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Earthgrinder's Journal


Earthgrinder's Journal

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21 entries this month
 

17:04 Jun 29 2020
Times Read: 663


The Class of 2020 has had it rough. Just look at the last few months here in the United States. Only the third impeachment in the nation’s history. A near war with Iran. Then a global pandemic that canceled all their graduation ceremonies. And now the highest unemployment ever recorded.

Not exactly an encouraging time to go out into the world and try to make it on your own.

Arnold Schwarzenegger faced a number of obstacles when he came into the world. Europe had been ravaged by World War II. There were few opportunities in his home country of Austria. He arrived in America with so little money that he got by laying bricks. He lost his brother and his father by the time he was 25. He had what many would have described as a crippling accent. Yet somehow he made it.

How did he overcome the innumerable obstacles and difficulties? As he told the Class of 2020 in a wonderful commencement address, which quotes Marcus Aurelius’s line about how the “impediment to action advances action,” it’s about vision. You can’t be reactive. You have to have a sense of where you’re going. Because if you don’t, how can you know how to respond to the troubles that pop up along the way?

Marcus Aurelius knew he wanted to be a great emperor. He knew the philosophy he was trying to live up to. He knew the example he was trying to set for history. So when difficulties arose—from ill-health to pandemics to palace coups—he had a framework to rely on. He had a vision that helped him put these obstacles into perspective. He had something to persevere for. Same with Stockdale. His vision was making it out of that North Vietnamese prison camp, and turning his ordeal into the kind of life-changing event that in the end, he would not trade for anything. That was his vision and it got him through unimaginable difficulty.

Whether you’re graduating or you are the parent of a graduate, it doesn’t matter. This advice holds true. You need to have a vision. You have to know where you are going. You have to know what you’re moving towards. Otherwise, you won’t get anywhere. The impediment to action advances action… but only if you know where you are trying to advance and the kind of person you want to be when you get there. ... The Daily Stoic


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21:44 Jun 25 2020
Times Read: 673


In March, Brent Underwood thought he’d found the perfect place to ride out the pandemic: a small California ghost town he’d been slowly renovating and turning into a resort.

It was safe and isolated, beautiful and quiet. Then a freak series of snow storms trapped him there in Cerro Gordo for weeks with dwindling supplies and no running water. His retreat turned suddenly into a prison. Then he had a bout with appendicitis that required him to drive himself 2 hours to the closest clinic.

As we’ve said before, life comes at you fast. (Indeed, Brent told us this on Daily Stoic Podcast a while back.)

But then it seemed like things were getting back to normal. The rest of the snow melted. He helped us launch our Alive Time vs. Dead Time Challenge, which raised money for victims of the pandemic. Work progressed on the town. Media attention poured in. Last week, the New York Times profiled him and the town in a long-awaited piece.

And then, before he even had time to send the article to his family, the town's crown jewel—the American Hotel—burned to the ground… exactly 149 years to the day from the day it had opened. From triumph to disaster in a matter of hours.

While cleaning up the debris from the fire a few days later, an earthquake hit the town and sent rock slides down the mountain.

Seneca himself tells the story of Rome burning to the ground and how the city of Lyons came to her aid with a large donation (just as the Friends of Cerro Gordo have a GoFundMe to rebuild the hotel). Little did Lyons know that within a year Rome would be returning the favor because Lyons had burned.

These are the lessons we must take from history as well as from current events. Life is unpredictable… yet somehow very predictable. Life comes at us fast. It doesn’t stop. It puffs us up and brings us low. It blesses and curses us.

All we can do is be ready. All we can do is pick up the pieces and keep going...the daily stoic


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17:00 Jun 25 2020
Times Read: 680


Today marks the International Day of the Seafarer, which serves to highlight how crucial overseas shipping is to daily life around the world. The event is also intended to remind us of the bravery and sacrifice shown by sailors of all stripes as they endeavor to perform this essential function. As much as 90% of all cargo travels by sea at some point in its journey to the store or your door, so next time you encounter an old sea dog on a dark and stormy night, be sure to say thanks.


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16:44 Jun 22 2020
Times Read: 699


It’s incredible to think of what has occurred in the last twenty years. The tech bubble. 9/11. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Great Recession. The Syrian Civil War. The Arab Spring. And now the COVID-19 Pandemic, and unprecedented protests and clashes between authorities and civilians

Even the last few months, as people have come to joke, feel like years all by themselves. Impeachment. The primaries. Pandemic. Police.

It’s too much. Overwhelming, yeah? Or is it just… life?

Remember in a span of less than two years, Seneca lost his father, got married (AD 40), then lost his firstborn son, and then twenty days after burying his son, he would be banished from Rome by the Emperor Claudius. Think about Marcus’s reign, which lasted just 19 years. This turned out to be enough time for a plague, a coup by one of his closest friends, to lose 5 of his children, a plague, the loss of his stepbrother (and co-ruler), an economic crisis, and more. Think about that three year period for Theodore Roosevelt where he got married, wrote a book, graduated from law school, won his first public office, and then had his first daughter. Then 48 hours later, on the same day in the same house, he lost his beloved mother and his wife.

To say this was “a lot” for these men would be a preposterous understatement. But guess what? They got through it. As you will get through it, as you have already gotten through so much. Because that’s what life is. It’s tackling problems day to day, or step by step as Marcus said. We can’t let the whole of it overwhelm us.

No, we have to concentrate like Romans. We have to say amor fati. We have to keep calm and carry on. Because that’s all we can do. ~ The Daily Stoic


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BloodRoseX
BloodRoseX
16:50 Jun 22 2020

"Amor Fati" was something I wanted to get tattooed on myself. But I decided against it, and went with "Collige virgo rosas".

Maybe on the back of my neck...I still have some space left...lol!





demi
demi
17:16 Jun 22 2020

The pure amount of people who are brainwashed into thinking we won't get over this is unreal. They seem to have forgotten everything else in the decades of their lives to the point they see this as the end. As tragic as it sounds, the world needs to keep moving. We can't stay in and suffocate.





 

Word of the day · Today

00:22 Jun 21 2020
Times Read: 717


Word of the day · Today
aberration

NOUN
a departure from what is normal, usual, or expected, typically one that is unwelcome.
"they described the outbreak of violence in the area as an aberration"
synonyms:
anomaly · deviation · divergence · abnormality · irregularity · variation · [more]


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22:18 Jun 18 2020
Times Read: 744


We’d like to think that our mind is our friend, but of course it isn’t. The Stoics knew this. The mind wants to jump to conclusions. The mind wants us to get worked up. The mind wants not to be challenged, not to have to admit it was wrong. That’s why they worked so hard to question their assumptions, to build strategies for questioning their own thinking and not being at the mercy of it.

This is very hard to do. We see the inability to do it manifest in our social media feeds and internet comment sections and of course in our own opinions on a regular basis. Someone brings up something bad, something serious: The unethical conduct of a politician you support. An example of brutal racism or injustice. A mistake you made. And how do we respond? It’s inflective. It’s immediate: “But what about ______?! But where are the ______ on _______?! But are you saying you don’t care about looting and riots?! But just last week, you did something worse!!!”

As if pointing out another wrong cancels out the first one. As if you can just change the subject and won’t have to deal with the problem at hand. That’s not how this works. “Whataboutism” is the sign of a weak mind. It’s the sign of someone who is not in control of themselves, who is not wise, who is easily susceptible to tolerating, even being complicit in injustices.

A Stoic looks at the world and at themselves unflinchingly. Marcus Aurelius thanked people who proved him wrong. Epictetus said we had to put our opinions to the test. You have to be strong enough to entertain disagreements, you have to be able to discuss and debate in good faith. It’s the snowflakes who fly into a rage when someone challenges their views. It’s the snowflakes who can never admit they’re wrong or address deserved criticism.

You’re better than that. Stronger and wiser than that too.~The Daily Stoic


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human20
human20
02:25 Jun 19 2020

You right





human20
human20
02:28 Jun 19 2020

Every got that mind i make mistake lot in my live





 

02:40 Jun 18 2020
Times Read: 764


The individual with a negative mental attitude attracts troubles as a magnet attracts steel filings.

It is a curious fact of nature that somehow our minds find a way to transform into physical reality the things we think about most. If you expect to fail, you can be sure that you will, and if you find something negative in every opportunity, nothing will ever work out positively for you. Fortunately, the reverse is also true. If you are a happy, positive person, you will attract positive things. You can keep your mindset positive by eliminating negative thoughts the moment they begin to creep into your conscious mind. If you dwell on the negative aspects of every opportunity, you will never accomplish anything worthwhile. Be prudent about the risks you take, but don’t be paralyzed by fear of failure.~ Napoleon Hill.


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IvyAiyanna
IvyAiyanna
02:50 Jun 18 2020

Like this..





 

The Daily Stoic

15:03 Jun 16 2020
Times Read: 774


It’s not that our ancestors didn’t know what was right, it was that they had trouble fully getting there.

In the opening pages of Meditations, Marcus Aurelius describes how the early Stoics like Thrasea, Helvidius, and Cato inspired him to believe in a “society of equal laws, governed by equality of status and of speech, and of rules who respect the liberty of their subjects above all else.”

Nothing is more important or just than that, Marcus believed. And yet he ruled a Rome that could not have been further from it in many ways.

Consider Thomas Jefferson’s opening to the Declaration of Independence in 1776, that “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Beautiful words expressing powerful ideals, even though their creator was the owner of dozens of slaves who could not have been further from living those ideals.

In a sense, the arc of the history of justice and progress has been less about innovation and more about realization. What America did in the 18th century was bring the world closer to Marcus’s vision than ever before; what Lincoln did in the 19th century was bring America closer to Jefferson’s vision than Jefferson had; and what Martin Luther King Jr. did in the 20th century was bring America closer still to the vision of Lincoln. Each one of these great heroes was fulfilling the work of the heroes that came before them, each one was trying to help us realize the justice we believed in but had not yet managed to achieve.

Well, that is the work that must continue today. Here we are in the 21st century. We must get closer to those beautiful visions. We must move the ball forward, but also in a sense backward—toward that timeless and true sense of what is right and fair. We don’t need to talk about what a just society looks like—we have that on record—we need to help become one. We need to, as Epictetus said, embody our philosophy.

We need to make it real. Now. Now. Now. --The Daily Stoic


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LORDMOGY
LORDMOGY
17:07 Jun 16 2020





 

The Secret History of Sun Down Town.--From the New England Historical Society

17:37 Jun 15 2020
Times Read: 777


CONNECTICUTThe Secret History of New England’s Sundown Towns

“Whites Only Within City Limits After Dark” reads the faded road sign, an artifact on display at the Tubman African American Museum in Georgia. The sign was found outside one of Connecticut’s sundown towns.
Sundown towns were municipalities that prevented African-Americans or other minorities from lingering after dark.



James Loewen, a sociologist who taught at the University of Vermont, discovered thousands of sundown towns. He found them throughout the United States, including New England.


Beginning in the 1890s, New England’s small towns and rural communities drove African-Americans into urban ghettoes, Loewen contends.

Small towns kept out not just black people, but Jews, Catholics, Greeks, Italians, Indians, even trade unionists and gays. They used violence and intimidation and restrictive covenants and mortgage practices

GREAT MIGRATION
Some New England counties drove out their entire African-American populations. From 1890 to 1940, many African Americans who lived in rural areas of New England had to move to cities.

From 1890 to 1930, the U.S. black population increased 60 percent. Between 1915 and 1930, more than a million African-Americans moved from the South to the North. And yet entire counties in New England became whiter.

In Maine, for example, only two of the state’s 16 counties had fewer than 10 blacks in 1890. By 1930, Maine had five.

Writes Loewen, in Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism, 14 Maine counties had at least 18 African Americans. By 1930, only nine did. Five black people lived in Lincoln County in 1930, where 26 had lived in 1890. Hancock County had 30,000 people in 1930, but only three were black. Forty years earlier, there had been 56.

Vermont had no all-white counties until 1930. New Hampshire had no all-white counties in 1890, but two in 1930.

RISE OF THE KLAN
Keeping out African-Americans happened well before the 19th and 20th century. In 1717, Town Meeting in New London, Conn., voted against free blacks living in the town or owning land anywhere in the colony.

But in the 1890s, racism deepened in the North as memories of the Civil War faded. Waves of Catholic and Jewish immigrants from Canada and southern Europe moved into Yankee mill towns. The influx of immigrants sparked the revival of the Ku Klux Klan — and created sundown towns.

In the early 1920s, the Klan began to hold regular meetings and cross-burnings in small towns in eastern and central Massachusetts. A Klan rally near Montpelier, Vt., in 1925 drew 10,000.

The Klan in London, Ontario
The Klan in London, Ontario

The Klan spread rapidly in Maine, with 15,000 showing up at the state convention in 1923. The KKK held its first daylight parade in the United States in Milo, Maine, in 1923, and others soon followed.

In 1925, The Washington Post estimated New England had more than a half-million Klansmen, with 150,141 in Maine and more than 370,000 across the other New England states.

Though Klan membership fell almost as quickly as it grew in New England, the KKK left a legacy of sundown towns. Their history is rarely told.

TALES OF SUNDOWN TOWNS
Loewen collected anecdotes about places where minorities were afraid to spend the night.

Italian stonecutters who quarried in Portland, Conn., were told to be on the other side of the Connecticut River by sundown. The bridge would then stay open at night so no one could pass over it.
One resident of the Wollaston neighborhood of Quincy, Mass., remembers an incident from the mid-1950s: “My father, a jazz musician, had some of his musician friends over one night for some jamming. Most of the musicians involved were black. The next day, a delegation of neighbors…came by to register their disapproval that my father had blacks in their neighborhood after dark.”
A similar story was told about Burlington, Conn. An African-American family friend from Waterbury came over to play cards. “He always made a habit of leaving before sunset and if he could not, he would spend the night on the couch. … [In] earlier years, whenever he would drive in or out of town, the police would stop and harass him, detain him for questioning, or pull him over and run his license and plates. Comments were made to the effect that being a black man in Burlington after dark, he couldn’t be up to any good…”
Starting in the 1930s, the Negro Motorist Green Book guided African-American travelers away from sundown towns. Black travelers typically carried blankets, food and cans of gasoline in their cars to avoid embarrassment, or worse.

RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS
In 1905, restrictive covenants began appearing in property deeds. They typically stated, “No portion of these premises shall ever be sold to or occupied by anyone other than members of the white or Caucasian race.” Then they often added, “Nothing in the foregoing shall preclude live-in servants.”

The exception rather than the rule: Jackie Robinson at home in Stamford with his wife Rachel, sons David, Jackie Jr.. and Sharon.
The exception rather than the rule: Jackie Robinson at home in Stamford with his wife Rachel, sons David, Jackie Jr.. and Sharon.

A 1940 deed for a development called High Ledge Homes in West Hartford, Conn., said, “No person of any race except the white race shall use or occupy any building on any lot.” The deed allowed one exception for people of a different race: the owner’s employees.

Similarly, Manchester-By-The-Sea in Massachusetts only allowed blacks and Jews to live within its borders if they were servants.

GOVERNMENT-SUPPORTED SUNDOWN TOWNS
The federal government encouraged sundown towns through discriminatory mortgage practices. Between 1934 and 1968, 98 percent of loans approved by the federal government in Connecticut went to white, non-Hispanic borrowers.

In 1954, baseball great Jackie Robinson bought a house in Stamford, Conn., but only with help from prominent white people. He proved the exception in suburban New England.

In Nahant, Mass., a property deed written in the 1920s contained language forbidding the owner to sell the house to Greeks or Jews. (Nahant, ironically, now has the densest population of Greek descendants in New England.)

ANTI-SEMITISM
sundown towns movie
A film that exposed Darien as one of Connecticut’s sundown towns.

In 1922, the Sharon, Conn., chamber of commerce distributed a leaflet asking homeowners not to sell to Jews. Another realtor in Greenwich, Conn., sent a similar memo. It said, “From this date on, when anyone telephones us in answer to an ad in any newspaper and their name is, or appears to be Jewish, do not meet them anywhere.”

Darien, Conn., did not let Jews spend the night within its borders. The 1947 film Gentleman’s Agreement , co-starring Paul Revere’s descendant Anne Revere. exposed the practice. Gregory Peck played a reporter pretending to be Jewish to write a story on anti-Semitism.

The Civil Rights movement then started to change all that with laws against racist policies. The Fair Housing Act of 1968 prohibited housing discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, family status or national origin.

But attitudes didn’t necessarily change.

In 1973, all-white Ashby, Mass., voted at Town Meeting 148 to 79 against inviting people of color into town.


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The Daily Stioic

02:47 Jun 15 2020
Times Read: 796


Over and over again, the Stoics remind us how weak we are compared to the force of nature and the whims of nature. Why get angry at the world, Marcus asks—quoting Euripedes—as if the world would notice? Seneca pokes fun at Claudius and his absurd delusion to immortalize himself. His impotent declaration of war against the sea and command to his soldiers to attack the waves with their swords.

“Nature exerts her own power,” as Seneca writes in his Letters, and “makes her presence known even to the strongest.” It doesn’t matter what you think. It doesn’t matter what you say. It doesn’t matter how well-laid your plans are or how powerful you become. Nature is more powerful. She put Alexander and his mule driver in the same ground in the end, as Marcus said, and she will humble you too.

You may feel powerful. You may be young and in peak physical shape. You may buy into that Silicon Valley techno-optimism about radical life extension. You may be crammed in a big city where Nature’s exertions are out of sight, out of mind. You may think your work is going to mean your immortality. But it won’t. Nothing ever will.

Seneca would have loved this photo making its rounds of a tree trunk swallowing a tombstone. Nature is an undefeated, unstoppable force. We will never come close to overpowering her. She is not only breaking down our physical bodies with each passing day we get to grace her with our presence, but when we breathe our last, she will devour even our memories and our monuments.

Human life is fragile and fleeting and the world is a merciless series of changes and extinctions. We are born to perish. "How does the earth find room for all the bodies buried in it since the beginning of time?” Marcus Aurelius asked, then answered, “Through change and decomposition... absorbed into the logos from which all things spring, and so make room for new arrivals.”

Accept that. Live well while you can


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18:32 Jun 11 2020
Times Read: 805


There’s no question that we are facing a number of pressing issues as a planet: Public health dangers. Homelessness. The rise of authoritarian China. Police brutality. Failures of the regulatory state.

It’s an interesting question: Are these crises suddenly coming to a head now? Or is it that we’re just finally noticing them?

When the Stoics talked about slowing down, about stillness, we have to realize that they weren’t talking about checking out. What they were talking about was tuning in. It can’t be argued that the murder of innocent people or racism are somehow new events in American life, for instance. All that’s changed is that people—because of the pandemic—are a little less busy and finally able to see what’s happening. Nothing new is happening in China, it’s just the noise of other issues is falling away and now it’s impossible to ignore what has been growing all the while. And so it goes for all the other major issues of our time. They’ve been here for some time...we were just too blind to notice, too self-absorbed to care.

Marcus Aurelius said we had to stop being bounced around by life. He said we had to concentrate. He was saying—as philosophers have said for all time—that we have to see the here and now. This is the hardest thing, but the most important thing. No one who is frenzied, who is jerked around by social media, who is doing way too many inessential things, has the time or the quiet necessary to do deep thinking. Their minds cannot compute what is obvious to those who are still or have perspective. No one who is roiled by anxiety, stress, distraction, or anger can develop the insights required to solve these difficult problems.

We have to slow down. We have to see. We have to do the work. -- The Daily Stoic


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The Daily Stoic

04:20 Jun 11 2020
Times Read: 829


These are strange times. We all have entrenched political beliefs, for which the stakes seem dreadfully high. There are trolls everywhere. There are stupid people everywhere. Both the trolls and the ignorant seem to revel in saying things designed to piss us off. And if that weren’t enough, most of us are spending extended and unprecedented amounts of time trapped inside with people whom we may love but still have the ability to make us upset.

Or actually, is that true? Can they make us upset? Not according to the Stoics.

“If someone succeeds in provoking you,” Epictetus said, “realize that your mind is complicit in the provocation.”

He meant that whatever the other person did is on them. Whatever your reaction is to their remark or action, that’s on you. No one can make you angry, only you have that power. Someone can certainly say something offensive or stupid or mean, but no one can make you upset—that’s a choice.

This is worth remembering always (it’s also a theme we talked about in our recent podcast with Robert Greene where he discussed why people—on the left and right—are so easily triggered when they hear things they disagree with). You shouldn’t give away your power over yourself. You shouldn’t let others bait you. You shouldn’t allow yourself to be provoked. But most of all, you can’t blame them if that happens.

Because you control you, nobody else. From the Daily Stoic.


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ReaperSoulMate
ReaperSoulMate
03:01 Jun 15 2020

Agreed.





 

06:43 Jun 09 2020
Times Read: 846


News flash Vampires are from Bulgaria where they still feed. Where they came from is a cave that's called the entrance to hell.. Originally 1500 years ago. Demons started inhabiting dead bodies. Maybe the legends age true.


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BloodRoseX
BloodRoseX
11:28 Jun 09 2020

Of course. It is a sort of possession... it is called Predatory Vampirism. Lots of magick involved.





NikkiAidyn
NikkiAidyn
13:17 Jun 09 2020

I'd like to know more about these stories





 

06:08 Jun 09 2020
Times Read: 850


I have been watching the salem wiitch trial. It was a sad time. My relative was one of the witches accused of practicing., falsly I might add. Yes she was a woman of wild spirit. She owned a farm. The owner of the farm abutting her land coveted her property. She was accused and jailed. Found guilty and hung. Her crime was being an independent woman and landowner. I am not mentioning her name to protect myself and the family. The farmer who stole the property vanished.


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20:28 Jun 06 2020
Times Read: 864


"Caesar thought Cato would roll over like every other opponent and obstacle he had faced. That turned out very much not to be the case. Portia and her husband Brutus collaborated, ultimately, to assassinate Caesar in an attempt to restore the Republic. Agrippinus and Thrasea and their obstinate resistance of Nero’s tyranny was a constant, exhausting drain on his rule (indeed, Thrasea quite nearly killed him). The British thought they could roll over those Stoic-inspired revolutionaries in the colonies in 1776 and found it was not that easy. Stockdale’s captors assumed they could break him, but instead endured seven long years of his constant, almost inhuman resistance in that POW camp.

The point being: A Stoic refuses to accept injustice and refuses to be intimidated… and they resist any and all attempts to force them to do otherwise."

—from Daily Stoic's Monday email, "You Always Have the Power to Resist"


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19:15 Jun 06 2020
Times Read: 869


Any way Allied invasion of Europe begins
Four years and two days after Allied forces evacuated from the European mainland, they return in the Normandy landings, the largest amphibious military assault in history. By the end of the day, 5,000 vessels land 160,000 troops on the French coastline, launching the push to defeat Germany. One this day D-Day June 6th 1944.

I was reading this morning that Chuck Norris had died last night. That put the household in a tremor. It is fake news. To the SOB that posted that--- Justice and Truth will get you.


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03:10 Jun 06 2020
Times Read: 879


I hereby declare this day as a no fighting day and only as a be magnificent day! If you are magnificent then you will get 🍪and🍺 compliments of moi Grinder.


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15:32 Jun 04 2020
Times Read: 891


It’s mighty easy to justify dishonesty if you make your living from it.

The subconscious mind makes no moral judgments. If you tell yourself something over and over, your subconscious mind will eventually accept even the most blatant lie as fact. Those whose lives and careers have been destroyed by dishonest behavior began the process of self-destruction when they convinced themselves that one slight infraction of the rules wouldn’t matter. When you sell yourself on an idea, make sure the idea is positive, beneficial to you, and harmless to others. Just as negative thoughts and deeds return to their originator, so do positive ones. When you practice honest, ethical behavior, you set in motion a force for good that will return to you many times over.- Napoleon Hill


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MorningStarAldan
MorningStarAldan
15:36 Jun 04 2020

Bam! Spot on! I love this thank you:)





 

The Daily Stoic

17:20 Jun 03 2020
Times Read: 902


It’s easy to forget. It’s easy to think small.

But this life is not just about us. Our loyalty and duty is not just to ourselves, to our family or to our immediate neighbors.

The Stoics believed that we were all one. Marcus Aurelius referred repeatedly to the hive. He spoke of being part of one large community. Dozens of times he talks of the common good, and how to wrong one is to wrong all, and to do good for one is to do good for all—that to do good for others is to do good for yourself. Seneca spoke of sympatheia, the interconnectedness of all people. He spoke of the need for kindness, for compassion, for understanding.

You might not think that a death in the streets of Georgia or a police killing in Minnesota or immigrant children in cages along America’s southern border has much impact on your safety. You might think that these situations are complicated. You might even question the other side’s political motivations and point to the media’s tendency to inflame things. And that all may be true, but it doesn’t change the facts: This is your problem. It’s everyone’s problem.

Martin Luther King, Jr. perfectly expressed those Stoic concepts of interconnectivity and interdependence when he said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.”

You cannot turn away from that. You cannot let this be partisan. You cannot close your heart to this. When people are being wronged, you are being wronged. We all are. We can disagree about who’s to blame for the problem and we can disagree about the solution, but we have to admit that the problem exists and we have to insist that a solution should. We have to fight for it. Now. Like true Stoics


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LORDMOGY
LORDMOGY
21:37 Jun 03 2020





 

Daily Stoic

02:05 Jun 03 2020
Times Read: 914


It would be easy to say that this is someone else’s fight. It is easy to say, as some pundits have said, that this is not a fight at all. You don’t go to war with a virus. That’s not how it works.

But according to Andrew Roberts, the great biographer of Churchill and Napoleon, that is exactly what is happening and exactly how this works. He asked, when we spoke to him (listen to our in-depth conversation with him here), if he could conclude our conversation by reading a passage from a speech Churchill gave to the Royal College of Physicians in 1944:

The discoveries of healing science must be the inheritance of all. That is clear. Disease must be attacked, whether it occurs in the poorest or the richest man or woman, simply on the ground that it is the enemy; and it must be attacked just in the same way as the fire brigade will give its full assistance to the humblest cottage as readily as to the most important mansion.

The war against disease, against pestilence, against infant mortality, these have been the collective battles of humanity since before Marcus Aurelius. Indeed, those were the primary battles of Marcus Aurelius' life. He fought against the Antonine Plague, selling off the imperial treasures and forgiving Rome’s debts as he did so, not out of self-preservation (in fact he ultimately died of it) but because he cared about other people. He fought armed only with the crudest medicines and understanding of science to help everyone he could, even as he mourned the deaths of his own young children.

It is so easy to say, as people now feel comfortable saying on the internet, “Oh, but wouldn’t many of these people have died anyway? COVID-19 only affects the elderly and the immuno-compromised.” Disgusting. Heartless. It’s also easy to say, as some people do from inside their mansions and with their comfortable finances, that we should all just stay in lockdown until this is over. This too is heartless to those who will lose their jobs, who are trapped in abusive domestic situations, who suffer from depression, and the unborn future generations who are deprived of the growth and dynamism of the economy.

War is hard. It is not clean. It is not easy. But it must be fought. It demands your sacrifices. It’s victims demand your compassion and its mercilessness spits in the face of your glib and selfish attitudes.

The virus is the enemy, as Churchill said. It must be attacked on the ground with everything we have. It needs you to hold your shield, as the Spartans did, for the protection of the whole line.


COMMENTS

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BloodRoseX
BloodRoseX
13:48 Jun 03 2020

I totally agree. Don't become complacent and start to take things for granted, people.





 

20:36 Jun 02 2020
Times Read: 925


Word of the day · Today
redolent
[ˈredlənt]
ADJECTIVE
(redolent of/with)
strongly reminiscent or suggestive of (something).


COMMENTS

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IvysxHaven
IvysxHaven
21:04 Jun 02 2020

Cool... thank you, hun.








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