Avatar
Jed
06445d2ba1299aa383eaa43ec95171c1ba5c4081d29dbe367f6fabd033b6b141
While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease. I hold fast to what I believe, til I see my name in stone. #faith #chickens #gardens #gsd #selfemployment maxi

Never forget, Crooks can fly a drone over a presidential speech venue, but you can’t fly a drone over a bunch of trees to give food and water to the starving. Your leaders hate you.

Replying to Avatar hodlbod

Watched Band of Thieves this weekend (which was pretty good), and was struck by a just slightly more concentrated dose of profanity than usual. Maybe it was the juxtaposition of the dorky main character and the amount of fucks coming out of his mouth, or maybe it was quantifiably more than usual, but in either case it got me thinking.

Why is our culture increasingly profane? Why must we punctuate all our communication with meaningless allusions to aggressive sex acts or scatology?

My wife an I have been watching "classic" movies more often in the last year or two, including On The Waterfront with Marlon Brando, the Bicycle Thief, and Casablanca. In every case, the pace of the dialog is quite slow, and the gravity much greater — despite an almost complete absence of emphatic profanity.

This can be seen in modern movies as well. Slow movies in general (think Dune or Interstellar) feel more meaningful. Marvel movies feel like cotton candy in contrast. In modern movies though, the gravity comes from the subject matter rather than the inherent drama of human life — vast stretches of space, time, or war. More mundane subjects having to do with normal people almost always seem to be approached with a certain level of irony or flippancy.

Marshall McLuhan says that "At electric speed, all forms are pushed to the limits of their potential." We live in a frantically fast age, that has outpaced the gravity of the human. The natural recourse is to attempt to keep up, but in doing so we lose the dignity slowness confers and are forced to resort to frantic insistence on our right to be heard. We scream, swear, panic, and twerk.

But of course, no one hears. The natural response to noise is to tune it out. The more we stimulate the senses, the number the senses become.

The most memorable people I have met are people who have not succumbed to this cultural panic. They are not people who project their emotions, but who carefully choose their words, and if in doubt prefer not to speak. They are people who have filled themselves not with their own thoughts, but with the thoughts of others, through study and memory. They are people whose silence speaks volumes.

I'm not like that. I'm uncomfortable with silence, and think best while talking. But it is something worth aspiring to. To be the kind of person whose dignity and gravity slowly expand. Who have a deep well of wisdom to draw from, which they dispense sparingly yet abundantly on the people they come into contact with. Whose eyes say more than their mouths.

There is one man in particular, whom I love. He always carried a pipe in his pocket or his mouth, vinted wine from his own grapes, did a little woodworking, and always said very little. Every Sunday, eyes closed, he would recite Psalm 103 to his small congregation. When he read the Bible, he would entirely leave off his own commentary (even though he was a pastor), simply reading the passage and closing the book afterward. At his funeral, and dozens of people shared stories of how this man had changed, or even saved their lives.

All of this came from a deep humility that came from spending many of his younger years without any idea what his purpose in life was, and from many personal failures and disappointments subsequent even to his calling. A "long obedience in the same direction" brought this man to the end of a life full of ups and downs, in which he was able to say that as he looked back, all he saw were the peaks, rather than the valleys.

Lately I've been challenged by Christ's words in Matthew, not to "worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble." No amount of thrashing productivity, frantic overwork, or boiling frustration can improve things, because our times are not in our own hand. All we can do is wait on God — and he will renew our strength.

Profanity is often a panicked bid to be heard by piling on emphasis. But panic is a form of fear, and perfect love casts out fear. "The very hairs of your head are all numbered. Do not fear therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows."

It drives me nuts.

I think profanity is increasingly used in substitute for good screenwriting and a cover for wooden acting. If they cuss enough, then the audience will understand their emotion without actors having to put facial expression and feeling into it.

The juxtaposition of a nerdy character that sounds like a sailor is jarring. That’s probably why you noticed it. Conversely, The Expanse (both the book and the show) are completely filled with all manner of foul language. However!! there are characters that don’t cuss at all, there are characters that have pet words that they sprinkle into casual communication, there are characters that cuss in foreign languages, there are characters that use made up cuss words, and there are characters that snap and cuss. This creates many diverse voices, and is good writing/screenplay.

What’s the iconic quote from Gone with the Wind “I don’t give a damn” that’s not exactly Shakespearean level prose. It’s uninspiring and cheap.

The thing that annoys me the most though is cussing that doesn’t exist in a movie or book’s canon. In Star Wars, Solo is saying things like hell, but the subject of an afterlife for bad people isn’t tackled in the Star Wars universe. There’s no spirit of palpatine floating around, and there’s no bad place for the Sith to go when they die. Lucas criticized Harrison Ford for out of place cussing, but he couldn’t get him to stop and some scenes never did get a non-cussing take, so it’s in the movie. Just shows that Ford is pretty low intelligence and doesn’t understand his roles.

That’s pretty rich coming from the author. (Here she is.👇 ) Apparently it’s not the trad part, it’s the wife part. To her, being a wife is a risky throwback.

She’s white, privileged, stays home with her kids, has chickens, makes sourdough and all the other things a tradwife does, she just does it as a bitter old lonely dried up grouch. More power to her.

Chemtrails, the biggest threat to our environment! #memes

I thought I’d go to main stream news and see how long it took for them to spin the story. Not long, apparently, the Russians spent a lot of resources to occupy and hold the power plant, Putin has made it clear he will consider even using depleted uranium as an act of nuclear war, and then Russians just set fire to their own nuclear stuff. 🤡 🌎 😆

Whatcha doin Terry?

Just sssellin orangesss

I dunno who “me” is in the ven diagram but if they actually do like ven diagrams they can’t be all bad. I’d sooner vote for them than Cackles.

Somebody remembers Nordstream! Stage an assassination attempt! 😆

Oh, it’s time for #cornstr is it? Ok you #cornstriches here’s a song I made a robot write for y’all I hope you like it. I put so much effort into it.. I mean the robot did. Or whatever. Corn!

https://suno.com/song/1949855a-1a01-4569-8b8e-60c17ac20257

Oh man, that makes a lot of sense actually. My grandmother used to gamble for milk caps.

Only problem was, the milk caps had a voucher on them you could redeem at the general store.

Addendum to the only problem.. her parents owned the general store and would be the ones paying out.

Addendum to the addendum, my grandmother was reeeeallly good at poker, and become quite the scandal in town. 😆