Reflections on Moral Quandaries and Ambiguities

I recently participated in an online Zoom forum presented by the history department of the University of Massachusetts Amherst through its Feinberg Family Distinguished Lecture Series, a series that purports to focuses on “big issues of clear and compelling concern, grounded in historical inquiry, context, analysis and experience”.  The event in which I participated (as part of the virtual audience) purported to deal with the dangers being faced in academia as a result of what smells like a dawning dark age where the right to think is shrinking daily and it was supposed to compare the current challenges faced by academia with those faced in the second half of the 1940’s during the tenures of Harry Truman as president and senator Joe McCarthy as hatchet man.  Unfortunately, notwithstanding the importance of the topic to me and its timeliness, I was disappointed and confess that I could not get past the introduction and first few minutes of the initial presenter’s discourse.  Instead of an objective academic discourse, it seemed a partisan charade reflective only of the nature of so many who today perceive of themselves as historians, people who have spent their lives reading and researching and writing and teaching, but for whom the quest for truth seems an irrelevancy, especially when the quest is undertaken under the shadow of long held political loyalties[1].

The presenters as well as their online audience seemed completely and blindly devoted to the Democratic Party, the party ironically responsible for both the dark days of the McCarthy era (although the senator himself was a Republican) and for today’s expansive wave of censorship and curtailment of liberty, especially liberties pertaining to the right to opine.  Their criticism, snide, direct and full of virtue signaling, was reserved for Republicans and the “far right”, there apparently not being a mere right wing, and thus, to anyone not part of the choir to whom they were preaching.  Thus, the postures they sought to represent, postures in which for the most part I personally believe, lost rather than garnered credibility.  It’s as though they’d never heard of political options like Doctors Jill Stein and Cornell West, or if they had, considered them beneath contempt, just as they consider former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., for placing the coronation of Kamala Harris at risk.

Even if their goal was merely political that strategy was not very productive.  Unless fund raising is the goal, “preaching to the choir” is almost always counterproductive, especially in an electoral context where attaining the vote of a majority is important.  Rather than more fully convincing the already convinced, one needs to reach out to those who have not yet made up their minds.  Better yet, one needs to strive to convince those who support one’s opponents that our views have merit.  That is very difficult when one has “shot one’s credibility in the foot” by refusing to accept that one’s side is fallible and that sometimes our opponents may be right.  Credibility is essential and it is best attained when one at least appears objective, when rather than spewing conclusions one has yet to support with facts, one at least pretends to consider opposing perspectives and examines the reasons why others hold them.  And that is best accomplished when one, in fact, has an open mind rather than its mere verisimilitude.

After I logged out of the event I became introspective, examining both my own beliefs and how I expressed them.  And that led me to the issues that most perplex me, and to the people I’ve chosen to admire, despite their foibles.  The latter are a very mixed group, both historically and during my own lifetime.  I am a great admirer of the reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. but accept that sexual fidelity was not his strong point, and if that was true for him, it was also true for John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Bill Clinton and Donald Trump and Joe Biden.  A bitter pill but one essential if one hopes to be objective.  I love Nelson Mandela and admire him not because of his courage in adversity but because, after he attained the South African presidency, he managed, at least for a brief while, to bring his traumatized racially, economically and culturally divided nation together.  And I love Mohandas Gandhi for his absolute dedication to peaceful revolution despite his failure, in the end, to attain it.  I love Uruguay’s Pepe Mujica and Brazil’s Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Chile’s Salvador Allende and Pablo Neruda, Cuba’s Jose Marti, Colombia’s Gustavo Rojas Pinilla and now Gustavo Francisco Petro Urrego.  None are perfect by any means, but they have all been transformational.  Ironically, I am also drawn to ethically complex people like Alexander III of Macedon, Gaivs Ivlivs Caesar and Napoleon Bonaparte, leaders who somehow combined good and evil successfully in order to attain transformational change, although I’ve always been curious as to why their military prowess so thoroughly overwhelms their more peaceful accomplishments in areas such as science, philosophy, education, architecture, etc., in their perception by the public.

As a political scientist, historian and researcher, albeit admittedly not a very important one, I’m deeply suspicious of those things on which we are not allowed, either legally or socially, to reflect, and I believed that that would have been one of the topics to be dealt with in the Feinberg lecture I’d been invited to attend, but I was very wrong.  Today’s tacit support by so many of genocide on the one hand and the pillorying of Donald Trump on the other, both massively driven by peer pressure, and attitudes towards the current conflicts in the Ukraine and in the Middle East, made me again wonder concerning the “verboten” subject of what World War II, the second war to end all wars, was really about, and just how evil the villains and of just how virtuous the victors really were; the victors responsible for the firebombing of Dresden and Tokyo and the nuclear destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the colonization of Africa and the Middle and Far East.  There was recent outrage among netizens of the corporate media concerning an admission purportedly made by Donald Trump that Adolf Hitler might have done some good things in Germany, something quickly (and distortedly) interpreted by Trump opponents as praise.  More than anything, that reaction to Mr. Trump’s honest observation made me acknowledge (after reflection) that like most others, I lacked the courage to agree with him despite the rarely admitted reality that, excluding his international bellicosity, racism and lack of respect for the sanctity of life (obviously huge faults), domestically, during the period from 1933 through 1939, Hitler in fact accomplished very positive things domestically in Germany, and that in turn made me wonder if we will ever be capable of an objective analysis with respect to that very complex man, a man who in his worst aspects, seems ironically similar to Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, a popular hero today not only in Israel, but in the United States, the United Kingdom and Germany.

All of the foregoing seem dangerous themes on which to focus, or even to consider, but is it ethically and morally correct to ignore them and to permit what passes for imposed truth to just “lie” (a double entendre) comfortably abed?  That observation then led me to reflect on the morally ambiguous issue of issues.  There are issues where, to me, every position seems wrong and worse, where most of those who hold a strong position do so incoherently when contrasted with their positions on related issues.  For me, one of those involves the profoundly polarizing conjoined issues of abortion and the death penalty. 

It seems incoherent to me that the postures of most people with reference to the foregoing seem to involve, on the one hand, a belief in the “right” to an abortion while simultaneously opposing the death penalty, and on the other, the position of their opponents who reject the right to abort unwanted fetuses while concurrently supporting the death penalty.  To my mind, one either respects the “right” to life or one doesn’t, both of those postures leading to logical conclusions:  If one respects the “right” to life, then both abortion and the death penalty should be anathema.  If one does not respect that “right”, then both abortion and the death penalty are acceptable options.  However, the topic involved is deemed so “existential”, that most of us have a very strong opinion in one direction or the other while strenuously opposing the “right” of others to have an opposing position, something that to me seems to require amazing moral ambivalence and hubris.  The issue is fraught with irreconcilable moral quandaries and yet, most people have no problem in taking one side or the other, and make it the principal basis on which they select whom they will support politically.  To top it off, most of the people who presents themselves as electoral options, loudly championing one side or the other, tend to be pure pragmatists for whom the only importance of the issue involves how it will mobilize their political bases.

The right to bear arms is another issue that strikes me as ludicrous, if not as existentially and morally problematic as the right to life.  I understand the second amendment to the United States constitution and the context under which it seemed essential.  It reads: “A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  It is absolute in its prohibition, unless one examines its premise, “a well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State”.  However, the philosophical context in which that statement was drafted was centered, not on defense from foreign aggression but on the importance of avoiding domestic tyranny and that in turn was premised on three important assumptions: first, that instead of standing armed forces, the “free State” anticipated would have a citizen army comprised of state militias in which most adult males would serve; second, that the armed citizenry would hold a preponderance of the power necessary to avoid tyranny and sustain its “free” status; and, third, that “freedom”, rather than mere security, would remain the priority.  None of those premises hold true today.  The state controls the overwhelming balance of power, both internally through its police forces and externally though its professional armed forces (and the military industrial complex against which Ike warned during November of 1960).  If the right to bear arms were to be effective today, citizens would have to enjoy the right to own and operate nuclear weapons, aircraft carriers, air forces, etc., and, as importantly, the ability to financially afford to obtain and maintain them.  We don’t and we shouldn’t and we couldn’t.  As to the importance of “freedom”, today it’s mainly an illusion bound in red tape with the state in control of most of our actions, a state not controlled by the citizenry but through bureaucrats imbedded throughout our bloated governmental systems by a tightly knit group of selfish billionaires, with the assistance of their tools in the megalithic media-sports-and-entertainment industries, industries whose job it is to keep us polarized and distracted while our pockets are picked.  So at best, “freedom is an illusion, an opiate in the same sense that Karl Marx described religion.

Of course, we’ve deluded ourselves with the concept of “rights”.  A concept ideal for “virtue-signaling” if little else.  Purportedly, “rights are inherent, universal and eternal, not granted, rather, at best discovered.  As purportedly eternal, they have supposedly always existed and will always continue to exist.  They are supposedly the emanations of the individual sovereignty and autonomy to which every human being is entitled.  Given the foregoing definition, rights may not be conditioned by others, even where those conditions are eminently sensible and indeed, essential for life in the collectives in which we live, collectives which range from the family, with or without children, through our diverse polities and eventually, encompassing the human species and perhaps, even every species and the planet as a whole.  If “rights” are inherent and unconditional, they must be impossible to violate.  However, no human interaction encompasses those requirements and further, as more and more rights are discovered on a purportedly generational basis, they become diluted in the sense that they are more and more impossible to attain.  Instead, today’s purported rights are, at best, aspirations as to how we should prioritize our resources and organize the diverse aspects of governance by others in our lives, but with no ability to enforce any such aspirations, however laudable they may seem.  They are promises impossible to keep and those who make them and most vigorously proclaim them are at best self-deluded, albeit in most instances they are merely frauds.  And yet, we willingly sacrifice our lives and the lives of those whom we most cherish, we sacrifice our honor, our morality and our ethics in their purported defense.  Thus abortion and the bearing of arms are but irrelevancies useful in keeping us divided and thus, easy to manipulate and control.

Not that “rights” would not be awesome if they could be attained, maintained and enforced, but they can’t, at least not while we remain a deluded species, one which on the one hand abhors the purported Nazi holocaust while on the other, applauds, supports and makes possible the holocaust perpetrated by the descendants of the Nazis’ victims against Palestinians and other Muslims (the only people who ever actually treated them with real compassion and respect).  Not while we accept the accumulation of massive wealth by actors and singers and sports stars as well as by corporate executives, directors, and, most of all, by the heirs of those who illicitly accumulated huge fortunes, while children, indeed while anyone starves to death, bereft of shelter and health care.  But we do.  And it seems that, at least for the foreseeable future, we’ll continue to do so.

Our moral ambiguities make that not only possible, but probable.
_____

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.


[1] Contextualizing the foregoing, I am a political independent although during my lifetime I have been a Republican, a Democrat, a Liberal, a Conservative, a Libertarian, a Democratic Socialist and a Green Party supporter.  However, I was always uncomfortable pledging my allegiance and my sacred honor to any political party, especially with respect to supporting policies with which I was either not familiar or with which I was not in total accord.  During the past decades I’ve taken to criticizing the United States duopolous political system and both principal political parties and my electoral activities have revolved around doing what I could to let voters know that there were more than two choices, more than two political parties, and that a lesser evil is always evil.  I am also an academic and the former chair of a university political and juridical science department as well as of political science, government and international relations programs in the Republic of Colombia.  In my youth, I taught history and chaired the social studies and, for a brief time, the foreign language departments at a military high school in the state of New York.

Of Mary and Khnum: Mixing Strangely Erotic Fractured Metaphors in an Ancient Sheepfold

Mary, Mary, quite contrary, was wondering how her garden grew when, lo and behold, of a sudden, she thought she spotted a little lamb, one that perhaps might become her own.

Nearby, a certain Miss Muffat sat on her tuffet, eating her curds and weigh, while a friendly if somewhat frightening, somewhat hungry and a bit jealous arachnid (none other than the trickster deity known as Anansi), hanging by a silken thread, curiously passed her way.

As Miss Muffat and Anansi looked on, Mary, Mary, quite contrary, fondled what she thought was her new lamb but the ovis aries, in reality the Egyptian deity Khnum, reacted unexpectedly, at least as far as Mary, Mary, quite contrary, was concerned.  Anansi couldn’t help but giggle, which almost gave the game away.

Khnum, at first seemingly young and small, turned out not to have been either, not at all.  He was in fact very, very ancient really, and in reality, quite a bit larger than a lamb, and he had budding horns and, … well …, reacting to Mary, Mary, quite contrary’s soft caresses, seemed unusually amorous for a lamb, at least as far as little Miss Moffat could tell.

Then, slam bam, thank you mam ….  The lamb turned out to be a ram … and …. not just any ram, but the primordial creator of human bodies and of the life force known as kꜣ (“ka”), and Anansi’s giggles turned into guffaws.

Thus, some months later, to Miss Muffat’s surprise and the spider’s strange delight (it loved irony and was as much a contrarian as Mary), Mary, Mary, quite contrary, indeed had her little lamb. 

Which was not just any little lamb at all.[1]
_____

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.


[1] An afterword of sorts.  It is sadly strange that in this puritanical age, puritanical concerning sexual matters but not bothered by genocide at all, I would feel uncomfortable, perhaps even ironically guilty, in having written this satire on the ancient myth of Leda and the Swan.

Reflections from the Edge of a Seemingly Bottomless Pit

November 5, 2024 is purportedly federal election day in the United States of America but the concept of an “election day” has become meaningless.  And that may not be a negative although how that has come about is troubling given that the main goal of that evolutive process seems to have become, not the implementation of more effective democracy but rather, the facilitation of more efficient electoral fraud and manipulation.

How so?

Well, in its least malign aspect, the evolving trend towards a voting season rather than an electoral day looks to “lock-in” voters prior to the availability of information necessary to make adequately informed voting decisions, thus making electoral manipulation more feasible.  That, of course, is tied into the manipulation of essential information by the corporate media through not only the publication and dissemination of distortions and outright lies as facts, but by the obfuscation of important relevant information, the Hunter Biden laptop from Hell being a prime, albeit far from the most important, example.  At least as nefarious are the range of voting procedures crafted by those who seek to minimize electoral safeguards through a longer, less organized and poorly monitored voting cycle, one where, for example, the State of California has criminalized required identity verification prior to voting and indeed, where most states controlled by the Democratic Party have taken steps to permit the casting of votes by people who provide no proof of who they are nor of their right to do so. 

The mass mailing of unsolicited ballots coupled with the ability to “harvest” and return such ballots is obviously designed, in its most benign aspect, to create a “market” for the purchase and sale of votes, and for the theft and unauthorized casting of ballots in its most nefarious form.  And that is where we find ourselves as the electoral season draws to a close “on or about” this November 5.  I use the phrase “on or about” because there is no longer a “hard date” by which votes must be cast given that judges and electoral officials in Democratic Party controlled states, and even in Democratic Party controlled counties and electoral districts have taken to insisting that the absence of postmarks or the receipt of ballots with postmarks beyond the date fixed for their return should be ignored in the interests of what they claim is a more ample form of democracy, something that seems akin to the old political slogan of “vote early and vote often”.

I have long avocated for an electoral period rather than an election day in order to make participation in the electoral process more convenient.  Decades ago I proposed that elections should take place over a series of set dates, perhaps as long as three or four, with results published daily to motivate the lazy to cast their votes when it became obvious that their participation would be essential in order for candidates they preferred to emerge victorious. But I understood that as important as participation in the electoral process was, safeguarding of the electoral process was at least as important, and that real democracy required limiting participation to eligible voters through strictly enforced safeguards, safeguards in fact effectively imposed in the poorest and least technologically advanced countries, safeguards such as photo identification cards, signatures and fingerprints.  In the Republic of Colombia where I currently reside such procedures are uniformly applied and though not perfect (electoral fraud still exists), at least efforts are made to minimize electoral fraud rather than to promote it.

In the United States, democracy is not thriving, it never has.  At the best of times the country has been ruled through a patchwork two-party dictatorship at the local, state, regional and federal levels, the “duopoly” at it is referred to by its critics, among them many smaller political parties, independent candidates and concerned voters.  But today’s Democratic Party seeks to eliminate even the duopoly.  During the past four years it has utterly corrupted the penal and judicial systems in order to minimize the ability of opponents to run against its pre-selected candidates, and I do not refer specifically to Donald Trump.  He at least is powerful enough to fight back.  But rather, to the most decent among alternative options, people like Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the son of the assassinated senator and former attorney general, Robert Francis Kennedy and the nephew of the assassinated president, John Fitzgerald Kennedy; people like the eminent and brilliant Afro-American philosopher, academic and civic leader, Cornell West; people like eminent physician and civic leader, Jill Stein; people like former Democratic Party congressman and peace activist Dennis Kucinich.  Perhaps even worse, in an effort to retain permanent dictatorial power for the ill-named Democratic Party, the Biden administration has done everything possible to curtail opposing viewpoints through criminalization of the right to hold and express opposing opinions and in that effort has recruited the major news media and the major internet platforms.

Not that the GOP, the Grand Old Party, otherwise known as the Republicans are all that much better although, except when it comes to blind allegiance to Zionists imperil ambitions, it is significantly less inclined to engage in military adventures abroad or to censorship and lawfare at home.  Still, its candidate in this election is one of the world’s least pleasant persons, an egotistical, self-promoting demagogue.  How far have we sunk as a polity when he seems far more trustworthy than the slick loophole specialists who oppose him, the Clintons and the Obamas if not quite the Bidens, those who offer us as a choice the chameleonic Kamala Harris, lawyers all, lawyers beloved of the quasi-cultural Hollywood and New York elites and, of course, of the Deep State moles who believe they’ve found the “one ring to rule us all and in the darkness bind us”.

Absolute power seems to be the goal and, as the old adage claims, “absolute power corrupts absolutely”.  Today, the descendants of those who believed they were fighting against such tyranny instead find themselves actively involved in promoting genocide, ethnic cleansing and apartheid on the one hand as they court nuclear holocaust on the other, all in order to enrich the tiny minority of billionaires reliant for their political and economic power on perpetual war and oppression.  And on our own cowardice, cupidity and stupidity.

It is, in all probability, too late to defeat the forces of darkness arrayed against us, but we can still, at least, back our own versions of Tolkien’s Frodo: I allude to people like Jill Stein and Cornell West who are still options, and in other elections, we can decide to vote for any candidate unaligned with the duopoly.  As always, if enough of us took that road less travelled, we might somehow find ourselves glimpsing a light at the end of that deep dark tunnel into which we’ve been forced to descend, assured that the wreak of filth and death we smell is really milk and honey.

As the purportedly Wicked Witch of the West exclaimed in the 1930’s movie version of “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz”, … “what a world, what a world”!  But perhaps hers is not the last word.

In 1875 poet William Ernest Henley, perhaps channeling the “darker days referenced by Sigmund Freud, wrote a poem he entitled “Invictus”, one I share as I close, albeit set in prose:

Out of the night that covers me, black as the Pit from pole to pole, I thank whatever gods may be for my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud.  Under the bludgeonings of chance my head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears looms but the horror of the shade, and yet, the menace of the years finds and shall find, me unafraid.

It matters not how strait the gate, how charged with punishments the scroll, I am the master of my fate: I am the captain of my soul.

_____

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

The Life of Yešu According to Diverse Jewish Sources

The life of the man or divinity worshipped by Christians as “Jesus” and the “Christ” and honored by Muslims as Isa or Issa is dealt with in collections known as the New Testament of the Bible and the Quran but it is also dealt with in diverse sources by Jews who despise and deprecate him as a fraud and a sorcerer. A Jewish alternative to the Christian gospels and Muslim reports in the Quran is reflected in diverse parts of the Talmud, both in the Palestinian and the Babylonian versions, but it is perhaps most detailed in a series of narratives of unknown origin or date entitled the Sefer Toledot Yeshu (the Life of Jesus; in Hebrew, ספר תולדות ישו). The numerous versions share common themes but differ widely in details and are divided into different family groups based on their similarities, principle among them being the Helena group, the Pilate group, the Herod group, the Aramaic Group, the Hebrew Group and the Yiddish Group.

The author stumbled on the Toledot Yeshu while researching the causes of cyclical antisemitism not only during the Common Era but starting with the antipathy between the ancestors of the Hebrews and the Egyptians and then the Canaanites and the Hellenes, something that seems important as the ironic Israeli attitude towards genocide is once again increasing antipathy towards Jews because of the conduct of  a politicized segment of Judaism known as Zionism which seeks to speak and act in the name of all Jews despite the objections of many who insist that Zionists do not act in their name, especially with reference to the slaughter of Palestinians and increasingly, Muslims in general.  The attitude reflected in the Toledot Yeshu is scurrilous, insulting and humiliating but then, the conduct of Christians with respect to Jews since their schism has also been scurrilous, insulting and humiliating.  Notwithstanding its tenor and purpose however, the diverse variants of the Toledot Yeshu provide interesting insights into the divergence of the Abrahamic faiths in a manner which seems to mirror the mythical relationship between their common ancestors, Cain and Abel, and provide interesting alternative perspectives with respect to the life of a mytho-historical figure who has had a major impact, for good but also for terrible evil during the past two millennia.

In this article, the author uses what he understand is the Aramaic version of the protagonist’s name, Yešu, although Christians refer to him as Jesus or Christ and Jews as Yeshua or Yeshu[1] and melds different variants of the Toledot Yeshu into a coherent narrative using footnotes to highlight alternative versions. Rather than an academic, historic and linguistic analysis, the goal of this article is to provide the general public with information concerning the substance of the narratives reflected in diverse versions of the Toledot Yeshu in an easily readable and digestible summary.  For serious and detailed academic treatments of the Toledot Yeshu reference is made to the conference held in 2011 at Princeton University under the leadership of Michael Meerson, Peter Schäfer and Yaacov Deutsch which includes articles by diverse academics and authorities on this topic and in a symposium text edited by Daniel Barbu entitled “The Jewish ‘Life of Jesus’ in Early Modern Contexts: Case Studies” found in Cromohs’ Cyber Review of Modern Historiography, Issue 25, 2022 published by the Firenze University Press, in Florence, Italy.  Cromohs is an organization that specializes in publication of “theoretically informed work from a range of historical, cultural and social domains that interrogate cross-cultural and connected histories, intersecting the history of knowledge, emotions, religious beliefs, ethnography, cartography, the environment, material culture and the arts”.  Specific suggested readings and sources are listed at the end of the article.

The Sefer Toledot Yeshu
ספר תולדות ישו

Introduction & Overview:

There is little agreement as to when the events described in the many variants of the  Toledot Yeshu took place (McDowell, 2023).  Some versions claim that the events on which they report took place as early as the year 90 before the start of what became known as the Common Era (“BCE”), the year 3671 according to the Hebrew Calendar, in the days of King and High Priest Alexander Jannaeus, while others imply that they took place almost four centuries later under the reign of the Roman Emperor Constantine.  Most, however, agree that they started during the reign of Octavius, the first of Rome’s Emperors during the first decade BCE and came to a climactic ending sometime during the last part of the reign of the Roman Emperor Tiberius or the early part of the reign of the Roman Emperor Gaius, known as Caligula during the fourth decade of the Common era.  The confusion in large part stems from variants of the Toledot Yeshu in which a royal personage by the name of Elena, Helen, Heleni or Helena plays a principle role.  In some variants, the earliest chronologically, the personage is Queen Salome Alexandra, the wife of Alexander Jannæus for some reason called Helene, but most refer to Heleni of Adiabene[2], a queen from a nearby Parthian vassal kingdom or to Helen Augusta, the mother of the Roman Emperor Constantine (Deutsch: 2011, p. 59) who lived long after Yešu’s death and the founding of Christianity.

Variants of the Toledot Yeshu differ a great deal concerning Yešu’s immediate ancestry, his birth, the sexual proclivities of his mother and how he became a heretical schismatic although they all accept the fact that he was adept at the performance of benign supernatural acts including creation and return of life, something his followers believed to involve miracles but which Jewish sources claim involved black magic using one of two sources of power.  In a majority of the cases the source involved knowledge and use of the letters of the ineffable name of the Hebrew deity, the “Shem HaMephorash” also referred to as the Tetragrammaton, the four-letter Hebrew theonym יהוה‎ transliterated as YHWH or YHVH (referred to herein as the “Ineffable Name”), but other sources claimed that Yešu’s supernatural power was based on Egyptian magic, either obtained during a sojourn in Egypt or provided to him by his cousin, the person known to Christians as John the Baptist. 

The Ineffable Name was apparently carved on the foundation stone of the most sacred section of the Hebrew temple constructed by Herod the Great to replace the temple initially built by Solomon but destroyed by the Babylonians, the same temple subsequently destroyed by the Romans (referred to herein as the “Second Temple”).  The part of the Second Temple involved was apparently the room in which the arc of the covenant was kept, a relic referred to as the “Holy of Holies”, and was accessible only once a year to the Hebrew High Priest.  If that were not the place referenced and instead, it was more generically within that precinct but more accessible, then anyone entering it might have had easy access to the Ineffable Name (unless it was hidden, perhaps somehow covered or disguised).  It seems incoherent that an almighty divinity would have been so easily manipulated by anyone with access to its name, making it seem more a tool than a sovereign. 

According to the variants that claim that Yešu’s purported miracles were accomplished through use of the Ineffable Name, Yešu was not the only one with inappropriate access thereto as the Jewish leaders who opposed him made access to the name available to various opponents of Yešu, including the person Christians refer to as Judas Iscariot but to whom Jews refer in a number of other ways, among them, as a rabbi by the name of Yehuda (Deutsch: 2011, p. 293) and to Yešu’s uncle Shimon to assist him in deceiving and betraying Yešu’s followers (Gager, 2011, pp. 224-225). Yehuda, frequently described as a learned Jewish rabbi, is the hero in most versions of the Toledot Yeshu as he defeats Yešu in an aerial battle by depriving him of the knowledge or use of the Ineffable Name by anally raping him although more subtle versions substitute the rape with urination or merely pollination with semen.

Most if not all versions of the Toledot Yeshu deal with a trial of Yešu, although disagreeing as to who presided over the trial.  In some versions it was one of the aforementioned foreign queens residing in Jerusalem. One wonders at the nature of her jurisdiction over the Jews since except in the case of Salome Alexandra, she was either the spouse of a sovereign from the Parthian vassal state of Adiabene or else the mother of a future Roman emperor, in every case during times that do not coincide with the general hypotheses concerning the period during which Yešu lived.  A second major series of versions of the Toledot Yeshu have the trial of Yešu presided over by the Roman procurator of Palestine, Pontius Pilate, somewhat coinciding with the version reflected in the Christian gospels, but assigning the execution of Yešu to the Jews themselves, Pilate having refused to take part.  Indeed, one point on which all versions of the Toledot Yeshu agree is that it was the Jews themselves who executed Yešu, something disputed publicly by Jewish leaders[3] during the twentieth century although proudly asserted in private.  A third series of variants involve the Roman emperor Tiberius, claiming that Tiberius was responsible for the execution of Yešu when a promised miracle, the virgin birth of a grandson through a daughter of Tiberius did not take place as, through the intervention of members of the Sanhedrin, the embryo miraculously given life by Yešu was turned to a stone, thus making Yešu appear to Tiberius as a heretical fraud.  Finally, a fourth series of variants have the trial of Yešu presided over by Herod Antipas, tetrarch over Galilee and Perea, rather than by the leaders of the Jerusalem Sanhedrin, and are, among other things, distinguished by the assertion that rather than having “stolen” access to the Ineffable Name, Yešu simply learned the name while at the Beit Midrash (the Jewish school), Deutsch, 2022, p. 143.

The core of all versions is similar in that Yešu was a mesmer (bastard) conceived while his mother was menstruating, that he falsely claimed to be the son of the Hebrew god and his messiah and that his deception was discovered and he was executed by the Jews for his blasphemies but there are very diverse differences among the various versions of the Toledot Yeshu concerning not only Yešu’s ancestry, birth and upbringing, but also concerning events following his trial.  In some, Yešu escaped only to be recaptured by or with the assistance of Yehuda while in others the members of the Sanhedrin proceed directly to execute Yešu, although not without difficulties, most stemming from Yešu’s use of the Ineffable Name to prevent trees from being used to hang him (hanging, rather than crucifixion being a common theme), a difficulty overcome by using other forms of vegetation, usually cabbage stalks for such purpose. Another common theme in the different variants of the Toledot Yeshu involves the temporary disappearance of Yešu’s corpse after his execution but with a number of different details concerning how it was eventually recuperated and disposed of (after an initial period when it appeared that it had ascended to join the Hebrew divinity in Heaven).

Some variants of the Toledot Yeshu continue the story beyond the disposition of Yešu’s corpse, with two further series of episodes. One deals with Yešu’s uncle Shimon and how he deceived and betrayed Yešu’s followers, leading many to their deaths by having them believe he was miraculously taking then to battle Yešu’s enemies levitating them onto a cloud only to drop them to their collective deaths, and the other, a much more interesting variant, deals with the apostles Peter, Paul and sometimes John, indicating that they were Jewish infiltrators among the followers of Yeshu whose task it was to take over the young movement and separate it from Judaism in order to minimize conversion of Jews by having the followers of Yeshu organize a separate religion with different holy days and even a different alphabet (see, e.g., Chuecas, 2022, pp. 172-175), pretty much what Saul of Tarsus, who Christians call St. Paul, did, perverting Yešu’s original teachings into the Christianity we know today.

Compilation of the Alexander Jannæus[4], Helena, Helene and Heleni of Adiabene [5] Versions

The following narrative combines elements from the version of the Toledot Yeshu that started during the reign of Judean King Alexander Jannæus (circa 103-76 BCE) prior to the Roman conquest in the year 63 BCE with versions that take place almost a century later during the period when the Parthian vassal queen Heleni of Adiabene resided in Jerusalem, purportedly as if she ruled there.  In part, that decision is based on the coincidence of factors involving the diverse Helena, Helene and Heleni variants, one of which involves King Alexander Jannæus’ wife Salome Alexandra who apparently exercised significant power following his demise.  It thus combines several disparate versions in order to provide a more ample range of events than any one of them provided independently.  Consequently, the initial events are as reported in the Alexander Jannæus variant, but the trial of Yešu is based on the narratives that predominate in the diverse Helena, Helene and Heleni of Adiabene versions.  In this regard it should be noted that there are hundreds of different manuscripts of the Toledot Yeshu with differing narratives and differing points of emphasis, none of which can be deemed more representative than the others.

The Alexander Jannæus version[6] relates that there had lived in Bethlehem an attractive albeit disreputable man of the tribe of Judah[7] whose name was Joseph Pandera[8] and who lusted after an attractive but chaste woman by the name of Miriam[9].  Miriam was the daughter of a widow and betrothed to a god fearing Torah scholar descended from the royal house of David whose name was Yohanan. At the close of a certain Sabbath, Joseph Pandera, apparently with the connivance of Miriam’s mother[10], surreptitiously entered Miriam’s darkened room late at night, surprising her as, although under Jewish law, Yohanan, as her betrothed, was entitled to enjoy carnal relations with her, he had declined to do so or did so infrequently, but at any rate, because she was menstruating and it would have been inappropriate for him to have had intimate relations with her at that time.  At any rate, on that night, Joseph Pandera, pretending that he was Yohanan, had forced her to engage in conjugal relations with him notwithstanding her menstruation, after which he had departed[11].  When next Miriam had encountered Yohanan and criticized his behavior, so alien to his normal strict adherence to Jewish laws and traditions, he, shocked, had denied that he had forced himself on her or had even been with her that night, and, after they had both questioned Miriam’s mother, Miriam and Yohanan became aware of her rape by Joseph Pandera.  Even worse, the rape of Miriam had left her with child. [12]

Furious and horrified, Yohanan had sought counsel from Shimon ben Shetach, a Pharisee scholar and Nasi (referred to in rabbinic literature as a rabbinic Sage ranking with Hillel) of the Sanhedrin closely connected with the royal court.  Unfortunately, according to Rabban Shimeon ben Shetach, because of the absence of qualified witnesses to the rape (usual, of course, in the case of rape), neither Yohanan nor Miriam had any legal recourse against Joseph Pandera who thus escaped the incident free of punishment, Jewish law being notoriously antifeminine.  Devastated but also irresponsible, Yohanan had then abandoned Miriam to her fate and left for Babylonia.  In some variants, Miriam then fled to her relatives in Bethlehem but they refused to help her and she gave birth in a stable (Yellin, 2022, p. 151) while other variants claim that Yohanan left for Egypt with Miriam and accepted the child as his own.

At any rate, Miriam eventually gave birth to a son she named Yehoshua after her brother (or, in some versions, her father) and, as called for under Hebrew law, he was duly circumcised on the eighth day following his birth[13].  When he attained the proper age, Miriam had him admitted to the study of Jewish traditions in Jerusalem, a study at which he excelled, excelled so much that not infrequently he corrected scholars assigned to teach him and his peers, much to his teachers’ embarrassment and annoyance. On one such occasion, while the rabbis were discussing the Tractate Nezikin[14], he gave his own impudent interpretation of the law and, in an ensuing debate, held that Moses could not be the greatest of the prophets if he’d had to receive counsel from Jethro. Because of his conceit and arrogance he was not popular with either his teachers or with his classmates, both groups eventually finding opportunities to cause him significant harm, opportunities made possible, according to this variant, by Yehoshua’s own childish carelessness and conduct and, notwithstanding his erudition, by his inattention to ritual details.

According to the Alexander Jannæus version of the Toledot Yeshu, one day Yehoshua (the name initially used prior to his excommunication) had disrespectfully walked in front of the “sages” (either his teachers or members of the Jerusalem Sanhedrin, or both) with his head uncovered and had greeted only his own teacher while ignoring the rest of the scholars present.  That had set them to speculating on his unnatural nature.  Much more seriously on a subsequent occasion, he had been playing with a ball (or hoop) and, chasing it, had inadvertently entered the Second Temple, again bareheaded. Because of the foregoing, and because of the malice that the scholars bore against Yehoshua they decided to conduct a thorough investigation as to his background, an investigation which eventually led them back to the famous Rabban Shimeon ben Shetach, the rabbi with whom Yohanan had consulted concerning the rape of Miriam and in whom he had confided, and the rabbi had shared with the members of the Sanhedrin involved the information with which he had been entrusted by Yohanan, information which, after being threatened with torture and death, Miriam had confirmed[15].  Thus, Yehoshua was declared a mamzer (a bastard), expelled from his studies, excommunicated from his faith and his name had been expunged (whereupon he became known merely as Yeshu[16]) and forced to flee to Upper Galilee where he remained until King Alexander Jannæus expired and his wife, Salome Alexandra assumed the leading role in the governance of Judah.

Upon the change in leadership, Yeshu had purportedly slipped back to Jerusalem and then surreptitiously entered the sacred precincts of the Second Temple, entry that had been forbidden him when he’d been excommunicated[17] and while there had come upon the Ineffable Name of the Hebrew god which was carved on the stone tablet on which the Arc of the Covenant was set[18].  The Arc of the Covenant, the most sacred relic in all of Judaism and referred to as the Holy of Holies, was kept in a room in the shape of a perfect cube fifteen feet in every direction modeled on the wilderness tabernacle that had been constructed in accordance with the specific instructions given to Moses by the Hebrew god himself, a room considered so sacred that only one person, the High Priest, was allowed to enter it, and then only one day out of the entire year, because it was claimed that it was the actual dwelling place of the Hebrew god[19]

The Ineffable Name was protected by two figurines in the shape of huge brass lions (or perhaps dogs, it was hard to tell) stationed at the entrance to the innermost precincts of the Second Temple so that anyone who improperly obtained knowledge of the Ineffable Name would be shocked by their roars into forgetting it upon passing them as he left.  Knowing of this because of his studies of Hebrew law and lore, Yeshu had copied the letters of the Ineffable Name using a bit of charcoal from the brazier set near the entrance to the Holy of Holies on a tiny slip of parchment that he had fortuitously brought with him, and, using the power of the Ineffable Name to perform miracles, he had sliced open his thigh (or perhaps his calve) without feeling pain and had hidden the small parchment inside his own skin, healing, the incision with the power thus obtained thereby making it possible to recover the knowledge he would lose after exiting the Second Temple. As he’d left, the brass lions (or dogs) had roared as expected and he’d forgotten the Ineffable Name but not the fact that he’d obtained it, or how, and thus, when he came to the dwelling in Jerusalem where he’d been hiding since his return, he reopened the cut in his flesh with a knife and withdrew the parchment, recovering the knowledge he’d lost and thus attaining the ability to perform all kinds of miracles through use of the letters of the Ineffable Name, including, the miracle of immediately healing the incision he had made.[20]

Using the ability thus obtained, Yeshu made himself known in Jerusalem and throughout diverse sectors of Judea[21] including the towns of Bethlehem and Nazareth and the Upper Galilee, performing benign miracles by helping the afflicted and diseased, miracles he always attributed to the Hebrew god and, eventually, he gathered a following of three hundred and ten young Jewish men.  He also refuted those who had spoken ill of his birth and those who had excommunicated him, asserting that they had done so only because they had been jealous of his knowledge which threatened their quest for wealth and power and despised him because of his criticism of their abuses and corruption. Yeshu proclaimed that he was in fact the “Messiah” of whom Isaiah had prophesied, quoting diverse prophetic texts such as “Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel” insisting that King David, who he claimed as his ancestor, had prophesied concerning him, and that the Hebrew god himself had spoken to him, saying “Thou art my son, this day have I begotten thee.”

Of course, he’d had to provide evidence for his claims as even his most devoted followers had proven skeptical and insisted on proofs.  He’d provided the evidence demanded by curing a man who’d been lame from birth, and another who suffered from leprosy, in each case using the letters of the Ineffable Name, after which even the most skeptical among his followers had accepted him as the Messiah and the son of the Hebrew god. As one might anticipate, when word of the foregoing reached the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem, its members, furious, had decided to infiltrate the nascent movement and capture Yeshu. To do so they recruited two volunteers, a certain Annanui and a certain Ahaziah, who, pretending to be disciples, suggested to Yešu that he accept an invitation to visit the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem. Concerned because of his devastating prior experiences with Jewish authorities Yeshu had agreed to accept the invitation but only if the Sanhedrin’s members agreed beforehand to accept him in accordance with his claims of Davidic descent. The leaders of the Sanhedrin had deceptively agreed and, in accordance with the prophecy of Zechariah, Yeshu had travelled towards Jerusalem arriving at Knob where he acquired an ass on which he rode into Jerusalem.  However, when he arrived, the leaders of the Sanhedrin had immediately broken their oaths and had bound him and brought him before a Queen[22] then residing in Jerusalem, accusing him of sorcery and enticement to violate Jewish law.[23]

Rather than despairing, Yeshu had confidently addressed the Queen asserting that the prophets had long ago prophesied his coming, quoting “… and there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse” and proclaiming that he was the one of whom they’d foretold and, further, evidently with respect to his accusers but directed at the Queen as well, quoting “blessed is the man that walks not in the counsel of the ungodly”.  Impressed, the Queen had turned to the leaders of the Sanhedrin and asked them whether or not what Yeshu had quoted was indeed in the Hebrew Torah, which they’d had to admit.  But they’d then forcefully responded that it did not apply to Yeshu and, also quoting from scripture, their spokesman had replied “… and that prophet which shall presume to speak a word in my name which I have not commanded him to speak or that shall speak in the name of other gods, even that prophet shall die.”  They had then insisted that Yeshu had not fulfilled the signs and conditions of the Messiah.

The Queen, confused by the rhetorical battle had turned to Yeshu who’d again addressed her insisting that he was indeed the Messiah and that as proof thereof he had, as prophesied revived the dead.  The Queen had reacted to that claim by calling for a corpse to be brought before Yeshu and, in her presence and in the presence of his accusers, Yeshu had pronounced the Ineffable Name and the corpse had sprung up, alive, seemingly proving his claim to the Queen’s satisfaction.  Astonished and angered, she had then turned to the leaders of the Sanhedrin and reproached them, saying “this is a true sign” and had sent them off, humiliated, from her presence.

For a while thereafter Yeshu’s following increased as did the opposition led by the leaders of the Sanhedrin, dividing and polarizing Israel[24]. Eventually, Yeshu left Jerusalem to visit the Upper Galilee where he’d dwelt in exile.  However, as soon as he left the leaders of the Sanhedrin had returned to the Queen, again insisting that everything Yeshu did he did through sorcery and that rather than engaging in benign healing, Yeshu was merely seeking to lead the Jewish people astray.  Vacillating before the insistence of the Sanhedrin, the Queen partially acquiesced in their demands by sending the two false disciples who’d initially lured Yeshu back to Jerusalem, Annanui and Ahaziah, with orders for him to again present himself before her.  When they found him and sought to arrest him, his followers had intervened but Yeshu had ordered them not to oppose the summons with a battle, rather, he had asserted that he would once more prove himself to the Queen using the power of his father in Heaven.  He did so before large crowds as witnesses by first molding birds from clay and then, using the Ineffable Name, had breathed life into them and set them to flight.  Then, he had recited the letters of the Ineffable Name over a millstone which had been sunk into deep waters, whereupon it had floated to the surface and he’d sat upon it, floating as if in a boat. When the people had witnessed those miracles they had marveled and, at the behest of Yeshu, Annanui, Ahaziah and the other emissaries sent by the Queen had departed and had faithfully reported what they’d seen to the Queen who had trembled in astonishment, regretting her doubts. 

Notwithstanding the foregoing the leaders of the Sanhedrin had not only remained unrepentant and unconvinced but had decided to violate the holy law that forbade access to the Ineffable Name and, determined to fight fire with fire, had elected a rabbi by the name of Judah Iskarioto (a variant on Yehuda) who they brought into the sanctuary and, despite the fact that he was not the High Priest and that it was not the feast day on which the High Priest was authorized to enter into the presence of the Holy of Holies, had permitted him to enter the sacred precinct and to copy the Ineffable Name, as Yeshu had done, and as Yeshu had done, to reacquaint himself with its letters once outside the Second Temple and to thereby also attain and retain the power to perform miracles.  Then, for a third time Yeshu found himself summoned to appear before the Queen to prove his claims, but this time, unbeknown to him, opposed by another with access to the Ineffable Name.  On this final occasion, Yeshu sought to prove his status as the true Messiah by ascending in the air[25] as if towards Heaven, but then the leaders of the Sanhedrin ordered Judah Iskarioto who was also present to do likewise, which he did, chasing Yeshu and seeking to force him to earth whereupon an aerial battle ensued.  For a while, neither was able to gain the upper hand but eventually, again in complete disregard for Jewish law or traditions, Judah Iskarioto engaged in an act that defiled the Ineffable Name for both of them, spewing his semen on Yeshu, and they both crashed to earth, polluted and, having lost knowledge of the Ineffable Name and thus unable to invoke their powers.  The agents of the Sanhedrin, not waiting for a further decision from the Queen had seized Yeshu, covered his head and beaten him with pomegranate staves after which they’d taken him as their prisoner to a synagogue in Tiberias[26].  There, they’d bound him to a pillar and tortured him, forcing him to drink bitter vinegar instead of water and had impaled his head with a crown of thorns (a situation similar to that reflected in the Christian gospels).

Reacting to the foregoing, Yeshu’s followers in Tiberias, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth and Upper Galilee had assembled to battle the members and agents of the Sanhedrin who’d captured and imprisoned Yeshu and they’d eventually prevailed, freeing him and fleeing with him to a region near Antioch[27] where Yeshu had remained, recuperating, until the eve of the following Passover.[28]

Unable to continue his ministry without access to knowledge of the Ineffable Name which was lost when he was polluted with the semen of Judah Iskarioto, Yeshu eventually resolved to abandon his exile and return to Jerusalem in order to re-acquire such knowledge and he set his return to coincide with certain prophecies associated with a Passover that was to coincide with a Sabbath.  Thus, on the eve of that Passover, Yeshu, accompanied by many of his disciples and welcomed by many others returned to Jerusalem riding upon an ass and, after a triumphal entry, headed for the Second Temple surrounded by many of his closest disciples who sought to create confusion as to which one among them was Yeshu thus minimizing the risk of interference with his mission by agents of the Sanhedrin and the temple priests who opposed him. However, Judah Iskarioto, also disguised, had infiltrated Yeshu’s disciples and sent word to the leaders of the Sanhedrin concerning Yeshu’s plans and further, had indicated that he himself would unmask him to agents of the Sanhedrin and the priests at the Second Temple by bowing to him.  Unfortunately for Yešu, events unfolded in the manner which Judah Iskarioto, the Sanhedrin and the priests had arranged and, once more, Yeshu found himself in their hands.

When he was seized, Yeshu had been asked his name by his captors to which he’d replied with various names and recited diverse versus from Jewish lore, all contradicted by the representatives of the Sanhedrin present with counter quotations whereupon, without a trial, he’d been sentenced to death by hanging at the sixth hour of the eve of the Passover (after which, the laws of the Sabbath would have forced a delay during which the followers of Yeshu might have engaged in more mischief and perhaps even rescued him again)[29].  However, when the members of the Sanhedrin sought to hang him[30], every tree they tried to use for such purpose refused to support his weight apparently because, while still able to conjure using the Ineffable Name, he’d enchanted all trees so that they would not cooperate in causing him harm.  But his plan was flawed as it had been limited to trees and thus did not apply to the carob-stalk, more a plant than a tree, and thus, the members of the Sanhedrin, the priests and their agents eventually succeeded in executing Yeshu by hanging him, albeit not in the traditional manner.  His corpse remained hanging from the carob-stalk until the hour for afternoon prayer, for it was written in Scripture that the body of a person executed by hanging could not remain throughout the night upon the “tree” so they had cast his corpse in a hole they’d caused to be dug outside of Jerusalem adjacent to an estuary near a river where refuse and human waste where regularly scattered (i.e., a dung heap), thus desecrating it.

Yeshu had prophesied his death but also, that he would not remain dead and would instead, ascend to join his father in Heaven and, for a while, it seemed that his prophecy had been fulfilled.  When his followers had visited the place where his body had been cast and sought to claim it, it had vanished therefrom, something of which they promptly informed the Queen, claiming that it proved the claims Yeshu had made to her and disproved those of the members of the Sanhedrin.

Shocked, the members of the Sanhedrin and the priests together with emissaries sent by the Queen immediately went to the spot where Yeshu’s body had been cast and found that indeed, it had disappeared.  When that information was conveyed to the Queen, she was furious as well as distraught considering that she may have been deceived into permitting the murder of the true Messiah but the members of the Sanhedrin and the priests dissuaded her from punishing them immediately, obtaining a reprieve of three days during which they would either provide evidence that Yeshu had not ascended to Heaven or be severely punished by the Queen.

As the deadline was set to expire towards the end of the third day, while walking in the field where Yeshu’s body had been cast, lamenting over his fate and praying for a miracle, one of the leaders of the Sanhedrin, Rabbi Tanhuma, met the owner of a certain nearby garden who, upon hearing the rabbi’s laments, approached him and confessed that he himself had removed the corpse and had buried it in the sand in his own garden so that Yeshu’s followers would be unable to steal the body and claim that he had ascended into heaven[31]. Elated and relieved, Rabbi Tanhuma quickly shared the news with the other members of the Sanhedrin and the priests whereupon, together, they dug up the corpse and, tying it by the hair to the tail of a horse, transported it to the Queen, exclaiming gleefully “This is Yeshu who is said to have ascended to heaven”.  Presented with such evidence, the Queen once more reversed her judgment agreeing that the prophecy of Yeshu’s ascension to Heaven had been false and that, consequently, Yeshu had proven to be a false prophet who had enticed the people and led them astray, after which she ridiculed Yeshu’s followers and praised those who had exposed him.

However, many of Yeshu’s followers refused to accept the judgment of the Queen and twelve of them dispersed to preach his message among diverse people.  Three went to the mountains of Ararat, three to Armenia, three to Rome and three to the kingdoms by the sea, each preaching that the followers of the Sanhedrin had slain “the Messiah of the Lord”.  Miriam, Yešu’s mother,

…. became ill after the death of her son and therefore made a will. She ordered the faithful followers of her son to set a tombstone over her grave. She died and the news quickly spread. Many came to her funeral to mourn her and deliver a funeral oration … recounting her good deeds and those of her son. …. The Sanhedrin then had the tombstone torn down and forbade anyone to erect a new one in the same place [making it] impossible to see that anyone had ever been buried there (Michels, 2022, p. 94).[32]

The Israelites loyal to the Sanhedrin had mockingly replied to the message of Yešu’s followers, taunting them and claiming that they had been foolishly deluded by a false prophet and for thirty years there was endless strife and discord between the two groups.  However, disturbingly, more and more Jews became deceived into following the heretical teachings of Yeshu’s followers.  In response to that growing dilemma, the leaders of the Sanhedrin devised a scheme to subvert the growing movement of Yeshu’s followers by once again infiltrating it, this time, with a mission to create an irreversible schism between the followers of Yeshu and loyal Jews.

The person that the Sanhedrin chose to implement its scheme was a greatly learned man, a rabbi by the name of Shimon Kaipha[33] who went to Antioch, then the main city of the followers of Yeshu who had taken to referring to themselves as “Nazarenes” and he claimed to them that he had been among the principle disciples of Yeshu and the Yeshu himself had charged him with leading his followers after his death and had empowered him to perform miracles “as Yeshu himself has done”, something he was indeed able to do because, as in the case of Judah Iskarioto, the priests of the Second Temple had made the power of the Ineffable Name available to him by granting him access to its secret.  Thus, he easily deceived Yeshu’s followers into accepting him as Yeshu’s heir by healing a leper and a lame man. Once the followers of Yeshu, the so called Nazarenes, had accepted him as their leader, Shimon Kaipha, as had been planned by the Sanhedrin, convinced them that now that Yeshu was enshrined in Heaven at the right hand of his father, he had ordained that his followers were to reject many of the most sacred aspects of the Hebrew faith, claiming that in a vision, Yeshu from Heaven had ordained that he and the Father abhorred the Hebrew new moons and feasts and even the Hebrew alphabet, and that his Nazarenes were thenceforth to observe as sacred the first day of the week instead of the seventh, the Resurrection instead of the Passover, the Ascension into Heaven instead of the Feast of Weeks, the finding of the Cross instead of the New Year, the Feast of the Circumcision instead of the Day of Atonement, the New Year instead of Chanukah; they were also to be indifferent with regard to circumcision and the dietary laws. Finally, that they were to follow the teaching of turning the right if smitten on the left and the meek acceptance of suffering.

All these new ordinances which Shimon Kaipha (or Paul, as he was known to the Nazarenes) taught them were really meant to separate these Nazarenes from the people of Israel and to bring the internal strife to an end.  It’s interesting that this Shimon Kaipha was represented as Paul, supposedly formerly Saul of Tarsus, rather that Peter (formerly Cephas, or Simeon or Simon), given the nature of the names involved, but then, Peter was usually portrayed in the Christian gospels as poorly educated and not particularly intelligent.  However, other versions of the Toledot Yeshu claim that Peter was indeed also an infiltrator and a learned, erudite and talented author as well (Gager, 2011, pp. 221-246).

Concluding Observations

The diverse versions of the Toledot Yeshu were, in part, based on information contained in the Palestinian and Babylonian Talmuds and other formal Jewish teachings but a good deal probably involve folklore; traditions orally passed on, especially during periods when such teachings involved serious personal danger.  Thus, the earliest versions of the Toledot Yeshu have proven impossible to date and an original version impossible to identify. In one sense, the diverse versions of the Toledot Yeshu are counterpoints to the Christian gospels, the canonical gospels as well as the apocryphal gospels (those rejected by traditional Christians), many of the latter having come to light in the last century.  In another sense, they seem a form of psychological passive resistance to the abuses heaped by Christians on Jews since the epoch of the Roman Emperor Constantine. Unfortunately, they are also, in part, responsible for the periodic tides of vehement antisemitism as they evoke the most lurid aspects of accusations by Christians against Jews, holding Jews collectively responsible for the death of Yešu.  Interestingly, beginning in the middle of the twentieth century, after the Nazi Holocaust, Jewish leaders externally denied any role in the death of Yešu, a claim formally accepted as valid by the Catholic Church and many other Christian denominations, while internally, disparate groups of Jews continue to cling to many of the claims made in the diverse versions of the Toledot Yeshu, if perhaps not to its outlandish supernatural aspects. Outlandish but perhaps not unusual or very different from the miracles claimed by all three of the Abrahamic faiths: Judaism, Christianity and Islam.  Claims which seem entirely credible within each branch, but ludicrous when espoused by another.

Personally, the author is particularly taken by the versions of the Toledot Yeshu that claim that saints Peter and Paul, the two most important saints in Christendom, were in fact, Jewish agents charged with infiltrating and subverting the nascent heresy into a full blown schism and in that manner, minimizing conversion of gullible Jews.  That is certainly a strategy worthy or the ancestors of today’s Mossad and Shin Bet and resonates with the role that Saul of Tarsus in fact played in the evolution of Christianity from one of the many variants of Judaism that existed two millennia ago into the myriad of frequently antisemitic, Hellenized variants of Christianity that exist today.  It’s ironic that Islam, which evolved seven centuries later, seems so much closer to the Judaism prevalent at the dawn of the Common Era than do most variants of today’s Judaism and certainly more so than any major branch of Christianity, and that Christians and Jews today so thoroughly criticize Islamic insistence on strict obedience to the Judaic Laws purportedly delivered to Moses directly by YHWH.

In conjunction with how similar beliefs are viewed so differently when espoused by others, it seems appropriate to reflect, at least for a moment, on the concept of genocide, a concept deemed abhorrent and anathema when applied to a group of which we are part, but sacred and holy when applied to others, at least among the Abrahamic faiths. Illustrative of the latter, of course, is the current genocide being inflicted by Zionists claiming to act in the name of and for the benefit of all Jews, a claim vociferously rejected by many Jews of conscience, especially when contrasted with the genocide perpetrated against Jews (and others, indeed, most victims were not Jews but Slavs, Russians, gypsies, homosexuals, etc.) by the Nazis during the second “war to end all wars”.  But the current Zionist attitude towards genocide is not alien historically to Jews who according to the Torah approved of genocide on numerous occassions, e.g., with respect to the Flood; to the killing of the Egyptian primogenitors; to the killing of all the men, women, elderly and children of Jericho by Joshua after the death of Moses; to the slaughter of the Canaanites throughout the Middle East; to the slaughter of Christians in Jerusalem during the Persian conquest of the city in the seventh century of the Common Era, etc. And of course, that is not a phenomenon unique to Jews, consider the genocide perpetrated by Europeans of all stripes on indigenous populations in the Americas, in Africa, in Australia and in Asia, especially by the United Kingdom, the Spaniards, the Portuguese, the Dutch, the Belgians and last but certainly not least, by the United States.

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About the Author:

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com.


[1] Phonically of course, as neither Hebrew nor Aramaic use the Latin alphabet.

[2] Heleni of Adiabene (Hebrew: הֶלֵּנִי‎ Hellēnī, who died circa 50–56 of the Common Era), was a queen mother in the Parthian vassal state of Adiabene.  She was, at least initially, purportedly married to her brother Monobaz I to whom she bore the monarchs Izates II and Monobaz II. About the year 30 of the Common Era, well within the most commonly accepted timeline for the life of Yešu, she and her family converted to Judaism to which she became devoted and, upon her death, she was buried in a pyramidal sepulchral in Jerusalem. According to Josephus, she was the daughter of King Izates I and according to Moses of Chorene she was the chief wife of Abgar V, king of Edessa, rather than of her brother, Monobaz I (although perhaps, at different times she had been wife to them both).  Problematic with respect to her inclusion in diverse variants of the Toledot Yeshu is the probability that she only moved to Jerusalem in the year 45 or 46 of the Common Era, well after the crucifixion of Yešu (Hasan-Rokem: 2011, p. 266).

[3] The public repudiation by Jewish leaders having been formally accepted by Catholics at least in the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) when Pope Paul VI issued the declaration Nostra aetate (“In Our Time”; Montini, 1965).

[4] See generally Meerson, 2014.

[5] See generally, Ilan, 2009; Hasan-Rokem, 2011.

[6] Frequently referred to as the Wagenseil version.

[7] In some versions, a nobleman.

[8] Interestingly, the initial reference to a purported Pantera as a possible father of Yešu was by a Roman philosopher by the name of Celsus, a second century Greek philosopher and opponent of early Christianity, in his literary work, The True Word, see Patrick, 2009; Origen, circa 3rd century, C.E.; Gager, 2011, p. 242.

[9] Miriam, or more probably Mariam, was the Aramaic and Hebrew form of the Greek name, “Maria”, anglicized to “Mary”.

[10] Some variants, however, have Joseph Pandera enter Miriam’s home by cutting a hole in the roof.

[11] Other related versions have Miriam willingly engaging in intimate relations with Joseph Pandera because they were both very attractive and desirable but Yohanan, her betrothed, had shown little interest in Miriam physically.  Thus she was an adulteress and Yohanan a cuckold.  In some of those versions, Miriam remained with Joseph Pandera after she was abandoned by Yohanan.  Indeed, in one version, Yohanan helped her escape her de facto imprisonment through the window of her bedroom using a ladder, after which they had eloped (Checas, 2022, p. 167).

[12] The Alexander Jannæus version is the kindest version with respect to Mary/Miriam/Mariam, as most have her as either a prostitute or a promiscuously unfaithful wife.  Most, if not all versions, have her conception of Yešu take place during her menstrual period.  In some versions, she deceives her fiancé Yohanan into believing that Yešu is his child, and he remains and raises him as if he were (see Michels, 2022).

[13] Other variants assert he was not circumcised and refused to adhere to Jewish dietary laws.

[14] A tract on the nature of damages under Jewish law, part of the fourth Order of the Mishna (also the Tosefta and Talmud) which dealt with Jewish criminal and civil law and the Jewish court system.

[15] Related versions had Yešu demand that his mother claim that he had been born from her forehead, and that she had acquiesced, claiming to have remained a virgin.  Furthermore, in those versions, she is a vocal supporter of Yešu when he is imprisoned and assists in his escape (see Michels, 2022).

[16] A negative acronym meaning “may his name and memory be blotted out” (Yimach Shmo Uzichro), Gribetz, 2011, p. 174.

[17] Incoherently implying that prior to his excommunication he’d had access to the sacred precinct reserved only to the High Priest, and that only once a year.

[18] Other versions assert that he came upon the Ineffable Name accidentally earlier when, in an incident somewhat similar to the one described above, as a child, he had entered the sacred precincts while chasing the hoop (or ball) but had inappropriately appropriated its use pretty much in the manner here described.

[19] Apparently, as illustrated in many versions of the Toledot Yeshu, it was a frequently violated sacred rule as not only Yešu but members of the Sanhedrin seemed to come and go there whenever they found it convenient to make the Ineffable Name available to someone for use in opposing Yešu.

[20] Consistent, apparently, with the general tenor of Jewish criticism of Jesus’ miracles going at least as far back as Celsus (second century of the Common Era, Gager, 2011, p. 242), which does not deny Jesus’ ability to perform miracles, accusing him instead of practicing magic. This version even accepts the divine origin of the miracles, attributing them to his misuse of the divine name. In the Alphabet of Ben Sira, Lilith is accused of a similar crime purportedly using the power of the Ineffable Name to escape from the Garden of Eden (Schäfer, 2011, p. 6).

[21] Most versions have the events taking place in the diverse parts of what would become the Roman province of Judaea but the Romans had not yet conquered Judea during the reign of Alexander Jannæus.

[22] Given that the Queen in question might have been any one of the various Helena, Helene or Heleni alluded to, the author has elected to just refer to the queen in question generically as the “Queen”.

[23] At this point, this compilation transitions to one more related to the Queen Helena, Helene and Heleni variants even though confusion reigns given the role played after the demise of King Alexander Jannæus by his wife, Salome Alexandra for some reason also referred to as Helene, all of which seem similar.

[24] Although the events took place in either a kingdom known as Judaea or a subsequent Roman province also referred to by that name, before its name was changed to Palestine, the term “Israel” was used to refer to its Jewish inhabitants.

[25] Described in some versions as riding on a sunbeam (Chuecas, 2011, p. 161).

[26] There is a good bit of incoherence here as Tiberias was founded sometime around 18–20 CE in the Herodian Tetrarchy of Galilee and Perea by the Roman client king Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great.  However, the narration purports to be from the Alexander Jannæus variant of the Toledot Yeshu which takes place almost a century earlier.

[27] Some traditions say Egypt.

[28] In a variation on the story, Judah was able to out-miracle Yeshu in the sign contest without defiling him and Yeshu was thus discredited, arrested, but, as in this version, his followers had been able to break him free, and, he had not forgotten the letters of the Ineffable Name. In that variant he had escaped to Egypt in hopes of learning Egyptian magic (regarded as the best magic in the world) but Judah had gone to Egypt and again infiltrated Yeshu’s disciples, posing as one himself.  From that vantage point that Judah had been able to cause Yeshu to forget the Ineffable Name, resulting in Yeshu’s decision to return to Jerusalem and relearn it. But Judah had promptly sent warnings to the leaders of the Sanhedrin along with suggestions as to how to arrest Yeshu.

[29] In this variant, no queen is present as Yeshu is convicted and executed directly by the Sanhedrin, which differs from most other Queen Helena or Heleni variants, and indeed, from the variants which have Emperor Tiberius, King Herod or Pontius Pilate presiding over a trial.

[30] Perhaps a euphemism for crucifixion but most variants of the Toledot Yeshu seem to insist that he was hung, rather than crucified, and that is consistent with the claim that it was the Sanhedrin rather than the Romans who executed Yešu as crucifixion was a Roman form of execution.

[31] One variant at least has the body deliberately removed by a rabbi, Gamliel, rather than a gardener, and hidden in order to prevent Yešu’s followers from stealing it and claiming that it had ascended, a plot that went astray when it inadvertently supported the suppositions of Yešu’s followers, but was subsequently corrected when Gamliel disclosed where he had hidden it so that it could be disclosed to the Queen.

[32] Another variants states the following concerning Miriam’s death and burial:

In those days, Mary, the mother of Jesus, died. King (Herod) ordered her to be buried under the tree where her son had been hanged, as well as the brothers of Jesus and his sisters, whom the king ordered to be hanged. And they hanged them and wrote on the tombstone, ‘Here the children of fornication (Hos 2:6) were hanged, and their mother was buried beside them. Shame on them!’ But some villains (פריצים) from Jesus’s family came and stole the tombstone and put another in its place, on which they wrote, ‘Behold, a ladder is set up on the earth with its top reaching the heavens, and the angels of God are ascending (Gen. 28:12). The mother of the children rejoices. Praise the Lord! (Ps. 113:9).’ When the king heard what the villains ( פריצים) had done, he ordered to demolish the tombstone, and he killed about 100 relatives of Jesus (Michels, 2022, pp. 95-95).

[33] Diverse variants claim it was not one person who infiltrated and sabotaged the evolving movement but two or three, men who promptly became major saints of the evolving heresy and who are known to foolish Christians as saints Peter, Paul and John.

“Antisemitism”: a Disturbing New Semantic Perspective

Is renewal of antisemitism the best way to resolve today’s geopolitical crisis, perhaps an existential crises?  If that’s true it’s an incredibly disturbing rejection of the ethics and morality that finally evolved during the past century. 

But is it true nonetheless?

The answer depends on how one defines (or rather, re-defines) antisemitism, something that has become an accelerating trend led by Zionists, both Jewish and Christian. The “re-definers” insist on defining “antisemitism” as any criticism of the Zionist anti-Islamic agenda thus, opposition to ethnic cleansing, apartheid, mass-murder, property theft and genocide when practiced by Jews or Jewish allies, is now defined according to them as “antisemitism” and such definition is more and more frequently being codified into law, especially in the United Kingdom and now in the United States and the European Union.  If one accepts that definition as valid, then the corollary is that antisemitism is morally and ethically a positive rather than a horrible trait, and antisemitism thus becomes, not a ludicrously unjustifiable prejudice but an essential trait necessary to promote equity, justice and world peace. 

How strange is that?

Given such re-definition, the law of unintended consequences comes into play, something of which many thoughtful and conscientious Jews are only too aware and, consequently, reject, insisting that such Zionist actions must not be made in their names.  They’re aware not only of the ethical and moral quagmire involved but of the eventual re-evaluative reaction, one that may well prove all too similar to reactions from which Jews have suffered throughout their history.  Reactions that have treated all Jews as responsible for the actions of a few and consequently eventually labeled Jews generically as selfish and morally repugnant “others”.  Reactions in which Jews, in a generalized sense, are first admired, respected and permitted to attain substantial political and economic power only to lose it all, and to all too frequently, lose their lives as well.

The cycles of Jewish power and then despair are seemingly tied to the concept of genocide, something with which notwithstanding perceptions, Judaism has been historically linked, more often, as is the case today, as victimizer than as victim. Current Zionist leaders in Israel have recently expressed admiration for historical incidents involving genocide engaged in by the ancient Hebrews and avocate for the morality of engaging in similar conduct today notwithstanding its classification since the second war to end all wars as involving crimes of lesse humanidad and thus, purportedly anathema. The actions that Israeli leaders have recently defended as appropriate include the use of rape, torture, collective punishment and mass extermination as legitimate military tactics. 

Unfortunately, examples of Jewish orchestrated genocide lauded by Israel’s current leaders abound in the Tanakh as they do the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.  Both record in positive terms numerous instances of genocide, sometime engaged in directly by the Abrahamic divinity (e.g., the destruction of the so called cities of the plain, Sodom and Gomorrah, etc.; the Great Flood, the murder of the Egyptian first borns, etc.), but all too frequently genocide directly perpetrated by Jews themselves, as in the slaughter of all the men, women and children of ancient Jericho and in a large number of other Canaanite cities by Joshua, Saul, David, etc.; and the genocide visited on Christians in Jerusalem in the seventh century during the Sasanian conquest in the year 614 of the Common Era.  The unfortunate corollary has been that the Jews themselves have subsequently suffered calamities all too similar to those that they inflicted on others, e.g., the Babylonian conquest, the Roman conquest, the millennia of antisemitism which followed the purported torture and execution of Yešu the Nazarene by the Jerusalem Sanhedrin and finally, the so called Nazi Holocaust.

We now find ourselves once more in what seems a new cycle. 

Starting in the nineteenth century, instigated by fundamentalist Christians in the United States who hoped to accelerate the end of the world and the so called “second coming”, Jews who’d attained economic power in the United States, the United Kingdom, France and elsewhere sought to reverse the tide of European and American antisemitism by creating a homeland for the Jewish people, eventually settling on the part of the Ottoman Empire referred to as Palestine.  The fact that Palestine had been inhabited for millennia by the descendants of historical Jews who’d converted, first to Christianity and then to Islam, and by others, especially Arabs who’d wandered in over the centuries, was deemed of no importance to this new movement which its adherents referred to as “Zionism”.  Nor was the fact that such plans were anathema to Orthodox Jews who viewed them as contrary to the dictates and plans of the Hebrew divinity.  In implementing their plan, the Zionists were ruthless from the beginning, eventually exposing their brethren in Germany and Eastern Europe to the tragedy commonly referred to as the Nazi Holocaust, a disaster essential to the success of the Zionist goal as, following that calamity, the victorious powers in the second war to end all wars finally complied with their commitments to Zionists for their purported help in persuading the United States to enter the first war to end all wars on the side of the victors.  Thus, despite the supposed right of popular self-determination, Zionists were awarded sovereignty over most of Palestine in 1947 despite being a small minority of Palestine’s total population and since then have sought continuous expansion through ethnic cleansing, theft of land and genocide.  As in the case of ancient Sparta (which Zionists seem to revere), since 1948 Zionists and other Jews have found themselves a minority in a sea of virtual slaves they were prepared to dominate by whatever means seem useful, the decisions of the Nuremberg tribunals (which Zionists had largely crafted) be damned.

Which is where we find ourselves today.  Pretty much damned.

Semitism has now been re-defined by Zionists as a Spartan-like creed that insists that anything done to maintain power over a subjugated population, including its elimination, is proper and defensible regardless of the hypocrisy involved, and, conversely, that anything which stands in the way of such “Semitism” is obviously antisemitic and must be destroyed. 

That attitude mortgages the future in favor of the greed of the moment in much the same way that, according to traditional Christians, the leaders of the Jerusalem Sanhedrin did two millennia ago when, addressing Roman concerns over the crucifixion of what to them seemed an innocent man, they purportedly told the Roman procurator in Palestine that any sins involved would be on their heads and on those of their descendants.  So very much like Luis XV’s purported refrain, “après moi le déluge”.

“Deluge”, … how appropriate.
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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Our Other World

Volition free.  Dreams.  Kaleidoscopes which almost all share but in unique and individual manners regardless of the efforts of others to invade or intrude upon them.  Our other world.  The one most closely linked to us but which we can’t understand, although we frequently try to and sometimes believe that we succeed. 

The world others seek to invade as well; in order to seek to define us.  The battlefield Sigmund Freud and others long before human history unsuccessfully tried to conquer by insisting on interpreting it and, in seeking to do so merely muddled the world of the woke as did Inanna’s sister in-law Geshtin-anna with respect to a certain dream involving her brother Dumuzi’s exile to the realm ruled by Inanna’s sister, Ereshkigal.  One wonders though if that mightn’t be where old dreams go after they’ve expired.

Logic is replaced in our other world by an analog all its own, one just as powerful but concurrently lacking in power as it has in the lands of the woke.  An ephemeral and ever changing version with traces left like landmines to explode when we least expect them, sometimes exploding unacknowledged, their consequences deftly swathed in mysterious consequences. A place where natural laws, physical laws cannot bind us, although its own undecipherable laws have their own rules, rules we lack the means to understand.

Volition free delight as well as terror drifting free, like manic wills o’ the wisp or dandelions, or perhaps lucid dragons or just poorly fried eggs.  Primordial chaos resting comfortably free of the restraints imposed by selfish order.

Our other world.
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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Tangled Political Realities as November 2024 Approaches

In terms of political organizations, the concepts of “conservative”, “liberal”, “progressive”, “left”, right” and “center” no longer have any real meaning. Their meaning and context have been vacuumed, distorted and destroyed by those in charge of perpetrating and perpetuating lies and disinformation, the corporate media, faux historians, controlled academia and those who control the Internet (including both social media and search engines where algorithms rule). Such terms are now merely tools to polarize us, to divide us and to make us easier to control.

Two relevant opposing concepts do however exist: state-ism and populism.

Statists include an ironic amalgam of those who honestly believe that current governments are beneficent and the answer to all our social, economic and political problems with cynical deep state operatives who see the state as the ideal tool to control us and through such control, to extract ever increasing profits for the billionaire class. The latter is comprised of moles buried throughout the bureaucracy, the judiciary and the media who assure that government works to perpetuate the worst among us in power while keeping the bulk of us safely divided.

Populists are an amalgam from diverse, frequently opposing sociopolitical perspectives who share a belief that the institutions of government have been perverted and thus oppose them. In general, they share beliefs in real democracy and real liberty but acknowledge that such concepts do not currently exist.  Populists comprise the vast majority but have permitted statist to maintain them divided into opposing camps based on the fake labels listed above, i.e.: “conservative”, “liberal”, “progressive”, “left”, right” and “center”, which populists take seriously. The labels are institutionally fake but contextually relevant. The differences exist for populists but the reality is that far more unites each sector of the populist political spectrum than that which divides them. Something that statists seek to obfuscate at all costs because, should populists attain their common interests and often complimentary goals, the statist empire could be destroyed and the dreams of equity, relative equality, justice and peaceful coexistence might become realities.

Statists use divisive emotions to maintain dictatorial control: what were once known as “wedge issues” which keep populists at each others’ throats. Issues like abortion and gun control and immigration, and they distort sociocultural divisions like gender, sexual orientation, race, nationality and religion keeping real problems festering because as long as they remain unresolved, populists can be kept from uniting. And, of course, the most cynical and thus most effective statists in the United States are today found in the Democratic Party and among the traditionalist wing of the Republican Party, and in the United Kingdom, in the once populist Labour Party and in the Conservative Party, in each case, merely virtually identical two-headed-Hydrae.

In the meantime, Hillary Clinton and her groupies try to re-seize control of the Democratic Party from a dazed and confused Joe Biden so that she can have one more chance to be the first female president while the Obama camp keeps pulling tangled strings behind the scenes to deflect her aspirations but is itself confused as to whether Michele or “AG” (his real name is Eric but he can’t let us forget he was once the Attorney General) Holder should replace their inept current figurehead, and Donald Trump keeps smirking and holding massive rallies while we ignore that three decent people are seeking to lead us out of the Deep State wilderness: Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Jill Stein and Cornell West, PhD.

And the rich keep getting richer, the poor, poorer, the economic center keeps shrinking and people keep dying massively in elective and genocidal wars while defense industry dividends soar and the corporate media shouts:

Nothing here to see!  Move along!!!  Turn the page!!! Or else!!!

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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Recalling Teddy’s Wisdom and Optimism

Great Ones we are grateful” was an expression my younger brother Teddy used to shout to the sky above Venice Beach in California during early mornings and late evenings many decades ago, at a time when his intuition insisted that we were not alone in the universe, and that we had benign mentors watching over us.

Times seemed bad to Teddy back then, back in the seventies and early eighties of the last century during another millennium when the Age of Aquarius was purportedly about to dawn. Of course, now, those times seem like a golden age, at least in comparison to the present. And now, even to Teddy, the Great Ones, if they exist or ever existed, seem as distant from us, and as disinterested in us, as do our own divinities, leaving us abandoned to our own devices, led through illusions and delusions and deceit by the very worst among us.

So while my brother’s optimism and hope were beautiful in their way, they were more than anything a symptom of the reality that we’d lost our way and that we seemed congenitally incapable of finding our way back.

Although back towards what, given our history as a species, seems a depressing thought.

And our path forward, unfortunately, now seems even worse.
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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

A Wakeup Call for Black Voters

African Americans were brought in chains to the Americas where for centuries they were forced to serve as slaves and, in a political sense that has not changed. After the purported emancipation of American slaves they’ve permitted themselves to remain in political slavery, first to the Grand Old Party and now, for almost a century, to the party that sought to keep them enslaved, the Democratic Party. In part that’s because American slaves, unlike the slaves in Haiti, did not free themselves. Haiti can hardly be qualified as a success but it’s version of Simon Bolívar and José Francisco de San Martín y Matorras and yes, George Washington, Toussaint Louverture should be an inspiration to all descendants of Africans stolen from their own lands and forced into slavery. Abraham Lincoln should not.

American slaves were emancipated only through a cynical ploy by Abraham Lincoln, a racist who believed African Americans could never coexist with whites and should all be expelled from the Union he loved. A cynical racist who believed that African Americans should never have political rights in the United States of America. American slaves were emancipated, not to enjoy the fruits of freedom and the ability to attain their highest potential, as individuals and as a race, but rather, to preserve the Union and to lower the cost of labor for Northern factory owners thriving as the industrial revolution permitted the evolution of what became known as the “gilded age” in the United States.

Slaves in the United States were emancipated, not because slavery was considered an intolerable evil, but because victory in the Civil War was essential for Northern industrialists to realize their dream of an American Empire. They were emancipated only to dissuade the United Kingdom and France from supporting the Confederacy’s aspirations for independence. In fact, when they were initially purportedly emancipated during the Civil War, they were emancipated only in the Confederacy over which the Union lacked legal jurisdiction but remained enslaved in the Union itself. That seems ironic based on how history has been taught in the United States for the past century but anyone can read Lincoln’s initial inaugural address where he said (and anyone can verify it on Google): “I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so.

The fact that Americans of African descent were emancipated by cynical whites by no means implies that there have not been brilliant, ethical and visionary leaders of African descent in the United States, leaders, for example, like Frederick Douglas or Marcus Garvey or Malcolm Little (later known as el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz and finally as Malcolm X) or Martin Luther King, Jr., leaders who believed that Americans of African descent should break the bonds of political slavery that prevented them from attaining the role in American society to which their numbers and their talents should have entitled them.  Indeed, as of 2019, there were a total of 255 different African American led groups in the United States that avocated for African American political independence. But the old overseer system that controlled African Americans during their days as slaves, the system of treacherous African American overseers who betrayed their brothers and sisters, never ended. It just morphed into a system controlled and funded by people of all races that sees African Americans as a commodity to be controlled and used, especially in the political arena where African Americans can be herded into a monolithic voting bloc that serves its masters rather than its members just as slaves enriched plantation owners while they were maintained at barely subsistence levels. A system run by modern overseers like Barack Obama and Kamala Harris and Hakeem Sekou Jeffries and Charles Diggs and Charley Rangel and Kweisi Mfume and Shirley Chisholm and Louis Stokes and William L. Clay. Heroes to African Americans because some among them participated in apparently successful battles for desegregation and civil rights but whose principal loyalties were and are to the white led, power mad, ill-named Democratic Party.

The Democratic Party is a strange amalgam of disenfranchised minorities and fringe groups without common bonds other than their deluded acquiescence in their own continuous betrayal, especially since the ascension of the Clintons to political power in 1992. The party’s principal strategy is the use of polarization to goad their betrayed supporters to maintain them in power so that the party can, in turn, serve its real masters: the billionaire class, Wall Street, trial lawyers, but most of all, the military industrial complex. It seems amazing, especially with reference to African Americans, how successful condescending platitudes, backslapping and utter hypocrisy have been in keeping their voters in line even when, as in case of the Clintons, they are devastatingly betrayed. Witness the Clintons (two for the price of one) deformations of the criminal justice and welfare systems that devastated the African American community. But that’s exactly what overseers are for. What they’ve always been for.

The reality is that Black Power is an inchoate reality, as is the power of each and every component of the incoherent alliance that conforms the modern Democratic Party, but a reality that will only be realized when such groups are emancipated from political slavery and attain their own political power through their own political parties under leaders loyal to their constituencies rather than to the hidden leaders of what has come to be known as the Deep State. Shifting from one component of the political duopoly that has ruled the United States since the Civil War to the other is meaningless. Only a multiparty system embracing real democracy rather than its verisimilitude can bring about a real American Dream, a society where every American citizen can attain his or her own greatest personal potential, for their own benefit, and where overseers are consigned to the Hell they deserve.

Of course, the United States constitutional system at all levels, as implemented by legislation, regulations, rules, ordinances, decree and judicial decisions, poses a huge impediment to political emancipation and democracy. It was designed by slaveholders precisely for such purpose, with the seductive illusions of democracy, liberty and opportunity for all held out like a carrot, but the carrot has always been a mere mirage and only the stick has been real.

It’s not as though African American political parties don’t exist. Cornell West, PhD, a brilliant American philosopher of African descent is running for president during this electoral cycle, although the Democratic Party is doing all it can to keep him off the ballot in November, and the following are an illustrative listing of current African American political parties in the United States: the African People’s Socialist Party, the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party, the Black Hammer Party, the Black Panther Party, the Black Riders Liberation Party, the Freedom Now Party, the Harold Washington Party, the New Afrikan Black Panther Party, the New Black Panther Party, the Progressive Democratic Party, the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Revolutionary Black Panther Party, the Umoja Party and the United Citizens Party. However, they are singularly unsuccessful because the overseers appointed by the Democratic Party (and its allies in the corporate media) keep them virtually unknown.

African American voters bear a terrible stigma as a result of the homogeneous manner in which a majority have voted over the decades. They tend to be the balance of power in American politics and have been so since they were formally granted the rights of citizens pursuant to the thirteenth fourteenth and fifteen amendments to the United States Constitution following the Civil War. In reality, although they’ve derived few tangible benefits as a result of their political subservience, they’ve been responsible for the election of the administrations responsible for World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the wars on Serbia and Kosovo, the destruction of Libya (Africa’s most economically successful state), the promotion of civil war in Syria, the Ukrainian conflict, and, for Israeli genocide, ethnic cleansing and Apartheid in Palestine.  Those are intolerable moral burdens for a people to bear. For any people. But especially for a people who have been so utterly abused for over half a millennium.

What Americans of African descent really need if real freedom and real independence and real emancipation and real personal realization are their goals, rather than fourth class illusory citizenship, is their very own “Toussaint Louverture”.

If you’re an American of African descent and don’t know who he is, look him up. 

You may be glad you did.

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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Humans: The Aberrant Species

Of all the species that share our planet, humans may well be the most aberrant. Aberrant in the willful rejection of nature’s guideposts. In part that’s because we’ve developed ethical and moral imperatives at odds with nature’s survival and improvement mechanisms. Thus, rather than discard the weak as inefficient, we protect and cherish them, at least on some level. Rather than propagation through biological natural selection so that the human race is constantly physically improving, our breeding selection criteria have become largely incoherent. No other life form that we know of does that on a consistent basis. We have counterintuitive dominant emotional motivational instincts such as love and mercy which lead us to react in manners different from other biological variants.

On the other hand, no other life form is as compulsively selfish and greedy as are humans who seem to have developed a manic addiction to accumulation, thus the majority of humans are deprived so that a very few can, not only gorge themselves, but hoard even what they cannot ever use. Mere survival has become inadequate to quench our thirst for things and power. We are perhaps the only species that values individualism above the collective good and we have moved from instinctively acting to assure our survival as a species and from survival of our diverse personal biological lines towards immediate gratification of whims. In that light, we are the only species that places a “moral” value on the ability to terminate the gestative life of healthy progeny. However, like many species, we have ingrained territorial instincts that make us as aggressive as any other species in the waging of war, something we do from tiny individual battles through battles between huge groups of states seeking hegemony.

What accounts for such anomalous tendencies?

I posit that it may involve a phenomenon described by atheist advocate Richard Dawkins as “memes” and, in operative combinations, as “memeplexes”.  Memes are akin to biological “genes”. Genes are the primary blueprints and building blocks for life based on the information they carry, perpetuate and share and through which they provide other genes and enzymes, etc., with orders that are usually carried out. When they are not, mutations occur with mutation also being an evolutionary tool seeking, through trial and error, to accomplish biological improvements. Memes perform similar functions but in a less direct biological context and, apparently, without an exterior guiding principal. They are the most basic units serving as a carriers of non-biological information.  While combinations of genes result in biological lifeforms ranging from amoeba to humans, combinations of memes form cultural quasi-life forms such as belief systems, philosophies, religions, nations, perhaps even history, etc., all of which share common elements associated with life forms such as birth, evolution, growth, instincts towards self-preservation, mutation, propagation, self-defense and aggression.

What seems to have occurred is that memeplexes have mutated into nature’s antagonists, into opponents of nature’s tendencies within us and, currently, memes and memeplexes seem to have proven dominant over genes, perhaps even reprograming genes and complexes of genes. In a fascinating albeit disturbing manner, memes and memeplexes use the human brain as their primary operational echanisms, both on an individual basis and collectively. In essence, memes hijack our brains and direct, or at least significantly impact our conduct through manipulation of our emotional reactions including our disposition and predisposition towards accepting things as accurate and true notwithstanding contrary physical and biological realities. Thus memes have converted truth from an absolute to a relative concept. They operate as a cancer infecting reality.

As we enter the age of what is termed “artificial intelligence”, really a complex series of programmed reactions used for both evaluative purposes and as mechanisms to impact our responses to diverse stimula, memeplexes become more and more controlling over the “rules” established through trial and error by evolutive nature and we become less and less a compound complex part of nature’s scheme seeking instead to bend nature to our memetic will.

If the religious concept of an antichrist or malevolent satanic figure applied to nature, then it seems reasonable to at least hypothesize that such “force” would be memetic based. Memes first conquered humans and then, using humans, memes have evolved as the antithesis to nature.

One wonders if a synthesis between nature and the bizarrely cancerous virtual world evolved through memes is possible, and if so, what it would be like.

It seems fascinating that Richard Dawkins, a bitter rival of anything associated with religion, was so prominent in sensing the basis for the subversion of nature.
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© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2024; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen). Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales. Previously, he chaired the social studies and foreign language departments at the Eastern Military Academy in Huntington, New York. He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review available at Substack.com; an intermittent commentator on radio and television; and, an occasional contributor to diverse periodicals and publications. He has academic degrees in political science (BA, the Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina), law (JD, St. John’s University, School of Law), international legal studies (LL.M, the Graduate Division of the New York University School of Law) and translation and linguistic studies (GCTS, the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies). However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta, cosmology and cosmogony. He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.