tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4904219782540965444.post2633736685716824910..comments2024-03-14T04:06:54.124-04:00Comments on GENKAKU-AGAIN (adam fisher): a sense of classgenkakuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12135705172119950326noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4904219782540965444.post-63387635866842907112018-11-13T16:22:45.367-05:002018-11-13T16:22:45.367-05:00I've never given much credit to "equality...I've never given much credit to "equality" ideologies. People are different, despite our similarities, and they're so far from reality. Some families have grown rich and powerful over centuries and not without sacrifices, surely other's but theirs as well, to some extent. It takes a lot of discipline to cash a 13-cent check, while I wouldn't bother and partly why I'm not better off myself. I've never been that bothered with wealth or other people's wealth. Having said that, I'm deeply bothered with the fact that a few very powerful people in this world invest so much time, energy and effort in keeping millions of people down. It bothers me especially that, in Europe, this 'lighthouse' of liberty, human rights and of "equal opportunities" - much of it bullshit, of course - children at the age of 5-6 years have already been given about 20 shots of vaccines that include, within its "life-saving" composition, potent neurotoxins such as mercury, muriatic acid and sodium hydroxide (drain cleaner), to name but a few. Modern times like very old times, I guess. Everything changed and yet much stays the same. There was a time when only the rich were given an education and thought the poor would better remain uneducated, lest they began dreaming of doing anything other than handling tools and low jobs. These days, a poor family's son or daughter may even become a respected doctor, but only if he or she sticks by a rule book, which includes giving millions of children the needed shots that keep them stupid, anxious and, why not, addicted to the anxiolytics we'll then sell them later. What a horrible, horrible world we live in. Not all bad, for sure, but horrible in so many ways that makes horror movies look pale. Never liked horror movies. Always felt you had to be either a sadist or a masochist to enjoy them. Such is life.Tiagonoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4904219782540965444.post-1567589993781193132018-11-13T15:47:21.126-05:002018-11-13T15:47:21.126-05:00I think I can relate, all the while wondering whic...I think I can relate, all the while wondering which of us were the more uncomfortable with our inability to connect on any level. I remember watching Downton Abbey with some interest, but it didn't clarify much. Maybe it did confirm the problem of people being plugged into a culture that separates them from others. I imagine it contributes to the farce of the bulk of our ruling class acting homey during election season. The Dalai Lama seems to navigate all places pretty ably. Too late for me perhaps.<br /><br />https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downton_Abbey<br />olcharliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00309255390011851502noreply@blogger.com