hubby_of_newtodisney said:Ummm, wisdom says I don't debate my D S-I-L!!! Seacrest out!
chicken!
and, um, I'll refrain from asking what the D in DSIL means. lol.
hubby_of_newtodisney said:Ummm, wisdom says I don't debate my D S-I-L!!! Seacrest out!
va32h said:Your statements defy logic.
Good people can sometimes do bad things. This does not make them intrinsically evil. It makes them flawed human beings, just like the rest of us.
Adultery does not make someone irreedemably evil and undeserving of sympathy ever, for any reason.
Selfishness (something which we have all been guilty of at some point in our lives) does not make us permanently and fatally flawed.
And if "being a *******" were a crime, 90% of the world's population would be in jail at one time or another, leaving only toddlers and babies to run the world.
Acknowledging that essentially good people can sometimes do very terrible things does not mean that we condone the behavior, approve of it, are desensitized to it, or have learned to accept it. It means we accept that our human nature is such that sometimes essentially good people can sometimes do very terrible things.
You have said some mean-spirited things in this thread. However, that does not necessarily mean you are a mean person. You're just flawed like the rest of us.
RobinMarie said:If you ran for office, I'd vote for you! Nicely written!
Peter Pirate said:Pirates Of The Carribean changed my life more than Brokeback Mountain or Crash, not there was anything wrong with either of them, just don't get patronizing about what is art and what isn't, thats kind of a personal call isn't it?
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I 'm not sure why you think that I look up to rebels.. I've always been a straight arrow who liked the straight arrows.. I'm a Marine,which is as establishment as you can get ,certainly not someone rebelious I've never grown up believing a rebel should be looked up to..I've never seen reel without a cause,Hate movies like the outsiders and I seriously doubt I will ever even watch Hustle and Flow...It's just not my kind of movie..Now I will watch Brokeback Mountain because it interests me. Incidentally I've also never seen Bridges of Madison County ..You make a lot of assumptionsspoon full of sugar said:A perfect exmple of this is the
You probably won't believe that because you have grown up believing "the rebel" is some one to be looked up to. Why? What does this type of person do for society or his own family? This is the type of person who vandalizes others property with no thought to the person who worked for it. He seduces young girls (usually under age since they don't know any better) and then leaves them. Does not care for his offspring, how could he, since he refuses to have a job? Etc..
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spoon full of sugar said:it really scares me that most of you don't understand this.
eclectics said:I feel that I possess a semi-reasonable amount of intelligence and the only thing I have gotten out of any of your posts is a headache.
spoon full of sugar said:Either you people are REALLY dense or your all messing with me. I just can't believe people are this dumb.
Your paragraph about James Dean you addressed specifically to me. It's new to me that pimp has now become a good word.spoon full of sugar said:Jenny *sigh* I was trying to explain a accepted psychological theory about how counterculture mores are inserted into our culture. You look like an intelligent woman, and I know the marines don't accept dummies (no matter what hollywood says) so you must be being delibrately obtuse. Fine.
Where you say I make alot of assumptions, I am not always speaking to you, I am responding to many posts. So not everything has to do with you. Sorry if that wasn't clear.
Peter Pirate, I wasn't saying that a gay rights leader has anything to do with Brokeback.I find it hard to believe that you got that from my post? He wasn't refering to Brokeback, just gays in the spotlight in general. I was using that as an example for the fact that the more we see something the more we accept it. I was trying to explain that a movie like hustle and flow is making the explotation of women more acceptable in general. When I was a kid, the word pimp was a bad word. Now it's slang for someone whos got it going on. And you don't see that as a bad thing?![]()
Either you people are REALLY dense or your all messing with me. I just can't believe people are this dumb.
spoon full of sugar said:were based on the other posts saying that the cowboys "had" to marry those women to save their very lives. And that that made it ok, it made it ok to enter into a marriage you aren't completely commited to, ok to commit adultery, ok to hurt your children, not because your gay, but because you cheated on their mother and lied to them about who you were.
Chattyaholic said:I was very glad "Crash" won Best Picture over "Brokeback Mountain."
I don't condone the gay lifestyle at all and for "Brokeback" to win Best Picture would be further proof of the decline in morals and values in people. I know more and more people are accepting the gay lifestyle, but just because people are accepting it doesn't make it right.
Ladyhawke10 said:I was shocked that Crash won--and was surprised when it was even nominated.
While I loved the film when I first saw it, I saw it as way too obvious to have serious artistic merit, and it's unabashedly didactic (teaching/ preaching) in a simplistic sort of way. So much so, that I showed it to my college students last semester during a unit on the myths of diversity. Ironically, I'm showing it again this semester and had to buy the dang thing because it was all checked out at the video stores after its big win
I think it's an enjoyable film to watch because it uses a lot of over the top techniques to pull at audiences hearts and tear ducts, and it's useful for simplifying racial issues because it spells them out, but from an artistic or literary standpoint, I just can't buy the brillance in having characters routinely say such bigoted remarks to other characters as if it's commonplace--it's so artificial--even a cliche of artificial. Does anyone NOT remember they are watching a movie when Sandra Bullock yells about homies in front of the locksmith she is complaining about--does anyone do this?? Movies don't have to be realistic to be good--there is plenty of evidence for this--but when the movie pretends to be real on the obvious use of smoke and mirrors--that's when you question it's integrity. And yes, I'm from LA and even work sometimes in the movie business doing short-term freelance stuff (like the kind of people who were supposed to be swayed by the fact that Crash was about LA themes)--and while I liked the film, the best picture nod made me question the integrity of the outcome.