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  • A
    An Open Letter to the Men and Women of ICE and DHS
    To the agents, officers, and staff serving under Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security:
    We write not in accusation, but in concern.
    Not to question your dedication to service, but to ask you to look inward — to reflect on the true cost of the mission you’ve been given, and what it may be asking of you, personally and morally.
    Every day, you are asked to enforce some of the most difficult policies in this country. You operate in tense communities and unpredictable conditions. The work is dangerous, emotionally draining, and often deeply misunderstood by the public. But beyond the tactical hardships, there lies a quieter, more personal burden — one that reaches into homes, families, and hearts.
    If you are honest with yourselves, many of you have felt that burden. You’ve seen how your role affects those closest to you: conversations at the dinner table that turn painful, friendships that grow distant, a child’s uneasy question about what you do and why. These are not just personal experiences — they are reflections of a deeper national struggle over identity, justice, and humanity.
    It’s worth asking: what happens to a person when duty and conscience come into conflict? What does it do to a family, when pride in service begins to mix with doubt or shame? These are hard questions, but they are the questions that define moral courage.
    Right now, tensions across our nation are growing. Communities are polarized, anger builds easily, and violence feels closer with each passing week. You are on the front lines of that volatility, and history tells us where unchecked division can lead. The last century bore witness to how ordinary men and women, loyal to their governments and trying simply to provide for their families, became instruments of suffering — sometimes without realizing it until it was too late. The scars of those choices led humanity into two devastating world wars.
    It is not unpatriotic to recognize the danger of repeating history. In fact, it is among the most patriotic acts you can take: to defend not just a flag or an order, but the moral foundation that flag is meant to represent — liberty, justice, and compassion.
    You have the power to shape how this moment in our history will be remembered. Your choices matter more than you may ever know. Within every one of you lies the ability to temper enforcement with empathy, authority with restraint, and fear with understanding. These are not acts of defiance — they are acts of strength.
    Do your duty, but do it with conscience. Protect your country, but defend its soul as well.
    History will not only ask what orders you followed — it will ask who you were when you followed them.
    With hope and respect, The citizens of The United States of America.
    akabigD•...
    You miss the whole point. Holocaust? Huh? I think you're confusing this post for something it's not. Your obviously have some issues. Nobody said anything about The Holocaust, Why would you even inject that into the conversation....
    communication studies
    argumentation
    online etiquette
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  • jordan avatar

    We have the option to see everything in your life as collaborative; we are scared to say this because we don't want to victim-blame but we're also scared of the possibilities and transcendence that opens up.  

    OK I’ve tried talking about this before and it always feels impossible, but it also feels super important, so here goes, relatively uncensored (meaning super philosophical, my apologies and hope some of you enjoy!):

    “We have the option to see everything in your life as collaborative”

    1. The nature of the universe is co-constructed / nondual: I think “experience” and “reality” are fundamentally intertwined; you can’t talk about a world out-there without a subjectivity talking about it (experiencing) and you can’t have an experiencing without a world out there (reality). In other words, subject and object (consciousness and matter) are one interpenetrated thingy. When I say “reality” I really mean “reality-experience” and when I say “experience” I really mean  “experience-reality.” Sometimes I just say “Life.”

      I mean this in a very extreme way.

      Not collapsing to the outer (materialism): This is not “there’s a pre-existing world out there, and many different pre-existing subjective views on it” which is the common way of understanding pluralism. That framing still fundamentally separates the outer world from the inner, and presumes a kind of self-existence of the outer without consciousness, which I think is basically epistemologically untenable. We simply can’t know if that’s possible, ever, because every thought- or real- experiment we do will always be known, by us, inside of a conscious experience.

      Not collapsing to the inner (idealism): This is also not “there’s no world out there, just constructs,” which I see as incoherently self-defeating: where do the constructs exist? We’re just hiding the fact that we presume constructs are objectively existing prior to that statement, and then declaring nothing inherently exists. It also doesn’t jive with out lived experience that there seem to be “things” like the laws of physics that are outside of our ability to simply construct a new meaning around. Perhaps the laws of physics are mutable, but we’d still be left with a meta-physics claim, like the one I’m making:

      The inner and outer, the consciousness and matter, fundamentally coexist as one occurrence. This is what I’m referring to as “life” in the title of this post.

    1. From this claim I think another follows that there’s a (possibly) inviolable metaphysics of correspondence between the interpretation and world-out-there, a “mirror” to the (obvious to almost all adults) correspondence between the world-out-there and interpretation: eg I can reinterpret the experience of stubbing my toe, but I can’t reinterpret the existence of the table leg I stubbed it on. The most obvious inverse correspondence is that I can use my reinterpretation to change the outer world: let’s say I consider stubbing my toe a lesson, and what I learn from that lesson is that I want to move the location of my table. Now I move my table.

      You can probably see where I’m going with this.

      If I don’t have access to the interpretation that toe-stubbing is a lesson-opportunity, maybe I’m less likely to move the table, or change my walking patterns, or whatever. (Yes there’s another failure mode in thinking the lessons are always only internal lessons, but that’s recapping the “collapsing to the inner” mentioned above, so already covered I think). Having the lesson-frame changes the way we encounter and react to adversity, even as small as toe-stubbing. Any given frame changes the way we encounter and react to all that we experience, because they’re interpenetratingly one thing.

    2. “Everything in my life is collaborative” is one of the interpretation-choices we all have; and it is causative in the same way “stubbing my toe is a lesson” is causative. I think this is a pragmatic statement of fact; here’s the value-laden one:

      Seeing everything that happens as collaborative is very good way to live, and results in greater well-being.

      It puts us in flow with what’s happening rather than resistance; it has us take self-responsibility for “what now” and keeps us close to where our actual power is (meaning making, as Frank said yesterday); all of this leads to a better experience regardless of your values and regardless of your life circumstances.

    “we are scared to say this because we don't want to victim-blame”

    This feels very un-politically-correct to talk about because people immediately try to apply it to others. They misinterpret it to mean, “If someone has a shitty experience it’s their fault.” 

    This is a mistake!

    (1) I’m not using it to talk about others.
    (2) The capacity to do something now doesn’t imply the capacity to have done something in the past.
    (3) I’m definitely not saying it’s fair.

    The statement is about everything in your life, not everyone’s life. The mistake at a philosophical level is trying to make it an “out there” proposition, instead of remembering the entanglement of inner-and-outer.

    This clarification is super important because to the extent what I’m saying is true, it’s a huge, underutilized technology in well-being improvement available to you in your life, but it remains unavailable to you if you think that using it means you have to blame other people for their circumstances. Don’t do that! Not necessary! For personal use only! (Even when I apply these ideas in coaching sessions, and we teach them in The Relateful Coaching School, it’s always first from a place of asking questions, finding attunement.)

    “but we're also scared of the possibilities and transcendence that opens up”

    The other most common block to trying on this perspective is that we’re terrified of being this powerful: 

    • What if we don’t use it responsibly? (Then you’d have the chance to see that as collaborative, taking the results as feedback)

    • What if we can’t use it well? (There’s no standard—that’s an unnecessary imposition we make up in our heads; and I don’t know if there’s an end either, so we’re always growing in capacity, if we want to) 

    • Does this mean it’s our fault if we don’t have a good experience? (no, remember that would be collapsing the outer to the inner)

    And we’re terrified at facing the reality of how deeply interconnected we are. 

    This means the “I” that I think I am really is indistinguishable from the entire world, which calls into the question the nature of that I. This is a scary thing to face, in my experience. Luckily, as far as I can tell the nature of reality-experience is holonic—transcendence always comes with including. So yes, I am much much bigger than whatever concept I make of myself, but that bigness doesn’t erase the concept or the me, it simply contextualizes it in something much grander. Which ironically, gives us a lot more room for self-expression, play, and surrendering into embracing the whole human experience with all of it’s complexity, suffering, and joy.

    #DeepTakes 

    MalcolmOcean•...
    @Arun, given this comment, I'm very curious what you'd make of my take from today: Hell is Praying and Heaven is Bullshitting. It feels to me like it touches on something very similar to your Someone who doesn't know what this means – would this help? Could this help?...
    social media communication
    personal communication
    online etiquette
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  • dara_like_sara avatar

    Timeline of Events in Brian Thompson Assassination. On December 4, 2024, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was assassinated outside the New York Hilton Midtown. The suspect, later identified as Luigi Mangione, 26, shot Thompson multiple times before fleeing on an e-bike. Thompson was pronounced dead shortly after. Mangione, who stayed in NYC for 10 days prior, was arrested on December 9 in Pennsylvania and charged with second-degree murder. The attack is believed to be a symbolic act targeting the healthcare industry.

    November 24, 2024

    • 10:11 p.m.: Suspect arrives in New York City on a Greyhound bus from Atlanta, Georgia.

    November 24 – December 3, 2024

    • Suspect checks into the HI New York City Hostel on the Upper West Side using a falsified New Jersey ID and pays in cash.
    • He stays at the hostel for ten days, checking out on December 3.

    December 4, 2024

    • 5:30 a.m.: Suspect leaves the hostel, likely by bike.
    • 6:15 a.m.: Suspect exits the 57th Street F Train subway station.
    • 6:17 a.m.: Suspect purchases coffee, water, and granola bars at a Starbucks near the New York Hilton Midtown hotel.
    • 6:30 a.m.: Surveillance footage captures the suspect walking while talking on the phone.
    • 6:39 a.m.: Suspect arrives in front of the New York Hilton Midtown hotel and waits.
    • 6:44 a.m.: Brian Thompson leaves his hotel. The assailant shoots him multiple times, then flees northbound via a pedestrian walkway.
    • 6:46 a.m.: Police respond to a 911 call reporting the shooting.
    • 6:48 a.m.: Officers find Thompson with multiple gunshot wounds. He is taken to Mount Sinai West hospital. The assailant is seen riding an e-bike into Central Park.
    • 6:59 a.m.: Suspect is seen riding a bike on West 85th Street.
    • 7:04 a.m.: Suspect enters a northbound taxi at 86th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.
    • 7:12 a.m.: Thompson is pronounced dead at Mount Sinai West hospital.

    December 9, 2024

    • Morning: Luigi Mangione, 26, is arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania, in connection with the assassination.
    • Afternoon: Mangione is charged with second-degree murder and other related offenses.

    December 11, 2024

    • Mangione appears in court, contests extradition to New York, and is held without bail pending a governor’s warrant.
    jordanSA•...

    If I could nominate a comment for bridging, I would nominate this.

    communication
    online etiquette
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