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SwiperTheFox
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Driverless cars will be a widespread thing and soon, but people predicting that it will happen before 2020 or on some other rapid timeline are totally missing a bunch of problems.

For an evil cabal of super-powerful monsters supposedly ruling over the entire Earth, Jews really are fucking impotent to stop all kinds of things that they wouldn't at all want, huh? Why, it's almost as if all of this conspiracy bullshit was completely false or something!

It's not really even "sensitivity" if somebody is going "these fascist losers are bastards, and screw them" after all. That's more like "righteous anger".

I'm thinking that the standard conservative response is something like:

Indeed.

I want to make a joke mashing together this with the Monty Burns book 'Will There Ever Be a Rainbow', but my creative spark escapes me, alas.

Two things.

I feel like I should leave an obligatory furry fandom based comment along the lines of "Movie looks like crap, but that femme squirrel is pretty damn hot, wish she'd [insert joke about 'nuts' here]".

In retrospect, it comes across as a fundamentally flawed film that's genuinely worth watching.

'Recursive quasi-historical fanfiction' is maybe the best way to put it.

Indeed.

Yeah, the Elite Squad films seriously were not intended to be "death and militarism is great, yay" propaganda movies, and audiences naturally will bring their own interpretations to things beyond what the intentions are in their creations.

One can't read too much into past works current political trends, especially when things get complicated. When the movie came out, a lot of aggressive neo-conservatives took it up as a favorite— those people having politics that don't jell well at all with the current alt-right. For me… eh… it's amazing how incredibly

Alas.

Interesting visual… and yet, damn it, feels apt.

Thank God Congress' effects to screw over the American people when it comes to healthcare have failed and are still failing. Fingers crossed that the rest of the year gives more lessons.

James Cameron's support for those awful Terminator films made after T1 and T2 have sapped the hell out of my personal respect for him as well.

People really, seriously need to check out the 'A Night to Remember' film. Not only is it a fascinating piece of the golden age of cinema, but the historical nature of the movie gives it a particular punch. The build-up to the actual disaster feels like a Hitchcock-ian thriller in many ways.

I feel sorry for the whole group of performers.