At the center of the book "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" the author says we must learn to separate the Vital from the Urgent and live our lives taking proper care of both. The reason we can't is the tyranny of the urgent.
Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
On my last day in Paris in July 2021, I stopped by La Nouvelle Librairie on Rue de Medicis across the street from Luxembourg Gardens. It is the fascist bookstore of Paris, on a shaded street with a half dozen bookstores and several cafes.
In front of La Nouvelle Librairie was a book table with a dozen copies of Le Grand Remplacement by novelist, gay rights activist and fascist Renaud Camus. The subtile "Introduction to Global Replacement" (Introduction au replacisme global) made me smile. A French intellectual could describe a 500-plus-page book as an introduction. An American publisher would insist on something less than a third that length.
Penelope Fletcher, owner of The Red Wheelbarrow, the English-language bookstore next to the fascist bookstore, assured me in 2019 that the French fascists have nothing good to say about President Trump or American fascists. "They see themselves as intellectuals," she said of the fascists next door. "They don't like to be associated with Trump and American fascists."
But American white supremacists, Nazis and others racists have made Great Replacement Theory their own, even if they don't know its French roots. When the Charlottesville Nazis chanted "Jews will not replace us" they were echoing the theory that Jews are moving brown people into white nations as part of a global takeover. (I can't help wondering what Charlottesville racists would have thought if they knew they were quoting a gay activist French intellectual.)
The man who murdered Jews in Pittsburgh in 2018 was motivated by Great Replacement Theory. When Trump said caravans were invading America he was echoing Great Replacement Theory back to his racist ChristianNationalist voters.
The ADL (Anti Defamtion League) has an excellent summary of Great Replacement Theory. I have some highlights below:
Use By Individual Extremists
Use by Media/Tech Personalities
Four years ago today Nazis with Tiki torches marched across the campus of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The chanted "Blood and Soil" and "Jews will not replace us." I was riveted to TV coverage of the march and worried about my daughter who lived 60 miles away in Richmond. Hundreds of armed racists were in Charlottesville for a "Unite the Right" Rally. Would the rally spill over into other parts of Virginia? I didn't know.
The next day one avowed Nazi would murder Heather Heyer and maim several more people. The coward-bully President we had at the time would waffle for days applauding then reluctantly condemning his fervent supporters waving Nazi and Rebel flags. He finally said there were "good people on both sides."
For more than fifteen years, my family and I had been members of Presbyterian Church that was part of the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA) denomination. It was the conservative side of the denominational split in the 1970s.
In the wake of Charlottesville, the liberal side of the split, the Presbyterian Church USA condemned the violence and the President for not speaking forcefully against Nazis. The PCA did nothing. I already was bewildered by people at the Church who supported Trump, some fervently. I left the Church.
By the end of the year I was attending a local synagogue. I had learned a lot about the Holocaust since Trump won the election. Two months before Charlottesville, I visited Auschwitz and Yad Vashem. At both places I learned about decorated Jewish veterans of World War I who were murdered in the Holocaust. I knew that my service to America means nothing to Nazis, or to the fascists who flocked to Trump.
I also read about German Jews who became Christians, sometimes going back three generations. In 1935, Jewish converts were expelled from all Churches in Nazi Germany. By the end of the war, nearly all were murdered. The Churches who expelled their ethnically Jewish members still called themselves Churches, but they were dead. Their god was Hitler.
The Churches that openly worship Trump now and call him God's Chosen or a modern-day King Cyrus are no better. There is not a word of the Sermon on the Mount that Trump has not spit on by his actions and life. So much of conservative America has shown itself to be shallow and shameless in following Trump. The Churches that worship him, or simply allow worship of him, are as spiritually broken as Nazi Churches.
Growing up I was mono-lingual. I still am mono-lingual if fluency is the measure language. My father spoke Yiddish, but had no interest in teaching me the language of his home. Except for a crash course in Hebrew six months before my Bar Mitzvah, I had no language training growing up.
During my second enlistment, I lived in West Germany for three years, from 1976-79. During that time I tried to learn German, but never got very far. I also began to learn Ancient Greek, a language I studied on and off right up to the present moment. In the past two decades I have take six semesters of Ancient Greek.
Somewhere in the nineties, I started to learn French. It became very useful when I got a job with the American branch of a French chemical company. I made a dozen trips to France and could carry on a simple conversation and read some documents.
Although our ability to learn language is greatest when we are very young, my interest in language got deeper in the past decade. I had always loved Russian literature since my first Russian lit. class in college. Around 2013 I decided I wanted to go to Russia, riding south to north from Odessa to Finland. The trip never happened, but I took three semesters of Russian and practice what I know several times each week. Now I had three alphabets floating in my head.
In 2017, Nazis marched in America chanting "Jews will not replace us." I joined a synagogue. It had been fifty years since I had read or said any Hebrew, but I started to learn. Now I have four alphabets. My best friend Cliff also decided to learn Hebrew so we commiserate about the difficulties of learning language at our advanced ages.
And now Arabic. I probably should have tried to learn Arabic when I deployed to Iraq in 2009. But I have been to Israel three times since 2017 and hope to return sometime in the next couple of years. I saw a lot of Arabic and decided I should at least be able to read the signs.
My language practice app is Duolingo. They just added an alphabet feature for alphabets other than the one for western languages. So I decided I could start from nothing and see if I could get to some basic phrases with just Duolingo and some writing.
Last month when I was in Germany for two weeks, I could order food in a restaurant in German. Language rests in strange places in my head.
So I will keep struggling with five alphabets and six languages (there is always more to learn in English) and possibly read Arabic signs on my next trip to Israel.
Today is the seventh day since I arrived in Panama. After some very difficult rides back in August, I have found better roads and hope to...