Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Hamas Victorious DELETED!

From Blogger: "This post was deleted because it violates Blogger Community Guidelines. To republish, please update the content to adhere to guidelines."

Yes, this blog article was deleted by Blogger. Certainly it wasn't read by anyone associated with Blogger. They don't read; they just delete. Most likely, I perhaps offended someone who found he title offensive. It certainly did not offend the dead children killed by both Hamas and Israel. My purpose was to defend them and all the other civilians killed in this war and the war in Ukraine where children are killed, kidnapped, and then sold online to pedophiles. Did I say something amiss about Putin? I was told to review the extensive guidelines but was not told what the problem was, so I was like a blind man looking for a needle in a haystack. In fact, the notice didn't indicate which article had been deleted. In the past Blogger would at least indicate the criticized blog post. In one case, I didn't know what the problem was so I simply deleted the post. Now Blogger does the deleting and tells you to go find out why. You can repost if you kept a copy.

The deleted “Hamas Victorious” post was highly critical of Hamas and Israel and mocks Netanyahu, the guy Spain's top criminal court has launched legal action against for war crimes. Was that my faux pas? Or was it my joke about Epstein, described by Wikipedia as a child sex offender? Or does someone think I disrespected God. Well, if God has the knowledge of horror that is occurring to children and has the power to prevent it, but doesn't, then he doesn't deserve to be respected because he lacks moral goodness. Or perhaps I disrespected the religious ideologies of the people involved in the conflict. Ideologies are cultural inventions. If they encourage doing harm, causing suffering, especially of women and children, then they are evil and deserve to be condemned.

Basically what Jesus said—not Christ, a mythic figure invented by Apostle Paul and the other writers of the New Testament*—is enough of the hatred and violence. There is a better way to live than hating and harming people, especially children. And actually what he meant that was ignored by Christians is that living altruistically is living spiritually. Paul talks endlessly about the spirit but knows nothing about it. It was just an idea he picked up from Plato who picked it up from Pythagoras. None of those men know anything about spirit. They just considered it non-material thus it must be good. Christians believe living spiritually is being a Christian. Wrong. American slave owners were all Christians. And both the Old Testament and New Testament condone slavery. That is hardly spiritual thinking but a good example of the harm ideologies can cause. The brilliant Jew Jesus came up with a new idea (a moral principle). The spiritual life requires action, not just being a member of this or that religious cult. And the action must be beneficial (lessen suffering) in order to be spiritual. Causing suffering and living spiritually are incompatible.

*Get informed:
Charles Freeman: A New History of Early Christianity
E.P. Sanders: The Historical Figure of Jesus
Bart Ehrman: God’s Problem
Bart Ehrman: How Jesus Became God
James Tabor: Paul and Jesus
G.A. Wells: The Jesus Myth
Richard Friedman: Who Wrote the Bible?
Burton Mack: Who Wrote the New Testament?
W.H.C. Frend: The Rise of Christianity
Ernest Renan: The Life of Jesus
Israel Finkelstein and Neil Silberman: The Bible Unearthed

That is why Jesus sought to modify or reinterpret, not necessarily reject, the religion of his people. Both he and John the Baptist were Jews. John knew there was a better way of living. And he offered baptism as a means of washing away the old way of living in order to begin a new way of living. What was the new way? Jesus’s way of life, a way of life that wasn’t God centered but human centered. The God centered way of life did little to nothing to benefit people. Most important it lacked a human-centered morality, which became for Jesus the basis for living a spiritual life. First of all, you must take with a grain of salt what Jesus says in the Gospels because the words are untrustworthy having been written by the Gospel writers who were—like Paul—Old Testament Christians, not followers of Jesus. Their Christ-God man declared war on humanity—a bringer of war, he says, not a bringer of peace. That’s not Jesus.

The true Jesus is revealed mostly through his actions, not his words—the existential Jesus. He heals the sick, stands up for the poor, and defends rather than browbeats women. And he sends his disciples to spread his spiritual morality to his people. He was not interested in the pagans. He tells his disciples, “Do not go among the Gentiles or enter any town of the Samaritans. Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel.” And what should they do? “Drive out impure spirits and to heal every disease and sickness.” Heal rather than harm. The assault on pagans was Paul’s idea, and as an Old-Testament Christian he wanted the cultural destruction of the pagans. He was a brilliant, evil man. The Old Testament Christians who invaded America followed his lead. They wanted Native Americans (who were pagans) destroyed by either bullets or conversion.

Jesus was ignored by his own people—both traditional Jews and Christians. Jesus might have had the same influence on the pagans as Buddha had on many cultures. Buddha was the first spiritual leader who chose a life-centered rather than God centered spiritual life. He was not a theologian but a wise man typical of the Eastern world. He was an ethicist who offered a complete ethical philosophy. His two great insights are to recognize significance of suffering as an absolute concern and humanity’s greatest undertaking is to minimize suffering in the world, for both human and other life forms. What Buddha offered was a spiritual philosophy because in recognizing suffering as a tragic aspect of life he recognized the absolute value of life. In this sense, his concern for suffering goes beyond that of Jesus because he recognized the value of all life. So what he offered that Jesus didn’t was a way of perceiving that was spiritual. I don’t see Buddha meditation as being inward-focused but outward-looking. His philosophy of the tragedy of suffering implies the valuation of all life.

Albert Schweitzer was more of a Buddhist than a Christian. What he experienced on the boat while “looking at the hippopotamuses was a sudden deep feeling of awe and wonder for being in wild nature and realizing that all life is equally valuable and connected. Reverence for Life is an ethic that says that all life is valuable and for humans to fully feel and comprehend this truth they must engage in deep contemplation. It is only in deep thought that a person can establish an inner profound reverence for all life.” This is pure Buddhism. Important here is ethics is also about recognizing value, inherently value in this case, not utilitarian value. So Buddha and Jesus offer ethical philosophies that are simple yet profound. And at time they were unique and new. Before these men societies were indifferent to suffering and even accept causing harm as a norm.

And the spiritual way of life based on ethics would have appealed to the Greek and Roman pagans who were looking for a more spiritual way of life that Greek philosophy failed to provide. Socrates’s great revelation is that men must adopt a rationally skeptical approach to ideas and actions. Without using reason as a guide, especially a moral guide, men will act foolishly and destructively. Of course, like Buddha and Jesus, Socrates was ignored. What we see in the horrific carnage occurring in the world today says as much. What we see in the behavior of Hamas, Netanyahu, and Putin is irrational, unethical stone-age barbarity driven by masculine aggression.

And I find it odd that someone decided that my post contained a faux pas as significant as the cruel carnage the post/article condemns. Does a Blogger algorithm decide that a complaint requires deletion of the post? Couldn’t be an AI because AIs are not that simpleminded. A reader claims that a word or phrase is inappropriate so the algorithm deletes a post! And AI would indicate the faux pas with an X so that the author could delete what the reader considers offensive. Or was a photo or image that I used a copyright infringement? I make no money from my blog, and I find it quite weird that an unauthorized use of a photo or image would be considered more important than the mass murder (and kidnapping in Russia’s case) of children.

In any case, Blogger seems to be following Trump’s method of dealing with critical commentary: delete it or delete the entire program, which in my case would be to delete my blog. It is a procedure adopted in authoritarian societies such as Russia, China, Iran, and so on. So, perhaps we should stop criticizing war criminals and child sex offenders because God's in his heaven thus all's right with the world even though children continue to be murdered and kidnapped and are starving in Gaza. I suppose this will be the next post of mine to be deleted. A complaint will be made and the algorithm will do the rest. However, I believe silence isn’t golden. It’s repression. That is exactly what happened to Socrates and Jesus. They were silenced.

Melania Trump recently revealed the importance of expressing one’s ideas. Her husband is a hard-hearted, tough-minded man. His way of doing business is transactional and essentially commercial. Profit rather than ethics is his dominate concern. He is not interested in the people of Canada, Greenland, or Ukraine but in the wealth that can be taken from their countries. His use of tariffs has revealed his concern for people is less than his concern for monetary profit. He has cancelled more than 90 per cent of U.S. aid programs such as U.S. Agency for International Development that helps fight disease and starvation in poor nations. He has shown that he is not motivated to help the Ukrainian people unless he or U.S. profits in some way. He is not a Good Samaritan but an opportunist. He will help someone if doing so is profitable. Then comes along Melania. Trump has been soft on mass murderer Putin. He tells Melania that he had a wonderful conversation with him, and she responded, “Oh, really? Another city was just hit.”

What Melania was able to do with her soft-hearted feminine response was to pierce through Trump’s tough-minded, hard-hearted indifference. In some way her compassionate feminine voice echoed within him. Trump’s White House crew are all fueled by masculine aggression—both the men and the women. But Trump doesn’t care about any of them as much as he cares about Melania. From the very beginning of his presidency Trump has been forgiving of mass-murderer and kidnapper of children Vladimir Putin, who is also responsible for getting nearly 1 million Russian soldiers killed or injured. Now Trump has said that he’s only going to give Russia 10 to 12 more days to reach peace with Ukraine, shortening a 50-day deadline he gave Putin two weeks ago before imposing punishing sanctions and tariffs. This change of heart resulted from what Melania told her husband.

The fact she expressed was effective only because it came from her, but it also reveals how the feminine worldview differs from the masculine. Melania cared about the human suffering Putin caused by hitting another city with drones and missiles. She saw beyond the destruction to the suffering—empathy Putin and Netanyahu are incapable of feeling, and Trump as well until that momentous conversation. He became a changed man because he took serious an idea from a woman he loves, respects, and values. The idea of suffering, especially the suffering of children, that my critics believe is less important than the mysterious faux pas I committed.

On a more positive note. I had always taken Melania for granted. Even when present, she was eclipsed by Trump’s presence. No longer for me. Beauty tamed the beast. I only hope it last. If it does, it might redeem Trump’s presidency.