Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 10, 2017

Waching daily Oct 12 2017

10 THINGS YOU�RE NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW

�The general population doesn�t know what�s happening, and it doesn�t even know that

it doesn�t know.� ~Noam Chomsky 1.) It is nearly impossible to pay off the

national debt:

�Nothing is so well calculated to produce a death-like torpor in the country as an extended

system of taxation and a great national debt.�~William Cobbett

This is because money is created out of debt in a one-to-one increase in public debt. The

national debt is $20 Trillion. That means the (roughly) 234 million US Americans would

have to pay approximately $62,000 each to pay it off. This includes babies, children,

poor people, and homeless people. There are even those who claim that it�s mathematically

impossible to pay off the debt. And almost every country is in debt to every other country.

It�s the height of insanity.

As former Governor of the Federal Reserve Marriner Eccles said, �If there were no

debts in our money system, there wouldn�t be any money.�

2.) There is no underlying thing backing money (it�s all an illusion):

�Federal Reserve notes are not redeemable in gold, silver or any other commodity, and

receive no backing by anything. The notes have no value for themselves.� ~The Treasury

All money is fiat money. A dollar bill is a dollar bill because everyone agrees it�s

a dollar bill. The dollar bill is not lawful money, but rather �legal tender.� Money

used to be backed by a �gold standard� �which meant the government had $100 worth

of gold in a vault from which they made a $100 bill that went out into the market (though

even gold only has value because we�ve all agreed since time

immemorial that it�s valuable). However, they moved away from gold years ago, so now

we must take the government�s word for it that the note is worth $100. The bill itself

is just an IOU note, made from thin air, based on debt, and laundered by the government.

Even the debt issue discussed in the first bullet is based on nothing, and is nothing

more than a financial concept financiers agree on. The debt isn�t actually there. But since

we all just go along with it, it affects us through inflation, and devaluation, and the

sky-is-falling knee-jerk reactions to money meaning something only because we give it

meaning. Money is little more than a cartoon in the brain that we�re addicted to watching.

3.) How to live off the grid:

�Live simply so that others may simply live.� ~Gandhi

You�re not �supposed� to know how to live off the grid, because then you can�t

be controlled by the government. The more self-sufficient you are, the less money the

corporations can make off you. The more rain water you catch, the less you�ll need

to pay the water companies. The more windmills you build and solar panels you erect, the

less you�ll need to pay the electric companies. The more composting toilets you install, the

less you�ll have to pay plumbing companies. The more gardening you do, the less you�ll

have to pay someone else for your food.

In short: the more independent you become, the less codependent you will be on the state.

And the state doesn�t like that, because they like your money way more than they like

your freedom.

4.) Planned obsolescence:

�Armaments, universal debt and planned obsolescence �those are the three pillars of Western

prosperity.� ~Aldous Huxley

Speaking of making money off you, planned obsolescence is a way for companies to keep

making money off you by capitalizing on your consumerist tendencies. Let�s face it, we�re

a nation of consumers with Big Macs for brains and iPhones for hearts. We need our fix and

we need it fast, and we are willing to fill all the landfills in the world, and then some,

to get it.

Planned obsolescence is designed into a product to encourage the consumer

to buy the next upgrade. Everything from toasters to automobiles, microwaves to cell phones

are prone to planned obsolescence by greedy companies that know you will come back for

more no matter how many times your things-things-things fall apart.

5.) Civil asset forfeiture:

�The State is nothing more nor less than a bandit gang writ large.�~Ludwig Von Mises

As if police brutality, extortion, and overreach of power weren�t enough, unscrupulous police

officials have been manipulating the deeply flawed federal and state civil asset forfeiture

lawsthat give them permission to seize, keep, or sell

any property allegedly involved in a crime. The key word is �allegedly.� Because most

of the time property is taken without even being charged with a crime. That�s crazy!

Originally meant to be used on large-scale criminal organizations, it is now used almost

entirely on individuals, ruining people�s lives over petty �crimes.� More and more

police departments are using forfeiture to benefit their bottom lines. It�s less about

fighting crime and more about profit. John Oliver did an excellent piece on the matter

that gets right at the heart of the issue.

6.) The US imprisons more of its population than any other country (and profits off it):

�Some may say that jailing people over their debts makes poverty into a crime. Well if

that�s true, maybe we should just cut out the middle man and put all poor people in

jail. Of course, this will require new prison facilities, which we can build using people

who can�t pay their prison fees. Not as workers, as the bricks.� ~Stephen Colbert

Living in what is widely considered the �land of the free,� this one should come as a

body blow to anybody who truly believes in freedom. The total prison population has grown

by 500 percent over the last 30 years. 500! The United States has less than 5 percent

of the world�s population, yet we have almost 20 percent of the world�s total prison population.

Even though crime is at a historic low.

The icing on this shit-cake is the deplorable fact that big corporations are making a killing

off the prison system. Equal parts extortion and slavery, for-profit prisons do nothing

in the way of rehabilitation and therapy, and everything in the way of profit and criminal

relapse.

7.) Forced taxation is theft:

�Since few men are wise enough to rule themselves, even fewer are wise enough to rule others.�

~Edward Abbey When taxation is forced, one cannot say they

live in a free country. When taxation is not optional, the country forcing the tax is not

free. Bottom line. If one does not pay their taxes, in such a country, they are threatened

with violence or prison if they don�t pay. That is point-blank extortion. And since it

is being done by an authoritarian government, it is

naked tyranny.

If one feels like paying taxes, then they should feel free to pay. That�s fair, because

that�s voluntary. But if the state is using its monopoly on violence to get money out

of you, that is not fair, that is extortion. It really is that simple. If freedom is primary

then voluntarism is paramount. The use of state services built off taxes is an entirely

different matter with entirely different solutions, and is an irrelevant red herring to the issue

at hand.

8.) You�re not �allowed� to be stateless, but you can be:

�A man without a government is like a fish without a bicycle.� ~Alvaro Koplovich

Statelessness is an alien concept in our world, even though it can be extended to all living

beings �in principle� and �in theory,� at its irreducible bedrock truth, it is exceptionally

difficult to be sovereign and stateless. This is because the entire world is plagued with

the disease of statism. It is so second-nature to our existence that we never question it.

We might as well be fish questioning water. But we are not fish. We are human beings with

the ability for deep logic, higher reasoning, and basic common sense. That is, unless we

are being oppressed into blind servitude and myopic subordination and we are unwilling

to question things� And here we are.

Similar to living off the grid, you�re not supposed to know this one because then the

corrupt nation states of the world would have less control over you. And, don�t be fooled,

it�s all about control, as Mike Gogulski found out firsthand. Unfortunately, the cons

outweigh the pros on becoming a stateless person (Though these two gents seem to be

enjoying it). Especially because we are social creatures and most of the other social creatures

in our world are conditioned statists. As Nietzsche famously said, �State is the name

of the coldest of all cold monsters. Coldly it lies; and this lie slips from its mouth:

�I, the state, am the people.��

9.) The police are NOT legally obligated to protect you:

�There�s no weakness as great as false strength.� ~Stefan Molyneux

Most people falsely and ignorantly assume that it is the sworn duty of the police

to protect and to serve. But it is actually the exception, not the rule. A cop protecting

and serving is doing so in a humane capacity and not because he/she is obligated to do

so. They just happen to be acting humanely while wearing a badge. The reality is that

power tends to corrupt. This applies especially to police. And especially-especially to police

that are trained to be offense-minded, oppressive, extorting, overreaching, and violent enforcers

of a statist agenda.

The solution is not more ill-trained offense-minded police with too much power, but more well-trained

defense-minded police with just enough power (a power with built-in checks

and balances in place to prevent power from corrupting). In short: a complete eradication

of the Thin Blue Line.

10.) We live in an oligarchic plutocracy disguised as a democratic republic:

�We may have democracy or we may have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few,

but we can�t have both.� ~Louis Brandeis, Supreme Court Justice

In our world, money is power. Money concentrated in the hands of a few, means power concentrated

in the hands of a few. And since power tends to corrupt if it goes unchecked, the people

must be free to check it, lest tyranny prevail. But because of an overreaching militarized

police force, the people are not free to check it. And here we are, slipping into tyranny.

If we lived within a horizontal democracy, we would have a better chance at being free.

No masters, no rulers, and hence, no chance for power to become concentrated in the hands

of a few. Easier said than done, sure, but nothing worth doing was ever easy.

As it stands, it is impossible to live freely within an oligarchic plutocracy.

The plutocrats will simply continue buying up power by creating oppressive laws and �legal�

extortion rackets that keep the people without wealth and power in a permanent state of poverty

and powerlessness. Add to that the use of lobbyists and a fiat currency based on debt,

and you have a nation of hoodwinked debt slaves under the delusion that they live in a free

democratic republic.

For more infomation >> 10 THINGS YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW - Duration: 14:31.

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The Academic Word List from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Part 4 - Duration: 5:29.

access

accessibility

accessible

adequacy

adequate

annual

annually

apparent

apparently

approximate

approximately

approximation

attitude

attributable

attribute

attribution

civil

code

commit

commitment

committed

communicable

communicate

communication

communicative

concentrate

concentrated

concentration

confer

conference

contrast

contrasting

contrastive

cycle

cyclic

debatable

debate

despite

dimension

domestic

domestically

domesticate

domesticated

emerge

emergence

emergent

erroneous

erroneously

error

ethnic

ethnicity

goal

grant

granted

hence

hypothesis

hypothesize

hypothetical

hypothetically

implement

implementation

implicate

implication

impose

imposition

inaccessible

inadequacy

inadequate

inadequately

integrate

integrated

integration

internal

internalize

internally

investigate

investigation

investigative

investigator

job

label

mechanism

multidimensional

obvious

obviously

occupancy

occupant

occupation

occupational

occupied

occupier

occupy

option

optional

output

overall

parallel

parameter

phase

predict

predictability

predictable

prediction

principal

principally

prior

professional

professionalism

professionally

project

projection

promote

promoter

promotion

regime

resolution

resolve

retain

retainer

retention

retentive

series

statistic

statistical

statistician

status

stress

stressed

stressful

subsequent

subsequently

sum

summarize

summary

summation

uncommunicative

undertake

undertaking

undertook

unparalleled

unpredictability

unpredictable

unresolved

unstressed

For more infomation >> The Academic Word List from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Part 4 - Duration: 5:29.

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The Best Horror Sequels That Were Ever Made - Duration: 10:04.

More often than not, horror sequels are downgraded ripoffs of the original, wear out what may

have been a novel concept to begin with, or resort to extreme gore and jump scares to

one-up their predecessor.

"Stab 2?

Who would want to do that?

Sequels suck."

"Oh, come on, man."

"Oh please, please, by definition alone they're inferior films."

That's true of most sequels, really, but it seems especially common in this genre.

There are exceptions to every rule, however—and these sequels not only live up to their horrifying

predecessors, they're even better.

Evil Dead II

Without The Evil Dead, we would have never been introduced to Ash and his cabin of horrors.

So, there's certainly something to be said for the merits of the movie that started it

all.

However, the "re-quel," as Bruce Campbell calls it, was a lot campier and more self-aware—and,

as a result, more fun.

"Groovy."

Instead of Ash coming in as the prototypical hero type, he became a lot more humorous and

quirky.

[Laughter]

Sure, this meant the gore got dialed down a bit, but it also set a new tone for the

series that was much cheekier and far more unique than the first.

Evil Ash!

"Groovy" Ash!

More mania!

[Scream]

Evil Dead II cemented the series as a viable franchise, opening the door for movie three,

Army of Darkness, as well as a remake and the TV spinoff series Ash vs. Evil Dead.

Bruce Campbell may have done other work in between all these Evil Dead installments,

but he'll still be forever be known for his demonic slaughtering skills.

"Yeah!

Lookin good.

Lookin sweet!"

Friday the 13th, Part 2

The first Friday the 13th certainly set a tone for what would become a sprawling series

of slasher pics targeting teen counselors at Camp Crystal Lake.

"The counselors weren't paying any attention.

They were making love while that young boy drowned.

His name was Jason."

But its commitment to realism in having a villain who's a real person, rather than future

franchise mainstay Jason Voorhees, meant it wasn't really all that different from any

other entry in the "teens running from the psycho" subgenre.

"Must be my imagination."

The second movie, however, threw caution to the wind and resurrected Jason from his watery

grave to do all the gore-dealing.

And it totally paid off.

"Here it comes!"

[Laughter]

Not only is Friday the 13th, Part 2 eerie and well-made, but the idea that Jason would

be the one to take up his mother's torch and terrorize campers for the next few decades

was solid and sustainable.

"And he's hungry.

Jason's out there."

Without this movie, Jason Voorhees wouldn't be such an icon of the horror genre, which

is just plain unimaginable.

The Devil's Rejects

Rob Zombie's House of 1000 Corpses was a shockingly brutal parade of violence and mayhem, and

produced some pretty unforgettable moments of violence that will haunt many nightmares

forever.

"Behold, fishboy!"

"Oh my god!"

But The Devil's Rejects came along and took its trio of nefarious butchers into more realistically

terrifying territory.

Baby, Otis, and Captain Spaulding are seen fleeing the police and tormenting anyone unfortunate

enough to find themselves in their path.

"You're not gonna slay us are you?"

"Ugh, slaying sounds so permanent."

The Devil's Rejects may have lost the atmospheric creepiness of the original, but it somehow

managed to be even more disturbing, since all these slayings were done in plain sight.

The depravity of these three was downright horrifying, and the fact that the movie was

so packed with relatable victims made the dread that much more visceral than its predecessor.

"What's the matter kid, don't you like clowns?"

Saw II

Saw is a modern horror classic that introduced audiences to a game no one in their right

mind would ever want to play.

"I want to play a game."

With special focus on the two victims of the day, Saw presented Jigsaw and his philosophical

torture-dealing scheme and paid off with a twist ending that opened the dirty bathroom

door to a whole franchise of gory traps.

"Hello Dr. Gordon.

You are perhaps my greatest asset."

But where the first movie suffered some pacing issues due to its shoestring budget and tight

set space, the second movie cleverly expanded the Jigsaw universe.

"Oh, yes.

There will be blood."

Not only did it present the first film's survivor Amanda as Jigsaw's protége, but it also committed

to its puzzle dynamic and got even more creative with its terrifying traps.

"Let the game begin."

Saw II was more exciting and interactive with the audience, and it offered much more insight

into who Jigsaw was and what he wanted to accomplish.

"By creating a legacy, by living a life worth remembering, you become immortal."

With the added layer of a bigger game in play for one of the detectives investigating Jigsaw's

crimes, Saw II began to really flesh out the formula introduced by the first and offered

a sustainable launch pad for the bevy of sequels to follow.

"Game over."

Wes Craven's New Nightmare

A Nightmare on Elm Street's original concept—that a boogeyman who haunted dreams could actually

merk a person in their sleep—was enough to make anyone afraid of bedtime.

"This… is God."

But once that storyline was beaten to lifelessness with a slew of progressively lame sequels,

franchise mastermind Wes Craven decided to get a little more creative about how to amp

up the intrigue.

With Wes Craven's New Nightmare, he ventured outside of the box and pegged all the predecessors

as the fictional movies that they were.

"I'm doing a film about my nightmares as I'm dreaming them.

In order for the movie to continue, it was dependant on me having more nightmares.

Well, fortunately, I did."

Once his creation Freddy Krueger started bleeding into real life, though, his original stars

had to play their old parts in an effort to stop the very evil he'd created with the original

series.

What resulted was a smart statement about the industry—and his own place in it -- and

a film that was both self-aware and completely entertaining at the same time.

"Nine, ten, never sleep again."

Scream 2

Scream remains a central piece of '90s slasher history thanks to its quotable psycho and

fascination with its own genre.

"Do you like scary movies?"

"Uh huh."

And its sequel, Scream 2, took the property to new heights by focusing on what made the

original so, well, original.

The first installment followed a fairly standard formula about a masked psycho offing high

school students, but there was an element of satisfying self-awareness that set the

movie apart.

Scream 2 accentuated that aspect by introducing a movie-within-a-movie storyline that winked

at its own pop cultural relevance in a charming new way.

"See, I've got my whole defense planned out.

I'm gonna blame the movies."

While some of the slay scenes from the first film were a little more thrilling than anything

that came after, the first sequel's subtle statements about itself were refreshingly

on point.

"It's showtime!"

The Purge: Anarchy

The Purge was laser focused on a single family trying to survive America's annual night of

government-sanctioned mayhem.

"Please just let us purge."

And while that was exciting enough to spawn a sequel, there was a lot of room to grow

once the concept proved to be viable at the box office.

Instead of just focusing again on a select few struggling to survive the night, The Purge:

Anarchy introduced some of the socioeconomic factors that would be an important part in

creating such a system of disorder.

While fans of the first film might've been left to wonder why and how the U.S. stooped

to allowing such chaos, Anarchy attempted to answer those questions.

By putting its central players outside the comfort of their own homes, we got to see

a lot more of the destruction and fallout from the Purge, and it was a lot more satisfying

and informative.

"Can't have heroes."

The parallels to the occupy movement also set the stage for the third installment, The

Purge: Election Year, and the pic also left room for the forthcoming prequel series that'll

delve into how society devolved in the first place.

Dawn of the Dead

George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead is a classic, no doubt about it.

It marked the beginning of the zombie film craze and holds up as an esteemed chapter

in his filmography.

"They're coming to get you Barbara."

However, Dawn of the Dead, the second installment in his Living Dead series, expanded the first

movie's ideas by showcasing the root cause of this epidemic.

"When there's no more room in Hell, the dead will walk the earth."

The film more narrowly pinpointed Romero's parallels between zombification and American

consumerism by having its victims take cover in a shopping mall.

And the film's juxtaposition of excess and materialism with hopelessness and violence

helped define the zombie genre as a whole forever.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning

When it comes to the Texas Chainsaw series, nothing has or probably ever will beat Tobe

Hooper's 1974 original.

When it comes to the modern reboots, though, there are some which were better than the

others.

After a series of Texas Chainsaw sequels that got progressively more ludicrous, 2003's reboot

looked to return the franchise to its original form by having a group of unexpecting teens

return to Leatherface's isolated abode.

"What's wrong with you people?"

"Oh my, my, my, my, my…"

The pic benefited from modern cinematography and sound effects, and one deliciously evil

sheriff that made Leatherface seem like a teddy bear.

However, it added very little to the story we already knew.

Its sequel The Beginning, however, did some digging as to why this cannibalistic family

became what they were.

The way their backstory developed was clever and included some of the franchise's best

dialogue.

"No talking until after I've said grace, a------."

More importantly, the plot also paid more attention to its societal environment—namely,

the Vietnam War and the conscription that plagued a generation's youth.

"You kids okay?"

It still didn't transcend the original by any stretch of the imagination, but it certainly

bested the previous sequels and reboots in the series.

"You blasphemous bitch!

This is redemption, lady, that's what this is!"

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