Monthly Archives: May 2023

What Ayn Rand Understood about Romantic Love That so Many Fail … – Foundation for Economic Education

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:13 am

We recently recognized Valentines Day: a holiday dedicated to amorous love.

While I spent the evening covering a campus fashion show for the Dartmouth Review all alone, Id like to share some of my favorite quotes from Ayn Rand on the subject. While Rand is perhaps most renowned for her political and moral philosophy, Objectivism constitutes a full philosophical system that includes a beautiful theory of love.

Many people conceive of love as unconditional and selfless. While this sounds sweet and wholesome prima facie, Rands fiction and philosophy reveal why this conception of love is far from the ideal. In Rands breakthrough 1943 novel, The Fountainhead, the protagonist (Howard Roark) issues one of the pithiest, most impactful and memorable lines in all of her fiction:

To say I love you one must know first how to say the I.

What does Roark mean by this? Love is not something that exists abstractly but as the union between two individuals. For this love to mean something, both individuals involved in the romance, a subspecies of the happy commerce of friendship, must have a robust sense of self. That is, each person must possess values independently and demonstrate the requisite virtues to achieve them. Love is not a substitute for self-esteem but a consequence thereof.

Hank Rearden, in Rands seminal 1957 tome Atlas Shrugged, expounds upon the role of romantic love in relation to ones highest values:

[Lovers] can be only travelers you choose to share your journey and must be travelers going on their own power in the same direction.

To lose oneself, i.e., ones values, virtues, and self-esteem, in the ecstasy of romance is to consign ones relationship to the same fate ones consigned his individuality: oblivion. Such is the natural and inexorable consequence of treating love as a substitute instead of a complement to the self.

The following line, uttered by Howard Roark in The Fountainhead, strikes many as antithetical to the widely accepted conception of love as sacrificial:

"I love you, Dominique. As selfishly as the fact that I exist. As selfishly as my lungs breathe air. I breathe for my own necessity, for the fuel of my body, for my survival. Ive given you, not my sacrifice or my pity, but my ego and my naked need.

To demonstrate the truthfulness of love as selfish, one can do a simple proof by contrapositive. In other words, is it true that the opposite of selfishness implies the opposite of love? I believe so. Imagine, if you will, your loved one informing you that they love you selflessly, i.e., they love you not for their survival, not out of their ego and naked need, but because they know you need them for your survival and out of your ego and naked need? I predict that you would be aghast by such an admission and properly regard their feelings towards you as altruistic and well-intentioned but not as love. It follows, then, that true love is a reflection of mutual selfish satisfaction that both partners derive from each others company.

Rand expounded upon her theory of love as selfish in a 1964 interview for a rather unlikely publication: Playboy.

It is for your own happiness that you need the person you love, Rand said, and that is the greatest compliment, the greatest tribute you can pay to that person.

So next year on February 14, a day dedicated to true love, I encourage you to express to your significant other that you love them as selfishly as [you] lungs breathe air.

Read more:

What Ayn Rand Understood about Romantic Love That so Many Fail ... - Foundation for Economic Education

Posted in Ayn Rand | Comments Off on What Ayn Rand Understood about Romantic Love That so Many Fail … – Foundation for Economic Education

1923 Emmy Submissions Revealed for Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren and More (EXCLUSIVE) – Variety

Posted: at 1:13 am

James Minchin III/Paramount+

Yellowstone may have been shut out at the 2022 Emmys, but Paramount+s Western spinoff 1923 is hoping to break that cycle.

Creator Taylor Sheridan, who wrote the entire first season of the freshman series, has chosen to submit the premiere episode, titled 1923, for Emmy consideration, Variety can exclusively confirm. In addition, the same kickoff episode will serve as Ben Richardsons official submission for outstanding directing for a drama.

ReadVarietysAwards Circuit for the latest Emmy predictions in all categories.

The eight-episode prequel to Paramount Networks Yellowstone and sequel to Paramount+s 1883 follows a generation of the Dutton family during various hardships, including prohibition, drought and the early stages of the Great Depression.

With the star power of veteran actors Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren, the duo will be vying for the lead actor and lead actress drama prizes.

Ford, 80, has never received an Emmy nom and this year, could get two. The other is for his career-best performance as a senior therapist with Parkinsons disease in Shrinking from Apple TV, which hes submitted for supporting comedy actor.

Mirren, on the other hand, has been an Emmy darling going back to her recognition for Prime Suspect in 1996 and her return to the character in 2007, with two other wins in between for The Passion of Ayn Rand in 1999 and Elizabeth I in 2006. Mirren is also wickedly close to achieving EGOT status after winning best actress for The Queen (2006) and a Tony Award in 2015 for The Audience. All that is needed is a Grammy prize (spoken word album incoming?).

In addition, the network has opted to submit an onslaught of supporting players.

Supporting drama actor will have Timothy Dalton, Brandon Sklenar, Darren Mann, Jerome Flynn, Brian Geraghty, Sebastian Roch and Robert Patrick up for consideration, while supporting drama actress hopes to include Aminah Nieves, Julia Schlaepfer, Michelle Randolph, Jennifer Ehle and Marley Shelton.

Paramount announced a second season in February after the show became a hit as the most-watched Paramount+ premiere of all time in the U.S., with 7.4 million viewers. It also received positive reviews, withVarietycritic Joshua Alstonwriting that Mirren and Ford both 80-ish, neither a stranger to action badassery make for such a potent pairing, their chemistry alone is enough to make 1923 feel like an elevated version of Sheridans neo-Western fare.

Emmy voting begins on June 15.

1923 Emmy Submissions

Follow this link:

1923 Emmy Submissions Revealed for Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren and More (EXCLUSIVE) - Variety

Posted in Ayn Rand | Comments Off on 1923 Emmy Submissions Revealed for Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren and More (EXCLUSIVE) – Variety

Crazy Town: Episode 73. How Longtermism Became the Most … – Resilience

Posted: at 1:13 am

Jason BradfordI'm Jason Bradford.Asher MillerIm Asher Miller.Rob DietzAnd I'm Rob Dietz. Welcome to Crazy Town, where we can't wait to meet our 80 trillion descendants on the other side of the cosmic wormhole.Melody AllisonHi, This is Crazy Town producer Melody Allison. Thanks for listening. Here in season five, were exploring Phalse Prophets and the dangerous messages theyre so intent on spreading. If you like what youre hearing, please let some friends know about this episode, or the podcast in general. Now on to the show.Asher Miller Hey Jason, I gotta ask before we start today, when I was pulling up in front of your house, I noticed, you have all these excavators out in the field?Jason Bradford Yes, I do. Asher Miller Like a dozen of them.Jason Bradford Yep. Big deal.Asher Miller What's going on, man?Jason Bradford Well, you know, there's a lot of stuff going wrong in the world, or potentially wrong. What we call existential risks, you know. The gray goo AI kind of stuff, pandemic, nuclear war, all kinds of things. And if we're going to basically fulfill our potential as beings in the universe, we've got to make sure that if civilization goes under, they can come back. Rob DietzThat's good thinking.Asher MillerThis is insurance?Jason Bradford Yeah. A lot of people think that either you're gonna go hide out in a bunker and be able to come out and re-boot civilization. But no way. Unless you're a hunter gatherer or a subsistence farmer, us moderns don't have the skills. So what I'm doing is I'm creating basically bunkers for groups of subsistence farmers and hunter gatherers that I'm going to import from various parts of the world. I'm not going to just get a single group of hunter gatherers or a single group of peasants. I'm mixing them together. We want that diversity. And they're going to live here.Asher Miller So not a monoculture of hunter gatherers. Jason Bradford No I'm not. I'm bringing in - Actually, I've got some New Guineans lined up. Some recently contacted tribes from the Amazon. I'm working on getting some Sentinelese from the Bay of Bengal. That's really tough. They try to kill you when you land. And I've got Andean peasants. I've got some Romanians. We're getting some Amish in here. So really, really solid crews, and they're going to be on 12 hour shifts. Asher Miller I was just thinking that you're doing rotational farming, basically?Jason Bradford Well, if things go wrong, you know, if the asteroid strikes, whatever, we need half of them at least in the bunkers at any one time, right? But they also have to come out to maintain their skills, get the vitamin D, etc. So I feel like I'm fulfilling my potential by doing for, you know, humanity, and the future generations. Rob Dietz Okay, I'm getting close to getting sick here. I'm near the vomit point. So I gotta call a little timeout on this - What do we even call it? A sales pitch? Jason Bradford Yep, this is legendary. This is going to be huge. Rob Dietz Well, let's just say for now that this is not Jason's cockamamie idea. He's making fun of a cockamamie idea that we're going to get to in a little bit. But in order to get there, we got to tell you about a guy named William MacAskill. Okay? He's our phalse prophet for today. And let me just start running through a little bit of his life to say, get a sense of him. And then we'll move on to the cockamamie ideas. Jason Bradford I was kind of getting excited about it, actually. Rob Dietz Yeah, I know. I know. Sorry. Okay, so McCaskill is probably the youngest of our phalse prophets so far. Jason Bradford Congratulations. Asher Miller What is he, 12?Rob Dietz Yeah, yeah. 11. No, he was born in 1987 in Scotland. His actual name when he was born was William Crouch, but - I don't know why that's funny.Asher Miller I just imagined he was crouching. Jason Bradford He was stooping a little. Asher Miller William, crouch!Rob Dietz Oh, it's a sentence. I gotcha.Asher Miller You gotta do it with a Scottish accent. William, crouch!Rob Dietz I thought we decided no more accents. After the Bill Clinton episode we had to put that away.Asher Miller You say this now. You're the one who gets to do all of the accents. Jason Bradford Yeah, I know. Only you can do accents.Rob Dietz Oh, no. This show is off to a bad start. Okay, back to William Crouch/MacAskill. He actually was kind of a progressive guy. So he and his partner both changed their last names when they got married. So that's how he ended up being William MacAskill.Asher Miller I gotta say I appreciate going with a new name versus the hyphenation thing. That gets long.Rob Dietz Yeah, it can get tedious. Yeah. Well, and so I think he had a pretty kind heart. When he was 15, he learned about the scope of people who are dying from the HIV epidemic and he kind of made this resolution, when I get older, I'm gonna make a ton of money so that I can give it away and become a philanthropist. So he went to Cambridge. So I guess he's got the academic chops. He studied philosophy. And he got impacted by this guy, Peter Singer, who wrote a pretty famous, influential essay called "Famine, Affluence, and Morality." And we're gonna get more into that later. And then he goes on to get his PhD in philosophy. Yes, that's a Doctor of Philosophy in philosophy. And now he's an associate professor at Oxford, and he's the chair of the advisory board of the Global Priorities Institute. Pretty highfalutin.Jason Bradford We've been making fun of a lot of the Ivy League schools in the U.S. I'm so happy we get to - Asher Miller Yeah, we get to make fun of the Brits. Jason Bradford I know the Brits. Like Cambridge, Oxford. This is great.Rob Dietz The true Ivy right? Jason Bradford Oh yeah. This is old school Ivy. This is great.Rob Dietz I mean, the the buildings were probably actually made of ivy at this point.Jason Bradford They were cloaked in ivy. Okay, so he's founded a few organizations, including the Centre for Effective Altruism. If you look it up it's spelled "t-r-e." Just be ready. Asher Miller Yeah, all about British - Jason Bradford Oh yeah, yeah. It's confusing. It argues for bringing database rational decision making to philanthropy. Rob Dietz Well, it sounds alright. Jason Bradford Yeah, a group called, Giving What We Can. And this is sort of like tithing your earnings to effective charities. Rob Dietz Sounds alright too.Jason Bradford Yeah. 80,000 hours, which is sort of the ideas that represents how many hours you're likely to work in a professional capacity. And so it is advising people on how to think through career choices that have the greatest social impact. Rob Dietz That sounds alright too.Jason Bradford I know, this guy's a star. He's a vocal supporter of animal welfare. This led him into vegetarianism. Nice. Live by your principles. He's best known, however, for being the leading voice of what is known as Longtermism. And he laid out what this means, his philosophy, in a very recent a apparently best selling book called, "What we Owe the Future: A Million Year View. And I remember getting ads like this like crazy through New York Times and stuff. I mean, this was really, really pushed. And it's this longtermism that we are sort of bringing up, and he's representing that as our phalse prophet.Rob Dietz If we were to just stop here, you'd have to say, "You know what? Maybe this guy is an actual prophet instead of a phalse prophet."Jason Bradford What's not to love, right? Yeah. Yeah. But we hinted at that with my fantasy about the bunker.Rob Dietz So it was a fantasy then? We're clear on this now.Asher Miller Some strange fantasies. So our Crazy Town devotees who listen to every one of our episodes may recall that I did an interview with Douglas Rushkoff, and we talked a little bit about the longtermism stuff. But we're going to really unpack that here today, and talk about why it's such a dangerous philosophy. So we're going to focus on longtermism, but, and this is - Part of what's really tricky about it is I think we have to place it in the context of a lot of other concepts. And that's partly because it helps people sort of like understand we're dealing with. And also because some of these other terms are also commonly used, or they're sometimes used interchangeably. They're used in different contexts. But what's important about them is that they're all connected sort of in an overarching philosophy, right? So the key thing is, if you hear any of these terms - It's not only understanding, like we want to present some of these concepts so you understand where longtermism comes from, but for your ears to be tuned to these terms that you might hear. Because then you'll know, "Oh, this represents this certain type of thinking."Rob Dietz Alright, if we're gonna start throwing around terms, can I just make the request that we don't use the word ontology or ontological at any time during this?Jason Bradford I was not planning on it, but you just did that. Asher Miller You actually did do that. Jason Bradford Okay? Okay, so someone who's really helped us understand how these are all connected, how these terms are conneceted, is Emile Torres, one of the most vocal critics of Effective Altruism and longtermism. And Emile is a reformed longtermist who actually had been a research fellow for our previous phalse prophet, Ray Kurzweil.Rob Dietz Wow. So Emile has escaped from the cults.Jason Bradford Yes. And Emile goes by they, and they have an actual acronym for this mishmash of all these related philosophies and concepts.Jason Bradford It's B-U-L-L-S-H-I-T. Easy to remember.Jason Bradford Okay, that's the easiest to remember. Unfortunately, this one's not as easy but - It's what's called TESCREAL. Okay? It sounds like something you'd push out.Jason Bradford It sounds like a hormone.Rob Dietz Some sort of disease, maybe. I went down to the public bathhouse and came away with TESCREAL. Jason Bradford And now you're on antibiotics. Okay, well it stands for - I might have some trouble with these words so I need you to step in if I flounder.Rob Dietz Okay, yeah. You almost said an anachronism for acronym.Asher Miller Well because there's so many "isms" in this acronym.Jason Bradford Oh my god. This is ridiculous. Are you ready for all the isming? Rob Dietz Yeah, okay. Jason Bradford Okay, we got transhumanism. Jason Bradford Weve got extropianism. We've got, oh this one is going to be rough, singularitarianism. We've got cosmism. We've got rationalism, Effective Altruism, and longtermism. So that's what TESCREAL all stands for.Asher Miller Okay. Rob Dietz Right. I'm gonna say that's a lot. So, I don't think we've got to cover what every single one of those means.Asher Miller We're just gonna do an episode on each one. Rob Dietz We want to get to longtermism, but like you said earlier, Asher, we've got to set some context here.Jason Bradford And a few of them, they are so related that it kind of covers the bases.Rob Dietz So, why don't we hit unilater - I've got Jason disease. No. Utilitarianism, Transhumanism, Effective Altruism, existential risk, and then we'll be safely arriving at our destination of longtermism.Jason Bradford Okay, and some of these are not exactly in TESCREAL, but they're related important ideas in lots of these, so. . . Asher Miller Alright. Well, let's start with utilitarianism. And I think, let's go in a certain order, because I think the order is almost like these are building blocks of concepts. So utilitarianism is probably the oldest of these. And it's a philosophy that dates back to Jeremy Bentham snd John Stuart Mill, you know, the late 18th century, early 19th century. And basically, all you need to know about utilitarianism is that it argues that the most ethical choice you can make is the one that will produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people. Okay? Pretty basic. Jason Bradford Pretty basic.Rob Dietz Pretty easy to agree with. I mean, just generally.Rob Dietz For the most part. Rob Dietz In general. Jason Bradford You know, devils in the details, maybe of like, who decides and how do you decide and -Asher Miller Ah, that's what we're gonna be getting into later.Jason Bradford Okay. Alright, then we're gonna go to my favorite, transhumanism. According to Emile Torres, transhumanism is, and I quote, "Ideology that sees humanity as a work in progress. It is something that we can and should actively reengineer using advanced technologies like brain implants, which could connect our brains to the internet, and genetic engineering, which can enable us to create super smart designer babies." So we cover this a lot with Ray Kurzweil.Rob Dietz I've also seen a lot of sci-fi, and it usually doesn't end well.Jason Bradford Yeah, usually not really.Asher Miller It's interesting, the first part of that, humanity is a work in progress, something that we should actively, you know, re-engineer. Like, okay. Took a little turn there.Jason Bradford Some red flags start waving in the wind here.Asher Miller Alright, let's talk about Effective Altruism, because I think Effective Altruism is really probably the most commonly used term to sort of define this space of philosophy and initiatives that people are working on. It's something that is really intrinsic, I think, to our phalse prophet MacAskill. So, according to the Center for Effective Altruism, which is something again, that Jason, you talked about MacAskill co-founded. Effective Altruism is quote, "About using evidence and reason to figure out how to benefit others as much as possible, and taking action on that basis. Jason Bradford Yeah, sounds good. Asher Miller So you can see how it builds off of utilitarianism. Jason Bradford Love it. Rob Dietz Agree. Asher Miller It promotes using data and dispassionate reason to identify what giving would have the greatest impact, right. So you see, and this is actually pretty common in philanthropy, where people like to use metrics and you know, different ways -Where you're not just being tugged by heartstrings, or whatever. You're trying to think about the greatest impact you can make. Okay/ And it comes from the Australian moral philosopher, Peter Singer. You know, you talked, I think you mentioned him, Rob, when you were talking about the influences on William MacAskill. He's commonly viewed as the founder of EA when he published that paper in 1972, "Famine, Affluence, and Morality." And basically, he wrote it in response to this humanitarian crisis that was happening in East Bengal where there were many people that are suffering from famine, huge humanitarian crisis that was happening there. And he was arguing that there was insufficient aid coming from wealthy nations looking at this situation. So in the paper, he argued, quote, "If it is in our power to prevent something bad from happening without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, we ought morally to do it." So basically, like, if it's not going to create an equally bad outcome consequence, it's our moral responsibility to help, right. And he also argued that quote, "If we accept any principle of impartiality, universal ability, equality or whatever, we cannot discriminate against someone merely because he is far away from us, or we are far away from him." Right? So he's saying, let's say the life of a child in East Bengal is worth the equivalent of the life of someone in your neighborhood. Rob Dietz Well, let the distortions begin now, shall we. If he's the kind of originator of this philosophy, it's started to take a turn for the worse. And this is one of the core ideas behind modern day Effective Altruism philosophy is that you got to earn to give. So it kind of goes back to MacAskill's youth of I want to grow up to be kind of philanthropist, right?Jason Bradford I know. It's amazing.Rob Dietz And you have this sort of rationale that whatever your job is, just go out and do it and get as much money as you can so that you can then become an effective altruist.Jason Bradford I think they also do say like, they asked a question, I saw this in some of Nick Bostrom writings, we'll talk about him a little bit. That, of course, you don't necessarily want to be engaged in like gun running or something like that.Jason Bradford There are limits. Jason Bradford There are limits. Right. Rob Dietz But there's kind of an irony here, because what you just said, Asher, of the life of a child in one part of the world is equivalent to the life of a child in your neighborhood. This kind of rationale is sort of doing this weird time thing where it's saying, the suffering of people today is not worth thinking about when you're talking about the potential well-being of all these future people.Asher Miller That will get us straight into longtermism, which we'll get to in a second. One thing I wanted to say about this earn to give philosophy, I've encountered this quite a bit in my own life. Asher Miller Yeah. So after college, I went and I worked at the Shoah Foundation, where we were documenting stories of Holocaust survivors. I didn't necessarily think I was going to be somebody who dedicated my career to doing nonprofit work. At the time, I wanted to be a writer, right. And I was going to write this book about a family of Holocaust survivors I was really close to. And in the process of preparing for that, I was writing a book for another Holocaust survivor. I was burned out. And I was living in Europe with my future wife, and then came back to the United States. I was like, what am I going to do now? And I was lucky enough to get interviews with folks, some really interesting people that that my dad was connected to in the Bay Area. And I remember meeting with this one guy, and you know, he was just kind of like asking me, he did a favor to my dad talking to me in my mid 20s about what I wanted to do. And I was like, you know, the .com boom was in effect at the time. Jason Bradford Really? Jason Bradford Oh, yeah. Asher Miller And I was like, I really want to do well. But I really want to do something meaningful and worthwhile. And basically, this guy, I'll never forget him. He like a VC guy, venture capitalist guy. He's like, "That's fucking stupid." He's like, "That's ridiculous. Make your money now and then you can give it away later. That's a way more effective way of helping the world." You know, he like just literally told me I was a fucking idiot. Jason Bradford For even imagining. Just go make piles of money.Asher Miller Go make your money.Rob Dietz I love it too, because he's also putting that message out with just sell your soul. You know, go do some work that you don't give a shit about as long as the piles of money are rolling in.Asher Miller And he was completely convinced that that was the right thing to do.Jason Bradford Okay, okay. Well, alright. So the other important thing to look at with this is what's called existential risks. And I remember when I first actually started learning about this whole philosophy, TESCREAL whatever, through the lens of existential risks. I remember being just struck by the fact that these folks in Oxford were like publishing about existential risk. Like wow, that's cool. You know?Asher Miller Because a lot of our work is about risks too, right?Jason Bradford I know, I'm like, Oh my God. We've got well funded Oxfordians is out there doing stuff. This is fantastic. So Nick Bostrom, also at Oxford, MacAskill's colleague. You know, he's also considered to be one of these fathers of longtermism. Introduced the concept of existential risk in 2002. And, I mean, of course, people have been worried about these kinds of things for a long time.Asher Miller Sure. We've been aware about nuclear, you know, nuclear holocaust for a long time.Jason Bradford Exactly. But he kind of brought it forward and started defining it and bringing in all the potential lists of things that could go wrong. And so he defines it as an adverse outcome that would either "Annihilate Earth originating intelligent life or permanently and drastically curtail its potential. An existential risk is one where humankind as a whole is imperiled. Existential disasters have major adverse consequences for the course of human civilization for all time to come." And that's a key thing, for all time to come. And so he lists top existential threats. And you know, I agree with a lot of these. Nuclear holocaust or runaway climate change. Then it gets a little esoteric and a little bit more hard to kind of relate to you. For example, misguided world government, or another static social equilibrium that stops technological progress. So this is interesting. This is a hint. This is telling. Anything that ends up stopping technical progress, or some -Asher Miller Is an existential risk? Jason Bradford Yes. Or a world government that doesn't allow medical progress to happen.Rob Dietz Doesn't even consider the potential existential threat from overdoing it on the technology.Jason Bradford Well, this is the irony we'll get into, okay. And also, what he calls technological arrests. And this is that if for some reason we can't overcome the technical needs we have to transition to a post human world. Alright? So they pretty much make explicit that they're dealing now with what you would call like this - What was it? The singulatarianism? Asher Miller Right. Okay, so let's jut look at these building blocks, right? Utilitarianism, transhumanism, Effective Altruism, existential risks. You know, that brings us to longtermism. And we're gonna unpack this more in a minute. But basically, the essential thing to know is that longtermism is used for valuing all potential human lives in the future. Asher Miller Yeah. So any potential life, right? And look, we know it's a confusing bit of word salad, TESCREAL. We'll see if that takes off. But again, I think the key thing here is that these are all terms of philosophical beliefs that that are used interchangeably. And they're part of this sort of collective worldview that is becoming increasingly influential. Jason Bradford Yeah.Asher Miller So basically, you're advocating whenever any one of those isms is mentioned the little alarm bell starts to go off. Asher Miller Your antennae should go off. Asher Miller "This is TESCREAL. This is TESCREAL."Asher Miller Yeah. So what is longtermism really? I guess I would summarize it like this. It takes utilitarianism right, which is the moral argument for prioritizing the greatest sum of well being. Do the thing that does the most good. And it combines that with Singer's, Effective Altruism, which is like, we can't prioritize our own interests, or just those that people were familiar with over complete strangers. And it basically puts it into like, the space time continuum, right? With a little dash of the singularity thrown in.Jason Bradford Yes, that's a great summary of this stuff.Rob Dietz Yeah. Can I ask you, Jason, resident biologist? Is that even a thing where you could value some other life out there more than say, yourself or your kin?Jason Bradford It's hard to do. Asher Miller Well, it's not more. It's equal, right?Jason Bradford Well, that's the thing. If you think about everything that we think of normal from an evolutionary point of view suggests that this is kind of impossible from a root level of, I mean, you can probably, in your head conceptualize this, but I think it's very hard to do in practice. And we were talking about, you know, if there's a burning building, and your kid is in it, you're willing to run into that building, right? But if it's not your kid, what are the odds you're just gonna run into that building? Rob Dietz Some of us will. Jason Bradford But it's very hard. And so -Asher Miller I will just say, though, I mean, I think Singer wrote about that, in his article that he wrote in 1971, and he was basically saying, we live in a global world now. We actually have agency to do something. And he was basically saying, look, if we have surplus, we should use it to help other people. So you could sort of see the logic of it, rational logic. As long as we're, and this is the key thing, as long as we act rationally, which brings us in a sense back to Pinker, right? Like hey, if we can all be rational and we've got you know, the spirit capacity, then we can do all these things.Rob Dietz And not to confuse everybody with too many names, but our beef is not with Singer, right. I mean, it's more the distortions that have occurred since he wrote that article. And you know, with longtermism, it argues for starters, don't discount the fate of people on the other side of the planet. Well, that's right in line with Singer so that's fine. Right? But then it goes deeper and says we shouldn't discount future lives, which also is pretty okay until you take it to some absurd level.Jason Bradford I think we gotta call back to - we had a whole in season, what was it, Season 3: Hidden Drivers? Rob Dietz Yeah.Jason Bradford We had a whole episode about discounting the future in episode 37 of Crazy Town. So anyway, I think in many ways, we're like, yeah, okay. We agree.Rob Dietz Yeah, even hitting the technical side, the discount rate and how basically, our money system discounts the future. And we're saying no, you can't discount the future. Asher Miller It's interesting with some of these philosophies and these terms. When you first heard about existential risks, you're like, oh, they're probably talking about the same thing I am worried about, you know, And we hear longtermism and we're like, yeah, we agree. We shouldn't discount the future. We should be concerned about future generations.Rob Dietz Don't just take it as quarterly returns, you know. Don't just focus on the thing that's right in front of you.Jason Bradford Okay. So here's where they remember, we kind of hinted that the devils in the details with a lot of this stuff. Okay. So MacAskill And he's got this recent book we mentioned. And in that he goes through some math. He says, "If we assume that our population continues at its current size - " Okay, so 8 billion or whatever - "And we last as long as typical mammals that would mean there would be 80 trillion people yet to come. Future people would outnumber us 10,000 to one." So that's where you start to go, okay, right. I can see that conceptually. But now you're like, we're going to value those 10,000 futures as much as the present.Rob Dietz And that's where he starts saying that every action we take right now in the present should be for the sole purpose of ensuring the existence and the wellbeing of that 80 trillion, or however many it is in the future. And even if that means sacrificing wellbeing and the lives of people today, such as the 1.3 billion people that are living in poverty and suffering today. It's just the math, right? You just look at the numbers. Who cares? Usually you would say, let the one sacrifice for the many. I guess this would be, let the 1.3 billion sacrifice for the 80 trillion.Asher Miller I'm sure that goes over well.Rob Dietz Yeah, as long as you're not in the 1.3 - If you're at Oxford, you're safe. Okay?Asher Miller Now, and this is where it brings it back to existential risks, right? So if we have to say, look, the simple math says there's gonna be 10,000 people in the future for every one of us alive today. Then we have to do everything in our power to prevent the risks to their existence happening. And so we've got to have all kinds of investments and focus on trying to prevent some of these risks. But of course, you know, sometimes we need to have a backup plan, which is, Jason, you were talking about, you're invested in some of these backup plans with what you're doing here on the property. I think you got that idea from one of MacAskill's colleagues, Robin Hanson. Jason Bradford Yes, very good guy. Asher Miller He wrote, and I'm quoting here, "That it might make sense to stock a refuge or a bunker with real hunter gatherers and subsistence farmers together with the tools they find useful. Jason Bradford Buying those. Asher Miller Of course, such people would need to be disciplined enough to wait peacefully in the refuge until the time to emerge was right. So perhaps such people could be rotated periodically from a well protected region where they practice simple lifestyles so they could keep their skills fresh. Now, you're bringing them here and rotating them on the farm. Well,Jason Bradford Well, that's my upgrade from this. I took his idea and - Asher Miller Well, the carbon emissions of flying them back and forth from Amazon or the Bay of Bengal . . . Jason Bradford Exactly. Exactly. Rob Dietz Yeah, I'm sorry. Like what kind of convoluted thinking to get - I'm pulling a one you two guys. I'm about to have an aneurysm here. Like what hunter gatherer or farmer signs up for this shit? Like, yeah, I'm gonna sit in your bunker waiting for your Holocaust to happen so that when it does, I can come out and teach you how to live again.Jason Bradford Okay, if there any longtermist billionaire effective altruists out there, just don't listen to Rob. Please DM me about funding this project. Alright? You'll find me no problem.Rob Dietz I'm so sad.Jason Bradford Alright. So there is tons of money being thrown at Effective Altruism And longterism. MacAskill's over 80,000 hours claimed in 2021 that 46 billion was committed to further the field.Rob Dietz That's that's roughly, what? Two times the annual budget of Post Carbon Institute.Jason Bradford And I only need a few 100 million for my project. Okay? I'm just letting you know, okay. Elon Musk has given 10's of millions to support Bostrom's work and others. And most infamously, you got this guy, you know, Sam Bankman-Fried. He actually worked at the Center for Effective Altruism and was very closely tied to MacAskill. And maybe you can explain what happened?Asher Miller Well, he's thrown a lot of money at Effective Altruism in different ways. He also robbed people blind. And then his company FTX went belly up.Rob Dietz All the money he threw was cryptocurrency which probably is now nothing, right? Asher Miller Well, but people had invested real wealth in this.Jason Bradford There's a lot of overhead in all that. Rob Dietz Well, now you wonder how much the Effective Altruists - Maybe this is good for our story if we're trying to battle this philosophy. Maybe they don't have quite as much money.Jason Bradford Maybe now they're down to 20 billion.Rob Dietz Imagine they could only have a 10th as much and they're still bazillions of dollars beyond where we are.Jason Bradford I'll just cut the number of hunter gatherers I'm going to bring in half. Okay?Asher Miller Alright. But I would say actually the sort of effective altruists community, if you want to call it that, has been following a little bit of the Powell memo playbook. We talked about this before in our last season. You know, talking about the Powell memo, for folks haven't listened to it, that basically laid out a strategy for neoliberalist advocates to basically change things on all sorts of levels of society that was affecting higher education, the media politics - Rob Dietz - The coordination of think tanks. Just basically getting the message out any way they could.Asher Miller And you actually could see that happening. I mean, I don't know, maybe there'll be expos days later about this being sort of coordinated, you know, on some level. But there's certainly been that kind of a spread of long term missed ideas. And Effective Altruism is you know, you talked about money that Musk has thrown to Bostrom. Millions of dollars going to Oxford University and these other institutions. You're saying Bankman-Fried was throwing a ton of money into the recent congressional elections and local elections. And he was specifically funding, I mean, he was funding people that are gonna basically change the rules or protect cryptocurrency from being regulated. But he was also funding actual sort of Effective Altruist longtermist candidates. There was actually one that ran here in Oregon. He was the first sort of Effective Altruism congressional candidate. He got like, you know, I think he had $11 million. I don't know how many of that came from Sam Bankman-Fried. And that guy worked briefly at Future of Humanity Institute, which is Bostrom's shop. But you have the head of the RAND Corporation, which is one of the most influential kind of think tanks, big think tanks in the country. He's a longtermlist. You've got longtermists writing reports for the United Nations. So there's a report in September 2021, called Our Common Agenda and it explicitly uses longtermist language and concepts in it. You have people in the media who have been really promoting longtermism. Good example of that is Sam Harris, who's a very famous well-known author and podcaster. He wrote the foreword to MacAskill's book, which you talked about. Jason Bradford He interviewed MacAskill quite a bit on his podcast, yeah. Asher Miller And he, you know, said to MacAskill, he said, quote, "No living philosopher has had a greater impact on his own thinking and his ethics." We could talk about the ethics of some of these guys, later, maybe, but - Rob Dietz Unbelievable money and influence and reach.Melody Allison How would you like to hang out with Asher, Rob, and Jason? Well, your chance is coming up at the 4th annual Crazy Town Hall. The town hall is our most fun event of the year, where you can ask questions, play games, get insider information on the podcast and share plenty of laughs. It's a special online event for the most dedicated Crazy Townies out there. And it's coming up on June 6, 2023 from 10:00 to 11:15am US Pacific Time. To get an invite, make a donation of any size, go to postcarbon.org/supportcrazytown. When you make a donation, we'll email you an exclusive link to join the Crazy Town hall. If we get enough donations, maybe we can finally hire some decent hosts. Join us at the Crazy Town hall on June 6, 2023. Again, to get your invitation go to post carbon.org/supportcrazytown.Jason Bradford Alright. I am really happy to talk about this species. This is one of my favorite species, Homo machinohomo. Also known as the Cyborgian.Rob Dietz Ah, this was our second one. Jason Bradford Yeah. Very different than the type specimen, Ray Kurzweil. But, you know, they both sort of believe in this transhumanism singularity type thing or the future of these high tech, you know, fusing with technology cyborgs. MacAskill is, he's not the techie guy, he's a philosophy guy. So you see how even within a species there can be great variance in form. Like imagine if you're an alien spacecraft and you're hovering over say, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Rob Dietz I used to live there. Jason Bradford Yeah. And you suck up a chihuahua and you suck up a great dane. Rob Dietz Used to see that all the time on the streets.Jason Bradford Exactly. At first you might have you might not have any clue that the same species are so different. Right? But within that detailed taxonomic work you can tease these things more.Asher Miller Which one is Kurzweil? The chihuahua or the great dane?Jason Bradford But I just want to explain a little bit about the evolution in the discussion section of my paper. I go into some detail -Rob Dietz This is where we realize that you're sad that you didn't really go the professorial route and you became a farmer. This is your chance.Jason Bradford This is my time. If any University is out there, maybe Oxford or Cambridge.Jason Bradford There's Singularity University.Rob Dietz What about the Jack Welch Institute of Management? Asher Miller So many options to choose from.Jason Bradford So many options. Anyway, you know, we have this species that we covered a lot called the double downer, right? Now what you're seeing is there's a lot of double downism in all these other species like the Cyborgians. They also kind of have double downing in them, but I consider them an offshoot of the double downer.Asher Miller Yeah, isn't double downers like an ancestor?Jason Bradford Yes. It is a paraphyletic species, probably the -Asher Miller Do they have a common ancestor?Jason Bradford - The mother species spinning off daughter species. Such as, Rocket Man, which we'll get to later in the season. The Industrial Breatharians, the Cyborgians, and Complexifixers. So these species -Rob Dietz What are we talking about here? Jason Bradford Oh, well, okay. Okay. I think you know, what you have is this sort of technology fetish that they all possess. But then these other species have particular niches. You can think if there's a species that's widespread in the lowlands, and then there's daughter species that kind of move up into the mountains and occupy different mountain tops. That's what I think is going on. But we're gonna need a lot more population genetics.Asher Miller What a beautiful world this is. What I actually think is - you remember that game PokemonGo? Jason Bradford Yeah. Asher Miller We need a PokemonGo to spot these phalse prophets. Jason Bradford I think that would be great. Asher Miller You could just like hold up your camera and be like, "Oh, what species is this dude?Rob Dietz Personally, I'd rather just go back to chihuahuas and great danes.Jason Bradford Okay, it's quite obvious by now that longtermism and all of the related TESCRAL beliefs are built on pretty insane assumptions about technological process, exponential growth, no limits to - But we've covered that before. And so we're not going to go into any detailed critique of that.Rob Dietz Yeah, but what I do want to go into a critique of is this rich versus poor, sort of this classist thing that's gotten built into the philosophy. And the easiest place to pick that apart is from one of MacAskill's colleagues, a guy named Nick Beckstead. And here's a quote I'm just gonna read you guys: "Saving lives in poor countries may have significantly smaller ripple effects than saving and improving lives in rich countries. It now seems more plausible to me that saving a life in a rich country is substantially more important than saving a life in a poor country, other things being equal. Richer countries have substantially more innovation and their workers are much more economically productive." That guy, Singer, talk about a perversion of what he was saying. It's like the opposite.Rob Dietz This is why longtermism really fucks with people's heads because it takes the Effective Altruism and says well, we have to consider trillions of people in the future. In which case, let's invest in the people now that have the most capacity to ensure that those, whatever, we can go colonize space.Rob Dietz Well that's how you get some jackass thinking let me import some of the poor people to live in Jason's bunker.Jason Bradford Exactly. We can't get rid of all the primitives or totally dismiss them because they are optionality in case - Asher Miller They are our backup. Jason Bradford They're our backup.Asher Miller They're our reboot, right? Jason Bradford They'e a reboot of civ. Asher Miller There's a generator in the garage.Jason Bradford There we go. Okay. Let's not forget about the bunkers we need with these people.Rob Dietz I'm sad again. Very sad again. But before we jump into that, can I just pat myself on the back for not making a joke after you said dark shit?Asher Miller Sure. You just had to point it out.Rob Dietz Sorry. My bad. My bad. I cant help it. It's a disease.Asher Miller We could go down a seriously dark rabbit hole like getting into some of the philosophy. Like what you just talked about Rob, like that quote that you read from Beckstead. Pretty fucking reprehensible. There's some shit here on the transhumanism front that is really to me quite disturbing. And I'll just give sort of one example of this. In a 2014 paper Bostrom - So Nick Bostrom, just to recall is another Oxford guy. I think highly influential on our guide MacAskill. He and a co-author of his name Karl Schulman proposed a process of engineering humans to achieve an IQ gain of up to 130 points by screening 10 embryos for desirable traits, selecting the best out of the 10 while destroying the other nine, of course, and then repeating the selection process 10 times over. This human would be so much more intelligent than we are that they would be an entirely new species. They would be a post-human, right?Asher Miller Yeah. And then of course, we become Cyborgians eventually right? You know, so that's just the first step.Rob Dietz Well, and that first one that they create in the lab would be like Lex Luthor. Asher Miller Right. It's just like, yeah, I mean, that is definitely like straight up eugenics stuff.Rob Dietz Continuing on this front, the whole idea of longtermism is to promote taking high risks in the now because the upside is so great in the future. And it so much outweighs the downside of taking those risks. And that's exactly how you get a Sam Bank-Fried. He's gonna go off and make as much money as he can. He sees this crypto thing going and he's like, "Yeah, I can take advantage of this and I can take some risks. And off and running. And he's like a poster child for this.Asher Miller But they use this philosophy to justify. To say that actually, this is for the greatest good.Jason Bradford Yes, 80,000 hours. Asher Miller Because we're going to make as much fucking money as we can right now and we're going to use that all for the purposes of ensuring these 80 trillion people, you know, in the future can have the best lives they can. You know, there's another infamous character, someone that that worked very closely with Sam Bankman-Fried. I think they even had a relationship of some kind named Caroline Ellison. She actually was the chief executive of Alameda research, which was like that sister company that was connected to FTX. She once wrote, this has since been deleted, but I think this is really interesting in terms of the logic here. She wrote, "Is it infinitely good to do double or nothing coin flips forever? Well, sort of, because your upside is unbounded and your downside is bounded at your entire net worth. But most people don't do this" she wrote. So basically she's saying, yeah, you know, keep doubling it. Flip the coin, try to double it. Take the risk.Rob Dietz It's like going to Vegas And playing blackjack. And when you lose, you just put twice the bet of what you lost, right? Jason Bradford Roulette. Roulette is better.Rob Dietz Or any of them, whatever. You lose, you just double it. And you keep doing it.Asher Miller But I mean, her saying okay, so the downside is you lost your initial quarter, or whatever it was, right? But the potential upside is so big. Jason Bradford But it's ridiculous. Asher Miller But she's like, people don't want to do this. And then she said, they don't really want to lose all their money. And then she wrote in parentheses, "Of course, those people are lame and not EAs,"Asher Miller Effective Altruists.Asher Miller Effective Altruists.Asher Miller "This blog endorses double or nothing coin flips and high leverage," right? So if you think about the cavalier nature of that, like, these people are lame, you know. Well, they fucking profited off of these lame people who invested in FTX. They invested all their money, and they lost it, right? Rob Dietz It's so arrogant, too. It's like, I'm enlightened and you are not.Asher Miller And you gotta wonder, is she as Cavalier these days now? I mean, all that coin flipping that they were doing with FTX and Alameda like, might put her in jail, right? Jason Bradford I mean, the probability is you're gonna lose everything if you're just coin flipping. That's what is so crazy. I mean, the odds that you actually keep doubling forever are ridiculous.Rob Dietz Matt Damon told me that crypto was the space for the bold. If you're a red blooded American . . . Asher Miller But it is interesting. You pair that mindset of like, double down, doubled down, take risks, do all this stuff. Oh, but we also have these existential risks we gotta worry about.Jason Bradford We've got our bunkers.Rob Dietz Well, you are leading into the double down doctrine. Okay? Now bear with me here. There's some circular logic here. There's some teenager style rationalization going on. I apologize to our four teenage listeners out there. No offense meant. I was a teenager once. Asher Miller Still are in some ways. Rob Dietz I didn't get through the poop jokes. I know. We're still there. But this double down doctrine, you see it among the longtermlists, the Effective Altruist, the TESCREALists. I wish I could just name all those things in a row. It rolls off the tongue. But it's really weird. They're sort of saying if we want to fix the problems that are caused by human's exploitation of the world, then we've got to exploit even more. And that way we can address all the externalities caused by our exploitation.Jason Bradford You got through it. Rob Dietz Right. I mean, that's the earn to give thing, right? It's like, make as much money as you possibly can now and then use that later.Rob Dietz Yeah. Well, and a really good example of it, there's a really good Guardian article where the author is interviewing William MacAskill. And he says that McCaskill is kind of saying, look, rather than cut back on consumption - And I should say, MacAskill, he said, we're over consuming, economic growth can't go on forever. He understands the -Jason Bradford Climate change is a problem. Blah, blah, blah. Rob Dietz Yeah, he understands the exponential math. He's like, yeah, of course if we keep growing the economy at 3% a year, eventually we - Asher Miller You say he understands it, but then he also thinks that we're going to have 80 trillion humans.Asher Miller Just keep digging. Rob Dietz Yeah. So he says all that and then this is wat he says about consumption. He says, "Rather than cut back on consumption, it's much more effective to donate to causes that are dealing with the problems created by consumption." So you know, like a doctor instead of dealing with the cause, just keep putting band-aids on top.Jason Bradford This reminds me of Woody Tasch, the Slow Money founder.Rob Dietz Yeah, those two are exactly the same. Woody Tasch and William MacAskillJason Bradford Well, he got so frustrated because he was working for the Ford Foundation, and they kept investing money in their endowment that was trashing the planet. And then they had to work on granting to fix it.Asher Miller Right. 95% gets invested in shit that makes everything worse And 5% you spend to try to fix the problem.Jason Bradford It's just not fair that 95% is winning all the time. Asher Miller That's the philanthropic model. Apparently it's the Effective Altruist's model too.Jason Bradford So this Oxford philosopher is not impressing me whatsoever. The other thing that keeps driving me crazy is this constant going into AI. They have a lot where like one of the most important jobs you can have is to invest in the safety of AI. The governance of AI. The prevention of AI from killing us all. Like, they're investing in how to protect ourselves from the AI that they need, so that we can create all these technologies, so that we can go post-human?Jason Bradford Well, they're saying, like, I'm really worried. I mean, you've got Musk saying this. All these people saying, basically, I'm really worried about AI. So we need to invest in AI. Rob Dietz Well, that's the that's the teenager part to me. It's like, I want to do this thing. I know it's dangerous. Let me find a reason why I should be able to do this thing. And it's this weird circular logic.Asher Miller I sometimes think that there's like, speaking of teenager hood, there's this desire to pursue whatever fucking instincts and impulse you have. But you also still kind of want a parent. Jason Bradford They want governance.Asher Miller They don't, but they do. Rob Dietz I wish instead of doing crypto adventures and all this crazy stuff, they were just throwing water balloons at people on the street like a regular teenager.Asher Miller That's not going to help us get to space and merge with technology in the singularity, Rob.Asher Miller Yeah, it is interesting to think about that the process of a good intention is being perverted on some level, right?Jason Bradford So I think this is a really interesting story how you start off with these well intentioned philosophies of like, Peter Singer, you know, is famous for animal liberation and being altruistic and giving and thinking about future generations. And it ends up becoming this sort of self serving, really juvenile rationalizations justifying your own work, your own sort of sense of power, and then basically relying on other wackadooley - Wackadoodlery? Like Kurzwelian wackadoodlery? To give you this reason to be doing all this just nutty stuff. And so it becomes also ironic that you have Singer who's this animal rights people and caring for other generations, and it becomes all centered around humans and our potential, and all the trillions of human lives ,and consciousness, and experience. Ah, God.Jason Bradford Yeah. I've been following the work of Sarah Pessin, who's a philosopher.Jason Bradford Another philosopher?Rob Dietz Does she have a Doctor of Philosophy in philosophy?Jason Bradford I think so.Asher Miller I'm sorry, I have to digress for a second. Do you recall watching Monty Python's Meaning of Life? Jason Bradford Oh my gosh. Oh I love that movie.Asher Miller There's a scene where this older couple is at this dinner in heaven, and they don't know what to talk about. And so the waiter gives them a topic to talk about which is philosophers. One of them was talking about like Schopenhauer and the other one, I can't remember, and the wife said, "Do all philosophers have S's in their name?" Like they are not capable of having a philosophical conversation.Rob Dietz It's reminiscent of us.Jason Bradford Well, look up Sarah. You can go to SarahPessin.com. And she has this really interesting section called Meaning Maps and Political Spiral Logics. And she talks about how in our society right now, there's all these good ideas that end up getting kind of corrupted. And she talks about this thing called the slipstream vector. So you imagine people with good intentions, and these philosophies sort of open up opportunities for someone to come in who just creates some extreme version that ends up being completely perverted. And this is happening a lot in our politics, actually. So the slipstream vector, I think. I see this happening in this movement.Rob Dietz Yeah, you just totally open the visual in my mind of pace lines in biking up. So you know like, when you're drafting behind somebody, you use like 30% less energy. Which is why in like the Tour de France, you see these huge mobs of cyclists right on each other's wheels. And yeah, so it's like, you know, there's Singer out in front, and then suddenly MacAskill and Bostrom get right on his wheel.Asher Miller So that is an interesting metaphor. I think we bring it back to William McCaskill, you could say, I don't know. I don't know the guy, but it seems like maybe that's his journey here. Which is like, it starts from a fairly innocent and maybe quite innocent or immature place, but well-intentioned. And then these things get their hooks in it. Do you know what I mean? So It's like, once you take Effective Altruism, and then you you add on this idea of not just like thinking about the long term and future generations, but you add this idea of human exceptionalism and the singularity.Jason Bradford Yes. Asher Miller And you start thinking about and you believe in this technological potential. It becomes this totally perverted thing. And then worse than that, you're talking about like, Singer in front And MacAskill and Bostrom, but then you got the guys like Sam Bankman-Fried and Elon Musk coming in. You're basically using this fucking thing, you know what I mean, to justify what they're doing. Back to that quote of like, it's better to invest in people in wealthy nations right now to do more long term good.Jason Bradford And they're completely willing to maybe push technology to the point where it kills us all off, and their backup plan is a bunker of hunter gatherers and peasants.Rob Dietz On plus side if we're sticking to the Tour de France metaphor here, Sam Bankman-Fried just got run by one of the support cars so we got that at least.Jason Bradford Okay, the insufferability index. Listeners, what is your score? We're gonna go through it here, but it's zero to 10. We've got intentions, personality, ideas, and then you get a bias. Does anyone want to go first?Asher Miller And high score of zero to three in each of those categories. Highest is is matched insufferable. Jason Bradford Yes, most insufferable. So how insufferable?Rob Dietz I'm happy to start. I think intentions for William MacAskill, I think he's getting a zero. I think he has really good intentions. From what I've read he's done some amazing projects trying to spread nets around places where mosquitoes are a problem to prevent malaria. I mean, really good altruistic instincts. Personality, I think he seems okay from what I've read. So he's getting a low score there too, as well. Ideas is where it gets a little bit iffy. For me, I think, again, earlier in our discussion I kept saying, "Well, that sounds okay." So some of the ideas are alright, it's just the way they've been perverted. So I think he's getting about a three for me. Jason Bradford Okay, pretty good.Asher Miller I'm gonna raise it by one. I'm gonna give him a one for personality. I'm not gonna go with zero because, you know, I don't really like people.Rob Dietz Yeah, there's no one.Asher Miller No one gets a zero. Rob Dietz Jason and I are twos in your book. Asher Miller My wife gets zero. If she heard this she'd be like, what are you talking about? Rob Dietz Yeah, I'm a 10, not a zero.Asher Miller The ideas, I'm gonna give him a two because it definitely goes into some wacky shit. But you know, there's some things like, you know, thinking about future generations that I agree with. But I'm gonna use my my scorers bias. I'm gonna add an extra point in there because there's some, he's kind of promoted some designer baby shit, too. You know, there's some stuff in there that's kind of dark. Yeah. I'm gonna go with a four.Jason Bradford Okay, okay. I think its really weird. I'm really disappointed in a so called Oxford philosopher. I'm no philosopher, I wouldn't consider myself a philosopher.Rob Dietz You are a Doctor of Philosophy.Jason Bradford In biology. Rob Dietz Yeah, those don't fit right.Jason Bradford Right. But I feel like he's got some such huge holes in this. Like the circularity of stuff. Like it pisses me off, right?Rob Dietz Well, you need to go to Oxford to understand this stuff.Jason Bradford Okay, anyway, I'm gonna go split the difference and add it up to a 3.5.Asher Miller Pretty low score. Jason Bradford Yeah, he got a pretty low score. Asher Miller Good job, William.Rob Dietz Let's call him up for beers.Jason Bradford He's young. He's got time to catch up. Asher Miller He's got time.George Costanza Every decision I've ever made in my entire life has been wrong. My life is the complete opposite of everything I want it to be. If every instinct you have is wrong, then the opposite would have to be right.Jason Bradford Alright, I really struggled with the do the opposite. Because I think these people so overthink it, And they just come up with stuff that just that no normal human would ever consider. I'm just like, the opposite might just be a normal frickin' human being.Asher Miller Well look, they have to come up with some ideas. They're the professors of philosophy.Jason Bradford They're living in their head and thinking of 80 trillion and like, billions of years in the future. And it just gets absolutely absurd. So just be normal. Just be a normal human being. And, also, okay, this is kind of weird, but you gotta be more present. Live more in the present. Like a goldfish. Okay? Not completely. You know, short-termism might be okay, sometimes.Asher Miller I'm gonna say we should, doing the opposite is maybe splitting the difference, right? Jason Bradford Right, right. Help balance it out. Asher Miller So it's not discounting the future. But It's also not discounting the present which is what longtermism has done. Rob Dietz Yeah, I think that's a really good point. Because if you go back to that episode we did in the hidden driver season about discounting the future, we kind of said, "Hey, stop doing that." And think about projects and things that you could do in this world that have a legacy. But kind of like with some limits on the horizon, right? We're not going to the sci-fi billions of years in the future on the other side of the wormhole.Jason Bradford And make sure that when you're doing those things, they also bring you joy in the here and now. I mean, you have to align those so you're never going to follow through.Asher Miller Yeah, so you know, maybe the whole seventh generation thing. Maybe that's a pretty good. . .Rob Dietz Yeah, in fact, there was an article on resilience.org by Christopher McDonald that was comparing the seven generations idea from the Iroquois Confederacy to this longtermism - Jason Bradford And he was excited about, oh longtermism is like seven generations.Rob Dietz Yeah, and he was like us sort of saying, "Oh, I agree. Oh, wait. Wait a second. What am I reading?" Look, I also think if okay, longtermism is a philosophy, or any of these other TESCREALs you want to pull - Never pull someone's TESCREAL, okay.Jason Bradford It might bite you.Rob Dietz But if you want to talk about philosophy, try to find a philosophy, some philosophical ideas, that can help you be present and help you be a good steward of the places you inhabit. You know, I like going old school with things like stoicism, you know, like letting go the things you can't control. I like Taoism. You know, there's a lot of go with the flow kind of ideas in there. Asher Miller Can I go with the Big Lebowskisms?Rob Dietz Perfect. Exactly. The dude abides. We can all abide. I also, on a more serious note, I think that Robin Wall Kimmerer, I think that we brought up her book, "Braiding Sweetgrass" before, and I know some of our listeners are fans of that book. What she does, it's amazing as she combines ecology, ecological science, with Indigenous philosophy. And it's a really wonderful mix, in a way, to think about the world. And as I think your goldfish example, kind of be present, where you are.Jason Bradford To be part of this world. This world and you are the same. We're one. That kind of stuff, And yeah, no, that's a beautiful book.Asher Miller And you know, honestly, I mean, we didn't get into this too much, but the human centeredness of longtermism and Effective Altruism and all the stuff - Doing the opposite of that is actually recognizing the more than human. And if we're not discounting the future lives of seven generations, let's say, of humans in front of us, what about all the other species that we share this planet with? And we've talked about this before, too, but another do the opposite is the precautionary principle rather than the double down doctrine that were these guys are pushing and were pushing on so many fronts right now. Everything seems to be fucking double down.Jason Bradford I know. I remember when I was reading West Jackson and Bob Jensen's book, they were explaining a conversation they had with each other over the phone. And Wes was like, "Bob, why isn't all this just enough? Just what we have. Why can't it just be enough?" And you wrote a book called, "Enough is Enough."Rob Dietz Yeah. My book was called, "Enough is Enough." Their book is called, "An Inconvenient Apocalypse." I bet they're selling a lot better than I am.Jason Bradford But I think that's true. I mean, can you just have a normal decent life and just consider the beauty of the world enough for you? I hope so.Rob Dietz I don't think so. I think that's a stupid idea. We instead have started a new organization.Jason Bradford Oh, we have?Rob Dietz Yeah, it's gonna counteract the Centre for Effective Altruism.Jason BradfordHow are you gonna spell it?Rob Dietz I don't know. I think we gotta go "-er" since we're here in America. We're not gonna go "-re"Asher Miller Yeah, we're American. You gotta spell it the right way, man. Rob Dietz And yeah, this center is going to be the opposite of the Centre for Effective Altruism, right? It's gonna be called the Center for Incompetent Hoarding. So, you know, listeners find it online, donate as much money as you can. It doesn't matter what you do to get that money.Asher Miller Just don't do crypto. We can't take crypto.Asher Miller Well, thanks for listening. If you made it this far, then maybe you actually liked the show.Rob Dietz Yeah, and maybe you even consider yourself a real inhabitant of Crazy Town. someone like us who we affectionately call a Crazy Townie.Jason Bradford If that's the case, then there's one very simple thing you can do to help us out. Share the podcast, or even just this episode.Asher Miller Yeah, text three people you know who you think will get a kick out of hearing from us bozos.Rob Dietz Or if you want to go away old school, then tell them about the podcast face to face.Jason Bradford Please for the love of God. If enough people listen to this podcast, maybe one day we can all escape from Crazy Town. We're just asking for three people, a little bit of sharing, we can do this.Jason Bradford If you are the effectively altruistic parent of a young human, one of your greatest potential impacts is making sure your offspring make as much money as possible. At temps for future trillions, we will place your child with one of our special clients, all of whom are in constant need of discreet services and are willing to pay unbelievable sums. With just one or two summer jobs with our agency placed with either a drug lord, human trafficker, or weapons dealer. Your kid will have a substantial endowment available for whatever lucrative business they can think of after they drop out of college. They can then leverage their wealth in the service of securing the wondrous eternal life of infinitely happy post-human sentient beings. Temps for Future Trillions, effectively justifying sociopathy today for a universe of transhuman colonization tomorrow.

The rest is here:
Crazy Town: Episode 73. How Longtermism Became the Most ... - Resilience

Posted in Transhuman | Comments Off on Crazy Town: Episode 73. How Longtermism Became the Most … – Resilience

Why Warhammer 40K fans keep arguing about the Emperors terrible sons – Polygon

Posted: at 1:13 am

Primarchs, Space Marines, and a boatload of daddy issues

Warhammer 40,000 stands apart largely because of its vast scale. Billions of people are stacked in hive cities, trillions of people sign up for the Imperial Guard (and die horribly in the process), and quadrillions of humans are spread across the galaxy. Thats without mentioning the various alien races, known as xenos terrifying space bugs, ferocious orks, awe-inspiring space elves, and immortal robot skeletons.

But thats not what fan conversation tends to center on. If you check out Warhammer 40K fan spaces and content channels, youll find that much of the conversation surrounds twenty terrible boys and all the bad decisions they make. Whats up with that?

The God-Emperor of Mankind is the guy who set up the Imperium of Man, powers the lighthouse that all Imperium ships use to travel, and stops an endless horde of demons from breaking into Terra and exploding the planet. The God-Emperor sustained an ouchie 10,000 years ago that means hes confined to the chair, a carrion lord who consumes a thousand souls a day. And its all because of his terrible sons the Primarchs and their nonsense.

Image: Games Workshop

The Primarchs and their exploits started as vague myths and legends, half-remembered from a lost age. These characters existed far back in history, and had no realistic bearing on contemporary gameplay and their stories werent explicitly told. That was before Black Library, the prolific book publishing arm of Games Workshop, started putting out books about these boys. There are now dozens of books in the Horus Heresy series, detailing each Primarchs exploits.

The various authors of the Black Library pull this off by writing the Horus Heresy series like a particularly nasty WWE-style feud, or a soap opera with constant gunfights and walking tanks. Many of the Primarchs seem either ridiculous, or they just blend together into a smear of big men and space battles. Each Primarch also has their own supporting cast from their legion of Space Marines, transhuman biosoldiers built from the gene-seed of their Primarchs. Space Marines are the poster boys of the setting, and one of the most iconic parts of 40K, and each legion has their own role and function.

If youre not deep on the lore of Space Marines and Primarchs, though, this nuance can easily be lost on the reader. The Imperial Fists, Iron Hands, and Iron Warriors, for instance, each have their own niche but if youre interested in reading about the Aeldari or Necron, they all just look like Space Marine palette swaps. (Although if you are interested in the nitty-gritty, there are good resources to help break that down.)

Two of the God-Emperors sons got deleted from the record we dont know what happened to them, and well never learn, thanks to a series of memory wipes and document burning leaving eighteen boys behind to start the Great Crusade, the Emperors attempt to reunite humanity and take over the whole galaxy. Each boy has a legion of Space Marine sons, which causes a recursive spiral of bad dad/son relationships. The Emperor went into the basement to work on his projects for a couple of decades, only showing up once in a while (and making things worse in the process).

But the Primarchs can also feel over-represented in the setting. The problem is that there becomes a vicious cycle where people love Primarchs, so more Primarch books are written, which helps build a fanbase for Primarchs. If youre pursuing stories about other factions and youre not a Space Marine fan, it can be frustrating to feel like every other vast corner of the universe is drowned out by the nonsense of these big sons.

Personally, I used to fall into this camp. Im still not that into Space Marines as theyre depicted in 40K. But I have found myself being charmed, first by the memes and tidbits of knowledge I picked up about these guys did you know Fulgrim, Primarch of the Emperors Children, is a giant snake demon who had his soul stuck in a painting for a while? Or that big Bobby G of the Ultramarines once fought in space with no helmet for twelve hours, fueled by rage at brotherly betrayal? and then by delving into the actual stories depicted in print.

Image: Games Workshop

In the modern day of 40K, only two loyalist Primarchs have returned Lion ElJonson and Roboute Guilliman. Guillimans return in 2017 was a massive deal that flipped the entire setting upside down, but as time went on, he became less of a protagonist and more of a garnish on top of the nightmare pasta that is the Imperium of Man. The traitorous Primarchs make fantastic bosses and have cool tabletop models, but theyve already lost. They lost 10,000 years ago, and it means that characters like Angron are more like environmental effects than actual characters.

These characters are at risk of overwhelming the setting due to their sheer popularity, but they work best as background figures who just make things worse (or at the very least, more complicated) for everyone around them. Theyre also a reminder not to take the setting too seriously. When characters like Corvus Corax of the Raven Guard are running around, its a charming relic from the older days of 40K where everything wasnt so carefully and meticulously sanded-down to be cool. I love my garbage boys just the way they are, heresy and all.

Read more

More here:
Why Warhammer 40K fans keep arguing about the Emperors terrible sons - Polygon

Posted in Transhuman | Comments Off on Why Warhammer 40K fans keep arguing about the Emperors terrible sons – Polygon

Freedom to Learn Day of Action | NEA – National Education Association

Posted: at 1:12 am

On May 3, NEA members, parents, and allies stood together across the country to defend and protect truth in education during the Freedom to Learn National Day of Action, an initiative of the National Womens Studies Association, in partnership with theAfrican American Policy Forum and several other organizations.

Instead of cultivating belonging, critical thinking, and funding public schools, some politicians across the country are banning books, censoring curricula, and passing state laws that limit classroom lessons on race and gender. The effects are damaging. Teachers, principals, administrators have lost their jobs; lives have been threatened, and students freedom to learn, be themselves, and pursue their dreams have been compromised.

We cannot, and we will not, allow politicians to grasp and hold on to power by fueling fear and division, and limiting our students' access and opportunity to an honest and accurate and complete education, said NEA President Becky Pringle, in April, during an NEA webinar on the "power of truth," adding that attacks on educators and their unions are driving teachers and education support staff out of the profession.

It is our shared responsibility to ensure that every student, every educator, and every school is excelling, she says.

Politicians in at least 44 states have introduced legislation or pursued other measures that would require educators to overlook or deny the role of racism, sexism, heterosexism, transphobia, and other forms of oppression throughout U.S. history. These laws and restrictions have been imposed in at least 18 states, according to research from the Zinn Education Project.

In Oklahoma, for example, Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a law restricting topics that could make a student feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race or sex, among seven other banned concepts.

[The law] is so vague, said Kristi Williams, founder of Black History Saturdays, in Tulsa, Okla., in early May. Educators are afraid to teach any aspect of Black history because they don't know what's going get them in trouble.

In response to these laws, educators, students, and community allies took part in collective actions in more than two dozen states across the country to show their support for the freedom to learn and demonstrate that the public supports equity in schools, campuses, and the workplace.

Actions included reading banned books, book-ban giveaways, teach-ins, social media blitzes, rallies, and more.

Three years ago, NEA and the Zinn Education Project launched the first national day of action to teach the truth, and another one is on the horizon: Teach Truth Day on June 10, when educators pledge to teach truthfully about U.S. history, defend LGBTQ+ rights, andspeak out against anti-history education bills, banned books, and more.

The day of action is sponsored by the Zinn Education Project and coordinated with Rethinking Schools and Teaching for Change.

NEA leaders firmly and unequivocally support these actions and urge the union's 3-million members to organize, participate, and engage to help raise awareness about the danger of these attacks on public education.

In Georgia, for example, people will meet at Stone Mountain Park for a truth-telling walk to discuss the areas connection to White supremacy and listen to a read-aloud of the book That Flag" by Tameka Fryer Brown and Nikkolas Smith. In Kansas, people will gather at Quindaro, a neighborhood located north of Kansas City that was once a stop along the Underground Railroad. This event is co-sponsored by various groups, including the National Education Association-Kansas City.

To participate, visit NEA'sFreedom to Learn and Teach Truth Day of Actionevent pageto help plan actions in your city.

Large swaths of the U.S. already have plans in place, which you can find here:

Go here to see the original:

Freedom to Learn Day of Action | NEA - National Education Association

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Freedom to Learn Day of Action | NEA – National Education Association

Urgent collective response needed to safeguard media freedom and … – OSCE

Posted: at 1:12 am

SKOPJE/VIENNA, May 17, 2023 The ninth South East Europe Media Conference, "At a Crossroads: Safeguarding Media Freedom to Protect Democracy," concluded today. The conference was organized by the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media (RFoM) in collaboration with OSCE field operations from South East Europe.

This year's conference brought together over 160 participants from various sectors, including journalism, media and legal experts, academia, civil society, and relevant state actors from the region and beyond. It featured interactive panels, side events, and debates, providing a platform for in-depth discussions on media freedom in South East Europe. The conference explored current and emerging challenges and developments, while seeking viable solutions.

The conference focused on the importance of independent journalism as well as on the need to seriously address the challenges related to the dynamics of the digital realm to promote and protect democratic values. Special attention was given to improving the safety and working conditions for media professionals, recognizing that the threats they face not only endanger them individually but also pose a significant risk to democracy itself. Teresa Ribeiro, the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, highlighted this concern, stating, "The threats to media and journalists are real and alarming, as they have a profound impact on the sustainability of peoples lives. Without ensuring journalists' safety encompassing physical, digital, economic, legal, and psychological aspectsquality and independent journalism cannot thrive, nor can a lasting and well-functioning democracy."

This years Media Conference is particularly important given that the issues discussed - supporting independent journalism, addressing challenges in the digital realm and improving the conditions for media freedom - are challenges not only throughout the region, but across the globe, stated Ambassador Kilian Wahl, the Head of the OSCE Mission to Skopje.

I believe it is most fitting that the conference took place this year in Skopje, during North Macedonias OSCE Chairpersonship, especially given the importance the Chair places on free media and safety of journalists, he added.

Discussions during the conference revolved around several key topics, such as the physical and online safety of journalists, the comprehensive viability of media organizations, legal harassment, the impact of artificial intelligence on freedom of expression, media self-regulation, and the detrimental effects of hate speech. Participants shared their experiences and insights, focusing on ongoing reforms and best practices to further enhance the environment for media freedom in the region.

More information about the conference can be found here:OSCE South East Europe Media Conference "At a crossroads: Safeguarding media freedom to protect democracy" | OSCE

The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media observes media developments in all 57 OSCE participating States.Sheprovides early warning on violations of freedom of expression and media freedom and promotes full compliance with OSCE media freedom commitments. Learn more atwww.osce.org/fom, Twitter:@OSCE_RFoMand onwww.facebook.com/osce.rfom.

See the rest here:

Urgent collective response needed to safeguard media freedom and ... - OSCE

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Urgent collective response needed to safeguard media freedom and … – OSCE

SWV to Perform at Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom – Rated R&B

Posted: at 1:12 am

Live Nation Urban and Jesse Collins Entertainment have unveiled the lineup for the second annual Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom, set for Monday, June 19, at Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, California, at 8 p.m. ET.

SWV, Miguel and Jodeci are among the first slate of performers tapped for the celebration, airing worldwide on all CNN platforms, with OWN broadcasting it nationally.

This upcoming performance builds anticipation for Jodecis Summer Block Party Tour, which SWV and Dru Hill will support as special guests.

Meanwhile, Miguel recently shared a new song, Give It To Me. Hes also enjoying a resurgence on the charts for his 2011 single Sure Thing.

Other acts set to perform at Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom include gospel legend Kirk Franklin, rising rapper Coi Leray and Afrobeats artist Davido.

Additional talent will be hitting the Greek Theatre stage to lift their voices in song and as presenters for the event.

Adam Blackstone and Questlove of The Roots will return as musical directors of the second annual Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom.

Last year, we launched Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom, and it was emotional and unforgettable for everyone involved. Weve teamed up with our partners at CNN and Jesse Collins Entertainment again and this year we are broadcasting live from the historic Los Angeles venue, the Greek Theatre. We are looking forward to educating and celebrating the Juneteenth holiday, says Shawn Gee, President of Live Nation Urban.

Chris Licht, Chairman and CEO of CNN Worldwide, says, We are proud to once again partner with Live Nation Urban to broadcast this powerful Juneteenth event on our platforms. We want to be a destination for people to both understand and celebrate a holiday of this magnitude.

We are thrilled to continue to elevate the importance of the Juneteenth holiday, adds Johnita P. Due, EVP of Integrity and Inclusion for CNN Worldwide. I look forward to the electricity of the 2023 show. It is meticulously crafted as an expression of the excellence and resilience of the Black community and the ongoing pursuit of equality.

Presale tickets are available today with the code LNU23. General on-sale begins this Friday, May 19, at 10 a.m. ET. Tickets and additional information about the event are available at ticketmaster.com.

Live Nation Urban and Jesse Collins Entertainment launched Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom last year after Juneteenth became a federal holiday in the U.S.

The inaugural event featured performances by Earth, Wind & Fire, Jhen Aiko, Anthony Hamilton, Michelle Williams, Lucky Daye, Robert Glasper and many more.

Coi LerayDavidoJodeciKirk FranklinMiguelSWV

Visit link:

SWV to Perform at Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom - Rated R&B

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on SWV to Perform at Juneteenth: A Global Celebration for Freedom – Rated R&B

Freedom Center fundraising in full gear | Local News … – Hudson Star Observer

Posted: at 1:12 am

If you have driven past Freedom Park recently, you probably noticed the army (pun intended) of military tents set up just to the east off Wall Street (County CC).

The deployment of troops to Freedom Park has become a regular occurrencein recent summers as various contingents of soldiers participate in hands on training by local professionals in a variety of skills from masonry, excavating and heavy equipment operation to, this summer, carpentry, electrical, plumbing and HVAC all in service of building Freedom Park Center. The 18,000-square-foot complex, designed to serve veterans, senior citizens and youth, is scheduled to open later this year.

The soldiers are receiving this training as part of the Department of Defense's Innovative Readiness Training program designed to take advantage of industry professionals willing to volunteer their time to train soldiers with valuable skills they can use during their military service and wartime missions.

In exchange for this training, the military looks for opportunities (across a wide range of sectors from healthcare and construction to transportation and cybersecurity), in this case constructing Freedom Park Center, to provide quality services with lasting benefits to communities throughout America.

The Innovative Readiness Training is providing the labor to build Freedom Park Center, but everything else, materials, fuel, food has to be paid for by the VFW.

As part of their fundraising efforts this summer, the Post has organized a number of events to help raise money to pay for those expenditures. If you are interested in contributing to the cause, here are some fun ways to do so.

Time: 7:30-11 a.m.

Date: Saturday, May 20.

Location: New Richmond Regional Airport, 625 West Hanger Road.

Cost: $10 adult breakfast; $5 kids, 3-10 years old.

Johnson Motors will be sponsoring a fly-in and car show at the Wings of Wisconsin corporate hangar 11-13 on the north ramp at the airport. All proceeds from the event will go towards the VFW Freedom Park Project. Local aircraft, race cars, vintage automobiles and fire trucks will be on display. Airport Manager Mike Demulling has even promised to let you shoot the 750 gallon-per-minute water cannon on the crash fire rescue truck for a $200 donation.

Time: 1-7 p.m.

Date: Monday, May 29.

Location: Lakefront Park, Hudson.

Cost: Free will donation.

On Memorial Day, FIT Real Estate will once again be hosting a concert to benefit the Freedom Park Center project.

The event is being promoted as a family friendly afternoon featuring food, drinks, bounce houses, face painting, kids hula hoop contest, silent auction and a concert.

The featured artists include Joshua Lassi at 1 p.m.; Jake Nelson Music at 2 p.m.; Tim Sigler at 3:30 p.m.; and U.S. Navy Veteran, Sailor Jerri, taking the stage at 5 p.m. This is a free will donation event with all proceeds benefiting the Freedom Park Center building project.

Read the rest here:

Freedom Center fundraising in full gear | Local News ... - Hudson Star Observer

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Freedom Center fundraising in full gear | Local News … – Hudson Star Observer

Jack Harlow Prefers ‘Freedom’ Of Acting To ‘Constraints’ Of Hip Hop – HipHopDX

Posted: at 1:12 am

New York, NY -

Jack Harlow has admitted that he prefers the freedom that acting allows compared to the constraints entrenched in the traditions of Hip Hop.

On Monday (May 15), ahead of making his Hollywood debut in the White Men Cant Jump reboot, Harlow reflected on his acting experience at a screener for the film.

I tell the truth on the mic, but maybe sometimes I feel some slight constraints in Hip Hop because theres a tradition to it, and I know Im a guest in the genre, he said (via PEOPLE).

Theres things that go through your head from time to time. But with acting I feel liberated to some degree I feel like I could show up and I could be whoever I want to be today. I dont know, I feel freedom.

The 25-year-old emphasized that this wasnt a one-time deal and he plans on exploring the acting world more in the future alongside rap.

Through this film, I was able to gain my confidence as an actor, and to me, this shit is not a side quest, Harlow continued. This isnt a side mission that Im taking on just to keep the entertainer thing going and make some extra money.

I really got the bug and fell in love with this, and Im developing a deep passion for the craft of this the same way I had in music. I dont want it to be a side hustle, I want to full-on go after this, and Im going after it and Im going to continue to do more.

related news

May 3, 2023

While White Men Cant Jump is coming to Hulu on Friday (May 19), Harlow still fed his rap fans with the surprise Jackman album in April.

He recently reflected on the warm reception to the project after letting it simmer in fans ears for a couple of weeks.

2 weeks have passed and I just wanna say the love & respect Ive felt from not only my peers, Jack wrote. But from YALLthe fansthe folks that have supported me from the beginningit feels fuckin amazing I have never felt so connected to the people listening to my musicthank you.

Read the original here:

Jack Harlow Prefers 'Freedom' Of Acting To 'Constraints' Of Hip Hop - HipHopDX

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Jack Harlow Prefers ‘Freedom’ Of Acting To ‘Constraints’ Of Hip Hop – HipHopDX

2022 Report on International Religious Freedom: Egypt – U.S. Embassy in Egypt

Posted: at 1:12 am

LEGAL FRAMEWORK

The constitution specifies Islam as the state religion and the principles of sharia as the main source of legislation. The constitution states that freedom of belief is absolute and the freedom of practicing religious rituals and establishing worship places for the followers of divine [Abrahamic] religions is a right regulated by law. The constitution also states citizens are equal before the law, prohibits discrimination on the basis of religion, and makes incitement to hatred based upon religion, belief, sex, origin, raceor any other reason a crime. It prohibits political activity or the formation of political parties based on religion.

The government officially recognizes Sunni Islam, Christianity, and Judaism, and allows only their adherents as defined by the government to publicly practice their religion and build houses of worship. The constitution defines al-Azhar, the main authority on theology and Islamic affairs, as an independent scientific Islamic institution with exclusive competence over its own affairs It is responsible for preaching Islam and disseminating the religious sciences and the Arabic language worldwide. The constitution requires the state to provide sufficient funding for it to achieve its purposes. Al-Azhars Grand Imam is elected by al-Azhars Council of Senior Scholars and is officially appointed by the President for a life term. The President does not have the authority to dismiss him.

By law, capital sentences must be referred to the Grand Mufti, the countrys highest Islamic legal official, for consultation before they can be carried out. The Grand Muftis decision in these cases is consultative and nonbinding on the court that handed down the sentence.

The constitution stipulates the canonical laws of Jews and Christians form the basis of legislation governing their personal status, religious affairs, and selection of spiritual leaders. Individuals are subject to different sets of personal status laws regarding such matters as marriage, divorce, and inheritance depending upon their official religious designation. The Ministry of Interior issues national identity cards for citizens that include official religious designations. Designation options are limited to Muslim, Christian, or Jewish. Although the government designates Jehovahs Witnesses as Christian on identity cards, a presidential decree bans their religious activities. Since a 2009 court order, Bahais and other citizens belonging to unrecognized religious groups may have their religious affiliation denoted by a dash (-) on national identity cards. The Minister of Interior has the authority to issue executive regulations determining what data national identity cards must list.

Neither the constitution nor the civil or penal codes prohibit apostasy from Islam, nor do they outlaw efforts to proselytize. The law states individuals may change their religion. The government recognizes conversion to Islam, but generally does not recognize conversions from Islam to any other religion, except in the case of individuals who were not born Muslim but later converted to Islam, according to a Ministry of Interior decree pursuant to a court order. Reverting to Christianity requires presentation of a document from the receiving church, an identity card, and fingerprints. After a determination is made that the intent of the change which often also entails a name change is not to evade prosecution for a crime committed under the Muslim name, a new identity document is issued with the Christian name and religious designation. In cases in which Muslims not born Muslim convert from Islam, their minor children, and in some cases adult children who were minors when their parents converted, remain classified as Muslims. When these children reach the age of 18, they have the option of converting to Christianity and having that reflected on their identity cards.

The penal code, while not addressing blasphemy by name, states that disdaining and disrespecting any of the heavenly religions (Islam, Christianity, and Judaism) is punishable by six months to five years imprisonment or fines of at least 500 Egyptian pounds (EGP) ($20). Using religion to promote extremist ideology with the aim of inciting strife or contempt of the heavenly religions or their sects or harming national unity carries penalties ranging from six months to five years imprisonment. The law is commonly applied in cases alleging contempt of Sunni Islam and Christianity. The cybercrime law penalizes violating the family principles of Egyptian Society with a minimum imprisonment of six months and a fine of 50,000-100,000 EGP ($2,000-4,000). According to civil society organizations, the term family principles is vague and is often invoked to punish perceived blasphemy.

There are four entities currently authorized to issue fatwas (religious rulings binding on Muslims): the al-Azhar Council of Senior Scholars, the al-Azhar Islamic Research Academy, Dar al-Iftaa (House of Religious Edicts), and the Ministry of Awqafs General Fatwa Directorate. While a part of the Ministry of Justice, Dar al-Iftaa has been an independent organization since 2007.

Islamic, Christian, and Jewish groups may request official recognition from the government, which gives previously unrecognized religious groups the right to be governed by their own canonical laws, practice religious rituals, establish houses of worship, and import religious literature. To obtain official recognition, a religious group must submit a request to the Ministry of the Interiors Administrative Affairs Department. The department then determines whether the group poses a threat to national unity or social peace. As part of this determination, the department consults leading religious institutions, including the Coptic Orthodox Church and al-Azhar. The President then reviews and adjudicates the registration application.

The law does not recognize the Bahai Faith or its religious laws and bans Bahai institutions and community activities. The law does not stipulate penalties for banned religious groups or their members who engage in religious practices, but these groups are denied rights granted to recognized groups, such as having their own houses of worship or other property, holding bank accounts, or importing religious literature.

The government, through the Ministry of Awqaf, appoints, pays the salaries of, and monitors imams who lead prayers in licensed mosques. According to the law, penalties for preaching or giving religious lessons without a license from the Ministry of Awqaf or al-Azhar include a prison term of up to one year, a fine of up to 50,000 EGP ($2,000), or both. The penalty doubles for repeat offenders. Ministry of Awqaf inspectors also have judicial authority to arrest imams for violating this law. A ministry decree prevents unlicensed imams from preaching in any mosque, prohibits holding Friday prayers in mosques smaller than 80 square meters (860 square feet), bans unlicensed mosques from holding Friday prayer services (other prayer services are permitted), and pays bonuses to imams who deliver Friday sermons written and disseminated by the Ministry of Awqaf. Ministry personnel monitor Friday sermons in major mosques and an imam who fails to follow the guidelines for ministry sermons may lose the bonus and be subject to disciplinary measures, including potentially losing his preaching license.

The Prime Minister has the authority to stop circulation of books that denigrate religions, referring to the three recognized Abrahamic faiths. Ministries may obtain court orders to ban or confiscate books and works of art. The cabinet may ban works it deems offensive to public morals, detrimental to religion, or likely to cause a breach of the peace. The Islamic Research Academy of al-Azhar has the legal authority to censor and confiscate any publications dealing with the Quran and the authoritative Islamic traditions (sunnah) and to confiscate publications, tapes, speeches, and artistic materials deemed inconsistent with Islamic law.

A 2016 law delegates the power to issue legal permits and to authorize church construction or renovation to governors of the countrys 27 governorates. The governor must respond within four months of receipt of an application for legalization; any refusal must include a written justification. The law does not provide for review or appeal of a refusal, nor does it specify recourse if a governor fails to respond within the required timeframe. The law also includes provisions to legalize existing unlicensed churches. It stipulates that while a request to license an existing building for use as a church is pending, the use of the building to conduct church services and rites may not be prevented. Under the law, the size of new churches continues to depend on a government determination of the number and need of Christians in the area. Construction of new churches must meet specific land registration procedures and building codes and is subject by law to greater government regulation than that applied to the construction of new mosques.

Under a separate law governing the construction of mosques, the Ministry of Awqaf reviews and approves building permits. A 2001 cabinet decree includes a list of 10 provisions requiring that new mosques built after that date must, among other conditions, be a minimum of 500 meters (1,640 feet) from the nearest other mosque, have a ground surface of at least 175 square meters (1,884 square feet), and be built only in areas where the existing mosques do not accommodate the number of residents in the area. The law does not require Ministry of Awqaf approval for mosque renovations.

In both public and private schools that teach the national curriculum, in all grades Muslim students are required to take courses on principles of Islam and Christian students are required to take courses on principles of Christianity. The religious studies courses they take are based on their official identity card designations, not personal or parental decisions. Students who are neither Muslim nor Christian must choose one or the other course; they may not opt out or change from one to the other once selected. A common set of textbooks for these two courses is mandated for both public and private schools, including parochial schools. Al-Azhar maintains a separate school system that serves an estimated two million students from kindergarten through secondary school, using its own curriculum.

The penal code criminalizes discrimination based on religion and defines it as including any action, or lack of action, that leads to discrimination between people or against a sect due to religion or belief. The law applies to religions whose rituals are publicly held, which technically applies only to the three Abrahamic religions. The law stipulates imprisonment for a term determined by the judge, a fine of no less than 30,000 EGP ($1,200) and no more than 50,000 EGP ($2,000), or both as penalties for discrimination. If the perpetrator is a government employee, the law states that the imprisonment should be no less than three months and the fine no less than 50,000 EGP ($2,000) and no more than 100,000 EGP ($4,000).

Customary reconciliation is a form of dispute resolution that predates the countrys modern judicial and legal systems and is recognized in the law in instances that do not pertain to crimes considered more serious (e.g., those involving homicide, significant injury, or theft). Customary reconciliation sessions rely on the accumulation of a set of customary rules to address conflicts between individuals, families, households, or workers and employees in certain professions. Parties to disputes agree upon a resolution that typically contains stipulations to pay an agreed-upon amount of money for breaching the terms of the agreement.

In matters of family law, when spouses are members of the same religious denomination, courts apply that denominations canonical laws. The courts apply sharia in cases where one spouse is Muslim and the other is a member of a different religion, where both are Christians but members of different denominations, or where the individuals are not members of a government-recognized religious group.

The government recognizes only the marriages of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim citizens, with documentation from a cleric, and does not recognize civil marriages between Egyptian citizens. Marriages between Shia are recognized as Muslim marriages. The law stipulates Muslim women are not permitted to marry non-Muslim men. Non-Muslim men who wish to marry Muslim women must convert to Islam. Christian and Jewish women are not required to convert to Islam to marry Muslim men. A married non-Muslim woman who converts to Islam must divorce her husband if he is not Muslim and is unwilling to convert to Islam. If a married man is discovered to have left Islam, his marriage to a woman whose official religious designation is Muslim is dissolved.

A divorced mother is entitled to custody of her son until the age of 15 and her daughter until the daughter marries. The childrens father has the right to petition the court to ask the children to choose between staying with their mother or father, unless one parent is Muslim and the other is not, in which case the Muslim parent is awarded custody.

The government recognizes civil marriages of Bahais, as well as of individuals from other unrecognized religious groups such as Jehovahs Witnesses, Hindus, and members of the Church of Jesus Christ, if one or both are foreigners. Authorities deny Bahais the rights of married couples pertaining to inheritance, divorce, and sponsoring a foreign spouse. In practice, however, Bahais reported occasional success in filing individual petitions for recognition of their marriages in civil court.

The law generally follows sharia in matters of inheritance. In 2017, an appellate court ruled that applying sharia to non-Muslims in inheritance matters violated the section of the constitution stating that personal status matters for Christian and Jewish communities are governed by their respective religious doctrines. The Constitutional Court has not ruled on this issue.

Sharia provisions forbidding adoption apply to all citizens. The Ministry of Social Solidarity, however, manages a program called Alternative Family which recognizes permanent legal guardianship if certain conditions are met, including requirements that the guardians share the same religion as the child and have been married to one another for a minimum of five years.

The quasigovernmental National Council for Human Rights (NCHR), whose members are by law appointed by parliament, is charged with strengthening protections, raising awareness, and ensuring the observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms, including religious freedom. It also is charged with monitoring enforcement and application of international agreements pertaining to human rights. The councils mandate includes investigating reports of alleged violations of religious freedom.

The constitution mandates that the state eliminate all forms of discrimination through an independent commission, to be established by parliament; parliament has not established such a commission.

The country is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights but declared in a reservation that it became a party considering that the provisions of the covenant do not conflict with sharia.

The newspaperal-Wafdreported that in September, the Second Circuit Terrorism Court in Tora sentenced an unnamed individual to 14 years in prison in a retrial for the 2013 mob killing of Shia scholar Hassan Shehata and three of Shehatas followers, including his brother. The original trial was invalidated on a technicality.

In May, the Emergency State Security Criminal Court sentenced Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, leader of the Strong Egypt Party, a former presidential candidate and a former leader within the Muslim Brotherhood, to 15 years in prison for funding a terrorist organization.

On June 23, the human rights advocacy NGO Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) issued a statement warning of the imminent forced deportation that month of Yemeni asylum seeker Abdul-Baqi Saeed Abdo, although according to local human rights advocates, at years end, he remained in Egypt. In 2015, the NCHR registered Saeed, a former Muslim who converted to Christianity in 2013 before moving to Egypt, as an asylum applicant. Egyptian authorities arrested him in December 2021 and accused him of joining a terrorist group and contempt for Islam. EIPR said the state, as a signatory to the 1951 UN Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol, had a duty not to deport Saeed to Yemen where his life or freedom would be threatened due to his religion.

According to a July 4al-Manassaarticle, in February, Ministry of Interior officials pardoned five police officers who were originally sentenced to prison terms of three years each for torturing Coptic merchant Magdy Makin to death in a Cairo police station in 2016. According to the article, at the time of the pardons, the five had only served one year of their sentences and the police force later reinstated one of the pardoned officers. The pardons came in the wake of a broader presidential pardon issued on the anniversary of the countrys 2011 revolution.

According to media reports, on June 6, the Emergency State Security Court in Heliopolis acquitted lawyer and Islamic researcher Ahmed Abdo Maher of contempt of Islam and inciting sectarian strife. In 2021, the Nozha Misdemeanor Court found Maher guilty of contempt of Islam and sentenced him to five years in prison with hard labor, but the Office of Ratification of Emergency State Security Provisions ordered a retrial before a new court after his attorneys appealed the original verdict. The original prosecutor charged Maher based on statements he made in his bookHow the Imams Jurisprudence Is Leading the Nation Astray. Activists and NGOs in 2021 responded to the case by calling for the abolition of the countrys blasphemy law.

According to EIPR, Cairos Economic Court, a circuit court that handles prosecutions brought under the countrys cybercrime law, sentenced Marco Gerges Salib to five years in prison on January 29 for exploitation of religion to promote extremist ideas, contempt for Islam, and infringement on Egyptian family values. Authorities arrested Gerges, a Copt, in 2021 for allegedly storing pornographic photographs deemed offensive to Islam on his mobile phone and comments about religion exchanged in private text messages. The defense stressed that no pictures or comments were posted to the internet and argued the basis for the investigation was an illegal search. On September 12, the Cairo Economic Court rejected his petition to appeal the verdict to the Supreme Constitutional Court. In a statement released on February 1, EIPR said the ruling relied on vague and unconstitutional accusations, including the charge of contempt of religion contained in the penal code, and attacking the values of the Egyptian family and society contained in the Law on Combating Information Technology Crimes, which opens the way wide for the misuse of these accusations in violating the freedoms of opinion, expression, creativity, and belief. According to the rights group defending Gerges, there was little relationship between the charges and the evidence presented against him.

According to secular news websites, in November, national security authorities summoned YouTube content creator and self-professed atheist Hesham al-Masry for questioning after Ahmad Karima, professor of Islamic law and comparative jurisprudence at al-Azhar University, accused him of insulting Islam following a heated online debate between Karima and al-Masry, during which al-Masry criticized Islamic doctrine and the Prophet Muhammad. Authorities released al-Masry without charge in November.

EIPR reported that on February 10, the Court of Cassation (the highest tier in the countrys common court system) rejected the EIPRs appeal on behalf of self-professed atheist activist and blogger Anas Hassan of a 2020 Amreya courts verdict sentencing him to three years imprisonment and a fine of 300,000 EGP ($12,100) for managing The Egyptian Atheists Facebook page. Authorities originally arrested Hassan in 2019, charging him with publishing atheist ideas and criticizing the divinely revealed religions. EIPR stated the Court of Cassations ruling comes in a broader context of prosecutions and trials for online expression in general, and for various religious expressions in particular. This includes a wide range of pursuits of nontraditional Islamic ideas, such as criticizing some traditional figures valued by Sunni Muslims, or expressing the ideas of non-Sunni Islamic sects such as Shias, Ahmadis, and Quranists, in addition to expressing atheistic ideas or declaring lack of faith and criticizing religions.

Local, regional, and international press outlets reported that on January 8, authorities released Copt and human rights activist Ramy Kamel Saied Salib (commonly known as Ramy Kamel). Authorities originally arrested Salib in 2019 following his application for a Swiss visa to speak at a UN forum in Geneva on minority rights and charged him with joining a banned group and spreading false news. Salib had previously presented on issues affecting the Coptic community in the same forum.

The news outletMiddle East Monitorreported that in April, authorities released nine Copts who were arrested on January 30 following a peaceful protest in Samalut, Minya Governorate. The nine were among a group of approximately 70 demonstrators who demanded authorization for the construction of a new church to replace one that had burned down in 2016. According to Amnesty International, the original church was the only place of worship in the village of Ezbet Farag Allah for approximately 800 Coptic Christians, who, after the fire, had to travel to surrounding villages to attend religious services. The January demonstrations followed the governments demolition of the remnants of the burned church and subsequent failure to respond to a formal request that the governorate authorize the construction of a new church.

According to an EIPR statement corroborated by photographs posted on social media, on February 23, Zagazig Criminal Court released Quranist activist Reda Abdel Rahman. Authorities detained Abdel Rahman, the nephew of Ahmed Sobhy Mansour, one of the most prominent advocates of Quranism, in 2020 and accused him of being an ISIS member and espousing takfirithought (i.e., accusing other Muslims of heresy), although he was never tried. Following his release, authorities stopped Rahman at Cairo International Airport and prevented him from travelling internationally without permission from the National Security Agency.

Al-Jazeerareported that on June 9, Cairos Criminal Court sentenced Salafi preacher Mahmoud Shaaban to 15 years in prison for inciting violence, opposing the state, and joining a terrorist group. Authorities charged Shaaban with joining the Free Syrian Army in Syria. Shaaban appeared in a wheelchair during the trial and accused authorities of willful medical negligence.Al-Jazeerareported authorities originally arrested him and three other Salafi preachers in 2019 for their membership in a banned political group, but a court acquitted them in 2021. Authorities rearrested Shaaban shortly after his release following the acquittal.

As reported by Member of Parliament Tarek al-Khouly via a published list of names, on September 9, the Presidential Pardon Committee (reactivated by President Sisi in April) announced the release of YouTube content creators Ahmed Sebaie, a Salafist, and Gergis Samih, a Copt. Both had been in pretrial detention since their separate arrests in 2020 on accusations of joining a terrorist group, spreading false news to destabilize the country, and using the internet to commit a crime. Authorities arrested Sebaie after he released a YouTube video criticizing the Bible and Samih after he created a Facebook post that Muslim neighbors called offensive to Islam.

The NGO Association of Freedom of Thought and Expression reported that on October 19, the South Cairo Court prosecutor summoned poet Amina Abdullah and resumed an investigation into whether she had committed contempt of religion and taken Gods name in vain during a public reading of her poem Daughters of Pain. The association said authorities first summoned her on October 16 but released her on October 18 on 5,000 EGP ($202) bail. Abdullah stated that due to the controversy generated by her poem, she received threats of violence, including threats to disfigure her with acid.

The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) reported that in June, dean of al-Azhars Sharia Faculty Mabrouk Attia said women should dress modestly to avoid tempting men. Otherwise, some slavering man may see you and murder you. Attias remarks came in the wake of student Naira al-Ashrafs death at the hands of her boyfriend Muhammad Adel when she refused to marry him. Attias comments sparked sharp backlash on social media and the National Council for Women filed a legal complaint against Attia with the general prosecutor for incitement to murder. Attia said his statements were misinterpreted. Calling al-Ashrafs death a reprehensible and heinous crime, he said Not wearing the veil is not justification for murder. I said that the veil protects [women] and decreases the cases [of attacks against them].

Media reported the Heliopolis public prosecutor launched an investigation of dean Attia for insulting Christianity and Islam after he issued a video in July in which he employed a pun playing on the similarity of the Arabic words for Mars and Messiah. Following complaints from Christians that his comments insulted Jesus, also a revered figure in Islam, Attia publicly apologized. On November 30, a court fined Attia 1,000 EGP ($40).

On October 25, CNN reported a TikTok content creator using the account name al-Prince al-Masry (Prince of Egypt) issued several videos in which he burned the Bible, smashed a cross using slippers, and insulted Jesus. The public prosecutors office subsequently announced on Facebook that it had started an investigation, accusing al-Prince al-Masry of exploiting religion in promoting extremist ideas with the intent of provoking discord and contempt of the heavenly Christian religion and the Christians and harming national unity. His case remained under review at years end.

In March, a judge in the Second Circuit of the Criminal Court ordered the release of a woman pharmacist after five months in detention, reportedly with precautionary measures (conditions of release) to be determined later by the police department. Police in Zagazig District, Sharqia Governorate, arrested the woman in 2021 and authorities charged her with spreading false news and joining a banned group one week after she reported her coworkers for assaulting and harassing her for her decision not to wear a hijab. A video of the assault was widely circulated on Facebook. The Supreme State Security Prosecution initially ordered her detained for 15 days pending an investigation of the charges but extended her detention multiple times.

Media outletCairo24reported that in June, Naguib Gabriel, attorney and head of the Egyptian Federation for Human Rights, stated he would appeal a then recent ruling drawing on sharia principles from the Family Court in Sohag City, Sohag Governorate, that a mans conversion to Islam from Christianity was not adequate grounds for his wife to seek a divorce. Gabriel, representing the converts wife, stated the courts decision was contrary to guarantees in the Coptic Orthodox Churchs bylaws that permit Christians to seek divorce if their spouse departs from the Christian religion. He said, This ruling overturned all established principles in the judiciary, according to which a Christian wife has the right to apply her religions law, and this ruling means that a Christian wife is forced to live with her husband, who has departed from her religion.

In September, social media activists circulated a photograph depicting a certificate of conversion to Islam issued by al-Azhars Islamic Research Academy on behalf of a young Christian, Saad Fahim, from a village in Beni Suef Governorate. They also circulated a medical certificate for the same man from a hospital in Beni Suef that indicated Fahim suffered from a psychological disorder and a delay in mental abilities and had previously been committed to the hospital for psychological treatment. The activists questioned how al-Azhar could accept such a conversion, and whether it was an indicator of forced conversion campaigns.

On August 15, the South Cairo Criminal Court ruled that the Muslim Brotherhood, originally designated as a proscribed terrorist entity in 2013, should be redesignated for five more years. The court also redesignated 277 of its members as terrorists for three more years. The court ruled the 277 persons appearing on the list could immediately return to government jobs from which they had been suspended as a consequence of their inclusion on the list, in addition to receiving their full wages; they had previously received half wages in connection with their suspension from work. The individuals on the list remained barred from international travel. A source familiar with the court toldal-Shoroukthe court made its determination on the grounds that the defendants had the right to earn a living.

In August, the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy published an article by an academic on ministering to Christians in the countrys prisons. The academic said prison authorities controlled what written or visual materials religious workers shared with inmates. Guards reportedly did not always recognize the diversity of Christian denominations, asking a Coptic layperson are you not all the same? The academic also suggested that nonbelieving Coptic prisoners felt compelled to attend meetings with religious counselors, lest their absence imply atheism, making them more vulnerable to violence by jailers and prisoners.

In January,al Jazeerareported the Ministry of Awqafs decision on December 29, 2021 to limit the duration of Friday sermons to 10 minutes as a COVID-19 prevention measure sparked widespread criticism on social media. The ministry said preachers and imams who violated the rule would face disciplinary measures, including having their licenses revoked. In a statement released on May 6, Minister of Awqaf Mohammad Mokhtar Gomaa announced that Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly had approved the full reopening of mosques and shrines, lifting most previous COVID-19 restrictions. Under the new guidance, mosques resumed normal operations starting May 8, allowing the return of religious and Quran recitation lessons. Islamic shrines were also opened during nonprayer times. The announcement appealed to worshipers to continue to wear masks and practice social distancing, adding that the duration of Friday sermons would continue to be capped at 10 minutes. The government had lifted COVID-19 restrictions on church gatherings, although many churches imposed their own restrictions on gatherings during outbreaks.

Media outletOrient.netreported that in July, Dar al-Iftaa issued a fatwa saying Muslims kissing and touching shrines or requesting help from the shrines patrons (i.e., prophets, saints, and righteous people), whether dead or alive, did not contradict monotheism or imply nonbelief in Islam. Thousands of social media users criticized the fatwa, stating that the veneration of shrines and their patrons was associated with Shiism or idolatry.

Media outletArabi21reported that in October, the Ministry of Awqaf arrested the imam of Cairos Abul Ella Mosque pending an investigation after a video clip circulated of individuals dancing and singing inside the mosque on the anniversary of the Prophet Muhammads birthday. The video sparked public anger, with some considering the festivities disrespectful.

The news outletAl-Quds al-Arabireported that in October, authorities canceled several Sufi celebrations, including the commemoration of the birth of 13th-century cleric Sayyid al-Badawi in Gharbia Governorate and a parade procession for the Prophet Muhammads birthday, describing the cancellations as precautionary measures against COVID-19.

In May,al-JumhuriyaOnlinereported Minister of Awqaf Gomaa met with Sheikh Abd al-Hadi al-Qasabi, leader of the Sufi orders. The two agreed that any Sufi religious observances or celebrations should be approved via an exchange of official letters between the General Sheikhdom headed by al-Qasabi and the Awqaf ministry.

In November, thousands of Sufi adherents in Cairo celebrated the birth of Imam al-Hussein in Cairos al-Gamaleya neighborhood near the al-Hussein Mosque. The government reportedly did not issue a permit for the celebration but made no attempt to halt it.

According to the media outletYoum7, in October, followers of the 13th-century Sufi imam Sidi Ibrahim al-Desouqi gathered in the city of Desouq in Kafr al-Sheikh Governorate to commemorate his birthday near his eponymous mosque. Following evening prayer on October 21, authorities, citing a desire to limit crowd size as a public health measure against COVID-19, closed the mosque, with the exception of allowing visits to Desouqis shrine inside. The celebration continued a few days later, with smaller numbers in attendance, including Kafr al-Sheikh governor Jama Nour al-Din.

According to multiple local sources, the government largely continued to allow Bahais, members of the Church of Jesus Christ, Jehovahs Witnesses, and Shia Muslims to worship privately in small numbers, but it continued to deny requests for public religious gatherings by unregistered religious groups.

The NGO Human Rights without Frontiers reported that in January, the African Association of Jehovahs Witnesses and the European Association of Jehovahs Witnesses filed a joint submission to the UN Human Rights Committee seeking reregistration in Egypt. The petitioners said unfounded accusations that the group was Zionist led the government to deregister it in 1960. The petitioners stated, The organization of Jehovahs Witnesses is entirely religious and does not advocate any political arrangement, which would include Zionism. The inability to register meant Jehovahs Witnesses could not build houses of worship or obtain land to bury their dead, necessitating that they worship discreetly in private homes and use privately owned cemeteries. The two associations stated that in 2019, the High Administrative Court rejected the groups appeal of a Ministry of Justice decree preventing Jehovahs Witnesses from officially registering marriages or property ownership in the name of the group. According to the petitioners, the court stated that the beliefs of Jehovahs Witnesses contradicted the countrys public order and morals. The petitioners said, Currently, the National Security Agency unlawfully interrogates and verbally harasses Witnesses on a monthly basis, summoning them without official authorization on the pretext of protecting national interests.

Bassatine Cemetery in Cairo, which members of the Bahai community described as overcrowded and inconveniently distant for Bahais living outside Cairo, remained the only cemetery in the country where Bahais could be buried. Bahais continued to pursue legal action to have the government designate a cemetery for persons whose national identity cards showed a dash [-] under religious affiliation (i.e., all those whom the government considered not to be Muslim, Christian, or Jewish). In December, the Supreme Administrative Court, responding to an appeal by the Bahai community to a previous lower court decision in March, ruled that the government of Alexandria was not obligated to grant land for a cemetery for members of unrecognized religious groups. In the earlier ruling, Alexandrias Administrative Court cited the religious opinion of al-Azhars Islamic Research Academy, which stated that allocating land for a Bahai cemetery would lead to discrimination, further division, fragmentation, and rupture of the fabric ofsociety. Also in December, the Port Said Administrative Court rejected a petition by members of the Bahai community to allocate land for a cemetery there. In May, television commentator Ibrahim Eissa called on President Sisi to intervene to solve the Bahai cemetery crisis, stating the group suffered from being unable to obtain burial permits outside of the Bassatine Cemetery in Cairo. Eissa added, They are Egyptians. It is their right to be buried in their land, and suggested the issue was relevant to the freedom of belief that President Sisi advocated.

One member of the Shia community said the government scheduled repairs and refurbishment of shrines venerated by Shias (e.g., Cairos al-Hussein Mosque) as an excuse to prevent gatherings of Shia pilgrims during Ashura and other observances.

Local media reported that on January 7, Wadi al-Natrun Correctional and Rehabilitation Center allowed several members of clergy to enter the facility to perform prayers for Christian prisoners for Coptic Christmas.

Reverend Samuel Abdullah stated on Facebook that on May 20, for the first time since its establishment, the Air Force Academy in Bilbeis, Sharqia Governorate, held a Christian religious service. The service, which took place in a newly constructed church opened earlier that month, included students and leaders from the academy.

In May, then Minister of Local Development Mahmoud Shaarawy announced that the 25 stops on the 2,100-mile Holy Family Trail, marking the route Christians believe was taken by Mary, Joseph, and Jesus from Israel to Egypt, were almost ready to receive visitors. In September, following months of renovation, the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities reopened a pilgrimage site on the trail in Cairos Matariya District believed to contain a sycamore tree descended from the one under which Mary reputedly bathed the infant Jesus during the trios journey. On January 11, the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced a special six-month museum exhibition in Sharm al-Sheikh on the history of the Holy Family in Egypt, consisting of manuscripts, icons, and other exhibits.

The Ministry of Awqaf continued to distribute sermon guidelines monthly to Sunni mosques and to recommend imams adhere to prescribed themes. It did not, however, dictate content word for word. According to the countrysNational Counterterrorism Reportreleased by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in September, the Ministry of Awqaf played a crucial role in countering extremist ideology and reforming religious discourse and had taken measures to ensure preachers who deliver Friday sermons are well-versed and trained to perform that crucial role. The report stated the ministry dismisses those who have been convicted in cases of sabotage, corruption, or terrorism, preventing them from preaching again. These measures aim to prevent terrorists and unqualified individuals from abusing mosques in promoting extremist ideology. The report identified as preventive measures degrading the capability of the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood and other terrorist organizations, coordinating with national authorities and religious institutions to refute extremist ideologies, promoting moderate religious teachings, and thwarting terrorist organizations efforts to recruit new followers.

TheNational Counterterrorism Reportstated al-Azhars Observatory for Combating Extremism played a significant role in monitoring and analyzing manifestations of extremism and discrediting extremist ideology. It circulated its publications in more than a dozen languages, including English, Arabic, Urdu, Swahili, Chinese, and Farsi, and organized sensitization and awareness-raising campaigns to promote the true essence of religion and refute extremist ideology. In addition to monitoring, the observatorys staff of approximately 100 individuals offered counterarguments to extremist statements on jihadi websites.

According to theNational Counterterrorism Report, the government aimed at preventing terrorism by monitoring extremist groups inflammatory pages and websites, identifying those in charge of their management, and taking legal action against them. The report cited a 2015 law criminalizing the promotion and glorification of terrorist crimes as the basis for defining extremist groups. According to EIPR, despite the language in the counterterrorism report, the government blocked but did not take legal action against websites that it deemed inflammatory.

Pro-Muslim Brotherhood media outlets reported that following the death of Qatar-based Sunni cleric and spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood Youssef al-Qaradawi in September, the Ministry of Awqaf banned prayers and sermons in mosques mentioning Qaradawi. Qaradawi went into self-imposed exile in Qatar in 2013 following the overthrow of then President Mohammed Morsi, and Egyptian authorities sentenced him to death in absentia in 2015. On September 26, journalist and political commentator Muhammad al-Daysati posted to Twitter, Yousef al-Qaradawi was the mufti of terrorism and he distorted Islam and created strife in Syria, Palestine, Libya, Egypt, and Tunisia and made Muslims kill Muslims so that the Muslim Brotherhood could rule.

Youm7reported that in August, the Disciplinary Court of the Supreme Administration of the State Council sanctioned Sabry Ebada, the former undersecretary of the Ministry of Awqaf in Ismailia Governorate, with an official warning for violations including speaking in an inappropriate manner before worshipers in the mosque, and exceeding the prescribed length for the sermon. The ministry dismissed the undersecretary in 2021 after he delivered a Friday sermon at the al-Matafy Mosque in which he described some of the worshipers as extremists, leading to an altercation between himself and worshipers following his address.

Al-Masrawyreported that in October, the Awqaf ministrys office in Beni Suef Governorate transferred a preacher at the Hajja Fatima Mosque near Beni Suef City and garnished his wages for violating the ministrys prescribed dress code. Worshipers had complained the preacher wore a shirt and pants instead of traditionalgilbabrobes while carrying out his official mosque duties.

Shia activist Haidar Kandil, a former reporter for the daily newspaperal-Dustour, continued to say he experienced travel restrictions and difficulties in finding work, which he attributed to religious discrimination. According to Kandil, in 2021, authorities banned him from travelling to Moscow and required him to check in weekly with police in his hometown, Tanta City. He said officials accused him of contempt of religion, spreading Shiism and antistate ideas, and establishing a group in violation of the law.

Media reported that on March 21, the Supreme Administrative Court rejected the appeal filed by the National Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (NTRA) against an administrative courts 2020 ruling that obligated the NTRA to block Shia websites in general, and theIbn al-Nafisnews website in particular, from the internet. The NTRA had argued monitoring content of websites was outside the scope of its mandate to provide access to web services.

According to a contributor at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, an international NGO focused on human rights, the government continued to ban the importation and sale of Bahai and Jehovahs Witnesses literature and authorized customs officials to confiscate religious materials from these groups adherents.

Organizers of the state-sponsored annual Cairo International Book Fair, held January 26-February 7, banned some publishing houses from participating and expelled others. For the second consecutive year, Palestinian writer and publisher Bisan Adwan was absent from the fair. Authorities expelled Adwan who had resided in Egypt since childhood from the country in 2020 amid accusations in the progovernment press that she promoted atheism. For the first time, organizers banned Egyptian publishing house Book Juice from participating due to what head of the Egyptian Publishers Association Saeed Abdo said were accusations that Book Juice had links to the Muslim Brotherhood. Book fair management reportedly rejected the Asir al-Kutub publishing houses participation without a justification, according to the firm. The decision followed allegations in the media that the firm published some books and publications authored by Islamists. Company officials told theCairo24website they had reviewed all their religious heritage publications to ensure that they were free of any ideas that support religious extremism and removed a large number of books from the firms electronic platform. The fair included publishers from various Arab countries and hosted approximately 91,000 visitors.

Multiple local and international sources reported that as of years end, the case against EIPR researcher Patrick George Zaki on charges of spreading false news remained ongoing. The charges stemmed from a 2019 article Zaki wrote on anti-Coptic discrimination. In December 2021, the court ordered Zaki released on bail after 22 months in pretrial detention but prohibited him from travelling abroad. On November 29, the court set February 2023 for Zakis next hearing.

Some publishers reported they were wary of publishing books that criticized religious institutions such as al-Azhar or challenged Islamic doctrine.

In November, the State Information Service announced that a cabinet committee tasked with registering unlicensed churches approved the adjusted status of 125 churches and affiliated buildings which were already built, bringing the total number of churches and service buildings granted legal status since 2017 to 2,526 out of 3,730 requests sent to the committee, with the remaining 1,204 pending at years end. There were no reports that the committee had rejected any requests to adjust the status of unlicensed churches. The committee stated representatives of Christian denominations would be invited to attend its next meeting to discuss ways for recently legalized churches to conform to building codes and fire safety standards. In March, President Sisi publicly called for building churches in every new municipality. While some non-Coptic Orthodox groups said the approval process took longer than normal, Coptic leaders said they were satisfied with the pace of committee approvals and that they expected to see decreasing numbers of approvals for previously unlicensed churches in the future as the government addressed the pre-2017 backlog.

In August, local and international media outlets reported on a series of fires inside churches and public places around the country, including an August 13 fire in the Abu Sefein Church in the Giza suburbs of Cairo that killed 41 persons. According to some sources, authorities suspected arson in only one case, a minor fire in Alexandria in which a person allegedly threw lighted cigarettes at a church. Police made no arrests in that case. Some clerical personnel and laypersons said the government bore partial responsibility for the church fires because its pre-2016 legacy of blocking church renovations and registrations led to overcrowded buildings in crowded urban areas with dangerous or poorly maintained electrical wiring.

In August, an unnamed Coptic parliamentarian told the news outletNew Arabthe government and the Coptic Orthodox Church went through a muffled crisis over church properties located within areas and projects that the government had prioritized for economic development. The parliamentarian said the government offered the Coptic Orthodox Church new land in exchange for its current holdings. Other sources said the government and the church cooperated and the government did not force the church to exchange properties.

Al-BawabhNewsreported that in August, President Sisi issued a decree allocating an area of approximately 12 acres of state-owned land in the Qus District, Qena Governorate, to establish a church for Coptic Catholics.

On April 27, President Sisi and the Sultan of the Indian Bohra community, Mufaddal Saifuddin, presided over the reopening of the al-Hussein Mosque in Cairo after extensive renovations. Sisi hailed the Bohra communitys contributions to renovating the mosque.

In May, the Ministry of Awqaf announced the state had constructed, developed, or maintained more than 8,500 Sunni mosques since President Sisi came to power in 2014. In June, Minister Gomaa said that since 2014, the ministry had spent nine billion EGP ($363.7 million) to renovate approximately 9,000 mosques nationwide. In October, the ministry announced that during the year, it had funded construction of 260 new mosques. Gomaa said the ministry paid more than 2.1 billion EGP ($84.8 million) toward social programs, including 200 million EGP ($8 million) toward Islamic education and school construction.

Shia community sources and religious freedom observers again said information contained in a 2019 report by Minority Rights Group International, an international NGO, on challenges facing the countrys Shia community remained valid. The NGOs report stated that there continued to be no Shia congregational halls (husseiniyas) in the country and Shia Muslims remained unable to establish public places of worship.

In July, the Ministry of Awqaf called on citizens to report via WhatsApp any mosque, other than those belonging to Sufi orders, that maintained collection boxes, and stressed the need for all Awqaf directorates, departments, and inspectors to ensure that there were no collection boxes in mosques. The ministry banned the use of collection boxes in mosques in 2021, citing security and transparency concerns, but made an exception for Sufi orders, whose collection boxes worshipers used for donations when they believed God had answered a prayer.

In April, the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities began restoring the historic Ben Ezra Synagogue in Cairo, a nonworking synagogue that functioned as a museum and tourist attraction.

In early October, human rights activists circulated on social media a list of 50 students, all Copts, whom administrators reportedly assigned to a single class at a public school in Damanhour. The activists stated the all-Copt class was a sign of discrimination and that students of different faiths should be mixed in public school classrooms. Shortly thereafter, the Ministry of Education issued a statement that the special class was a trial to facilitate Christians attendance in religious education classes, but that the plan had since been abandoned and both Muslim and Christian students were now attending classes together.

Youm7reported the Ministry of Education continued to develop a new curriculum that included increased coverage of respect for human rights and religious tolerance. In June, Minister of Education Reda Hegazy announced the curriculum for grades four through six would include grade-appropriate versions of the bookValues and Respect for Others, an ethics text drawn from Islamic and Christian religious traditions. The book was already in use in classes in the first through third grades, and, according toYoum7, dealt with human values common to all religions, such as honesty, cleanliness, acceptance of others, respect for diversity, tolerance, etc. In October, Minister Hegazy announced the ministry had revised the primary school curriculum to focus on four priorities, including learning to coexist with others. Contrary to remarks Hegazy reportedly made in parliament when he was Deputy Minister of Education in 2021, the government did not issue instructions to remove Quranic verses from the general curriculum and restrict them to religious classes.

In April, the Ministry of Education amended the schedule of exams for primary and secondary school students when made aware that the dates originally announced coincided with Palm Sunday and Easter.

In December, MEMRI reported the Ministry of Education launched an investigation after photographs circulated on social media of junior high school girls in a village in Dakahlia Governorate wearing head-to-toe coverings as the school uniform.Al Arabsaid the school had imposed the dress code for seven years. Critics likened the school to Taliban schools and said it was an act of child abuse. Supporters of the school criticized the secular media attack on the hijab and called the photographs of girls in the prescribed uniforms a heartening Islamic sightthat every devout believer should strictly follow.

Reuters reported that on September 13, the Supreme Administrative Court upheld a decision to remove Mona Prince from her position as an instructor at state-run Suez University. The court justified the decision by saying Prince departed from the approved curriculum and did not adhere to accepted religious dogma while teachingParadise Lostby John Milton; it also criticized her for posting a video on her personal Facebook page of herself dancing. The court condemned her instruction methods as deviating from the scientific description of the academic curricula and spreading ideas that contradict heavenly beliefs and public order.

The Personal Status Law, coving all citizens regardless of religion, remained in place. At years end, the cabinet had still not submitted to the House of Representatives the draft Personal Status Law for Christians that media reported the Ministry of Justice completed in late 2021; Christian representatives from multiple denominations had reviewed and agreed to the ministrys draft. Several parliamentarians said the cabinet might submit the Personal Status Law for Christians once a new Personal Status Law for Muslims had been drafted and submitted. President Sisi created a drafting committee for the latter legislation in June and reviewed the committees progress in December, but as of years end the draft was not complete.

In September, the Coptic news websiteal-Watanireported that in February, authorities removed a four-year-old child, a foundling, from the adoptive Coptic family who were raising him and sent him to an orphanage. Police and Ministry of Social Solidarity officials based the decision to remove the child on the law stating that a child of unknown biological parentage is assumed to be Muslim, which rendered his upbringing in a Christian household potentially illegal. Upon transferring the child to the orphanage, authorities changed his name from the Christian one the adoptive Coptic family had given him to one that could be Christian or Muslim. The family challenged the decision to remove the child in administrative court. The court postponed the case until March 2023.

While the Coptic Orthodox Church did not bar participation in government-sponsored customary reconciliation sessions, a hurch spokesperson said reconciliation sessions should not be used in lieu of the application of the law and should be restricted to clearing the air and making amends following sectarian disputes or violence. At least one Coptic Orthodox diocese in Upper Egypt continued to refuse to participate in reconciliation sessions, criticizing them as substitutes for criminal proceedings rather than a means of addressing attacks on Christians and their churches. Other Christian denominations reported they continued to participate in customary reconciliation sessions.

Human rights groups and some Christian community representatives continued to characterize reconciliation sessions as encroaching on the principles of nondiscrimination and citizenship and said mediators regularly pressured Christian participants to retract their statements and deny facts, leading in some cases to the dropping of criminal charges. Local media reported that in April, Nevine Sobhy, a Christian, reported to local police in Menoufiya Governorate that a pharmacist slapped her twice for not wearing the hijab while visiting his drugstore during Ramadan. Sobhy complained on social media that police then pressured her to resort to customary reconciliation and only allowed her to file an official complaint when she insisted. After 10 days, a customary reconciliation session led by security figures, in the presence of the villages mayor and its churchs priest, concluded with the pharmacist paying Sobhy 100,000 EGP ($4,000) on the condition that Sobhy withdraw her police complaint. According to local media, based on a study of 45 customary reconciliation cases, EIPR found a persistent trend among reconciliation councils to favor the more socially empowered stakeholder. According to EIPR analysis, customary reconciliation is seen as one of the most important reasons for the recurrence of sectarian tensions, as it establishes the absence of justice and support for the perpetrators, and the lack of reparation for the victims.

On February 10, the NGO Coptic Solidarity said there was a 2 percent glass ceiling on Copts in entry-level positions in the judiciary, military and police, and diplomatic corps. The group said, Additionally, Copts are strictly prohibited from entering any of the sensitive government branches (such as the various security and intelligence services as well as the presidential office). Coptic Solidarity reported that on February 5, President Sisi issued a decree regarding 1,167 transfers and promotions of judges and prosecutors. Only 20 (1.7 percent) were Copts. The NGO said that only three of the countrys approximately 165 ambassadors were Copts.

On February 8, President Sisi appointed Judge Boulos, a Copt, to head the Supreme Constitutional Court, the first Christian so appointed. The Coptic community applauded the announcement and the NCHR released a statement praising the move as signaling a new era of promoting equal opportunities without discrimination for all citizens.

Christians continued to report that those admitted at entry levels of government faced limited opportunities for promotion to the upper ranks. In August, al-Watan Newsreported Minister of Military Production Mohamed Salah El Din appointed Emil Helmy Elias, a Copt, as deputy to the chairman of the National Organization for Military Production. Elias was the first Christian appointed to the position.

No Christians served as presidents of the countrys 27 public universities. The government barred non-Muslims from employment in public university training programs for Arabic-language teachers, stating as its reason that the curriculum involved study of the Quran. In February, Coptic Solidarity said Copts occupied less than 5 percent of the 1,550 leadership positions in public universities, despite representing 25 to 30 percent of total students.

Minister of Immigration and Expatriate Affairs Soha Samir Gendi was the only Christian in a cabinet of 32 ministers, replacing previous Minister Nabila Makram, also a Christian. Among the 27 governorates, only Damietta and Ismailia had Christian governors. The governor of Damietta was the countrys first woman Christian governor. Electoral laws reserve 24 seats for Christian candidates in the House of Representatives. During the year, the House of Representatives exceeded the quota, with 31 Christians out of a total of 596 representatives. There were 24 Christian senators 17 elected and seven appointed by President Sisi out of 300 seats in that chamber, including the deputy speaker.

Al-Watanireported that in May, governor of North Sinai Mohamed Abdel-Fadil Shousha ordered that 200 Copts displaced by threat of terrorist violence from the city of Arish in 2017 should be officially assigned to government jobs in their current locations. The decision meant a substantial pay cut for the relocated Copts, since wages and benefits in Arish are higher than in other parts of the country. Following criticism of the decision from the affected employees, the governorate announced in June that the displaced Copts could continue to earn the same salaries they received while working in Arish, provided they presented periodic documentation of their current work status outside of Arish. The Arish Copts expressed relief at the governors decision and appreciation for the governments efforts in its war against terrorism in North Sinai Governorate.

Some Shia stated they were excluded from service in the armed services, and from employment in the security and intelligence services. One Shia community member expressed dissatisfaction that al-Azhar continued to ban education on Shia Islam in schools, requiring Shia students to study Sunni Islam.

The government generally permitted foreign religious workers in the country. Sources continued to report, however, that authorities denied some religious workers visas or refused them entry upon arrival without explanation. In May, several groups of U.S. citizens, at least 25 persons in all, stated they had been barred from reentering Egypt due to their religious beliefs because the government believed they intended to engage in proselytizing.

Read the original here:

2022 Report on International Religious Freedom: Egypt - U.S. Embassy in Egypt

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on 2022 Report on International Religious Freedom: Egypt – U.S. Embassy in Egypt