She looks like this girluziq wrote:
do the right thing. post the pics.
25% of Americans are already special ed.Dilbert wrote:
If cousin marriage was a part of American civilization you'd all be too retarded to think - like most of Pakistan
She looks like this girluziq wrote:
do the right thing. post the pics.
25% of Americans are already special ed.Dilbert wrote:
If cousin marriage was a part of American civilization you'd all be too retarded to think - like most of Pakistan
marrying cousins was part of american culture for most of its history. britain too. it's typical bougeois family-clan type stuff. victorians and before were always marrying cousins or second cousins.Dilbert_X wrote:
If cousin marriage was a part of American civilization you'd all be too retarded to think - like most of Pakistan.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You are right but if cousin marriage was a part of American civilization nobody would think it is weird if I asked my cousin out.
political dynasties arise when democratic processes ossify and inequality/stratification starts to set into the body-politic. same thing happened as rome went from a republic to an imperium. being the pre-eminent global power with an economy 5x bigger than just about any near-competitor will do that to a free country; too much money, too much power and political prerogative.Personally I think the idea of political dynasties is anti-democratic the same as royal families
https://www.getyarn.io/yarn-clip/60bb2b … 4e7053d84buziq wrote:
probably a good point. the history channel and all that 'factual' cable programming really veered off the road into nonsense in the mid-aughts. i mean, even before then it was just 95% hitler and the nazis, anyway, which is kind of weird when you think about it in terms of the mass psychology of their viewer demographics.
The jews are never going to stop telling the holocaust is the most important thing to happen in the last 5,000 years, the Kennedy stuff is going to get pulled along in its wake. "Somebody died 50 years ago! Here's another hot take! We interview more people who weren't there and don't know anyone who was!"uziq wrote:
probably a good point. the history channel and all that 'factual' cable programming really veered off the road into nonsense in the mid-aughts. i mean, even before then it was just 95% hitler and the nazis, anyway, which is kind of weird when you think about it in terms of the mass psychology of their viewer demographics.
Not said that, what I do think is people from corrupt anti-democratic tribal cultures shouldn't be in positions of power - they'll use it to benefit their own tribe. Applies to Etonians and Ghanaians equally.ironically, though, you're against any radically egalitarian or 'bottom up' politics. you don't want political dynasties, but you do want only 'the right sort' of people to be represented and in power. in a country that is majority non-white, still being sniffy about migrants or non-WASP culture generally seems like a pretty funny way to be 'anti-elites' like the kennedys.
Might be better than what we have now.a self-elected elite of technocrats who all went to the right engineering college or business school and claim to have all the answers to every political question in the universe isn't paticularly 'participatory' or 'democractic', either, by the way.
We should be beyond thinking that QAnon and all this Republican claptrap are purely boomer affairs though. I've seen Trump trucks driven by and Trump-festooned residences occupied by people who haven't even started graying yet. The QAnon shaman is barely older than uzique ffs. If they're boomers, what does that make you? What did you do during the Great Depression, dilbs? Or was it the Great War?Dilbert_X wrote:
Boomers still obsess over the Kennedy assassination for some reason.
The republicans obviously hated the Kennedy family just as they've blindly hated every other democrat president and politician.
Retards make everything personal.
Last edited by uziq (2021-11-22 17:53:05)
Data Suggests QAnon Followers More Likely To Be Mentally IllSome of the psychological quirks that are thought to drive belief in conspiracy theories include need for uniqueness and needs for certainty, closure, and control that are especially salient during times of crisis. Conspiracy theories offer answers to questions about events when explanations are lacking. While those answers consist of dark narratives involving bad actors and secret plots, conspiracy theories capture our attention, offer a kind of reassurance that things happen for a reason, and can make believers feel special that they’re privy to secrets to which the rest of us “sheeple” are blind.
With an invisible leader (it’s not even clear if “Q” is a single individual or several), no organizational structure, and no coercive element for membership (people are free to “come and go” as they please), it would be a stretch to call QAnon a religious cult. But it has been increasingly modeled as something of a new religious movement, especially inasmuch as it’s often intertwined with an apocalyptic version of Christianity. Previous research on cults has revealed that people who join them are more likely to have symptoms of anxiety and depression and are often lonely people looking for emotional and group affiliation.1 Anecdotal evidence suggests that a similar psychological profile may also account for why some might find QAnon appealing.
This image has been on my hard drive since college for this very reason.uziq wrote:
probably a good point. the history channel and all that 'factual' cable programming really veered off the road into nonsense in the mid-aughts. i mean, even before then it was just 95% hitler and the nazis, anyway, which is kind of weird when you think about it in terms of the mass psychology of their viewer demographics.
this was a meme to internet-literate people but it's pretty much the paranoiac, fantasy-lit imagination of the QAnon mouth-breathers.political dynasties arise when democratic processes ossify and inequality/stratification starts to set into the body-politic. same thing happened as rome went from a republic to an imperium. being the pre-eminent global power with an economy 5x bigger than just about any near-competitor will do that to a free country; too much money, too much power and political prerogative.Personally I think the idea of political dynasties is anti-democratic the same as royal families
ironically, though, you're against any radically egalitarian or 'bottom up' politics. you don't want political dynasties, but you do want only 'the right sort' of people to be represented and in power. in a country that is majority non-white, still being sniffy about migrants or non-WASP culture generally seems like a pretty funny way to be 'anti-elites' like the kennedys.
a self-elected elite of technocrats who all went to the right engineering college or business school and claim to have all the answers to every political question in the universe isn't particularly 'participatory' or 'democratic', either, by the way.
You almost have to see it to get the full effect. Watching this with people who are leaned forward taking it very seriously must be a distinctly uncomfortable experience.Scientists who have reviewed What the Bleep Do We Know!? have described distinct assertions made in the film as pseudoscience.[11][12] Lisa Randall refers to the film as "the bane of scientists".
Dunning-Kruger effect in action, Mao was a moron who thought himself exceptional.uziq wrote:
and those experiments in societies led by experts, scientists, engineers, technicians, etc., didn’t really go very well, did they