As I get older, I no long paint in precise brush strokes. My pallet of colors tends to run together. It becomes big globs of paint, mixes of colors, and just a messy Mélange of materials. Thus you will find posts like this one; a confused jumble of colors and textures.
Here I am going to post some long overdue stories of heroism, exceptional selfless actions and noteworthy behaviors. I do so while the United States oligarchy / plutocracy is staring the crack-up / collapse. Indeed, you cannot maintain a society that’s solely focused in farming the citizenry for every ounce of effort that they manage. You just cannot have a “for profit” society. It doesn’t work.
Society is about relationships.
It is NOT about money.
And any nation that “doesn’t get it”, that doesn’t understand that most simple concept needs to experience the ultimate collapse that it deserves.
Here-in lies the rub: Most people regardless of whatever kinds of intelligence they may possess simply cannot believe that the post-War USA is as draconian as it demonstrably is. You are correct, it would scramble their brains to consider it because deep down they have this unpleasant subconscious awareness that their trinket laden "way of life" hinges on a web of plutocracy. In addition the means to control currency is really the bottom line. It is simply a way to capture and monetize everything under the sun and this is exacly what the technocrats are fixing to do. Just listen to Uncle Claus, he's not one to mince words. And no, we are not allowed to leave. "1) The Empire's policy is clear: nobody is allowed to opt out. Any success outside the system is an affront to the narrative and thus global hegemony. It is not allowed and, in fact, has been actively undermined by The Empire…an obvious and shameful point that faux patriots seem to gloss over. 2) Controlling the debt based money system allows The Empire to shamefully fund its extortive activities and give the illusion of abundance and all the consumer comforts that come with the illusion. It is hard to get anyone, including loved ones, to recognize the illusion. Too many are mesmerized by shiny things and refuse to see the moral\ethical imperative for opting out of the illusion as much as possible " Granted I am not full of answers here, but one thing that is quite clear is that in order to "do it yourself" you need to be free of the various chokepoints that have been set up. Call me crazy, but listening to some of the vids done by Ice Age Farmer sheds light on how things could be shut down but quick! Start with food and take it from there. -Posted by: Chevrus | Dec 17 2020 23:27 utc | 45
So here, in this post we are going to talk about being “the Rufus”. Which means to help others with no intention of profiting from it.
The videos are from China which is a nation that puts society over the individual and the self. This is in direct opposition of America that puts the individual (me, me, ME!) over society. It’s a matter of selfishness.
- Service-for-myself.
- Service-for-others.
I hope that you enjoy the videos and get something from them.
Why now?
Looking at all the hundreds of thousands of Americans standing in line waiting for handouts at charities across your country is disgusting and disturbing. Watching YouTube videos of hundreds of thousands of people waiting in line to claim their food stamps less than a week away from Christmas is disgusting and disturbing. Your country is disgusting and disturbing. -Anonymous Coward
Have you been reading the (American) “news” lately?
- NUKE WEAPONS AGENCY BREACHED IN MASSIVE CYBER ONSLAUGHT
- ‘ACT OF WAR’ BY RUSSIA
- Global herd immunity will take ‘two or three years’…
- TRUMP DOWNPLAYS HACK, RUSSIA ROLE
- CONTRADICTS POMPEO
- BLAMES CHINA
- White House aides prepare to move on as Trump vows to keep fighting…
- Covid deaths top 3,000 for third straight day…
- Wisconsin dentist accused of breaking teeth in fraud scheme…
- UPDATE: Hack against USA ‘grave threat’…
- Auctioning Off Spot To Push ‘Demolish’ Button To Blow Up Trump Plaza Casino…
- Rich people cut the line…
- VIDEO: Creepy Clown Waving Long Knife Robs Convenience Store…
- FBI abandons compromised computers…
- ‘Largest Espionage Attack in History’…
- FBI still won’t say who was wounded, or why, in ‘agent-involved shooting’
- GOOGLE hit by antitrust suit from almost 40 states over search dominance…
- Act of war?
- Mammoth Iceberg Jeopardizes Millions of Penguins…
- Satellite Can Peer Inside Buildings…
- With Trump silent, reprisals may fall to Biden…
- Illegal Winery Busted At Alabama Sewage Plant…
- NIGHTMARE STRAIN ‘50% MORE CONTAGIOUS’…
A nation by merit
I am going to start this post with a video that helps describe what the leadership of China represents. No, it’s not a charismatic union organizer (Obama), a casino boss / mobster (Trump), a Texas Oil Billionaire (Bush), or a snake-oil salesman (Clinton)…
…they don’t get into the leadership positions by their connections, great PR promotion, or graft…
..or by conning the mindless multitudes (the mob rabble) to “vote” for you…
…they get there through merit. They get there through ability. They get there through a structured program of “hard knocks”. All those in leadership positions in China, not only were at the top of their class at the most difficult university to get into, but they also had to humble themselves working hard, demeaning jobs at poverty wages to fully appreciate what work is. It’s part of a long-duration program that grooms the Chinese leadership for the future.
The Chinese leadership are SALT.
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The next video is of a young Chinese boy.
The Chinese are taught to calculate and be the best that they can possibly be. Check out what he does. No, this is not a fun exercise that has no practical application in the “real world”, it is a skill of processing information, under stress and duress, and providing solutions.
When Mike Pompeo strutted into China with his neocon list of demands, his porky jowls jiggled in moist anticipation that China would be forced to kneel in front of him. But he did not anticipate, nor understand who he was dealing with. to this day; to this moment, most Americans and American leadership somehow think that the Chinese leadership is just a Chinese-speaking version of American leadership.
No, they are not. They are something else entirely.
Watch and learn.
.
But what good is this?
Americans would ask, “but how can you profit from this skill?”
But that is not the point.
In China, and the Chinese philosophy, people are part of a society, and they contribute to that society. It’s not the “lone wolf” that gobbles everything for themselves. If you have something to contribute, systems are put in place to benefit from your contributions.
- America = “lone wolf” = Do things yourself, become a rich man or be a failure.
- China = “part of a team” = Contribute, and share in the group profits or losses.
This young man demonstrates that he has impressive skills and abilities. Abilities and skills that can (eventually) be put to great use for the society, and his community as a whole. You can well understand that the leadership will put him in a training plan that will lead towards leadership positions so that he can do great things for the Chinese society as a whole.
In American, on the other hand, we are amused at his quirky skill. We see if we can use him to obtain money for ourselves, maybe put him on a talent show, and pay him a small stipend in the process.
Societal differences
The differences in the two societies; America compared to China can result in some interesting differences. One of the biggest is in helping others, and in the motivations why you would help someone. In America it has been (for all practical purposes) outlawed.
Consider America.
- Many Leave Good Samaritan to Die Video – ABC News
- Bystander Apathy – GoodTherapy.org Therapy Blog
- Watching George Floyd Die: Turning Bystanders into …
- Bystanders watch in horror
- Kristallnacht: Why So Many Stood by While Jews Were … – Time
- Bystanders Watch In Horror As 11-Year-Old Boy Is Caught In …
And of course, Americans ask what are the legal ramifications if they help someone…
We all have to look deep inside ourselves. Are we a Rufus? Or, are we Bystanders?
Saving a man from a fiery death
Here, in China, we have an average guy, a delivery man, who goes to save a man who had an accident and is on fire and probably dying…
Bad Guys and Good Guys
Here we have a bad man. He breaks something in a busy intersection. Instead of cleaning up his mess, he just rides off and leaves it for others to deal with. He is what we call an “asshole”.
Then we see cars and people drive past this mess. No one does anything. It just lays there inert, waiting to blow out someone’s tires, cause an accident or create havoc.
Then comes the Rufus…
Baby near death!
OMG! What happens when your tiny infant or young child is unresponsive. the poor thing is only one year old. They start turning blue and they cannot breathe! What are you going to do?
The man is a traffic cop, by the way.
It’s not all about money
From the two-minds blog…
When Social Capital Becomes More Valuable Than Financial Capital December 17, 2020 This devaluation of financial wealth--and its transformation to a dangerous liability-- will reach extremes equal to the current extremes of wealth-income inequality. Financial capital--money--is the Ring that rules them all. But could this power fall from grace? Continuing this week's discussion of the idea that that extremes lead to reversions, let's consider the bedrock presumption of the global economy, which is that money is the most valuable thing in the Universe because the owner of money can buy anything, as everything is for sale. The only question is the price. Reversion to the mean is a statistical dynamic but it is also a human social dynamic: for example, once the social / financial / political pendulum reaches Gilded Age extremes of wealth/income inequality, the pendulum swings back. The more extreme the inequality, the greater the resulting extreme at the other end of the pendulum swing. In the heyday of the postwar boom in the early 1960s, finance--banks, lending, mortgages, loans, investment banking, derivatives, futures, FX, all financial market trading, research firms, hedge funds, mutual funds, etc.--was about 5% of the economy. It now exceeds 20% of the economy, and its actual role and impact is much larger than 20%. Finance is now the dominant force in the economy in terms of wealth creation and influence. (This parallels healthcare, which went from less than 5% of the economy to 20% in the same time span.) While finance creates some jobs, it is essentially extractive: it produces no goods, it extracts wealth from the goods-producing economy via debt and speculation. Thus a reversion that reduces finance back to 5% of the economy can be expected. How will this reversion to a much more constrained and modest role in the economy play out? There is much to be said about such a complex and consequential process, but today I want to focus on one potential dynamic: the idea that social capital--our connections and loyalties to groups and other people--will become more valuable than financial wealth, i.e. "money." The past 45 years can be characterized as the ascendance of finance: finance rules everything. Most people would say this has been true for all of human history, but it isn't quite so simple. In many instances, loyalties, membership and devotion to causes far outweigh the influence of money. In periods of severe labor shortage, labor has more value that money, in the sense that labor sets the price of labor rather than capital setting the price. This article caught my eye a few weeks ago: The Rich in New York Confront an Unfamiliar Word: No The pandemic is causing inequality to soar, but increasingly the privileged are discovering that they can't bend the world to their will. The wealthy are accustomed to buying whatever they want with money, and the possibility that there might be limits on the power of money is shocking to them. These limits might take political forms such as regulatory limits on what wealth can buy, they might take financial forms such as bans on certain speculative skims, and they might also take social forms, where people refuse to provide some good or service for cash because they've been reserved for family, friends or exchanges within trusted networks where membership cannot be purchased at any price. Here is a simple example. Let's say I have an in-law unit adjacent to my house. It's been promised to a family member, and so when a prospective tenant offers me $1,000 a month to rent it, I decline. In the unmoored, soulless world ruled by money, the prospective tenant reckons the "problem" (my refusal) can be solved with more money. So he offers me $1,500 a month. I decline, because the bonds of family are more important and valuable than a few more dollars. The "problem" for the wealthy isn't money; the "problem" is that social ties, obligations and commitments are more valuable and binding than money. The wealthy assume that "everyone has a price," a truism proven by Jeffery Epstein, who bought his way into Harvard, MIT, etc. with bundles of cash. But as the status quo unravels, the wealthy will discover that not everyone can be bought. Indeed, accepting a big bribe might terminate all sorts of much more valuable connections.
The time has come when we need to place an emphasis on our place in society, our relationships, and our purposes in life. The soul-less pursuit of more and more “stuff” to prove how wealthy your are as an indicator of wealth not only generates and glorifies psychopaths, but it is (in itself) inherently dangerous.
Consider America…
…and the rest of the ‘West”.
The Wealthy have their own set of rules…
- Crimes Without Punishment: How The Wealthy Before Carlos …
- 12 Rich People That Were Let Off Way Too Easy | TheRichest
- The wealthy ‘make mistakes’, the poor go to jail | Poverty …
- Why the Wealthy Favor Harsh Punishment — for Criminals …
- Do Rich People Get Off Easier When They Break the Law …
- A Wealthy Teen’s Defense For a Deadly … – Slate Magazine
- Celebrity Justice: Prison Lifestyles of the Rich and …
The poor have their own set of rules…
- ‘Punishment Without Crime’ Highlights The Injustice Of …
- Man jailed for life over $20 marijuana sale – ABC
- The death penalty: a punishment for the poor?
- Fort Worth Shoplifter Gets Life In Prison – CBS Dallas
- Anthony Crutcher is serving a 60-year sentence for selling $40 worth of cocaine.
You see, in America, your measure of value is how much money you have. If you are poor, or middle-class you are considered to be unimportant and disposable. If you are wealthy, you are considered to be significant and important. It’s a very clear distinction, and that is the way it is.
But that does not really matter in the big and real scale of things. This reality is associated with our current set of physical reality templates. And as such, knowing this, you all just must do your best with the “hand of cards that you have been dealt”.
A Rufus contributes and does his best no matter what!
Here we have another young man. A boy, actually, who has lost an arm. But that hasn’t stopped him. It’s not a limit on him, his ability or his dream. He pushes and he strives and he does his best no matter what.
What is stopping you?
How people in a healthy society work together
As I grew up in America there became a rising realization that if you tried to help someone you could get sued for doing so, you could end up braking some law, or rule or regulations and it would hurt you personally. So over the decades, Americans started to become less helpful of others, more self-centered, and more isolated for each other.
This was never healthy and is a sign of the decay of a culture.
- Handcuffed hero: Good Samaritan arrested after saving …
- CPD officer disciplined following arrest of Good Samaritan …
- ‘Good Samaritans’ are still being arrested for helping …
- Good Samaritan Arrested After Saving Woman’s Life …
- ‘Good Samaritans’ are still being arrested for helping …
- Good Samaritan Arrested Moments After Helping …
- South Carolina Girl Scout cookie ‘good Samaritan’ arrested …
"The “generous stranger” who spent over $500 on cookies so two Girl Scouts wouldn’t have to stand in the cold, has been arrested by U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency." He violated FDA regulations.
Not so in China. You are part of a society and it is your duty to participate.
Take a look at this video and notice how everyone runs to help the man in distress. The run to help fro the East, from the South, from the North, and from the West. They all run to help. It’s what healthy societies and cultures do.
In America
This next video shows normal everyday citizens (members of the neighborhood) working together. And it takes place in America. Americans please (kindly) take note. This is how communities work. They work together.
A stranger arrives in their community. Whether he is associated with Antifa or the BLM is not specified, but he has left the urban enclave and entered the suburbia ring around the city. Inside his back pack are such things as duct-tape, wire ties, spray cans of black paint, flammable materials, fireworks and other similar items.
In an attempt to prevent the BLM riots from expanding outward from the urban centers, those that live in the suburbs have set up community groups to defend from the rioters, and the probing (recon) elements of the organizations that instigate the conflict.
Here we have one such interaction.
In my mind, when you work as part of a group, or a team, or participate in the defense of your community, you ARE a Rufus. For you are participating into something bigger and better than yourself, and you are not doing it for personal benefit, money or wealth.
A bad man
The world is filled with all sorts of people. Some are just angry and do some really bad things. Some are just idiots, or just terrible people. But what are you going to do when you meet them?
What are you going to do when they are tearing up your community, your life, and your neighborhood gas station? What are you going to do?
Are you going to stand back and call the police? Are you going to film it and post it on Facebook? Are you going to sent it to Twitter with a socially important hashtag, or are you going to drop everything and take action immediately?
Firing a guy in China
In America, over the last three decades, “letting someone go” has become so common that it has become part of the industrial / cultural landscape.
The core of Office Space is the absurdity of office life. Mike Judge’s comedy wasn’t the first to seize on this, and the second-half of the 20th century is filled with examples of people feeling like meaningless drones in a corporate existence that holds considerable sway over the lives of individuals while also divorcing individuals from their individuality. Peter (Ron Livingston) chooses to meet absurdity with absurdity, becoming disconnected from a workplace that has no connection to him. But through it all, Office Space has just that—space. It’s a workplace that’s both uncaring and unpredictable, but it also functions as a home station and place of security (until Milton (Stephen Root) burns the building down). -Collider
While it is outrageously common in the United States, it is quite different inside of China. It is not so common in China. Aside from being against the law, there are procedures that a company must follow and strict rules on what they must pay you.
Here we have a worker being let go. He carries his clothing in his suitcase behind him. As all factory workers live inside the company dorms (typically). What we see is his boss putting one years salary in a cigarette box and gives it to him. This would never happen in the USA.
The last time I was let go was on Christmas eve, right before the Christmas luncheon. No severance pay or warning or anything like that. They gathered my gear and left it on the company stoop on the parking lot and had security escort me out.
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The point of this is simple, you don’t need to be a hero saving people. You just need to be a decent human. You help others and you understand how they must feel and you help them. You don’t just spit on their CV and push them out the door, American style. You help them.
You be the Rufus in your every-day behaviors.
And for all my my long term MM readers, listen up! It will be your EVERY-DAY actions from which your will be judged upon. And yes, it’s not a religious fantasy. YOU. WILL. NEED. TO. ANSWER. FOR. YOUR. BEHAVIORS.
Speaking of the movie “Office Space”, there’s been a major shift in the American working “lifestyle” since that movie came out…
Twenty years later, offices haven’t gone anywhere, but our economy has drastically transformed. When Office Space was released, we were in the middle of the dot-com bubble, which didn’t burst until 2000, so Office Space is a story told in relative security. Peter’s job sucks, but he has a job. The question isn’t “Can we get work?” but “What is the quality of our work life?” The job is a given, and, being that it’s a 40-hour-per-week office job, Peter presumably has healthcare benefits and so forth. The film’s conflict and comedy comes from Peter rebelling against his workspace. But what happens when that workspace is no longer a given? Office Space isn’t unrecognizable twenty years after its release, but we’re in a far different world. We’ve gone through the Great Recession and an economy transformed by the Internet in a way that was only beginning to surface in the late 90s. Initech, Peter’s company, would likely have been absorbed into a larger tech giant, and for the part of writer-director Judge, he’s gone on to explore that world in his HBO series Silicon Valley. But that show tends to explore the working world from the top down. We see it from the hustling creators of Pied Piper to the buffoons leading tech giants like “Hooli” (i.e. Google). Rarely do we see the lives of the working drones, and even if we did, it would be more specific to the Silicon Valley lifestyle. What hasn’t really been explored is how the gig economy has transformed the lives of the modern worker. You have huge companies like Uber, AirBnB, and others technically letting the individual run their own hours, but it’s the crushing life of a freelancer who’s been abused by an indifferent system. Once again, you have the clash of the individual against the corporate life except the setting has left the office and moved into an individual’s home, car, and anything else they could possibly use for even the slightest profit while a tech giant reaps most of the rewards. There’s definitely room here for the dark, absurd comedy that Office Space provided because while Judge’s follow-up film, Idiocracy, tends to be cited more and more, there are definitely lessons to be had from Office Space and its rebellion against a monolithic and random culture. In the world of Office Space, you can devote years of your life to a company, be laid off unceremoniously by people who don’t know you, try to commit suicide, decide against suicide at the last minute, and then get hit by a drunk driver, which results in serious injury but also a seven-figure settlement. The illusion of control that the office job—and really any job—provides, would fit nicely to the setting of the gig economy. Of course, you can’t really call it “Office” Space without the office, and that’s okay. While the setting was obviously essential to the 1999 comedy, the larger story is one of workplace malaise and frustration. The inanity Joanna (Jennifer Aniston) has to suffer through is just as mind-numbing and ridiculous even though she works in the service industry and Peter works in information technology. The workplace is the problem, and I’d love to see a story that shows how that problem evolves when the workplace is your life rather than something you can leave at the office. -Collider
Rescue of a child in distress.
Here we have a traffic cop, a policeman that basically helps resolve fender benders, and traffic accidents, answering the cries of a mother in distress. Her cries of terror is heart-rendering. The anguish is real.
But watch what happens.
The Rufus shows compassion
Compassion and understanding are in short order today.
The West has tossed those elements of the human nature into the trash bin, and have instead embraced a belief that the amount of money that you accumulate is a measure of your success in life. Just look at the articles in the American “news” media. It’s all about the super-rich and the super wealthy. Very few articles are about people who don’t earn a few million dollars per year.
- Jeff Bezos became even richer thanks to Covid-19. But he …
- How billionaires got $637 billion richer during the COVID …
- U.S. billionaires gained almost $1 trillion in wealth …
- 5 Mind-Blowing Statistics About the Richest 1% | The …
- American billionaires got $434 billion richer during the …
- The World’s Richest Families 2020 – Bloomberg.com
- Bill Gates turns $10 billion into $200 billion worth of …
Yet…
Yet when their physical body dies, and the consciousness goes from the particle form to the wave form, and they are out there roaming in the non-physical realm, they will have to answer for their behaviors. And in that realm, the new swimming pool in their third mansion, or how they bought a fruit basket to their house maid is not going to “cut it”.
We are measured by who we are and what we do and how we treat each other. (And something else, covered later on, in this post…)
Like the humanity that is displayed in this teacher….
It is all about watching heroic actions or is something else more important here?
Ah yes. It’s great to watch heroes in action, isn’t it? But it’s not just that. Please gauge your reactions to watching the videos. How do you feel?
- Do you feel pride in that someone did the “right thing”?
- Or did you feel repulsion that someone was a “sucker”?
That, I strongly believe, is determined from where you come from. If you are from the “dog eat dog” streets of New York City, you might feel differently than say a person who was raised on the corn-fields of Iowa.
That should be somewhat obvious.
But is it just urban vs. rural experiences, or is it something deeper?
Or, in other words, would a person from the mega-city of Shenzhen China (14 million people), have a similar reaction to a person from the metropolis of New York City (5 million people)?
I argue that there is something much more complex going on, than the density of population where you live, having an impact on your societal behaviors.
It makes me think.
Contemporaneous Chinese POP music
Yeah. I have been thinking a lot about this lately. I believe that the music of a nation is a reflection of it’s society. And China, being a nation of nerds, that maintain an existence within a firmly specified society has their own types and styles of music that reflects these characteristics.
You can probably discount my thoughts in this matter. But you cannot deny that there is a significant difference between American music videos and Chinese, or Indian, or Japanese for that matter. I like to believe that it is due to culture and society, but to nail down the exact elements remains elusive.
Lets look at this.
There's so many different types of songs and musical styles. How in heck can you use them to illustrate that cultural and societal differences can become a window towards the way Rufus behaviors manifest?
First up – 张韶涵 – 破茧
This is so very Chinese, and there’s so many elements involved that you just need to see it yourself to try to figure out what is going on here.
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Can you figure it out?
I can’t. It seems to be a complex, boy and girl relationship along with a society of friends. Friends that are fighting forces that threaten their happiness – kind of thingy.
It’s so hard to sort out. But, over all I see a theme of relationships, friendships, working together, and fighting against something or someone that threatens their lifestyle.
…Pretty universal.
Or is it?
南征北战NZBZ – 穿越 (Live)
What makes all this difficult to sort out is that music videos are about all sorts of things. And you just cannot point to one or two and say that that is what the culture represents. For instance, here is a MV from a Chinese rap group (you probably didn’t know that they existed) singing about…
I don’t know…
…life?
Here’s the dangerous three man rap group called NZBZ. (NZBZ = 南征北战). The song is called 穿越.
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You can probably recognize the English words and phrases being used.
I think, but I could be terribly wrong, that it is a celebration of being who you are. Or something along those lines. More or less.
More…
…or less.
陈雪凝 – 绿色
This chick is one of the top pop artists of 2019 into 2020. She’s a Shenzhen girl as you can tell by the backgrounds in the video. This is one of her most famous songs. It’s about …
…well, you all try to figure it out.
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Lyrics are HERE.
若不是你突然闯进我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞放任了 说不痛苦那是假的 毕竟我的心也是肉做的 你离开时我心里的彩虹 就变成灰色 说不心酸那是假的 如果我真的没那么爱过 爱着一个没有灵魂的人 世界都是黑色 若不是你突然闯进 我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞 放任了 爱我的话你都说 爱我的事你不做 我却把甜言蜜语 当做你爱我的躯壳 你的悲伤难过我不参破 我也会把曾经的且过 当施舍 不去计较你太多 从此你在我心里 只剩绿色 说很快活那是假的 你的名字依然那么深刻 每个字都刺穿我的心脏 那鲜明的痛是红色 若不是你突然闯进 我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞 放任了 爱我的话你都说 爱我的事你不做 我却把甜言蜜语 当做你爱我的躯壳 你的悲伤难过我不参破 我也会把曾经的且过 当施舍 不去计较你太多 从此你在我心里 只剩绿色 呼 若不是你突然闯进 我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞 放任了 爱我的话你都说 爱我的事你不做 我却把甜言蜜语 当做你爱我的躯壳 若不是你突然闯进 我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞 放任了 爱我的话你都说 爱我的事你不做 我却把甜言蜜语 当做你爱我的躯壳 你的悲伤难过我不参破 我也会把曾经的且过 当施舍 若不是你突然闯进 我生活 我怎会把死守的寂寞 放任了 爱我的话你都说 爱我的事你不做 我却把甜言蜜语 当做你爱我的躯壳
And a raw translation…
If it hadn’t been for you breaking into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
It’s false to say no pain
After all, my heart is made of meat
The rainbow in my heart when you left
it turns gray
It’s false to say no
If I really didn’t love it that much
Love a man without a soul
The world is black
If you hadn’t suddenly broken into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
Love me and you’ll say it all
Love me for things you don’t do
But I put sweet words
When you love my body
Your sorrow is sad and I don’t break it
I’ll also take what I used to do as a charity
Don’t count you too much
From then on you are in my heart
There is only green left
It’s a fake to say you’ll live soon
Your name is still so profound
Every word pierces my heart
The distinct pain was red
If you hadn’t suddenly broken into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
Love me and you’ll say it all
Love me for things you don’t do
But I put sweet words
When you love my body
Your sorrow is sad and I don’t break it
I’ll also take what I used to do as a charity
Don’t count you too much
From then on you are in my heart
There is only green left
Call.
If you hadn’t suddenly broken into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
Love me and you’ll say it all
Love me for things you don’t do
But I put sweet words
When you love my body
If you hadn’t suddenly broken into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
Love me and you’ll say it all
Love me for things you don’t do
But I put sweet words
When you love my body
Your sorrow is sad and I don’t break it
I’ll also take what I used to do as a charity
If you hadn’t suddenly broken into my life
How can I let go of the loneliness of death?
Love me and you’ll say it all
Love me for things you don’t do
But I put sweet words
When you love my body
It’s a difficult song to translate directly. Don’t you know. Maybe a Gemini in the MM audience might be able to help decipher this complex array of thoughts, Ideas and emotions.
And that is it, isn’t it?
The differences in society and culture, in the language, and in the behaviors can really have an impact on whether you are being a Rufus within the confines of your baseline template.
So what am I getting to here?
Well, there’s a lot that must be said but the English language is insufficient for the task. So I am flailing. I am trying to use music videos to expound on my narrative.
If I were to expand upon what I am trying to say, I would argue that [1] we must be the Rufus in all cases.
However what a Rufus actually is depends upon the [1a] culture and society that [1b] your soul has established for your consciousness.
You cannot be an American (say), and try to act or behave like a Chinese woman or an Japanese man would act. That is not in “your cards”.
Being a Rufus means that you must work within the kit of behaviors that you must take on given the initial template of behaviors that you have been granted at birth. This is true, EVEN if you move to another location and another society that is different from your initial conditions.
Or, to put it better, be the best that you can be. Stop trying to copy another person, or their culture and background. Be you, but make sure that you are the best you that you can be.
To help illustrate this, let’s look at a MV from India.
Karunesh – Punjab
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So what is going on here? Well, it’s hard to tell, but you can be well assured that a person from India would well understand the complex interplay of relationships and issues that are being hinted at.
Just like you might have a difficult time understanding what is going on in the Chinese videos.
The relationships between the daughter and her father might be difficult for an American to understand, as can be the relationship between her and the young man. We can’t be an American and pass judgements on her or her family simply because the initial set of pre-birth world-line conditions between us are incompatible.
All that we can do is do OUR best in our life, and applaud others when they do THEIR BEST in their respective lives. Do not try to put them into your circumstances, and your culture.
Different places have different cultures, rules, and societal norms. For me, I find it difficult to understand the Indian culture. Because it is [1] old, [2] complex, [3] stratified with a caste system (that America is devolving into), and [4] industrialized with elements of the new intermingled with ancient tribal complexities.
A Rufus in India would operate under different conditions than a Rufus in America, or China, for example.
But I live in China, and I am an American.
So yeah, you will need to take those facts into account. What I view as Rufus actions might differ considerably from what you might. This could be especially true if you are from India, the Middle East, or Russia…perhaps.
Never the less, let’s consider this narrative in the believe that you must do your BEST no matter what, and strive forward, no matter what.
America has changed, while I have stayed the same
Did you know that the American military has eliminated the tough “basic training” in favor of a “softer”, more “gentle” training system. One that emphases the high technology needs of the American military while at the same recognizing that modern American “millennials” are often loathe to join the military. This new military is intended to be better than before and world class.
I was raised in an America where you need to push yourself to be the best. It was a land where you has “a shot” at a better life, if only you studied hard, worked hard, and found yourself a “good company” to work within. But, boy oh boy, has times changed. Today, America represents something else entirely…
Indeed even the military has changed. The days of “basic training” are over. It all has been replaced with a kinder, more sensible military. One that will be experts in servicing the very complex military hardware that the nation fields. In the new America, individual strength of character, morals, and striving to be the best you can be has been discarded and placed into the rubbish bin of history. Today’s modern America is one of socially-aware, kind and gentle folk who would have no problem pushing the red button to obliterate an enemy city, or unleash a swarm or hunter-killer drones upon the civilians in a city.
- The Army Rolls Out a New Weapon: Strategic Napping
- Low Recruit Discipline Prompts Army to Redesign Basic …
- No More Drill Sergeant ‘Shark Attack’: Army Moves Toward …
- Navy, Army, Air Force & Marines change boot camp during …
Well… I have my own opinions about this. But I do believe that we should always strive to be the best that we can be… no matter what. And that is one thing that I like about China. That basic belief is ingrained in all the Chinese people from the moment that they are born to their individual lives as they grow older.
How does this attitude manifest…
To see what [1] being the best you can be, [2] working as part of a larger whole, [3] contributing, and being helpful, and [4] being the Rufus during times of need, we can see how it manifests within China.
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And check out how road-work is done…
TWICE – Likey
But is that all there is?
Work? Superiority in sports? Or in the military? What about day-to-day social interaction?
And here’s a MV from South Korea. Yes, each and every video has a different “flavor” and a different subject matter. This is what is known as “K-Pop”. This group is an all girl group that pretty much perform the dance routines that all the dance troops in my office building do.
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It’s just a happy, up beat, and light video. Also, I like it because it is filmed in Boston. And you all should know that I miss Boston terribly.
It’s not deep.
It’s just light, happy and positive.
Does that mean that that’s all there is? No. It just means that a key aspect of our life, at least the attractive part of it, is associated with happy light feelings, emotions and relationships.
Being the Rufus should be what we do when things go wrong. But aside from that, we should always strive to be the “bright and shining example from which others can emulate”. (Shades of MAJ here!)
And who can argue with that?
Do you want some more?
I have more posts in my Rufus Index here…
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Beyond triggered at some of these videos. The India one where people of a higher caste are slapping poorer people and driving them off the train. Imagine if that happened in New York or Chicago. They’d be shot dead. The Punjab video was also disturbing in another way. I’ve raised two daughters to be adults, but I was so disturbed by it, I couldn’t watch it all, and I don’t even know why? The future seems to belong to China though, those videos were heartfelt and reminds me of how life was in the 70’s before things got cut-throat and ruthless.
Yes. That is the point of all this. In fact, it looks like the USA is turning into a high-technology version of India. With cradle-to-grave caste systems being put into place right now. The only thing that is going to stop it is a major SHTF event, but most Americans are far too soft and already long down that road…it’s all past the point of no return.
the India video of people slapping Indian men off the train…
I saw the video a while back and it was explained as the train officers slapping men who had pushed themselves into women-only cabins. Notice that the family man with a child and wife was not slapped.
PS. I tried to leave a donation- but it wouldn’t let me proceed. It asked me to enter a state, but I’m in Canada. Couldn’t proceed with donation because I couldn’t complete the form. You might want to update you donation page for international readers.
I am very sorry to hear this. I would suggest you try again. And just pick out any state. As long as your bank info is good, you should be able to send the money. Other than that, you can send me an email, telling me how much you want to donate, and I will send you a Paypal invoice that you can respond to. Other options include Wechat and you can send me a “red envelope” using that APP. No worries.
Hah,
The first Chinese Song with the fantasy music video has the title 破茧 (Break the Cocoon), and is, imo, best described as a Chinese music video description and celebration of the “Hero’s Journey”, where the Hero fights and forges his way past all manner of obstacles and hardships and enemies with the help of his friends and allies
The second rock song is titled 穿越 which means “Transcend”, and the song is pretty much about transcending limitations – of the naysayers, the doubters, the haters, telling all those who put you down and tell you that you can’t to “Fuck off”, to face the Universe and ‘Make some Noise” – to make Your voice heard
The third song is about ruing after lost love, and I think its about how the color green describes her leftover memories of her lost lover; when ‘he’ left, the rainbow in her heart turned gray, the memories of ‘him’ still pierce her heart ‘red’, to love a soul-less person, the world would be black, and now that she is coming to terms with the loss of her love, “green” is what is left in her heart…its tricky to say what ‘green’ means, but from the feel and lyrics of the song, I think it means a sort of bitter peace…
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Here are some Chinese songs off the top of my head that you might enjoy…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Na0RVRx8_qw
Very cute song sung by a very cute singer Feng Timo with a very cute voice! The song is a very very whimsical expression of puppy love…and the lyrics are very hard to understand for a non-native speaker, but fear not, there is a fairly accurate english translation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1Rlods-Ugk
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoQb7N0VLiY
This is one of the most famous classic songs sung by Wang Fei, whose closest western equivalent is probably Whitney Houston…
The title, “Red Bean”, is about “But, I think the Red Bean lyrics itself talking about a person who fall for someone and won’t separate with him/her but he/she knows nothing lasts forever and there’ll be separate someday…”
http://iamjewelgirl.blogspot.com/2012/04/red-bean.html
The singer Wang Fei has many great ballads that one can explore if it catches their interest…her style is very much that of the 80s and 90s…slower, more thoughtful, more soulful
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQRytoLd_RY
And here is one by Jay Chou, who is regarded as the “King of Mandopop”. Also a singer and producer of many great songs but has a much more modern and contemporary flavor…with a faster tempo and more complex sound
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Oops, all three happen to involve the theme of Love! Ah well, Chinese music does have quite the obsession with Romantic love…
Outstanding information and a great addition to MM. I will check out the links and look up the aforementioned songs. A BIG thank you for that!!!!!