Your points are retarded sounding and difficult to interpret, but let me attempt to address them.
While violence is real and part of humanity and its history and present so is harmony and peaceful coexistence. Actually, I would say that it our capacity for civility that we show each other that separates us from the savagery of the animal kingdom. I do not accept that violence is simply the state of things and that we should all embrace and glorify it. Rather, I like the idea of walking down a busy street holding my child by the hand without worry of an 'inherently and aggressive humanity' taking our lives in the bloodiest manner possible.
Remember ass wipe, violence is wrong. Period. You don't have to 'hate humanity' to make this statement. If you want to go back to clanish caveman days where strangers just brutally killed one another upon first sight...be my guest.
Our fantasies challenge our civility. This event is the manifestation of this fact.
Posted 7/22/2012 3:50 am
Okay, how about this: Do you, OP, think the audience got what was coming to them? Consider this: Most of the movie goers were there rooting for the protagonist; that is, the violence that was being displayed was being meted out as justice. What they experienced was nothing short of the exact opposite. Do you still think it ironic? Do you still think that people rooting for the concept of "good" should experience "evil" as some divine comedy?
To once again quote the greatest humanitarian of the 20th century:
"Was there any form of filth or profligacy, particularly in cultural life, without at least one Jew involved in it?
If you cut even cautiously into such an abscess, you found, like a maggot in a rotting body, often dazzled by the sudden light-a kike!
What had to be reckoned heavily against the Jews in my eyes was when I became acquainted with their activity in the press, art, literature, and the theater. All the unctuous reassurances helped little or nothing It sufficed to look at a billboard, to study the names of the men behind the horrible trash they advertised, to make you hard for a long time to come. This was pestilence, spiritual pestilence, worse than the Black Death of olden times, and the people was being infected with it! It goes without saying that the lower the intellectual level of one of these art manufacturers, the more unlimited his fertility will be, and the scoundrel ends up like a garbage separator, splashing his filth in the face of humanity. And bear in mind that there is no limit to their number; bear in mind that for one Goethe Nature easily can foist on the world ten thousand of these scribblers who poison men's souls like germ-carriers of the worse sort, on their fellow men.
It was terrible, but not to be overlooked, that precisely the Jew, in tremendous numbers, seemed chosen by Nature for this shameful calling.
Is this why the Jews are called the 'chosen people'?
I now began to examine carefully the names of all the creators of unclean products in public artistic life. The result was less and less favorable for my previous attitude toward the Jews. Regardless how my sentiment might resists my reason was forced to draw its conclusions.
The fact that nine tenths of all literary filth, artistic trash, and theatrical idiocy can be set to the account of a people, constituting hardly one hundredth of all the country's inhabitants, could simply not be tanked away; it was the plain truth."
Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler
Volume One - A Reckoning
Okay, how about this: Do you, OP, think the audience got what was coming to them? Consider this: Most of the movie goers were there rooting for the protagonist; that is, the violence that was being displayed was being meted out as justice. What they experienced was nothing short of the exact opposite. Do you still think it ironic? Do you still think that people rooting for the concept of "good" should experience "evil" as some divine comedy?
Good bloodbath.
All sorts of good horrific violence.
This is SO COOL!
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BLAM! BLAM! BLAM! BLAM! BLAM! BLAM!
This is such a tragedy!
Such a shocking tragedy!
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Posted 7/22/2012 3:57 am
Similar to the 2011 movie "God Bless America". At the end of the movie, the protagonists show up at an American Idol show, and blow away the judges, contestants, audience members.
Okay, how about this: Do you, OP, think the audience got what was coming to them? Consider this: Most of the movie goers were there rooting for the protagonist; that is, the violence that was being displayed was being meted out as justice. What they experienced was nothing short of the exact opposite. Do you still think it ironic? Do you still think that people rooting for the concept of "good" should experience "evil" as some divine comedy?
OP here.
Rooting for the 'good guy' is one thing, paying cold hard cash to see him level out this fictitious 'justice' in the most violent manner possible is something different all together. You think the killer didn't root for the 'good guy' in violent films? Think he has been sitting around all his life rooting for the bad guy? This fuck was a child guidance councilor at a day camp. Hardly something the Joker would invest his time in.
Mechanical engineering and Agricultural Sciences. Why?
WTF has happened to us? People actually are disparaging higher eduction these. Jealous fucks. Go back to your gory comic book and leave the big thinking to the rest of us.
Rooting for the 'good guy' is one thing, paying cold hard cash to see him level out this fictitious 'justice' in the most violent manner possible is something different all together. You think the killer didn't root for the 'good guy' in violent films? Think he has been sitting around all his life rooting for the bad guy? This fuck was a child guidance councilor at a day camp. Hardly something the Joker would invest his time in.
What the killer did or didn't root for is irrelevant. Stick to the point: You said it was ironic these people got gunned down because they were there for the violence. I say they were there to vicariously experience justice (something that has been erased in our politically correct society). You were asserting that they got what was coming to them. Given my argument that they wanted a sense of justice and instead were victimized by a murderer, do you still stand by your flawed logic that this was somehow karma?