Tuesday, 31 December 2013

Happy New Year

Happy New Year.

I hope for you the very best,
That you might raise yourself above the waves, and tides of tomorrow.
That you might ride future's crest.

That you might think well of all you meet.
That you might greet them with a smile,
And sugar their lives with sweets.

For in the service of others
We pan our gold.
Make who we are.
Want to be.
And then become.
Before we grow too old.

So in this day of cheer.
Spare a moment of thought
For those whose life is dear,
But for whom the world sells cheap.

I hope for you the very best.
That you might of blessings and goodness,
Forever reap.

Shafeesthoughts


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Saturday, 28 December 2013

Justice as the job of State

Simonides said in regards to Justice that "the repayment of debt is just".

But it cannot be just if that repayment causes you greater harm.

Justice is, or should be, the balancing of rights and obligations. And whilst you might be obliged to repay a debt, you also have a right to be kept from harm.

The business model of credit companies playing odds on their customers being less scrupulous and more spendthrift, where they thrive on others' misfortune, cannot ever be called just.

It is obvious then that a person behaves "justly" when they are ABLE to repay a debt and then does so.

But it is "juster" still if the debt never need be taken in the first instance. For then the problem of being "when able" becomes a non-problem.

From this we can glean that irrespective of our definition of it, justice can take many forms and have many levels.

And that it is rather easier for us to say that injustice is "the withholding of payment of debt whilst you have the means". That therefore justice is and should be the norm whilst injustice is something to be hated and reviled.

This leads us a more proper definition of justice as pervading where injustice dissipates. And then that the doing of justice, in order to earn the appellation of "being just", is the removal of injustice. It is not a singular thing in itself but becomes when a person fights against wrong. And this is why Harun ar-Rashid (rh) was called both just and the fifth rightly guided.

When we consider that whilst we might call an individual "just", as in a just King or Ruler, it can never be that a sole individual can have the power to remove injustice. That is even the case when we concentrate on one solitary injustice and ignore wholesale injustices.

This because every act to remove an injustice can quite easily be thwarted by further injustice.
It is not enough to follow one act of justice with myriad acts of injustice.

And so Harun ar-Rashid (as) was called just because he restored Jizya to its rightful place and nobody could dispute with that. That act could not be followed by further injustice because his job was to restore what was in the first place, and was recognised as being such by all.

Whereas the Allies when they deposed Sadam freed the political prisoners, only later to incarcerate a greater people within their jails without recourse to Law. Irrespective of their first act, no one could claim that they were just.

And furthermore, even to forgive a debt may not be called "just" if it leads not to the debtor's improvement but yet still deepens his irresponsibility and dependency. Rather he should be the recipient of an ongoing charity that may be small but keeps him whole.

And therefore we might agree with Plato that justice, or the removal of injustice, is the responsibility of people as a whole and not of individuals.

That it is a job of state.
But should not be the job of law.
See: Justice and Law


(ADDED LATER on 29//12/13.)
What is further clear is that Simonides classification of justice as a means debt repayment is clearly a one sided treatment in favour of the haves. It does nothing to tell us about the justice due to the have-nots.

Is Justice not for them who have not? And if Justice provides a balance between rights and obligations, then what right is due to the have nots, by way of being?

These are examined in the prior post. (See link above).

But what is clear from the treatment above is that injustice is a greater and more powerful relation than justice.
That does not affect my belief that justice is, and should be seen as, the norm.

And that society and the state should be charged with the fight against injustice.

That justice is not for the creditor but for the people as a whole.

And the creditor who would seek to use justice as a means of pursuing debt should be known as unjust. Since justice is not a word to be bandied about for individual selfish ends. Rather justice is like the mother who on suffering the fate of seeing her son or daughter wronged, pursues it so that no one would suffer as she did. Or the son who craves to see his father released from an unjust incarceration. These are real examples. And politics should be in the job of helping them realise those ends, and not thwarting them as is so often the case.

At last, the collection of debt might be a right which when exercised could lead to injustice. Therefore the exercise of a right does not necessarily lead to justice, and can in fact be unjust.

A sobering thought in our society full of rights, and full too of obligations made law by our politicians. Whose job it should not.



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Friday, 27 December 2013

A Blueprint for Russell Brand.

A Blueprint for Russell Brand.

The Legislative and The Executive.

If Politics is, as discussed in the previous post, about the exertion of influence. *1
And in its best form it is about enabling men to come together as a collective for the betterment of all, as a whole.

Then what is Law?
Law is about protection.
Protection both from the consequence of disobedience to GOD, and from the oppression that men visit one on the other.

It is little known that the first to separate the legislative from the executive were the Muslims. Such an occurrence happened after the Messenger of God (saw) had left us both with the Quran and with his example as a means of making our way in this World. For prior to that in his very person both were combined. And after him (saw) the Quran and his interpretation and explanation of those injunctions contained in his sayings codified our Law.

It was this fact that the Law had been set that allowed for the Muslim successors to concur on such a separation. For Muslim Law was not the purview of a minority of Muslim men, but belonged to all in the exemplary Recitation (Quran). And so the law, in general, was known and accessible.

Today our politicians concern themselves with the manufacture of Law to the detriment of their duty toward inspiring people to act for the collective betterment. They seek to influence our behaviour not through appealing to our better natures but through hitting us harder in the pocket by stipulating varying degrees of taxation and sanction . Theirs is a monetary appreciation of the world, that owes much to economists and bankers, but completely ignores their true calling. And ignores the true calling of what politics is really meant to be about:

The creation of something out of nothing.

The power to overcome against insurmountable odds.

The selfless sacrifice without hope of reward or recognition.

And it is these things that truly inspirational leaders prove to us time and again, in the annals of history, not by talk, which is cheap, but with great deeds.

And the greatest of these inspired us to follow their example of selfless giving and then also ennobled others through their realisation of becoming selfless givers too.
A passing of the baton that extends to this day, through five hundred thousands of our suns.

Today our Law courts spend much on the mediation between the laws that our political classes make and the people that they are charged to protect. Should the people need protection from our politicians? It appears that our judges believe that that may well be necessary and that many laws passed by statute need to be challenged in court in order to be ratified into law.

Our politicians continually claim that their lawmaking is in the interests of protecting the people, but that is not their job.

It is, however, and should be the job of the judicial classes. This does not mean an end to the adversarial nature of the British judicial system. Only a charging of judges with the keeping of safety of the people. That judges should be the ones to enact law by the ratification of it through the law courts and not politicians who are ill fitted to that role. For they should be the ones that bring prosecution for the public benefit and enunciate the law.

So then what for Politicians?
I believe that Politics is in the job of Justice.

But that the Law and Justice are often confused. For you can have one without the other.

Law is exerted when justice by other means has failed. *2
And that you can have justice even before the exertion of the law, this is often called ethics.
Politics should be in the job of providing for such Justice before recourse to Law.

It should be in the job of inspiring people to their better selves, of making provision for the less well of and for the future and of protecting the people wholesale.

But justice is by definition "the giving of each man his due".

And in this case is each man's due in relation to what he has earned or what is his right by way of being?

By way of being his right is to opportunity towards betterment. In this instance the state and the polity needs to provide for equal access towards opportunity. And provide every encouragement towards betterment.

This is the necessity of education. Education should better people and provide opportunity towards further betterment. If it does not make them better citizens and provide them with life and other skills then it is a failed education.

The right due to man because of what he has earned is that it is not diminished by any ulterior agency and not without good reason. By itself the earning of wealth does not diminish the wealth of others. However when that wealth exerts influence it can and does diminish the wealth of others and in those cases the state should guard against such occurrence where the economics of the marketplace is skewed towards the wealthy. This right therefore defines the right to justice. Such was the address of Abu Bakr as-Sadiq (ra) the first successor of our beloved Prophet (saw).

By extension a just state should be allowed to levy tax for those reasons of
-security, since security is essential for opportunity.
-education.
-law since justice is administered through it.
-the maintenance of a balanced marketplace and the encouragement of small business.
-and government to administer between their competing needs.

The provision of healthcare, a cornerstone of the modem state, falls beyond this pail.

Social care becomes a right through the saying of GOD in a Hadith Qudsi, "I was hungry, thirsty and destitute...". And this is a duty upon those that have towards those that have not. Whilst the redistribution here is there not to create a flat society but solely to alleviate suffering.

And so social care becomes a state responsibility by way of God's grace.

However in stark contrast the provision of healthcare cannot be found to be fundamental to the purpose of state. And therefore at best can solely be a common and not compulsory sadaqa. Common since it is a collective undertaking to provide for those who have not whilst also providing a service for those that contribute towards it. In essence the provision of Healthcare should be treated as a sadaqa by all those that undertake it, hoping to realise the Quranic injunction that any that saves a life it were as if they saved humanity as a whole.

And so I believe that a National Health Service is not a right to be enacted through the State but rather that it should be a voluntary and collective undertaking towards which all people should be given every encouragement. For those that contribute towards it, should see it as a voluntary and ongoing charity on par with those things that God loves most.

Notes:
*1- Politics as Influence.
Blog: "to sum a life".

*2- Law and Justice.
" Where the Justice of a Liberalism will always be too late.


*3- Abu Bakr as-Sadiq (as) and the defence of democracy.
Progressive Politics









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Wednesday, 25 December 2013

To sum a life

If I sum my life what measure could I glean?

Would I be like the man who measures his worth through the achievements of his son?
So that when a son does not fulfil his expectations he is destroyed and glum beyond measure. Isn't that just foolishness.

However isn't it true that to live you life through the lives of others is not a shameful thing to do. For after all isn't that what Politics is, in essence, all about? To some politics might be a dirty word, but in essence it is to exert influence further than your immediate reach. To enable men as a body to come together to achieve greater things than they could alone. Is that not the essence of what it means to be a real man?

Isn't that what Plato meant when he said that man is not truly a man until he lives in a Polis? To which man did Plato refer, the collective or the singular man? For each man is two such men, one public and the other private.

Whilst singly the best a man can achieve is bare survival, a public man living through the lives of others can accomplish much through such influence.

However isn't it true that no matter whichever man he is, all men will one fateful day face their final destiny singly and alone. And that therefore they can never face the summation of their lives through the lives of others, just as they cannot be accompanied through death. These are facts that all men should confront before their actualisation within themselves.

However I believe that there is a way in which such a man can face that eventuality through the lives of others. And that is when the influence such a man has exerted has not been for selfish ends. The best of which is when you enable others to realise their own unselfish and true nature. A passing of the baton that your successor might also act with the same interest and intent. And then the summation of your life might become an integration over a continuum.

How great our religion which taught us these essences in referring to Sadaqa al Jareeah; the continuous and ongoing Charities. That my self and my sum can be gleaned from those unselfish acts.

We started on this tract of thought by contemplating a man who seeks to live on, and achieve, through his children.
The difference between the two is that the latter influences those others through choice and not through compulsion.

And we neglected the first's brother who measures his life through the number of cattle that he possesses? Trinkets that he toys with. He will surely die. And his measure will be dire.



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Saturday, 21 December 2013

I flailed and I flailed

I Flailed and I Flailed



I came upon myself
Unnerved and unnerving
My very emotions ate into themselves
But they did not dissipate
Nor dissolve
Except to reappear
A life unto their own.

A feast of anguish
That could not fill any hunger
Except there was no hunger there to fill
Save a pit, a bottomless pit
Through which I fell.

And all around me felt anguish at my anguish
The spread of a disease
The fear of the unknown.

I came upon myself
Happy and contented

My emotions beamed from me
As a lighthouse without shade
Without night
Without need of warning
Nor precarious dangerous surroundings
And all about me were glad.

I came upon myself
Sad and forlorn

My emotions lay me by the wayside
And life passed me by.
Until I realised the bootstrap
That I make my own way
Create my own life
Make my own happiness

I came upon myself
Cheerful and neglectful

I said to myself that whatever life throws my way
I will take on the chin
And then look away.
And I will dance and sing
And be merry even as the sun goes down.

I came upon myself
Lost, so lost.

And I wondered at my wrong
Where had I gone from that happy contented youth?
And I blamed and I blamed
And I flailed and I flailed

Until an angel whispered words of Peace
Responding to my remembrance words
From a glorious Quran.

And I found myself
Happy and contented.

And I found myself
Happy and contented.

Shafeesthoughts


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Tuesday, 10 December 2013

The Looking Glass

The Looking Glass.

What meaning cAnst you place in one verse?
Hold it tight
Squeeze with might

Imagine that your poem is a bottle out to sea.
What echo would you wish to bleed
Into that vessel bound.

For horiZons that you cannot see.
Or with a fiery tongue,
You might place therein the curse of Djinn.

But imagine that your verVe could inspire,
People to deliver.
On hope, and hope, and hope.

How much the better.


That the magic that you weave,
With words of silk and satin'd lace,
Merely clothe a box with nowt within.

Tied with a bow,
To make so special.
That they themselves might find within.

So great a present,
Would that be.
If realised
If actualised

But better yet still
A thing that could inspire at will
Whose words would sweep you with mystery

Profound
Yet of no nonsense speak
One that could make yourself
anew.

Anew
Renew
That ancient bond of trust you took

Stay true, my friend.
Stay true.

For if you would just polish it.
That then you could be the looking glass.

Shafi..
-------------------------------

And the Messenger of God was known to those who knew him, as the walking Qur'an-
The Recitation.




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Monday, 9 December 2013

Leaves me to adventure in faraway lands.

Leaves me to adventure in faraway lands.

Gulls call,
Soar and sweep.
Yonder hand that feeds them
With scraps of meat.

Ever is the way with all.
That nourishment comes where
Least looked for.
Waste not, want not says the Master.

All except for men.
Who goad and bitter death.
Who look not for return.
Prince and proudly they would stand.

Until the leveller passes them by,
That then their limbs might fall and die.
And then for them be no return.
And yet the sea, yet rages on.

For industry will not let lie.
Death be gone.
Let me finish this song.

Unfurl my sails.
Depart these shores,
Leave me to adventure in
Faraway lands.

--------------
Wrote after reading "in cabin'd ship at sea".

Notes-
In the Qur'an GOD declares that HE provides nourishment to all creatures from places that we cannot see or fathom.

Including man.
Excepting man.
For where man goes,
And those that rely on him,
Want and hunger will follow.

Except at the end of days.
See. Surah Kouirat.


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