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FreeThinker

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Posts posted by FreeThinker

  1. This doesn't really have anything to do with gay themes--unless you accept George Bernard Shaw's statement that there's no such thing as a heterosexual Englishman--but I thought it was fun. I don't normally go in for displays of patriotism and nationalism-- mine or anyone else's--but since I'm descended from Englishmen and Scots, I'll give in on this one occasion. I found this delightful video on Youtube. Damn, the British really do good patriotism. (Interestingly, when I Googled that quote to make certain I was correct in attributing it to Shaw, only one result came up and it was a posting from Awesome Dude!)

  2. From a New Yorker profile of Donald Trump:

    The socioeconomic forces are real, but Trump is also the beneficiary of a long process of Republican intellectual decadence. Paul Ryan denounces Trump but not the Tea Party rhetoric that propelled his own political ascent. John McCain holds Trump in contempt, but selected as his running mate Sarah Palin, the Know-Nothing of Wasilla, one of Trump’s most vivid forerunners and supporters. Mitt Romney last week righteously slammed Trump as a “phony” and a misogynist, and yet in 2012 he embraced Trump’s endorsement and praised his “extraordinary” understanding of economics.

    The G.O.P. establishment may be in a state of meltdown, but this process of exploiting the darkest American undercurrents began with Richard Nixon’s Southern Strategy and, more lately, has included the birther movement and the Obama Derangement Syndrome. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, who compete hard for the most extreme positions in conservatism, decry the viciousness and the vacuousness of Trump, but they started out by deferring to him––and now they ape his vulgarity in a last-ditch effort to keep pace. Insults. Bigotry. Nationally televised assurances of adequate genital dimensions. This is the political moment in which we live. The Republican Party, having spent years courting the basest impulses in American political culture, now sees the writing on the wall. It reads “Donald Trump,” in very big letters.

    Fox News and Rush Limbaugh have spent the last two decades stoking white, working class anger toward anyone who is different, who is "other," and now they face the monster they encouraged.

  3. The one thing that always rings a bell in my head when I read it is the term "different to." British English is different to American English, while American English is different from or different than British English. The OED says different to predates the other two usages and that during the Sixteenth Century, different against was also used.

    Some authorities feel that because one writes differ from, the related different from is preferable to different to.

    Because I am an Anglophile, I would prefer to use the British versions of such things, though I don't want to seem pretentious to American readers, but I can't bring myself to write different to. It just doesn't sound right!

  4. Does this mean mean we have to add yet another letter to LGBTQI for "gender neutral" or is that covered by transgender? Or is that another shade of transgender, like Queer and Gay? And what does the "I" stand for?

    "They" actually may be more appropriate in describing me than just "he" as I have been often told that I have multiple personalities-- jackass, bitch, naughty person, etc. :redface:

  5. The "dark" side of the moon is the wrong term. It's the far side. Because the moon rotates at the same rate that it orbits the earth, it keeps one face toward the earth at all times. However, just as sunlight moves across the face of the near side, so too does it move across the far side. The correct term is the "far side." (It was still a good album, even if it was misnamed).

    Also, the Chinese will use an orbiting mother craft to relay data back and forth between earth and the landing craft.

  6. Re: the question, why Islam and why now, I think the reason is because we don't want to condemn an entire group for the actions of a few. Just as I wouldn't call ALL Texans idiots because Ted Cruz is a Texan or ALL Christians murderers because some abortion opponents murder, or all police corrupt or racist because a small minority are, or all Republicans racists because their frontrunner is one, so, too, would I not call all Muslims murderers because of the actions of some. It is to avoid punishing or abusing the innocent that we oppose profiling or stereotyping. I would hope that would be progress.

    However, in times of stress, it is common for people to get defensive of their fears and try to justify their tendencies to see "others" as an enemy. Demagogues like Trump, George Wallace, Joseph McCarthy, Oswald Mosley, and Huey Long always take advantage of that and their followers become even more adamant when questioned about their actions.

    What Trump and many of his supporters fail to understand is that this is precisely how ISIL wants us to react. They WANT the apocalyptic war with the West and they want us to overreact, to abandon the principles that make American society so free and strong. To be honest, I doubt Trump is capable of understanding that or of even caring. As a malignant sociopathic narcissist, he is concerned only with building the adoration of his followers for him and he doesn't give a damn how he does it or how much harm it causes.

  7. Do you leave two spaces after a period or one? In the ancient days of typewriters, we were taught to hit the space bar twice after a period. With computers, we only hit it once. According to the New Yorker, that's how you can tell a writer's age. (I've never had a period, so I never had to hit the space bar after mine).

    http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/comma-queen-space-the-final-frontier?intcid=mod-latest

  8. I saw Hanson perform at Mayfest, an arts festival in Tulsa, before they were discovered at SXSW in Austin. It's a shame they became typecast as bubblegum because of MMMbop. They have worked with a number of greats, including Carol King and Leon Russel. I once heard them perform with Leon. They are incredibly talented and if people could get past the MMMbop thing, they'd find they produce great music. They also do an amazing amount of charitable work for Africa. They are good guys.

  9. This is what happens when large segments of society are guided by mysticism, superstition, and wishful thinking rather than by logic, reason, and empirical data. Will we forever be controlled by the Bronze Age mythology of an insignificant tribe of goat-herders in the Middle Eastern desert?

  10. I saw both of these a few years ago when researching Dance of the Wicked Boys. These are excellent. There are actually dozens of wonderful videos of young dancers on Youtube.

    For a long time in American schools, boys trained in the same classes as girls. It was only until recently that most schools began separate programs for the early years, recognizing that boys have different physical needs in training and giving them more athletic-type training to use up the extra energy boys have and to overcome the stigma for young boys. Later, of course, it is necessary, especially in partner classes, for the males to train with females.

  11. Check out this video featuring Romeo for Burberry produced last year. Romeo is a talented dancer as well and lots of critics raved about his performance. I'm not a fan of David Beckham's tattoos but, with parents like David and Posh, it would hard for Romeo not to be good-looking and talented!

  12. If you enjoy ballet, and even if you don't but you appreciate achievement and hard work, the Australian danseur Harrison Lee will amaze you. Here are two videos of him dancing, first at the age of twelve in an astonishingly physical and, yet, graceful performance. The second is his winning performance at the 2015 Prix de Lausanne, the pinnacle for a young danseur. If you've read Dance of the Wicked Boys, Harrison Lee was Jeremy's age in the first video and Rafael's age in the second. I understand he now trains with the Royal Ballet in London.

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