A quotation from Josh Billings

Whare thare iz one man obstinate bekauze he iz wize, thare iz 4,695,853 obstinate bekauze they are ignorant.
 
[Where there is one man obstinate because he is wise, there are 4,685,853 obstinate because they are ignorant.]

Josh Billings (1818-1885) American humorist, aphorist [pseud. of Henry Wheeler Shaw]
Josh Billings’ Farmer’s Allminax, 1874-12 (1874 ed.)

More about this quote: wist.info/billings-josh/83874/

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #joshbillings #conviction #determination #ignorance #obstinacy #sticktoit #stubbornness #wisdom

Billings, Josh - Josh Billings' Farmer's Allminax, 1874-12 (1874 ed.) | WIST Quotations

Whare thare iz one man obstinate bekauze he iz wize, thare iz 4,695,853 obstinate bekauze they are ignorant. [Where there is one man obstinate because he is wise, there are 4,685,853 obstinate because they are ignorant.]

WIST Quotations

#341: How Radical Should You Be In Your Belief?

https://youtu.be/mOoLMJQRrQY

How radical should you be in your belief? If you believe in something, shouldn’t you aim to believe in it more? So, let’s discuss.

All of us have our ideas that we prefer over others. All of us may have our political, religious, cultural preferences. There’s nothing wrong with that. That’s what we do. That’s what makes us human.

If we believe deeply that something is correct, that something is good, should we not think also that more of that is better? It’s a seductive idea and it seems logical initially. If you are X, if you believe in X, shouldn’t you believe in it more so? That seems to be the case because otherwise why would you believe in it? Is your belief really that weak that you can’t strengthen it?

So that’s the idea. And if you for some reason don’t want to fully commit, maybe you really never believed it completely. Maybe you’re not really a true believer. That’s the other part of the idea.

However, I would say this ignores certain facts about ideas, because every idea — whether it’s a religion, a philosophy, a cultural preference — typically has safeguards. When you look at all the big religions, they have some sort of clause, some sort of warning against taking it too far. Because that’s what the very idea of divinity is. That’s what the very idea of God is: that which we as human beings cannot completely understand. God is that which we cannot even approach so much that we can be certain of what God is. Because if we could, wouldn’t that mean in some way that we could become God? And that’s the very warning that most religions promote.

Believe, but don’t assume for a moment that you have all the answers.

There’s this joke that camels always look at humans in a specific way. The joke is that God has 100 names. We know 99 of them. But the camel knows all 100. And that’s why the camel looks so superior.

But that is the idea of religion. The idea of religion is a combination — as strange as this may sound — of belief and humility. We are not God. We are not everything in the universe. We are not all-knowing. We are not omnipotent. And we will never get there. So whatever you think of as God — whether you think that’s a religious idea, whether you think that’s nature, whether you think that’s the universe, whether you think that’s just the ultimate good — this idea is clear: do not pretend to be all-knowing yourself. Have some sense of humility.

Now that also goes for philosophy. You may say, I follow philosopher so-and-so. But philosophy is an ongoing conversation about wisdom — the love of wisdom; that’s what philosophia means. Each idea in philosophy lives in interaction with other ideas. Philosophy is more than just footnotes to Plato. Plato can be footnotes to Plato — if you look at the Laws and the Republic, there are two very different ideas there, and more than two.

Philosophers are typically smarter than those who follow a specific philosophy. Because every philosopher knows that in order to put out the strongest version of their idea, they have to leave some of the complications out. But there are always complications. And philosophy X always lives in some form of exchange with philosophy Y or Z or however many there are. Every idea lives in an ecosystem of ideas. It lives in relation with others.

Philosophy X may be good or better in certain respects than philosophy Y. Maybe philosophy Y is good in other aspects. But the truth emerges in the interaction between the two.

So you may believe that the individual is the source of all morality. But how far do you want to take this? Do you believe this to the complete abdication of responsibility for others? Do you believe this to the complete rejection of the state? Similarly, if you believe the state is the authority over everything else, at which point does this have to stop? At which point does the state have to even question itself as to how far it should go?

Everything costs money. Does this mean that everything should be judged by its price tag? Even though price is not a static thing — it depends on a lot of factors. Is the price tag always the value of something, or is it just our momentary expression of our social and cultural priorities? Of course there’s supply and demand which regulate that. But is that still everything? Aren’t there things where we should find some difficulty putting a price on? Aren’t there some things that we can’t really measure very well? So isn’t there a limit to this kind of positivist, materialist way of looking at things?

Equally, if we say the materialistic world doesn’t matter and we need to live in a more spiritual, contemplative state of mind — that may be true to a point, but eventually bills will have to be paid. You do live in some form of reality, and that reality means that resources typically are limited and there needs to be a prioritizing. How do you organize that?

The material and the spiritual belong together. They will always have friction between each other, but they will always complement each other. If you’re too materialistic — if you believe that only that which can be measured, only that which can be owned, only that which can have a price tag matters — you should maybe think about some more spiritual components of life. If you’re too spiritual, maybe you need to be rooted more in the fact that there’s also a materialist component of life.

If X drowns out Y, sides of X may appear that make it wrong, because you need that balance. And there are more than just two — X and Y is easier, but you could say XYZ or whatever.

So in fact the saying may be true that too much of a good thing is indeed not good. It distorts what it is.

This is why you see me frequently call for moderation. You could argue that too much moderation is also wrong — you need some passion and some intensity and some belief. Well, yes. But moderation can also be just a middle ground between these different poles. All these different ideas around us lead us to negotiate our space within them. Moderation does not mean you don’t have convictions. It means that you question at which point your convictions turn into such a radicality, into such an extreme version, that they become wrong — that they are undermined by their own conviction.

Is radicality the truest expression of an idea? No. It may be the most flamboyant, the most interesting. But it can’t survive well. If you turn too radical, too extremist, your idea may be more attractive to people who really think like you. But then look at history. Every time an idea became too radical, it fails. It has failed. No matter what the idea — because in its radicality, in its extremism, it loses its power of conviction towards those who don’t agree with you. And the number of people in the world who agree with you is always going to be punctuated by the number of people who disagree with you.

If you want to build a successful movement, if you want to build a successful approach to politics, to religion, to whatever your cultural or social idea may be, you need to convince others. You need to find ways of integrating aspects of the other into your own.

Which is why this very familiar symbol of yin and yang — masculine, feminine, black, white, dark, light — shows you these two parts, but there’s always something of the other in the bigger part. You know the symbol.

If we don’t find a way to integrate that with which we disagree — as some sense of doubt, as some sense of humility within our convictions — then our convictions will be nothing but arrogance, nothing but self-congratulatory pose, and turn out to be nothing else than solipsism: centering on yourself and that which you think defines you as the only thing that matters.

[This was originally posted to YouTube as a video. This post is a slightly abbreviated transcript, preserving the oral style of the video.]

#2026 #balance #beliefAndHumility #camelJoke #conviction #convictionVsArrogance #criticalThinking #culturalCommentary #divinity #doubt #ecosystemOfIdeas #extremism #God #humility #ideas #ideology #individualVsState #integration #Laws #loveOfWisdom #materialism #moderation #moderationVsExtremism #philosophia #Philosophy #Plato #politicalCommentary #politicalPhilosophy #politicalTheory #positivism #priceAndValue #publicPhilosophy #radicalism #radicality #religionAndReason #Republic #selfCongratulation #solipsism #spirituality #successfulMovements #tooMuchOfAGoodThing #trueBeliever #wisdom #yinAndYang

Développement personnel : assez de faux miracles

Une phrase ne répare pas une vie.

Publicités

Chaque jour, les réseaux sociaux débordent de promesses. Une citation à répéter. Une méthode miracle. Trois étapes pour guérir. Cinq minutes pour transformer votre existence.

C’est séduisant. Rapide. Rassurant.

Mais profondément trompeur.

Publicités

L’illusion vend mieux que la vérité

Le développement personnel est devenu un marché. Un immense marché. Et comme tout marché, il attire autant les passionnés que les marchands d’espoir.

On vous vend des raccourcis vers le bonheur.

Comme si une blessure profonde pouvait disparaître avec une affirmation répétée devant un miroir.

Comme si des années de souffrance pouvaient s’effacer en récitant quelques mots bien choisis.

La vérité est moins glamour. Mais elle est infiniment plus puissante.

Publicités

Une citation n’est pas une transformation

Une belle phrase peut inspirer.

Elle peut éveiller une prise de conscience. Ouvrir une porte. Allumer une lumière.

Mais elle ne fait pas le travail à votre place.

Comprendre n’est pas guérir.

Savoir n’est pas changer.

La transformation commence quand vous osez regarder ce qui, en vous, demande à être entendu.

Publicités

Le vrai changement dérange

Changer, ce n’est pas ajouter des couches de positivité sur une douleur intacte.

C’est aller à sa rencontre.

C’est accepter de voir ses peurs, ses blessures, ses mécanismes de protection.

C’est inconfortable.

Parfois même bouleversant.

Mais c’est là que tout commence.

Publicités

Le danger des promesses faciles

À force de croire aux solutions instantanées, beaucoup finissent par se sentir coupables.

“Pourquoi cela fonctionne-t-il pour les autres et pas pour moi ?”

La réponse est simple.

Parce que vous n’êtes pas un problème à réparer en urgence.

Vous êtes un être humain à comprendre.

Aucune formule magique ne peut remplacer un véritable travail intérieur.

Publicités

Derrière le mal-être, un message

Chaque émotion a une fonction.

Chaque blocage raconte une histoire.

Chaque souffrance cherche à être reconnue.

L’ignorer ou la recouvrir de pensées positives, c’est comme peindre un mur fissuré sans réparer la structure.

La fissure reviendra. Toujours.

Souvent plus profonde.

Publicités

Ma conviction

Je ne crois pas aux miracles vendus en kit.

Je crois à la puissance d’une rencontre authentique avec soi-même.

Je crois que l’apaisement naît lorsque l’on cesse de fuir ce que l’on ressent.

C’est précisément là que j’interviens.

À travers la conversation hypnotique, j’aide chacun à entendre ce que ses émotions tentent de lui dire depuis parfois des années.

Non pas pour masquer la douleur.

Mais pour la comprendre, la libérer et retrouver un équilibre durable.

Publicités

La vraie révolution intérieure

Le développement personnel n’est pas un spectacle.

Ce n’est pas une collection de citations.

Ce n’est pas une course à la perfection.

C’est un retour à soi.

Un chemin exigeant, mais profondément libérateur.

Et si la plus grande illusion n’était pas de croire aux miracles…

Mais de penser que l’on peut guérir sans jamais se rencontrer vraiment ?

La vraie transformation commence le jour où vous cessez de chercher des recettes, pour enfin écouter ce qui vit en vous.

Publicités Publicités Publicités

Développement personnel : assez de faux miracles

par Khalid Akayousse2 mai 2026

Croyance ou spiritualité : la différence qui change tout

par Khalid Akayousse2 mai 2026

Pourquoi tu répètes toujours les mêmes schémas de vie… et comment en sortir

par Khalid Akayousse1 mai 2026

Décrypter les messages de votre inconscient en 3 étapes

par Khalid Akayousse1 mai 2026

Le passé ne meurt jamais

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Les 3 pièges invisibles qui bloquent votre bien-être

par Khalid Akayousse1 mai 2026

Ma méthode : libérer le mal-être à la racine

par Khalid Akayousse1 mai 2026

Ce que votre corps révèle sur vos émotions cachées

par Khalid Akayousse30 avril 2026

La vérité que personne ne vous dit sur la guérison émotionnelle

par Khalid Akayousse30 avril 2026

Ce que voit une personne négative… et ce qu’une personne positive perçoit

par Khalid Akayousse29 avril 2026

Quand l’émotion rencontre la clarté

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Je traverse une rupture

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Je manque de confiance : et si le vrai problème n’était pas celui que vous croyez ?

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Je souffre d’anxiété

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Pourquoi les gens tombent malades sans comprendre

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Personne ne te dit que ton état d’esprit peut te détruire

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Ton mental fabrique ce que ton corps subit

par Khalid Akayousse27 avril 2026

Et si tu étais le problème ?

par Khalid Akayousse25 avril 2026

Lettre ouverte à mes lecteurs

par Khalid Akayousse24 avril 2026

On t’a blessé… ?

par Khalid Akayousse24 avril 2026

Tu fais de ton mieux… vraiment ?

par Khalid Akayousse24 avril 2026

Tu n’as pas besoin de te battre autant

par Khalid Akayousse24 avril 2026

Tout peut changer

par Khalid Akayousse24 avril 2026

DERRIÈRE LA COLÈRE… CE QUE PERSONNE N’OSE REGARDER

par Khalid Akayousse23 avril 2026

Un silence… une histoire

par Khalid Akayousse23 avril 2026

NOTRE FORCE S’ARRÊTE LÀ OÙ NOTRE PEUR COMMENCE

par Khalid Akayousse22 avril 2026

Et si l’autre était juste un miroir ?

par Khalid Akayousse20 avril 2026

Il y a quelque chose que tu évites de voir

par Khalid Akayousse18 avril 2026

LA… MAINTENANT

par Khalid Akayousse18 avril 2026

TU T’ÉLOIGNES DES AUTRES… ET TU NE VEUX PAS VOIR POURQUOI

par Khalid Akayousse17 avril 2026

La conversation hypnotique, c’est une manière de parler qui utilise des mots simples, des images et des suggestions pour contourner les résistances conscientes et toucher directement l’inconscient.

En clair :
C’est une conversation naturelle qui amène la personne à se détendre, lâcher prise et voir autrement ce qu’elle vit, sans qu’elle ait l’impression d’être “hypnotisée”.

Elle permet de :

  • apaiser les émotions
  • changer une perception
  • ouvrir de nouvelles possibilités intérieures

On pourrait résumer en une phrase :
Parler autrement pour permettre à l’autre de ressentir et changer profondément, sans forcer.

#changement #citation #conviction #déranger #développementPersonnel #derrière #facile #faux #illusion #intérieur #malêtre #message #mieux #miracle #promesse #révolution #Transformation #vérité #vendre #vie
3/ What we’re actually waiting for is the political will, the capital, and the consumer pressure to scale what we already know works. That gap between ‘we have the solution’ and ‘we’re deploying it at scale’ is the only real obstacle. And that gap is closeable. 🌿 #conviction #commitment

3/
What we’re actually waiting for is the political will, the capital, and the consumer pressure to scale what we already know works.

That gap between ‘we have the solution’ and ‘we’re deploying it at scale’ is the only real obstacle.
And that gap is closeable. 🌿

#conviction #commitment

Hundreds march in Whitehorse to protest manslaughter conviction
About 450 people gathered in downtown Whitehorse Tuesday to protest a recent Yukon Supreme Court decision and advocate for judicial reform.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/over-450-people-march-whitehorse-protest-manslaughter-conviction-9.7180569?cmp=rss
Wet'suwet'en chief can't cite Indigenous law to overturn criminal conviction, B.C. court rules
Chief Dsta’hyl sought to overturn his conviction related to Coastal GasLink pipeline opposition.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/wet-suwet-en-chief-coastal-gaslink-conviction-9.7180386?cmp=rss
Wet'suwet'en chief can't cite Indigenous law to overturn criminal conviction, B.C. court rules
Chief Dsta’hyl sought to overturn his conviction related to Coastal GasLink pipeline opposition.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/wet-suwet-en-chief-coastal-gaslink-conviction-9.7180386?cmp=rss

Why I’m going to write about Israel

I’m an active part of this vibrant poetry community on WordPress. Many here are not just fellow writers but people I consider friends. That’s part of why I’m writing this.

I’ve decided to write a series of posts about Israel, Gaza, and the broader war with Iranian proxies. This is not something I want to do, and it’s not in my interest to do it. But I’ve decided to do it anyway.

In our community, views on geopolitics vary widely. But when Israel comes up—especially in relation to Gaza or Lebanon—the tone is almost always critical, often escalating to accusations of genocide. Those who are more supportive of Israel generally don’t write about it; most aren’t from Israel, and it isn’t their priority. So the conversation moves in one direction, largely unchallenged.

For me, writing about this is not a winning proposition. I’ll likely take heat, I may lose followers, and I won’t gain any. This is not the blog I set out to create, and it’s not the blog I want—I want a poetry blog, focused on self-exploration, ethical reflection, and personal writing, with some prose alongside the poems.

But when I read posts about Gaza, I often see reactions formed from partial and often sensationalized coverage. The emotions are real, and the concern is real, but the conclusions, as I see them, are often disconnected from the underlying facts. The word that keeps appearing is genocide.

What is happening in Gaza, and similarly in southern Lebanon, is a war against enemies that embed themselves within civilian areas—and in Gaza, also extensively beneath them. That does not make civilian harm acceptable, but it does matter for how the situation is defined. By definition, this is not genocide.

There’s also a practical difficulty for me. It is much easier to react than to respond: attaching a word like genocide to something emotionally overwhelming takes comparatively little effort, while defining terms, examining evidence, and writing something careful and grounded takes much more. That imbalance shapes the conversation, where the fastest claims travel furthest—even when they are the least substantiated.

It’s also why I’ve avoided writing about this. Doing it responsibly requires time, research, and precision—far more than making a facile accusation. At the same time, I’m aware that as an Israeli, as a Jew, as a Zionist, I’m easy to dismiss; it’s simple to say, “Of course he would say that.”

I could ignore these posts, and that would certainly be easier. But to me, that feels like cowardice—because I know I’m outnumbered in our community. When one view dominates so completely, silence starts to look like agreement, and no one else in this space is likely to make the case for why the war in Gaza is not genocide.

What I see instead are powerful, often graphic descriptions of suffering paired with the word genocide, without a clear demonstration of why it applies. The result is that the term begins to lose meaning. And when everything is called genocide, it becomes harder—not easier—to hold Israel accountable for real wrongdoing, because a maximalist accusation leaves no room for serious critique or distinction.

So I’m choosing to step into this. Not because it helps me—it doesn’t—but because I care about the truth, and because for all its flaws, I love my country and my people. I am proud of Israel, and proud to be Israeli.

I also want to be clear that I understand the emotional reaction to what people are seeing from Gaza. As a human being, I feel that too. I don’t dismiss it; I disagree with how it’s being interpreted.

I am bringing geopolitics into a space many of us use for poetry and reflection, and I don’t take that lightly. But at some point, truth has to take precedence over comfort. At minimum, I think it’s worth hearing a perspective that is largely absent from our community, especially from someone who lives it.

This is not about winning arguments. It’s about putting a perspective on record, knowing the cost—and being willing to take the heat.

#Accountability #Conviction #Hamas #Hezbollah #Integrity #Iran #Israel #Narrative #Truth #Voice #War
Ontario driver who killed woman, 3 daughters has appeals dismissed
Brady Robertson had appealed both his conviction and his sentence after being found guilty of dangerous and impaired driving causing death.
#Crime #BradyRobertson #ImpairedDriving #KarolinaCiasullo
https://globalnews.ca/news/11812679/brady-robertson-appeal-dismissed-dangerous-driving-conviction/