"Guns & Butter" abruptly shut down

"Guns & Butter" abruptly shut down

guns and butter.jpg

Bonnie Faulkner's long-running radio show Guns & Butter has been abruptly cancelled by its home radio station KPFA in Berkeley.

The weekly show has been one of the central features of KPFA (and affiliated stations) for the past seventeen years.

See this article about the cancellation of Guns & Butter, published today by Professor Michel Chossudovsky of the University of Ottawa and the Centre for Research of Globalization, at Global Research

Professor Chossudovsky has been a frequent guest on Guns & Butter, along with a constellation of other important critical voices including Professor Michael HudsonProfessor David Ray GriffinProfessor James Tracy, and accomplished civil rights lawyer William F. Pepper, Esquire -- among many other insightful researchers and authors examining issues of absolutely critical importance.

While I certainly do not agree with every assertion by every single guest who appears on Guns & Butter, the abrupt cancellation of Bonnie Faulkner's show because of assertions made by one recent guest (who was one part of a three-guest show) sends a chilling message about the freedom of the press in the united states at this time. To be even more specific: I personally do not agree with the opinion voiced by the guest in question, cited by KPFA as the reason the show was shut down, and yet I believe the termination of the show is a very serious matter and an ominous indicator of the current state of freedom of speech and the press.

Are men and women to be treated like children, as if they are unable to discern for themselves whether or not an argument has merit, and thus must be shielded from any objectionable views? Even if I disagree with a guest on a show or find that guest's views to be objectionable, I am adamantly opposed to silencing a radio program in the united states because an opinion with which I disagree was voiced by someone appearing on that show.

This removal of Guns & Butter from production at KPFA terminates one of the last remaining shows on the broadcast airwaves which dared to question the government narrative on events such as the murderous attacks of September 11th, 2001 or the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and many others.

I would strongly urge Bonnie Faulkner to continue her weekly show as a podcast, if at all possible, and to solicit support from listeners in order to enable that to happen. I would also urge podcast hosts  who are interested in the truth on the kinds of subjects that Guns & Butter has examined over the past seventeen years to invite Bonnie to be a guest on their shows, and to reach out to her with offers to help her launch such a podcast that can be independent of KPFA.

However, there are numerous reasons why the removal of Guns & Butter from the airwaves is a huge blow to independent examination of critically important political and economic subjects at this juncture in history -- not least of which being the fact that consumption of digital media can be monitored and tracked much more closely and much more easily than can the similar consumption of a radio show by listening to that show on one's radio, at home or in the car. Additionally, it is much easier to suppress or obscure the existence of a website, or slow the traffic going to that website to a trickle, using a variety of techniques such as those described herehere and here

For these reasons, men and women who believe in freedom of speech and freedom of the press should flood KPFA with indications of disapproval of their high-handed cancellation of Bonnie Faulkner's weekly show, using the addresses provided in the Global Research article linked above.

In addition, I would strongly recommend visiting the archives of Guns & Butter and downloading as many shows as possible, in case those shows are removed at a future date. Those archives go back fifteen years, to 2003. 

The possibility that access to those archived shows could be removed appears to me to be fairly likely, especially given the fact that the video showing Bonnie Faulkner voicing her displeasure at the termination of her show in a room full of supporters carrying signs condemning censorship, which was embedded in the article posted earlier today on Global Research, has already been removed in the short time that it has taken to write this blog post.

I myself met Bonnie Faulkner in my hometown of San Mateo in 2014. There is no indication that she has ever harassed anybody or called for the harassment of anybody. However, as the article posted today in Global Research points out, while the banning of Alex Jones has received enormous media attention, the termination of Guns & Butter has been completely ignored by the monopoly media (the so-called "mainstream media") which shapes the opinions of the large segments of the population who do not avail themselves of other sources of information.

The termination of Guns & Butter, about a month following the Alex Jones incident, removes yet another avenue of information outside of the controlled media monopoly. My personal suspicion, based upon evidence and not just intuition, is that Alex Jones is likely a provocateur whose role is to behave in a deliberately objectionable and offensive manner in order to discredit more authentic independent voices while at the same time sucking up all the media attention given to the many voices critical of the official media line on important and suspicious events, and whose antics make the censorship of such voices easier for the general public to accept. 

In other words, I strongly suspect he is deliberately playing the role of a raving "conspiracy theorist" in order to discredit more deliberate and less objectionable voices who question the mainstream narrative on certain subjects. I strongly suspect that some of the more vocal and visible proponents of the "flat earth" movement could be playing a similar role in order to jump in front of and distract from more serious lines of investigation, while attempting to discredit anyone else who questions certain narratives through a form of "guilt by association."

The fact that Bonnie Faulkner's show has suddenly been terminated without any media attention approximately one month after the much-publicized Alex Jones dust-up would appear to lend some credence to that possibility.

I believe that the termination of Guns & Butter is an extremely troubling and serious sign about the current status of the freedom of the press and freedom to express opinions in an era of increasingly rigid control over the media, the airwaves, the general discourse among the citizenry, and the ability of men and women to gain access to research, evidence and analysis which reveals some of the glaring inconsistencies in the official narrative of critical events. 

I would recommend immediately downloading many (or all) of the available Guns & Butterarchive, and placing them on an external hard-drive, mobile device, or series of CDs, and then listening to them while driving to work, riding on the bus, doing the dishes, or working in the garden. I would recommend going right back to the beginning of the archive in 2003, and working forward -- and after several shows, asking yourself if you really believe Bonnie Faulkner is someone whose views are objectionable or outrageous.

And, after you have asked yourself that question and answered it, you might also ask yourself why the framers of the Constitution put the protection of the unabridged freedom of speech and the unabridged freedom of the press at the very beginning of the Bill of Rights -- rights which they correctly described as being inherent in all men and women, and not granted by anyone else, and rights which they accurately perceived as being essential to democratic government by the people, just as they clearly saw the silencing of free speech and a free and independent press to be an essential aspect of tyranny.

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar

I've just published a new video entitled "Seeing the Star Myths: Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar." It is intended to help you find those constellations in the night sky -- and in the ancient Star Myths of the world, in which Sagittarius plays an especially important role.

This video is the third thus far in a series that also includes:

and

In order to perceive and understand the overwhelming evidence which shows that the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories are all built upon a foundation of celestial metaphor, it is necessary to be able to envision the various constellations which those ancient myths are referencing. 

Sadly, due to a variety of factors, most people today are not able to envision the constellations of our night sky, and are not familiar with their various distinctive features and characteristics.

In this video, we examine the mythologically-important constellations of Sagittarius, the Southern Crown (Corona Australis), and Ara the Altar. We also examine a piece of ancient artwork which shows that the ancients most definitely appear to have been employing the same constellational outlining system which the famous author H. A. Rey (1898 - 1977) published in his excellent guide to the night sky entitled The Stars: A New Way to See Them (first published in 1952).

I hope the video will be helpful to you in your efforts to see the constellations in the night sky -- and in your mind's eye -- and to understand the celestial language spoken by the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories, in order to hear their timeless message.

Please feel free to share on social media and with friends and family who may appreciate the information in this video, and to sign up to my YouTube channel in order to be notified when new videos are published.

Please offer prayers and encouragement for those impacted by historic floods in Kerala, India

Please offer prayers and encouragement for those impacted by historic floods in Kerala, India

image: Indian Express (link).

image: Indian Express (link).

The annual festival of Onam which is observed most especially in the state of Kerala in India would have commenced on August 15 this year. However, the observance of the festival has been canceled this year due to devastating flooding.

I had been contacted some time before by a reader in Kerala who has been working on an article about the celestial connections of the annual Onam festival. That article has now of course been postponed.

The unprecedented flooding is the worst in at least a hundred years, and has already claimed over three hundred lives in Kerala, with more rains continuing to fall even now. 

The rains are an annual feature of the monsoon season, but this past week they were so heavy that engineers at nearly all of the numerous dams in the area had to begin releasing water to prevent the dams from bursting altogether.

Readers may remember that the Oroville dam in northern California was letting off water from its spillway in the spring of 2017 when the spillway failed due to lack of necessary infrastructure spending, which is one of the signature characteristics of neoliberalism, privatization, and the siphoning-off of public resources to enrich private interests, discussed in previous blog posts such as:

Please pray for those in Kerala affected by the deadly flooding, and please let others know about the situation there, which does not appear to be receiving much media coverage at least where I live. 

And, if you are moved to do so, please help the men, women and children of Kerala in any way you can (while at the same time being sure to look into the trustworthiness of any agency through which you might choose to donate funds).

Let's do what we can to reach out and offer encouragement, prayers and assistance during this catastrophe.

image: Indian Express (link).

image: Indian Express (link).

Welcome to new visitors from Lighting the Void! (and returning friends)

Welcome to new visitors from Lighting the Void! (and returning friends)

Big thank-you out to Joe Rupe, the founder and host of Lighting the Void for having me over to his live radio show and podcast, and a most enjoyable conversation about the connections between the myths and the stars . . . and the implications for our understanding of history, our seemingly-material universe, who we are and what we are doing down here.

The interview below was recorded on Friday, August 10th, 2018. You can listen to it using the embedded player, or download the file to a mobile device to listen while driving to work, doing the dishes, working in the garden, or walking down the block. You can also find the interview on Spotify as well as iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, and wherever else good podcasts are found.

To those visiting here for the first time after listening to the podcast on Lighting the Void, welcome! I'm glad you enjoyed the discussion and hope you will look around the main website at starmythworld.com where you can find links to videos, myths, resources, and all of my books thus far (complete with some sample content and links to order signed copies).

Below are some links to previous blog posts which touch on topics or subjects that came up during my conversation with Joe on Friday:

For those who just learned about Star Myths from Lighting the Void, I hope this information will be a blessing to you in some way, and I hope you will visit again soon!

And for those just learning about Lighting the Void, please give the show some good reviews on Stitcher or iTunes if you enjoyed the interview, subscribe to the LTV channel on YouTube, and support independent media as much as you can!



 

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Hercules and the Northern Crown

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Hercules and the Northern Crown

I've just published a new video entitled "Seeing the Star Myths: Hercules and the Northern Crown."

This video is a follow-up to the previous video on "Seeing the Star Myths: Scorpio and Ophiuchus."

In it, I explain that although an overwhelming amount of evidence demonstrates that the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories follow the very same system of celestial metaphor, this evidence is very difficult for most people to perceive (even if someone explains it), because most people cannot envision the outlines and stars of the various constellations.

However, it doesn't have to be this way! In 1952, famous author H. A. Rey (1898 - 1977) published a book entitled The Stars: A New Way to See Them, in which he lamented the sorry state of depicting the constellations used in most texts of that time (a situation which has hardly improved today, more than sixty-five years later), and the resulting lack of familiarity with the heavens among most men and women. 

The brilliant system he set forth in that text for envisioning the constellations makes it much easier to find the constellations in the night sky -- and, although Rey himself never seems to have mentioned it (an no one else seems to have mentioned it either), his system appears to be the very same system used in the world's ancient myths! 

Some of the undeniable correspondences between his outlines and ancient artwork which appears to be based on those same constellations (and which depict gods and mortals who appear in the various myths around the world) are shown in the above video -- and those examples could literally be multiplied into the hundreds or even the thousands.

This latest video discusses the constellation Hercules -- an extremely important figure in the Star Myths of the World -- with tips on how to find the constellation in the night sky, and discussion of some of the myths from various cultures which are connected to this heavenly figure. The video also discusses the nearby constellation of Corona Borealis (the Northern Crown), and some of its manifestations in world mythology.

I hope you have an opportunity to locate these constellations for yourself, in the infinite realm of the heavens -- perhaps as you settle into a comfortable spot from which to observe some of the Perseid meteor shower.

Enjoy! Please feel free to share with friends and family, to provide feedback on the video page itself, and to subscribe to the Mathisen Corollary YouTube channel in order to receive notification when new videos are published. 

It's time to make your plans for the 2018 Perseid Meteor Shower

It's time to make your plans for the 2018 Perseid Meteor Shower

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

August 11, 12 and 13 are the dates that the annual Perseid meteor shower is expected to peak this year. These nights correspond to the dates of New Moon for the month (on August 11) and a very thin waxing crescent, which has experts predicting that this year's viewing conditions for the Perseid meteor shower could be the best for decades (on either side).

Here is a discussion anticipating this year's Perseid meteor shower from Earthsky.org

Here is a similar discussion from Sky & Telescope.

And here's one that appeared in Forbes with a little more discussion about the ominous comment Swift-Tuttle whose trail creates the annual Perseid shower each year when the earth passes through the debris-trail left by that comet's orbit.

Here's a link to a blog post I wrote seven years ago about the Perseid meteor shower, in 2011. And here's another which discusses why meteor showers tend to occur on the same days each year, and whey they have "given names."

Below is an image from Wikimedia commons in which a time-lapse camera captures several streaking Perseids crossing the circular paths of the stars (circular star-paths which are caused by the spinning of our spherical earth on its orbit):

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

As the above-linked articles make clear, observing the Perseids does not really require any special equipment: naked-eye viewing is best. A reclining chair (especially a lawn-chair) can be helpful, although you can also lie rather comfortably on the hood and windshield of your car, if you want (but be careful if you're not used to doing that). 

Although the Perseids are named for the constellation Perseus, indicating the direction from which they appear to originate in the night sky, as this article from Alan MacRobert at Sky & Telescope's weekly "This Week's Sky at a Glance" column explains:

A shower's radiant is the perspective point where the meteors would all appear to come from if you could see them approaching in the far distance. In fact we see them only in the last second or two as they streak into the Earth's upper atmosphere, and this can happen anywhere in your sky.

Perhaps more important than focusing on any single point in the sky is getting yourself to a propitious point on earth's surface from which to best observe the stars . . . and the meteors.

Fortunately, in the modern era, there are a plethora of tools available to help you select a favorable point on the terrain from which to observe the heavens. The familiar Google Maps gives you the ability to turn on the "terrain" mode for viewing, which is invaluable for conducting a little "map recon" of your local area in order to find pieces of terrain which are likely to offer an excellent view of much of the heavens. To use that feature, simply select "terrain" from the "hamburger" menu pulldown, and then begin to use the contour lines to tell you where the high ground and the low ground is likely to be located, and where on the map you might offer good unobstructed views of the night sky.

You can use the map to find high points created by hills, ridge lines, and saddles in the terrain. If you are not that familiar with topo maps and grid lines, the Google Maps give you some assistance by "shading in" the sides of hills and ridges, so that you can tell which is the high ground and which is the low ground (another clue is to look for places with water, such as ponds or streams, which will always be the lowest region, since water seeks the lowest places to pool).

Below, I offer some examples of places that might offer good views of the night sky, based on a "map recon" using Google Maps and the "terrain" view feature. I simply looked at the contour lines and terrain features, and drew in several little arrows pointing to spots that are likely to offer good unobstructed views of the night sky. Note that some of the locations may be unsuitable due to street lamps or other light pollution -- once you have conducted your map recon, it is advisable to go do an actual in-person recon during daylight hours in order to check for any dangerous features (such as sharp cliffs) and to see if there are streetlights in the area that might necessitate going somewhere else.

For purposes of showing the kinds of terrain features to look for, I chose two locations in California's historic gold country: Angel's Camp and Placerville (both places where I believe author Mark Twain  [Samuel Langhorne Clemens, 1835 - 1910] once stayed for extended periods). The first is Angels Camp:

angels camp with arrows.jpg

Note that all the points marked with red arrows indicate likely points which would offer good star gazing on dark nights (depending on streetlights or other light pollution). These are all locations with a road running through them. The methodology for this map recon involves looking at the contour lines to find hilltops and ridges with roads that might offer easy access to stargazers. You should be able to apply a similar type of recon to your local area, using Google Maps, so that you can plan in advance of the peak Perseid observation nights of August 11, 12 and 13.

Below is another example, showing Placerville, California and using purple arrows to mark likely spots for star-gazing (and meteor-shower watching), depending on the light pollution:

placerville 2 with arrows.jpg

I hope you will have the opportunity to get outside to look for Perseids during this year's Perseid meteor shower, if at all possible. Once you find an observation point which offers good views of the sky, and which seems to be safe and easy enough to locate after dark, all you have to do is go outside during the peak viewing hours for the meteor shower, and look to the heavens. 

 

 

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Scorpio and Ophiuchus

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Scorpio and Ophiuchus

I've just published a new video entitled "Seeing the Star Myths: Scorpio and Ophiuchus."

In it, I explain that an overwhelming amount of evidence points to the conclusion that the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories from cultures on every inhabited continent and island of our planet are based on a common system of celestial metaphor -- but that unless people can envision the constellations, this evidence will be very difficult to see or comprehend, even if someone is trying to present it and explain it.

Unfortunately, most people do not get a clear image of a constellation and outline in their mind when you say "Capricorn" or "Aries" or "Aquarius," although this is not at all their fault -- we're never taught it in school, and they are not addressed in any of the media we are exposed to on a daily basis. 

Not only that, but the way the constellations are usually presented is worse than unhelpful for seeing the constellations in the sky (and for seeing the connections between the myths and the stars). As the famous author H. A. Rey lamented in a book published all the way back in 1952, there are two ways that the constellations are usually presented to us, and both of them are worse than useless. 

One way is with flowery and often full-color images of what the constellations are supposedly intended to represent, and the other way is with abstract jumbles of lines which look nothing at all like what the constellations are intended to represent. Neither one will be of much use for finding the constellations, remembering what they look like, or seeing how the characters and episodes in the Bible and the other myths and sacred stories from around the world are all representative of specific constellations and their motions as part of the endless heavenly cycles.

However, it doesn't have to be that way! As mentioned above, H. A. Rey published a book over sixty-five years ago which provides an outstanding way of envisioning the constellations -- and what's more, appears to have either been based upon the ancient system used around the world in ancient myths and sacred traditions, or else to have independently reproduced it through Rey's own genius (although to my knowledge he never mentioned the connection between his specific outlining system and the ancient myths).

Of course, I can already hear someone (in my imagination) saying that since I myself grew up using this system of envisioning the constellations, published by H. A. Rey in the book The Stars: A New Way to See Them, and because I am so familiar with that system, that is what I unconsciously "project" into the myths. However, that argument is countervailed by the overwhelming number of ancient artifacts, sculptures, and reliefs from multiple cultures on different continents which can clearly be seen to be portraying gods, goddesses, heroes and heroines in postures which are distinctly reminiscent of the outlines of specific constellations -- outlines which match the system of envisioning the constellations published by H. A. Rey in 1952.

For a few examples of this correspondence, see previous blog posts such as this onethis onethis onethis one (note especially the ancient sculpture of Buddha and Vajrapani) and this one, as well as any of my recent books which contain hundreds of illustrations and star charts.

This video, and others to follow, will show a system for envisioning the constellations which should help in finding them in the night sky -- and in seeing them in ancient myths and artwork from around the world.

This one discusses Scorpio and Ophiuchus (with some mention of other nearby constellations, and of course the glorious column of the Milky Way), as well as a few myths from around the world which connect to those constellations.

Enjoy! Please feel free to share with friends and family, to provide feedback on the video page itself, and to subscribe to the Mathisen Corollary YouTube channel in order to receive notification when new videos are published.