RandyLahey [he/him]

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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: August 21st, 2020

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  • and in the first one, a 50% chance that your declaration of war would be overruled by congress, to represent the peaceful nature of dEmOcRaCy

    ive always kinda wanted to write a bit of an essay on the intense liberal ideology baked into almost every facet of the civ series (and not just its laughable ‘government types’), but never quite got around to it. theres so much, down to how nomadic and non-urban peoples are ‘barbarians’ to be destroyed so their land can be properly tamed, to the linear flow of technological and social progress as represented by government-allocated beakers or whatever, to even just the conception of the city as the atomic unit of human societal organisation, etc etc etc. and of course the complete lack of any vision of the future or ‘victory’ beyond either military or soft-power conquest of the globe, or liberal democracy in space for no discernible reason, like it cant even conceive of any greater goal for humanity, like it might as well be francis fukuyamas civilization




  • perhaps an obvious one but im gonna say black panther, not just for killmonger being based and them having to make him kill his girlfriend for no reason to make him look like the bad guy, but for its portrayal of the international rules-based order

    borrowing from an old comment, the thing that i found most interesting about that movie is that killmonger completely plays by all the countrys rules to come into power - he comes from the appropriate royal bloodline, he gets the backing of one of the major feudal lords, he comes in openly and challenges the sitting monarch who accepts the challenge without coercion (and as we saw earlier in the movie, challenge to personal combat is a normal and accepted means of transfer of power), and then he wins decisively and kills the sitting monarch (as far as anyone knows). all of this is ludicrous crusader kings shit and an absurd way to run an enlightened modern country, but he plays by the rules.

    and the very second that somebody they dont like gets into power, what is the rules-based “liberal” response? pro-royalist military coup, openly backed by literally the cia. they only find out the black panther guy is alive later, so they still think hes dead when they throw it all into motion but that doesnt stop them. and the movie is written in a way that makes this seem like the obviously logical and honourable and correct thing to do, and that these are the good guys that you should support. and at the end stability is restored, and even though hes a hereditary monarch without even the figleaf of parliamentary oversight, hes pro-western and he says nice things in speeches so thats basically the same as democracy right?

    like even in the most woke lib “pro-black” blockbuster movie, cia-backed coup is just seen as the obvious response to any thorny political questions.

    but hey, they did open one (1) community centre at the end so the injustice faced by black people worldwide was pretty much solved :liberalism:




  • spoiler for disco elysium (the reading group bit) but i found this really profound :lt-dbyf-dubois:

    Rhetoric: The question you mean to ask is both very complicated and incredibly simple…

    Endurance: Take a deep breath. Best to go one piece at a time.

    You: If communism keeps failing every time we try it…

    Steban: (he waits patiently for you to finish)

    You: …And the rest of the world keep killing us for our beliefs…

    Steban: Yes?

    Volition: Say it.

    You: …What’s the point?

    Steban: (he considers your words for a minute)

    Composure: You’re witnessing his ironic armour melt before you. This is his true self you’re seeing now.

    Empathy: He’s thinking about someone…

    You: Wait, who is he thinking about?

    Empathy: Hard to say. Someone dear to him.

    Visual Calculus: Track his gaze. He’s looking out past the broken wall, toward the opposite side of the Bay…

    You: Toward the skyscrapers of La Delta.

    Visual Calculus: They rise like electric obelisks in the night.

    Steban: The theorists Puncher and Wattmann — not infra-materialists, but theorists nonetheless — say that communism is a secular version of Perikarnassian theology, that it replaces faith in the divine with faith in humanity’s future… I have to say, I’ve never entirely understood what they mean, but I think maybe the answer is in there, somewhere.

    You: Wait, you’re saying communism is some kind of religion?

    Steban: Only in this very specific sense. Communism doesn’t dangle any promises of eternal bliss or reward. The only promise it offers is that the future can be better than the past, if we’re willing to work and fight and die for it.

    You: But what if humanity keeps letting us down?

    Steban: Nobody said fulfilling the proletariat’s historic role would be easy. (he smiles a tight smile) It demands great faith with no promise of tangible reward. But that doesn’t mean we can simply give up.

    You: Even when they ignore us?

    Steban: Even then.

    Ulixes: Mazov says it’s the arrogance of capital that will be its ultimate undoing. It does not believe it can fail, which is why it must fail.

    Volition: So young. So unbearably young…

    Half Light: Why do you see the two of them with their backs against a bullet-pocked wall, all of a sudden?

    Inland Empire: Their faces, blurred yet frozen as though in ambrotype. You were never that young, were you?

    Steban: I guess you could say we believe it because it’s impossible. (he looks at the scattered matchboxes on the ground) It’s our way of saying we refuse to accept that the world has to remain… like this…



  • I hate to say it but similarities between broken, desolate cities in most zombie apocalypse movies just can’t be dismissed

    on a picture of a cityscape that would look completely normal in most of the world

    You are looking across into South Korea. This open space is the Joint Security Area which straddles the political border within the Demilitarized Zone. The physical border is where the light gravel turns dark denoted by the raised concrete line. Cross that line and you’ll be shot. The blue buildings are halfway in each Korea and by entering them, one can theoretically cross to the South. The large building ahead is the ‘Freedom House’, ironically housing a dozen surveillance cameras.

    whoops when you forget that the scary orwellian building youre talking about is actually on the south korean side



  • fuck me, my subconscious definitely picked up on some kind of extra racial weirdness when i was going through all this shit arguing with people on r*ddit, but yeah it didnt quite click until you mentioned it that this is exactly what it was

    and yeah im just realising as well that there was lots of talk about religious persecution etc, but very little talk about islam - rarely called “islamophobia”, and i have a strong feeling that if you looked at all the articles with this in mind youd find that as much as they focused on religious buildings that they really downplayed “mosques” in favour of other terms or generic “houses of worship” etc (this last bit might actually be legit though, it does seem from my very limited knowledge that their version of islam is a bit different in its religious buildings from “mainstream” islam)

    this shit probably should have been immediately obvious but there was so much other bullshit to wade through that i guess i didnt really notice