Thursday, March 02, 2023

 Thank You Mr. King -- Installment 6 (Delayed).


It has been four years since my last post on this heading.  What have I been doing?  Not a lot of consequence, and I certainly have not written anything approproaching the art of Stephen King.  I do hear, however, that Mr. King, has been before Congress and has testified against the attempt by Penguin Random House of Simon & Schuster.  Not surprising that Mr. King objects to what is a terrible idea, inasmuch as (1.) it is a terrible idea, and (2.) some years ago when Penguin Random House (allegedly) cheated Mr. King from certain royalties, he took his considerable talents to Simon & Schuster.

In the interim, I did read a wonderful book entitled "How To Stop A Conspiracy", by the Roman (now deceased for about 2250 or so years) Sallust, with a commentary and translation by Josiah Osgood.  I strongly recommend it.  I bought my copy from the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, via an advertisement directed at me on Facebook.  For a long time, I resisted those advertisements.  But, I'll be damned, if, somehow, Facebook has figured out what interests me (some of the time, anyway).  Or what might interest me.  Let's hope FB keeps it to themselves (and me ... 😊 ... cause I likes what I likes, and it's no body's business what I likes, except me ... 😉).

Read.  Read.  Read.  Finally, as my ripe old age, I have figured out why "people" read.  Why leaders read.  Why the wealthy entrepreneurs read.  Why teachers read.  Why smart people read.  And it is this:  YOU DO NOT WANT TO ARRIVE IN THE NEXT LIFE AS IGNORANT AS YOU WERE WHEN YOU REACHED THIS LIFE.  You think I am kidding.  I'm not.  If you educate yourself, now, in this life.  You'll have a running start as a good life, the next time.  One time I watched the movie of "To Kill A Mockingbird" and then, fascinated, I actually got the book and I read it.  The most eye-opening this for me in that book was the old lady down the street, who had gotten addicted to some kind of drug, and on her dying bed (it took her quite a while to die) one of the protagonist's children was forced to go to her bed every day and read to her.  Why?  She felt that she needed to break her addition, in this life, so that it would not follow her into the next life.  And, the process was so appallingly difficult that she needed someone to distract her from her withdrawal sufferings.  She wanted to leave this life clean, better than she had been during her life.

I want to leave this life, lo' many years from now, better than I am now ... so that, when I get to the next place I am going, I won't be as ignorant as I was when I entered this life.  I want to give myself a leg-up.  Reading does that.


My Maiden Post from https://www.buymeacoffee.com/Ntany3K5kK/what-matters-1640152

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Art and the Game

From time to time, I wonder to myself, if -- as some say -- "art is the quality of communication" -- then will true, valuable, informative, communication win out, in the competition for attention, over "celebrities" who couldn't tie their own shoes, over "healthy living influencers" who eat junk food when they think no one is looking, over loud mouthed pundits who are simply following a script that someone smarter than they are, wrote for them.

In short, I wonder to myself, if "people" are as easily led into temptation as they seem to be and whether there is any point to trying to deliver them from evil ... as what used to be called "the Good Book" suggests might be the salvation of the human race.

And, then, following this introductory train of thought, I consider the 'ancient' civilization of "the Roman People" (that is actually what Romans called themselves. They didn't say "the United States of Rome" or "Rome". They called themselves "the Roman People"). There are many fine books written about the Roman People ... the first one I ever remember was called "The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire". One I have read recently is "How To Stop A Conspiracy, An Ancient Guide to Saving a Republic" by Sallust, translated and introduced by Josiah Osgood, copyright 2022 by Princeton University Press. It's a little book, in pages and physical size (you can hold it in one hand. But, its quality of communication, its "art" is remarkable. Sallust's thesis, so far as I could recognize it is that the Roman People fell, as we now know, because, after conquering the world, and the hardships and efforts required to do so, having earned their leisure and their luxury (at least for true citizens), it ruined them. And, the "game", as it were, no longer being about getting others, came to be about getting each other. Amassing large fortunes, having fine clothes (with money stolen from their peers), amassing political power ... in short, the game came to be about nothing in particular. There was no longer any "game", and so the Roman People simply ate themselves up. The famous saying 'Nero fiddled while Rome burned', issued to suggest how morally bankrupt the Roman People had become that their leader would "fiddle" whilst they went down to ruin, is really saying that to remain great, a great people need a great game, and when the game is over, the game turns inward and self-destruction inevitably results.

So, dear friend, the next time you feel like you have accomplished something by reaching the 75th level of Dungeons and Dragons, ask yourself "What Game Is This I Am Playing?" Or more accurately, "Who's Game Am I A Pawn In?" And, if you don't like the answer, well, then, go on out and start a good game. One that actually builds something for you to pass on to your People, bye and bye.

Cheerio.