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Considering most recent studies (John Hopkins University Survey) point to hundreds of thousands of civilian casualties inflicted by the ‘coalition’ in Iraq and most grossly conservative estimates point to at least 50,000, war criminals and ‘crimes against humanity’ are defined by the emotional consensus of the easily manipulated masses. Saddam Hussein has been accused of being responsible for the killing of a number of people which does not compare to the damage caused by, and will in the future be created by, the bringers of democracy. When we look at the numbers, who really deserves to be hung on national television? Who deceived then rallied all of western civilization to a campaign that had no basis other than greed, a greed paid for in the blood of the innocent?

War criminals, and those worthy of being punished as such are defined by the victor, not any reasoned principle. In the end every executive who holds sway over something bigger than a hamlet will see a ‘crime against humanity’ in his term. Few are able to reduce two ancient countries to ruins however. Words are worthless and actions are the true language of the world.

The death of one man is a tragedy. The death of millions is a statistic.

– Josef Stalin

Secondly, iraqbodycount.org isn’t a realistic estimate of the dead – since each individual casualty has to be confirmed by at least two independent news sources. The news obviously isn’t going to be able to confirm every single body bag – which is why its a GROSSLY conservative number. The administration claims 30, 000 civilian casualties, which is about 21 times less than reality.

Compare the numbers of Saddam’s accused genocide to the wanton carnage caused by the liberators of democracy and its quite clear who should be hung. Freedom isn’t speeches, it’s not victory celebrations, or revision made possible by myopic memories, its not caviar dinners in the white house or pretentious grandstand blathering on national television – thats not reality. Reality is how many corpses are buried. Reality is living in a country with a destroyed infrastructure and no hospitals, food or water. Reality is having to bury your parents and then being branded a terrorist when swearing to resist those who slew them. Reality isn’t emotions and words; reality is cause and effect. Words are worthless and actions are the true language of the world.

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Don’t Despair Just Because It’s Christmas

From an article by the American Underground Nihilist Society

The holidays make it easy to express oneself, because the split between reality and fantasy in our world is most evident. People rush around, minds fixed on symbolic gestures like gift-giving and dinner-preparations, while doing whatever they can – and they have no shorter of subterfuge – to hide the shortcomings of their lives and society so that, just for a moment, they can have a ceremonial peace of mind. In that, they’re both at their least neurotic and their most deluded, so the religious nature of the holiday is brought to the forefront: they’re like fanatics in the grips of religious delusion. And we scorn the suicide bombers?

Your coworkers will be thankfully busy kissing ass, which means you don’t have to waste time listening to their “opinions” which are essentially recombinations of TV, newspaper, and talk radio ideas. They will however give you worthless stuff they bought at bulk prices, and hope to receive something actually worthwhile in return (the solution: bake them banana bread, especially if you can’t do it). Every single person you interact with on a daily goods-service basis will also be angling for a gift. These are even better; give them the worthless crap you got last year. It’s not a question of what the gift means, but a question of recognition. In our “free” society, we feel free to guilt each other into handing over something, which primarily profits those who make functionless symbolic gift items, and, of course, the waste management industry, who’ll be hauling it away in June.

As if you needed extra giggles, you’ll get to witness the entire consumer sales industry mobilized to sell gift items. The guilt is heavy, and it’s enforced by an image: people happily at home with loved ones, exchanging gifts, eating and having a good time. The reality is obligation by social pressure to buy, divorces, families fighting on phones, and people giving each other meaningless crap and spending up to 10% of their disposable income doing it. No one wants to hear the reality, and this is why they drown it out with Christmas songs. They’ve even gotten clever (at least as clever as a gibbon on crack) and have made “unique” versions of each Christmas song, like the techno “Silent Night” and jazz-fusion “I’m Dream of a White Christmas.” Get your sickening emotional cues now, because otherwise, you numb consumers, you wouldn’t even know you’re having a “good time.”

Since most of us live in a reality that’s far from the television image, and must contend with broken families, failed relationships, and droningly predictable office parties where at some point an idiot “livens things up a bit” by getting drunk and doing something amusingly stupid – or it would be amusing, had it not happened at every Christmas party over the past decade – there’s a series of industries dedicated to compensation. The alcohol sellers are warming up to send you out into the night with a case of red’n’green beer. Psychologists crack their knuckles and schedule overtime leading up to Christmas. And if you lack a pithy two-line statement of goodwill, the greeting card people have a new crop of cards with pleasant illustrations on them. Parasites, all.

Don’t despair, you say? We live in a crumbling civilization that most are too dumb to recognize, and it continually breeds dumber people and hands over power to them, as that’s the type of person who has so little going on in their lives they need to become a bureaucrat. We are surrounded by bad design, from our roads arranged to please developers and not serve the citizen, to our awkward housing designed around profit centers and not pragmatic living. Our lives are manipulated by external emotions designed to please everyone in a room, making us slaves to the weakest link in the chain, and now you’ve got to put on your plastic holiday smile to cover it. No wonder Christmas is the season for heart attacks, suicides, divorces and drug overdoses.

My solution, as in most cases, is to bypass despair for nihilism. You – or rather, the sense and sensibility of nature – are in control, and you don’t have to take it seriously. Do what is required, and nothing else, but most of all, don’t take this insincere marketing holiday into your heart. Yule was a real holiday, a winter survival landmark, but Christmas ever since has been a time of humility and submission before the Jewish prophet. Why? Give people at the office crap, and hand out garbage others have given you to those supplicants who desire gifting for their services. Care not about it; summon the nihilism of your heart and see the reality: Christmas is just another day, and a day in which you can do what you want, as long as you aren’t fooled by the hype of the crowd. Happy are those who never hear Christmas music at all, but happier are those who hear without hearing, and notice the holiday without heeding. Crush Christmas with your awareness of its meaninglessness. There’s no need for despair if you never take it seriously in the first place.

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Flux

Soon you’ll be ashes, or bones. A mere name, at most – and even that is just a sound, an echo. The things we want in life are empty, stale and trivial. Dogs snarling at each other. Quarreling children – laughing and then bursting into tears a moment later. Trust, shame, justice, truth – “gone from the earth and only found in heaven.”

Why are you still here? Sensory objects are shifting and unstable; our senses dim and easily deceived; the soul itself a decoction of the blood; fame in a world like this is worthless.

-And so?

Wait for it patiently – annihilation or metamorphosis.

-And until that time comes-what?

Honor and revere the divine, treat human beings as they deserve, be tolerant of others and strict with yourself. Remember, nothing belongs to you but your flesh and blood – and nothing else is under your control.

– Marcus Aurelius