I'm traveling to all contiguous united states interviewing locals about their opinions on different topics: the meaning of life, their problems, their personality, their values, etc.
Great photos. Wonder what some of the people are selling
@TVDandTrueBloodАй бұрын
Lmao why does one of the covers just have a portrait of Franz Liszt?
@humanexperient5096Ай бұрын
lol
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
17:35 Truman wrote the Washington Post Op-ed exactly one month to the day, December 22nd 1963, stating it needs to be reined in. 🤔
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
The peace speech and also he was pulling out of Vietnam before it really even started per National Security Action Memorandum 263.
@humanexperient5096Ай бұрын
One personal theory I have is that one of the people involved is still alive. I think this because Bush sr said he'd declassify all documents in 25 years (thinking this person would die in their 60's), but the date has been pushed twice since then (the guy is in his 80's now). Coincidentally Oswald was in his 20's. Some people say there were at least 3 Oswald doubles, although I'm not sure I believe that theory. I recommend the stossel interview with Mike Pompeo. He sort of alludes to this theory IMO
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 Wasn't it Clinton in '92 that said it'll be due in 2017? It could've been Bush but I think he was the one the president was protecting pushing it that far back. Who is the guy you think they're protecting? I thought it was HW. I think there was at least 2 LHO's but probably more. I will check that interview out. Ty.
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
The best books on the topic are 'JFK and the Unspeakable' by Douglass, 'Last Word' by Lane, and 'Final Judgment' by Piper
@humanexperient5096Ай бұрын
I got Unspeakable in audiobook after hearing RFK jr recommend it
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 It's a great book.
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
Do you know who popularized the term 'conspiracy theorist', why and how they did? Hint: It has to do with that Dallas event.
@humanexperient5096Ай бұрын
I read that after making this video in a book called CIA Rogues and the Killing of the Kennedys. I also read the Jesse Ventura book on the topic. I'm convinced after having read those two books.
@badmanskill1112Ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 The term was popularized by the Agency via the media to use to discredit anyone that questioned the Warren Comm.
@morbiusprime2043Ай бұрын
Just finished reading the book, thanks for this beautiful analysis
@cxvndy63262 ай бұрын
Is there any way to contact you directly? Socials? I would like your help with this book if that's possible :)
@aheyenkojacob10072 ай бұрын
Although this is just a coincidence, I want to leave it here. I also admire Dostoevsky, as well as Peterson. Just funny that you mentioned the 1976 film Network. I was recently thinking about what movie I could call my favorite and this picture was the first thing that came to mind. Just funny. Speaking of realism. Dostoevsky's ideas, I believe, would be too cramped in the canons of the realistic novel. Therefore, he often goes beyond the bounds of plausibility, but only where it is necessary to convey a thought, an idea. Thank you for your thoughts. Subscribed!
@JamesChatting-vp8hh2 ай бұрын
Anthony Cumia has a new book coming up. He's very sharp!
@JamesChatting-vp8hh2 ай бұрын
I think the Screwtape letters is awful. C.S. Lewis apologetics is overrated.
@JamesChatting-vp8hh2 ай бұрын
It was really hard to get MJ because of his beliefs
@Mace-888672 ай бұрын
“Prince Myshkin being a simp” 😂
@thesanjam4 ай бұрын
Thank you for the display of amazing photografs of people from that period.
@jasonhawkins6345 ай бұрын
I'm Leann and Jason is my dad.
@humanexperient50965 ай бұрын
Wow! I'm glad you could find this video! How's Jason doing?
@carlh.h.22425 ай бұрын
I read Dawkins 15 years ago and was convinced by atheism. It didn’t stick. I read Dostoyevsky 5 years ago and became an Orthodox Christian.
@raghad-zn9xn2 күн бұрын
If you haven’t read the Quran, You’re missing out.
@antseanbheanbocht49935 ай бұрын
I thought the flip flopping was Dostoyevsky highlighting the moral weakness of these so called upper classes. Easily won over. It seems to me he is mocking the Russian upper classes throughout the book?
@zifalvaintolk505 ай бұрын
Alright retard, i'll bite.
@randomomelette29065 ай бұрын
Hey I have a question. I just started reading the book and I got stuck on rogozhins past. Is he the dark man? Please help me, the book is good but a little confusing
@humanexperient50965 ай бұрын
The dark man on the train is Rogojin. He's antithetical to the prince. One is dark-haired, the other blonde. One is satan and brings eternal death, and the other is the groom (Jesus), who will bring salvation. We are Nastasia Philipovna, and we have to pick between the two. Are you talking about another dark man? In what chapter is he mentioned? Also what translation?
@humayunkhan22776 ай бұрын
Roger was a dear friend & a great leader !
@humanexperient50966 ай бұрын
Wow. Well, his book was very captivating, and his track record awe-inspiring.
@SKMikeMurphySJ6 ай бұрын
You are not far from the kingdom of heaven! "Without god everything is permitted." ~ D "Beauty will save the world"~ D "Atheism is so last Decade!" ~ MM SJ Both Bowie & Iggy Pop made an album titled The Idiot, because there is something so special about it. See how its portrayed in Russian before you judge...
Mannnn not a soliloquy fan? Personally I think those are make or break for most novels and are the most captivating defining moments!
@joereeve25696 ай бұрын
Great video, my favorite of all I've watched about this book
@dalelerette2067 ай бұрын
Nietzsche loved Dostoevsky so there may be hope yet. Nietzsche’s unbelief may have contributed to his nervous breakdown. And his lack of faith may have resulted in no support when he brilliantly pulled away the illusions of all philosophy. Unlike Nietzsche, I would be led by the Spirit to say it is time to, “Let our souls magnify the Lord” -- and realize there are no borders, especially when we blow into the sails of another's boat. We don’t believe in God. God believes in us. As we are divinized, God literally indwells our soul and believes on our behalf by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost.
@runningintohistory8 ай бұрын
I stopped in Franklin to get gas on my way back to Pennsylvania and was like, hey I know this gas station lol.
@humanexperient50968 ай бұрын
recognized it from watching this video? Wow!
@runningintohistory8 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 yeah man. I like your work. I found your channel a few years back. I'm actually staying on a farm in Franklin for a week to release a video about the effects of the Civil War in this region. Exploring the Confederate caves, etc. I did talk to a few locals. Do you mind if I share a short clip of your video, with credit and a link to your channel?
@humanexperient50968 ай бұрын
@@runningintohistory wow, thanks that means a lot. Sure thing. Go ahead and use whatever clip you want.
@runningintohistory8 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 thanks man.
@runningintohistory8 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 hey what is your name? Or just your first name so that I can reference you and your channel.
@carlorizzo8278 ай бұрын
Loved this, thank you. Gotta read it again, last time was 40 yrs ago (I'm 70🤣) I hate haaaate to disclose how much i identify with the title character, with the big differeence i am middle class not aristocracy. I'm not epileptic, but have a mind/brain condition (borderline? CPTSD? mild schizoid? pseudo quasi autistic?) I'm brainy, but utterly lack common sense street smarts. Authored appallingly awkward incidents, shoulda been struck by⚡️numerous times. The narrator is sadly naive re family members forgiving. Dostoevsky has a keen grip on the nature of split personality. Especially Raskolnikov. Astonishingly in The Double. Likewise Myshkin's insane simp-pathy for Rogozhin at the end
@timangar97719 ай бұрын
Cool video! But were you really disgusted by Myshkin consoling Rogozhin after the murder? I felt nothing but pity for the both of them... and I do believe that Myshkin would have acted differently had Rogozhin killed Aglaya instead. You see, by the time of her death, Myshkin loved Nastasja like you love a child, not like you love a woman. That's what Jewgeni Pawlowitch ponders about: How can the prince love both Aglaya and Nastasja? Perhaps a different kind of love? Anyhow, prince Myshkin saw that Rogozhin had killed what Rogozhin most dearly loved in the world, out of jealousy, out of pain... how horrible! And what I find most horrible is that we can empathize with Rogozhin, we can see that jealousy and rejection have made us hurt those we love most in our own lives, or that we at leasted wanted to do so. And then comes Myshkin with his infinite understanding of the pain that Rogozhin experienced, and he consoles him... No, I did not find that repulsive. Because this is not stupid, this is loving. What repulsed me was how Myshkin pushed away Aglaya out of love and stupidity, how he did not recognize the seriousness of how much she loved him and how much she wanted him to come with her. That I found awful.
@rachmiraina9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great explanation! I'm glad I came across this video soon after finishing the book. I don't know, maybe I'm overreacting or catastrophizing, but Holbein's painting somehow foreshadowed Myshkin's tragic end. Hippolyte once said, 'If this great Teacher of theirs could have seen Himself after the Crucifixion, how could He have consented to mount the Cross and die as He did?' In a way, if Myshkin were to know how his love could lead to such an end as depicted in the book, would he still have chosen to be the person that he is? His unconditional love ultimately brings about his own ruin and destruction, not to mention the people around him. Anyway, much appreciate the video, thank you!
@bartz211510 ай бұрын
the prince didnt want nastasya philpovna when he sat with aglya at the green bench 20:30
@ShinkuRED10 ай бұрын
Are your other scripts still in the works?
@humanexperient509610 ай бұрын
I paused them, but will pick them back up. I'll wrap up The Virtue of Selfishness. Then I'll make a less ambitious one on 5 books that changed my life. And hopefully I'll make one on 1984, John Quincy Adams, The Prince and Malcolm X
@ShinkuRED10 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 Good to hear. Just found your channel from this video and was hoping you hadn't retired already.
@The.Youtuber.with.no.Name.10 ай бұрын
You posted this on /lit/ and this was really good.
@humanexperient509610 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. It means a lot hearing feedback like this. I saw your other comment in my notifications, but don't see where it ended up. To answer your question, I had the Virtue of Selfishness script written, and started recording it over a year ago, but when I would listen to what I had recorded, it sounded absolutely boring. So I paused it. I'll pick it back up, prioritize it and finish it in a couple months.
@phillipstroll738510 ай бұрын
Cracks me up. Even the poor and impoverished, even those without any education at all but were literate understood this book. Yet, so called educated modernity can't grasps a simple book. Smfh
@humanexperient509610 ай бұрын
interesting. can you explain it for us?
@phillipstroll738510 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 see what I mean. A book doesn't become a classic because no one read it. The majority of the population was what so many call poor and illiterate; yet, they sure were capable of purchasing, reading and comprehending these works.
@tendiesoffmyplate908510 ай бұрын
It's a good idea to go into it blind. Going into it with foreknowledge is huge spoilers.
@DarthStygian10 ай бұрын
That’s cool. Jason was a good dude. The interviewer seemed a tad biased, but not particularly judgmental. I would say that this video is a good thing. I’m more happy for watching it.
@riceboybebop701811 ай бұрын
Love the breakdown overall. Disagree with the personal tangent. The disease is involuntary and leads to progressice deterioration. Psychedelic substances, ones which your beloved Jordan Peterson also took, manage to confront you with your own demons. This can reveal insight after hellish or heavenly revelation in controlled, chosen time and place, unlike the disease. JP also talks about the permanent changes after a trip and how these helped a group of cancer patients facing their reality of death. This means it is not a singular experience of hedonistic bliss, it is a personal potentially life changing lesson.
@hellucination990511 ай бұрын
This book is dysgenic and full of lazy thinking. The modern left is a joke.
@johnrencheck228311 ай бұрын
Go back to virgin land ur 19 doesnt matter who u deal with ur gonna have drama hun YOUR 19 I LIVE IN WV AND I DONT KNOW WHO THE HELL U ARE IF U DONT WANT PEOPLE TO KNOW U STAY OFF THE SOCIAL MEDIA BULLSHIT
@shinmen.takezo Жыл бұрын
You read Dostoevsky and you still an atheist!? May God guide you to the righteous way.
@Romahelten Жыл бұрын
Just finished it after a long hiatus from Ippolit's self-eulogy, I was hooked the first half of the book, and then suddenly it wanted you to care about something entirely different which was very difficult. To me, I read the self-eulogy as one of Dostoevsky's personal ramblings, where he himself did not necessarily know what he wrote as I didn't feel the connection between it and the rest of the story. Although I would highly recommend the book, I would advise to skip that part and possibly afterwards go back an read it.
@sarahjones79 Жыл бұрын
Being an atheist is not an accomplishment. America is being destroyed from the inside out and loss of faith is a glaring contributor (if not the core one). Do not underestimate the power of communism and its HATRED of humble faith. ( do not underestimate the effects of the cold war and its aggressive attacks, scheming, infiltrations) forgive my naive simplicity)
@kriseckhardt5148 Жыл бұрын
I lived in Franklin and being a Yankee from RI I thought I would have trouble. EVERYONE was nice.
@lynninpain Жыл бұрын
Your comment about Korean movies made me laugh! I am well aquainted with Korean dramas, though I prefer the comedic ones with stereotypical Korean tropes and avoid the tragic ones, sterotypically over the top. They are disturbing.
@filip1261 Жыл бұрын
Do you genuinely think mental illness isn't political? That's just completely moronic
@humanexperient5096 Жыл бұрын
did you watch my summary of chapter 5?
@LooseOrangeJuice6 ай бұрын
@@humanexperient5096 Tough to even get through the first 5 minutes. You rant about how Marxists complain about "commoditization," when the word you're actually searching for is "commodification." These two terms mean two different things. You say you've heard Marxists complain endlessly about this topic, but apparently you haven't done a very good job listening. This video is mindless drivel. I haven't read Capitalist Realism yet, but I plan to after seeing what a piss poor job you did debunking it.
@pcatful Жыл бұрын
I think the people in this novel would make ME demented so the spoilers are a great help let me tell you.
Пікірлер
This book is just fyodor's anime harem fantasy. 🤡
Its over Marxbros, dude pulled out the Ayn Rand quote.
🤣
W
Nice job.
Or maybe all those girls are dead
fffffffiiiiiiirrrrrsssssstttttt ppppppppoooooooosssssssstttttttt
Great photos. Wonder what some of the people are selling
Lmao why does one of the covers just have a portrait of Franz Liszt?
lol
17:35 Truman wrote the Washington Post Op-ed exactly one month to the day, December 22nd 1963, stating it needs to be reined in. 🤔
The peace speech and also he was pulling out of Vietnam before it really even started per National Security Action Memorandum 263.
One personal theory I have is that one of the people involved is still alive. I think this because Bush sr said he'd declassify all documents in 25 years (thinking this person would die in their 60's), but the date has been pushed twice since then (the guy is in his 80's now). Coincidentally Oswald was in his 20's. Some people say there were at least 3 Oswald doubles, although I'm not sure I believe that theory. I recommend the stossel interview with Mike Pompeo. He sort of alludes to this theory IMO
@@humanexperient5096 Wasn't it Clinton in '92 that said it'll be due in 2017? It could've been Bush but I think he was the one the president was protecting pushing it that far back. Who is the guy you think they're protecting? I thought it was HW. I think there was at least 2 LHO's but probably more. I will check that interview out. Ty.
The best books on the topic are 'JFK and the Unspeakable' by Douglass, 'Last Word' by Lane, and 'Final Judgment' by Piper
I got Unspeakable in audiobook after hearing RFK jr recommend it
@@humanexperient5096 It's a great book.
Do you know who popularized the term 'conspiracy theorist', why and how they did? Hint: It has to do with that Dallas event.
I read that after making this video in a book called CIA Rogues and the Killing of the Kennedys. I also read the Jesse Ventura book on the topic. I'm convinced after having read those two books.
@@humanexperient5096 The term was popularized by the Agency via the media to use to discredit anyone that questioned the Warren Comm.
Just finished reading the book, thanks for this beautiful analysis
Is there any way to contact you directly? Socials? I would like your help with this book if that's possible :)
Although this is just a coincidence, I want to leave it here. I also admire Dostoevsky, as well as Peterson. Just funny that you mentioned the 1976 film Network. I was recently thinking about what movie I could call my favorite and this picture was the first thing that came to mind. Just funny. Speaking of realism. Dostoevsky's ideas, I believe, would be too cramped in the canons of the realistic novel. Therefore, he often goes beyond the bounds of plausibility, but only where it is necessary to convey a thought, an idea. Thank you for your thoughts. Subscribed!
Anthony Cumia has a new book coming up. He's very sharp!
I think the Screwtape letters is awful. C.S. Lewis apologetics is overrated.
It was really hard to get MJ because of his beliefs
“Prince Myshkin being a simp” 😂
Thank you for the display of amazing photografs of people from that period.
I'm Leann and Jason is my dad.
Wow! I'm glad you could find this video! How's Jason doing?
I read Dawkins 15 years ago and was convinced by atheism. It didn’t stick. I read Dostoyevsky 5 years ago and became an Orthodox Christian.
If you haven’t read the Quran, You’re missing out.
I thought the flip flopping was Dostoyevsky highlighting the moral weakness of these so called upper classes. Easily won over. It seems to me he is mocking the Russian upper classes throughout the book?
Alright retard, i'll bite.
Hey I have a question. I just started reading the book and I got stuck on rogozhins past. Is he the dark man? Please help me, the book is good but a little confusing
The dark man on the train is Rogojin. He's antithetical to the prince. One is dark-haired, the other blonde. One is satan and brings eternal death, and the other is the groom (Jesus), who will bring salvation. We are Nastasia Philipovna, and we have to pick between the two. Are you talking about another dark man? In what chapter is he mentioned? Also what translation?
Roger was a dear friend & a great leader !
Wow. Well, his book was very captivating, and his track record awe-inspiring.
You are not far from the kingdom of heaven! "Without god everything is permitted." ~ D "Beauty will save the world"~ D "Atheism is so last Decade!" ~ MM SJ Both Bowie & Iggy Pop made an album titled The Idiot, because there is something so special about it. See how its portrayed in Russian before you judge...
kzread.info/dash/bejne/pqBruNNvhZOefso.htmlsi=qRoiWvFywdPEHcMG
She is a Femme Fatale!
Mannnn not a soliloquy fan? Personally I think those are make or break for most novels and are the most captivating defining moments!
Great video, my favorite of all I've watched about this book
Nietzsche loved Dostoevsky so there may be hope yet. Nietzsche’s unbelief may have contributed to his nervous breakdown. And his lack of faith may have resulted in no support when he brilliantly pulled away the illusions of all philosophy. Unlike Nietzsche, I would be led by the Spirit to say it is time to, “Let our souls magnify the Lord” -- and realize there are no borders, especially when we blow into the sails of another's boat. We don’t believe in God. God believes in us. As we are divinized, God literally indwells our soul and believes on our behalf by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost.
I stopped in Franklin to get gas on my way back to Pennsylvania and was like, hey I know this gas station lol.
recognized it from watching this video? Wow!
@@humanexperient5096 yeah man. I like your work. I found your channel a few years back. I'm actually staying on a farm in Franklin for a week to release a video about the effects of the Civil War in this region. Exploring the Confederate caves, etc. I did talk to a few locals. Do you mind if I share a short clip of your video, with credit and a link to your channel?
@@runningintohistory wow, thanks that means a lot. Sure thing. Go ahead and use whatever clip you want.
@@humanexperient5096 thanks man.
@@humanexperient5096 hey what is your name? Or just your first name so that I can reference you and your channel.
Loved this, thank you. Gotta read it again, last time was 40 yrs ago (I'm 70🤣) I hate haaaate to disclose how much i identify with the title character, with the big differeence i am middle class not aristocracy. I'm not epileptic, but have a mind/brain condition (borderline? CPTSD? mild schizoid? pseudo quasi autistic?) I'm brainy, but utterly lack common sense street smarts. Authored appallingly awkward incidents, shoulda been struck by⚡️numerous times. The narrator is sadly naive re family members forgiving. Dostoevsky has a keen grip on the nature of split personality. Especially Raskolnikov. Astonishingly in The Double. Likewise Myshkin's insane simp-pathy for Rogozhin at the end
Cool video! But were you really disgusted by Myshkin consoling Rogozhin after the murder? I felt nothing but pity for the both of them... and I do believe that Myshkin would have acted differently had Rogozhin killed Aglaya instead. You see, by the time of her death, Myshkin loved Nastasja like you love a child, not like you love a woman. That's what Jewgeni Pawlowitch ponders about: How can the prince love both Aglaya and Nastasja? Perhaps a different kind of love? Anyhow, prince Myshkin saw that Rogozhin had killed what Rogozhin most dearly loved in the world, out of jealousy, out of pain... how horrible! And what I find most horrible is that we can empathize with Rogozhin, we can see that jealousy and rejection have made us hurt those we love most in our own lives, or that we at leasted wanted to do so. And then comes Myshkin with his infinite understanding of the pain that Rogozhin experienced, and he consoles him... No, I did not find that repulsive. Because this is not stupid, this is loving. What repulsed me was how Myshkin pushed away Aglaya out of love and stupidity, how he did not recognize the seriousness of how much she loved him and how much she wanted him to come with her. That I found awful.
Thanks for the great explanation! I'm glad I came across this video soon after finishing the book. I don't know, maybe I'm overreacting or catastrophizing, but Holbein's painting somehow foreshadowed Myshkin's tragic end. Hippolyte once said, 'If this great Teacher of theirs could have seen Himself after the Crucifixion, how could He have consented to mount the Cross and die as He did?' In a way, if Myshkin were to know how his love could lead to such an end as depicted in the book, would he still have chosen to be the person that he is? His unconditional love ultimately brings about his own ruin and destruction, not to mention the people around him. Anyway, much appreciate the video, thank you!
the prince didnt want nastasya philpovna when he sat with aglya at the green bench 20:30
Are your other scripts still in the works?
I paused them, but will pick them back up. I'll wrap up The Virtue of Selfishness. Then I'll make a less ambitious one on 5 books that changed my life. And hopefully I'll make one on 1984, John Quincy Adams, The Prince and Malcolm X
@@humanexperient5096 Good to hear. Just found your channel from this video and was hoping you hadn't retired already.
You posted this on /lit/ and this was really good.
Thank you very much. It means a lot hearing feedback like this. I saw your other comment in my notifications, but don't see where it ended up. To answer your question, I had the Virtue of Selfishness script written, and started recording it over a year ago, but when I would listen to what I had recorded, it sounded absolutely boring. So I paused it. I'll pick it back up, prioritize it and finish it in a couple months.
Cracks me up. Even the poor and impoverished, even those without any education at all but were literate understood this book. Yet, so called educated modernity can't grasps a simple book. Smfh
interesting. can you explain it for us?
@@humanexperient5096 see what I mean. A book doesn't become a classic because no one read it. The majority of the population was what so many call poor and illiterate; yet, they sure were capable of purchasing, reading and comprehending these works.
It's a good idea to go into it blind. Going into it with foreknowledge is huge spoilers.
That’s cool. Jason was a good dude. The interviewer seemed a tad biased, but not particularly judgmental. I would say that this video is a good thing. I’m more happy for watching it.
Love the breakdown overall. Disagree with the personal tangent. The disease is involuntary and leads to progressice deterioration. Psychedelic substances, ones which your beloved Jordan Peterson also took, manage to confront you with your own demons. This can reveal insight after hellish or heavenly revelation in controlled, chosen time and place, unlike the disease. JP also talks about the permanent changes after a trip and how these helped a group of cancer patients facing their reality of death. This means it is not a singular experience of hedonistic bliss, it is a personal potentially life changing lesson.
This book is dysgenic and full of lazy thinking. The modern left is a joke.
Go back to virgin land ur 19 doesnt matter who u deal with ur gonna have drama hun YOUR 19 I LIVE IN WV AND I DONT KNOW WHO THE HELL U ARE IF U DONT WANT PEOPLE TO KNOW U STAY OFF THE SOCIAL MEDIA BULLSHIT
You read Dostoevsky and you still an atheist!? May God guide you to the righteous way.
Just finished it after a long hiatus from Ippolit's self-eulogy, I was hooked the first half of the book, and then suddenly it wanted you to care about something entirely different which was very difficult. To me, I read the self-eulogy as one of Dostoevsky's personal ramblings, where he himself did not necessarily know what he wrote as I didn't feel the connection between it and the rest of the story. Although I would highly recommend the book, I would advise to skip that part and possibly afterwards go back an read it.
Being an atheist is not an accomplishment. America is being destroyed from the inside out and loss of faith is a glaring contributor (if not the core one). Do not underestimate the power of communism and its HATRED of humble faith. ( do not underestimate the effects of the cold war and its aggressive attacks, scheming, infiltrations) forgive my naive simplicity)
I lived in Franklin and being a Yankee from RI I thought I would have trouble. EVERYONE was nice.
Your comment about Korean movies made me laugh! I am well aquainted with Korean dramas, though I prefer the comedic ones with stereotypical Korean tropes and avoid the tragic ones, sterotypically over the top. They are disturbing.
Do you genuinely think mental illness isn't political? That's just completely moronic
did you watch my summary of chapter 5?
@@humanexperient5096 Tough to even get through the first 5 minutes. You rant about how Marxists complain about "commoditization," when the word you're actually searching for is "commodification." These two terms mean two different things. You say you've heard Marxists complain endlessly about this topic, but apparently you haven't done a very good job listening. This video is mindless drivel. I haven't read Capitalist Realism yet, but I plan to after seeing what a piss poor job you did debunking it.
I think the people in this novel would make ME demented so the spoilers are a great help let me tell you.
Have not read this book🇨🇦😁