Thursday, September 29, 2011

Wall Street Science Fiction!

A Warning as Wall Street Moves Into Emerging Markets - NYTimes.com
When I first read the title of this article I was thinking I could find evidence the US was going to invest in emerging markets like the Chinese and the US could have the national growth like China's. Also we could utilize present US securities market volatility to our advantage as the Chinese do, offsetting problems in such things as traditional Dow Theory. But of course in our country, the US, perhaps the perception of president Obama as a socialist may factor in well with your discussion of sovereign wealth funds, because our treatment of such things in a more progressive light may allow 'fortress DC' to keep up with the likes of fortress euro's cultural wealth and China's money. If you don't change you'll be begging for change. Unfortunately, only tomorrow will show us a more futuristic overview of life, relieving us of the miasma of fatalistic visions...ie. the times we live in and NYTimes articles in general are very uplifting, but we need to bring perspective on where we as a race are going and who we really are. Otherwise, we are just existentialist escapists without futurist vision. I found this article particularly uplifting because it points toward tangible evidence of futuristic change.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

China - Officers Suspended in Sex Slave Case - NYTimes.com

China - Officers Suspended in Sex Slave Case - NYTimes.com
The plight of enslaved girls forced into performing sex on the internet is highlighted in this brief article. The next time you delve into the pornographic side of cyberspace, if you are a respectable citizen or human being, you should take this into consideration.
I am an open-minded free spirit, but ultimately a positivist. I have many theories on how criminals generally justify yin yang behavior, but I know there's a line crossed in the case of sex slaves where there is no chi at all. Very bad. You see, one of my theories runs along the lines whereby life can be a debilitating activity, but somehow we all have to tough it out and find a tomorrow that's futuristic in varying degrees, as per the individual. Therefore we must never lose sight of the ethical high ground. The chi point is that there is a vast range of negative behavior, but ultimately the light must outshine the dark...redemption in finding true order in the cosmos and your own cosmic fate.
     The problem with sexual slavery, I believe, is that it lowers humans into some sort of penultimate hellish dimension. To human traffickers I say, wake up and smell the humanism.
CNN Freedom Project>Take A Stand

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Evidence of Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Puzzles Scientists - NYTimes.com

Evidence of Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Puzzles Scientists - NYTimes.com 
Someday, maybe very soon, particles or spaceships traveling faster than light speed will be the norm. The problem with Einstein physics is that it has its origins in 1905, when there were very few if any profound thinkers. I am convinced the accuracy of modern science is some half way measure whose success is more the result of fitting parts of the puzzle of reality together only as a result of the human mind being hardwired to be extremely advanced.  It is only an approximation of real penultimate hi-tech, though oddly enough one can find solace in the fact that today's technology is partly futuristic  Again, this only works to a certain extent because reality is infinitely complicated, leaving present scientists with a low order use of our resources. Perhaps a good analogy is the idea that the human mind is only using a small percentage of it's capability, though I don't doubt the ability of the average person to be part of the rational mainstream.
Further, if you read the New York Times article in the link on the top of this page, you might get excited by the fact that the empirical experiment observing faster than light travel may be concrete proof, as opposed to purely mental speculation, that the world really has more to it then commonly thought. Personally, whether it's rationalism or empiricism, I get something out of it. It's just that I've long maintained the world is infinite in nature, more like science fiction turned fact as opposed to the big bang or creationism.
When I say reality is infinite in nature, I don't mean in the sense of Hiesenburg's Uncertainty Principle. I mean I can only conceptualize in terms of a personal cosmology outlined in a piece I wrote in this blog, big brother's ultra state, called "Don't Worry About Those UFOs Around the Corner!" But I do like empirical experiments that propel low level hi-tech because it's still hi-tech which is reaching for the infinite future, a place and dimension we may see in our lifetimes.