Hello everyone. Frequent readers probably noticed my posting
pattern. I try to do at least one post towards the beginning of every month.
Things were different last month for a few reasons. I started several new jobs.
I had two free lance positions. One of them was very much an, ug I need this to
pay the rent job. The other is with the Epoch Times. The
latter sounds like a great free-lance position from a financial standpoint but
from a career standpoint as well. Despite the mainstream media trying to claim
they are not credible; they are one of the most popular news sites in the
world. Please make sure to check it out. (It may be behind a pay wall, but I’m
doing my part to make sure it’s worth the price of admission.)
The final piece allowed me to quit that first free lance
job. I’m working for a tech start up called Banq.
I know they spelled bank wrong, but it is a nice and steady historian position.
I’m developing new hire training and that means I’m studying all sorts of
things like block chain, non-fungible tokens, and today I studied initial coin offerings.
It seemed very intimidating but as I study it is new terms, but old concepts.
For example, when you were a child at Chuck E Cheese you understood tokens.
Non-fungible simply means that instead of interchangeable currency it is unique
and not interchangeable. Blockchain sounds mysterious, or like some bling a
rapper would wear, but it is the code that makes a digital ledger and tracks
changes. Each block is unique, has a digital fingerprint, and every change in
the ledger creates a new block in the chain. If you try to change a past block
it changes future blocks and thus is easily detectable and makes the block
chain an immutable record.
This has all sorts of applications ranging from concert
tickets that can be digital tickets. Digital tickets are nothing new, but it
can also be a unique piece of art or (non-fungible) token that includes album
art, song playlist, a code that gives you unique access to physical items like
merch or concerts, and its code can give artists royalties every time it is
sold, or access to an online vault of bonus material. There are secure private
keys matched with public keys (the security features to verify your access to currency or NFT in the blockchain)
that prevents this from becoming another Napster. The immutable part of block
chains will be appealing to real estate deeds among other items. You can even
include code that lets investors sell, buy, and trade, their portion of
ownership in the deed far more quickly than today’s technology. I’m dropping tons of terms, but they are
simply digital uses of technology we are familiar with like ledgers, tokens,
banking records, and online purchases. There is a great deal to discuss, and my
job is to organize it into easy training for new employees. It is supposedly the wave of the future, so you heard it here folks.
I’ve also done some writing on the Book of Mormon. I
received an advanced copy of, Proclaim
Peace, from the Maxwell Institute. I thought their timing was good
since my research on just warfare in the Book of Mormon makes this book right
up my alley. My review ended up being about 6,000 words. There are four
sections that outline methodological problems I found. The first was the
narrative spin they had to put on scriptures to make it fit a peace narrative.
They ignore stronger readings plainly described in the text for far more
speculative reading that fits their narrative and politics. I already noticed
this problem in discussing Mason’s
previous work. The second problem was sadly common to pacifists in that
they that obliterate the tension in Christian ethics between pacifism and just
war. The scriptures must be carefully reconciled, but pacifists militantly
focus on Christ’s mortal ministry, and ignore the rest. Third problem was that
they did not address any just war arguments. They had a perfunctory summary,
dismissed it as neither broad nor comprehensive, denigrated military service as
a resigned acknowledgement of telestial duties and generally ignored a rich
body of robust just war literature. Collectively these writers influenced
Western ideas regarding humanitarian intervention, human rights, international
law, natural rights that influenced the American constitution, peace keeping
and international bodies. Needless to say, I was incredibly disappointed with
their dismissal of such a rich body of work. The final part consists of some
personal notes. I can’t wait for the reaction to my piece because the people
who talk about the power of assertive love don’t even seem to like their
opponents in relatively low stakes academic discussions. But I’m supposed to believe
that their love will transcend ethnic strife, political tension, and centuries of
conflict.
I think it is a good rebuttal that is representative of the
importance of understanding just warfare in general, and how it interacts with
the Book of Mormon. I hope to bring you the review and the book on just war in
the Book of Mormon soon.
I work as a freelance writer. I you found value in this work please consider donating using the paypal button at the bottom of the screen, or by purchasing one of my books on Amazon.