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Archives for June 2017

The Pursuit of Happiness

June 12, 2017 by Southpaw 28 Comments


Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. It’s one of the most well-known phrases from the Declaration of Independence, but it also serves as a platform for the American dream. These basic principles inspire people to come to this country in order to improve their quality of life. While some people come to this place to escape some sort of persecution, many simply want to improve their condition. However, though I understand the concept of the American Dream from a practical view, the philosophical notion of such a thing seems somewhat contradictory. You see, happiness stems from contentment. Contentment simply rests upon the notion that people are “fine” with the way things are around them. If this is true, then one would have to first seek being content with their quality of life before being happy. Thus, our sense of discontent leads to contentment. It’s a strange concept, but it isn’t farfetched by any means.

If someone seeks to make a positive change, they must first identify a given problem and experience feelings of discontent. So, many act in a manner to achieve a desired state. While some succeed, others completely fail. Interestingly enough, attempting to reach this state may result in further discontent. If we are to look further, it is built within the human condition that we must achieve more than being merely content; thus, we become upset with what we have earned thus far and seek to improve our conditions even further. That is the Pursuit of Happiness to its very core. Seeking something higher than one’s current status, no matter what someone’s current status may be.

“The Constitution only guarantees the American people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself.” Benjamin Franklin

So, our discontent pushes us further into that pursuit, to which we set another bench mark. However, once that bench mark is met, we seek to reach yet another bench mark and yet another after that. No matter what. No matter how hard we try to pursue happiness, we continuously fall into that same feeling of discontent. It’s interesting that the Pursuit of Happiness can turn into a Pursuit of Perfection, and within that Pursuit of Perfection, we do not only abolish the notion of contentment, but sink into discontent and eventually sadness. Our inability to consistently obtain something more, to truly reach the pinnacle of happiness, often makes us miserable.

American Politics mirror American life. No matter how often actions are taken to improve the lives of Americans, we still find a way to be critical of those actions. It could simply be due to discontent with a given political party, or it could be resulting from us discrediting any given accomplishment to “not being enough”. However, just as in life, our inability to reach the desired level of perfection creates discontent amongst the American people. That discontent insights a sense of misery, which eventually stems into the chaos we are witnessing today. Now, some may critique my argument saying that contentment will never insight positive change, but that is not my intention. Ultimately, we must continue the Pursuit of Happiness while not losing our current sense of contentment, for when we do, the pressure of failure detracts from our ultimate goal. As Americans, as human beings, we should be able to recognize the things we are content with while simultaneously pursuing happiness. If we neglect to do so, it only appears that our quality of life will continue to suffer with the passage of time.


POPS says:

I think that what Southpaw is saying is that the key to happiness is accepting those things that we cannot change, and changing those things that we cannot accept.

(And don’t let anyone else tell you what may or may not be changeable.)

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Filed Under: Southpaw's Ramblings

Fake Newspeople?

June 6, 2017 by Pops 27 Comments

Regardless of a person’s political leanings or other demographic, most everyone has a particular news personality that they favor. People prefer certain journalists primarily because they trust them, and secondarily because those journalists are affable, engaging, or share other traits that comport with the personality of the news consumer.

But mostly, it is a relationship based on trust. People watch, or listen, or read news to get facts about other places, other events, and other people that they wouldn’t otherwise know. And whether the TV news consumer prefers one of the major networks, or a cable channel, or a streaming service, when someone desires news, they want and expect the truth. Consumers want actual news – reality, with real people, real events, and real places.

On the other side of news reality is entertainment fiction, and successful fiction is the story that blends the incredible with the credible in such a way as to become more believable.

One of the techniques that creators of fiction have successfully used to inject believable reality into an otherwise fictional story is to add a journalist into the storyline. Remember “Godzilla” when Raymond Burr was the American reporter broadcasting onsite from the destruction of Tokyo? Or the radio show “War of the Worlds” when the northeast U.S. went into an actual panic over a Martian invasion when the radio show was presented as an actual live newscast? In the quest for ever more believability in fiction, it has become common for movies and TV shows to incorporate actual news personalities in reporting the fictional events as they transpire in the made-up storyline.

So what’s the problem with that?

Day after day, we watch our journalists of preference provide us the facts of the day. We trust them. Whether it is Wolf Blitzer, Rachel Maddow, Sean Hannity, Chris Matthews, or any other major news presenter makes no difference. We watch them because we believe them.

So what happens to that credibility factor when we see our own trusted news journalists doing gigs as themselves reporting on a fictional work? An excellent example is the Netflix series “House of Cards.” This is a storyline of high political fiction and intrigue, and in most episodes, the imaginary events of the day are portrayed by real broadcast media journalists reporting fictional news, as themselves, in support of the imaginary story.

When you watch and hear someone you trust, playing a role as themselves on a fictional show but telling you something that you know is utterly untrue with the same demeanor and sincerity that they have when they report “real” news, it gives one pause. If your journalist can be so believable reporting fictional news, how do you know that they are not also acting when they report the “real” news to you night after night?

What if your parish priest performed a role in a movie as a priest who molested children? What if the judge in your civil rights case was a part-time actor who portrayed a racist jurist from Alabama?  What if your banker portrayed a TV banker with a gambling addiction who embezzled all of the bank’s money?  As you watched them perform, wouldn’t your own comfort meter register a swing, at least a little?

Quite simply, persons whose professions are based on relationships of trust should not engage in acts that convincingly display their ability to be untrustworthy.

Don’t show me how credible you can be when you are pretending to tell me the truth – it gives me reason to doubt you all the time.

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You can never learn anything from words that come out of your own mouth.

June 5, 2017 by Pops 27 Comments

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Filed Under: Pop's Pearls of Wisdom

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