Thursday, July 21, 2011

What are the three most important things? The most important time is now. The most important person is the person we are with now. The most important action is what we are doing now.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

February 27, 2011

Four Noble Truths
1. There is suffering in the world
2. All suffering has a cause
3. Suffering can be ended
4. There is a path to ending suffering
 
Posted by Picasa

Thursday, October 22, 2009




Lolita

I have just finished reading Lolita for the very first time. I am glad that I waited so long to read it. Even Nabokov, through the voice of Humbert, suggests that it not be read until after the year 2000. I would not have appreciated it until now. Before I leave off and move on to Tehran, a few thoughts. Very conveniently, Mr. Nabokov deposited a few words at the end of the book in the form of an essay entitled, “On a Book Entitled Lolita. This was very helpful I might add in giving additional insight into the story. Nabokov states in this thesis that, “‘Teachers of Literature are apt to think up such problems as ‘what is the author’s purpose?’ or still worse ‘what is this guy trying to say?’” Nabokov answers by saying that he is the kind of author that having stared a book completes it for no other reason than to get rid of it. One might just as well wonder what the purpose was behind the Mona Lisa. Just what was Leonardo thinking?

Some may have expected Lolita to be a lewd book .It is not. Nabokov goes on to say that there are three taboos that most American publishers were concerned with in 1955. There is the one that Lolita was concerned about and the other two: A negro-white marriage with lots of children that is a happy success; and the atheist that lives a long, happy and useful life. Lolita is a work of fiction that exists for the sole purpose of eliciting a state of “aesthetic bliss”. In this regard it succeeds admirably.

Before leaving the topic of Nabokov, I want to touch slightly on the controversy surrounding the last manuscript that he wrote. “Laura” has been languishing in a Swiss Bank vault lo these many years. Nabokov left clear instructions that it was to be burned upon his death. I am grateful that "Laura" will be published. We might take a cue from Nabokov himself as to whether the manuscript should have been burned or not. Writing in an essay on the short story "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka, Nabokov relays that Kafka asked his friend, Max Brod, upon his death, "to burn everything he had written, even published material." "Fortunately, Nabokov goes on to say, "Brod did not comply with his wishes." I think we can call upon the same fortune that the family did not destroy the manuscript of "Laura."     
            
 



Monday, September 04, 2006

Islamic Fascism

Donald Rumsfeld suffers from moral and intellectual confusion. He says that by opposing the war protestors are appeasing a new type of fascism. Islamic Fundamentalism is without a doubt a threat to the western world, but it is not fascism. It doesn’t even hold up as a metaphor. There is no state or regime to appease.

Fascism by definition is a totalitarian form of philosophy of government that glorifies the state and assigns to the state control over every aspect of national life. These are distinctions that disqualify the usage of the word “Islamofascism”

Rumsfeld need to go back to school and study his history before he tries to deliver a lesson to the rest of us.

Terrorists should not be ignored, or appeased, but let’s get it right; calling them fascists doesn’t help, it is merely inaccurate. Associating the religion of Islam with fascism is both offensive and inaccurate. Fascism is an expression of extreme right wing politics. Political ideologies derived from fascism have been violently opposed to Islamism.

Fascism is nationalistic and Islam is hostile to nationalism. Fundamentalism is transnational and appeals to believers of all nations and races across national boundaries. There is no idea of racial purity. Fascism in Europe was a secular movement.

The term “Islamofascism” is a term of military propaganda, full of sound and fury, crafted to produce hysteria, destroy all sense of proportion, signifying nothing.



Marlowe
2006

Tuesday, August 15, 2006



The lotus symbolizes the simultaneous nature of cause and effect or the laws of karma because it blossoms and produces seeds at the same time.

We can create our own happiness under any circumstances. This is also symbolized by the lotus. The lotus grows and blossums in a muddy swamp, yet remains utterly free of any defilement.


Odunde 2006 Posted by Picasa