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- By Mike Rogers
Nearby
my apartment, a man by the name of Faramarz runs his business. Faramarz
is such a nice, friendly guy - - one of the nicest guys you could ever
hope to meet. Faramarz has been in Japan for over 21 years. He is one
of the few foreigners I have met who has been here longer than I.
Faramarz
is married to a Japanese and his business sells exquisite, handmade Persian
Carpets. These are some of the largest and most beautiful carpets I've
ever seen. They are the kind of things you would see on the floor of a
palace or the office of the CEO of some huge Japanese company. I imagine
that carpets like these grace the floors of places like Buckingham Palace
or the Taj Mahal. Faramarz's handmade carpets are as beautiful and detailed
as any you will ever see.
Faramarz
has two employees named Ramin and Aribizu. These guys impress me so much.
They are so friendly and intelligent. They can each speak more than three
languages and their English is superb. It's amazing that they come from
what many of us in the west would consider a "backward third-world country."
Every
person I have ever met from their country was extremely intelligent and
proficient in several languages. One of my best friends in college was
from the same place, and he could speak English, French, Russian, and
Farsi. Farsi, as some of you may know, is the native language of people
from Persia - - or what we now call Iran.
Last
night, Faramarz invited me over to sit and chat in his office for a few
minutes. It was fun. Faramarz and his two employees had a wager on a sale
that they were working on. The sale didn't go through; Faramarz lost the
bet, so he had to buy ice cream for everyone. I thought:
"What
a bunch of sincere, easy-going, peaceful people."
Faramarz
and I started to discuss world events and I spent my time trying to explain
the thinking of my countrymen. Faramarz and his friends all seemed to
feel sorry for me. Well, not for me exactly - - but for you, me, all of
us we call, "Americans."
You
see, this kind of thinking I have found quite common over these last few
years when I meet people from other countries (and I meet quite a lot
due to my job). It all boils down to this:
"Everyone
all over the world likes American people. We just hate your government."
In
the last year I have met people from Bulgaria, Romania, China, Thailand,
Korea, Australia, England, Scotland, New Zealand, France, Afghanistan,
and Kenya. And they all said basically the same thing. People everywhere
are beginning to despise the United States.
The
talk then went into the Chinese concept of "Ying and Yang." Faramarz explained
to me that what is going on in the Middle East all fits in perfectly with
the concept of Ying and Yang. In Japan, this concept is described as,
"Dark versus Light."
I
was a bit surprised to hear Faramarz explain his take on this concept
to me. I would expect to hear something like this from someone from China
or Korea, but someone from Iran?
Then
again, when you realize that the Middle East has always been the road
to the Far East, it shouldn't be too surprising to hear them speaking
a philosophy that mirrors Eastern
Asian thought.
Simply
put, Ying and Yang represent the balance of everything in the world. Dark
and light, good and evil, you and me.
Yang
is the spirit of "light." He has the side of good and light. We and everything
else that is not dark. Ying is, of course, the complete opposite. Ying
is the "dark" part of the spirit. Evil and darkness; defeat is on his
side of the balance.
In
this Eastern philosophy, balance is everything. If something falls, something
else must come back. That means if one manages to become the most powerful,
the entire universe will be out of balance. So if Yang won, everything
in the world would be happy – but not for long, for the balance
would be upset. And for as long as Yang is in power, the reverse effect
must come into play, and Ying will dominate after that for an equal or
longer period of time - - until the cycle reverses itself again.
Of
course many Westerners might just chuckle at this silly "Eastern" notion.
But last night it dawned on me: I realized that this concept of "Ying
and Yang" is exactly the same as Sir Isaac Newton's Third Law of Motion,
called "Principia
Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis," published in 1686. Isaac
Newton stated:
"...that
for every action (force) there is an equal and opposite reaction."
All
actions are "forces," so this undisputable law says every force has an
equal and opposite force. For every action, there is a reaction. For every
behavior, there is a consequence. Like the rock thrown into the pond,
the ripples radiate out, eventually hitting the shore, and then again
returning to its center. For every act, a consequence.
One
might take issue with my interpretation of how Ying and Yang and Newton's
Third Law of Motion are, ultimately, the exact same thing. But I think
anyone could see where there is a correlation.
Furthermore,
could any educated person in the entire Western world argue with Newton's
Third Law of Motion? I don't think so. Agreed?
Whether
you want to call it Ying and Yang or Newton's Law, it is an undeniable
fact that every action has an equal reaction.
That's
why now I'd like to tell you folks in America a little more about Persia
(Iran):
Did
you know that Persia
is one of the oldest civilizations in the world? And that Persia was once
one of the largest empires the world had ever seen?
Did
you know that, even though Persia has lost battles, it has never been
conquered even once in over 3,000 years?
Did
you know that Iran
has more than three times the population of Iraq, and 63% of that population
is under 31 years old? Did you also know that, geographically speaking,
Iran is four times larger than
Iraq?
Did
you know that Iran's economy was twelve times the size of Iraq's, as of
2003?
Did
you also know that, although no one is sure of the total casualties during
the Iran-Iraq
war of 1979 to 1988, estimates range from 800,000 to 1 million dead,
at least 2 million wounded, and more than 80,000 taken prisoner? That
there were approximately 2.5 million who became refugees and whose cities
were destroyed? That the financial cost is estimated at a minimum of $200
billion? And even though, according to some estimates, Iran lost about
one million soldiers, it was still not defeated?
Of
course, you do know that now the Bush administration and the neocons are
setting America up for a war with Iran. Right?
With
George W. Bush as your next president, go ahead, America, attack Iran.
But, as sure as the sun will rise tomorrow, you will be forced to pay
the piper. And it will, most certainly, be a catastrophically heavy price.
Please
don't send me mail arguing with me about this observation. Argue instead
with Ying and Yang - - or, better yet, argue with Isaac Newton's Third
Law of Motion:
"...for
every action (force) there is an equal and opposite reaction."
~
Thanks to my good friend, Anthony
Gregory, in the editing of this article.
September
17, 2004
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send him
mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to Japan in 1984. He
has worked as an independent writer, producer, and personality in the
mass media for nearly 30 years.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers Archives
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