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moritherapy

Last seen: 3 weeks ago

Isabella is a 54 year old woman from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

I'm a psychotherapist and writer. Intersted in a million things. Excited about helping people reach for the really good lives they are meant to have - because happiness is something that will always spill over. My web site is Counselling in Vancouver.

  • Orcinus

    Rated Aug 30 1 review activism, peace, politics, books blogspot.com

    Eliminationism is a concept I first heard about yesterday. Here is an explanation of it:

    From the page: "What, really, is eliminationism?

    It's a fairly self-explanatory term: it describes a kind of politics and culture that shuns dialogue and the democratic exchange of ideas for the pursuit of outright elimination of the opposing side, either through complete suppression, exile and ejection, or extermination.

    I first encountered it in Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners, which is in many regards a problematic text, especially insofar as it describes prewar German society as almost uniquely predisposed to antisemitism. But Goldhagen's text correctly identifies and describes the essence of the Nazi campaign against the Jews as eliminationist in nature, something that was made undeniably manifest in the Holocaust.

    But while eliminationism's most startling historical example was provided by the Nazis, it also has a long and appalling history in the annals of American democracy. It was manifest in the genocidal wars against Native Americans, when "the only good Indian was a dead Indian": in the many anti-immigrant campaigns waged by Nativists of many different stripes; in night-riding Ku Klux Klansmen, Jim Crow segregation, and the lynch mobs who murdered thousands of innocent blacks during the heyday of white supremacism; in the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in World War II; in the continuing march of hate crimes that target various kinds of "undesirable" members of society for terrorization and exclusion; and in the lingering far-right "militias" and related hate groups who scapegoat minorities and immigrants, gays and lesbians, government officials, and liberals generally, making them the targets of both hateful rhetoric and actual violence.

    Eliminationism in truth forms the really hateful, violent core of fascism, the facet that distinguishes the real item from its pseudo manifestations (though of course not all eliminationism is necessarily fascist). It glories in violence, in action over intellect, and always insists, of course, that it represents the true national identity."
    Orcinus
  • God Has a Dream - Desmond Tutu - Adobe Reader PDF eBook -...

    Rated Aug 29 1 review christianity, books, religion, spirituality, africa ebookmall.com

    can't review this book because i haven't read it yet but would very much like to. has anyone else read it?
    God Has a Dream - Desmond Tutu - Adobe Reader PDF eBook - Download Now!
  • White Readers Meet Black Authors: Buy a book for somebody white this holiday
  • The Old Closes and Streets of Glasgow

    Rated Dec 17 2008 1 review history, poverty, scotland, photography, books gla.ac.uk

    Glasgow photographer Thomas Annan's book "The Old Closes and Streets of Glasgow". Created between 1868 and 1871 as part of a commission from the City of Glasgow Improvements Trust, this collection of images of the working class areas of old Glasgow helped document the impoverished living conditions of the working class at the time.

    The Old Closes and Streets of Glasgow
  • & Neuroplasticity and the Brain That Changes Itself&& &...

    Rated Nov 15 2008 1 review psychology, science, books, neuroscience sharpbrains.com

    A review of an interesting book about neuroscience. From the page: "The Brain That Changes Itself: Stores of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science, is a compelling collection of tales about the amazing abilities of the brain to rewire, readjust and relearn after having a slice of itself rendered dysfunctional. The first seven chapters captivated me for their personal stories; the final four chapters for the science and philosophy."
     & Neuroplasticity and the Brain That Changes Itself&& & Brain Fitness Revolution at SharpBrains &&&&
  • gladwell.com

    Rated Nov 10 2008 9 reviews science, books, blogs, statistics typepad.com

    Malcolm Gladwell of "Blink" and "Tipping Point" fame has a blog! Yay!!!
    gladwell.com
  • The Spy Who Tried to Stop a War | p3books.com

    Rated Nov 10 2008 1 review activism, peace, politics, books, war p3books.com

    Just listened to an interview with Katharine Gunn, "The Spy Who Tried To Stop A War." A very impressive woman. Fro mthe page: "In the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, a young British intelligence officer thought she had information that could halt the march to war. To leak that information, however, would mean breaking her pledge to protect state secrets.

    In the end, Katherine Gun decided to reveal what she had discovered--an illegal plot to influence the UN's authorization of the invasion. Gun's decision led to her arrest and sparked a legal, political, and media firestorm."

    The Spy Who Tried to Stop a War | p3books.com
  • Integral Options Cafe: The Misshapen Mind: How the Brains...

    Rated Aug 21 2008 1 review psychology, books, neuroscience blogspot.com

    Yes, the brain is a beautiful thing - but not because it's a feat of perfect engineering. It is, in fact, a rather ineffcient piece of machinery (I think I read somewhere the other day that the brain of an octopus or some such marine creature is way, way better engineered). From the page:

    "The older parts of the brain, call them our reptilian legacy, had much longer to mature. As a result, in many situations, especially when quick responses are demanded, they simply overwhelm our rational side, stampeding us into actions that don't really stand up to serious analysis.

    Thus, we see an act of violence in the media (whether it be a single person being kidnapped and murdered, as with the 1993 celebrated Polly Klaas case in California, or mass slaughter, as with September 11), and we respond with a potpourri of inchoate fear, panic, and rage. We feel that the certainties governing our lives have been shattered. Rarely do we successfully step back and analyze the likelihood or unlikelihood of such an event impacting us. "

    Integral Options Cafe: The Misshapen Mind: How the Brains Haphazard Evolution Left Us with Self-Destructive Instincts
  • Roots: The Saga of an American Family - Wikipedia, the...

    Rated Aug 08 2008 2 reviews african americans, history, writing, books wikipedia.org

    I finally started reading "Roots". It's an engaging and important story but I soon started to have the niggling feeling that it's probably not as well-researched as is commonly assumed. And wouldn't you know it: it's not really a novelization of facts but rather mostly a work of the imagination - and not just Alex Haley's imagination but also Harold Courlander's, whose book "The African" was clearly plagiarized by Haley. - A good and useful read anyway, just needs to be taken with a few grainfuls of salt.
    Roots: The Saga of an American Family - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Came of Age Before Computers

    Rated Aug 04 2008 1 review internet, language, psychology, books, blogs blogspot.com

    Another post about reading print instead of on the internet. Researcher Dr. Amryanne Wolf ... "her intention was to describe the "miraculous" deep reading process. When it comes to reading, she said, "the point of it all is to take what you read and then think and infer and gain insight. It is really beyond what a lot of people think about as 'just' reading. It's deep thinking .. and it takes place in one hundred to two hundred milliseconds. Over the eight years that she was writing the book "I had a completely different world on my hands".

    Came of Age Before Computers