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Tim Lukeman

Published Letters: 92
Editor's Choice: 5

Tuesday, October 30, 2007 10:26 AM

Necrophiliacs

Earlier posters have it exactly right: Pod & his ilk are the very horror they inveigh against, foaming at the mouth & invoking the apocalyptic nightmares they so desperately hope to make real. Is there any doubt that if they'd been living in any previous totalitarian state, they'd be supporting it as enthusiastically as they one they're striving to create here & now?

The late Erich Fromm had a name for people like this: "necrophiliacs," because they quite literally worship death. All that matters to them is power, toughness, destructive capability; they're obsessed with a fetid, rotting, excremental universe of suffering & degradation. That's what their own wretched souls (or psyches, if you prefer) really are. And anything that embodies life, hope, reason, promise, etc., is anathema to them.

Just read an old copy of Fromm's "The Heart of Man" -- nearly 50 years old now, and just as accurate today as when it was first published. We're dealing with psyches that are warped, contorted, crippled, imprisoned in their own decay. And they loathe & fear & wish to destroy anyone & anything that's different, because they don't dare face themselves in the mirror, don't dare admit what they are.

Monday, November 5, 2007 12:38 PM

Why do they torture?

Simply because they can.

And because they enjoy it.

Simone Weil covered this long ago in "The Use of Force." As did Orwell. As did Erich Fromm. As did so many others.

They do it because they enjoy the feeling of power & control -- and the greatest control over another human being is that of life & death.

They worship power, they worship destruction, they worship death.

Which is why Fromm called them "necrophiliacs."

Emotionally, psychologically, they are failed human beings. And anyone who isn't like them, terrifies & disgusts them, and must be crushed.

And more & more Americans find this to be "patriotic," admirable behavior ...

Tuesday, November 13, 2007 06:27 AM
Original article: Divided we stand

Actually

I haven't heard many liberals say any such thing. In fact, I've never personally known one to say it.

But I have heard quite a few conservatives say that liberals say it. Which seems to point to certain insecurities on their part.

Thursday, November 15, 2007 05:49 AM

The hollow men

Glenn, keep it up! Nothing disgusts me more than these scared little boys puffing themselves up & telling each other how tough they are -- by sending someone else off to fight & die for them.

It's the political equivalent of Richard Pryor & Gene Wilder sauntering along & saying, "That's right, we bad, we bad." Except that there's no humor in this ugly reality, unless it's in the sick joke of having others die to bolster their own sagging & insecure manhood.

And this is what passes for grown men today ...

Thursday, November 15, 2007 05:54 AM

The hollow men

Glenn, keep it up!

Nothing disgusts me more than seeing these scared little boys puff themselves up & pretend to be so big & tough & strong -- by sending others off to fight & die in their place.

I can only think of Richard Pryor & Gene Wilder swaggering along & saying, "That's right, we bad, we bad!" Except that there's no humor in this ugly reality, unless it's in the very sick joke of letting others die to reinforce their own sagging & insecure illusion of manhood.

Really, is this what passes for grown up men today?

Thursday, November 15, 2007 05:55 AM

Sorry

The software double-posted my comment for some reason.

Friday, November 16, 2007 10:21 AM
Original article: "Beowulf"

Well, this sounds awful

I had some hopes for this, but the video game look is ghastly for the most part. And I don't know why they decided they had to "improve" on the original, which is a pretty powerful, darkly rousing story.

OK, I know why they "improved" it -- because they wanted it as dumbed down as possible for wider audience reception. Can't go wrong aiming for the lowest common denominator, right?

And as for the dipped-in-polythene look of the characters -- "creepy" is exactly the word. When I saw the ads for "The Polar Express," I loathed it on sight. You know, if they had just made a little half hour TV special out of it, using traditional hand-drawn animation, they might actually have gotten that holiday classic they were aiming for ...

Tuesday, November 20, 2007 07:20 AM

A sense of myth

Gary, what a wonderful article to start the morning! You've definitely hit the target, too. There are so few filmmakers today who truly understand the essence of the mythic, who prefer hotties to mysteries, action to heroic tragedy, glossy surace to depth.

Elric O M, I wholeheartedly second your insightful comments. I'm old enough to recall literary & mythic references as a matter of course in film & TV -- for example, I recently saw some old episodes of "Route 66" & was delighted to hear so many of them. Obviously the writers, producers, and networks expected the majority of their audience to get & understand them as well.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007 08:20 AM

Re: Tall Poppy Syndrome

Whatever sticks up gets cut down to the level of the others.

LW, from what you say, it could be a bit of cultural difference. But your mother's last words are telling -- it could very well be that you're striving to refute her judgment of you, trying so hard that you end up shooting yourself in the foot, and thus reinforcing that judgment. There could be a part of her that you've internalized -- the negative, nagging, vicious little voice that makes sure you won't "be good enough" no matter what you do. But that's for you & your therapist to work out, if such is the case.

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