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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (1426805)11/29/2023 10:46:37 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
jazzlover2

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1571973
 

Ayn Rand on the Death of Marilyn Monroe

In 1962, Ayn Rand was briefly commissioned to write a weekly column for the Los Angeles Times, whereby her writing was nationally syndicated, however she left the column after only a year because of a lack of interest in pop culture news. She wrote the following piece about a week after Marilyn Monroe’s untimely death.

——

Through Your Most Grievous Fault

August 19, 1962 - Los Angeles Times

The death of Marilyn Monroe shocked people, with an impact different from their reaction to the death of any other movie star or public figure. All over the world people felt a peculiar sense of personal involvement and of protest, like a universal cry of “Oh, no!”

They felt that her death had some special significance, almost like a warning which they could not decipher…and they felt a nameless apprehension, the sense that something terribly wrong was involved.

They were right to feel it.

Marilyn Monroe, on the screen, was an image of pure, innocent, childlike joy in living. She projected the sense of a person born and reared in some radiant Utopia, untouched by suffering, unable to conceive of ugliness or evil, facing like with the confidence, the benevolence and the joyous self-flaunting-flaunting of a child or a kitten who is happy to display its own attractiveness as the best gift it can offer the world, and who expects to be admired for it, not hurt.

In real life, Marilyn Monroe’s suicide…or worse: a suicide that might have been an accident, suggesting that, to her, the difference did not matter…was a declaration that we live in a world which made it impossible for her kind of spirit, and for the things she represented, to survive.

If there ever was a victim of society, Marilyn Monroe was that victim…of a society that professes dedication to the relief of the suffering, but kills the joyous.

None of the objects of the humanitarians’ tender solicitude, the juvenile delinquents, could have had so sordid and horrifying a childhood as did Marilyn Monroe.

To survive it and to preserve the kind of spirit she projected on the screen…the radiantly benevolent sense of life, which cannot be faked…was an almost inconceivable psychological achievement that required a heroism of the highest order. Whatever scars her past had left were insignificant by comparison.

She preserved her vision of life through a nightmare struggle, fighting her way to the top. What broke her was the discovery, at the top, of as sordid an evil as the one she had left behind…worse, perhaps, because incomprehensible. She had expected to reach the sunlight; she found, instead, a limitless swamp of malice.

It was a malice of a very special kind. If you want to see her groping struggle to understand it, read the magnificent article in a recent issue of Life magazine. It is not actually an article, it is a verbatim transcript of her own words…and the most tragically revealing document published in many years. It is a cry for help, which came too late to be answered.

“When you’re famous, you kind of run into human nature in a raw kind of way,” she said. “It stirs up envy, fame does. People you run into feel that, well, who is she…who does she think she is, Marilyn Monroe? They feel fame gives them some kind of privilege to walk up to you and say anything to you, you know, of any kind of nature…and it won’t hurt your feelings…like it’s happening to you clothing…I don’t understand why people aren’t a little more generous with each other. I don’t like to say this, but I’m afraid there is a lot of envy in this business.”

“Envy” is the only name she could find for the monstrous thing she faced, but it was much worse than envy: it was the profound hatred of life, of success and of all human values, felt by a certain kind of mediocrity…the kind who feels pleasure on hearing about a stranger’s misfortune. It was hatred of the good for being the good…hatred of ability, of beauty, of honesty, of earnestness, of achievement and, above all, of human joy.

Read the Life article to see how it worked and what it did to her.

An eager child, who was rebuked for her eagerness…“Sometimes the (foster) families used to worry because I used to laugh so loud and so gay; I guess they felt it was hysterical.”

A spectacularly successful star, whose employers kept repeating: “Remember you’re not a star,” in a determined effort, apparently not to let her discover her own importance.

A brilliantly talented actress, who was told by the alleged authorities, by Hollywood, by the press, that she could not act.

An actress, dedicated to her art with passionate earnestness..,“When I was 5…I think that’s when I started wanting to be an actress…I loved to play. I didn’t like the world around me because it was kind of grim…but I loved to play house and it was like you could make your own boundaries”…who went through hell to make her own boundaries, to offer people the sunlit universe of her own vision…“It’s almost having certain kinds of secrets for a moment, when you’re acting”…but who was ridiculed for her desire to play serious parts.

A woman, the only one, who was able to project the glowingly innocent sexuality of a being from some planet uncorrupted by guilt…who found herself regarded and ballyhooed as a vulgar symbol of obscenity…and who still had the courage to declare: “We are all born sexual creatures, thank God, but it’s a pity so many people despise and crush this natural gift.”

A happy child who was offering her achievement to the world, with the pride of an authentic greatness and of a kitten depositing a hunting trophy at your feet…who found herself answered by concerted efforts to negate, to degrade, to ridicule, to insult, to destroy her achievement…who was unable to conceive that it was her best she was punished for, not her worst…who could only sense, in helpless terror, that she was facing some unspeakable kind of evil.

How long do you think a human being could stand it?

That hatred of values has always existed in some people, in any age or culture. But a hundred years ago, the would have been expected to hide it. Today, it is all around us; it is the style and fashion of our century.

Where would a sinking spirit find relief from it?

The evil of a cultural atmosphere is made by all those who share it. Anyone who has ever felt resentment against the good for being the good and has given voice to it, is the murderer of Marilyn Monroe.





To: Wharf Rat who wrote (1426805)11/30/2023 6:37:05 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1571973
 
The Final Failure of Justin Trudeau

POLITICS

Canada expected to unveil oil and gas emissions cap at COP28 climate summit

The federal government expects to unveil its long-delayed oil and gas sector emissions cap during climate talks starting Thursday, underscoring Canada’s position that fossil fuels can still be part of the clean transition as long as their emissions are cut.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault set out the expectations for the global gathering, dubbed COP28, on Parliament Hill Wednesday, just before departing for the summit. He also said methane and zero-emissions vehicle regulations could be released at the gathering. But he cautioned it could take to the end of the year to release all three policies.

The proposed emissions cap in the oil and gas sector is a critical plank in Canada’s 2030 emissions reduction plan, but it will also open up another fight with Alberta, and marks another flashpoint in the fierce debate over the future of fossil fuels.

The annual climate talks are being held in the United Arab Emirates. The major oil producer’s host role and the presence of the oil and gas industry at the summit is already sparking criticism from some climate activists. Scientists say greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are the biggest cause of climate change.

Mr. Guilbeault said Canada will be advocating for the phase-out of unabated fossil fuels – meaning offsetting emissions through technology such as carbon capture and storage.

He told The Globe and Mail that “COP would be a very good moment” to release the emissions cap details.

The minority Liberals have not yet said how the cap would be imposed, nor what the emissions limit will be. Options under consideration include a new cap and trade system or changes to the industrial carbon price.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first announced the cap in the 2021 election campaign. But the government has twice delayed its rollout.

The oil and gas sector emissions cap is supposed to take effect in 2025, setting a ceiling on emissions that would decrease in five-year increments. Mr. Guilbeault declined to say whether it will still take effect in just over one year’s time.

He also wouldn’t say what the new emissions limit will be for the oil and gas sector but said the emissions reduction plan shows the direction and scale of change needed.

That plan said the sector had to cut emissions by 42 per cent below 2019 levels by 2030. That would mark a significant turnaround for Canada’s highest emitting industry, and internal government documents obtained by The Globe in 2022 showed the feasibility of such a cut was in doubt.

Mr. Guilbeault said the government will first release a “framework” document explaining the emissions cap. Draft regulations will be released later.

“If we don’t put in place the cap on oil and gas emissions, we can’t achieve our 2030 targets,” he said.

Canada has promised to cut overall emissions by 40 per cent below 2005 levels by the end of the decade. The federal Environment Commissioner has said the country is not on track to meet that target.

In a separate interview on Wednesday, Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said the cap will ensure emissions are cut in a “manner that’s economically thoughtful” and it is not about shuttering the sector. The International Energy Agency has forecast that demand for oil will peak this decade, but that doesn’t mean the market will disappear.

“There’s no point in Canada effectively shutting-in production that’s not related to declines in global demand, and allowing the United States or Venezuela to actually export more,” he said.

While Alberta will be sharing a stage with Canada at the climate summit in Dubai, the province opposes the emissions cap because it believes it will be a de-facto production cut.

Government spokesperson Ryan Fournier said in a statement that the cap is “unacceptable and unconstitutional.” He said the targets are not achievable and would drive away investment.

Mr. Wilkinson made the pitch that decarbonization is how the sector will remain competitive. As global demand for oil and gas declines, he said competition will be driven by price and the carbon intensity of fuels.

Countries with the lowest carbon intensity of production emissions “are going to be winners,” Mr. Wilkinson said.

The government-funded Canadian Climate Institute said Wednesday that its modelling shows the emissions cap is achievable without cutting production as long as oil and gas prices don’t go below current levels.

At current prices, or higher, the institute said its modelling shows the sector can make the investments needed to cut emissions while continuing to grow and making a profit.

Janetta McKenzie, with the Pembina Institute, said the sector-specific emissions cap is needed because unlike other sectors, the oil and gas sector’s emissions continue to increase. “Existing policy is not enough,” she said.

While Alberta is working with Ottawa on policies like carbon capture, utilization and sequestration, it is trying to thwart other federal plans with the provincial sovereignty act. Ms. Smith invoked it on Monday against federal clean electricity regulations and has mused about using it to stop the emissions cap.

With reports from Carrie Tait and Reuters

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