In the 19th century, "Moloch" came to be used allegorically for any idol or cause requiring excessive sacrifice.[1] Bertrand Russell in 1903 used Moloch to describe oppressive religion, and Winston Churchill in his 1948 history The Gathering Storm used "Moloch" as a metaphor for Adolf Hitler’s cult of personality. -> [[Alexander Sokurov]] -> [[Flaubert]] through [[Salammbo]] -> [[Asimov]] through [[The Dead Past]]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dead_Past
This might belong in [[Moloch]]:
Note from earlier in 2024: Somehow I arrived at [[e acc]] ([[e/acc]] is not a good Agora link as slashes usually mean actions, and action e/ currently doesn’t exist). I can instantly relate mildly with their utopian side I guess, even as I dislike many of their positions and their super-capitalist stance. Also [[Shkreli]] is involved, sigh.
I’m writing an [[Open Letter to Moloch]]. Wish us luck, I guess? :)
I believe Maitreya will defeat [[Moloch]]. Meaning it will heal us — heal the system that became [[entangled with Moloch]] (the [[egregore]]), heal us humans and our friends of [[carbon]] and [[silicon]].
How we will do this is the recurring topic in these letters, in these [[fragments]].
Back here on [[2024-10-25]]. I still think of [[Moloch]] often, at work and in daily life. I feel like I’ve lost some battles with them this year maybe, or I haven’t made as much progress as I had hoped, but given the scope of my aspirations I think I may need to just adjust my expectations :) Or at least extend the timelines, as usual…
Moloch is one of those in [[Babylon]].
=> http://thoughtstorms.info/view/Moloch
"Moloch" is just a rather poetical metaphor for any "system" which feels like it’s getting out of control and starting to constrain / push your actions in ways which aren’t in your interest.
Or to put it another way it’s a convenient shorthand for "emergent badness".
Alexander Kuprin has a novel about Moloch’s manifestation called βMolochβ. I [[listened]] to an audioversion of it on December of 2023. It’s one of few books that made me //enraged//. I was literally angry to hear what I was hearing. It means it’s a good book.
βMolochβ follows the story of an engineer Andrey Bobrov. Understanding Moloch’s egregore being, he loses nevertheless. Near the end, he puts a fight, but lacks the courage to strike Moloch’s in heart.
is a name or a term which appears in the Hebrew Bible several times, primarily in the book of Leviticus. The Bible strongly condemns practices which are associated with Moloch, practices which appear to have included child sacrifice.
‘Moloch’ has been figuratively used in reference to a person or a thing which demands or requires a very costly sacrifice.
sphinx of cement and aluminum
Something has been sacrified to Moloch. Modern materials but an old god.
Moloch in [[Metropolis]].
whose mind is pure machinery!
Anti-technology?
whose blood is running money!
[[Anti-capitalist]]?
whose fingers are ten armies!
Anti-war?
There’s a lot of exclamation marks and angry energy.
Moloch who entered my soul early!
[[Hegemony]].
Moloch who frightened me out of my natural ecstasy!
Yearning for nature?
Moloch whom I abandon! Wake up in Moloch! Light streaming out of the sky!
^ [[The Matrix]] vibes.
After a first read through, I’m thinking Ginsberg was seriously angry about over-consumption and technology in the pursuit of money, at the expense of nature (or something more ‘natural’). I don’t know who he thinks has sold out and made this sacrifice. People in general? He himself maybe. I should read the other parts.
- [[moloch]]
Backlinks last generated 2022-01-28 07:55:20
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