G
Guest
Guest
Perro, give me more to go on. What didn't you get? P.cantdog said:So like what did she say then?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Perro, give me more to go on. What didn't you get? P.cantdog said:So like what did she say then?
cantdog said:In my view. I think we have more of a monetocracy right now: one dollar, one vote.
cantdog
)
I was merely going on a tangent off Gauche’s introductory sentences: “Isn't the intent of democracy that it will always try to destroy itself? Somebody famous said something along the lines of "It is the duty of every citizen to question (challenge?) the state."Pure said:I'm not sure if this is saying the 'family' model might be more suitable than a 'democratic' one. Most families--'nuclear' or not--have been rather authoritarian, typically patriarchal; often with father having life/death powers. Which is why the kids have to escape.
. . .
I have no idea whether 'nuclear family' is a 'societal construct'. My impression is that it's not a common configuration, if one means mom, dad, two kids, a dog, in a house of their own, no parents, aunts, etc. (I suspect P will agree with this.) I gather it existed in the 1950s in the United States, but now represents only a minority of US family structures.
Pure said:
I have no idea whether 'nuclear family' is a 'societal construct'. My impression is that it's not a common configuration, if one means mom, dad, two kids, a dog, in a house of their own, no parents, aunts, etc. (I suspect P will agree with this.) I gather it existed in the 1950s in the United States, but now represents only a minority of US family structures.
Pure said:
I find Christians' moralizing tedious, esp. when they try to show superiority to Rome.
Originally posted by cantdog
I fear the smell of burning bridges.
Let em burn, baby!