[Archive c 17.03.2008] Humour [Archive to 28.04.2012] - page 579

 

Since this thread is no longer strictly 'Humour' but rather 'Free Communication', I think this post has the right to live here - I want to share my find.

Be sure to see it for yourself and show all your friends. And let your friends show them to their friends and so on up the chain. Let people know the truth.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oGVB55NNL4M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=iv&v=u9f62GaF5-k&annotation_id=annotation_818023
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGLpM-4W98c

 
drknn:

Since this thread is no longer strictly a "Humour" thread but rather a "Free Talk" thread, I think this post of mine has a right to live here - I want to share my find.

Be sure to see it for yourself and show all your friends. And let your friends show them to their friends and so on up the chain. Let people know the truth.


not impressed. artificially drawn conclusions, based on false assumptions.

everything is much more interesting. the video is blunt.

 
sergeev:


I'm not impressed. Artificial conclusions, based on a false premise.

It's much more interesting than that. The video is dumb.


It brings goodness into the world, trying to rebuild the psyche of the masses into a more harmonious interaction. This alone is enough to spread and disseminate this film wherever you can.

We do live in a creepy society. After the collapse of the USSR, I first saw a homeless man sleeping at a bus stop. The first thing I thought was that he would be taken to a sobering-up centre. A moment later I realised that this was not going to happen - they had only recently closed the sobering-up centres. To be honest, I was horrified at the time, just imagining that over time there would be more and more of them. I was immediately reminded of the pictures in Soviet magazines and newspapers, showing vagrants sleeping on the street, covering themselves with whatever they could. The thought: "Where are we going?" gave me a feeling of longing, of uncertainty. Most of all, I wondered why in the hell the leadership had ruined the USSR. The realization came years later. Yes, the USSR was not an ideal society. But the way people lived under his rule was far better than the way people live now. I do not take into account certain particularities of that system. On the whole, the people felt much better than they do now...

So why not change the current system? Let it not be socialism, but why not tempt people to become kinder, to take care of their neighbors, and not to drown and betray them?

What's the big deal - you don't have to go far. My mother is an ordinary rank-and-file member of society - for as long as I can remember her, she was always the kindest person, genuinely loving her children. But now she is a completely different person, a stranger to me - the state authorities have rebuilt her psyche through the media and other means, and not for the better. She is a different person now, at times not just cruel but I would even say brutal, practicing spitefulness, inconsiderate rudeness. At times she has that old mother in her. But for the most part, I have become irritable with her. My sister and brother, too. And this is just a backlash against her actions.

If this film can save someone from such an outcome, I will only be glad. And it can do that.

 

People have not changed, it's just that in the past the function of demonstrating kindness was performed by the state and the brigades, now there is no funding or indirect incentives. People used to live "together and amicably" because there was not enough living space for everyone, the country was being built, and everyone hoped that we lived badly, so our children and grandchildren would be better off. And we put up with all the inconveniences. And the children took the goals they were brought up with - to grab. All the shit in the CIS countries is because of the lack of nourishment in their heads and stomachs, although when it was there...

 

Here is a quote from here
http://c29crf.livejournal.com/50347.html
.
"Here's a place where I really relaxed, forgot about my problems, it's India. When you arrive, the first thing you see is filth and poverty, but after a while, you get used to it, and then "nirvana" begins. Because in India there's a spirit of goodness and mutual love. Everybody smiles, everybody feels good.
.
When they earn money and get an education it will all be over :-).
.
P.S.: I used to communicate with some people from working families - some intellectuals from the "university" are as close to them as to the moon.

 
My treasure trove, while the moderators are asleep and I can still write, admire http://byaki.net/video/18825-dokumentalnyj-film-s-national-geographic.html
 
drknn:


It brings goodness into the world, trying to rearrange the psyche of the masses into a more harmonious interaction. That alone is enough to spread and disseminate this film wherever you can.

We do live in a creepy society. After the collapse of the USSR, I first saw a homeless man sleeping at a bus stop. The first thing I thought was that he would be taken to a sobering-up centre. A moment later I realised that this was not going to happen - they had only recently closed the sobering-up centres. To be honest, I was horrified at the time, just imagining that over time there would be more and more of them. I was immediately reminded of the pictures in Soviet magazines and newspapers, showing vagrants sleeping on the street, covering themselves with whatever they could. The thought: "Where are we going?" gave me a feeling of longing, of uncertainty. Most of all, I wondered why in the hell the leadership had ruined the USSR. The realization came years later. Yes, the USSR was not an ideal society. But the way people lived under his rule was far better than the way people live now. I do not take into account certain particularities of that system. On the whole, the people felt much better than they do now...

So why not change the current system? Let it not be socialism, but why not tempt people to become kinder, to take care of their neighbors, and not to drown and betray them?

What's the big deal - you don't have to go far. My mother is an ordinary rank-and-file member of society - for as long as I can remember her, she was always the kindest person, genuinely loving her children. But now she is a completely different person, a stranger to me - the state authorities have rebuilt her psyche through the media and other means, and not for the better. She is a different person now, at times not just cruel but I would even say brutal, practicing spitefulness, inconsiderate rudeness. At times she has that old mother in her. But for the most part, I have become irritable with her. My sister and brother, too. And this is just a backlash against her actions.

If this film can save someone from such an outcome, I will only be glad. And it can do that.

Go to church, not watch and spread videos from the internet.

"And why do you look at the speck in your brother's eye, but do not feel the plank in your own eye" (Mt 7:3).

ZS: By the way, I noticed some "chip" name flashed at the end of the video, what do you think his intentions are?

 

I was just remembering the goodness. And for some reason I thought the GDP was too. To cut a long story short:

One day, Vladimir Vladimirovich was sitting on a stool in his private, soundproof confessional.

- To make a long story short," summed up Vladimir Vladimirovich, "Everything seems to be...

The face from the icon looked at Vladimir Vladimirovich through slits in the felt with reproachful eyes.

- Ah, yes," thought Vladimir Vladimirovich repentantly, "How could I forget... //chulan... the ancient mobile phone, the tortuous search for the charger...

- Boris! Boris!!! - Yes, me! Recognized you, dog...? Yeah, yeah... And you thought... - ...the old mobile phone was croaking and gave a kind of perestroika romanticism to what was going on. - What am I calling for? I'm cleaning karma here (I'm clean in front of myself and Russia!) - and behind you... no... you owe me... What? Don't you remember? It's an elective. Twenty million... Remember? So what am I... Come and give it to me!

--- The battery's dead," Vladimir said as he took his mobile away from his ear, "or he hung up...
 

===============

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sergeev:

not impressed. artificially drawn conclusions, based on false assumptions.

it's much more interesting. the video is dumb.

О! You know the truth? So tell me.

All in all, the people felt much better than they do now...

so why not change the current system? Let it not be socialism, but why not tempt people to be kinder, to care for their neighbours rather than drowning and betraying them?

Have you ever tried attacking a T-90 with a spear and in your pants? No? Try it, it's fun!

Rational logic with morals points to the only right way: become autonomous! The exploiters' greatest asset is the ignorance of the exploited! No soldier will fight if he knows the truth. No cop would wave his baton on a coinage knowing the truth.

The complex hierarchy affects the lack of direct(and generally) contact with the fat(dangerous) rats, which makes it possible to use their defeated opportunities to become autonomous!

The third part of the video is not quite so. For more clarity, read the ratta and the insider's confession.

Reason: