Although it may seemed like an indecisive move, the truth is that's how Fuzzy Thinking works. I am no[w] trying to rationalize my action, seriously that how a Fuzzy thinker should behave; with elasticity.
Having said that, a Fuzzy Thinker always has a range that he has to work with. In a way he has to think and work twice as hard because always there are two paths he has to consider all the time.
It is a split:
I prefer this split LOL:
Now that I am confident that there is God and I am THE God, I now am more certain than ever to execute my Daisho Set (my mind that is) towards a Fuzzy Certainty (as opposed to absoluteness).
Which means at any point of time there are always two options: Aladdin or Aladeen LMAO:
In our case that means we are both gods and man fully functioning. To me it is the same thing. My job is to thrive in this Point of Paradox and at the same time balancing my li[k]e in the Sweet Spot of Sanity.
It is easy to be engulfed by power. The challenge is to be all powerful but at the same time unperturbed by it. Often we humans become jaded when tested with just a little bit of power. You don't have to give real power to a person to see the effect. A psychological experimentation of college students where they were divided into prisoners and prison guards proved that given just a little power [power] to control, the "prison guards" started abusing the "prisoners".
The Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE) was a social psychology experiment that attempted to investigate the psychological effects of perceived power, focusing on the struggle between prisoners and prison officers.
It was conducted at Stanford University on the days of August 14–20, 1971, by a research group led by psychology professor Philip Zimbardo using college students.[1] In the study, volunteers were randomly assigned to be either "guards" or "prisoners" in a mock prison, with Zimbardo himself serving as the superintendent.
Several "prisoners" left mid-experiment, and the whole experiment was abandoned after six days. Early reports on experimental results claimed that students quickly embraced their assigned roles, with some guards enforcing authoritarian measures and ultimately subjecting some prisoners to psychological torture, while many prisoners passively accepted psychological abuse and, by the officers' request, actively harassed other prisoners who tried to stop it.
The experiment has been described in many introductory social psychology textbooks,[2] although some have chosen to exclude it because its methodology is sometimes questioned.[3]
Power is very seductive to many who see it as a mean for self-interest. That is why we need the Golden Rule; do onto others what you want others to to onto you. That is why a hierarchical [] is a failure, As you notice in my Eight Precepts of Autonomous Governance and the Zen of Personal Bliss, we vote on issues but not on leadership style:
Observation #5: Detach from the worldly constraints. Stay away from politics and religious matters. They are tools created by the few to manipulate the many. They are time wasters to the inhabitants of Sparta 4964. We are governed by a benevolent dictator. Our law is the martial law. We do vote on issues but not on leadership style. However, we practice open door policy. Our world is borderless and our citizens are free radicals. We do not limit freedom of thought, speech, and action. All subjects are freestylers who exercise their freedom of will.
Of course we are living in a world where the majority rules. However the majority is always wrong - Orson Wells.
I personally doesn't believe in democracy. I am a socialist. In my life I only voted twice. Once was a protest vote, the other because my friend Amoi said that I will be making history by voting.
Socrates was also against democracy. Let me find the quote:
Plato was not in favor of democracy either:
So as you can see, our best political system is not really the best and our monetary system is a Ponzi scheme. Furthermore, our religions were a bunch of lies.
I didn't pluck the Eight Precepts out of thin air. So are the 3 Vision Statements of Carte Blanc, Recreational Marijuana and the Polygamy/Polyandry Bill. Unless we are doing something different, we are actually fucking everybody's backside in a long line of butt fucking Conga Dance:
How's that for a message to all the Fat Cats Power Mongers all over the world? And you know what? All can be solved with a little act of empathy.
I am not against the politicians and the religions devotees. All I am saying is be flexible to adapt to the situation. Not too tight, not too loose - The Buddha.
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