In short, the Individual, the Community, and the State

MONDAY, 30 AUGUST 2021

A personal manifesto on political beliefs should begin with your view on three concepts:

1. The Individual

2. The Community

3. The State

Without consulting a search engine or a dictionary, I’d say the State is an organised effort by adults within a geographic area with historical and other ties to manage common interests. These interests include infrastructure, education, international relations, military defence, and the drafting and enforcing of laws that represent the values of the community.

Community can be your neighbourhood, but also people who share a particular language, ethnicity, or religious belief.

And the Individual is a single child or adult.

Your personal political manifesto will need to pay attention to the relationships between Individuals, between the Individual and the Community, and the relationship between the Individual and the State, and relations between respective Communities and the State. It will also set out the rights of the Individual and duties of the Individual (if any) towards both the Community and the State, and the duties of the State towards Individuals and Communities.

______________________

A reasonable opinion on Covid-19 vaccinations

TUESDAY, 27 JULY 2021

Everyone these days has an opinion on the Covid-19 vaccination. I’m not convinced it’s safe. Experts differ about safety and efficacy. And there is the common-sense position that any reasonable person should take about things that are injected into your veins that have not yet been properly tested, or that have not gone through the process that vaccinations usually go through. Sceptics also point to numerous examples from J&J, Pfizer, and other pharmaceutical companies that, years after launching products, removed the products from pharmacy shelves due to side effects that did not show up initially. It is also now clear that you can still get Covid-19 even if the vaccine is flowing through your veins.

That said, people who have made a name for themselves as independent thinkers who don’t care much about popular opinion – people like cartoonist and author Scott Adams and journalist Peter Hitchens – have been vaccinated. Adams also makes the point that anyone who is 100% sure about anything regarding the pandemic are not thinking things through properly. Probability is the only reasonable position to take.

It is said that if you are vaccinated you would have milder symptoms after infection, and that you would therefore have a better chance of survival. Supposedly more so if you are over fifty. It is also reasonable to assume that most people will get infected at some point.

That means I will most likely also get Covid-19 at some point. Because I would prefer not to get deadly ill, and because millions of people have received the vaccine so far and have shown little or no side effects, I will get the vaccine as well. That’s the good reason. The bad reason why I would get it is because the government forces you with all sorts of regulations, from how you work to whether or not you can travel. I don’t agree with that at all. Persuade people with reasonable argument. Force them to get an injection, and alarm bells start going off.

WEDNESDAY, 28 JULY 2021

Last thing I want to do is write a long piece about vaccinations and Covid-19.

Some questions will suffice:

1. Can SARS CoV-2 still enter your body even if you’ve received two doses of the vaccine?

2. Can you still develop Covid-19 even if you are fully vaccinated?

3. Can you still transmit the virus to other people after you’ve been fully vaccinated?

If the answer is positive to all three of the above questions, then why get the vaccination? Because, say people who are supposed to know, if you are vaccinated and you get Covid-19, your symptoms will be less severe and you’ll have a better chance of making it – especially if you are older and suffering from other ailments.

Now, I accept this view of the vaccine, and since I’ve recently turned fifty, it might be a good idea to increase my chances against the virus (as I explained yesterday).

But what exactly is the argument put forward by governments and their supporters to force people to get vaccinated? Because they care about people and don’t want them to get seriously ill? Isn’t this something people can decide for themselves? Isn’t this why people are “allowed” to drink and smoke as much as they want? Everyone decides for themselves how much cake and coffee and sugar and salt they want to indulge in. And governments don’t force people to exercise at least thirty minutes a day, and to eat enough vegetables and to cut back on red meat.

As it seems to me, the only way that governments could justify forcing people to get vaccinated is if it reduced spread. If it could be proven that the vaccines were highly effective in doing so, you could perhaps understand why there is so much pressure on people.

The only other reason that could make sense is if governments argued that since vaccinated people would get less severe symptoms, they’d have less of an impact on the country’s health services.

Is that the argument? Then why not launch draconian measures to force fat people to lose weight, or to force people to drink less? Adults either decide for themselves about their own health and lifestyle, or the government decides about it. This thing that the government is forcing people to get injections so that they don’t get too sick with a flu-type virus but is otherwise okay with people systematically destroying their lives doesn’t make sense.

Another thing: If you intentionally damage or end someone else’s life, or it happens because of your negligence, you will be and ought to be punished. How do government measures on Covid-19 vaccines fit into this concept, seeing that doctors and nurses inject people with a substance that may cause more harm to that person than it will prevent?

* * *

Here are some links [see dates on the webpages to see when they were last updated]:

https://factcheck.thedispatch.com/p/do-the-covid-vaccines-offer-100-percent: “At a town hall on July 21, in Cincinnati, President Joe Biden, in stressing the importance of COVID-19 vaccines, made the following statement: ‘If you’re vaccinated, you’re not going to be hospitalized, you’re not going to be in an ICU unit, and you’re not going to die.’ The statement is false. Although the COVID-19 vaccines are effective, no single vaccine is 100% effective at preventing infection.”

https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/covid-19/health-departments/breakthrough-cases.html: “Some people who are vaccinated against COVID-19 will still get sick and have a vaccine breakthrough infection because no vaccine is 100% effective.”

https://health.clevelandclinic.org/can-vaccinated-people-transmit-covid-19-to-others/: “Can fully vaccinated people still transmit the virus to others, including other vaccinated people? While it is possible, Dr. Cardona says that the ability to transmit COVID-19 may occur at a lower rate. … ‘We are still collecting data and doing ongoing research about the vaccine responses in these vulnerable populations.’”

______________________

Wake up early enough

FRIDAY, 2 JULY 2021

Sixteen is not too young to understand what you are doing with the whole school story. In fact, even if you are fourteen or fifteen, you can do yourself a favour to develop some understanding of it – or ask adults in your life to explain it to you.

So, what do you do between the ages of seven and, let’s say, sixteen? You learn to read and write. You learn to do math, and you read enough history and geography to be able to locate yourself in the world. You may learn one or two other languages; you learn about human and animal biology, and you learn a little science. If you’re in a technical school, you’ll learn more practical topics … but that’s my next point. After sixteen, up to and including your early twenties, you learn things that will enable you to earn an income, and to contribute to the society, or at least to the community, in which you live.

Does the sixteen-year-old understand this? Maybe; maybe not. But the child in grade ten (or nine, or eleven) who questions why they have to study Biology or Science or Mathematics if they are not going to pursue careers where this knowledge will be of value deserves a proper answer.

Here’s my advice. You need to be able to write properly. Maybe you learn it in English class. If not, take extra courses on Udemy, or on another platform. You need to know more about the world, and about history. YouTube is packed with short and long documentary videos that will teach you what you need to know. Also watch travel programs, or videos about different countries to learn more about the world. Science, and Biology? YouTube. And then, seeing that just about anything between 16 and 23 is about preparing to make money and contributing to society, watch lectures, interviews, and book summaries on how people make money, how they manage money, and how you can improve your relationship with money. Boring for your average sixteen-year-old, you may say? More boring than a Biology class, or even for some students, a History class?

Fact of the matter is, too many people wake up too late. Too many also take too long to empower themselves to construct a good life. A life where they have a good idea of what they are doing, for whom, and why.

______________________

And then you turn fifty

MONDAY, 19 APRIL 2021

I’m ready to grow old.

I don’t know everything I want to know, and I don’t understand everything I want to understand.

I realise more than half of my life is probably behind me – and I have vivid memories of my childhood, so I know time doesn’t stand still.

I accept that I will never learn to speak Turkish, and even if I learn to speak Turkish, I probably won’t learn to speak Swedish as well. And even if I learn to speak both Turkish and Swedish, I will most likely not learn to speak Xhosa or Russian or Japanese in addition to the other languages.

I see people younger than me who speak and act like they have yet to learn or experience certain things. I see from this that I have indeed experienced a lot of life, or that there are many things I have not yet experienced – both good and bad.

I am ready to grow old, because I accept someone has to take the place of the generations that have come before me. That is me, and the millions of other people on the planet who were born in the late sixties and early seventies.

MONDAY, 17 MAY 2021

When you bleed, your body does something to stop the bleeding.

When you bleed, you also take steps to stop the bleeding.

Yet we fear it.

TUESDAY, 22 JUNE 2021

Other people may differ, but for me, fifty is the biggest birthday of my life – so far, at least.

Sixteen is probably big, but I was a high school student at fourteen, at fifteen, and at seventeen and eighteen. What is so special about sixteen?

Twenty-one was also supposed to be an important milestone, and it was indeed a good party in my case – a large group of friends, and pizza and a dozen or so bottles of red wine at Giovanni’s Pizzeria in Arcadia, Pretoria.

Twenty-five is the quarter century – which I celebrated on a plane on my way to Hong Kong, and from there to Seoul, and from there to another city in South Korea where I would spend the next two years of my life.

Thirty was celebrated in Kaohsiung, in southern Taiwan, and I must confess: I felt older.

Forty came and went. (The decade was exceptionally productive, though.)

But fifty? There’s the sentiment of fifty that is the youth of old age, but no one who turns fifty is unaware of the fact that they are … significantly older than with any other milestone.

The instinct is immediately to recite a list for which one is grateful – and Heaven knows I am grateful for every person who makes my life better, and for every event and turn of events that made things work out better than how they could have worked out. But you think back to the day when you turned sixteen, and just the other day when you turned thirty – we had brunch at a place not ten minutes’ walk from where I’m typing these words.

You want to explain to people that you still have one or two items of clothing in your wardrobe that you’ve been wearing since your early thirties. (What should I do? Throw it away if it’s still wearable?) You want to point out that most leaders of state are still older than you. But nothing takes the thought away. Nothing can take it away: You’re getting old.

FRIDAY, 25 JUNE 2021

I’m again listening to music from fifty and sixty years ago. I read about the Cold War. I watch videos of murder and slaughter and political struggle in Vietnam in the sixties and early seventies.

I’m trying to capture something of the world that was dying at the time a new generation was about to be born.

MONDAY, 28 JUNE 2021

Turning fifty. During a global pandemic. Your mother is still recovering from the virus; your father is in the hospital. Your older sister had it a few weeks ago, and your younger sister and her husband currently have it.

Still, you’re grateful for what you have, and for what you have had so far.

So, guess you aim for 51, then.

TUESDAY, 29 JUNE 2021

I realised last night as I was being carried away to oblivion: Fifty is an appropriate age for me.

Suppose a Cosmic Accountant asks me to make a list of things I have experienced in my life, lessons I’ve learned, things I’ve seen, places I’ve visited, people I’ve met and gotten to know, but above all, to indicate on a spectrum what I reckon my emotional and mental understanding is as a result of all the above-mentioned. If the Cosmic Accountant then assigned to my person an age of “32”, I’d be disappointed. If he said something like “65”, I would think I had overcooked things a bit. “50”, I reckon, is an appropriate number.

SUNDAY, 5 SEPTEMBER 2021

Fifty and the possibility that the best years of your life are still ahead of you is a good opportunity for the famous Henry Ford quote: “If you believe you can, you can. And if you believe you cannot, don’t even bother.”

______________________

More notes on the adult life

MONDAY, 14 JUNE 2021

I wrote a piece in 2015 about the trifecta of adult life: married, two children, financial independence. I want to add two things:

1. Legacy – it matters what you leave behind. The film magnate, Harvey Weinstein, was married, had at least two children, and was very wealthy. But he was a scumbag who forced women to have sex with him – or confronted them with extremely difficult choices. This, not his marriage or his children or his money or dozens of movies, is his legacy.

2. Not a requirement, but it can make up for the absence of another item: Did you lead an interesting life? Did you visit interesting places? Did you meet people from different cultures and backgrounds? Did you take risks, even after you failed?

FRIDAY, 18 JUNE 2021

One man married in his late twenties, had three children, had a happy marriage, ran his own business, and enjoyed financial success – annual vacations, including trips abroad, with the whole family, and later with his grandchildren. At 68 he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and he died after two years of unsuccessful treatment.

Another man married in his late thirties. Their marriage is also happy but has produced no children. He invests time and money in various endeavours, but financial independence has eluded him thus far. Despite the fact that there is never money for extravagance, he and his wife live comfortably. At 68, he is still healthy, except for some arthritis in his knees, and in his one hand.

Now, the million-dollar question: Who’s the winner?

Or should both be grateful for their blessings?

WEDNESDAY, 23 JUNE 2021

Working on my own projects is an expression of my faith in a better future. If I stop believing my own projects could give me a better future … I would have to find something else to put my faith in. This is what has driven me since 2006 … since 2003 … since 1997/8 … to become financially independent. I have spent more time and energy on this than on anything else in my adult life.

That might be why I could never accept a position where I would have seen myself as just a cog in the machine. What would have driven me forward? That I could pay rent at the end of the month and buy groceries? That’s just survival! To work on something that can give me financial independence – financial independence! – is to have faith. It is to be pushed forward with a vision for the future.

Am I rather a poor believer – or a believer who can pay rent and buy groceries, and have some savings in the bank – than a comfortable cog in the machine who doesn’t believe my life is ever going to get much better?

Belief in something I cannot see is woven into my psyche. Working on something that can improve my life is a ritual that confirms my faith.

Plus, it increases the likelihood of success.

[Must add that there are certainly people who are “just cogs in the machine”, and if they don’t do it, someone else will, but after work and on weekends they also work on their own projects, which they also hope will give them a better future. I sometimes tend to think in black and white.]

MONDAY, 28 JUNE 2021

I believe in something.

When I work on what I believe in, I prove that my faith is genuine.

When I work on it, I am actively realising what I believe in.

______________________