Sunday, December 13, 2020

Let Us Break Their Bonds Asunder

Under the pretext of Coronavirus, governments have committed themselves to a global reversal of GOD-given human rights. Human rights, properly conceptualized, are the common heritage of all humanity resulting from the eternal gospel of Christ, and secured over the centuries through the blood of many martyrs.

Whether through malice or neglect, this reversal of human rights by governments has been ruinous for the common man. Small businesses have come to ruin while monopolies further enrich their billionaire owners. This represents a massive transfer of wealth, a widening of the gulf of economic inequality as bankruptcy and unemployment further disinherit a middle class already long beleaguered by inflation and debt. All the signs point to an overreaction, and all the trends indicate that they fully intend to completely overreact.

Multinational corporations are openly showing their hand in the high stakes arena of politics and governance through their censorship of voices that do not support their narrative.

"Fake news" adequately describes the state of bought-and-paid for mainstream media.

The internet is crawling with "fact-checkers" at every corner. 

Social media is one vast Propaganda Open Day.

And that election was a travesty.

Already the threat of a New Normal is declared a done deal: "Things will never be the same again."

Goodbye human rights, goodbye rule of law, goodbye privacy, goodbye freedom of conscience, of religion, of association; we are fighting the virus, and climate change, and religious fundamentalism, and terrorism; new gremlins newly sprung up in this 21st Century which you ancient rights and freedoms know nothing about.

Let government therefore be all powerful, let big business join the party (strictly for your own good you see), let all religious leaders pronounce their blessings on the effort, let all media sing from that same script harmoniously, and let the masses shut up and fall in line, for vaccination plus full spectrum electronic surveillance plus whatsoever else the New Order will deem suitable to a New Normal.

Who dare call it conspiracy? Covid 19 is real!

PSALMS 2:2-3
The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together, against the LORD, and against his anointed, saying, 

Let us break their bands asunder, and cast away their cords from us



Wednesday, July 22, 2020

The information superhighway



A library of self aggrandizing autobiographies
A gallery of portraits of the abandoned
An asylum for miserable recluses
A whirl of coordinated confusionA map to stay existentially lost 
The world's moral sewer.
Smile for the selfies!

Monday, April 6, 2020

The Siege of the Worshippers of Mammon

Under the terms of lockdown dictated by the virus all remain quietly indoors, craving no more than a return of all the world to that blessed state of normalcy that erstwhile prevailed. We pine for a return to normalcy, that neurotic state of universal victimhood in which every man was for himself, the weakest be damned, but at least people walked the streets and mixed freely.

The media has attained unprecedented heights of relevance with the level of attention focused on them. "How many cases? How many dead? Sanitize! Isolate! Should there be a lockdown?"


Restrictions on movement and speech multiply. Trade suffers, commerce languishes, transport grinds to a halt. Traffic jams? What traffic jams? The economic juggernaut is brought to it's knees.  The money is dried up in an effort to dehydrate the pandemic. Tension mounts, no word of a cure.

Every day freedom recedes into the realm of idealism, a hazy horizontal mirage, a throwback to the glorious days of normalcy, in which the dollar answered all things, and reigned supreme. But now its supplicants are perplexed.

Boxed in and nostalgic, in fear for their lives and livelihoods, the people eventually give up their rights and liberties. With the dearth of liquidity, with the money addict's supply choked to a trickle, one by one he relinquishes his hard-won heritage to secure the drug. "It is an emergency,"' he tells himself, "When this is all over I'll get it all back." All sacrifices to a god that answers not.

The dealer having cultivated the addiction has withdrawn the supply. After a long enough period, withdrawal symptoms lay waste his customer's resolve. Composure is entirely lost, and dignity abdicates in hunger's favor. The customer, totally drained of resources and driven mad by desperation, offers himself, mind soul and body, in exchange for sweet release from the torment of hunger and privation.

Suddenly with clarion blasts the brazen gates of bounty are thrown open to the starving. Behold your hero, your dealer. Behold your god, Mammon. They are received joyfully, with open arms.

Monday, January 13, 2020

Saint Augustine on Kingdoms

A pirate was seized and brought before Alexander the Great. He asked the emperor what the difference really was between piracy and government, besides the scale of action.


"Justice being taken away, then, what are kingdoms but great robberies? For what are robberies themselves, but little kingdoms? The band itself is made up of men; it is ruled by the authority of a prince, it is knit together by the pact of the confederacy; the booty is divided by the law agreed on. If, by the admittance of abandoned men, this evil increases to such a degree that it holds places, fixes abodes, takes possession of cities, and subdues peoples, it assumes the more plainly the name of a kingdom, because the reality is now manifestly conferred on it, not by the removal of covetousness, but by the addition of impunity." Indeed, that was an apt and true reply which was given to Alexander the Great by a pirate who had been seized. For when that king had asked the man what he meant by keeping hostile possession of the sea, he answered with bold pride, “What thou meanest by seizing the whole earth; but because I do it with a petty ship, I am called a robber, whilst thou who dost it with a great fleet art styled emperor."

Originally quoted from St. Augustine's book City of God
copied onto here from https://oll.libertyfund.org/quotes/200

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Blue Shoes at the End of the Tunnel

It is a miracle how I got through university.

I was a broke kid in the midst of rich kids.  Constantly felt lost and out of place. Couldn't hang out with the cool crowd. Looked, felt and acted out of place in the few instances I dared to show up at a rave, and didn't know enough to actually avoid caring as much as I pretended not to. It got to me.

Naturally my introversion was amplified in this social wilderness. I mostly hung out alone, sinking deeper into my personal black abyss every day especially after I finally gave up on finding acceptance. No cool clothes, no hot girl, and forget about a car; I worried instead about how Mother could even afford my fees and meals.

Fortunately there was football and swimming. I clung to these sports with more wrath than enthusiasm in a desperate attempt to sublimate the fury of frustrated youth. And the library was big and well stocked with variety. It helped to distract me from all the fun I couldn't afford.

One time an unsought-after crisis befell me. In my eagerness to make friends I lent my only pair of football boots to a teammate who showed up for a match late, hung over and ill equipped. He ran the boots down to shreds in the space of ninety minutes and handed them back to me in the most casual manner, "thanks dude," and dashed off to some other party with his buddies, leaving in my hands a stinking muddy mess of rags and studs. I put a brave face to it, quietly hoping he would make good for the damage, and retired to my humble hostel room to while the ever-present hunger away.

But the days went by and I had no shoes with which to play football. they only had swimming twice a week in those days, and that was grossly insufficient to exorcise my frustrations. So the blackness grew within, with anger and hatred to boot. Depression set in.

But as if in answer to a prayer I needed to make but didn't know I should, Mother traveled to town uninvited and took me shopping to Gikomba. She bought me a second hand pair of blue Adidas F50 boots for 1200 shillings.

12 dollars! Best gift I ever received! Literally saved my life.

Love you Mum.