Sunday, 17 May 2015

Wars

I get Wanda's number and she takes mine. We talk some more, confiding in eachother now, about love and men and how she is absolutely done with them, no more, never, ever again. She can't and doesn't believe in love anymore. Her eyes grow wide and wet. You can get burned forever can't you? 

I listen out through another cigarette.

There's nothing worse than violence at home. Up close. Violence from a partner or a parent or all of it. Violence in a place you can't escape from. Because you're too young. Because you're too in love. Because you're too poor. Because you have nowhere else to go. The deep shattering of trust and with it all hope and confidence. Because no safe space means no safe space. Where can you go? When home is hell. And even when you leave, violence leaves its' trace. It's remembered in the body; buried, but staying, latent and inflamed again with the flex of instincts which fear have got to,  triggered by the most banal of encounters. 

People leave their mark. 




Wanda didn't go into detail. But I'm used to recognising trauma. The way people talk with enhanced animation, the wide eyes, the re-live, the still undigested shock rising through the body and the voice. 

I've seen it in women and I've seen it in men who had their lives destroyed - or almost destroyed - by other men, because they fought back, because they refused to accept injustices. They stood up and felt the full force of a company, or the police, or an army, and a state, and often all of it hurricained into one, long, nightmare. But if you saw them, on a building site, or in their homes making a tea, or in the pub, you'd never know they were at war. Likewise the woman cleaning your room, walking past you pushing an overstacked laundry trolly, or picking up biscuit wrappers in a chandeleir-lit atrium. Soldier.

Wanda hadn't just gone through hell in home and home in hell, but also another terrible experience, a different form of war on her. One to do with European border regimes and the people who can exploit them and profit from them. And they have guns. One to do with her poverty and precarity. A deal she'd entered into. She started shaking and shouting when she told me.

171 comments:

  1. I love your writing. I also love you. Thank you.

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  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMikQR2srws

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  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfQk2b17Dp0

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  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l02EYK8sfxI

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  7. Replies
    1. What can we expect from an aristocratic writer wife!

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    2. Some long lost relative of George I think!

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    3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBvC4z5zDEA

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    4. Following the untimely death of her first husband Alfred, Agnes’s move to the Aston Tavern marks a significant transformation in her life—a transition from struggle to opportunity. Rose’s conferring with historian Professor Julie Marie Strange provides valuable insights, shedding light on how Agnes secured this new and more respectable venue for her family. “For a woman running a pub, you can often be associated with immorality because you’re selling alcohol. So it’s quite morally risky. So she has to be a really astute, shrewd businesswoman,” Professor Strange emphasises, illustrating the precarious balance that widows often had to maintain in terms of societal perception.

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    5. The fabric of family dynamics, particularly during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, was not always black and white. Marriages, particularly in lower-income settings, often served as partnerships for both emotional and financial stability. Professor Strange says that “it could have been a business decision” for Agnes—a calculated step to uphold her establishment’s respectability. Her actions further amplify her role as a resourceful architect of her own future, reflecting traits that Rose resonates with deeply.

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    6. Dr. Jenson reveals that Pasquel settled and began working as a hawker, selling goods as he moved through the countryside, eventually specialising in jewellery. “This is fascinating!” Rose enthuses, realising her ancestor was adept at navigating a realm rife with challenges.

      But the story takes a dramatic turn when they uncover records revealing that Pasquel, now an established jeweller, faced challenging situations in his trade, including theft. Rose learns more about her great-great-grandfather’s journey as Dr. Jenson presents her with a peddler’s certificate, a document that legitimises Pasquel’s travels and trade. Rose anticipates, “He had permission to sell jewellery wherever,” exemplifying the spirit of entrepreneurship that seemed to flow from their Italian roots.

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    7. Meeting historian Dr. Oscar Jenson in South Molton, Rose learns that her four-times-great-grandfather, Pasquel Lyons, was indeed born in Italy. The revelation sparks a passionate cry of joy: “He is Italian!” she affirms, her spirit buoyed by this newfound connection. Yet, the mysteries surrounding his journey to England remain. “When did he come to England?” Rose inquires – Dr. Jenson explains that Pasquel likely migrated to England around the end of the Napoleonic Wars, a time when travel became more accessible. However, details about his exact origins in Italy or the circumstances of his arrival are elusive. The small population of foreigners living in South Molton at the time signifies Pasquel’s likelihood as one of only a few Italian immigrants in the area.

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    8. In 1983, it divested Thomson-CSF Téléphone , its civil telecommunications division, to telecommunications specialist Alcatel. Four years later, its semiconductor interests were merged with those of the Italian defence group Finmeccanica.[1] That same year, Thomson-CSF's medical imaging technology was exchanged with GE for GE's RCA and consumer electronics businesses.[1]

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    9. In December 2000, Thomson-CSF was officially rebranded as Thales (from the Greek philosopher Thales, pronounced [talɛs] reflecting its pronunciation in French).[4][5]

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  8. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyNF9WEslxo

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  9. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3PzIojtUU8

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    Replies
    1. Comparing brain scans to R. Now that is bad writing!

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    2. I mean using GPT to write R is fine but ...

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  10. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt29120226/

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    1. What is it with people loving Heartland so much?

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    2. https://youtu.be/nnJULrr41k8?si=GXG8WmI_Lwz-4xKn

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    3. Mamma Mia, here we go again!

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    4. "We were already here. This is our bunker from the feral blitz."

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    5. Seen "Britain and The Blitz" on Netflix yet?

      https://www.netflix.com/gb/title/81687619?s=a&trkid=13747225&trg=wha&vlang=en&clip=82007716

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    6. Mamma Mia, here we go again!!!

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    7. Who needs a bunker when you have the Spear of Destiny?

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    8. You friends with R. J. Mitchell?

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    9. Mitchell was by nature a reserved and modest man.[3] He was a reticent public speaker who disliked presenting papers.[117] According to one member of his department, "he said nothing unless there was something worth saying".[59] He avoided publicity, and was not widely known to the general public until after his death.[3]

      According to his son Gordon, Mitchell was resentful of authority being imposed on him or of the routines of the workplace, and was short-tempered and "a difficult man to live with sometimes". Often given full scope at Supermarine, he was a strict taskmaster who nevertheless struggled with the level of organisation needed for a company such as Supermarine.[118] When the engineer Barnes Wallis was employed to improve the efficiency of Mitchell's department in 1930, Wallis had to be recalled after their personalities clashed.[117] The ODNB describes Mitchell as being highly gifted and intelligent, but someone who was "often stern and irascible towards those less gifted than himself". He was devoted to his staff at Supermarine, to whom he showed kindness and humanity, and they in turn repaid him with loyalty and affection.[3]

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    10. "Mm. Well, good job it's staff karaoke night, then, innit?"
      "Oh...the ancient Japanese art of making a berk outta yourself, no thank you."

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    11. Clearly not talking about Kiyamoto Musashi!

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    12. What can I say Dokkōdō is the way!

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    13. The Book of Nothing, according to Musashi, is the true meaning of the strategy of Ni Ten Ichi Ryu. It seems very esoteric in nature because he emphasizes that people must learn to perceive that which they cannot understand or comprehend. He notes that in this Void, what can be comprehended are things which we do and see, such as the way of the warrior, martial arts, and Ni Ten Ichi Ryu. At the same time, in the Void, things we do not do or see (which he calls Spirit) are part of the information which we perceive on a conscious level, but with which we have no physical relationship. It is arguable whether Musashi is referring to religious spirituality or if he is actually explaining a way to live a life and to process thoughts.

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    14. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrIn4OMHZk8

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    15. Smith's mother, Catherine Hancock, lived in Runcorn, Cheshire, where Smith himself intended to retire. She died there in 1893. Smith's half-sister Thyrza died in 1921 and his widow, Sarah Eleanor Smith, was hit and killed by a taxi in London in 1931.[6] Their daughter, Helen Melville, married and gave birth to twins in 1923, Simon and Priscilla. Simon, a pilot in the Royal Air Force, was killed in 1944, during World War II. Priscilla died from polio three years later; neither of them had children. Helen died in 1973.[2][failed verification]

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    16. Edward Smith joined the White Star Line in March 1880 as the Fourth Officer of SS Celtic.[7] He served aboard the company's liners to Australia and to New York City, where he quickly rose in status. In 1887, he received his first White Star command, the Republic. Smith failed his first navigation exam, but on the next attempt in the following week he passed, and in February 1888, Smith earned his Extra Master's Certificate. Smith joined the Royal Naval Reserve, receiving a commission as a lieutenant, which entitled him to add the letters "RNR" after his name. This meant that in a time of war, he could be called upon to serve in the Royal Navy. His ships had the distinction of being able to fly the Blue Ensign of the RNR; British merchant vessels generally flew the Red Ensign.[8][9][10] Smith retired from the RNR in 1905 with the rank of Commander.

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    17. RMS Titanic was a British ocean liner that sank in the early hours of 15 April 1912 as a result of striking an iceberg on her maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City, United States. Of the estimated 2,224 passengers and crew aboard, approximately 1,500 died (estimates vary), making the incident one of the deadliest peacetime sinkings of a single ship.[4]

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    18. You friends with this guy as well then?

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    19. The ships were constructed by the Belfast shipbuilder Harland & Wolff, which had a long-established relationship with the White Star Line dating back to 1867.[9] Harland and Wolff were given a great deal of latitude in designing ships for the White Star Line; the usual approach was for Wilhelm Wolff to sketch a general concept, which Edward James Harland would turn into a ship design.Harland and Wolff put their leading designers to work designing Olympic-class vessels. The design was overseen by Lord Pirrie, a director of both Harland and Wolff and the White Star Line; naval architect Thomas Andrews, the managing director of Harland and Wolff's design department; Edward Wilding, Andrews's deputy and responsible for calculating the ship's design, stability and trim; and Alexander Carlisle, the shipyard's chief draughtsman and general manager.[11] Carlisle's responsibilities included the decorations, equipment, and all general arrangements, including the implementation of an efficient lifeboat davit design.[a]

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    20. Violet Jessop said that while on the Carpathia, she had searched for Andrews but found he was among the missing when the roll was called.[28] On 19 April 1912, his father received a telegram from his mother's cousin, who had spoken with survivors in New York: "INTERVIEW WITH TITANIC'S OFFICERS. ALL UNANIMOUS THAT ANDREWS DIED A HEROIC DEATH, THINKING ONLY OF OTHER'S SAFETY. EXTEND HEARTFELT SYMPATHY TO ALL."[29]

      Newspaper accounts of the disaster labelled Andrews a hero. Mary Sloan later wrote in a letter: "Mr. Andrews met his fate like a true hero, realising the great danger, and gave up his life to save the women and children of the Titanic. They will find it hard to replace him." A short biography, Thomas Andrews: Shipbuilder, was produced within the year by Shan Bullock at the request of Sir Horace Plunkett, a member of Parliament, who felt that Andrews' life was worthy of being memorialised.

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    21. In 1936, the Air Ministry established a new aircraft factory at Belfast, and created a new company Short & Harland Ltd, owned 50% each by Harland and Wolff and Shorts. The first products of the new factory were 50 Bristol Bombays followed by 150 Handley-Page Hereford bombers.[19]

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    22. The company started an aircraft manufacturing subsidiary with Short Brothers, called Short & Harland Limited in 1936. Its first order was for 189 Handley Page Hereford bombers built under licence from Handley Page for the Royal Air Force. In the Second World War, this factory built Short Stirling bombers as the Hereford was removed from service.

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    23. The shipyard was busy in the Second World War, building six aircraft carriers, two cruisers (including HMS Belfast) and 131 other naval ships; and repairing over 22,000 vessels. It also manufactured tanks and artillery components. It was in this period that the company's workforce peaked at around 35,000 people. However, many of the vessels built in this era were commissioned right at the end of the Second World War, as Harland & Wolff were focused on ship repair in the first three years of the war. The yard on Queen's Island was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe in April and May 1941 during the Belfast Blitz, causing considerable damage to the shipbuilding facilities and destroying the aircraft factory.

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    24. In 1912, due primarily to increasing political instability in Ireland, the company acquired another shipyard at Govan in Glasgow, Scotland. It bought the former London & Glasgow Engineering & Iron Shipbuilding Co's Middleton and Govan New shipyards in Govan and Mackie & Thomson's Govan Old Yard, which had been owned by William Beardmore & Company. The three neighbouring yards were amalgamated and redeveloped to provide a total of seven building berths, a fitting-out basin and extensive workshops. Harland & Wolff specialised in building tankers and cargo ships at Govan.[10] The nearby shipyard of A. & J. Inglis, on the north bank of the Clyde and the east bank of the Kelvin, was also purchased by Harland & Wolff in 1919, along with the Meadowside shipyard of D. and W. Henderson and Company, on the north bank of the Clyde but on the west bank of the Kelvin.[11] The company also bought a stake in the company's primary steel supplier, David Colville & Sons. Harland & Wolff also established shipyards at Bootle in Liverpool,[12] North Woolwich in London[13] and Southampton.[14] However, these shipyards were all eventually closed, beginning in the early 1960s when the company opted to consolidate its operations in Belfast.

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    25. Dokkōdō: Never stray from the Way.
      Looks like I went a bit astray!

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    26. https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/hoarding-books-declutter-house-b2728781.html

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    27. 14. Do not hold on to possessions you no longer need. Someone needs to work on this!

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    28. https://youtu.be/YIEVL_072hA?si=raHfT1BopSHRs41G

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    29. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89pUAPoGv0w&t=143s

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    30. https://youtu.be/0YII23uTmvM?si=OBtQnxqvrVQFv2cx

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    31. https://bushidokarate.martialartsuk.org/

      https://youtube.com/shorts/zQrGInObPrM?si=X0TtdBHgVNPKStSh

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    32. Oh...the ancient Japanese art of making a berk outta yourself, no thank you!

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    33. It's the leg kicks that do the damage. The reach in a street fight is superior because of the kicks. One kick from a trained muay thai person can leave the victims leg unusable after one kick. Means you don't have to engage in a fight or grapple. Gives them an advantage. Combo of muay thai boxing and ju jitsu or wrestling would be unbeatable in a street fight.

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    34. Only an idiot would base a character off Robert Greene!

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    35. On December 16, 2022, during the Mahsa Amini protests, the Neighborhood Youth Alliance of Iran and the Neighborhood Youth of Karaj Group distributed a text that they attributed to Greene, describing strategies for opposing the Islamic Republic governmental system of Iran. The Institute for the Study of War suggested that the text corresponded to a December 7 YouTube video by Greene on the protests. A five-point list of civil disobedience strategies for sustaining the protest movement was distributed with the text.[7]

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    36. Ok, he doesn't look bad so far but ...

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    37. The 33 Strategies of War is the third book by Greene and was published in 2006.[36] The book is divided into five parts: Self-Directed Warfare, Organizational (Team) Warfare, Defensive Warfare, Offensive Warfare and Unconventional (Dirty) Warfare.[36] The book is a guide to the campaign of everyday life and distills military wisdom from historical figures like Napoleon Bonaparte, Sun Tzu, Alfred Hitchcock, Alexander the Great and Margaret Thatcher.[37][38][39]

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    38. The Sunday Times called the book "an excellent toolkit for dealing with business and relationships," and The Independent claims that Greene is "setting himself up as a modern-day Machiavelli" but that "it is never clear whether he really believes what he writes or whether it is just his shtick, an instrument of his will to shift £20 hardbacks."[40][41] NBA player Chris Bosh stated that his favorite book is The 33 Strategies of War.[19][42][43] It has sold more than 200,000 copies.[35]

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    39. https://youtu.be/cvZEuCv7-w0?si=dOgm-T8Kaeqd71Gf

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    40. - Tory represents the left-wing mentality, hardened
      from a lower and impoverished class, into
      modernity and complicated pragmatism, the
      masculine and tough type of girl. Cobra Kai (Yin)
      - Sam represents the right-wing mentality,
      sheltered, from high class and wealth, into tradition
      and simplistic morality, the soft and gentle kind of
      girl. Miyagi-Do (Yang).
      That is why most liberal fans generally love and
      defend Tory, and most conservative fans generally
      love and defend Sam. Most young Americans are
      liberal, so they obviously support Cobra Kai (Yin)
      and Tory much more than they do Sam.

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    41. During this period Pissarro spent time in rural areas such as Montmorency, La Roche-Guyon, and Pontoise, where he could find ample subject matter for landscape painting. This established a lifelong pattern of working outside Paris while also frequently staying in the city. About 1860 he began a relationship with Julie Vellay, his mother’s maid, and in 1863 their first child, Lucien, was born. (The couple married in London in 1871; in all, they would eventually have eight children.)

      Pissarro became more and more opposed to the standards of the École des Beaux-Arts and the Academy throughout the 1860s, and he occasionally took part in lively debates with younger artists such as Monet and Renoir at the Café Guérbois. Ten years older than such artists, Pissarro was seen as a father figure, and his fierce arguments about egalitarianism and the inequities of the system of juries and prizes impressed everyone. Although he showed his work at the Paris Salon, he and his colleagues came increasingly to recognize the unfairness of the Salon’s jury system as well as the disadvantages relatively small paintings such as their own had at Salon exhibitions.

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    42. Discussions in the art world were interrupted, however, by the outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870. Pissarro left for London, where he met up with Monet and the dealer Paul Durand-Ruel. Pissarro lived in south London for a time and painted scenes, such as The Crystal Palace, London (1871), of the newly emerging suburbs there. Many years later, he wrote: “Monet and I were very enthusiastic over the London landscapes. Monet worked in the parks, while I, living in Lower Norwood, at that time a charming suburb, studied the effects of fog, snow, and springtime.” On his return to France and his house in Louveciennes, Pissarro discovered that much of the work in his studio had been destroyed by Prussian soldiers.

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    43. Pissarro nonetheless remained certain that the group’s independent exhibitions represented the correct path forward. After exploring the idea of another alternative forum for exhibition, called the “Union,” he rejoined the other founder-members of the Impressionist group and showed his work at the second group exhibition, held in April 1876 at the gallery of Durand-Ruel. He showed 12 paintings—among them two painted at Montfoucault, the home of his friend Ludovic Piette—that included spring, summer, and winter landscapes. Once again, his work was criticized. Pissarro’s financial struggles were also increasingly acute. Renoir recalled being turned down by one collector who said: “You are too late. Pissarro has just left, and I have taken a painting of his. A human consideration: he has such a large family. Poor chap!”

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    44. Save yourself for marriage chap!

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    45. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-G9kIJPGAA

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    46. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVdha3ctFao

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    47. https://youtu.be/TcJ-fYjCx44?si=StNsuUH8V4GF1jEk

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    48. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYTOK89w8h0

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    49. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I44_zbEwz_w

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    50. Makes me wonder if this is actually real!!

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    51. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_7IPm7f1vI

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    52. Man, he was maid for this!

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    53. In our most recent video, we show that Atlas can lift, carry, and throw larger, heavier objects than ever before, while maintaining the athleticism of parkour and the coordination of dance. To push these limits, we improved Atlas’s control software to get the adaptability required for real world tasks.

      At the heart of Atlas’s controller is a technique called Model Predictive Control (MPC). Our model is a description of how the robot’s actions will affect its state, and we use that model to predict how the robot’s state will evolve over a short period of time. To control the robot, we use optimization: given the robot’s measured state, MPC searches over possible actions it can take now and in the near future to best achieve the set task.

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    54. https://bostondynamics.com/blog/picking-up-momentum/

      If you really want to go into DORK TOWN!!!

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    55. When linear models are not sufficiently accurate to represent the real process nonlinearities, several approaches can be used. In some cases, the process variables can be transformed before and/or after the linear MPC model to reduce the nonlinearity. The process can be controlled with nonlinear MPC that uses a nonlinear model directly in the control application. The nonlinear model may be in the form of an empirical data fit (e.g. artificial neural networks) or a high-fidelity dynamic model based on fundamental mass and energy balances. The nonlinear model may be linearized to derive a Kalman filter or specify a model for linear MPC.

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    56. Maybe this one's best left for Peter/Dan!

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    57. Josemaría Escrivá had a Jesuit priest as a spiritual director (Fr. Sánchez) at the time that he founded Opus Dei (1928ff.).[22] As a result, he apparently based some of the practices of Opus Dei on the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus,[23] such as: required manifestation of conscience to a superior, seeking prestigious people for membership, a military-style hierarchical authority structure,[24] and an emphasis on blind obedience as a means of efficiency in the apostolate.[25]

      Nevertheless, the Superior-General of the Society of Jesus Fr. Wlodimir Ledóchowski (1866–1942) later told the Vatican he considered Opus Dei "very dangerous for the Church in Spain." He described it as having a "secretive character" and saw "signs in it of a covert inclination to dominate the world with a form of Christian Masonry."[26] In the 1950s, some Jesuits told Italian parents of members of Opus Dei that their sons were being led to damnation.

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    58. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9rUREflwDI

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    59. "Do not think dishonestly."
      "The Way is in training."
      "Become acquainted with every art."
      "Know the Ways of all professions."
      "Distinguish between gain and loss in worldly matters."
      "Develop an intuitive judgement and understanding for everything."
      "Perceive those things which cannot be seen."
      "Pay attention even to trifles."
      "Do nothing which is of no use."

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    60. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oqv49hE6Z-w

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    61. Sorry about the shit structure btw!

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    62. Now you'll notice that a lot of this is just common sense but then again that in itself is very useful!

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    63. The majority will do 1,2,5 and last

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    64. Basically, there is NO MAGIC WAND!!! Never has been!

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    65. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUZjC769A3E

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    66. https://youtu.be/56ZY-msH1EE?si=18gwR0TuyYfK4E_X

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    67. The research on ideology, politics, and racist prejudice, by John Duckitt and Chris Sibley, identified two types of authoritarian worldview: (i) that the social world is dangerous, which leads to right-wing authoritarianism; and (ii) that the world is a ruthlessly competitive jungle, which leads to social dominance orientation.[17]

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    68. But in Republics there is a stronger vitality, a fiercer hatred, a keener thirst for revenge. The memory of their former freedom will not let them rest; so that the safest course is either to destroy them, or to go and live in them.

      Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince

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    69. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    70. Parties of the centre-right generally support liberal democracy, capitalism, the market economy (though they may accept government regulation to control monopolies), private property rights, and a limited welfare state (for example, government provision of education and medical care). They support conservatism and economic liberalism and oppose socialism and communism.
      By contrast, the phrase "far-right" is used to describe those who favour an absolutist government, which uses the power of the state to support the dominant ethnic group or religion and criminalize other ethnic groups or religions.[108][109][110][111][112] Typical examples of leaders to whom the far-right label is often applied are: Francisco Franco in Spain, Benito Mussolini in Italy, Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany, Augusto Pinochet in Chile, and Jorge Rafael Videla in Argentina.[113][114][52][page needed][115][116][117]

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    71. In the United States, the Tea Party movement stated that the core beliefs for membership were the primacy of individual liberties as defined by the Constitution of the United States, preference for a small federal government, and respect for the rule of law. Some policy positions included opposition to illegal immigration and support for a strong national military force, the right to individual gun ownership, cutting taxes, reducing government spending, and balancing the budget.[55]

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    72. In France, the Right's support of capitalism can be traced to the late 19th century.[41] The so-called neoliberal Right, popularised by US President Ronald Reagan and UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, combines support for free markets, privatisation, and deregulation with traditional right-wing support for social conformity.[9]

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    73. In France, nationalism was originally a left-wing and republican ideology.[43] After the period of boulangisme and the Dreyfus affair, nationalism became a trait of the right-wing.[44] Right-wing nationalists sought to define and defend a "true" national identity from elements which they believed were corrupting that identity.[41] Some were supremacists, who in accordance with scientific racism and social Darwinism applied the concept of "survival of the fittest" to nations and races.[45]

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    74. Early Marxist movements were at odds with the traditional monarchies that ruled over much of the European continent at the time. Many European monarchies outlawed the public expression of communist views and the Communist Manifesto, which began "[a] spectre [that] is haunting Europe", and stated that monarchs feared for their thrones. Advocacy of communism was illegal in the Russian Empire, the German Empire, and Austria-Hungary, the three most powerful monarchies in continental Europe before World War I. Many monarchists (except constitutional monarchists) viewed inequality in wealth and political power as resulting from a divine natural order. The struggle between monarchists and communists was often described as a struggle between the Right and the Left.

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    75. The reactionary right looks toward the past and is "aristocratic, religious and authoritarian".[102]
      The moderate right, typified by the writings of Edmund Burke, is tolerant of change, provided it is gradual and accepts some aspects of liberalism, including the rule of law and capitalism, although it sees radical laissez-faire and individualism as harmful to society. The moderate right often promotes nationalism and social welfare policies.[103]
      Radical right is a descriptive term that was developed after World War II and it was applied to groups and ideologies such as McCarthyism, the John Birch Society, Thatcherism, and the Republikaner Party. Eatwell stresses that this usage of the term has "major typological problems" because it "has also been applied to clearly democratic developments".[104] The radical right includes right-wing populism and various other subtypes.[102]
      The extreme right has four traits: "1) anti-democracy, 2) ultranationalism, 3) racism, and 4) the strong state".[105]
      The New Right consists of the liberal conservatives, who stress small government, free markets, and individual initiative.[106]

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    76. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQ5_fxINnyk
      “Appear weak when you are strong, and strong when you are weak.”
      ― Sun Tzu

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    77. “To know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy.”
      ― Sun Tzu

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    78. “So in war, the way is to avoid what is strong, and strike at what is weak.”
      ― Sun Tzu

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    79. “Those skilled at making the enemy move do so by creating a situation to which he must conform; they entice him with something he is certain to take, and with lures of ostensible profit they await him in strength.”
      ― Sun Tzu

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    80. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1xldt6igTE

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    81. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3g9DxN18hw

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    82. Moral Relativist gone mad!!!

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    83. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    84. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) believed that we have to assess the value of our values since values are relative to one's goals and one's self. He emphasized the need to analyze our moral values and how much impact they may have on us. The problem with morality, according to Nietzsche, is that those who were considered "good" were the powerful nobles who had more education, and considered themselves better than anyone below their rank. Thus, what is considered good is relative. A "good man" is not questioned on whether or not there is a "bad", such as temptations, lingering inside him and he is considered to be more important than a man who is considered "bad" who is considered useless to making the human race better because of the morals we have subjected ourselves to. But since what is considered good and bad is relative, the importance and value we place on them should also be relative. He proposed that morality itself could be a danger.[20] Nietzsche believed that morals should be constructed actively, making them relative to who we are and what we, as individuals, consider to be true, equal, good and bad, etc. instead of reacting to moral laws made by a certain group of individuals in power.[21]

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    85. In the early modern era Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) notably held that nothing is inherently good or evil.[19]

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    86. https://youtu.be/xl5pcFeHLgs?si=j2gqKZdyflq2Aywy

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    87. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2F1LQQK348

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    88. These things cannot be clearly explained in words. You must research what is written here. In these three ways of forestalling, you must judge the situation. This does not mean that you always attack first; but if the enemy attacks first you can lead him around. In strategy, you have effectively won when you forestall the enemy, so you must train well to attain this.

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    89. https://youtube.com/shorts/GWTA5f-xlEU?si=cLPJrPXN60tT5H0e

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    90. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQJRdOH6Kjk

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    91. https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/harry-potter-actress-emma-watson-banned-from-driving-for-six-months/ar-AA1IHKL3

      Ouch!

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    92. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5R1aB3YxsQ

      I'm starring that this is genuinely good advice!!

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    93. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d37nKoSQ-P4

      Wow, he might as well be running https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/lebensborn-program. Fucking Psycho!!!

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    94. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DoWgH1z6BuU

      Isn't this basically gaming??

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    95. https://www.msn.com/en-us/science/genetics/ar-AA1IHFHO
      Um, ok ...

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    96. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56ZY-msH1EE

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    97. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPY1yyaQBSI

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    98. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tnn2oRkQBTM

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    99. https://youtu.be/YuOeyY5fzbA?si=HptMDhQ1Mss-dbWC

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    100. https://youtu.be/ddujb9-fzTE?si=9BdrM0qT-fw2088G

      You gonna vote for Zara?

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    101. https://youtu.be/OezXQE3IOKo?si=byUBzJTjV9i0N1at

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    102. As the name suggests, Tai No Sen (Waiting for the Initiative) is invented for very opportunistic and decided battles between parties. The main idea being to feign weakness as to open a weak spot, or Achilles' heel, in the opposing force, and then regrouping to exploit such a hole by attacking deep within the enemy's party. Although it is not mentioned, this would most likely be to kill the officer of the highest rank as an attempt to remove the tactical centre of a group of soldiers. A method particularly useful for Musashi or others, if attacking a general directly would signal the end of the battle upon his defeat.

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    103. https://youtube.com/shorts/XHVG0KNx--w?si=ljuQ_bqqnCPQxsth

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    104. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS-4J_VX64U
      Ok, this will be somewhat familiar but you'll like the ending!

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    105. https://youtu.be/4P8iOk2dm24?si=5M6-_zyq4sCY7ZWi
      I may have sent this already but you know the bar is so high today for remembering these sort of things!

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    106. Club secretary Lucas Cork has been practicing kendo since 2006 and said it was about etiquette and respect, not winning.
      https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-03-24/kendo-way-of-the-sword-gold-coast/7271392

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    107. It's not about the winning, it's about the taking part!

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    108. https://youtu.be/5oGea8mwEBE?si=1fj6OSihtjPsqfWm
      This is just a classic example of BAD SPORTSMANSHIP!!!

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    109. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQWT3CagCeg
      You'll be somewhat familiar with this

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    110. Way better then being a fire fighter imo!

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  11. https://web.archive.org/web/20180110084808/http://www.theranos.com/

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  12. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10166622/

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  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiEl10LA0Cc&t=26s

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  14. "I've seen it in women and I've seen it in men who had their lives destroyed - or almost destroyed - by other men, because they fought back, because they refused to accept injustices. They stood up and felt the full force of a company, or the police, or an army, and a state, and often all of it hurricained into one, long, nightmare. But if you saw them, on a building site, or in their homes making a tea, or in the pub, you'd never know they were at war. Likewise the woman cleaning your room, walking past you pushing an overstacked laundry trolly, or picking up biscuit wrappers in a chandeleir-lit atrium. Soldier."

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZEofm1Gp1k

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    1. https://youtu.be/glcqGCaqUCU?si=i_9f8cBlQyPr3mXk

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  15. The totalitarian government uses ideology to control most aspects of human life, such as the political economy of the country, the system of education, the arts, sciences, and private morality of its citizens.[5] In the exercise of socio-political power, the difference between a totalitarian regime of government and an authoritarian regime of government is one of degree; whereas totalitarianism features a charismatic dictator and a fixed worldview, authoritarianism only features a dictator who holds power for the sake of holding power. The authoritarian dictator is supported, either jointly or individually, by a military junta and by the socio-economic elites who are the ruling class of the country.[6]

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    1. Thus, if the concept of totalitarianism continues to be criticized for its ambiguities, weaknesses, and abuses, it probably will not be abandoned. Beyond being a Western banner, it stores the memory of a century that experienced Auschwitz and Kolyma, the death camps of Nazism, the Stalinist Gulags, and Pol Pot's killing fields. There lies its legitimacy, which does not need any academic recognition.[7]

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    2. In 1999, the British Film Institute voted The Killing Fields the 100th-greatest British film of the 20th century. It is now seen as one of the greatest films of all time.

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    3. What are you waiting for, Martyrin!

      The leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising were executed for organising an armed insurrection in Ireland during Easter Week in April 1916. A series of courts martial began on 2 May, in which 187 people were tried. Controversially, Maxwell decided that the courts martial would be held in secret and without a defence, which Crown law officers later ruled to have been illegal.[49][50] Ninety were sentenced to death. Fifteen of those (including all seven signatories of the Proclamation of Independence ) had their sentences confirmed by Maxwell and fourteen were executed by firing squad at Kilmainham Gaol between 3 and 12 May.[51][1].

      The Manchester Martyrs were three Irishmen executed after being convicted for the murder of a Manchester City Police officer in 1867. The day after the executions, Frederick Engels wrote to Karl Marx: "Yesterday morning the Tories, by the hand of Mr Calcraft, accomplished the final act of separation between England and Ireland. The only thing that the Fenians still lacked were martyrs. ... To my knowledge, the only time that anybody has been executed for a similar matter in a civilised country was the case of John Brown at Harpers Ferry. The Fenians could not have wished for a better precedent."[52] Ten Irish Republican Army members died during a 1981 hunger strike, including Bobby Sands.

      The Belfiore martyrs (in Italian, Martiri di Belfiore) were a group of Italian pro-independence fighters condemned to death by hanging in 1853 during the Italian Risorgimento. They included Tito Speri and the priest Enrico Tazzoli and are named after the site where the sentence was carried out, in the valley of Belfiore at the south entrance to Mantua.

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    4. Robert Harper, from whom the town takes its name, was born in 1718 in Oxford Township, Pennsylvania, now part of Philadelphia. Since he was a builder, Harper was asked by a group of Quakers in 1747 to build a meeting house in the Shenandoah Valley near the present site of Winchester, Virginia.[15] Traveling through Maryland on his way to the Shenandoah Valley, Harper—who was also a millwright—realized the potential of the latent waterpower from the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers at their confluence. He paid Stephens 30 guineas for his squatting rights to the ferry, since the land actually belonged to Lord Fairfax.[16]: 12 

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    5. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy (ATC) headquarters is in Harpers Ferry. The Appalachian Trail passes directly through town, which some consider the psychological midpoint of the trail[86][87] despite the exact physical midpoint is being farther north in Pennsylvania. Uniquely, the towns of Harpers Ferry and adjoining Bolivar have partnered with the ATC to be declared a united Appalachian Trail Community.[88]

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    6. The Hill Top House Hotel, which had opened in 1888 to accommodate African Americans as the sole hotel in Harpers Ferry that would accept them as guests, burned in 1911. It was then rebuilt on a larger scale, but that building also burned in 1919. It was rebuilt a second time on a slightly smaller scale but closed in 2008. As of 2021, developers plan to demolish it and build a new 120-room hotel on the site.[81] Controversies about the impact such a proposed venue would have on the town have delayed its development.

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    7. Liberty Falls, the fictional setting of the Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 zombies map of the same name, is loosely based on Harpers Ferry.

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    8. Someone's a fan of Zombies 4: Dawn of the Vampires!!

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  16. Rummel cited Marxism–Leninism and communism in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin, China under Mao Zedong and in East Germany, Nazism in Germany under Adolf Hitler and fascism in other states, state socialism (Burmese way to socialism) in Burma under U Ne Win and Islamic fundamentalism (Islamism) in Iran as examples of totalitarianism.[14][15] However, not all scholars believe these regimes and ideologies exemplify totalitarianism: some of those who support of the concept of totalitarianism exclude Burma,[16] Iran[17] and even Fascist Italy[18] from this category, while historians who state that the concept can not adequately describe Stalinism nor Nazism criticize the concept of totalitarianism in general (see below).

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    1. Traverso writes that the usage of the term began after 9/11 by Western propaganda, which previously used it against the other enemies while maintaining the geopolitical interests of the West. He notes that the Islamic state which most resembles the concept of totalitarianism, Saudi Arabia, is an ally of the West and as a result, it cannot be considered a part of the "Axis of Evil", and for that reason, as he believes, Saudi Arabia is rarely described as "totalitarian", unlike Iran.[7]

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  17. As all architecture is inherently a product of the society in which it was constructed, the architecture of totalitarian regimes can be used to glean information on the ethos and desires of its creators, making it a popular subject for analysis by architectural historians.[18] The architecture of totalitarian regimes is often viewed in terms of how it manifests dominant state propaganda.[4][19][20] While the architecture of fascist Italy, Germany, Portugal, and Spain often invoked notions of racial supremacy, nationalism, and Christian supremacy, Stalinist architecture (such as the Exhibition of Achievements of National Economy) frequently emphasized the successes of the Soviet Union in building new society.[12]

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  18. Beyond Neoclassicism, which is not unique for totalitarian systems,[5][6] the descriptions of the totalitarian architecture sometimes focus on brutalism, often in the context of Le Corbusier and his associations with Benito Mussolini.[7] Other authors have upheld brutalism and socialist realism as modernist art forms which exist beyond simply being physical manifestations of totalitarian ideology.[8][9] Though many architects and architectural historians believe that significant similarities exist in the planning and construction of buildings within totalitarian regimes, it is frequently not considered a unique architectural style.[10] [11]

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  19. For influential philosopher Karl Popper, the social phenomenon of political totalitarianism is a product of Modernism, which Popper said originated in humanist philosophy; in the Republic (res publica) proposed by Plato in Ancient Greece, in Hegel's conception of the State as a polity of peoples, and in the political economy of Karl Marx in the 19th century[19]—yet historians and philosophers of those periods dispute the historiographic accuracy of Popper's 20th-century interpretation and delineation of the historical origins of totalitarianism, because, for example, the ancient Greek philosopher Plato did not invent the modern State;[20] his approach has been described as a radical denial of historical causation[21] and as an ahistorical attempt to present totalitarianism and liberalism not as products of historical development, but as eternal and Timeless categories of humankind itself.[22]

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  20. Timeless revolves around the story of Army Lieutenant Colonel Lê Nguyên Đại and his Conrads. They are peacetime soldiers with patriotism, courage and the spirit of completing any mission and overcoming any difficulty. They are people who never falter in the face of danger, ready to sacrifice themselves to protect people's lives from natural disasters and epidemics. Those people have a compassionate heart, share and sympathize with every difficulty and hardship of their compatriots, but are extremely resourceful, decisive and steadfast when facing enemies with sophisticated tricks, taking advantage of people's trust to propagate against the Party and State's policies. With their hearts turned towards the people, peacetime soldiers always put the interests of the people first, because they understand that people's trust and affection are the strong motivation that helps soldiers overcome all challenges.

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  21. Excluding Joseph Conrad of course. He was known for the The Nigger of the "Narcissus"!

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  22. The title character, James Wait, is a dying West Indian black sailor on board the merchant ship Narcissus, on which he finds passage from Bombay to London. Suffering from tuberculosis, Wait becomes seriously ill almost from the outset, arousing the sympathies of many. The ship's white master, Captain Allistoun, and an old white sailor named Singleton remain concerned primarily with their duties and appear indifferent to Wait's condition.

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    1. The voyage resumes but eventually drifts into the doldrums, where the headwinds diminish and the ship is becalmed for many days. Rations grow even scarcer and the men become anxious to return home. Wait eventually confesses to a lazy Cockney sailor named Donkin that he is not as sick as he first claimed: that he is feigning illness to avoid having to participate in the laborious work required of every healthy seaman. Many others had already grown suspicious of him, and Captain Allistoun reveals Wait's charade before the entire crew. Wait claims he feels well enough now to work, but the captain orders that he be confined to the forecastle for the remainder of the voyage, a decision which quickly polarizes much of the crew between Wait's supporters and detractors. Allistoun prevents a near-mutiny encouraged by the conniving Donkin. Forced to stay abed, Wait grows increasingly frail as his condition deteriorates. The ship continues to drift without a breeze and some of the crew, including Singleton, begin to whisper that Wait himself is responsible and that only his death will bring favourable winds.

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    2. As the ship passes the Azores and Wait nears death, Donkin discreetly plunders Wait's personal belongings from his sea chest. Wait eventually succumbs and dies—the first proof that he was genuinely ill. This occurs within sight of land, as Singleton had predicted, and a strong wind returns immediately after Wait's body is committed to the sea. The Narcissus soon arrives in England.

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  23. The novel has been seen as an allegory about isolation and solidarity,[10] with the ship's company serving as a microcosm of a social group. Conrad appears to suggest that humanitarian sympathies are, at their core, feelings of self-interest[5] and that a heightened sensitivity to suffering can be detrimental to the management of human society.[10]

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