Abishai100
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- Sep 22, 2013
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Satanism has faced controversy and also received a cult-following in the USA. Roman Polanski's two incendiary films Rosemary's Baby and The Ninth Gate have explored mainstream cultural perceptions of the offbeat quality and Occultism-orientation of Satanism 'theosophy' and have made people more comfortable about general free-speech issues regarding religious pluralism and also 'other-worldly' belief-systems.
A confectioner is a candy-maker and seller.
The American horror film Candyman presents the story of a ghoulish ghost haunting vulnerable people and armed with a deadly hook-like weapon and enticing people with a devastating but alluring/intriguing incantation --- a 'metaphysical horror-candy.'
The modern world is gauged by mercantilism-gauged politics and 'culture' (e.g., European Union, Wall Street, etc.), and Hollywood (USA) has made reflective 'spiritual-candy' themed films such as The Wolf of Wall Street and Money Monster.
Americans like visual-learning and sensory-based stimulation (e.g., amusement parks, drive-in theaters, MTV, etc.). We can therefore explore religious pluralism issues regarding Satanism as they relate to modern age media-based free-speech.
Here is a 'media-friendly' mock dialogue I cooked up about Occultism 'academic-candy' between Vishnu (Hindu god of protection) and Shiva (Hindu god of destruction). I think it represents new age pluralism consciousness, which stirs my interest, since I follow the beliefs/practices of Catholicism which has been known to embrace 'media-based free-speech' issues.
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VISHNU: Americans have made many films about the Occult.
SHIVA: Roman Polanski's are the most respected, but there are others.
VISHNU: Yes, such as Halloween III: Season of the Witch.
SHIVA: Halloween itself has important Occultism overtones for mainstream society.
VISHNU: The Christian Devil likes to disguise himself, so maybe he favors Halloween!
SHIVA: Kids go trick-or-treating on Halloween in costumes/masks, hoping for sweet candy.
VISHNU: That's the general 'mainstream optimism' "towards" Occultism every Halloween.
SHIVA: It's surprising Halloween has not seen censorship/persecution issues from mainstream religions.
VISHNU: Halloween as it is today may have been censored by old-world Christians.
SHIVA: Perhaps, but old-world Christians may have also sought to censor MTV.
VISHNU: Treating Occultism stimuli in the modern world as 'brain-candy' may be a neutralizing approach.
SHIVA: It would surely drop some cooling cold water on the incendiary modern problem of pluralism.
VISHNU: It's hard to embrace free-speech when belief-systems seem very unusual.
SHIVA: Because Satanism has been linked to bizarre notions such as cannibalism, it is not mainstream.
VISHNU: Even today.
SHIVA: Even today.
VISHNU: Maybe movies serve as a 'soap-box' for mainstream society-dialogue in the modern age.
SHIVA: Yes, the modern world is, after all, the age of media (e.g., CNN, Facebook, etc.).
VISHNU: We should consider Occultism-oriented horror-films as symbols of 'talk-show candy'!
SHIVA: There must be a line between unreserved chatter and 'pluralism-showmen'!
====
A confectioner is a candy-maker and seller.
The American horror film Candyman presents the story of a ghoulish ghost haunting vulnerable people and armed with a deadly hook-like weapon and enticing people with a devastating but alluring/intriguing incantation --- a 'metaphysical horror-candy.'
The modern world is gauged by mercantilism-gauged politics and 'culture' (e.g., European Union, Wall Street, etc.), and Hollywood (USA) has made reflective 'spiritual-candy' themed films such as The Wolf of Wall Street and Money Monster.
Americans like visual-learning and sensory-based stimulation (e.g., amusement parks, drive-in theaters, MTV, etc.). We can therefore explore religious pluralism issues regarding Satanism as they relate to modern age media-based free-speech.
Here is a 'media-friendly' mock dialogue I cooked up about Occultism 'academic-candy' between Vishnu (Hindu god of protection) and Shiva (Hindu god of destruction). I think it represents new age pluralism consciousness, which stirs my interest, since I follow the beliefs/practices of Catholicism which has been known to embrace 'media-based free-speech' issues.
====
VISHNU: Americans have made many films about the Occult.
SHIVA: Roman Polanski's are the most respected, but there are others.
VISHNU: Yes, such as Halloween III: Season of the Witch.
SHIVA: Halloween itself has important Occultism overtones for mainstream society.
VISHNU: The Christian Devil likes to disguise himself, so maybe he favors Halloween!
SHIVA: Kids go trick-or-treating on Halloween in costumes/masks, hoping for sweet candy.
VISHNU: That's the general 'mainstream optimism' "towards" Occultism every Halloween.
SHIVA: It's surprising Halloween has not seen censorship/persecution issues from mainstream religions.
VISHNU: Halloween as it is today may have been censored by old-world Christians.
SHIVA: Perhaps, but old-world Christians may have also sought to censor MTV.
VISHNU: Treating Occultism stimuli in the modern world as 'brain-candy' may be a neutralizing approach.
SHIVA: It would surely drop some cooling cold water on the incendiary modern problem of pluralism.
VISHNU: It's hard to embrace free-speech when belief-systems seem very unusual.
SHIVA: Because Satanism has been linked to bizarre notions such as cannibalism, it is not mainstream.
VISHNU: Even today.
SHIVA: Even today.
VISHNU: Maybe movies serve as a 'soap-box' for mainstream society-dialogue in the modern age.
SHIVA: Yes, the modern world is, after all, the age of media (e.g., CNN, Facebook, etc.).
VISHNU: We should consider Occultism-oriented horror-films as symbols of 'talk-show candy'!
SHIVA: There must be a line between unreserved chatter and 'pluralism-showmen'!
====