- Reaction score
- 8,264
- Location
- Halfway Up Ben Nevis
I’ll take his relevant posts before your blank ones all day, everyday “BRO”You must love KW, too. That's sad, bro. SAD.
I’ll take his relevant posts before your blank ones all day, everyday “BRO”You must love KW, too. That's sad, bro. SAD.
BF loves the fellow. He falsely inflates forum stats and stats are all BF worries about. Fuck quality - BF wants quantity! He's hoping to make some money off this place one day so he needs all the KW posts he can get.
Real classy of him.
"This recent on All Things Considered (“VA Struggles To Unlock The Reasons Behind High Suicide Rates Among Older Veterans”) got me thinking. If veterans are such great people, role models, heroes, brave, etc., etc., etc., who are almost worshiped by many Americans, honored, held in high esteem, continually thanked for their service, etc., etc., etc., then why do so many of them want to kill themselves?"
Source:
Alright Jeannie you hardass. Lace up your combat boots and get on that battlefield.
KW is putting on his frilly pink party dress and heading to the cop bar to look for a dateAlright Jeannie you hardass. Lace up your combat boots and get on that battlefield.
"One of the most fascinating aspects to U.S. militarism is the bromide that has infected the minds of so many Americans: that U.S. soldiers have sacrificed their lives or limbs in foreign wars to “defend our freedom” here at home. Not surprisingly, it was repeated at the Nationals game yesterday. People who came to watch a baseball game were asked to remember the sacrifices, including deaths, that American servicemen have made in the “defense of our freedom.”
Why do I find that fascinating?
Two reasons: first, The bromide is palpably false, and, second, it is a testament to the power of state to indoctrinate the citizenry."
Source:
"One of the most fascinating aspects to U.S. militarism is the bromide that has infected the minds of so many Americans: that U.S. soldiers have sacrificed their lives or limbs in foreign wars to “defend our freedom” here at home. Not surprisingly, it was repeated at the Nationals game yesterday. People who came to watch a baseball game were asked to remember the sacrifices, including deaths, that American servicemen have made in the “defense of our freedom.”
Why do I find that fascinating?
Two reasons: first, The bromide is palpably false, and, second, it is a testament to the power of state to indoctrinate the citizenry."
Source:
"This is a bromide that is inculcated into every child, from the time he reaches six years of age and heads into the public (i.e., government) school system. By the time the kid reaches his teen years, the indoctrination is taking hold. By the time he becomes an adult, the indoctrination is complete. In fact, the indoctrination is so perfect that actually it doesn’t matter what the troops are doing overseas. Whatever they are doing is automatically considered to be “defending our freedom.”"