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| #Post#: 9854-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: rp Date: November 21, 2021, 9:15 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| How about in terms of reducing parental tyranny? Do you think | |
| one is better than the other, or that it varies on a case by | |
| case basis? | |
| #Post#: 9857-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 21, 2021, 10:46 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It varies. In the optimistic projection, having other people | |
| living in the house at least makes it harder for parental | |
| tyranny to be completely hidden from third-party view, and at | |
| best could mean more chance that some of them actively intervene | |
| to defend the children. It often seems to be the case that | |
| uncles/aunts who themselves never reproduced tend to treat the | |
| children in the house (their nephews/nieces) much better than | |
| those children's parents do. In the pessimistic projection, if | |
| the household consists of two or more sets of parents (so now we | |
| are talking about uncles/aunts with offspring of their own), the | |
| sets of parents could end up engaging in competitive parental | |
| tyranny! | |
| (Then again, compulsory schooling often leads to competitive | |
| parental tyranny between classmates' parents anyway. So [nuclear | |
| family plus compulsory schooling] (the Western combination) | |
| would be no better overall than [extended family but no | |
| compulsory schooling] (the non-Western combination). | |
| #Post#: 10405-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: January 4, 2022, 9:41 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10365049/Team-nine-black-climbers-atte… | |
| [quote]A team of nine black climbers is attempting to scale | |
| Mount Everest to tackle the mountain's 'intentional lack of | |
| access for black people' and mountaineering's 'colonial | |
| history'.[/quote] | |
| https://smallimg.pngkey.com/png/small/129-1297667_clip-free-stock-collection-of… | |
| Western colonialists did it, so False Leftists feel a need to | |
| show that the victims of Western colonialism can do the same? | |
| (This tacitly implies that you admit the Western colonialists | |
| are superior. Even if you manage to climb the same mountain they | |
| did, they still did it first, therefore they will remain | |
| superior.) The True Left approach is to despise the Homo Hubris | |
| hobbies as inferior: | |
| https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/close-the-mountain-mt-e… | |
| [quote]Climbing Everest is not sport or �living your best life�; | |
| it�s become the epitome of heartless, self-serving arrogance. | |
| ... | |
| [img] | |
| https://content.api.new | |
| s/v3/images/bin/c98ea179cd6510e323153f9b3770aaae[/img] | |
| Sacks of garbage collected from Mount Everest. | |
| ... | |
| it has become a grotesque theme park for cashed-up, kitted-up | |
| corporates and thrillseekers who see it as a notch on their belt | |
| and a post on their Instagram. | |
| The mountain is making monsters out of all of us: the | |
| middle-class adventure seekers who clearly think it requires | |
| little more training than a Saturday fun run; the companies | |
| responsible for this ugly commercialisation of risk; the voyeurs | |
| who click on the ever more disturbing photographs and video that | |
| pop up each May as the perilously short climbing season gets | |
| underway. | |
| Honestly, if we�re trying to rid our oceans of plastic then | |
| we�re equally responsible for clearing our tallest peaks of both | |
| human detritus and the grievous lack of integrity and care that | |
| causes it. | |
| As in so much of life, just because we can doesn�t mean we | |
| should. | |
| ... | |
| Where we should step in is when innocent people or the planet | |
| are harmed. When ambition exceeds competency to such an extent | |
| that others� lives are put in jeopardy and the wilderness loses | |
| its mystique. Everest is strewn with disused oxygen tanks, | |
| broken ladders, frayed ropes and frozen bodies, some of whom | |
| belong to the Sherpas who are collateral casualties in Western | |
| egotism.[/quote] | |
| Non-Westerners historically almost never climbed mountains | |
| recreationally prior to the colonial era. It is a | |
| characteristically Western activity: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountaineering | |
| [quote]In 1757 Swiss scientist Horace-B�n�dict de Saussure made | |
| the first of several unsuccessful attempts on Mont Blanc in | |
| France. He then offered a reward to anyone who could climb the | |
| mountain, which was claimed in 1786 by Jacques Balmat and | |
| Michel-Gabriel Paccard. The climb is usually considered an | |
| epochal event in the history of mountaineering, a symbolic mark | |
| of the birth of the sport.[11][13] | |
| By the early 19th century, many of the alpine peaks were | |
| reached, including the Grossglockner in 1800, the Ortler in | |
| 1804, the Jungfrau in 1811, the Finsteraarhorn in 1812, and the | |
| Breithorn in 1813.[11] In 1808, Marie Paradis became the first | |
| woman to climb Mont Blanc, followed in 1838 by Henriette | |
| d'Angeville.[15] | |
| The beginning of mountaineering as a sport in the UK is | |
| generally dated to the ascent of the Wetterhorn in 1854 by | |
| English mountaineer Sir Alfred Wills, who made mountaineering | |
| fashionable in Britain. This inaugurated what became known as | |
| the Golden Age of Alpinism, with the first mountaineering club � | |
| the Alpine Club � being founded in 1857.[16][17] | |
| One of the most dramatic events was the spectacular first ascent | |
| of the Matterhorn in 1865 by a party led by English illustrator | |
| Edward Whymper, in which four of the party members fell to their | |
| deaths. By this point the sport of mountaineering had largely | |
| reached its modern form, with a large body of professional | |
| guides, equipment, and methodologies.[13] | |
| In the early years of the "golden age", scientific pursuits were | |
| intermixed with the sport, such as by the physicist John | |
| Tyndall. In the later years, it shifted to a more competitive | |
| orientation as pure sportsmen came to dominate the London-based | |
| Alpine Club and alpine mountaineering overall.[18] The first | |
| president of the Alpine Club, John Ball, is considered to be the | |
| discoverer of the Dolomites, which for decades were the focus of | |
| climbers like Paul Grohmann and Angelo Dibona.[19] At that time, | |
| the edelweiss also established itself as a symbol of alpinists | |
| and mountaineers.[20][21] | |
| Expansion around the world | |
| In the 19th century, the focus of mountaineering turned towards | |
| mountains beyond the Alps, and by the turn of the 20th century, | |
| mountaineering had acquired a more international flavour.[22] | |
| In 1897 Mount Saint Elias (18,008 ft (5,489 m)) on the | |
| Alaska-Yukon border was summitted by the Duke of the Abruzzi and | |
| party.[23] In 1879�1880 the exploration of the highest Andes in | |
| South America began when English mountaineer Edward Whymper | |
| climbed Chimborazo (20,549 ft (6,263 m)) and explored the | |
| mountains of Ecuador.[24] It took until the late 19th century | |
| for European explorers to penetrate Africa. Mount Kilimanjaro in | |
| Africa was climbed in 1889 by Austrian mountaineer Ludwig | |
| Purtscheller and German geologist Hans Meyer, Mount Kenya in | |
| 1899 by Halford Mackinder.[25] | |
| The last frontier: The Himalayas | |
| The last and greatest mountain range was the Himalayas in South | |
| Asia. They had initially been surveyed by the British Empire for | |
| military and strategic reasons. In 1892 Sir William Martin | |
| Conway explored the Karakoram Himalayas, and climbed a peak of | |
| 23,000 ft (7,000 m). In 1895 Albert F. Mummery died while | |
| attempting Nanga Parbat, while in 1899 Douglas Freshfield took | |
| an expedition to the snowy regions of Sikkim.[26] | |
| In 1899, 1903, 1906, and 1908 American mountaineer Fanny Bullock | |
| Workman (one of the first professional female mountaineers) made | |
| ascents in the Himalayas, including one of the Nun Kun peaks | |
| (23,300 ft (7,100 m)). A number of Gurkha sepoys were trained as | |
| expert mountaineers by Charles Granville Bruce, and a good deal | |
| of exploration was accomplished by them.[26] | |
| In 1902 the Eckenstein-Crowley Expedition, led by English | |
| mountaineer Oscar Eckenstein and English occultist Aleister | |
| Crowley was the first to attempt to scale K2. They reached | |
| 22,000 feet (6,700 m) before turning back due to weather and | |
| other mishaps. Undaunted, in 1905 Crowley led the first | |
| expedition to Kangchenjunga, the third highest mountain in the | |
| world, in an attempt described as "misguided" and | |
| "lamentable".[26][why?] | |
| Eckenstein was also a pioneer in developing new equipment and | |
| climbing methods. He started using shorter ice axes which could | |
| be used single-handed, designed the modern crampons and improved | |
| on the nail patterns used for the climbing boots.[27] | |
| By the 1950s, all the eight-thousanders but two had been climbed | |
| starting with Annapurna in 1950 by Maurice Herzog and Louis | |
| Lachenal on the 1950 French Annapurna expedition. The highest of | |
| these peaks Mount Everest was climbed in 1953 after the British | |
| had made several attempts in the 1920s; the 1922 expedition | |
| reached 8,320 metres (27,300 ft) before being aborted on the | |
| third summit attempt after an avalanche killed seven porters. | |
| The 1924 expedition saw another height record achieved but still | |
| failed to reach the summit with confirmation when George Mallory | |
| and Andrew Irvine disappeared on the final attempt. The summit | |
| was finally reached on 29 May 1953 by Sir Edmund Hillary and | |
| Tenzing Norgay from the south side in Nepal.[26] | |
| Just a few months later, Hermann Buhl made the first ascent of | |
| Nanga Parbat (8,125 m), on the 1953 German�Austrian Nanga Parbat | |
| expedition, a siege-style expedition culminating in a last 1,300 | |
| meters walking alone, being under the influence of drugs: | |
| pervitin (based on the stimulant methamphetamine used by | |
| soldiers during World War II), padutin and tea from coca leaves. | |
| K2 (8,611 m), the second-highest peak in the world, was first | |
| scaled in 1954 by Lino Lacedelli and Achille Compagnoni. In | |
| 1964, the final eight-thousander to be climbed was Shishapangma | |
| (8,013 m), the lowest of all the 8,000-metre peaks.[26] Reinhold | |
| Messner from the Dolomites was then the first to climb all | |
| eight-thousanders up to 1986.[28][/quote] | |
| Anyone who thinks this is admirable should be prohibited from | |
| reproducing. | |
| #Post#: 10438-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: guest55 Date: January 7, 2022, 9:37 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The only mountain one need ever climb in their lifetime's is the | |
| mountain upon which stands the temple of truth! | |
| [img] | |
| https://www.idlehearts.com/images/if-while-hurrying-ostensibly-to-the-temple-of… | |
| [img] | |
| https://www.idlehearts.com/images/our-civilized-world-is-nothing-but-a-great-ma… | |
| #Post#: 10444-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: January 7, 2022, 10:33 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Another uniquely (wasteful) Western hobby which we also despise | |
| is skydiving: | |
| https://myskydivingfootprint.org/ | |
| The only scenario in which non-Westerners would be justified in | |
| skydiving would be for military purposes. Civilian skydiving for | |
| recreational purposes is barbaric. And Westerners always find a | |
| way to make barbarism even more barbaric: | |
| https://www.azmemes.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Becuase-It-Scares-The-Hell.j… | |
| #Post#: 10445-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: guest55 Date: January 7, 2022, 10:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Not only does it scare the dogs but it also gets you views, | |
| which is obviously more important than anything! | |
| Youtuber Possibly Crashed Plane for Views | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwbNmT1ZWYE | |
| Comment: | |
| [quote]Not only was he wearing a parachute which he doesn't | |
| usually do, he was also wearing a camera specifically for | |
| skydiving on his wrist. Which he uses when he does skydiving | |
| usually. He was clearly intending on going skydiving when he | |
| took off in that plane and not just spreading ashes or going for | |
| a cruise.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 12415-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: acc9 Date: April 1, 2022, 7:20 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ojRgr6h68IQ | |
| Ascension - a documentary film on China that has reaped several | |
| film awards for providing uncomfortable insight into the less | |
| than promising implications if the country was to continue on | |
| its present path of economic and technological advancement but | |
| without awareness of how they've sadly missed the mark for | |
| elevation as they aim to measure up to 'Western' etiquette and | |
| demeanors for cultural excellence. | |
| #Post#: 12477-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 3, 2022, 10:52 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OK, I watched the full documentary, and encourage everyone here | |
| to do the same (and come back here to discuss it further if you | |
| want to). The trailer does not show the worst parts; you really | |
| need to see the whole thing. The following review contains a | |
| brief description of some of what is included: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/ascension-review-oscar-nominated-doc-221118… | |
| [quote]from assembly lines where women prepare silicone sex | |
| dolls for demanding clients to private dining rooms where | |
| nouveau-riche elites learn how to eat a banana with fork and | |
| knife. | |
| ... | |
| The midsection of the film focuses on those enrolled in various | |
| seminars and coaching sessions to improve their standing. Women | |
| learn business etiquette, including when to hug and how to smile | |
| (pleasantly expose the upper eight teeth), while men study to | |
| become butlers or bodyguards. | |
| ... | |
| Finally, in the film�s last half-hour, Kingdon enters the realm | |
| of wealth and leisure, revealing how those with disposable | |
| income spend their free time � in video arcades and amusement | |
| parks, or educating themselves on fine European cuisine.[/quote] | |
| (I hardly need to say that the sex dolls are designed to look | |
| like "whites".) | |
| This is what happens when improvement is equated with | |
| Westernization. I see it as both a lament to how China has | |
| utterly failed to avoid the trap of Westernization, and a | |
| warning to other formerly colonized countries - which still have | |
| a chance to choose - to not go down this same fallen path as | |
| China. | |
| [quote]a galling late scene watches an oblivious influencer | |
| complaining of possible heat stroke while ignoring the gardener | |
| working just a few yards away.[/quote] | |
| The gardener with the straw hat, bent back, etc. visually looks | |
| just like how colonial-era Western propaganda used to stereotype | |
| Chinese peasants. Presumably this is the stereotype that the | |
| influencer wants (at least subconsciously) to distance herself | |
| as far away from as possible. Yet the scene is set up to leave | |
| no doubt that the gardener is the relatively more respectable | |
| individual (notwithstanding the indignity of having to work on a | |
| Western-style lawn: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/decolonized-housing-(america-edition)/… | |
| signifying the imprisonment within Western forms that even a | |
| (perhaps) internally non-Westernized Chinese must now | |
| endure.....). | |
| Can China still extricate itself from all this? Possibly (I am | |
| not optimistic), but first it must vividly remember what it | |
| truly means to be Chinese as understood in ancient times (and | |
| re-expressed in Counterculture-era pop music): | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsIBE8dBoZY | |
| #Post#: 12571-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 7, 2022, 1:19 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Responding to: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/ancient-world/ancient-candidates-for-socialis… | |
| [quote]aren't arranged marriages unromantic, since the person in | |
| question isn't being given the freedom to potentially find and | |
| marry the person that they instinctively know they love enough | |
| to pledge life-long loyalty to?[/quote] | |
| I am against arranged marriages where the subject does not have | |
| a choice to turn down the suggestion. (This would be initiated | |
| violence, which we are always against.) | |
| The form of arranged marriage which I am claiming is superior to | |
| free-market dating is where the subject can turn down as many | |
| suggestions as they want. This allows the subject to, in your | |
| words, marry the person that they instinctively know they love | |
| enough to pledge lifelong loyalty to. But it moreover allows the | |
| subject to meet this person while avoiding the thought process | |
| of "wanting to find someone" (practically a prerequisite in | |
| free-market dating), such avoidance being necessary for romantic | |
| love. As I have explained previously, the moment you | |
| intentionally set out to find someone, romantic love is already | |
| impossible, because whoever eventually fills the vacancy has | |
| already been reduced to a vacancy-filler and thus a mere | |
| commodity to satisfy your pre-existent desire. | |
| #Post#: 12574-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Social decolonization | |
| By: SirGalahad Date: April 7, 2022, 1:42 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Yeah, perhaps I should've worded it better. By "find" I mean | |
| cross paths with. Not necessarily to go actively looking for. | |
| I've read your position on dating apps and anything adjacent | |
| before, and it makes sense. | |
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