StoneRainbow71

5.6K posts

StoneRainbow71

StoneRainbow71

@StoneRainbow71

Katılım Temmuz 2022
8 Takip Edilen45 Takipçiler
StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@JavanLangur @stitchkingdom @dutyfreechamp They just gave her an awkward puberty and an inferiority complex because Marcia was popular. Typical for tv - they imagine certain characters as less attractive than they are. High school guys would be fighting over who got to date Jan, I guarantee it.
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Sleepy Javan Langur
Sleepy Javan Langur@JavanLangur·
@StoneRainbow71 @stitchkingdom @dutyfreechamp Agree. I never understood the dynamics of the original Brady bunch bcuz I always thought Jan was just as pretty as Marsha, Jan was just younger and had braces. Jan as a young adult below👇 I wasn’t even born when it first aired tho. Maybe beauty standards were different🤷‍♀️
Sleepy Javan Langur tweet media
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@wolviebets @dutyfreechamp People complain that Gilligan's island was just dumb comedy, but there's nothing wrong with some dumb comedy. It shouldn't be the only thing out there, but sometimes you're in the mood for it.
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Wolvie
Wolvie@wolviebets·
@dutyfreechamp Gen Z should do themselves a favor and watch this, Gillian’s island, and some of the other older classics. Nothing but upside. Culturally necessary. Old shows will help slow the brain down. Put the phone down and watch one episode a day. Just enjoy it. See what it was like
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@KNOWtheLEDGE4 @MLakonias There CAN be, but why would you want to? You need audience buy-in for stuff like that. You need to explain how it works - like Morgan Freeman in Robin Hood. He's in 12th century England for a reason, the movie explains it. You just don't stick him there and pretend he's English.
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KNOWtheLEDGE
KNOWtheLEDGE@KNOWtheLEDGE4·
@StoneRainbow71 @MLakonias You're making excuses for why there can't be a white black panther is funny. The point is you CAN no matter if it's a "knock off version" Hollywood have not off versions of fictional characters all the time.
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Raven
Raven@MLakonias·
Black Panther and Wakanda were fictional and no one would dare cast white actors. There is one more difference, Wakanda is fiction the Odyssey is a myth.Let me me give you a head's up. Fiction is a made-up story created primarily for entertainment, where both the author and the audience know it is not literally true. In contrast, a myth is a sacred, culturally significant narrative meant to explain the world, human origins, and moral truths, often treated as deeply meaningful or historically valid by its originating culture. Hope that helps!
bonky@shesbonky

@Moon_River05 Helen of Troy is a FICTIONAL CHARACTER. Malcolm X was a real person. hope that helps!

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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@KNOWtheLEDGE4 @MLakonias OK, but then the white multiverse character isn't "Black Panther", he's a Tarzan knockoff. I still think multiverse characters need to make sense in their respective universes. "What if a different 'Black Panther' had Tarzan's backstory?" is mildly interesting, I guess?
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KNOWtheLEDGE
KNOWtheLEDGE@KNOWtheLEDGE4·
@StoneRainbow71 @MLakonias Sure a white man can be king of the African jungle. That's my point to use for the white Black panther. The blueprint is laid for you. The white man, not the indigenous black man ruling the African land. He's king.
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@KNOWtheLEDGE4 @MLakonias Tarzan is white, Black Panther isn't. Two different stories. They both should be left the way they are. Multiverse or no, the character makes no sense race-swapped. Same for James Bond. White.
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@KNOWtheLEDGE4 @MLakonias It’s not because he’s white. It’s because he was raised by Apes and knows their language, but he's human, so he's smarter than them. Black Africans are raised by other humans, not animals. That’s why.
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KNOWtheLEDGE
KNOWtheLEDGE@KNOWtheLEDGE4·
@MLakonias How is it not controversial for a fictional white man who is king of the African jungle? It never stopped White Hollywood before.
GIF
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@jtsid1969 @JohnJHarwood The executive branch bureaucracy under Trump was actively trying to undermine him in many areas. Pretending this isn't true is massive gaslighting by leftist partisans.
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John Taylor
John Taylor@jtsid1969·
@JohnJHarwood Are you insinuating that trump told his irs to leak his taxes or do you think the deep state controlled by obama/biden told the irs agent to leak trumps tax information. Are you that stupid to think trumps irs leaked his own taxes? Apparently ,you are just that stupid
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@KurtSchlichter Imagine pretending that a huge part of the Trump 45 Admin wasn't actively trying to undermine him.
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@SouthernMB82 This (and its opposite) happens in a lot of cultures. That old joke: "The Irish leave and don't say goodbye. Jews say goodbye and never leave." I can personally attest that the Italian goodbye takes at least half an hour.
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Southern Mama
Southern Mama@SouthernMB82·
If you grew up in the South, you know what is happening in this picture. My great-grandmother hugs her friend goodbye in the driveway while still chatting. Her friend’s husband stands there with her purse knowing full well he still has at least 15 minutes before they actually leave. Does he want to complain? Maybe, but he knows he is just as guilty as her when it involves his friends. Meanwhile, my mother twirls around in the driveway trying to patiently wait for the grown-ups to finish visiting with each other without getting her dress dirty. This scene is replayed throughout the South every day. We call it the Southern goodbye. The practice has remained engrained in our culture for generations upon generations. I pray it continues for generations to come.
Southern Mama tweet media
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Jesse Livermore
Jesse Livermore@Jesse_Livermore·
Shaping up to be the biggest and most embarrassing geopolitical defeat in U.S. history. By a large margin.
Jesse Livermore tweet media
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@FifthDensityV @FortressLugh Look at many modern Syrians. Can you distinguish them from French or Italian? "Everyone was dark-skinned in the Eastern Mediterranean in ancient times" is a lie. Blue eyes probably rare, but lighter skin? No.
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Toxic._.positivity
Toxic._.positivity@FifthDensityV·
@FortressLugh Jesus was white and so was everyone in the levant. We can track this with genetics and written descriptions.
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Kevin MacLean (Fortress of Lugh)
"But what about Jesus being cast as European?" This is the film Jesus I know best. I watch it occasionally because it is dubbed into Gaelic and available free online in Canada, unlike BBC Alba. Yes, the actor is English, but his brown hair and eyes help him plausibly fit the role, especially with the beard. He doesn't accurately reflect a Jew from Nazareth at the time. But is he closer in appearance to Jesus than casting Samuel L Jackson? Obviously. There is being inaccurate, then there is being glaringly and obviously wrong. Nolan's film doesn't just do this with the casting, but with everything.
Kevin MacLean (Fortress of Lugh) tweet media
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Eloi
Eloi@lynne180552·
@FamedCelebrity But, to Lennon's credit, he has some good modulation in that song. I dont like it either, but one day it came on, and I actually listened, and immediately picked up a guitar to plot out the chords. Nice borrowed chords and tonal shifts. What does Zendaya offer?
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William M Briggs - Statistician to the Stars!
This Zendaya is plain, and even on the ugly side. Which is no fault of hers, and is a trait shared by billions. I myself have British-heritage teeth. But you don't see me in toothpaste commercials. Though you will see Z in many, many films, because why? Because, in part, for the same reason you keep hearing the same lousy songs by Big Names at Christmas, starring in the top slot "So This Is Christmas" by Big Name John Lennon, a song which is the purest form of aural torture, as hideous a fractured collection of plastic notes as you will ever have the displeasure to hear. Nobody wants it, nobody asks for it, but it's played endlessly because everybody expects it should be played. Because it was big, and done by a Big Name. Badness perpetuates itself by being familiar, and everybody likes the familiar, even the familiar they hate. Now this Z was chosen, at first, because she was not of-no-color (and Hollywood has a DIE fetish). But after this choosing she became a Big Name. And thus, even though nobody particularly wants her, there being any number of actually attractive of-color women to choose from, we get Z. She is far from alone. Once somebody who should not have becomes a Big Name they become like "So This Is Christmas". And we'll never stop hearing from them. This also explains why we can't shake loose rotten politicians.
Pop Base@PopBase

New look at Zendaya as Athena in ‘The Odyssey.’ (via ELLE) In theatres on July 17.

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Disparu
Disparu@disparutoo·
This is the most blunt admission that woke kills TV shows I have ever seen.
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Dilan Esper
Dilan Esper@dilanesper·
@EsotericCD @MuseZack more generally Looney Tunes assumed familiarity with Rossini's operas, Moby Dick, Dickens, Mark Twain, Stephen Foster, etc.
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Zack Stentz
Zack Stentz@MuseZack·
How did the Looney Tunes writers assume their audience would get Of Mice and Men references? Was a movie adaptation really popular, or was Steinbeck a lot more widely read back then?
Zack Stentz tweet media
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@Aelthemplaer No, it's a spiritual replay of the Lottery of the Goats that happened in the Temple on Yom Kippur. Two identical goats; one is released, one is sacrificed.
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Ælþemplær
Ælþemplær@Aelthemplaer·
While I personally think Pilate was curious about Jesus, it's interesting what he and the temple elders did with Barabas. Often lost in translation is Barabas' first name was Jesus also. And the name Barabas literally means "son of the father". Pilate asked the crowd: "Who do you want me to release? Jesus, Son of the Father? Or Jesus, called the Savior?" Both are titles Jesus Christ used. It feels like Pilate and the elders were trying to trick the crowd, or perhaps invent plausible deniability, because it would be very easy to confuse these two people and effectively make the vote entirely at the whims of interpretation. If it went bad, Pilate and the elders could claim it was a confusion of identity, and if the vote went against what they wanted, they could make it what they wanted. In this we see a critique of power, democracy, authoritarianism, and many more. You'd be hard-pressed to find an ancient text going that indepth in criticizing man-made institutions.
Aelfred The Great@aelfred_D

I’ve always found “what is truth” to be one of the coldest, most upsetting lines in scripture. “Doing his Roman duty”, washing his hands, is its own kind of evil.

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unseen1
unseen1@unseen1_unseen·
Those who think the high clown loss is some kind of rally point or will have any impact on the midterms are idiots. Prediction by the time midterms comes aroud the vast majority of voters wont even know who the hell the high clown us. Let alone that he lost his primary. Same for cassidy. Same for tillis. Just like no one remembers Amish or Flake or that senator from TN.
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StoneRainbow71
StoneRainbow71@StoneRainbow71·
@chriswithans @thornt25628 "She hid out almost as much as Biden" Yeah, well that matters. The "second most famous Democrat" was still essentially unknown. She was never publicly in a difficult position. People knew her name and job, and that was about it. Reality says the more they saw, the worse it was.
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Chris
Chris@chriswithans·
@thornt25628 That's what the polls told you but it's not rooted in reality. She was the vice president, after all. She was literally the second most famous Democrat. Sure, she hid out almost as much as Biden but then so did all the other Democrats.
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Chris
Chris@chriswithans·
Democrats can't blame the first black female and first Asian major-party presidential candidate for losing a presidential election, so they're blaming Joe Biden. But anyone without amnesia knows that every Democrat in August of 2024 was claiming the late switchover was going to work because Trump wasted all that time and energy on Biden and not Harris. Meanwhile Harris ostensibly raised $1.5 billion in 107 days, something that Democrats also bragged about nonstop as proof that she would win. I have no idea what the "advanced polling" would've done, as they already had extensive approval and favorability polling on Kamala Harris; it was about the same as Biden, since she was Biden's VP. With this, too, every Democrat gaslit themselves into thinking Harris' suddenly high favorable rating was very real and not an artifact of response rates, even though Biden was still posting the same sub-40s approvals.
Chris tweet media
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Sensurround
Sensurround@ShamashAran·
This is a great piece, but i'm going to TL;DR it, and add a few notes. The reason "Libertarianism" (capital L) failed is because it's a pipe dream. For Libertarianism to catch on, it requires that all involved be intelligent, good, moral people. It fails for the same reason Communism fails: Many people are stupid, and some are downright evil.
Christian Heiens 🏛@ChristianHeiens

A lot of people are asking why the "Libertarian moment" failed to materialize. Here are my thoughts, as a former Libertarian myself. About ten years ago, there was an expectation, certainly within libertarian circles but across the Right at large, that the future of "Conservatism" in the US would be Libertarianism. There was this belief that the GOP would become a vehicle for libertarian philosophy and that the Right as a whole would be moving in a far more libertarian direction. The Tea Party movement, Ron Paul's presidential bids, the prospect of a future Rand Paul bid, and old Reagan quotes about how the essence of conservatism is libertarianism were all in vogue if you were involved in any sort of Right-wing politics in America. There really was this feeling that the old Reaganite fusion was exhausted and the Iraq era had discredited Neoconservatism. Meanwhile, the 2008 crash, coupled with the managerialism of the Obama presidency, had radicalized a bunch of young men into rejecting what they saw as the establishment narratives of both parties. For a 20-something-year-old guy, being able to proudly say that he hated both Bush and Obama felt incredibly liberating. Ron Paul's two presidential runs, and the prospect of a third and potentially more successful one from Rand, promised to herald in a new era for American politics. Libertarianism also seemed like a great diffuser of the insidious social Progressivism that was beginning to creep into all mainstream institutions. The Great Awokening was just in its beginning stages, and at the time there seemed to be absolutely no response to the Progressive agitprop that was gaining traction on the Left. We understood that these "social movements" were all pulling in the same direction, but no one had any idea how to address them because they were about as intense as they were insane. Libertarianism seemed to offer a great response. Do nothing. I'm serious. There was this expectation that we could completely sidestep the Great Awokening and nip the entire thing in its bud by adopting a "You do you" approach. By pretending like social or cultural issues didn't matter, or in some cases, that Progressives were actually in the right on them, Libertarianism offered an avenue for the Right to seemingly take off the table an entire revolutionary movement that we all thought was driving young millennials (who were still in their teens and early 20s) into identifying as Democrats or Socialists or even Communists. "I don't care about the culture war. I want gay married couples to be able to adopt and protect their marijuana operation that's going on in the basement of their private property with AR-15s, and I want to abolish the income taxes they make on it, too." But when this tactic was put into practice, it never seemed to work. I remember in my old libertarian days over a decade ago, having conversations with Leftists my age in high school and college, and it was always disappointing. It's like I kept trying to win them over and explain I was on their side and that they just needed to understand that wealth redistribution and socialism were bad policies, but that we were both "social liberals" who wanted the same thing. I just wanted them to be rich on top of it all. And for some reason, it just never worked. At the time, I didn't understand why. But I do now. Libertarianism offered the possibility of escaping politics itself while still being political. You could tell someone that you didn't care about their lifestyle, worldview, theology, or culture, and still plausibly make the case for why they should vote for you and implement your policies, because your policies were all about transcending conflict rather than confronting it. Libertarianism offered the illusion of a sophisticated ideology for adults who had outgrown the tribal passions of the past. But that's exactly why it failed. It was always operating like a parasite on an older order that it didn't create and couldn't defend, but few of us could see it at the time because of the nature of the world around us. But that world, like the Bushite one before it, died. Mass migration and open borders actually changed the visual landscape of America in a way that was far more abrupt than the gradual changes of decades earlier. The Great Awokening, which Libertarianism offered to neutralize with its "live and let live" attitude, ended up devouring everything around it until people could no longer ignore it. The economic situation, which Libertarianism had such elegant solutions for as the centerpiece of its entire worldview, actually ended up being far more complex than the activists ever expected. America's massive twin fiscal and trade deficits, endless QE, zero interest rate environment, and the hollowing out of the Rust Belt all coincided with the rise of managerial credentialism, the professional laptop class, and the adoption of Progressivism as the civic religion of every institution and profession that seemed to be benefiting from these very policies. "Social Justice Warrior" and "Rich Liberal" became synonymous with all the institutions that had betrayed America. This created a rebellion, as Libertarians expected, but the moment Trump arrived, he revealed that the overwhelming majority of those rebels were not interested in smaller government in the abstract. They were looking for a government that would fight for them. They had felt betrayed, humiliated, forgotten, and denigrated. They believed, correctly, that they were losing their country. They had a deep resentment of our oikophobic ruling class and their wacky social views that seemed to always pop up whenever core elements of their way of life were about to be torn away from them. And once those things came to the surface, the "Libertarian moment" was essentially dead because it had no satisfying answer to the actual question being asked, which wasn't "how to balance the budget?" or "what procedural railguards can we set up to protect Americans from warrantless wiretapping?" It was “Who rules, in whose interest, and can we do anything to stop our dispossession at the hands of people who openly hate us?” The Libertarian moment failed because it had no answer to this question, which has essentially been the foundation of all of American politics since Obama's second term. It's a political ideology that wants to escape politics itself, and the moment politics became more than just a complicated math problem and instead was about which vision of civilization would prevail, the entire premise disintegrated.

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