Misguided Zen
meandering towards enlightenment

Archive for the ‘From the author’ Category

Know thyself

Posted in From the author  by Karl Morris on April 21st, 2010

2 things

The above utterance is one I often use in retorts whether I have one point to make or twenty. It’s something I picked up along my multi-year

jeans at the beach. add it to the list.

journey to Cynic City that I just haven’t been able to shake. With good reason though; I was hardly aware that I used it. It wasn’t until today when I overheard a favorite comedic pundit of mine use it to segue into his rant that I kinda jumped to attention thinking that I was hearing myself. I can’t really account for the response, but that’s not the point.

The point is my sudden awareness of this now entrenched idiosyncrasy and my new found interest in figuring out just how long my list of imperceivable habits is. The sooner I know this the sooner I can start completing my profile on Facebook. I’ll probably have to send out a survey to my 1000 closest friends (again, Facebook), so hopefully they’ve been paying attention.

I really hope I’m not an arm puncher.

Straight talk

Posted in Advice, From the author  by Karl Morris on March 23rd, 2009

It is my hope that I make at least some sense. My rants are never clear:

We have an inherent flaw in our human make up of persistently asking the wrong questions, and then being genuinely surprised and bewildered when we get useless answers.

It’s worsened when we’re unable to discern that we have gotten useless answers and proceed to act on them.

Whether it be an inability to comprehend, or an inability to communicate, we are often times incapable of getting the facts we need to make informed decisions.

Blessed are the few who have the presence of mind to achieve a vague realisation of this. Far too often the problem is compounded by a veil of ignorance that prevents the uninformed from realising their own disadvantageous position.

This blindness to the truth is perpetrated by the deep rooted narcissism that bubbles in our loins. A self centred view of the world where everyone sees and interprets things the way we do; we, who are the keepers of knowledge and dispensers of wisdom.

The problem is hard to identify but easy to solve. We need to be seekers of truth and not its agents. Let an acknowledgement of, and a drive to dispel ignorance be our purpose. Strive for humility. If our first thought is “I don’t know” half the battle is won. Approach situations as a neophyte. Accept, even before it is proven, that what you know may be flawed or at the very least incomplete. Be open to new ideas and be explicit in sharing. Don’t force, but rather be taken in by the wave of collaboration.

Knowledge isn’t something we own, it’s something we partake in.

Why I’m a Democrat

Posted in From the author, The free market, Truisms  by Karl Morris on November 9th, 2008

It almost goes without saying that a black man in America, and for that matter black people around the world, by and large associate with the Democratic party though they are noticeably ignorant and only blindly subscribe to their policies. The simple truth of the matter is that if you really stop and think about it, blacks are much more attuned to the ideology of the Grand Old Party than to the Democratic or Libertarian stance. It was a Republican (Abraham Lincoln) that signed the Emancipation Proclamation (albeit under duress) formally abolishing slavery, Republicans support less taxes and less involvement in the day to day lives of citizens, and the laundry list goes on and on.

If blacks do indeed have the same ideals as Republicans then why do so many identify with Democrats? I believe a lot of it has to do with the GOP’s name. It sounds classist and exclusionary with a huge throwback to slavery and the Great House. All in all it kinda rubs you the wrong way. This alone couldn’t be the reason however (one would hope) and I’m sure each person could give their own story. I’m no exception.

Again, if the views of republicans line up almost purposefully with my own, then why do I trumpet my democratic status. It’s simple really; I’m a Democrat because Republicans are nonsensical and oxymoronic. If that comes off as a little too harsh then lets just say that at the very least they’re…convenient.

Their policies of less taxes and more independence come from the concept of “small government”. The idea being that citizens should not have the government interfering with there day to day lives, and should be granted certain inherent freedoms. This comes from the belief that the Free Market is a perfect, self correcting entity that will always work out for the economy’s and its citizen’s best interest. Now while there are many instances of the market healing from a scratch or a jolt, there’s zero evidence that this mantra holds true for gaping wounds. The Great Depression (1929) and The Greater Depression (2008) are both instances of the market failing horribly and in both instances the government (correctly) intervened. The idea that if left alone, the market will always (eventually) be in the right seems to be an unrealisable fantasy. None the less, this is what Republicans believe and while I disagree with it, that’s not what I have a problem with. My problem is that their idea of small government only extends as far as giving you freedoms that do not trample on their own moral judgement. The things that are personal and *should* be left to individual judgement are being governed by persons with a “I’m right, fall in line” mentality. If they believe that the government should stay out of our lives then they have no business legislating about issues such as gay marriage and abortion. Regardles of my own stance on those or any such issue, I don’t believe the impact on my own sense and sensibility gives me right or reason to impede on someone else’s decisions. In other words, stay out of their lives. Be a small government.

The moral right is highly subjective. Parents, friends, school, community and church have the voting majority in moulding your view of the world. It seems to me that Democrats realise this, and as such don’t impose their will in areas where shades of gray exist. When it doubt, let them work it out. When you start to govern with a view of not just managing the business of the country but also its moral fibre, then it’s easy to develop a school of thought that those who don’t agree with you are against you. And we’ve seen where that leads.

So I’m a Democrat because I differ morally with some beliefs of Republicans and the convenient way in which some issues require small government while others do not. My wish is that more (black) persons would pause for a minute and figure for themselves why they’re drawn to the party, though it might be too late to make sense from all the noise. With Obama in the White House, it’s pretty hard to think you need any reason beyond that.

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First!

Posted in From the author  by Karl Morris on February 8th, 2008
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This is the obligatory fist post with the sole purpose of familiarizing you with the musings to follow.

Describing this blog will really come down to your point of view. In my mind this is just an avenue to complain about the daily doses of idiocy that I’m faced with, some being my own, while to others it may be a fountain of truth from which flows the meaning of life with a slightly PG-13 edge.

No matter what brought you here and what you may think…stay for the booze. There will be plenty.

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