HoChiMaxh [he/him]

  • 4 Posts
  • 40 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 10th, 2022

help-circle
  • Yeah ok. I’d say in general most people don’t watch that many movies made more than 20 years before they were born. I watch a lot of movies, old and new foreign and domestic but realistically I don’t watch more than maybe one a year made in that time frame as applied to me.

    IDK right or wrong I think it’s pretty important to contextualize these numbers rather than going the “kids these days” route.

    Also Netflix sucks. If you have a library card you probably have free access to stream films on Kanopy which has a ton of great older films.



  • Not books per se but authors: I find both Marx and Fanon very tedious to read. Their prose is awkward and I feel like the text is fighting my brain when I try to read them.

    This is not a slight against their ideas, just their writing.

    It should also be noted I’ve read neither in their original language, just translations, so it’s I entirely possible this is just the fault of translators. I don’t think it is for Marx though, because even when I read Engels or Lenin and they block-quote Marx the text automatically gets :wtf-am-i-reading:


  • I think Skinamarink is the scariest flick I’ve seen in a long time, maybe ever. I think the the sense of worsening dread as the plot develops and savagery and hopelessness ratchet up is pretty unique.

    I think you’re right about the depressing :doomjak: feeling too, it stuck around with me for a few days. The fact that they’re so young, and thus haven’t fully developed a consistent set of rules for how the world definitely should be, means they begin adjusting their sense of normal to this heinous scenario that the audience understands to be completely demonic.

    spoiler

    Toward the end of the film the spirits seem to supplant the role of the parent while maintaining their role as tormentor, which is such a fundamentally dire and perverse development.

    Really great, no notes I thought it was perfect. The Hammer and Podcast fellas did a review on it last weekend (these are the guys that used to do film reviews with Breht on Rev Left Radio Back in the day.) Taylor has an interesting interpretation of the spirits as an embodiment of ideology itself - while I wouldn’t phrase it exactly like that, I do think that line of thinking is what made it stand out to me.

    If you’re going to try watching it, go to a theatre, don’t watch it on your laptop while scrolling Hexbear, it is made with the expectation you pay attention and allow the horror to sink into you


  • HoChiMaxh [he/him]@hexbear.nettomemes@hexbear.netYes
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    2 years ago

    In prison Ocalan became a theory head, and he synthesized a kind of hodge-podge anarcho-feminist revolutionary theory that Rojava is ostensibly based on. I’m not familiar with the specific quote but in context this is likely about challenging the assumed role of men in society to uplift women’s position.













  • There’s lots to say here, so I’ll just give a few tips.

    Most important individual factor that is relatively easy to adjust is commute time. All time in a car or a crowded bus is really just time subtracted from your life - if you commute for 2 hours a day, that’s like 1/8 of your waking (work day) life and 25% of your life off the clock. It’s a huge god damned time suck. I have prioritized living close to where I work and where my friends live, even if that means we get a lot less living space or pay more that we would otherwise as a result. (Commuting is an insidious hidden cost because it’s basically work time you’re not paid for, so while it costs more sometimes I see it as purchasing back that time). I currently live actually pretty far from my work for me because we got evicted, but I ride my bike there and back (1.5 hours a day) so it doesn’t feel as much like wasted time. That being said we’re talking about moving again to be closer to things.

    As for fitness/friends, the manner in which I stay fit is a very social activity that involves spending a lot of time with people - so my fitness has never been in conflict with my friendships but rather strengthens them and also serves as a vehicle to expand my circle. People here always seem to talk about going to the gym and I don’t get that at all. Shit seems pretty boring to me, and I think bodybuilding is lame. I’d much rather be getting fit while hanging out with my friends.

    Lastly, when I start to put on a bit of weight (usually around this time of year) I start running. I hate running, I think it’s boring, but it is the most time-effective way to burn calories that I’m aware of. This kind of maintenance is boring and I try to reduce how much time I put into it, hence running. I usually run once a week as far as I can - by the time the weather starts getting good I’m usually up to about 20k, then I stop and start doing more fun activities outside.



  • This isn’t like my issue or anything, but from afar it does seem frustrating that there are legitimate grievances in the men’s rights community that are interesting and very compatible with feminism, but because the community has so many toxic dildos in it discussing any of those grievances serves as a red flag for being an MRA psycho.

    I imagine it is like being a serious academic who happens to have good historical evidence that there was actually only 9 million people who died in the Holocaust, not 12 but you could never actually share your research with anyone because they would just lump you in as a Holocaust denier.