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THE Philosopher
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Nice little place on an acre with some lake frontage for sale. About in the price range of a decent retail employee. 94% white town in a 92% white county. About 300 miles away from a major city.
Earlier, a friend and I were discussing John Milton. He said something like "I remember seeing that he put forward some spurious theological claims." I responded: "Well, he was a Puritan, so probably something like advocating for polygamy."

And what do you know? There's a section in his The Christian Doctrine in which he defends polygamy.

My prejudice against Anglo Puritans remains undefeated
I have deferred until last the discussion of jazz, which seems the clearest of all signs of our age’s deep-seated predilection for barbarism. The mere fact of its rapid conquest of the world indicates some vast extent of inward ravage, so that there were no real barriers against the disintegration it represents.

Jazz was born in the dives of New Orleans, where the word appears first to have signified an elementary animal function. It was initially a music of primitivism; and we have the word of one of its defenders that “jazz has no need of intelligence; it needs only feeling.” But jazz did not remain primitive; something in the Negro’s spontaneous manifestation of feeling linked up with Western man’s declining faith in the value of culture. The same writer admits that “if one examines the fields of activity which have been reserved for art, one perceives that the creative work of our ancestors was under the impulse of a harmonious equilibrium between reason and sentiment.” Jazz, by formally repudiating restraint by intellect, and by expressing contempt and hostility toward our traditional society and mores, has destroyed this equilibrium. That destruction is a triumph of grotesque, even hysterical, emotion over propriety and reasonableness. Jazz often sounds as if in a rage to divest itself of anything that suggests structure or confinement.

It is understandable, therefore, that jazz should have a great appeal to civilization’s fifth column, to the barbarians within the gates. These people found it a useful instrument for the further obliteration of distinctions and the discrediting of all that bears the mark of restraint. Accordingly, it was taken up in a professional way and was sophisticated by artists of technical virtuosity so that it became undeniably a medium of resourcefulness and power. That is all the more reason for recognizing its essential tendency.

The driving impulse behind jazz is best grasped through its syncopation. What this can achieve technically we need not go into here; what it indicates spiritually is a restlessness, a desire to get on, to realize without going through the aesthetic ritual. Forward to the climax, it seems to say; let us dispense with the labor of earning effects. Do we not read in this another form of contempt for labor? Is it not again the modern fatuity of insisting upon the reward without the effort? Form and ritual are outmoded piety, and work is a sacrifice. The primitive and the bored sophisticate are alike impatient for titillation.

As dissent breeds further dissidence, so the emancipation which is jazz gives rise to yet greater vagaries. In “swing” one hears a species of music in which the performer is at fullest liberty to express himself as an egotist. Playing now becomes personal; the musician seizes a theme and improvises as he goes; he develops perhaps a personal idiom, for which he is admired. Instead of that strictness of form which had made the musician like the celebrant of a ceremony, we now have individualization; we hear a variable into which the musician pours his feeling and whimsy more freely than the Romantic poets laid bare their bleeding hearts.

Jazz has been compared to “an indecent story syncopated and counterpointed.” There can be no question that, like journalism in literature, it has helped to destroy the concept of obscenity.

- Richard Weaver, Ideas Have Consequences
Mr A. L. Morton, who knows more about the Ranters than anyone else, suggests that migratory craftsmen, freed by the temporary breakdown of the settlement system during the Revolution, men who were 'unattached and prepared to break with tradition', may have furnished much support for the Ranters. We should bear in mind the whole mobile itinerant population, evicted cottagers, whether peasants or craftsmen, slowly gravitating to the big cities and there finding themselves outsiders, sometimes forming themselves into religious groups which rapidly became more and more radical. It is very difficult to define what 'the Ranters' believed, as opposed to individuals who are called Ranters. The same is true to a lesser extent of Levellers or early Quakers; but the Levellers did issue programmatic statements, and the pamphlets of Fox and Nayler can be accepted as authoritative for the Quakers. There is no recognized leader or theoretician of the Ranters, and it is extremely doubtful whether there ever was a Ranter organization.

- Christopher Hill, The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution

Everywhere I turn is further evidence that living in cities leads to terrible things.
Some startup company in Silicon Valley offered me a job. Should I take it chat? [He scratches his chin ponderously, intellectually, even]
The USA Today's treacherous tongues, pernicious pens, and foul fingers are 'fficially forever forbidden from featuring God's grand grounds, His heavenly haven. This decree denounces discussion of the divine domain in their dastardly diurnal. Let this law live long.
From Poor Chat and book club member:

I’m eating lunch in this shitty underground food court that has a fake sky. But portions of the sky keep flickering or going out. Real simulacra vibes
Ahhh, yes, because all thieves steal at self-checkout. Nobody has ever thought to just, like, put something in their bag. No Muslim women have ever shoved things into their religious garments.

We can also be assured that there will be no errors with these scanners. Your items keep getting double scanned because there are invisible barcodes all over them? No worries, we restricted the ability of the machine to scan duplicates. Oh, what's that, you had two of the same product in your arms and thought they'd both be scanned by the new magic, high-tech scannerinos? You're going to jail, pal.
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🇺🇸 Wall Street private equity firms are now buying up American mobile home parks and skyrocketing rents up to 60% on people

“These communities have become the target of a new kind of landlord, private equity. Private equity firms are increasingly getting involved. Some of the biggest investors in America have moved into this industry. People living at a local mobile home park outraged over the sharp increase in lot rents. Rents were raised by nearly 60%.”

Resident “I worked for 45 years. There is no American dream anymore. All it is survival.”

“Homes of America has gone on a buying spree spending nearly $300 million to acquire 138 parks across 17 states. They've raised rents and aggressively evicted residents.” and that’s just ONE FIRM buying, there are many more

Resident says “I don't know what I'm gonna do. Hope that I don't wake up tomorrow. Death crossed my mind.” She can only afford one more month of rent.

🔗 Wall Street Apes
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🇺🇸 Wall Street private equity firms are now buying up American mobile home parks and skyrocketing rents up to 60% on people “These communities have become the target of a new kind of landlord, private equity. Private equity firms are increasingly getting…
There's something to say about this sort of thing. For now, most of this pressure exerts itself in cities and in other areas of excessively high demand. Eventually, though, the ability to continue to make the graph go up in those areas will fall and they'll start to look elsewhere into less densely populated areas to try to turn a profit. It's difficult to predict when this will happen or to what extent it will be successful, but there's wisdom in being prepared for it.
Forwarded from Literally 1984