ME (supreme) ME

From: jaan.ranniko@smtpgw.aftrs.edu.au
Date: Fri Aug 11 2000 - 16:36:57 MDT


     
     A suspicious letter drops through the slot in the door.
     
     It has a plastic window through which you read:
     
     Congratulations on your new purchase:
     "supreme meme" is "No idea is sacred"
     You may already have won MORE!
     
     You wipe your sweaty brow and tear the envelope open...
     
     
     
     Here is the fine print:
     
     Whether the idea / notion / concept / label / category / belief /
     slogan / vehicle of cultural appropriation of "meme" ...
     (delete whatever proves applicable / inapplicable)
     ...is really built to include paradox.
     
     Because "No idea is sacred" is not a paradox, nor is it true; just as
     "No idea is sacred, except the sacred ones." is. The logical
     equivalent of the value statement "no idea is sacred" is "No statement
     is true." which is a paradox, as is "Nothing is true" as in "Nothing
     is true, everything is permitted.". If you accept the logical
     equivalent, you accept the paradox. If you stick with last week's
     "supreme meme" which is "No idea is sacred" you buy the problems of
     defining "sacred", and which dictionary best defines it? And who wrote
     that? And who told them? Someone will eventually tell you that god
     told them, and then you'll have a schizophrenic on your hands, telling
     you this is sacred and that's sacred and now it's time to make war
     with the infidel because they say the sacred sandal of OofaBlathaTekk
     smells like curry and we know it smells like cheese.
     
     So: reject falsity in a world where nothing is true
                               or
     Establish and enshrine new hierarchies of nonsense (new AND IMPROVED!)
     
     What's yer poison, cowboy?
     
     
     
     The qualifying factor that could make "meme" special enough to
     
     also represent paradox is that it is, I believe, a french term
     
     equivalent to "mama".
     
     
     And while you're at it, why not consider
     
     why the concept of meme was ever invented
     
     in the first place
     
     and in whose name is it propogated
     
     and what exactly is it
     
     that makes it
     
     just
     
     so
     
     special?
     
     
     "It's the bubbles of nothing that make it really something."
     - Aero Bar ad circa 1990
     
     You leave the empty envelope near the phone, at the bottom of the neat
     stack of other empty envelopes, scribbled messages for housemates,
     other people's lives.



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