Champions Renaissance

(Answer at the end).

CRUELTY

By Charles Kocian

Less than a week after the Daily Star posed the question: Does a head of lettuce have a longer shelf-life than Liz Truss’ time in office? her resignation occurred. It happened after a growing opposition and, the day before, the leader of the opposition in the House of Lords, Baroness Smith of Basildon, also referenced to the lettuce. “How embarrassing is it when, across the world, the media picks up on The Economist editorial that says the prime minister’s likely shelf life is shorter than that of a lettuce,” he said.

The Daily Star’s experiment turned Twitter into a rain of memes and, instead of representing humankind creativity, it turned into a kind of social media cruelty or instrument of psychological torture.

Daily Star asked if a lettuce have a longer shelf-life than Liz Truss’ time in office.

Brexit leader Nigel Farage believes that the Conservative Party is in need of replacing. He thinks that there has been a “globalist coup” with the installation of finance minister Jeremy Hunt, a globalist and opponent of Brexit, who is acting as the “president of the United Kingdom” for his final say over policy decisions during the last days of Liz Truss.

“The Conservative Party is now showing its true colours,” and he added that “politically it never ever believed in Brexit.”

“I have to tell you they are the most self-centred selfish people I’ve ever met in my life, they’re in politics not for their beliefs, not for what they can do for the country, they’re in it for their own ghastly little careers,” he added.

Nigel Farage in London with followers.

Mr Farage said that he would be looking for key defectors from the Tory Party in order to legitimise a move against the Conservatives.

Is true that the lettuce won the contest but we shall not forget that, as Aristotle said: “at his best, man is the noblest of animals, separated from law and justice is the worst.”

It looks like Liz Truss fall was caused by her radical policies that broke liberal UK’s political consensus.

Speaking of the human species, according to Gustav Le Bon’s book Psychology of Crowds, all kind of crowds are irrational and opposes objective reality. That happened to Darwin and, centuries before in the Renaissance, to Galileo, when he preferred to trust his telescope rather than Inquisition’s political consensus.

Before Galileo was ordered to abstain from his ideas, the Inquisition showed to him The Rack, an instrument of torture where the prisoner was tied by the hands and feet on a table. The strings were wound around a wheel to stretch them until they were dismembered.

The Rack: torture instrument of the Catholic Inquisition.

Galileo was ordered to abandon its idea that the earth moves around the sun. His views of the Universe were against the Pope so he condemned Galileo for believing in his telescope.

Galileo formally declared its ideas false to stay out of death and, following the Inquisition’s 1616 judgment, the works of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler and others were also banned by the Vatican.

Science showed centuries later that the Vatican were holding wrong premises. The objective truth is that the earth moves around the sun. Are globalists sustaining wrong premises today? Why banning free speech and abandon critical thinking skills, again? Before answering this let’s look cruelty in ancient Greece: the brazen bull.

The brazen bull was an instrument of torture in ancient Greece.

The brazen bull was invented by Perillos of Athens somewhere between 570 and 554 BC, during the reign of Phalaris in Sicily. The head of the bull was designed with tubes so that the prisoner’s screams were converted into infuriated bull sounds. Phalaris was killed in the brazen bull when he was overthrown by Telemachus, his political opponent.

The Romans said they used this torture device to kill Christians, like Saint Eustace, who was roasted in a brazen bull with his wife and children by Emperor Hadrian. The same fate happened to Saint Antipas during the persecutions of Emperor Domitian.

Perhaps is time to ask if man’s cruelty is worse than of a scorpion.

The Frog and The Scorpion Fable

The Scorpion and The Frog Fable tell us that, once upon a time there was a scorpion who wanted to cross a lake. “Frog, carry me on your back to the other shore” and the frog replied: “for no reason because you’re going to kill me”. But the scorpion replied: “don’t be silly, if you die, I die too.” Believing there was no danger the crossing proceeds but, in the middle of the lake the scorpion stung the frog. “What have you done!” the frog yelled. “I’m sorry, I couldn’t help it, it’s my nature” the scorpion replied and both died.

CONCLUSION

Man, in West and East institutions, public and secret, ruled man and man’s rulers, should all review their premises now, because if the snowball get big enough it will be too late for all, no matter who is the scorpion or the frog.

But I must say that perhaps, the warmongers who have their fallout shelters ready they don’t care an Armageddon and maybe is what they are looking for to reduce population after the virus failed.

How far can man’s cruelty go?

I will end with the words of Aristotle again, who defined man as a rational animal. He said: “Man at his best, is the noblest of all animals but, separated from law and justice, is the worst.”

Now answer to question 22.

QUESTION N° 22

The Vatican rewarded Galileo because he discovered with his telescope that the Earth moved.

a) True

b) False

The answer is: false.

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