Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 16 to 20 of 20

Thread: D-Day at 60 Years

  1. #16
    Unpostmodernizeable Shadow Nexus's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2000
    Location
    Barcino, Hispania
    Posts
    987

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by The Captain
    "Alienation is still present, and that is an enemy of freedom."

    That is a very good point, and worth reinforcement. For all we do have, we should always be striving to further break down barriers. There are places in this world where if you are a female, you are automatically condemned to be a servant, or in some cases, die. That can certainly be changed. It would also help if we could find a way to have true unity. The UN has had many successes but of late has really fallen off the radar. Either, we must make a concrete effort to rebuild our bridges, or else, we must find a new forum of appreciation for one another.

    Take care all.

    In fact, I refer to alienation from the part of what happens to the members of industrialized, western, modern societies. In fact, I believe our freedom to be rather controlled in a way, because we fall into the alienation of glorifying what we produce. This concept is not new, it was already critizized in ancient Greece, but from a very different perspective. The we got Kant doing a brief manifesto (What is Enlightment?) where he discussed about this concept of not only freedom to vote, but freedom to be. Of course, the best ideas arround alienation come- in my opinion- from the time of philosophies of suspicion, this means Karl Marx and Friedrich Nietzsche, both developing arround this, Marx from a social way and Nietzsche facing more on what he called "The superhuman". Still, Marx did have his analysis on the alienation of the individual, and it is sad this part of marxism is not studied, because I believe it was Marx's first problem was arround alienation, even in front of economical equality. Of course, both Marx and Nietzsche have been horribly manipulated, prostituted and misunderstood, to a point they were actually used to justify atrocities, such as the absolutisms of both Russia and Germany. Sad, very sad.

    Well, and then we got the modern critics. Herbet Marcuse, Martin Heidegger, Erich Fromm, Norbert Bilbeny, Charles Taylor...yes, alienation is still a problem today. I haven't explained why...of course, it would be a very long post, and it would be going off topic. Wait, I have already gone off topic!!!

    *shuts up*


    PS: Sapere aude!

  2. #17
    cyka blyat escobert's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Rush B! NO STOP!
    Posts
    17,742
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by King Bahamut
    Allied forces stormed Omaha Beach in Normandy, France,
    Discuss.
    That was just one american company or so that was on omaha. other were on Utah and a couple other beachs onlong that line. Omaha was the worste though.

    And no, no one in my family waws old enough or didn't serve.

  3. #18
    Banned
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    Down the Street.
    Posts
    136

    Default

    Don't forget Canada, we were in the D-Day Invasion also. You couldn't do it without us

  4. #19
    cyka blyat escobert's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Rush B! NO STOP!
    Posts
    17,742
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default

    and the english. It wasn't jst us americans on the beaches we were on two canada was on one and and the brits on two.

  5. #20
    Proudly Loathsome ;) DMKA's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Ohio
    Posts
    11,306

    FFXIV Character

    Efes Ephesus (Adamantoise)

    Default

    I guess I'm uhh...."thankful" for what they did, though I have a hard time being thankful to people who participate in war...call me what you will, but thats how I am.

    Anyway umm yeah good for them and their victory. The world is anything but free though, and I get pissed when people go around chanting that the US is a free place.

    But yeah, it'd be pretty interesting to talk to some of them, though all the veterans I talk to are usually hateful categorizing senile idiots. *sigh*

    And yeah I had a grandpa in that war...he was a Sailor (like I was going to be) and he died when I was about 7. He wasn't even born in the US...he was an immigrant from Mexico...how odd.
    I like Kung-Fu.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •