Unbelievable hypocrisy - "Raping the Marlboro man"

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Justforfun000
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Unbelievable hypocrisy - "Raping the Marlboro man"

Post by Justforfun000 »

I heard of this review a while ago in my searches but never really read it until the other day. I can't believe the audacity of this asshole. He goes SO carefully into detail on how hollywood and the directors and actors are brainwashing people. He goes on to list every insidious emotional ploy and "agenda" to counteract Judeo-Christian values, and doesn't say ONE word about justifying those beliefs that have done the exact same thing times a million and one! I can't believe the NERVE.

How can someone take such an in depth analysis of this kind of prosetylizing which is not even REALLY true in the sense of this movie, and not see the hypocrisy with his own position? He's begging the question that his moral foundation is the absolute way. AGGHHHH. Maybe I shouldn't be surprised, but these ones that have half a brain and understand a critical viewpoint they are able to use to their benefit baffle me when they don't apply the same discipline to their own backyard.

I seriously would like to email this asshole and pick apart this entire diatribe in a devestating way that would force him to admit that he can't demand this of other things and not his own view.

If anyone is willing to offer rebuttals of his review, I'd appreciate the input.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48076
'Brokeback Mountain':
Rape of the Marlboro Man

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: December 27, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern

Editor's note: Recently, WND Managing Editor David Kupelian, author of the best-selling book, "The Marketing of Evil," was widely quoted in the news media for his criticism of the new film "Brokeback Mountain." Here, Kupelian explains how and why the controversial movie is one of the most powerful homosexual propaganda films of our time.
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com


"Brokeback Mountain," the controversial "gay cowboy" film that has garnered seven Golden Globe nominations and breathless media reviews – and has now emerged as a front-runner for the Oscars – is a brilliant propaganda film, reportedly causing viewers to change the way they feel about homosexual relationships and same-sex marriage.

And how do the movie-makers pull off such a dazzling feat? Simple. They do it by raping the "Marlboro Man," that revered American symbol of rugged individualism and masculinity.

We all know the Marlboro Man. In "The Marketing of Evil," I show how the Philip Morris Company made marketing history by taking one of the most positive American images of all time – the cowboy – and attaching it to a negative, death-oriented product – cigarettes.

Hit the pause button for a moment so this idea can completely sink in: Cigarette marketers cleverly attached, in the public's mind, two utterly unrelated things: 1) the American cowboy, with all of the powerful feelings that image evokes in us, of independence, self-confidence, wide-open spaces and authentic Americanism, and 2) cigarettes, a stinky, health-destroying waste of money. This legendary advertising campaign targeting men succeeded in transforming market underdog Marlboro (up until then, sold as a women's cigarette with the slogan "Mild as May") into the world's best-selling cigarette.

It was all part of the modern marketing revolution, which meant that, instead of touting a product's actual benefits, marketers instead would psychologically manipulate the public by associating their product with the fulfillment of people's deepest, unconscious needs and desires. (Want to sell liquor? Put a seductive woman in the ad.) Obviously, the marketers could never actually deliver on that promise – but emotional manipulation sure is an effective way to sell a lot of products.

The "Marlboro Man" campaign launched 50 years ago. Today, the powerful cowboy image is being used to sell us on another self-destructive product: homosexual sex and "gay" marriage.

'People's minds have been changed'

In "Brokeback Mountain," a film adaptation of the 1997 New Yorker short story by Annie Proulx, two 19-year-old ranchers named Ennis Del Mar (Heath Ledger) and Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal) have been hired to guard sheep on a rugged mountain in 1963 Wyoming. One night, the bitter cold drives Ennis into Jack's tent so they can keep each other warm. As they lie there, suddenly and almost without warning, these two young men – both of whom later insist they're not "queer" – jump out of the sack and awkwardly and violently engage in anal sex.

Too embarrassed the next morning even to talk about it, Ennis and Jack dismiss their sexual encounter as a "one-shot deal" and part company at the end of the sheepherding job. Ennis marries his fiancée Alma (Michelle Williams, Ledger's real-life girlfriend) while Jack marries female rodeo rider and prom queen Lureen (Anne Hathaway). Each family has children.

Four years later, Jack sends Ennis a postcard saying he's coming to town for a visit. When the moment finally arrives, Ennis, barely able to contain his anticipation, rushes outside to meet Jack and the two men passionately embrace and kiss. Ennis's wife sadly witnesses everything through the screen door. (Since this is one of the film's sadder moments, I wasn't quite sure why the audience in the Portland, Oregon, theater burst out in laughter at Alma's heartbreaking realization.)

From that point on, over the next two decades Ennis and Jack take off together on periodic "fishing trips" at Brokeback Mountain, where no fishing actually takes place. During these adulterous homosexual affairs, Jack suggests they buy a ranch where the two can live happily ever after, presumably abandoning their wives and children. Ennis, however, is afraid, haunted by a traumatic childhood memory: It seems his father had tried to inoculate him against homosexuality by taking him to see the brutalized, castrated, dead body of a rancher who had lived together with another man – until murderous, bigoted neighbors committed the gruesome hate crime.

Eventually, life with Ennis becomes intolerable and Alma divorces him, while Lureen, absorbed with the family business, only suspects Jack's secret as they drift further and further apart. When, toward the end of the story, Jack dies in a freak accident (his wife tells Ennis a tire blew up while Jack was changing it, propelling the hubcap into his face and killing him), Ennis wonders whether Jack actually met the same brutal fate as the castrated "gay" cowboy of his youth.

Ultimately, Ennis ends up alone, with nothing, living in a small, secluded trailer, having lost both his family and his homosexual partner. He's comforted only by his most precious possession – Jack's shirt – which he pitifully embraces, almost in a slow dance, his aching loneliness masterfully projected into the audience via the film's artistry.

Yes, the talents of Hollywood's finest are brought together in a successful attempt at making us experience Ennis's suffering, supposedly inflicted by a homophobic society. Heath Ledger's performance is brilliant and devastating. We do indeed leave the theater feeling Ennis's pain. Mission accomplished.

Lost in all of this, however, are towering, life-and-death realities concerning sex and morality and the sanctity of marriage and the preciousness of children and the direction of our civilization itself. So please, you moviemakers, how about easing off that tight camera shot of Ennis's suffering and doing a slow pan over the massive wreckage all around him? What about the years of silent anguish and loneliness Alma stoically endures for the sake of keeping her family together, or the terrible betrayal, suffering and tears of the children, bereft of a father? None of this merits more than a brief acknowledgment in "Brokeback Mountain."

What is important to the moviemakers, rather, is that the viewer be made to feel, and feel, and feel again as deeply as possible the exquisitely painful loneliness and heartache of the homosexual cowboys – denied their truest happiness because of an ignorant and homophobic society.

Thus are the Judeo-Christian moral values that formed the very foundation and substance of Western culture for the past three millennia all swept away on a delicious tide of manufactured emotion. And believe me, skilled directors and actors can manufacture emotion by the truckload. It's what they do for a living.

Co-star Jake Gyllenhaal realized the movie's power to transform audiences in Toronto, where, according to Entertainment magazine, "he was approached by festival-goers proclaiming that their preconceptions had been shattered by the film's insistence on humanizing gay love."

"Brokeback Mountain," said Gyllenhaal, "is that pure place you take someone that's free of judgment. These guys were scared. What they feared was not each other but what was outside of each other. What was so sad was that it didn't have to happen like that." But then, said the article, Gyllenhaal jumped to his feel and exclaimed triumphantly: "I mean, people's minds have been changed. That's amazing."

Changed indeed. And that's the goal. Film is, by its very nature, highly propagandistic. That is, when you read a book, if you detect you're being lied to or manipulated, you can always stop reading, close the book momentarily and say, "Wait just a minute, there's something wrong here!" You can't do that in a film: You're bombarded with sound and images, all expertly crafted to give you selected information and to stimulate certain feelings, and you can't stop the barrage, not in a theater anyway. The visuals and sound and music – and along with them, the underlying agenda of the filmmakers – pursue you relentlessly, overwhelming your emotions and senses.

And when you leave the theater, unless you're really objective to what you've experienced, you've been changed – even if just a little bit.

Want to know how easily your feelings can be manipulated? Let's take the smallest, most seemingly insignificant example and see. Sit down at a piano and play a song, any song – even "Mary Had a Little Lamb" – as long as it's in a major key. Then, play the same song, but change from a major to a minor key; just lower the third step of the scale by a half-step so the melody and harmony become minor. If you watch carefully, you'll note this one tiny change makes the minor-key version sound a bit melancholy and sad, while the normal, major-key version sounds bright and happy. (As the expression goes, "Major glad, minor sad.")

Now take this principle and apply it to a feature film by expanding it a million-fold. A movie's musical score has one overriding function – to make the viewer feel a certain way at strategic points during the story. And music is just one of dozens of factors and techniques used to influence audiences in the deepest way possible. Everything from the script to the directing to the camera work to the acting, which in "Brokeback Mountain" is brilliant, serve the purpose of making the movie-makers' vision seem like reality – even if it's twisted and perverse.

Do we understand that Hollywood could easily produce a similar movie to "Brokeback Mountain," only this time glorifying an incest relationship, or even an adult-child sexual relationship? Like "Brokeback," it too would serve to desensitize us to the immoral and destructive reality of what we're seeing, while fervently coaxing us into embracing that which we once rightly shunned.

All the filmmakers would need to do is skillfully make viewers experience the actors' powerful emotions of loneliness and emptiness – juxtaposed with feelings of joy and fulfillment when the two "lovers" are together – to bring us to a new level of "understanding" for any forbidden "love." Alongside this, of course, they would necessarily portray those opposed to this unorthodox "love" as Nazis or thugs. Thus, many of us would let go of our "old-fashioned" biblical ideas of morality in light of what seems like the more imminent and undeniable reality of human love in all its diverse forms.

A "Brokeback"-type movie could easily be made, for instance, to portray a female school teacher's affair with a 14-year-old student as "a magnificent love story." And I'm not talking about the 2000 made-for-TV potboiler, "All-American Girl: The Mary Kay Letourneau Story," about the Seattle school teacher who seduced a sixth-grade student, went to prison for statutory rape, and later married the boy having had two children by him. I'm talking about a big-budget, big-name Hollywood masterpiece aimed at transforming America through film, just as Hitler relied on master filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl to make propaganda films to manipulate the emotions of an entire nation.

In place of "Brokeback Mountain's" scene with the castrated homosexual, the "adult-child love story" could have a similar scene in which, as a young girl, the future teacher's mother took her to see the body of a woman who had fallen in consensual "love" with a 14-year-old boy, only to be brutalized, her breasts cut off, and bludgeoned to death – all by Nazi-like bigoted neighbors. (So that's why she couldn't be honest and open about her later relationship with her student.)

Inevitably, such a film would make us doubt our former condemnation of adult-child sex, or at least reduce our outrage as we gained more "understanding" and sympathy for the participants. It would cause us to ask the same question one reviewer asked after seeing "Brokeback Mountain": "In an age when the fight over gay marriage still rages, 'Brokeback Mountain,' the tale of two men who are scarcely even allowed to imagine being together, asks, through the very purity with which it touches us: When it comes to love, what sort of world do we really want?"

OK, I'll bite. Let's talk about love. The critics call "Brokeback Mountain" a "pure" and "magnificent" love story. Do we really want to call such an obsession – especially one that destroys marriages and is based on constant lies, deceit and neglect of one's children – "love"?

What if I were a heroin addict and told you I loved my drug dealer? What if I told you he always makes me feel good, and that I have a hard time living without him, and that I think about him all the time with warm feelings of anticipation and inner completion? And that whenever we get together, it's the only time I feel truly happy and at peace with myself?

Oh, you don't approve of my "love"? You dare to criticize it, telling me my relationship with my drug dealer is not real love, but just an unhealthy addiction? What if I respond to you by saying, "Oh shut up, you hater. How dare you impose your sick, narrow-minded, oppressive values on me? Who are you, you pinch-faced, moralistic hypocrite, to define for me what real love is?"

Don't laugh. I guarantee Hollywood could make a movie about a man and his drug dealer, or an adult-child sexual relationship, that would pull on our emotions and create some level of sympathy for the characters. Furthermore, in at least some cases, it would make us doubt our conscience – a gift directly from God, the perception of right and wrong that he puts in each one of us – our inner knowing that this was a totally unhealthy and self-destructive relationship.

Ultimately, propaganda works because it washes over us, overwhelming our senses, confusing us, upsetting or emotionalizing us, and thereby making us doubt what we once knew. Listen to what actor Jake Gyllenhaal, who plays Jack, told the reporter for Entertainment magazine about doing the "love" scenes with Heath Ledger:

"I was super uncomfortable … [but] what made me most courageous was that I realized I had to try to let go of that stereotype I had in my mind, that bit of homophobia, and try for a second to be vulnerable and sensitive. It was f---in' hard, man. I succeeded only for milliseconds."

Gyllenhaal thinks he was "super uncomfortable" while being filmed having simulated homosexual sex because of his own "homophobia." Could it be, rather, that his conflict resulted from putting himself in a position, having agreed to do the film, where he was required to violate his own conscience? As so often happens, he was tricked into pushing past invisible internal barriers – crossing a line he wasn't meant to cross. It's called seduction.

This is how the "marketers of evil" work on all of us. They transform our attitudes by making us feel as though our "super uncomfortable" feelings toward embracing unnatural or corrupt behavior of whatever sort – a discomfort literally put into us by a loving God, for our protection – somehow represent ignorance or bigotry or weakness.

I wrote "The Marketing of Evil" to expose these people, and especially to reveal the hidden techniques they've been using for decades to confuse us, to manipulate our feelings and get us to doubt and turn our backs on the truth we once knew and loved. Indeed, whether they're outright lying to us, or ridiculing us for our traditional beliefs, or trying to make us feel guilty over some supposed bigotry on our part, the "marketers of evil" can prevail simply by intimidating or emotionally stirring us up in one way or another. Once that happens, we can easily become confused and lose the inborn understanding God gave us. We all need that inner understanding or common sense, because it's our primary protection from all the evil influences in this world.

As I said at the outset, Hollywood has now raped the Marlboro Man. It has taken a revered symbol of America – the cowboy – with all the powerful emotions and associations that are rooted deep down in the pioneering American soul, and grafted onto it a self-destructive lifestyle it wants to force down Americans' throats. The result is a brazen propaganda vehicle designed to replace the reservations most Americans still have toward homosexuality with powerful feelings of sympathy, guilt over past "homophobia" – and ultimately the complete and utter acceptance of homosexuality as equivalent in every way to heterosexuality.

If and when that day comes, America will have totally abandoned its core biblical principles – as well as the Author of those principles. The radical secularists will have gotten their wish, and this nation – like the traditional cowboy characters corrupted in "Brokeback Mountain" – will have stumbled down a sad, self-destructive and ultimately disastrous road.



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Post by Zero »

He never quite explains how the lifestyle or behaviors involved in homosexuality are destructive. I haven't seen the film, but I imagine that the only reason gay lovers would marry women would be to appease homophobic societal expectations anyways. And how the hell is getting away from biblical "morality" bad anyways? Does this fucker seriously know nothing about the inquisition, crusades, witch hunts, and the massive amount of death and misery caused by absolute faith in the fantastic absurdities present in the bible?

Just another fundie moron. I like how he tries to use emotional pleas to back his position, even though he's criticizing holywood for the exact same thing. Primarily shame.
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Post by Dark Hellion »

Having not seen the movie yet, and having only read this article, I have the feeling the author is skirting the main issue. The wreckage of the lives is caused not by the homosexual relationship but by the fact that they hid it in fear of societies reaction and attempted to fulfill societies role that it had placed for them, and because of their true sexuality or at least true feelings they do so awkwardly, thus leading to the downfall of thier marriages.
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Post by AK_Jedi »

I would like to see what this guy thinks about romantic comedies. In virtually all of these movies, the main characters usually leave at least one unlucky partner, usually at the alter. What about the lose and devestation that afflicts these jilted lovers? Why do we never see their side of the story?

He also brushes over the fact that the same system of manipulating the audiences emotions is used in EVERY play and movie out there. Including, just to pick a title at random, The Passion. He probably doesn't think that that movie used such despicable tactics to manipulate the audience's feelings.
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Post by Base Delta Zero »

And how the hell is getting away from biblical "morality" bad anyways? Does this fucker seriously know nothing about the inquisition, crusades, witch hunts, and the massive amount of death and misery caused by absolute faith in the fantastic absurdities present in the bible?
They know that very well, but you see, to their minds, the most important thing in the universe is obeying biblical law and believing the bible. It's fine to kill people, as long as god wants you to do it (i.e. they are heathens). The people killed by the inquisition, crusades, witchhunts deserved it, because they didn't obey the divine law. They have no consistent system of morality, and in fact, believe any morality other than "follow these rules and kill anyone who doesn't" is heretical.

A fundamentalist believes the 'fantastic absurdities' in the bible because they think it is God's word, and not believing in God's word means damnation. :roll:
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Post by Darth Wong »

Yes, the film is a piece of propaganda designed to show that homosexuals can be just like everyone else, have the same kind of jobs and dreams and hopes and fears and problems as everyone else, etc. How horrible of those evil Hollywood people to do this, instead of promoting the "correct" message that homosexuals are all evil sociopaths who are totally unlike good American citizens and who lurk in dark corners preying on children while worshipping Satan.

Seriously, that is precisely what this article is basically saying.
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Post by mr friendly guy »

Zero132132 wrote: And how the hell is getting away from biblical "morality" bad anyways? Does this fucker seriously know nothing about the inquisition, crusades, witch hunts, and the massive amount of death and misery caused by absolute faith in the fantastic absurdities present in the bible?

.
But don't you know. Those who caused inquisition, crusades, witch hunts weren't true Christians. Strangely Stalin and Mao were true atheists, but then logical consistency was never a strong point for the fundamentalist and dare say not a strong point for some moderate Christians either.
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Post by Justforfun000 »

I just can't believe that he has the nerve to pick apart the psychological impact of film directors and ignore that priests and the
Pope are guilty of the EXACT same charge. Worse. The movie tells a story without moralism put in alongside. It doesn't use cheap ploys to "drive the message" home. It doesn't have long-winded histrionic rants about how horrible society is for not being tolerant.

Its the complete LACK of these elements that makes this film so powerful. It simply portrays the way things are without judging them whatsoever. I someone comes away with a strong opinion on what should have been or not, it is their OWN conscience forming that view because of what they feel.

What pisses this guy off is obviously the fact that silence in this case speaks louder than words and homophobia and the dangers of it is shown quite clearly to those with any brain, and drives it home with the force of a mach truck to those with any heart on top of it.

I have the email addy to this guy, but I was hoping the little coward would have a public blog where people could refute him. Maybe I haven't found the original link, but I'll look. Because he is so loquacious he has been reprinted in every imaginable Christian publication I noticed while searching. Not that THEY'D have any agenda of course. :evil:
You have to realize that most Christian "moral values" behaviour is not really about "protecting" anyone; it's about their desire to send a continual stream of messages of condemnation towards people whose existence offends them. - Darth Wong alias Mike Wong

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Post by Sriad »

"Cigarette marketers cleverly attached, in the public's mind, two utterly unrelated things: 1) the American cowboy, with all of the powerful feelings that image evokes in us, of independence, self-confidence, wide-open spaces and authentic Americanism, and 2) cigarettes, a stinky, health-destroying waste of money."

Except some cowboys really DID smoke cigarrettes.

They also really DID have red hot angsty butt-sex. That's as far as the cigarette-homosexual connection goes. Kupelian does an excellent job, though, of attempting to link 2)cigarettes, a stinky health-destroying waste of money, to 1) homosexuals.
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Post by wolveraptor »

I don't know why this guy has some stupid obssession with cowboys. Everybody knows that pirates are way better.

But seriously, it's obvious that he never bothers to justify comparing a homosexual relationship with a heroin addiction.
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Post by wolveraptor »

I'm about to write an e-mail to him. Should I censor the swearing or what?
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Post by Winston Blake »

We all know the Marlboro Man. In "The Marketing of Evil," I show how the Philip Morris Company made marketing history by taking one of the most positive American images of all time – the cowboy – and attaching it to a negative, death-oriented product – cigarettes.
WTF? They put a well-liked image on their product and this means they're trying to degrade and destroy America? As opposed to, say, trying to sell cigarettes by association with said well-liked image, before most people saw them as a "negative, death-oriented""stinky health-destroying waste of money"?
I'm about to write an e-mail to him. Should I censor the swearing or what?
If you want a reply, you probably should. Chances are he'd take one look and think 'uneducated immoral non-Christain hooligan not worthy of my moral greatness'. Or you'll have to painstakingly explain what 'style-over-substance' means in your next email.
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Post by mingo »

Base Delta Zero wrote:
And how the hell is getting away from biblical "morality" bad anyways? Does this fucker seriously know nothing about the inquisition, crusades, witch hunts, and the massive amount of death and misery caused by absolute faith in the fantastic absurdities present in the bible?
They know that very well, but you see, to their minds, the most important thing in the universe is obeying biblical law and believing the bible. It's fine to kill people, as long as god wants you to do it (i.e. they are heathens). The people killed by the inquisition, crusades, witchhunts deserved it, because they didn't obey the divine law. They have no consistent system of morality, and in fact, believe any morality other than "follow these rules and kill anyone who doesn't" is heretical.

A fundamentalist believes the 'fantastic absurdities' in the bible because they think it is God's word, and not believing in God's word means damnation. :roll:
Thing is, these folks are selective about which rules in the Bible they follow. They're big on "homosexuallity is and abomination" but have no problem with a ham and cheese sandwich. Of course they'll tell you they are "no longer under the (old testiment) Law" except of course when it forbids something they don't like.
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Post by Zero »

I think I might send this guy a letter I wrote. First, I'd appreicate some input.
Judge not, lest ye be judged.

This is the only part of the bible that's applicable to everyone. It's the only thing that isn't some arbitrarily spoken rule that generally makes no sense. There are some rules in there which make a bit of sense, sure, such as the rules prohibiting killing and theivery, but they're never supported by even the simplest bits of logic the way the phrase above is. It wasn't a simple, spoken, "judge not," which would have been another arbitrary rule. The entire point of the small saying is that we ought not judge others before looking at our own faults.

It's odd, then, that fundamentalist christians ignore what's arguably the only important bit in the bible in favor of raw hatred. I recently read your hateful commentary on the movie "Brokeback Mountain", and I was unsurprised to see that you were essentially angry at a movie for trying to show that homosexuals were generally human beings like the rest of us, with dreams, hopes, aspirations, and flaws, as opposed to the "correct" view of evil amoral psychotic sociopaths who are totally unlike normal, decent Americans.

When you wrote this hateful spiel, did you even consider how terrible you ought to feel every time you eat Ham? God's teachings in Leviticus ought not be ignored in favor of modern lifestyles. If you sin, God wants an animal sacrifice. You're not supposed to eat things that are uncosher, so every time you reach for your bacon in the morning, you're a sinner. And why not? If we're going to pull out arbitrary biblical passaged about Sodom and Gomorra, then why shouldn't you follow equally arbitrary passages dealing with what you're allowed to eat, when you're allowed to sleep with your wife, when you should kill a woman for not screaming when being raped, etc., etc.?

If it's your contention that homosexuality ought to be viewed as a greivous sin against the lord, then why don't you have a similar cry of America's foundations beind under attack when you enjoy a ham and cheese sandwhich? What about the last time you had some decent shrimp at a seafood joint? What about the last time you didn't kill your child for cursing at you? What about the last time you took a shave, or got a haircut? All of these things are in Leviticus, and it seems people are abandoning these rules that God handed down to His creation in favor of a simpler lifestyle.

Judge not lest ye be judged.

Have you judged yourself by the list of archaic, arbitrary rules listed in the bible? And have you judged others? Or was your rant related to some pseudo-moral "family values" propoganda? Or maybe you're just a hypocrite.
Anything I should add? Anything I should take out?
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Anomie
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Post by Anomie »

I love how he compares homosexual relationships with pedophillia. Because a relationship between two consenting adults of the same sex is exactly like a relationship where one individual invariably has more power and the other cannot give legal consent. :roll:

Stupid motherfucker. :finger:
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wolveraptor
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Post by wolveraptor »

Zero, you should probably try to address “arguments” from his review instead of a general e-mail that he can easily dismiss. Specifically, mention how he blames the homosexual for the ruined marriage, instead of the repressive society that wouldn’t let them express their feelings in the first place (which would effectively abrogate the entire damned plot, which wouldn’t be too interesting; hence, the setting).
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."

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Zero
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Post by Zero »

wolveraptor wrote:Zero, you should probably try to address “arguments” from his review instead of a general e-mail that he can easily dismiss. Specifically, mention how he blames the homosexual for the ruined marriage, instead of the repressive society that wouldn’t let them express their feelings in the first place (which would effectively abrogate the entire damned plot, which wouldn’t be too interesting; hence, the setting).
The trouble with that is that I haven't seen the movie. I would, but I'm trying to save up a bit of cash to get a book I've wanted to read for a while, and I don't have a job just now, so I'm shit poor. Besides all that, I really don't like romance types anyways. I don't actually know what's in the movie itself.
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wolveraptor
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Post by wolveraptor »

Hell, I haven't either, but he summarizes it well enough. If you use his own words, he can't argue on the details with you.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."

- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
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