Russell Brand, UK comic commands revolution, daily Nonduality Highlights,
Dustin LindenSmith: Rich Murray 2013.10.27
http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2013/10/russell-brand-uk-comic-commands.html


http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2013/10/russell-brand-on-revolution

wicked rant...

Brand’s interview with UK journalist Jeremy Paxman is here, and it’s worth
watching in its entirety:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YR4CseY9pk  16 minutes



The Nonduality Highlights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NDhighlights/

#5084 - Sunday, October 27, 2013 - Editor: Dustin LindenSmith

dus...@lindensmith.com<https://mail.google.com/mail/?view=cm&fs=1&tf=1&to=dus...@lindensmith.com>
 via yahoogroups.com
8:37 AM (11 hours ago)


Another video interview with Russell Brand has gone viral this week, to the
point that even my own national Canadian newspaper, The Globe And Mail, has
had one of its columnists, Elizabeth Renzetti, write about it in this piece
called “Revolution may be a tired word, but Russell Brand has struck a
chord”:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/revolution-may-be-a-tired-word-but-russell-brand-has-struck-a-chord/article15096184/

Renzetti correctly points out that if you’re above a certain age, you may
not be likely to have seen the video in question, but that if you’re below
a certain age, Brand’s comments strike directly at the heart of how
disenfranchised, disillusioned, and excluded people feel from the current
geo-political system.

She quotes an illustrative recent statistic that only 19% of Americans
trust their federal government most of the time, compared with 75% fifty
years ago. It would seem that most of us aside from the moneyed few -- the
1% of the 1% especially -- are completely disillusioned with the current
system as it now stands. Comedian and political satirist Jon Stewart has
won a poll as the most respected news source in America, and for one of the
first times in my memory as a young 40-year-old, I am now seeing
celebrities like Brand express opinions that used to be publicly held only
by far left-wing environmental and social activists or spiritual teachers.

What I've noticed in the discussions that have ensued on my own Facebook
posts on this topic is that people over a certain age have been quick to
dismiss Brand’s ideas because they appear ( to them ) to lack specificity,
concrete purpose or planning. But our friend Wayne Ferguson correctly
pointed out the following in a recent dialogue he had with Jerry Katz:

It's unseemly [ to say the least ! -- ed. ] that we would spend a trillion
dollars devastating the lives of people in Iraq and Afghanistan and we
aren't willing to fund a single-payer health-care system in this country.

Russell Brand doesn't exactly know how this is going to unfold, but it is
clear that the status quo won't do. He is much more aware of and sensitive
to reality than the power elite that are only concerned with preserving and
augmenting their well feathered nests.

Brand’s interview with UK journalist Jeremy Paxman is here, and it’s worth
watching in its entirety:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YR4CseY9pk

I have literally been moved to tears by several of the sentiments expressed
in this interview, and also in the editorial piece that Brand has written
for The New Statesman that inspired this interview in the first place. To
wit:

The Agricultural Revolution took thousands of years, the Industrial
Revolution took hundreds of years, the Technological Revolution took tens,
the Spiritual Revolution has come and we have only an instant to act.

Now is the time to continue the great legacy of the left, in harmony with
its implicit spiritual principles. Time may only be a human concept and
therefore ultimately unreal, but what is irrefutably real is that this is
the time for us to wake up.

The revolution of consciousness is a decision, decisions take a moment. In
my mind the revolution has already begun.

Brand had the opportunity to expand on these ideas in his piece in The New
Statesman, below:

http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2013/10/russell-brand-on-revolution

>From the preceding, here are just a few highlights:

Capitalism is not real; it is an idea. America is not real; it is an idea
that someone had ages ago. Britain, Christianity, Islam, karate, Wednesdays
are all just ideas that we choose to believe in and very nice ideas they
are, too, when they serve a purpose. These concepts, though, cannot be
served to the detriment of actual reality.

The reality is we have a spherical ecosystem, suspended in, as far as we
know, infinite space upon which there are billions of carbon-based life
forms, of which we presume ourselves to be the most important, and a
limited amount of resources.

The only systems we can afford to employ are those that rationally serve
the planet first, then all humanity. Not out of some woolly, bullshit
tree-hugging piffle but because we live on it, currently without
alternatives. This is why I believe we need a unifying and inclusive
spiritual ideology: atheism and materialism atomise us and anchor us to one
frequency of consciousness and inhibit necessary co-operation.

Brand also writes eloquently on the much broader historical context of our
current paradigm:

Suffering of this magnitude affects us all. We have become prisoners of
comfort in the absence of meaning. A people without a unifying myth.

Joseph Campbell, the comparative mythologist, says our global problems are
all due to the lack of relevant myths. That we are trying to sustain social
cohesion using redundant ideologies devised for a population that lived in
deserts millennia ago. What does it matter if 2,000 years ago Christ died
on the cross and was resurrected if we are not constantly resurrected to
the truth, anew, moment to moment? How is his transcendence relevant if we
do not resurrect our consciousness from the deceased, moribund mind of our
obsolete ideologies and align with our conditions?

The model of pre-Christian man has fulfilled its simian objectives. We have
survived, we have created agriculture and cities. Now this version of man
must be sacrificed that we can evolve beyond the reaches of the ape. These
stories contain great clues to our survival when we release ourselves from
literalism and superstition. What are ideologies other than a guide for
life? Throughout paganism one finds stories that integrate our species with
our environment to the benefit of both. The function and benefits of these
belief matrixes have been lost, with good reason. They were socialist,
egalitarian and integrated. If like the Celtic people we revered the rivers
we would prioritise this sacred knowledge and curtail the attempts of any
that sought to pollute the rivers. If like the Nordic people we believed
the souls of our ancestors lived in the trees, this connection would make
mass deforestation anathema. If like the native people of America we
believed God was in the soil what would our intuitive response be to the
implementation of fracking?

I find those last sentiments to be truly moving, and the reason why I
highlight them in this issue of The Nonduality Highlights is because they
attempt to transcend the status-quo narrative that so many individuals in
the broader society are (perhaps mindlessly?) entrenched in.

Looking beyond "the story" to the unified nature of our reality is perhaps
the most concrete "action" we can take in actualizing the nondual
perspective. I continue to appreciate deeply such lucid and articulate
expressions of this insight in the mainstream.

Proof that the message is getting out there is that Paxman's interview with
Brand had just over a half-million views when I first watched it earlier
this week, and it's now approaching 7 million.

Dustin


within the fellowship of service, Rich Murray
619-623-3468
Imperial Beach, CA 91932
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