I vant Z train.theCryptofishist wrote:Silly Burner, you wanted the Mussolini train.
I'm gonna keep pushing on regardless of Camp A or Camp Z.
I vant Z train.theCryptofishist wrote:Silly Burner, you wanted the Mussolini train.
So, you vant Z train, but you'll "take the A train?"Lonesomebri wrote:I vant Z train.theCryptofishist wrote:Silly Burner, you wanted the Mussolini train.
I'm gonna keep pushing on regardless of Camp A or Camp Z.
Only if you're equating "stupidity" (code for inferiority) to lack of means or opportunity. Gotta get out of that Puritan mindset, Elliot. Perceived blessings on earth do not necessarily imply virtue or intelligence.Elliot wrote:Scary thing is.... I believe we HAVE passed our peak as a civilization, and that happened very recently when we invented medicine and sanitation and ways to keep most people from being eaten by animals, and thus eliminated the natural ways the stupidest were kept from growing up to reproduce.
Now we go out of our way to keep the stupidest alive to reproduce like flies. As a society we are down-breeding ourselves.
It is most frightening every time I realize the stupidities I am "capable" of myself.
Some of the reading I have done suggests that the human body actually is healthier and functions better when you are not too comfortable and a little hungry. And that this decline began with the advent of agriculture. Agriculture changed everything. What we ate, how we got it, and how we dealt with other people. Ownership of property (land, and then the technology to improve it) was invented and it became not only easier to treat other people like shit but fashionable too. Now look where we are.Elliot wrote:Now, there's something we can agree on!Dr. Pyro wrote:This is particularly true when you consider how stupid the average person is, and half the population is even more stupid than that.MyDearFriend wrote: EDITED TO ADD, FOR FULL DISCLOSURE: I find that a lot of people are really stupid.![]()
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Scary thing is.... I believe we HAVE passed our peak as a civilization, and that happened very recently when we invented medicine and sanitation and ways to keep most people from being eaten by animals, and thus eliminated the natural ways the stupidest were kept from growing up to reproduce.
Now we go out of our way to keep the stupidest alive to reproduce like flies. As a society we are down-breeding ourselves.
It is most frightening every time I realize the stupidities I am "capable" of myself.
I'm gonna have to wait until the consensus is in from the more civilized before I can go along with this, but if they give the go ahead, we are all happy!theCryptofishist wrote:We better get all those people in wheelchairs, too. Whiners. Thinking they have some sort of dignity, or something.
I think that is a fair assessment. At least it seems so to me. If you stripped burning man to the core and laid it over civilization before the advent of agriculture you would see a very good and favorable comparison.Elliot wrote:.
Well put, BBadger. And Box Burner, I like the invention of agriculture as a tipping point.
When I started this, I did not dream of so much good input!
Now, this thought: Might we say Burning Man is an embodiment of Hypothesis A? Or -- since I must allow for radical inclusiveness -- at least a good portion of us like to think of it that way?
I suppose life before agriculture was pretty much a Z type world -- eat or be eaten, minute to minute. Wow, we are lucky!Box Burner wrote: I think that is a fair assessment. At least it seems so to me. If you stripped burning man to the core and laid it over civilization before the advent of agriculture you would see a very good and favorable comparison.
I think there is only A or Z. Everything in the middle is just "maintenance" (for lack of a better word) to varying degrees.ygmir wrote:I'm struggling with the polarization. a or z, still not seeing much in the middle.
No, I would say it was an A type world. If you look at some of the few primitive cultures of hunter/gatherers that still exist you will see that they share everything. There is a high degree co-operation among the members of the group. They do not think their lives are poor. they work together play together, eat well or go hungry together. These groups number about 150 to 200 members, which is about the maximum number of people that you can maintain stable relationships with. (see Dunbar's number. There were no cities with thousands of people living in their own filth.Elliot wrote:I suppose life before agriculture was pretty much a Z type world -- eat or be eaten, minute to minute. Wow, we are lucky!Box Burner wrote: I think that is a fair assessment. At least it seems so to me. If you stripped burning man to the core and laid it over civilization before the advent of agriculture you would see a very good and favorable comparison.
Oh right, let's go back to being hunter-gatherers. What a wonderful life they led. Instead of having predictable food sources we'll just raid the other village and take their food stocks. After all, that's what raiders and bandits do right? No place to call home, so they go take what others have created or fought for.Box Burner wrote:Some of the reading I have done suggests that the human body actually is healthier and functions better when you are not too comfortable and a little hungry. And that this decline began with the advent of agriculture. Agriculture changed everything. What we ate, how we got it, and how we dealt with other people. Ownership of property (land, and then the technology to improve it) was invented and it became not only easier to treat other people like shit but fashionable too. Now look where we are.
I used to think that about the event before I ever attended. That BM comprised a bunch of deluded, arrogant, myopic weirdos with no concept of the real world, or for that matter that their event relies on a functioning society -- i.e. dirty hippies, the salt of the earth. I thought I'd have to shoot down the ideas of bozos preaching on about their "grand vision of the world." I thought I'd be subjected to every last complaint about how the "man" was ruining the world -- but that the "dude" telling me this had no solutions.Elliot wrote:Now, this thought: Might we say Burning Man is an embodiment of Hypothesis A? Or -- since I must allow for radical inclusiveness -- at least a good portion of us like to think of it that way?
You are an amazing human being. Many people who have been faced with some of the harder life experiences you have just become more and more Z. Dare I even say most people do. Its an old adage that "that which does not kill you makes you stronger." It takes an incredible sense of self, and a well rounded sense of good and evil to be able to truly come out a BETTER, more well rounded, caring person after hardships... IMHO "stronger" does not mean "More me me me! F' U! All for ME!" Stronger means "I've got me down, and now I'm here to help you, too." When it comes down to it, life is reflective. What you put in is what you get back. "Karma" is not some spiritual force. Its human nature.tatonka wrote: I have been in so many weird places ,and most you get the "feeling" to be on your guard , these events do not instill that in me. As helping society ,well I still have only been trying to improve myself, and my family . But I found if I give smiles to everyone , I get them back ,and it feels great. thanks all ")
I also LOVE these analogies.FossaFerox wrote:LIBERALLY SNIPPED QUOTING:
In 1944 there were 29 reindeer. In 1963 there were over 6,000. In 1965 there were 44 reindeer. By the 1980s there were 0 reindeer.
As far as the propensity for violence goes, I've always liked Lt. Col. David Grossman's take on things. Basically people can be separated out into three broad categories (though it IS a spectrum, not all-or-nothing). The first category are sheep. ...... Naturally, sheep have enemies, namely the wolves who prey on them.....
The third category are where I think you guys probably fit. Namely sheep dogs.
YES, we DO go crazy without human touch. Its not a matter of lovey dovey cuddle monkies being all hippy and shit. Sure, that counts, but its more. Its the handshake. The pat on the back. Even the hand placed on a shoulder to say "Ahem, I'm trying to get through where you are currently standing." Any form of human touch generates hormonal response. Truly any. In most people, all non-aggressive contact generates happiness hormones. I firmly believe that is one part of why BM is so therapeutic for so very much people. Even outside of the hippy dippy, and the bacchanalian orgies, touching one another is widely accepted as something that you do there.theCryptofishist wrote:I think that lack of touch is also a strain. I think we go crazy without it. (For a given value of crazy...) I think that the way prisons are designed (building and socially) drives people a little crazy.
That's where the problem lies. The expectation that someone will get something real, and direct back in return for their good deed will set one up for disappointment every single time. The buddhists are onto something when they say that expectations are the cause of human suffering. Sometimes, "the thanks you get" are more thinly veiled and indirect.Lonesomebri wrote: hey, I'm giving my all for the good of all you bastards and this is the thanks I get?
One of my favorite quotes of all time (although I no longer know who receives credit) deals with this. Groups of people follow the lowest common denominator for morality. My take on this is that whenever something is eating at an individual's conscience, there will be someone there to justify the bad behavior.Dr. Pyro wrote:This is particularly true when you consider how stupid the average person is, and half the population is even more stupid than that.MyDearFriend wrote: EDITED TO ADD, FOR FULL DISCLOSURE: I find that a lot of people are really stupid.
I agree with you that we're on a decline, though I don't think it was any one singular thing that put us there. To refer back to FossaFerox, if anything, I think its just that we're reaching maximum capacity... Overpopulation. Agriculture, medicine, and all sorts of other technologies come into play.Elliot wrote: Scary thing is.... I believe we HAVE passed our peak as a civilization, and that happened very recently when we invented medicine and sanitation and ways to keep most people from being eaten by animals, and thus eliminated the natural ways the stupidest were kept from growing up to reproduce.
Now we go out of our way to keep the stupidest alive to reproduce like flies. As a society we are down-breeding ourselves.
It is most frightening every time I realize the stupidities I am "capable" of myself.
I'd MUCH rather leave it up to nature than society to decide who has what it takes for survival. I mean really.... Hitler has already come up enough in this conversation.... Let's take it to a modern situation, like LGBT issues for example. "Gays are why [insert anything bad at all anywhere in the world.]" REALLY?!?!?! Society has too much fear of the different, and is too prone to knee-jerk reactionism.BBadger wrote: Anyway, if you're a fan of directing mankind's progress to some set genetic purpose, don't leave it up to "nature" to do the work: nature doesn't know "best" because nature doesn't care.
LOL!Simon of the Playa wrote:talk is cheap.
lets see some titties.
I don't know about others, but when I hand out free drinks on the playa I expect the world to listen.That people weren't building and creating stuff for Burning Man for the sake of some sort of ideal, but just to make something great -- in their own way -- for a week a year.
Did not say let's go back to being hunter/gatherers. Just said that how they live together compares favorably with the ideals of burning man.BBadger wrote:Oh right, let's go back to being hunter-gatherers. What a wonderful life they led. Instead of having predictable food sources we'll just raid the other village and take their food stocks. After all, that's what raiders and bandits do right? No place to call home, so they go take what others have created or fought for.Box Burner wrote:Some of the reading I have done suggests that the human body actually is healthier and functions better when you are not too comfortable and a little hungry. And that this decline began with the advent of agriculture. Agriculture changed everything. What we ate, how we got it, and how we dealt with other people. Ownership of property (land, and then the technology to improve it) was invented and it became not only easier to treat other people like shit but fashionable too. Now look where we are.
ThanksYou are an amazing human being. Many people who have been faced with some of the harder life experiences you have just become more and more Z. Dare I even say most people do. Its an old adage that "that which does not kill you makes you stronger." It takes an incredible sense of self, and a well rounded sense of good and evil to be able to truly come out a BETTER, more well rounded, caring person after hardships... IMHO "stronger" does not mean "More me me me! F' U! All for ME!" Stronger means "I've got me down, and now I'm here to help you, too." When it comes down to it, life is reflective. What you put in is what you get back. "Karma" is not some spiritual force. Its human nature.

If you're railing against agriculture you are talking about hunter-gatherers. Agriculture implies predictable food sources, which includes animal husbandry.Box Burner wrote:Did not say let's go back to being hunter/gatherers. Just said that how they live together compares favorably with the ideals of burning man.
Now you're victim-blaming. Oh right, the farmers caused the raiders to steal from them, just as Burning Man bicyclists cause bike thievery. Is this the logic you're pushing? These are some mixed up values you're describing.You did not have anyone raiding villages until you had agriculture. Hunter/gatherers moved with their available food as the seasons changed and the herds moved. They did not have food stocks to raid.
Agreed. Man's inhumanity to man is as old as time itself. We're just aware of it now, communicating at lightning speed and able to document everything that happens 24 hours a day, and it's overwhelming and at times, awful. But human nature is what it always was. As a species we change slowly. Only technology has changed, and that's because we've been able to piggyback on the existing stuff and don't have to remake the wheel with every generation.BBadger wrote:So drop these silly notions that the "noble savages of old" better represented the "ideals" at Burning Man. They were treating each other like shit long before recorded history. The only thing civilizations and technology enabled was writing to document some of it. We aren't any more violent now than we ever were -- we're just more aware of it. Let's get back to reality here. Let's get back to humanity. Stop deferring blame to agriculture, or sanitation, or race, or any other scapegoat-concept that humans use to ignore the fact and responsibility that humans are humans. There was never a decline, only a change. The ways humans interacted, however, remained the same. The only way to reduce the "bad things" humans do is to work on how humans choose to interact with each other.