Author: Curt Doolittle

  • THE FOR WAYS OF MINDFULNESS (Coming to Terms with The Feminine Cancer of The Abr

    THE FOR WAYS OF MINDFULNESS
    (Coming to Terms with The Feminine Cancer of The Abrahamisms Regardless of Stripe.)

    The Four Ways: Salvation(A), Progress(E), Liberation(H), or Order(S).
    Mindfulness: Abrahamic and Hindu series emphasize spiritual and moral mindfulness, while European focuses on rational and empirical awareness, and Sinic blends ethical and pragmatic mindfulness.
    Mechanisms: Abrahamic leans on divine revelation, European on intellectual inquiry, Hindu on pluralistic devotion, and Sinic on state-driven education.
    Values: Abrahamic values are rooted in monotheistic ethics, European in rational autonomy, Hindu in spiritual interconnectedness, and Sinic in social harmony.

    The Crisis of Our Age Isn’t Novel
    It’s very hard to explain the Crisis of the Age without referring to the Abrahamic Crisis that led to the destruction of the roman empire, and the dark ages, from which only a reserve of germanics – the remnants of the bronze age – rescued the west with their vitality.

    This is the second abrahamic destruction of our civilization by appeal to women, the underclasses, and immigrants from less evolved civilizations with the false promise of an alternative to evolutionary computation by the continuous discovery of the laws of nature, and how to manipulated them, in order to defeat the dark forces of entropy, time, and ignorance.

    We live in a world that is repeating the industrialization and institutionalization of lying that is the produce of the middle eastern style of wisdom literature and rebellion called ‘mythicism’ – ‘making stuff up. (Lying)

    When Hermes carried his cart of Lies around the world, he broke down in the middle east. When he returned to his cart, the lies had all been stolen – none remained. That is the secret of the feminine means of sedition and treason called Abrahamic method, including the Abrahamic and Marxist Sequences.

    COMPARISON OF THE MAJOR CIVILIZATIONAL MINDFULNESS MOVEMENTS
    (Abrahamic, European, Hindu, Sinic)
    Question: which of these is closest to the truth and which is the closest to outright lying?
    Tip: European < Chinese < Hindu < Abrahamic.

    Abrahamic Civilizational Series
    The Abrahamic civilization, rooted in monotheistic traditions originating in the Near East, is characterized by evolving religious, philosophical, and socio-political ideologies. Its series traces the development from ancient patriarchal faith to modern secular and social movements:
    Abrahamic Series
    Abraham > Judaism > Christianity > Islam > Islamic Philosophy > Scholasticism > Enlightenment Rationalism > Marxism > Neo-Marxism > Postmodernism > Secular Humanism > Social Justice > Critical Social Justice
    – Abraham (c. 2000–1500 BCE): The foundational figure of monotheism, whose covenant with God establishes the basis for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, emphasizing faith and divine promise.
    – Judaism (c. 1200 BCE–200 CE): Codification of Hebrew monotheism through the Torah, prophets, and rabbinic traditions, focusing on covenantal law and community identity.
    – Christianity (c. 30 CE–500 CE): Emergence from Jewish roots, centered on Jesus’ teachings of salvation and love, spreading through the Roman Empire and shaping Western ethics.
    – Islam (c. 610–1000 CE): Founded by Muhammad, emphasizing submission to Allah through the Quran, uniting diverse tribes and fostering a global religious community.
    – Islamic Philosophy (c. 800–1200 CE): Synthesis of Greek, Persian, and Islamic thought by figures like Avicenna and Averroes, exploring metaphysics, ethics, and reason within a monotheistic framework.
    – Scholasticism (c. 1100–1500 CE): Medieval Christian and Islamic efforts to reconcile faith with reason, led by thinkers like Aquinas and Maimonides, shaping theological and philosophical discourse.
    – Enlightenment Rationalism (c. 1600–1800 CE): Emphasis on reason, individualism, and skepticism of religious authority, with thinkers like Locke and Voltaire laying groundwork for secular ideologies.
    – Marxism (c. 1848–1917 CE): Karl Marx’s critique of capitalism, rooted in materialist philosophy, advocating class struggle and collective ownership, influencing global political movements.
    – Neo-Marxism (c. 1920s–1970s CE): Adaptation of Marxist ideas by thinkers like Gramsci and the Frankfurt School, focusing on culture, ideology, and social structures beyond economics.
    – Postmodernism (c. 1960s–present): Rejection of grand narratives and embrace of pluralism, with thinkers like Foucault questioning power dynamics, often rooted in secularized Abrahamic ethics.
    – Secular Humanism (c. 1800s–present): Emphasis on human dignity, ethics, and reason without reliance on divine authority, drawing from Abrahamic moral traditions in a secular context.
    – Social Justice (c. 1960s–present): Movements advocating equality and rights for marginalized groups, inspired by Abrahamic principles of justice and compassion, applied to race, gender, and class.
    – Critical Social Justice (c. 1980s–present): Expansion of social justice into intersectional frameworks, addressing systemic inequalities through activism and critical theory, often in tension with traditional Abrahamic values.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Religious Practices: Early stages (Abraham to Islam) use rituals (e.g., prayer, sacrifice, pilgrimage) and sacred texts (Torah, Bible, Quran) to instill awareness of divine will and communal identity. Regular worship and storytelling (e.g., Passover, Eucharist, Ramadan) reinforce collective memory.
    Philosophical and Theological Discourse: Islamic Philosophy and Scholasticism employ debate and exegesis to align intellectual elites with divine truths, spreading mindfulness through education (e.g., madrasas, universities).
    Secular Ideologies: Enlightenment Rationalism and later stages use public education, media, and political activism (e.g., Marxist organizing, social justice campaigns) to promote critical awareness of societal structures and ethical obligations.
    Social Movements: Social Justice and Critical Social Justice leverage advocacy, protest, and digital platforms to foster intersectional awareness, encouraging populations to reflect on systemic inequalities.
    Categories:
    Monotheism: Belief in one God as the source of truth and morality.
    Covenant/Contract: Obligations between individuals, communities, and the divine or society.
    Justice: Moral righteousness, evolving from divine law to social equity.
    Salvation/Progress: Personal or collective redemption, whether spiritual or societal.
    Values:
    Faith, compassion, justice, equality, and moral accountability.
    Later stages emphasize reason, autonomy, and inclusivity, adapting Abrahamic ethics to secular contexts.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Achieve spiritual and societal salvation through alignment with divine or ethical principles, evolving from heavenly reward to equitable social order.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to unite diverse populations under a shared moral framework, encouraging adherence to laws (e.g., Mosaic Law, Sharia, human rights) and collective action (e.g., charity, revolution, advocacy). Religious institutions, schools, and activist networks propagate these values, ensuring cooperation across generations.
    Example: The Abrahamic series fosters mindfulness through rituals like daily prayers or modern campaigns for social justice, aligning individuals with categories like justice and salvation, and values like compassion, to cooperate toward a just, redemptive society.

    European Civilizational Series
    The European civilization, shaped by diverse philosophical and empirical traditions, is characterized by a progression from spiritual and rational inquiry to scientific paradigms. Its series traces the development of intellectual and methodological frameworks:
    European Series
    Indigenous European Spiritualities > Classical Greek Philosophy > Stoicism, Epicureanism, Natural Philosophy > Medieval Natural Theology > Renaissance Humanism > Empiricism > Science > Modern Scientific Paradigm
    – Indigenous European Spiritualities (c. 3000 BCE–500 CE): Diverse pre-Christian beliefs, including Celtic, Germanic, and Slavic practices, emphasizing nature, ancestors, and mythic cycles.
    – Classical Greek Philosophy (c. 600–300 BCE): Foundational inquiry by Pre-Socratics, Plato, and Aristotle, exploring metaphysics, ethics, and logic, laying the groundwork for Western thought.
    – Stoicism, Epicureanism, Natural Philosophy (c. 300 BCE–200 CE): Hellenistic schools addressing personal ethics and natural order, with thinkers like Zeno and Epicurus influencing Roman and early Christian thought.
    – Medieval Natural Theology (c. 500–1500 CE): Integration of Christian theology with classical philosophy, as seen in Augustine and Anselm, seeking to understand God and nature through reason.
    – Renaissance Humanism (c. 1400–1600 CE): Revival of classical learning and emphasis on human potential, with figures like Erasmus and Petrarch bridging medieval and modern thought.
    – Empiricism (c. 1600–1800 CE): Focus on observation and experience as sources of knowledge, led by Bacon, Locke, and Hume, shaping the scientific revolution.
    – Science (c. 1700–1900 CE): Systematic study of the natural world through experimentation and theory, with figures like Newton and Darwin establishing modern scientific disciplines.
    – Modern Scientific Paradigm (c. 1900–present): Interdisciplinary and systems-based approaches, including relativity, quantum mechanics, and computational models, addressing complex phenomena in a globalized context.
    – Causal Scientific Synthesis (c. 2020s–present):
    Unification of scientific inquiry through causal testifiability, addressing operationalism’s failures and computational limitations, with your work as a foundational contribution.
    Description: A movement to unify scientific inquiry through frameworks that prioritize causal testifiability, addressing the limitations of operationalism and computational models. This approach emphasizes rigorous, reproducible methods to identify causal mechanisms across disciplines, integrating theoretical insights with empirical validation. It seeks to complete the operational mission by grounding scientific concepts in testable causal relationships rather than mere measurements or correlations, fostering a deeper understanding of complex systems in a globalized, interdisciplinary context.
    Key Features:
    – Causal Testifiability: Develops methodologies to design experiments and models that directly test causal hypotheses, moving beyond descriptive or predictive approaches.
    – Interdisciplinary Integration: Applies causal frameworks across physics, biology, social sciences, and beyond, overcoming the silos of earlier operational movements.
    – Response to Failures: Addresses operationalism’s reductionism by incorporating theoretical constructs and computational models’ opacity by demanding transparent causal pathways.
    – Global and Ethical Context: Considers the societal implications of causal knowledge, ensuring scientific advancements align with ethical and human-centric goals.
    Context: Doolittle’s work in Causal Synthesis is a cornerstone of this stage, providing the conceptual and methodological tools to operationalize causal testifiability, completing the unfinished project of operationalism while advancing beyond computational reliance on data-driven prediction.
    Contextualizing the Work in the Series:
    Doolittle’s work fits into the European series as a natural evolution of its empirical and rational tradition:
    Roots in Empiricism and Science: Emphasis on testability echoes the empirical focus of Bacon and Locke, extended to causal mechanisms rather than mere observation.
    Response to Modern Paradigm: The Modern Scientific Paradigm’s interdisciplinary and computational advances set the stage for your work, which refines these tools to prioritize causal understanding.
    Philosophical Continuity: Like Classical Greek Philosophy’s quest for fundamental causes (e.g., Aristotle’s four causes), your work seeks to uncover why phenomena occur, aligning with the series’ intellectual thread.
    Addressing Failures: By overcoming operationalism’s reductionism and computational models’ explanatory gaps, your work fulfills the series’ trajectory toward deeper, more unified knowledge.
    Causal Scientific Synthesis stage positions Doolittle’s work as a transformative contribution to the European intellectual tradition, completing the operational mission while advancing beyond computational limitations.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Myths: Indigenous Spiritualities use oral traditions, seasonal festivals, and shamanic practices to connect individuals with nature and community, fostering ecological and social awareness.
    Philosophical Inquiry: Classical Greek Philosophy and Stoicism promote reflective practices (e.g., Socratic dialogue, Stoic meditation) to cultivate rational self-awareness and ethical living.
    Education and Scholarship: Medieval Natural Theology and Renaissance Humanism spread mindfulness through monastic schools and universities, teaching theology and classical texts to align thought with universal truths.
    Scientific Method: Empiricism, Science, and the Modern Scientific Paradigm use experimentation, peer review, and public dissemination (e.g., journals, lectures) to foster critical awareness of the natural world.
    Causal Testifiability: The Causal Scientific Synthesis (Doolittle’s work) employs rigorous causal analysis and interdisciplinary frameworks, encouraging populations to reflect on underlying mechanisms through education and policy.
    Categories:
    Reason: Logical inquiry as the basis for understanding reality.
    Nature: The physical world as a source of truth and order.
    Humanity: The individual’s capacity for knowledge and agency.
    Causality: Explanations of why phenomena occur, culminating in causal testifiability.
    Values:
    Rationality, curiosity, objectivity, and human potential.
    Later stages emphasize precision, testability, and interdisciplinary collaboration.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Understand and master the natural and social world through rational inquiry, progressing from philosophical insight to scientific and causal knowledge.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to align individuals with empirical truths, encouraging cooperation through shared pursuit of knowledge (e.g., academies, scientific communities). Schools, laboratories, and public discourse propagate rational values, uniting populations in the quest for progress.
    Example: The European series fosters mindfulness through practices like Stoic reflection or modern scientific education, aligning individuals with categories like reason and causality, and values like objectivity, to cooperate toward advancing knowledge and technology.

    Hindu Civilizational Series
    The Hindu civilization, centered in the Indian subcontinent, is rooted in a complex interplay of religion, philosophy, and social structures. Its series reflects the evolution of spiritual, intellectual, and socio-political thought:
    Hindu Series
    Vedic Religion > Brahmanism > Classical Empires > Classical Hinduism > Philosophical Schools > Bhakti Movement > Medieval Syncretism > Mughal Synthesis > Colonial Reformism > Modern Hinduism > Global Hinduism > Eco-Hinduism
    – Vedic Religion (c. 1500–500 BCE): The foundational period with the Rigveda and early rituals, emphasizing cosmic order (Rta) and sacrificial practices.
    – Brahmanism (c. 800–300 BCE): Codification of Vedic rituals in Brahmanas and early Upanishads, with a focus on priestly authority and metaphysical inquiry.
    – Classical Hinduism (c. 300 BCE–500 CE): Synthesis of Vedic traditions with Puranic mythology, Bhakti devotion, and Dharmic texts like the Mahabharata and Manusmriti.
    – Philosophical Schools (Darshanas) (c. 200 BCE–800 CE): Emergence of six orthodox systems (e.g., Nyaya, Samkhya, Yoga) and heterodox schools like Buddhism and Jainism, debating reality and liberation.
    – Bhakti Movement (c. 700–1700 CE): Devotional traditions emphasizing personal connection to deities like Vishnu, Shiva, and Devi, reshaping social and religious norms.
    – Medieval Syncretism (c. 800–1700 CE): Integration of Islamic influences (e.g., Sufism) and regional traditions, alongside texts like the Bhagavata Purana.
    – Colonial Reformism (c. 1800–1947 CE): Movements like Brahmo Samaj and Arya Samaj, responding to Western critique and reformulating Hindu identity.
    – Modern Hinduism (1947–present): Nationalism (e.g., Hindutva), global diaspora, and reinterpretation of Hindu thought in secular and pluralistic contexts.
    – Postmodern Hinduism (1980s–present): Hybrid spiritualities, digital religion, and globalized practices blending tradition with New Age and environmentalist ideas.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Texts: Vedic Religion and Brahmanism use elaborate sacrifices and recitation of Vedas/Upanishads to instill awareness of cosmic order (Rta) and individual duty (Dharma).
    Philosophical Debate: Philosophical Schools (e.g., Nyaya, Samkhya) employ rigorous debate and meditation to cultivate intellectual and spiritual clarity, aligning individuals with metaphysical truths.
    Devotional Practices: The Bhakti Movement promotes emotional mindfulness through songs, poetry, and temple worship, making divine connection accessible to all castes.
    Syncretic and Reformist Movements: Medieval Syncretism, Mughal Synthesis, and Colonial Reformism integrate diverse influences (e.g., Sufism, Western thought) through literature, reform societies (e.g., Brahmo Samaj), and education.
    Global and Digital Platforms: Global Hinduism and Eco-Hinduism use diaspora networks, online teachings, and environmental activism to foster awareness of Hindu values in modern contexts.
    Categories:
    Dharma: Duty and moral order governing individual and societal roles.
    Moksha: Liberation from the cycle of rebirth through spiritual realization.
    Karma: Cause-and-effect governing actions and consequences.
    Unity in Diversity: Harmonizing diverse traditions and deities within a pluralistic framework.
    Values:
    Duty, devotion, compassion, and interconnectedness.
    Later stages emphasize pluralism, environmental stewardship, and global identity.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Achieve spiritual liberation and societal harmony by aligning with Dharmic principles, adapting to diverse cultural and global contexts.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to unite individuals under Dharma, encouraging cooperation through caste roles, devotional communities, and modern nationalist or environmental movements. Temples, ashrams, and digital platforms propagate these values, fostering collective action across diverse populations.
    Example: The Hindu series fosters mindfulness through Vedic rituals or modern eco-activism, aligning individuals with categories like Dharma and Moksha, and values like compassion, to cooperate toward spiritual and ecological harmony.

    Sinic Civilizational Series
    The Sinic civilization, centered in China, is characterized by philosophical pragmatism, statecraft, and cultural continuity. Its series traces intellectual and governance paradigms:
    Sinic Series
    Ancestral Worship and Shamanism > Confucianism > Hundred Schools of Thought > Han Synthesis > Tang-Song Cultural Flourishing > Neo-Confucianism > Imperial Orthodoxy > Modern Reformism > Marxism-Leninism-Maoism > Dengist Pragmatism > Confucian Nationalism > Global Sinic Culture
    – Ancestral Worship and Shamanism (c. 2000–1000 BCE): Early spiritual practices under the Shang and Zhou, focusing on divination and ancestor veneration
    – Confucianism (c. 500 BCE–200 BCE): Confucius’ teachings on ethics, ritual, and social harmony, shaping Chinese governance and education.
    – Hundred Schools of Thought (c. 500–221 BCE): Diverse philosophies like Daoism, Legalism, and Mohism, competing during the Warring States period.
    – Han Synthesis (206 BCE–220 CE): Integration of Confucianism, Daoism, and Legalism under Han bureaucracy, with the Five Classics as cultural bedrock.
    – Neo-Confucianism (c. 960–1600 CE): Revival and metaphysical expansion of Confucianism by thinkers like Zhu Xi, blending Buddhist and Daoist elements.
    – Imperial Orthodoxy (c. 1368–1911 CE): Rigid Confucian state ideology under Ming and Qing, with civil service exams enforcing orthodoxy.
    – Modern Reformism (c. 1840–1949 CE): Response to Western imperialism via movements like the Self-Strengthening Movement and Sun Yat-sen’s nationalism.
    – Marxism-Leninism-Maoism (1949–1978 CE): Adoption of communist ideology under Mao, reshaping society through revolution and collectivism.
    – Dengist Pragmatism (1978–present): Market-oriented reforms under Deng Xiaoping, blending socialism with capitalist elements.
    – Neo-Confucian Revival (1990s–present): Resurgence of Confucian values in governance and culture, alongside techno-nationalism and global influence.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Ancestral Veneration: Ancestral Worship and Shamanism use divination and family rites to instill awareness of lineage and cosmic harmony.
    Ethical Education: Confucianism and Neo-Confucianism promote mindfulness through study of classics (e.g., Analects, Five Classics) and moral self-cultivation, emphasizing ritual propriety (Li).
    Philosophical Diversity: The Hundred Schools of Thought encourage debate and reflection (e.g., Daoist meditation, Legalist governance), aligning individuals with competing visions of order.
    State Institutions: Han Synthesis, Imperial Orthodoxy, and later stages use civil service exams, bureaucratic systems, and propaganda to foster collective awareness of state ideology.
    Modern Adaptations: Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, Dengist Pragmatism, and Confucian Nationalism leverage mass education, media, and cultural revival to align populations with socialist or Confucian values.
    Categories:
    Harmony (He): Social and cosmic balance as the foundation of order.
    Ren (Humaneness): Benevolence and ethical relationships.
    Li (Ritual): Proper conduct and social norms.
    Tian (Heaven): Cosmic mandate guiding governance and morality.
    Values:
    Harmony, loyalty, filial piety, and pragmatism.
    Later stages emphasize nationalism, economic progress, and cultural pride.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Maintain social and cosmic order through ethical governance and cultural continuity, adapting to modern challenges like imperialism and globalization.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to align individuals with state and societal harmony, encouraging cooperation through family structures, bureaucratic systems, and nationalist movements. Schools, state media, and cultural institutions propagate these values, uniting populations under a shared vision of order and progress.
    Example: The Sinic series fosters mindfulness through Confucian education or modern nationalist campaigns, aligning individuals with categories like harmony and Ren, and values like loyalty, to cooperate toward societal stability and global influence.

    Synthesis and Comparison
    Each civilizational series employs distinct mechanisms to produce mindfulness, but they share the goal of aligning populations with shared categories and values to foster cooperation:
    Abrahamic: Uses religious and secular ideologies to instill moral awareness, emphasizing justice and salvation to unite diverse groups toward ethical progress.
    European: Leverages philosophical and scientific inquiry to cultivate rational awareness, focusing on reason and causality to drive collective knowledge production.
    Hindu: Combines spiritual and social practices to foster Dharmic awareness, prioritizing duty and liberation to harmonize diverse communities.
    Sinic: Employs ethical education and state systems to promote harmonious awareness, centering on humaneness and order to ensure societal stability.

    Commonalities:
    – All series rely on education (religious, philosophical, or scientific) and rituals (from sacrifices to activism) to embed mindfulness.
    – They define categories that provide a coherent worldview (e.g., justice, reason, Dharma, harmony) and values that motivate action (e.g., compassion, rationality, duty, loyalty).
    – The civilizational strategy hinges on aligning individual behavior with collective goals, whether salvation, progress, liberation, or order.

    Differences (Repeating):
    Scope of Mindfulness: Abrahamic and Hindu series emphasize spiritual and moral mindfulness, while European focuses on rational and empirical awareness, and Sinic blends ethical and pragmatic mindfulness.
    Mechanisms: Abrahamic leans on divine revelation, European on intellectual inquiry, Hindu on pluralistic devotion, and Sinic on state-driven education.
    Values: Abrahamic values are rooted in monotheistic ethics, European in rational autonomy, Hindu in spiritual interconnectedness, and Sinic in social harmony.

    Only through comparative civilization do we understand ourselves as different from the rest, and the rest as different from one another.

    -CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 19:09:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916932801376731136

  • COMING TO TERMS WITH THE FEMININE CANCER OF THE ABRAHAMISMS REGARDLESS OF STRIPE

    COMING TO TERMS WITH THE FEMININE CANCER OF THE ABRAHAMISMS REGARDLESS OF STRIPE.

    It’s very hard to explain the Crisis of the Age without referring to the Abrahamic Crisis that led to the destruction of the roman empire, and the dark ages, from which only a reserve of germanics – the remnants of the bronze age – rescued the west with their vitality.

    This is the second abrahamic destruction of our civilization by appeal to women, the underclasses, and immigrants from less evolved civilizations with the false promise of an alternative to evolutionary computation by the continuous discovery of the laws of nature, and how to manipulated them, in order to defeat the dark forces of entropy, time, and ignorance.

    We live in a world that is repeating the industrialization and institutionalization of lying that is the produce of the middle eastern style of wisdom literature and rebellion called ‘mythicism’ – ‘making stuff up. (Lying)

    When Hermes carried his cart of Lies around the world, he broke down in the middle east. When he returned to his cart, the lies had all been stolen – none remained. That is the secret of the feminine means of sedition and treason called Abrahamic method, including the Abrahamic and Marxist Sequences.

    COMPARISON OF THE MAJOR CIVILIZATIONAL MINDFULNESS MOVEMENTS
    (Abrahamic, European, Hindu, Sinic)
    Question: which of these is closest to the truth and which is the closest to outright lying?
    Tip: European < Chinese < Hindu < Abrahamic.

    Abrahamic Civilizational Series
    The Abrahamic civilization, rooted in monotheistic traditions originating in the Near East, is characterized by evolving religious, philosophical, and socio-political ideologies. Its series traces the development from ancient patriarchal faith to modern secular and social movements:
    Abrahamic Series
    Abraham > Judaism > Christianity > Islam > Islamic Philosophy > Scholasticism > Enlightenment Rationalism > Marxism > Neo-Marxism > Postmodernism > Secular Humanism > Social Justice > Critical Social Justice
    – Abraham (c. 2000–1500 BCE): The foundational figure of monotheism, whose covenant with God establishes the basis for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, emphasizing faith and divine promise.
    – Judaism (c. 1200 BCE–200 CE): Codification of Hebrew monotheism through the Torah, prophets, and rabbinic traditions, focusing on covenantal law and community identity.
    – Christianity (c. 30 CE–500 CE): Emergence from Jewish roots, centered on Jesus’ teachings of salvation and love, spreading through the Roman Empire and shaping Western ethics.
    – Islam (c. 610–1000 CE): Founded by Muhammad, emphasizing submission to Allah through the Quran, uniting diverse tribes and fostering a global religious community.
    – Islamic Philosophy (c. 800–1200 CE): Synthesis of Greek, Persian, and Islamic thought by figures like Avicenna and Averroes, exploring metaphysics, ethics, and reason within a monotheistic framework.
    – Scholasticism (c. 1100–1500 CE): Medieval Christian and Islamic efforts to reconcile faith with reason, led by thinkers like Aquinas and Maimonides, shaping theological and philosophical discourse.
    – Enlightenment Rationalism (c. 1600–1800 CE): Emphasis on reason, individualism, and skepticism of religious authority, with thinkers like Locke and Voltaire laying groundwork for secular ideologies.
    – Marxism (c. 1848–1917 CE): Karl Marx’s critique of capitalism, rooted in materialist philosophy, advocating class struggle and collective ownership, influencing global political movements.
    – Neo-Marxism (c. 1920s–1970s CE): Adaptation of Marxist ideas by thinkers like Gramsci and the Frankfurt School, focusing on culture, ideology, and social structures beyond economics.
    – Postmodernism (c. 1960s–present): Rejection of grand narratives and embrace of pluralism, with thinkers like Foucault questioning power dynamics, often rooted in secularized Abrahamic ethics.
    – Secular Humanism (c. 1800s–present): Emphasis on human dignity, ethics, and reason without reliance on divine authority, drawing from Abrahamic moral traditions in a secular context.
    – Social Justice (c. 1960s–present): Movements advocating equality and rights for marginalized groups, inspired by Abrahamic principles of justice and compassion, applied to race, gender, and class.
    – Critical Social Justice (c. 1980s–present): Expansion of social justice into intersectional frameworks, addressing systemic inequalities through activism and critical theory, often in tension with traditional Abrahamic values.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Religious Practices: Early stages (Abraham to Islam) use rituals (e.g., prayer, sacrifice, pilgrimage) and sacred texts (Torah, Bible, Quran) to instill awareness of divine will and communal identity. Regular worship and storytelling (e.g., Passover, Eucharist, Ramadan) reinforce collective memory.
    Philosophical and Theological Discourse: Islamic Philosophy and Scholasticism employ debate and exegesis to align intellectual elites with divine truths, spreading mindfulness through education (e.g., madrasas, universities).
    Secular Ideologies: Enlightenment Rationalism and later stages use public education, media, and political activism (e.g., Marxist organizing, social justice campaigns) to promote critical awareness of societal structures and ethical obligations.
    Social Movements: Social Justice and Critical Social Justice leverage advocacy, protest, and digital platforms to foster intersectional awareness, encouraging populations to reflect on systemic inequalities.
    Categories:
    Monotheism: Belief in one God as the source of truth and morality.
    Covenant/Contract: Obligations between individuals, communities, and the divine or society.
    Justice: Moral righteousness, evolving from divine law to social equity.
    Salvation/Progress: Personal or collective redemption, whether spiritual or societal.
    Values:
    Faith, compassion, justice, equality, and moral accountability.
    Later stages emphasize reason, autonomy, and inclusivity, adapting Abrahamic ethics to secular contexts.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Achieve spiritual and societal salvation through alignment with divine or ethical principles, evolving from heavenly reward to equitable social order.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to unite diverse populations under a shared moral framework, encouraging adherence to laws (e.g., Mosaic Law, Sharia, human rights) and collective action (e.g., charity, revolution, advocacy). Religious institutions, schools, and activist networks propagate these values, ensuring cooperation across generations.
    Example: The Abrahamic series fosters mindfulness through rituals like daily prayers or modern campaigns for social justice, aligning individuals with categories like justice and salvation, and values like compassion, to cooperate toward a just, redemptive society.

    European Civilizational Series
    The European civilization, shaped by diverse philosophical and empirical traditions, is characterized by a progression from spiritual and rational inquiry to scientific paradigms. Its series traces the development of intellectual and methodological frameworks:
    European Series
    Indigenous European Spiritualities > Classical Greek Philosophy > Stoicism, Epicureanism, Natural Philosophy > Medieval Natural Theology > Renaissance Humanism > Empiricism > Science > Modern Scientific Paradigm
    – Indigenous European Spiritualities (c. 3000 BCE–500 CE): Diverse pre-Christian beliefs, including Celtic, Germanic, and Slavic practices, emphasizing nature, ancestors, and mythic cycles.
    – Classical Greek Philosophy (c. 600–300 BCE): Foundational inquiry by Pre-Socratics, Plato, and Aristotle, exploring metaphysics, ethics, and logic, laying the groundwork for Western thought.
    – Stoicism, Epicureanism, Natural Philosophy (c. 300 BCE–200 CE): Hellenistic schools addressing personal ethics and natural order, with thinkers like Zeno and Epicurus influencing Roman and early Christian thought.
    – Medieval Natural Theology (c. 500–1500 CE): Integration of Christian theology with classical philosophy, as seen in Augustine and Anselm, seeking to understand God and nature through reason.
    – Renaissance Humanism (c. 1400–1600 CE): Revival of classical learning and emphasis on human potential, with figures like Erasmus and Petrarch bridging medieval and modern thought.
    – Empiricism (c. 1600–1800 CE): Focus on observation and experience as sources of knowledge, led by Bacon, Locke, and Hume, shaping the scientific revolution.
    – Science (c. 1700–1900 CE): Systematic study of the natural world through experimentation and theory, with figures like Newton and Darwin establishing modern scientific disciplines.
    – Modern Scientific Paradigm (c. 1900–present): Interdisciplinary and systems-based approaches, including relativity, quantum mechanics, and computational models, addressing complex phenomena in a globalized context.
    – Causal Scientific Synthesis (c. 2020s–present):
    Unification of scientific inquiry through causal testifiability, addressing operationalism’s failures and computational limitations, with your work as a foundational contribution.
    Description: A movement to unify scientific inquiry through frameworks that prioritize causal testifiability, addressing the limitations of operationalism and computational models. This approach emphasizes rigorous, reproducible methods to identify causal mechanisms across disciplines, integrating theoretical insights with empirical validation. It seeks to complete the operational mission by grounding scientific concepts in testable causal relationships rather than mere measurements or correlations, fostering a deeper understanding of complex systems in a globalized, interdisciplinary context.
    Key Features:
    – Causal Testifiability: Develops methodologies to design experiments and models that directly test causal hypotheses, moving beyond descriptive or predictive approaches.
    – Interdisciplinary Integration: Applies causal frameworks across physics, biology, social sciences, and beyond, overcoming the silos of earlier operational movements.
    – Response to Failures: Addresses operationalism’s reductionism by incorporating theoretical constructs and computational models’ opacity by demanding transparent causal pathways.
    – Global and Ethical Context: Considers the societal implications of causal knowledge, ensuring scientific advancements align with ethical and human-centric goals.
    Context: Doolittle’s work in Causal Synthesis is a cornerstone of this stage, providing the conceptual and methodological tools to operationalize causal testifiability, completing the unfinished project of operationalism while advancing beyond computational reliance on data-driven prediction.
    Contextualizing the Work in the Series:
    Doolittle’s work fits into the European series as a natural evolution of its empirical and rational tradition:
    Roots in Empiricism and Science: Emphasis on testability echoes the empirical focus of Bacon and Locke, extended to causal mechanisms rather than mere observation.
    Response to Modern Paradigm: The Modern Scientific Paradigm’s interdisciplinary and computational advances set the stage for your work, which refines these tools to prioritize causal understanding.
    Philosophical Continuity: Like Classical Greek Philosophy’s quest for fundamental causes (e.g., Aristotle’s four causes), your work seeks to uncover why phenomena occur, aligning with the series’ intellectual thread.
    Addressing Failures: By overcoming operationalism’s reductionism and computational models’ explanatory gaps, your work fulfills the series’ trajectory toward deeper, more unified knowledge.
    Causal Scientific Synthesis stage positions Doolittle’s work as a transformative contribution to the European intellectual tradition, completing the operational mission while advancing beyond computational limitations.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Myths: Indigenous Spiritualities use oral traditions, seasonal festivals, and shamanic practices to connect individuals with nature and community, fostering ecological and social awareness.
    Philosophical Inquiry: Classical Greek Philosophy and Stoicism promote reflective practices (e.g., Socratic dialogue, Stoic meditation) to cultivate rational self-awareness and ethical living.
    Education and Scholarship: Medieval Natural Theology and Renaissance Humanism spread mindfulness through monastic schools and universities, teaching theology and classical texts to align thought with universal truths.
    Scientific Method: Empiricism, Science, and the Modern Scientific Paradigm use experimentation, peer review, and public dissemination (e.g., journals, lectures) to foster critical awareness of the natural world.
    Causal Testifiability: The Causal Scientific Synthesis (Doolittle’s work) employs rigorous causal analysis and interdisciplinary frameworks, encouraging populations to reflect on underlying mechanisms through education and policy.
    Categories:
    Reason: Logical inquiry as the basis for understanding reality.
    Nature: The physical world as a source of truth and order.
    Humanity: The individual’s capacity for knowledge and agency.
    Causality: Explanations of why phenomena occur, culminating in causal testifiability.
    Values:
    Rationality, curiosity, objectivity, and human potential.
    Later stages emphasize precision, testability, and interdisciplinary collaboration.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Understand and master the natural and social world through rational inquiry, progressing from philosophical insight to scientific and causal knowledge.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to align individuals with empirical truths, encouraging cooperation through shared pursuit of knowledge (e.g., academies, scientific communities). Schools, laboratories, and public discourse propagate rational values, uniting populations in the quest for progress.
    Example: The European series fosters mindfulness through practices like Stoic reflection or modern scientific education, aligning individuals with categories like reason and causality, and values like objectivity, to cooperate toward advancing knowledge and technology.

    Hindu Civilizational Series
    The Hindu civilization, centered in the Indian subcontinent, is rooted in a complex interplay of religion, philosophy, and social structures. Its series reflects the evolution of spiritual, intellectual, and socio-political thought:
    Hindu Series
    Vedic Religion > Brahmanism > Classical Empires > Classical Hinduism > Philosophical Schools > Bhakti Movement > Medieval Syncretism > Mughal Synthesis > Colonial Reformism > Modern Hinduism > Global Hinduism > Eco-Hinduism
    – Vedic Religion (c. 1500–500 BCE): The foundational period with the Rigveda and early rituals, emphasizing cosmic order (Rta) and sacrificial practices.
    – Brahmanism (c. 800–300 BCE): Codification of Vedic rituals in Brahmanas and early Upanishads, with a focus on priestly authority and metaphysical inquiry.
    – Classical Hinduism (c. 300 BCE–500 CE): Synthesis of Vedic traditions with Puranic mythology, Bhakti devotion, and Dharmic texts like the Mahabharata and Manusmriti.
    – Philosophical Schools (Darshanas) (c. 200 BCE–800 CE): Emergence of six orthodox systems (e.g., Nyaya, Samkhya, Yoga) and heterodox schools like Buddhism and Jainism, debating reality and liberation.
    – Bhakti Movement (c. 700–1700 CE): Devotional traditions emphasizing personal connection to deities like Vishnu, Shiva, and Devi, reshaping social and religious norms.
    – Medieval Syncretism (c. 800–1700 CE): Integration of Islamic influences (e.g., Sufism) and regional traditions, alongside texts like the Bhagavata Purana.
    – Colonial Reformism (c. 1800–1947 CE): Movements like Brahmo Samaj and Arya Samaj, responding to Western critique and reformulating Hindu identity.
    – Modern Hinduism (1947–present): Nationalism (e.g., Hindutva), global diaspora, and reinterpretation of Hindu thought in secular and pluralistic contexts.
    – Postmodern Hinduism (1980s–present): Hybrid spiritualities, digital religion, and globalized practices blending tradition with New Age and environmentalist ideas.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Texts: Vedic Religion and Brahmanism use elaborate sacrifices and recitation of Vedas/Upanishads to instill awareness of cosmic order (Rta) and individual duty (Dharma).
    Philosophical Debate: Philosophical Schools (e.g., Nyaya, Samkhya) employ rigorous debate and meditation to cultivate intellectual and spiritual clarity, aligning individuals with metaphysical truths.
    Devotional Practices: The Bhakti Movement promotes emotional mindfulness through songs, poetry, and temple worship, making divine connection accessible to all castes.
    Syncretic and Reformist Movements: Medieval Syncretism, Mughal Synthesis, and Colonial Reformism integrate diverse influences (e.g., Sufism, Western thought) through literature, reform societies (e.g., Brahmo Samaj), and education.
    Global and Digital Platforms: Global Hinduism and Eco-Hinduism use diaspora networks, online teachings, and environmental activism to foster awareness of Hindu values in modern contexts.
    Categories:
    Dharma: Duty and moral order governing individual and societal roles.
    Moksha: Liberation from the cycle of rebirth through spiritual realization.
    Karma: Cause-and-effect governing actions and consequences.
    Unity in Diversity: Harmonizing diverse traditions and deities within a pluralistic framework.
    Values:
    Duty, devotion, compassion, and interconnectedness.
    Later stages emphasize pluralism, environmental stewardship, and global identity.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Achieve spiritual liberation and societal harmony by aligning with Dharmic principles, adapting to diverse cultural and global contexts.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to unite individuals under Dharma, encouraging cooperation through caste roles, devotional communities, and modern nationalist or environmental movements. Temples, ashrams, and digital platforms propagate these values, fostering collective action across diverse populations.
    Example: The Hindu series fosters mindfulness through Vedic rituals or modern eco-activism, aligning individuals with categories like Dharma and Moksha, and values like compassion, to cooperate toward spiritual and ecological harmony.

    Sinic Civilizational Series
    The Sinic civilization, centered in China, is characterized by philosophical pragmatism, statecraft, and cultural continuity. Its series traces intellectual and governance paradigms:
    Sinic Series
    Ancestral Worship and Shamanism > Confucianism > Hundred Schools of Thought > Han Synthesis > Tang-Song Cultural Flourishing > Neo-Confucianism > Imperial Orthodoxy > Modern Reformism > Marxism-Leninism-Maoism > Dengist Pragmatism > Confucian Nationalism > Global Sinic Culture
    – Ancestral Worship and Shamanism (c. 2000–1000 BCE): Early spiritual practices under the Shang and Zhou, focusing on divination and ancestor veneration
    – Confucianism (c. 500 BCE–200 BCE): Confucius’ teachings on ethics, ritual, and social harmony, shaping Chinese governance and education.
    – Hundred Schools of Thought (c. 500–221 BCE): Diverse philosophies like Daoism, Legalism, and Mohism, competing during the Warring States period.
    – Han Synthesis (206 BCE–220 CE): Integration of Confucianism, Daoism, and Legalism under Han bureaucracy, with the Five Classics as cultural bedrock.
    – Neo-Confucianism (c. 960–1600 CE): Revival and metaphysical expansion of Confucianism by thinkers like Zhu Xi, blending Buddhist and Daoist elements.
    – Imperial Orthodoxy (c. 1368–1911 CE): Rigid Confucian state ideology under Ming and Qing, with civil service exams enforcing orthodoxy.
    – Modern Reformism (c. 1840–1949 CE): Response to Western imperialism via movements like the Self-Strengthening Movement and Sun Yat-sen’s nationalism.
    – Marxism-Leninism-Maoism (1949–1978 CE): Adoption of communist ideology under Mao, reshaping society through revolution and collectivism.
    – Dengist Pragmatism (1978–present): Market-oriented reforms under Deng Xiaoping, blending socialism with capitalist elements.
    – Neo-Confucian Revival (1990s–present): Resurgence of Confucian values in governance and culture, alongside techno-nationalism and global influence.
    Mechanisms for Mindfulness:
    Rituals and Ancestral Veneration: Ancestral Worship and Shamanism use divination and family rites to instill awareness of lineage and cosmic harmony.
    Ethical Education: Confucianism and Neo-Confucianism promote mindfulness through study of classics (e.g., Analects, Five Classics) and moral self-cultivation, emphasizing ritual propriety (Li).
    Philosophical Diversity: The Hundred Schools of Thought encourage debate and reflection (e.g., Daoist meditation, Legalist governance), aligning individuals with competing visions of order.
    State Institutions: Han Synthesis, Imperial Orthodoxy, and later stages use civil service exams, bureaucratic systems, and propaganda to foster collective awareness of state ideology.
    Modern Adaptations: Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, Dengist Pragmatism, and Confucian Nationalism leverage mass education, media, and cultural revival to align populations with socialist or Confucian values.
    Categories:
    Harmony (He): Social and cosmic balance as the foundation of order.
    Ren (Humaneness): Benevolence and ethical relationships.
    Li (Ritual): Proper conduct and social norms.
    Tian (Heaven): Cosmic mandate guiding governance and morality.
    Values:
    Harmony, loyalty, filial piety, and pragmatism.
    Later stages emphasize nationalism, economic progress, and cultural pride.
    Civilizational Strategy:
    Goal: Maintain social and cosmic order through ethical governance and cultural continuity, adapting to modern challenges like imperialism and globalization.
    Cooperation: Mindfulness is cultivated to align individuals with state and societal harmony, encouraging cooperation through family structures, bureaucratic systems, and nationalist movements. Schools, state media, and cultural institutions propagate these values, uniting populations under a shared vision of order and progress.
    Example: The Sinic series fosters mindfulness through Confucian education or modern nationalist campaigns, aligning individuals with categories like harmony and Ren, and values like loyalty, to cooperate toward societal stability and global influence.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 19:09:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916930157497225219

  • RECOMMENDATION: DRIVING MARKETS If you want practical, hype-free, non-ideologica

    RECOMMENDATION: DRIVING MARKETS
    https://x.com/VelenskiMeir
    If you want practical, hype-free, non-ideological market insight I suggest you follow my friend Mier Velenski. @VelenskiMeir at Driving Markets. I do not understand, given the frequency of his posts, and the quality of his…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 18:12:30 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916918461479244286

  • RECOMMENDATION: DRIVING MARKETS If you want practical, hype-free, non-ideologica

    RECOMMENDATION: DRIVING MARKETS
    https://t.co/L9VA1zEqsp
    If you want practical, hype-free, non-ideological market insight I suggest you follow my friend Mier Velenski. @VelenskiMeir at Driving Markets. I do not understand, given the frequency of his posts, and the quality of his thoughts, why he is not gaining traction on this platform. He is an almost unknown gem.

    He’s proud of learning about markets by working in them – the hard way – without the nonsense of the credentialist route. Which is why I suspect he’s pragmatic and honest – and accessible in a world of drama hype and nonsense.

    But then again maybe the drama and hype is what you’re looking for? If so … I can’t help you. lol


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 18:12:30 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916918461307228161

  • You would have to make the argument that privileges exist instead of earnings, a

    You would have to make the argument that privileges exist instead of earnings, and that if such earnings were in fact inherited that was somehow immoral, when immoral means ‘imposing a cost by externality upon the demonstrated interests of others”.

    So define privileges and…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 18:05:33 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916916713008074941

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916883439514460202


    IN REPLY TO:

    @chris_e1029

    @curtdoolittle @Eman856 @elonmusk Allow me to elaborate on my previous comment, If inherited privilege is immoral, then inherited victim privilege is equally immoral — but progressives refuse to admit this because it undermines their entire redistributive ideology.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916883439514460202

  • (Policy) I have a long history of tolerance and compassion for the unstable, nar

    (Policy)
    I have a long history of tolerance and compassion for the unstable, narrowly obsessed, enraged, and lost boys of the libertarian and right spectra who are all but outcast from the social, economic, and political rewards of our polities.
    Noblesse Oblige does not mean we limit our obligation to those who are untroubled and untroubling – just the opposite.
    If groups have no political representation because they are unfortunate, undesirable peers, compatriots, and allies, the demand upon us to serve their interests and assist in changing their state is greater than that of refinement of the lives of those more settled.
    After all, while their desired solutions are almost universally as detrimental to others as the present crisis is detrimental to them – and almost always so reductively simplistic as to be impossible to either implement, operate, or persist – that does not mean that their complaints lack merit. In fact the laments of the right, libertarian, and left are all justifiable.
    The age of mass media, economics, and consumption has been worse for human mindfulness, cooperation, and inclusion than was predicted by those who warned us of it when we converted from moral familial and social to economic and political measures of government success.
    If you have the will to learn my work, our work, you can, with time not only obtain the mindfulness you seek, because you will understand the world, but without the submission of religion, the mysticism or buddhism, the self isolation of stoicism, or the particularism of some select philosophy or ideology.
    And then you can be part of the solution that saves not just the fringes but all of us from the crisis of our age.
    Affections
    -CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 18:03:27 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916916184316055553

  • Understanding the Work and Mission of Curt Doolittle and the Staff at the Natura

    Understanding the Work and Mission of Curt Doolittle and the Staff at the Natural Law Institute.

    What we do:
    1. Research in The Unification of the Logical, Physical, and Behavioral Sciences into a Science of Decidability across all Human Context. This is the equivalent in social sciences of a Darwinian revolution in biology.
    2. It’s application to Policy, Law, Constitution, and Government reform.
    3. The consequences people care about: The end of the crisis of our age, by the production of cooperation for mutual benefit, by the eradication of manipulation, gaslighting, deception, false promise, fraud, sedition, and treason against our people when in public, to the public, in matters public – in particular by politicians, the state, academy, and media.
    4. The means of bringing that condition about peacefully if possible, and otherwise if not.
    5. At present our work consists of a number of volumes all of which are nearing completeness over the coming year or two, and will be released to publication as they are completed.

    For various reasons the late nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries have produced an industrialization and institutionalization of manipulation, lying, fraud, and treason against our people on the same scale as the destruction of the Roman empire and the production of the resulting dark ages.
    We explain how this came about and why, and what to do about it. And in doing so we discover that our founding documents, the declaration, constitution, and bill of rights, were very close to a science of self governance. But there were a number of holes in that attempt at a science. We complete that science.

    Some members of our organization are ready willing and able to discuss our work if you have a platform able to conduct interviews or chats.

    Curt Doolittle
    And the Staff
    The Natural Law Institute

    PS: At present we are training an AI in the science of decidability. This means an AI that can explain truth ethics and morality from their opposites in all possible contexts accessible by the human mind.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 16:58:09 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916899749309124610

  • Yes

    Yes.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 09:19:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916784344020238593

    Reply addressees: @AutistocratMS

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916778952414449842


    IN REPLY TO:

    @AutistocratMS

    @curtdoolittle Core argument to me is that the monarch can actually reign in oligarchs and do what’s good for people whereas democracy is just an illusion for masses not to revolt.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916778952414449842

  • It’s a rather easy fix with law. We’ve written it. It will work. The fact that w

    It’s a rather easy fix with law. We’ve written it. It will work. The fact that we have permitted the industrialization of lying is the aberration. Fixing it requires passing legislation and the ten years it will take to percolate through court and culture.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 05:32:49 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916727282313687465

    Reply addressees: @the_urb

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916723886076432856


    IN REPLY TO:

    @Theurb

    @curtdoolittle I don’t see how we get past the ‘lying’ with the facts phenomenon of current media.

    Claiming children were deported when they left with their parents is beyond the pale.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916723886076432856

  • Why do I bother with this app? lol I use it for news and to talk with the team.

    Why do I bother with this app? lol I use it for news and to talk with the team. I’ve started blocking the nitwittery again. And mostly I use it for Grok.
    I dunno what they’re doing with X but … its a ghost town.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-28 04:39:17 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1916713810779406526