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norton ash wrote:Wow, dig the manatee whisperer.
eyeno wrote:But, a returning soldier that reports that America is not under threat of Jihad, and that his true duty was to be a mercenary for empire is not what empire desires. Empire does not want returning soldiers to report that they guarded poppy field, oil fields, etc...This is what I mean when I said "taking the starch out of returning soldiers is high priority".
Not that Hugh's story has anything to do with this. But if the story were a plant for the media I would suspect it would be to cast doubt on returning soldiers so that people would view them as ptsd nutso.
But no one has been able to answer the most pressing question: Why did Benjamin Colton Barnes, a 24-year-old Iraq war veteran, open fire on Anderson?
Jan 27
Jan 20
In New York City in 1980, Dexter Mitchell plays half-willing big brother to his neighbors, a trio of exchange students from the People's Republic of China.
Jan 13
Set in New York City as civilization collapses, eight survivors huddle in a bomb shelter and begin to turn on each other as they wait for a rescue.
Jan 13
Synopsis: The storyline follows the only surviving agent of an attack on a CIA safe house (Ryan Reynolds) as he tries to get a lethal prisoner (Denzel Washington) to a second safe house before being taken out by violent forces that want them both dead.
JackRiddler wrote:.
Looking ahead to the rest of the year, amid all the superhero blockbusters (Batman, Spiderman and the Avengers in one year) and the War-Is-Good blockbusters, the thing that really grosses out is that 21 Jump Street is going to be a movie.
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compared2what? wrote:If you stop to think about what that show's cultural legacy actually turned out to be for a minute. Or so I find, at least.
Plus, in a more general sense, it's as good an illustration as any of what an ugly little blight on the mind the exercise proposed in the OP is inevitably destined to be. Just in case anybody (newsflash, Sepka) needs one.
JackRiddler wrote:compared2what? wrote:If you stop to think about what that show's cultural legacy actually turned out to be for a minute. Or so I find, at least.
So starting the career of Johnny Depp (someone whom we both love, madly, I assure you, as an artist and for his political significations too) retroactively turns "21 Jump Street" into a show that didn't provide ideological affirmation for the incursion of police into schools that escalated around that time and has continued ever since?
I can follow as far as agreeing that Depp's body of work is consequential and the series is no longer of measurable consequence (pending how the remake does), but these are unrelated facts.
Plus, in a more general sense, it's as good an illustration as any of what an ugly little blight on the mind the exercise proposed in the OP is inevitably destined to be. Just in case anybody (newsflash, Sepka) needs one.
Ah, I'm taking this as a humor thread.
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Searcher08 wrote:invariably...?
If one is seeing it as mind blight, one is already displaying the first symptoms. Eating people in confined places may follow (see Young and Rubicam for further details)
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