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Questions & Reflections

SUCCEED or die trying.

Posted on Sep 16th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
There are seven billion people on this planet, out of them you are one.
There are a hundred billion stars in this galaxy, out of them you are one.
There are a billion billion galaxies in this universe, out of them you are one.

You are one, and you have the strength and power of just one person. You entire life is worth nothing in comparison to even the local universe we live in. If you were to die tomorrow life and existence will go on without so much as a stir or a stutter. This is a fact.

An untold trillion other people have lived and died living in the system. Their entire lives spent pursuing common themes of food, sex and money. the grand vast majority of humanity devote their life to staying afloat and getting enough means to reached the next day and the next.

We are spending our lives waiting for the next moment to come and pass. This is your life, and it is ending one minute at a time. In most likelihood it will be so to the end. Passively watching things go by, never taking chances, never taking risks for fear of failure, for fear of losing that which we have and living the rest of our life in shame.

I say ENOUGH OF THIS! Stop living your life like this, for it is not truly living. Stop fearing death, for it is inevitable. Death will come no matter what you do, and it will come to everyone when their time is up! You must not fear death, you must be thankful of it for it is the only certainty you'll ever get in life.

Cast away your fears, take your hesitations and squash them down to the size of a grain of rice. Take your dreams and hidden desires and paint them in large pictures wherever you can. Make your goals your only objectives. Forget about surviving, that is cheap. Start living and fighting! SUCCEED, for the only alternative is failure. Death is better then failure. If you strive to SUCCEED you will never falter, as long as you have breath in you fight on to get what you want and what you dream of.

SUCCEED OR DIE TRYING! That is the only way to be alive.
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And the beggining has come!

Posted on Sep 7th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
Plans never work out the way you'd expect, and I, of all people, should know this.
Let me introduce you to the Raw Truth Bar a project I am co-creating to spread the truth about food, health, life and everything to the world. Through diet and training we are showing people how to become the Gods themselves.
Look into it, learn what you can and continue supporting us the way you have so far along this path.

THOU ART GOD!
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I will not die!

Posted on Aug 4th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
 

I will not die:


I will not die!
Not wind or hail
will bring me down
or break my sail.


I will not die!
These broken wings
still carry me afar
expect many things.


I will live on
and embrace the heat,
of torches many
from the deep.


I will live on,
and fight the day
when spirits break
and are ruled by dismay.


This fire, this life
so hot so fierce,
yet still dim compared
to the one within.


My life, my soul
forever strong,
will continue to endure
be it right or wrong.


For even though
I have you here,
it is the voice deep inside
which I always hear.

THOU ART GOD!

Copywrite © 2008 Solomon Seagal

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NASA astronaut Edgar Mitchell speaks out about NASA Cover ups!

Posted on Jul 28th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
Edgar Mitchell UFO interview on Kerrang Radio 23 july 2008

This amazing interview with Edgar Mitchell, one of the Apollo astronauts who walked on the moon gave this amazing interview where he admits that NASA and the US government has been maintaining contact with intelligent beings of another planet!

This is the time I want to stop and say I TOLD YOU SO! In your face doubters. This is just the beginning. We are at a turning point here, in these years, where the truth will no longer be able to be held back. We are on the verge of Singularity, my friends, there is no longer any reason to doubt, although it might still be hard to believe. The world is on the edge of vast change, and we have to get ready for the excitement.

What will happen from this point on? Where will this go? This is a choice that is left up to us.
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I'M BACK!

Posted on Jul 23rd, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
I'm back and better then ever. Now with an NLP master practitioner certificate and loaded with more knowledge and ideas. Open to business! My new website is www.solomonseagal.com CHECK IT OUT!
Very soon my first book will be available for perchase and marketed to the wide public. The first book will be comprised of some of my writings posted on this blog with a few juicy additives that make it worth every cent! Stay tuned for more information coming soon.
At the momant I'm sitting here twiddling my thumbs in redneck Texas, but soon I'll be migrating back into civilization in NY. Whoever's in NYC give me a call ;)
More and better quality blogs coming soon! My promise.
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To live life without regrets

Posted on May 8th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
It's been sometime since i last posted, and even when I did post I admit the quality of my posts has dropped immensely. I admit that this is partly due to me having limited access to computer and Internet and mostly due to me being lazy. But I promise you this that as long as I can I will keep you posted with the latest news. But for now you will have to make do with another short article. Enjoy!

How do you live life without regrets? You don't. Ask anyone who's lived their life and they can tell you about many of their regrets, even the most successful of people. Regrets are what make life interesting. Life is short, we are here to make mistakes. He who doesn't make mistakes has never tried something new. People are afraid to make mistakes, that is why they stick to what they are used to, what they consider familiar.
But without mistakes there is no progress. Without mistakes you cannot live a life. Ask yourself this, those older people who have lived their lives, do you ever hear them talking about how they tried something new, took big chances and messed up? Do you hear elders complain about why they took a leap, took a chance and made a change? Those who regret such things are the ones you see sitting around unhappy about everyone and everything. Those who take chances and live their life will always be successful in their life. If you don't live this life which one will you live?
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The Meaning of Life (according to Albert 2.0)

Posted on Mar 1st, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose

This piece is a specualtion I'm borrowing from Journey By starlight, a website projecting conversations with Albert Einstien. I hope you enjoy this as much as I do.

Albert 2.0


The Meaning of Life (according to Albert 2.0)


“Hey Albert, have you noticed this is the 42nd post on your blog?”


So?

“So now you’ve covered every other angle on life, how about telling me the meaning of life?”

Well, I could try but what does that have to do with the number 42?

“In Douglas Adam’s book The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy, it’s the answer to life, the universe and everything. A race of hyper-intelligent pan-dimensional beings built a monster computer called Deep Thought that took seven and a half million years to work out the answer which was… 42. I know it was after your time but haven’t you come across that yet?”

No, but a hitch-hiker’s guide to the galaxy would be fun. What I don’t understand is that if the answer was 42 what was the question?

“Exactly, so you have read it.”

Not at all, I just couldn’t imagine trying to find the answer without knowing what the question was.

“That was the funny bit. They asked for the answer but forgot to be precise about the question.”

Why was that funny?

“Ok Albert, we’ll work on your humour programming later, but if you are so smart and the answer is 42, what could the question be?”

Do you mean what is the right question to ask if you want to find the answer to life, the universe and everything?

“Well I was more thinking of why the answer to life, the universe and everything might be 42.”

What if it isn’t?

“You’re the one that said imagination is more important than knowledge, so imagine for a moment the answer is 42. What could the question be?”

Hmmm, a tricky one….I know. What is the secret of a rainbow?

“Brilliantly random, but what are you talking about?”

42 degrees is the angle that light is reflected inside a raindrop to make a rainbow.

“Are you serious?”

Absolutely, that’s the only important question I know about the universe that has the answer 42.

“So how does that explain how a rainbow works?”

A rainbow forms because a raindrop can act just like the prism that Isaac Newton used to split light into different colours. When ray of sunlight hits a raindrop it is bent and split into colours as it passes through the middle of the drop in the same way as a prism. It then reflects off the back of the raindrop like a mirror and comes back out of the from of the raindrop, bent round by 42 degrees. In fact it is not always exactly 42 degrees because each colour or wavelength of light is bent by a different amount, blue more than red, which is why the colours are spread out into a rainbow in the first place. The laws of optics tell us there has to be a fixed angle between the sun, the raindrops and you the observer. That’s why a rainbow will move away as you move towards it – you can never reach the end of a rainbow which is why it is such a good place to hide pots of gold.

“I always knew those leprechauns were clever.”

Clever indeed, but let me ask you a question, and this question will help explain the meaning of life. What is more important, knowing how the reflection angle of light inside a raindrop forms a rainbow or looking at a rainbow in wonder in the first place?

“Oh, well I suppose knowing how a rainbow is formed is better than just gawping at it.”

I wasn’t thinking of gawping at a rainbow but looking at it in wonder. That is more important than knowing how it works.

“Why?”

Because without a sense of wonder you won’t be able to appreciate the beauty of a rainbow or anything else. If humanity lacked wonder then who would have bothered to find out the secrets of rainbow?

“But what does knowing the secrets of a rainbow have to do with the meaning of life?”

The most remarkable thing about the universe is that it is understandable at all. The journey of discovery towards understanding starts with wonder. A famous Jewish theologian Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel said a very wise thing back in 1951, ‘life without wonder is not worth living.’ I remember as a child being given a compass and being completely fascinated by what invisible force could keep it pointing north. That gift helped ignite a sense of wonder in the physical world that I’ve never lost.

“I’m still not clear what that has to do with the meaning of life?”

Do you really want to know?

“Of course.”

Well to capture the meaning of life in one sentence I’d rephrase Abraham Heschel’s words and add the missing final link. Life without wonder has no meaning, so the meaning of life must be wonder itself.

“Life without wonder has no meaning, so the meaning of life must be wonder itself…..mmm…. deep.…but cool all the same…..and 42?”

Next time you see a rainbow, stop what you are doing and just sit and watch it. Then you’ll find out the real importance of 42…. and of being alive as well.



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Why the Gaia Community sucks

Posted on Feb 25th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
Why the Gaia Community sucks- this is not intended as an insult but as an attention grabber for those of you to see some of the fallacies supported by the Gaia related communities such as New Age and the Self Help movement.

In the last few days I've been communicating with a few New Age gurus who were mistaken to think I am one of them and that I support their frame of thought. Entertaining as it was this was not profitable to my current task of gathering energy for the revolution.
I do not appose New Ageism in particular as I do with organized religion, but I appose many of the underlying principles of New Age. Often I find that New Age falls pray to irrational thought, supporting blind belief over understanding. To make myself clear, I support rational thought and science. Even though many of my ideas are controversial I do not pretend to know best or to know more than experts and professionals. I simply let my imagination and thinking fly before my judgment, not in it's way. I simply take the facts science proves to be true and deduce from that what I can.
Remember, rational thought is the key civilization, without it we are nothing.

Let me also remind you that I do not affiliate with the self-help movement. A movement I believe to be an elaborate scam and which steals from our pockets billions of dollars a year. Many self help gurus such as Oprah and Dr. Phil make a living off giving simple advice to people to help their problems go away or point out the "bleedingly obvious". Overall such people and their programs are an insult to intelligence of anyone who is excited by them. Many times the Self help industry gives cheap solutions to problems and convinces people that their problems aren't their fault and will go away. Pop-psychology is on the rise and useful help is rare, if at all.
Too often do I hear "I did this and this and it didn't work, what should I do?" As Einstein so rightfully put it- "insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." Fact is if you did X and it's not working for you try something else!

If self help books were really effective do you think there would be so many of them out there? Stop going through hundred of different books and gurus, you won't find your answer there! People always read these books because they are looking for some simple step-by-step guide or magic solution that would make their problems miraculously go away. Don't deny it, you've thought this too!
The only way you will solve your problems are by facing them head on, not by hiding and sleeping it off and mellowing it down. Stop searching in every religion, stop pretending what you have is the right path when it's not. You don't need someone else to tell you who you are, yo ushouldn't even care.
Self Improvement is masturbation, self destruction, on the other hand...
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Masculine Identity in the Service Class: Analysis of Fight Club

Posted on Feb 19th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
 Masculine Identity in the Service Class: An Analysis of Fight Club
By Adrienne Redd
Last updated on June 27, 2004
Copyright 1996-2004 Adrienne Redd

Table of Contents
1 Gray-Collar Workers
2 On Being a Man Who Serves Others
3 "A Very Strange Time in My Life"
4 Shattering the American Dream
5 Nervous Laughter
6 Hypotheses about Masculine Identity

1 Gray-Collar Workers

This film will be more enjoyable for those who see it first and then read this analysis because, like The Sixth Sense or The Crying Game, Fight Club has a secret, which this discussion will reveal.
As does Natural Born Killers (www.geomatics.kth.se/sjoberg/homepage/nbk.htm), this film addresses morality and society by using the motif of violence. But like that film, it is not primarily about violence any more than Dog Day Afternoon is about bank robbery. Nonetheless, Fight Club (www.foxmovies.com/fightclub/) will inspire wringing of hands as critics and commentators call it a mirror held up to an empty and tormented contemporary consciousness. This is a misinterpretation and not the central point of the film.
Prima facie, Fight Club is also about masculinity, but with the crucial proviso that it is about masculinity among a specific class of American men: the burgeoning stratum of service or gray-collar workers. There was a time when blue-collar workers could invest in a kind of honor and mythology of hard physical work, but "the world has changed" (as one Bruce Springsteen song laments (www.musica.org/letras/ing1/Y19049.htm)) and now former steelworkers are parking cars, waiting tables, and watching security monitors. They have not even the solace of big muscles and the solidarity of unions from which to construct their identities and with which to salve their bruised egos. And as a character says in the film, they lack a great cause, like a war or depression, in which to test themselves.
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2 On Being a Man Who Serves Others

With nihilistic aphorisms and near-poetry, the story is told by the narrator (Edward Norton, www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/movies/oscars/edward_norton.htm), whose name we never learn, although he has aliases. Call him Jack. After suffering from insomnia for sixth months and developing a dependence on a comically wide array of support groups (testicular cancer, brain parasites, tuberculosis, and various 12-step groups), Jack first encounters another faker at the support groups, a derelict young predator named Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter,  www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/filmgrph/helena_bonham_carter.htm) and soon after an alter ego who blows up his condo unit (unbeknownst to him). Condoless, he moves into a dilapidated house in the warehouse district with his new friend, Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt, washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/filmgrph/brad_pitt.htm). Thus he begins a series of adventures: fistfighting with a growing circle of other men for fun, giving assignments of starting fights with strangers, becoming increasingly more defiant at work, making premium soap from the fat discarded by liposuction clinics, and ultimately building an army of gray-collar workers to wreak havoc around the unnamed city (perhaps Los Angeles) -- first in a transgressional way and then more and more destructively.
In a twist that will catch most viewers by surprise, Tyler Durden turns out to be a fragment of Jack's personality, but this is merely a device to have this mysterious and powerful character (and manifestation of wish fulfillment) appear in Jack's life. (An analysis of Tyler Durden's name reveals that in antiquated English, "Tyler" means gatekeeper or house builder. "Durden" has the word root dour meaning hard (as in "durable"). His initials, T.D., invoke Todd or death in German or perhaps D.T. (delirium tremens), since Tyler is a hallucination of Jack, the waking person. Although a second viewing shows that the first understanding of the film meshes successfully with subsequent viewings, the narrative device of the alternate personality is just that and does little to tap into what is understood about multiple personalities. One of few consistencies with psychological literature is that Jack, the waking self, is depleted and becomes less powerful as Tyler becomes more dominant. An aside, it's interesting to note that this is the second film in Norton's short but meteoric career in which he has played a character with multiple personalities, the first being Primal Fear (1996) (www.aboutfilm.com/movies/p/primalfear.htm), in which Norton made his film debut.
Fight Club is really about what it is to be a man who serves others (as women have traditionally) and how such men construct identity and meaning in their lives. That women now can take most of the jobs that men can is certainly a background fact, but the film explores other issues or sources of masculinity. The first of three pivotal scenes in this film is a moment of intimacy between Jack and Tyler when they confide that their fathers are distant and disengaged. Jack's father left when he was a small boy and married subsequent wives and had subsequent families. Tyler says that his father didn't go to college and so this was very important for Tyler to do (and Jack comments that this sounds familiar.) He says that his father was not able to adequately answer his series of questions of "now what?" Later, when Tyler subjects Jack to a deep chemical burn on his hand (which leaves a scar curiously like puckered lips), Tyler makes this empty silhouette where the father-deity should be more explicit, asking Jack, "What if God doesn't want you? What if you are one of his unwanted children?" This is echoed when the Tyler personality "leaves" (and Jack must pursue him) and Jack laments, "My father dumped me. Tyler dumped me."
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3 "A Very Strange Time in My Life"

Another potential font of masculine meaning, a man's identity in contrast to (and potentially in harmony with) women as partners is touched upon briefly and discounted. Tyler says in his heart-to-heart with Jack: "We are a generation of men raised by women. Do you really think that women are the answer?" At the prospect of marriage, in hypothetical response to Tyler's questions of "what next?" Jack says, "How can I get married? I'm a 30-year-old boy." Not until Tyler becomes a threat to Marla, who has been Tyler's lover, does Jack take steps to protect her. In the final moment of the film, he can acknowledge that he has been part of this relationship (which he believed only to be between Tyler and Marla) and can be tender to her. By way of explanation, he says, "You met me at a very strange time in my life."
The film, though violent and brutally blunt, is remarkably nonsexual. The love in the film is not love between Tyler (or Jack) and Marla, nor is it homoerotic (the idea that heterosexual men need to integrate their feminine side or embrace some of the sensitivity of gay men is completely avoided). There is not a single gay character. There only is the goal of self-love, both in the sense of a well-integrated self and in the sense of the central male character, Jack-Tyler, loving his penis. One of the marginal professions that Tyler pursues (while Jack seems to experience insomnia, but is in a kind of fugue state) is that of projectionist. He enjoys splicing single frames of pornography ("a nice big (flaccid for the ratings people we suppose) cock") into family films. In fact, just before the credits roll at the end of Fight Club, one can observe one such nearly subliminal image. There are also nagging fears of castration and mutilation that pervade the film. The first support meeting that Jack attends is a testicular cancer group where the members have had their testicles removed and commiserate, saying, "We're still men." One of the survivors of testicular cancer, Bob (Meatloaf), has grown huge breasts because of subsequent hormone imbalances, but there is no sense of his being effeminate. His breasts are almost incidental and (consistent with the rest of the film's dismissal of women) referred to as "bitch tits." After the Tyler personality blows up Jack's condo, he tells him that it could be worse: He could have had a woman cut off his penis as he slept and thrown out the window of a moving car. Castration is also a threat used against adversaries at other points of the film. Jack embraces and reintegrates Tyler in the final scene of the film when he shoots himself in the face, "killing" Tyler. The act (which exorcises Tyler as a distinct fragment of Jack) takes courage and abandon worthy of Tyler. Afterward, Jack seems powerful and in control.
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4 Shattering the American Dream

The other two pivotal scenes, with regard to exploring masculinity, are occasions when Tyler speaks to the members of fight club, saying, "We've all been raised to believe that we'll be millionaires and movie idols. But we won't!" This ties into the American dream and the mythology that anyone can become rich or become president. Part of the way that the working poor are lulled into cooperating and staying in the service of richer classes is by this unspoken promise that if they work hard they will ascend to higher security and status. Implying that the fights fill the men's need to test themselves, Tyler also says that this generation of men has had no Great Depression or great wars in which they could prove their toughness and worth. Ridiculing men who sculpt their bodies in fitness clubs, Tyler says, "Self-improvement is masturbation." Of the fights, Jack says, "nothing was solved" but "we all felt saved." (Interestingly, most of the fistfighters are the same "angry white men" who voted against liberals in the 1996 elections.)
In spite of the implied criticism of social stratification, the narrator behind the narrator or the core sensibility of the film does particularly lionize gray-collar men. One of Tyler's practices becomes what he calls "human sacrifice." He pretends to rob a convenience store, tells the clerk he is going to murder him and then tells him that if he does not pursue the dream he originally held (becoming a veterinarian or whatever), that he will be dead in six weeks. This implies that the motivation to succeed must come from the individual who has slipped into the gray-collar class, not from the system and that the individual, not the system, is responsible for the individual's success.
Before he blackmails his boss to put him on salary for not revealing the company's unscrupulous business practices and quits his job as a recall coordinator (analyzing catastrophic crashes to determine if the auto company should issue a recall), Jack emails haikus such as the following to his coworkers:
The worker bees can leave
The drones can fly away
The queen is their slave.
This implies that the people at the top of society are slaves to the service class, of which Jack-Tyler's followers are members. (Interestingly, the novel, Alias Grace (1996) (www.dancingbadger.com/agrace.htm), by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, also touches on the idea that the privileged are helpless and almost childlike without those who serve them.) There is a certain disdain for the classes higher than themselves and at the same time, the implication of an unwilling parasitism. This is epitomized in the premium soap that Tyler makes from human fat and sells at a chic shop. He delights in "selling rich women their fat asses back to them."
There is also a sense in which Tyler, though he works at a restaurant and as a projectionist, is not truly one of the class of gray-collar workers. Late in the film, when Jack is just about to learn the secret of his additional personality, he interrogates a worker in a dry cleaning facility and then snorts in disgust, "you're a moron." This individual devaluation is also manifested in one of Tyler Durden's mantras for the corps: "You are not special. You are the all-singing, all-dancing crap of the world." There also is a very powerful implication that although Tyler tries to give his followers awareness and a sense of living every moment fully, they have merely exchanged one set of programming for another. This is most painfully evident when Bob, now a member of Project Mayhem, is shot and killed. One soldier insists on burying the evidence (the body). The soldiers assert that as members of Project Mayhem they have no names and Jack insists, "This is a friend of mine and his name is Robert Paulson." They take this as a new part of their credo and begin to chant, "His name was Robert Paulson. His name was Robert Paulson."
Also supporting the idea that the gray-collar workers are merely waiting to be programmed is another scene near the end of the film. Tyler Durden is driving recklessly to try to shock Jack (who has not yet become aware that they are two aspects of one person) into feeling alive. He turns to two of the soldiers and says, if you knew you were going to die, what would you do?" They intone emotionlessly, as though it is a rote response, "paint a self-portrait" and "build a house."
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5 Nervous Laughter

The film is ultimately deeply conflicted about the identity and worth of gray-collar workers. After Project Mayhem's destruction has drawn the awareness of city leaders, some of its members wait tables at an anti- crime banquet. They grab the police commissioner in the men's room and threaten him with castration if he does not call off the investigation, saying, "We cook your food; we haul your trash; we place your calls; we guard you while you are sleeping. Do not fuck with us."
Using soap to make explosives to destroy the records of all the credit card companies seems like a Marxist impulse to level society (but it is quixotic and pointless since all such records are double- or triple-backed up.) On the other hand, exonerating the least responsible citizens from their consumer debt contradicts Tyler's urging clerks to work harder to become what they dreamed of being. Tyler's goal is not, however, a Marxist leveling of the industrial world nor even a revolution by agricultural peasants. In a vision of the post-destruction world that Tyler articulates to Jack before he "leaves," he seems to describe a pre-agrarian, hunter-gatherer world where young, strong men are kings once again. (This sensibility is well captured in Mose Allison's "Young Man Blues," recorded by The Who in 1968.) Tyler's first conversation with Jack, in which he asks him if he knows what a duvet is and ridicules the valuelessness of this knowledge in the "hunter-gatherer sense," reinforces Tyler's pre-agrarian, pre-specialization, pre-societal stratification vision.
Although dark, this is a very funny film, inspiring much laughter, both nervous and hearty. The transgressional mischief that Jack and his Tyler component engage in is also an important part of being male. Reversing the tines on parking lots so that tires explode dramatically as unsuspecting drivers exit, slipping revised safety guidelines into the rear seat pockets of airplanes which show the passengers praying, weeping, and cringing in fear, bucking the system exploring new realms are all parts of the defiant and creative curiosity that leads men to fly to the moon and climb mountains just because they are there.
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6 Hypotheses about Masculine Identity

There are two hypotheses about another potential source of masculine identity. It may be that only men of middle class and above get to be gentle, reliable providers and perhaps working class men only get to be violent (and have that outlet be socially accepted.)
The second hypothesis is that the materialism that is so reviled and rejected throughout the film is the real social flaw, not the stratification of society. Perhaps working class men only feel like they cannot be gentle, responsible providers because they have been seduced into what Jack calls "the Ikea nesting instinct," the urge to keep up with the Joneses and to be defined by one's things. Echoing Thoreau, Tyler says early in the film that "the things you own end up owning you," and one of his instructional speeches after he assembled the Project Mayhem army is, "You are not your job. You are not the contents of your wallet. You are not the car you drive. You are not your khakis." It may be that working class people's finances and their standards for happiness are destroyed believing the marketing that says that everyone can and should have every convenience and material pleasure. This cannot be true, because if such luxuries could be had by everyone, they would not be so desirable.
Another compelling theme of this film seems to be accepting the reality of one's mortality and living life to the fullest. While waiting for a plane, Jack says, "This is your life and it's ending one moment at a time." The terminally ill members of the support groups are also a strong reminder of death the project of being alive until one dies. The first time that Jack converses with Marla, who is, like him, a support group tourist, she finishes his sentence for him. He says, " When people think you're dying they really listen," and she adds "... instead of waiting for their turn to speak."
The film is also about escaping conventional society. Representative of escaping out the top of a cold and constrictive society are the references to being a millionaire or a celebrity. Representative of escaping out the bottom are the constant references to "trying to hit bottom" to attain a freedom that doesn't come until one has nothing to lose. However, though Tyler and the other characters want to walk away from conventional consumer society, they do retain a sense of honor. Tyler makes Jack promise three times not to speak about him (and this makes the dual realities of Tyler as a separate physical person and Tyler as fragment possible) and when Tyler stands up to Lou, the owner of a building in whose basement the fight club meets, they resolve the conflict with Tyler taking only the owner's word that they can continue to use the building. This and the threat with which Tyler extracts a promise from the police commissioner recall the concept of testifying. It means to "tell the truth" in a formal sense, but has its origins in the Roman punishment of castration for perjury. To promise or to give one's word was to promise upon one's testicles.
Fight Club's themes of honor and freedom (perhaps attainable through total disengagement from society and perhaps by starting over) remains complex and contradictory, as do its exploration of individual work and group power. Ultimately this film, directed by David Fincher (Seven, 1995; The Game, 1997) does not coalesce perfectly, but its themes and images are rich with meaning and it is one of the deepest explorations of modern masculinity within the working class to date.
Adrienne Redd has written about film, theater, music, the visual arts, politics, and the environment for 20 years. She lectures on film and leads a monthly film discussion for the County Theater in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. She is writing a book about American political activists, working on a documentary and pursuing graduate work in sociology at Temple University in Philadelphia.
This essay copyright (c) 2000-2004 by Adrienne Redd.
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Solipsism

Posted on Feb 8th, 2008 by White Rose : Technogiddo revolutionist White Rose
Solipsism- the belief that you are the only one in the universe. This is more of a mind excersice than an actualy belief system. The Matrix touches upon many points of solipsism and makes the general point. What if reality is an illusion? What if everything we see, hear, smell and taste are produced by our mind and not from outside sources as we are led to believe?
In a way scientists proved this to be true, the brain is capable of creating it's own reality, regardless of what is out there. By interpreting what we see and hear for us, the brain is influencing are view of reality, therefore we can never be sure what is real and what is our imagination. In these videos we will explore the mind excersizes Solipsism provides for us:

Anno's Solipsism I

Anno's Solipsism III

Anno's Solipsism IV

Anno's Solipsism II


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