A frog who wants the objective truth about anything and everything.

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • Just to clarify, I did not post this as an allegory for the election loss, we don’t need any myths to soothe our conscience. It just popped up in my subscriptions and thought it was interesting enough to post.

    If anything, I think its conclusion about feelings and beliefs ultimately trumping objective truth is quite applicable to MAGA.


  • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPtoVideos@lemmy.worldFirefly and the Lost Cause
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    3 days ago

    Maybe I misinterpreted what Feral was getting at, but at least from my reading of it, he’s saying the myth was ‘half-true’ in the sense that that propaganda was effectively sold to the lowly enlisted/conscripted men to give them self-justification to fight. Whereas the truth was indeed that the whole thing was just for slavery. The myth then became even more useful after defeat to help them accept it ‘honorably’. His conclusion about what people believe and feel ultimately having a larger impact than the actual truth seems to confirm that reading, but I could be wrong.

















  • Sorry to hear things are rough for you. I hope whatever is causing it improves!

    Mine is an odd choice, or maybe not, but its the first thing that came to mind: Night in The Woods

    It’s about a girl that comes home from college to her old dying town. I know that doesn’t sound terribly uplifting, and there’s some downer stories mixed in there, but overall I found it a very heartfelt and uplifting game, because the main character’s friends are the most wonderful bunch of people, and you hang out with them and go on little adventures throughout. It’s got a cool creepy mystery story going on, but the game is mostly about deep friendship, family, and overcoming struggles with their help, and I found that very uplifting and worthwhile.









  • I love Carlin, but he was an awful defeatest, any sliver of hope beaten right out of him, which he admits himself.

    Education is, genuinely, the prime issue. Where I agree with Carlin is that better education can’t fix our system, because the system itself is fundamentally broken. It’d be better with smarter people, but ultimately would still be corporate captured and self-serving.

    What a highly educated populace could mean is a rejection of the current system entirely, in favor of building a new one in its shell cooperatively, with horizontal, decentralized power and the wholesale rejection of profit-motive being the prime focus.

    I suspect Carlin would assume humanity is incapable of that, but then again he probably wasn’t super familiar with how that actually happened in the Spanish Civil War.

    If we manage to pull it off, Carlin would’ve been happy for once, begrudgingly :p