barracuda wrote:A question: When did I brag about my own lack of taste? Cuz I'm still not getting that part.
By merely stating that you thought someone else lacked taste, you brandish what you seem to believe is a superior position. But that position regards taste. Therefore, taste being a matter of taste, it could just as easily be said that you are bragging about your lack thereof (though, obviously neither you or Cox is making that claim, but expressing different tastes).
barracuda wrote:There were any number of silly, snarky comments I might have made, among them the standard Do tell! or more cheesier Oh, reeeeeally? or the more cloaked in faux-ernestness Tell me about it, what with the way things are theeeese days! or a more severely pointed It would seem the propaganda--both the sterile, patriotic variety, and the poisonous alphabet soup kind--has affected you more than you might think.
I think I understand this part - you're saying that because these men made films about patriotic themes and loved the state, that somehow this, in and of itself, is to you a reflection of a lack of quality in their productions? That is, because they made films that demonstrated their love, interest, and appreciation for America, that somehow disqualifies their work as having value as art?
Huh? No, not at all. I am saying that you expressed (in the quote prior to mine that you did not include this time around) the kind of acceptance of patriotism for patriotism's sake in a way that one would expect from someone awash in a pro American worldview. ie. how Hollywood wins hearts and minds.
barracuda wrote:Also, some straight speaking wouldn't hurt, if you wanna be understood. I'm not a mind-reader, ya know.
No comment.