Meze or mezze is a selection of
small dishes served as appetizers in parts of the Middle East, the Balkans,
Greece, and North Africa.
Call it the realm of the former Ottoman Empire. I have been chewing on a few topics for
several days. Each of these could,
perhaps, be turned into a complete meal but I am not in a position to devote
the proper attention to each. So, for
now, I will just serve each as a small dish.
It is also equally likely, as is usually the case, that the mezze
platter will be sufficient for the entire meal.
Diversity is Our Strength
If there is an overriding theme to the societal disaster
that defines the current times, it is this slogan. More specifically, it is the context in which
this slogan is used. Certainly,
diversity can be a strength if ends are held in common; certainly,
diversity is a strength if the rules of the game (the means) are
respected.
Can you imagine any social institution being successful if
the individuals who make up such an entity are working toward different
ends? We see this in the least effective
such entities; in the successful ones, we see that all individuals are working
toward a similar end, purpose, objective.
Can you imagine any social institution being successful if
the individuals who make up such an entity are all playing by different rules? Each one defining how his role is governed,
independent of the governance of the entity as a whole?
Further, the ends and means are completely interrelated: It
isn’t that the ends justify the means; it is that the ends define
the means. Within such a framework,
diversity is a strength: diverse skills, temperaments, capabilities, ideas –
all moving toward a common end, all playing within a common framework of
means.
Diversity is not a strength when the subject population does
not hold to common ends and does not agree to play by common rules (the
means). In such a case, diversity is
hell. If the diversity of hell is where
you look for your strength, feel free to welcome diversity as it is celebrated
by the broader culture.
Everything is a Lie
Everything. Out of
the mouths of politicians, news reporters, journalists, thought leaders in
sports and entertainment. Well, not everything. On the rare occasion we hear some truth from
any of these, they are shut down and ostracized.
Everything we are taught about history is a lie. Not a little lie, like George-Washington-cut-down-the-cherry-tree
lie; big
lies – lies that have resulted in the deaths of millions and the cost of
trillions. The dead can be considered
the trophies in the game rooms of the liars and the sacrifices of a worshipful population;
the cost is going into the pockets of the same liars. Whenever someone sticks his head up and says “wait,
that isn’t true,” he is labeled a conspiracy theorist – before being shut down
and ostracized.
Do you want to succeed by the standards of this world? Be a champion of the biggest lie. Do you want to survive? Don’t openly challenge any of the lies.
Do you want to do righteous work? Speak truthfully.
The Meaning Crisis
To really feel
the joy in life
You must suffer
through the pain
-
Illumination
Theory, Dream Theater
This idea of a meaning crisis has gained increased popular
traction recently. What is the meaning
crisis? A very complicated
question. It is easier to describe it by
what is lacking in Western society than what it actually is, I suppose. On one level, it can be captured by noting
the superficiality of the material life – a life consumed with getting more
stuff. There is no depth in this life,
no relationships, no connections of value, no reason to cherish the joy in life
– because “more stuff” doesn’t bring joy to life.
But as I think about it, at its most fundamental level, it
strikes me that the things that give life meaning are those things for which
one is willing to die or kill. Of course,
what one is willing to die or kill for matters – a lot.
Jeff Deist raised
just such points (and quite a backlash) when he spoke at Mises University
two years ago:
In closing, I’ll mention an email
exchange I had recently with the blogger Bionic Mosquito. If you’re not reading
Bionic Mosquito, you should be!
Well, yeah. That’s
true. But you are already here…so….
I asked him the same hypothetical
question I have for you: what would you fight for? The answer to this question
tells us a lot about what libertarians ought to care about.
By this I mean what would you
physically fight for, where doing so could mean serious injury or death. Or
arrest and imprisonment, or the loss of your home, your money, and your
possessions.
His answer?
In other words, blood and soil and
God and nation still matter to people. Libertarians ignore this at the risk of
irrelevance.
What in the West is worth fighting for? Who in the West is willing to do the fighting?
They shoot
without shame
In the name of
a piece of dirt
For a change of
accent
Or the colour
of your shirt
-
Territories,
Rush
There are some answers.
There are those in the West willing to go overseas and kill people who
have never been a danger to anyone in the West; there are those in the West who
are willing to kill others because they wear the wrong color in the wrong
neighborhood.
Beyond these?
Virtually nothing (other than family for some of us). And given that these are the two best
examples I can think of, it suggests something about the cultural degradation
of the West. Western society is willing
to kill and die for evil purposes.
And this is, for the moment, the best description I can give
of why there is a meaning crisis. Well,
this and having “diversity is our strength” shoved down our throats. Oh, and knowing that everything told to us is
a lie.
The Mess of Romans 13
Other than the end
times interpretation by followers of the Scofield Bible, there is probably
no misinterpretation of the Bible that has caused more harm than the “obey-the-government-at-all-times”
interpretation of Romans 13 (and these two are certainly quite related today). I have offered that Gerard
Casey has provided one of the many good evaluations of this fallacy.
Just reading and listening to the Gospels, in how many cases
is it offered that the governmental authorities were defied? Not deified as in the standard
interpretation of Romans 13; defied!
Jesus would not have survived his first years had this not been the
case.
I know, I am the one pushing Christianity as the
necessary foundation for liberty.
But organized Christianity – almost whatever the denomination – is so
compromised morally and doctrinally. I
take comfort that this situation has been seen many times before and has been
overcome.
It will be overcome again.
What would you expect, given He who is in charge?
Overturning Culture
I can’t remember which one of you wrote it and I cannot find
it now, but we had an exchange on Jesus overturning culture some weeks ago. I keep writing about the value of common
culture, not overthrowing the culture but allowing it to evolve naturally. The example was given by one of you of Jesus:
He sure overthrew a lot of culture!
This has been on my mind since then. When I consider the cases where Jesus
overthrew the existing culture – usually to be found in passages where He is
dealing with the Pharisees or which begin “You have heard it said…” – the examples
I can think of off of the top of my head are all examples of overturning
culture in favor of Natural Law. In
other words, Jesus makes clear that what many refer to as Judeo-Christian
as the basis for Western civilization is simply Christian. The Judeo part of the equation
destroyed the love inherent in Natural Law.
I write often about the old
and good law. This means…not just old
law – as the Pharisees would see it.
“Good” law is grounded in Natural Law (and I don’t mean to imply here
physical punishment for all violations of Natural Law, as I do not believe this
nor is this
the example Jesus gave us).
Where Jesus overturned culture – again, from my memory – He
did it in the direction of Natural Law, law that recognizes the proper ends for
human beings. You don’t get much better
“good” law than this.
Conclusion
Of the five topics here, it is the last one – if any – that
I might pursue further. In the meantime,
back to the mezze:
Meze is generally
accompanied by the distilled drinks rakı, arak, ouzo, Aragh Sagi, rakia,
mastika, or tsipouro.
Each of these drinks is regional – specific to a place. I always choose based on the country (or
restaurant) in which I am dining. When
in Rome and all that. But my go to? The one in my liquor cabinet? I am a bit ashamed to admit it, but it is the
state-owned Yeni raki from Turkey. More
bite than ouzo or arak, but what do you expect from
Turks. Add a little water and a
little ice….
All I can say is…pass the bastirma.