Warriors: Christian Demo

Abishai100

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Sep 22, 2013
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Americans are fascinated by images/stories of great networking imagination and teamwork, and maybe that's because capitalism is anything but simple.

We market sci-fi films like Alien: Covenant and adventure-metaphysics video-games such as Dante's Inferno, perhaps because we want to 're-present' social characterizations of great courage and wit.

Will all this 'inventive' socialization characterization create an unbearable 'creativity tribulation' not unlike the 'media whirlwind' we saw during the symbolic 'Quiz Show Scandals' of the 1950s which was portrayed in the Robert Redford film Quiz Show (starring Ralph Fiennes)?

The Bible states that at the End of Days there will be a Great Tribulation and the AntiChrist will rise to prominence to seduce humanity away from imagination temperance, so will we see such 'undesirable intrigue' manifested in media scandals (e.g., Clinton-Lewinsky)?

This modernism Tribulation-yarn was inspired by Demon City Shinjuku.




:2cents:


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After 9/11, Americans became paranoid about what Hollywood (USA) movies and images anti-Western terrorists could see/view and then 'internalize' for anti-capitalism 'arguments.' Americans so loved cinema that they couldn't be preoccupied with unnatural fears about what kinds of daily/social activities could be 'perceived' in this modern 'media/net-matrix' by 'spying anti-American terrorist groups' such as Al Qaeda, the Taliban, ISIS, and Cobra. Suddenly, there was a palpable 'deranged quiet fear' in the minds of everyday American capitalists/consumers. The demons were...in the air.

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A clan of inner-city youth formed 'fight clubs' in L.A., N.Y., and D.C. These 'fight clubs' were devoted to forms of 'American pride' in the modern city and wanted to defy this sudden new fear of anti-traffic socialization censorship after 9/11. These clubs/gangs didn't want to curb their love of American streets just because terrorists seemed to despise Wall Street. These fight clubs and gangs wanted to reclaim the 'gritty' spirit of the American city --- at any cost --- so they waged violent late-night weaponry-infused brawls and paid off cops to turn away so they could wage a 'holy pro-American crusade' secretly...and confidently.

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An artist who was a member of one of these 'fight clubs' decided to make an artistic rendering of the 'metaphysical intrigue' associated with all this new age anti-capitalism angst. This artist created renderings of giant piano-portraits/cartoons with images of little 'toy soldier humans' lined up in the strings and chords of the piano-instrument being literally used as 'musical guinea pigs' for torture performed by a great sadistic 'pain-and-fear overlord' puppet-master simply named Jigsaw. Jigsaw was to this new age of urban anxiety what perhaps Rumpelstiltskin (impish death-wager figure from folk-tales) was to old-world ethics (e.g., European social contract prestige issues including the alienation of Jews during WWII).

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As all this 'fight club' intrigue unfolded as an 'unnatural' vigilantism-oriented response to 9/11, American food-companies continued to market convenience-goods such as chicken pot pies and rotisserie turkeys to ravenous consumers who still adored the modern feathers of capitalism and shopping. Many went on blithely embracing Wall Street and simply denying the 'scar/trauma' of 9/11, even though some historians claimed that devastation was arguably worse than Pearl Harbor itself. These consumers, mostly conservative Christians, believed the 'warriors of faith' would just justify their very human yearning to 'transcend' the 'globalization problem' of anti-American terrorism.

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A calendar featuring images of blushing or bathing brides in the rain signified a new age American fascination with lust imagery regarding the deification of fashion, aesthetics, and couture. Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, GQ, Vogue, and Ralph Lauren were the new 'hallmarks' of socialization 'sophistication,' replacing the old totems such as Little Orphan Annie, Henry David Thoreau, and Washington Irving. The new 'vibe' was all about everyday vanity (e.g., MTV, Facebook, Planet Hollywood, etc.), so the new anti-social 'angst' regarded the 'idolatry' towards fashion-based neglect of moral erudition. Was this the time of great radicalism?

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A pair of oddballs from two N.Y. fight clubs engaged in a cat-and-mouse game on New Year's Eve. One was a psychotic Leatherface-copycat named Hewitt who was a practicing cannibal, prophesying the 'new age wisdom' of eating homeless people as a defiant cry against 'invading/intrusive Muslim terrorists' who seemed to think they knew what was best for the world. The other was a 'Christian crusader' named Ajay who dressed in ninja-costumes and pursued Hewitt with a 'patriotic fury' and was determined to prove that American justice was pure and swift and America did not need 'foreign critics' (e.g., ISIS, Taliban, Cobra). As Hewitt and Ajay chased each other around in Times Square on New Year's Eve, a CNN journalist tweeted, "Is this a sure-fire sign that the AntiChrist is some kind of panic-messenger?"

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TRUMP: Carter, are you a fan of the real-estate board-game Monopoly (Parker Brothers)?
CARTER: Sure. Monopoly (Parker Brothers) is now a popular iPhone video-game app.
TRUMP: Did you know they've translated Dante's Inferno into a modern video-game?
CARTER: Yes, consumerism caters to many levels of anti-civilization 'angst.'
TRUMP: Perhaps all this commercial traffic makes 'anarchy meditation' thrilling.
CARTER: Perhaps this all began with the Los Angeles Race Riots of 1992.
TRUMP: Since 9/11, Americans are generally antsy about socialization/stability.
CARTER: People have difficulty simply trusting international bodies such as NATO.
TRUMP: I think if the AntiChrist shows up, he'll be a movie-star making rebellious films.
CARTER: Well, this is, after all, the radical 'MTV Generation.'
TRUMP: Anyways, Americans still lead the way in consumer-goods.
CARTER: Yes --- Apple, IBM, Fisher-Price, Energizer, McDonald's, Wal-Mart.
TRUMP: Wall Street will always be a 'tower of power.'
CARTER: Maybe these new 'fight clubs' popping up across U.S. cities will dissolve!
TRUMP: Everything depends on good journalism, Carter...
CARTER: Are you a fan of CNN or do you prefer BBC?
TRUMP: I prefer CNN, honestly...
CARTER: Americans need solid 'Christian demos' of everyday values-infused proverbs.
TRUMP: Yes, that's why we have media-balloons such as EWTN now.
CARTER: I wonder if the 'artistry' of Al Jazeera will 'inspire' more anti-Western terrorists!


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:1peleas:


 

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