feza

304 posts

feza

feza

@feza428

Se unió Haziran 2024
77 Siguiendo37 Seguidores
feza
feza@feza428·
@MDE_Unmapped San Carlos & Cisneros cliff jumping is undefeated
English
0
0
1
39
Medellín Unmapped 🇨🇴
Towns in Antioquia you should visit: - Támesis - Concepción - Santa Fe de Antioquia - Jericó - Jardín - El Retiro - San Rafael - Valparaíso - Venecia - Cármen de Viboral - San Pedro
Español
8
3
87
4.9K
feza
feza@feza428·
@NYCMayor what we doing about this weather? This is getting out of hand
GIF
English
0
0
0
1
feza
feza@feza428·
@jofpin Sort of like the president from a certain nation, who cemented his campaign after he got shot at
English
0
0
0
102
Memory Medieval
Memory Medieval@MemoryMedieval·
There's a really simple answer to this. You don't see 23 year olds creating masterworks (or doing things that 23 year olds did centuries ago, for almost all of human history) because modernity delays the ascension to adulthood for young men. There are exceptions. I will briefly explain. In almost every previous era, young men would have been expected to take their place among adults as young as 14, often 16, surely by 18. I know what some of you Redditers are going to say... "young men become adults today at 18, its the same!" No, its not. Culturally, it's not. Michelangelo was apprenticed to the sculptor with the largest workshop in Florence at age 13. Do you see any 13 year olds apprenticing with world-class talent today? Here's another, more recent example. Alexander Hamilton fought in the Revolutionary War from 20 years old until he was about 27. When he got out of the army, he studied law on his own for 6 months, passed the bar, and became a lawyer. A lawyer at 28 years old, with 7 years of war service and the founding of a country under his belt. Today, a young man will go to four years of college (until 22), three years of law school (25) and then maybe even take time after that to study for and pass the bar. But today's young man is 25 and Hamilton was 27! Yeah, Hamilton was 27 with a decade (or more) of insane work/life experience under his belt. Todays young man of 25 is entering the workforce for his first job at an entry level position with no experience at 25. Back to Michelangelo. If you're apprenticing at 13, you're going to have ten years of TOP LEVEL EXPERIENCE by the time you're 23. Todays "artists" may grow up doodling, take some high school classes. Go to four years of "art school" (total waste, btw, but unrelated), at which point they go out and look for entry level work (or begin freelancing) at 22 years old. Todays 22 year old artist may not even see a professional work in person at the same age that Michelangelo had NINE YEARS of EXPERIENCE working with one of the best sculptors on the planet. Now before I get the next goofy rebuttal "Okay well Michelangelo and Hamilton were exceptional." Yes, of course. But what you have to understand is that they emerged from a culture that made young men at that age exceptional. They were at the top, sure, but there were many, many, many JUST below them. They didn't emerge from a vacuum. Young men in previous eras were almost universally prepared and expected to be accomplishing at a world-class level by the time they are in their early-to-mid 20s.. their "prime". You do see this today but in other fields, such as sports. You can have a young Messi at 13 who goes to Barcelona. He goes through the system and is world-class by the time he's 21 or 22. We can see how this makes sense for athletes, most will be finished before 40. But the thing is, it also applies to all other disciplines, we're just addicted to credentialization, bureaucracy, and (quite frankly) nonsense so we delay the growth of young men by keeping them overlong in "high school" and "college" and thinking we are "preparing them" when in reality all of society is designed to hold them back and keep them at a middling-but-serviceable level for their entire lives. Culturally we don't see GREAT AND POWERFUL young men because our culture doesn't take an interest in producing them. Our culture's interest is in producing managers, administrators, bureaucrats, taxpayers, subscribers, and consumers. So we don't live in an era of high competition to do great things in normal fields like art. Competitive young men are today building bullshit AI hustles, managing OnlyFans prostitutes, or (more legitimately) going into sales, sports, or other venues where they can at least get some commiserate payoff to their efforts and personal drive. Do you want 23 year olds to be making incredible scuptures again? We haven't even gotten to the other side of the coin. Who is going to pay them to do it? I don't see anyone lining up to commission amazing 23 year old sculptors. The Pope doesn't even do this any more (to my knowledge). It all boils down to two questions. If you want to see young men of supreme ability and excellence, you have to ask yourself two questions. Who is going to pay the 23 year old to do said excellent thing? And who is going to apprentice said 13 year old to begin learning it. Todays teenagers have access to the internet and are allowed to hustle and scam on the margins. That's why you see (aside from 20 year old Cooper Flagg tearing up the NBA) 23 year old TikTok marketing millionaires or Rolex-wearing Onlyfans pimps today and no Michelangelos.
Memory Medieval tweet mediaMemory Medieval tweet mediaMemory Medieval tweet media
Josh Greentree | Path to Powerhouse@GreentreesGym

@CultureExploreX It is a magnificent piece. I want to know why we don’t see more 23 year olds do spectacular things.

English
50
187
1.5K
95.2K
feza
feza@feza428·
@kenw_2 Yeah this guys the truth
English
0
0
0
181
feza
feza@feza428·
@MrBeast Double it and pass it to the next person
English
0
0
0
8
MrBeast
MrBeast@MrBeast·
If you won Beast Games would you rather take $5,000,000 upfront or $50,000 a month for life?
English
23.2K
1.9K
54.5K
11.3M
The United Stand
The United Stand@UnitedStandMUFC·
🚨 #mufc Second Quarter Fiscal 2026 Results 🔄£32.6m operating profit vs £3.9m loss last year 📈Adjusted EBITDA up 9.2% to £102.9m despite no UEFA revenue 💼Q2 revenue £190.3m, EBITDA £76m 🚀Q2 operating profit jumps to £19.6m from £3.1m 🤝FY26 guidance reaffirmed: £640–660m revenue, £180–200m EBITDA
The United Stand tweet media
English
47
93
2.4K
187.3K
Naval
Naval@naval·
There is no place to rest your head.
English
537
379
6.2K
271.6K
feza
feza@feza428·
@RoyceCFC2 Brazil a dark horse? Lmaoooo
English
0
0
1
382
Rob Hallam
Rob Hallam@robj3d3·
Just hit $26k MRR 🤯 But still never launched anywhere Monday 9th Feb. @ProductHunt 😺 Drop "👋" if you're in
English
147
21
460
113.3K
feza
feza@feza428·
What’s the best done-for-you tool to create apps with prior knowledge?
English
0
0
0
4