The tendency to say 'yes' to everything makes him an indistinguishable part of the whole. That is why the society has always been so much insistent about obedience.

"A father may very well take pride at the obedience of his idiotic son because he is unaware that such a person as his son is cannot have the mettle to say 'no.' Some intelligence is necessary to say 'no.' As far as saying 'yes' is concerned, it needs no intelligence. 'Yes' is computerized; the less the intelligence, the sooner it emerges. Saying 'no' requires some scrutiny of the matter. It demands argument. One has to weigh the pros and cons in one's mind before one can utter 'no,' because with the saying of 'no' the matter does not end; rather, it starts from there. Saying 'yes' implies a closing of the subject rather than the starting of it. So if the son is intelligent, the father may not like him because his incontrovertible arguments may leave him (the father) dumbfounded on many an occasion." - Osho, the Hippie Rebellion.

Posted by mediafaction at 12:51 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 21 January 2005 1:00 AM EST
Monday, 17 January 2005
Beyond The Wall Of Sleep
Topic: by Lenny
Nightmares in the Danvers Asylum.

All quotations taken from “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” by H.P. Lovecraft (1919).

I have often wondered if the majority of mankind ever pause to reflect upon the occasionally titanic significance of dreams, and of the obscure world to which they belong. Whilst the greater number of our nocturnal visions are perhaps no more than faint and fantastic reflections of our waking experiences - Freud to the contrary with his puerile symbolism - there are still a certain remainder whose immundane and ethereal character permit of no ordinary interpretation, and whose vaguely exciting and disquieting effect suggests possible minute glimpses into a sphere of mental existence no less important than physical life, yet separated from that life by an all but impassable barrier.

Growing up in Western Pennsylvania did nothing to prepare me for the oppressive North Atlantic Gothic character of the New England states. I have been in Providence, Rhode Island for five years. Like every other city in the country, Providence is in the business of turning its every square inch into a mall. The remaining depth of New England will soon be paved over, to make way for The Gap. Modern Culture thrives on this sanitation. Historical re-enactments are a thriving industry and all summer, up and down the Atlantic coast you will find students from Connecticut and Eastern Massachusetts dressed as pilgrims, grabbing a quick beer before they have to get back to the ship, selling images of clean scrubbed, G-rated colonists that never existed. Dreams of Disney Pilgrims do not betray the nightmares cultivated in New England’s collective unconscious.

H.P. Lovecraft’s stories often explore the intersection of nightmares and madness. This isn’t an academic exploration - Lovecraft had no formal education beyond High School. This is art, informed by Lovecraft’s intuitive grasp on the nightmares of the region.

Lovecraft, a lifelong residence of Providence, was a pale, quiet man who had some significant problems. His parents both died horrible deaths in Butler Hospital, which was, and still is, an insane asylum. Butler is adjacent to Swan Point Cemetery, Lovecraft’s final resting place. He liked to spend moonless nights walking down the hill from his mother’s apartment on Angell Street to Prospect Terrace, where the signal fires of the American Revolution could be seen from as far away as Boston, to the graveyard at the Cathedral of St. John. His mind racing, he would return to his desk and begin the creative act; channeling the vision and the voice of the subconscious the only way that his waking mind would allow.

It is a cool, warm night in June 2003. Thoughts of graveyards and ghosts accompanied me as I walk through the the grounds of the old Danvers State Hospital. There lies no doubt - among people that believe in this sort of thing - that the grounds and buildings here are haunted. Often Lovecraft would write about things so terrible that just one glimpse would strike a man mad. This is one of the few times in my life that I thought I just might see what he meant.

I am staring up at the Kirkbride building. The architecture is so gothic that it has to have been made for the movies. On the spot that now houses the main building of the asylum was once Hathorne House, birthplace of the infamous Johnathan Hathorne, who sentenced nineteen innocent people to the gallows and many more were left to die in jail. This happened in Salem Village, located at present-day Danvers, Massachusetts.

When Danvers State Hospital was established in 1878, it was a state-of-the art facility, whose every nuance - from its location to the architecture of the buildings - was chosen for its therapeutic qualities. One hundred and twenty-six years later, I find myself touring the cemetery grounds with a flashlight. The dead are but some remains of the noble dream of Dr. Thomas Story Kirkbride, the institution’s first superintendent. His stated goal was to give “the humblest of unfortunates” the same care that the best families of nearby Boston and Cambridge were afforded.

At each outburst… I would fit the transmitter to his forehead and the receiver to my own, constantly making delicate adjustments… accordingly I continued my experiments, though informing no one of their nature.

With time, such care came to include lobotomy, electroshock and hydrotherapy.

By the 1950s, the institution housed upwards of twenty-six hundred patients, though its capacity was originally six hundred. Twenty-six hundred people who were all dreaming of escape, of a vivid life, moving proudly. Could they forget the asylum, even in their dreams? Or did dreams turn to nightmares when invaded by a certain deadly enemy?

The sum of all my investigation was, that in a kind of semi-corporeal dream-life… [he] wandered or floated through resplendent and prodigious valleys, meadows, gardens, cities, and palaces of light, in a region unbounded and unknown to man; that there he was no peasant or degenerate, but a creature of importance and vivid life, moving proudly and dominantly, and checked only by a certain deadly enemy, who seemed to be a being of visible yet ethereal structure...

In 1992 came the closure of the Danvers asylum. The National Guard helped transport the last of the patients to their new homes, mostly smaller, residential facilities, as is now the norm. The age of the “insane asylum” is by all definitions over. It is said that when Danvers closed down many of its ex-residents, the ones with nowhere else to go, would return to wander the empty grounds.

I find a spot on the ground and sit down. As I look around, I try to imagine what it would be like to be imprisoned here, to live under these gray skies and eventually die, only to be noted on a small, round marker with no name, only a number. It has been over ten years since the facility was closed. The buildings are scheduled for demolition. What will they put here in its place? A strip mall? Will the people there also dream of escape?

Providence, RI
July 2003

Posted by mediafaction at 11:04 AM EST
Saturday, 25 December 2004
Santa Clause is Satan's Cause
Topic: Religious Nuts

Merry Christmas, everybody!

I'll be back on January 1st. Jerk.



Santa Claus is Satan's Cause!


The modern-day Santa Claus is an American version of Saint Nicholas, a fourth century Roman Catholic bishop from Asia Minor who was noted for his good deeds and gift giving. This tradition first spread throughout Europe, and then found its way to America by the early Dutch settlers.

Since God's word warns us to BEWARE of tradition (Col. 2:8), we shouldn't be surprised to find the Devil right in the middle of the world's most celebrated holiday. Lucifer's desire has always been to dethrone God and exalt himself (Isa. 14:12-15). He desires worship (Luke 4:7; II Ths. 2:3-4). Perhaps you've never thought of it, but please note how Satan robs the Lord Jesus Christ of His glory by spreading the Santa Claus tradition...

read more from BibleBelievers.com here.

Posted by mediafaction at 12:01 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 23 December 2004 9:15 PM EST
Friday, 24 December 2004
A Christmas Carol
Topic: Christmas

It's Christmas time, and that means it's time to enjoy A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens' melancholy tale of a productive businessman who gets worked over by three meddling supernatural social workers one Christmas Eve, transforming him into a simpering socialist.

It's almost as sad as Star Wars, really.

What the hell?

Posted by mediafaction at 12:01 AM EST
Thursday, 23 December 2004
Is Heaven Populated Chiefly by the Souls of Embryos?
Topic: science and technology
What are we to think about the fact that Nature (and for believers, Nature's God) profligately creates and destroys human embryos? John Opitz, a professor of pediatrics, human genetics, and obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Utah, testified before the President's Council on Bioethics that between 60 and 80 percent of all naturally conceived embryos are simply flushed out in women's normal menstrual flows unnoticed. This is not miscarriage we're talking about. The women and their husbands or partners never even know that conception has taken place; the embryos disappear from their wombs in their menstrual flows. In fact, according to Opitz, embryologists estimate that the rate of natural loss for embryos that have developed for seven days or more is 60 percent. The total rate of natural loss of human embryos increases to at least 80 percent if one counts from the moment of conception. About half of the embryos lost are abnormal, but half are not, and had they implanted they would probably have developed into healthy babies...

more here.

Posted by mediafaction at 8:35 PM EST
Wednesday, 22 December 2004
What do I miss most about Southern New Enland?
Topic: Beer, cause and effect.



see Dave's photo essay here


Posted by mediafaction at 12:01 AM EST

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