Nandi: I ain't her. Mal: Only people in this room is you and me.

'Heart Of Gold'


Natter 70: Hookers and Blow  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


DavidS - Apr 24, 2012 6:35:12 am PDT #2153 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

"Authenticity" is one of the great bullshit standards.


Sophia Brooks - Apr 24, 2012 6:37:47 am PDT #2154 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I have a "certificate of live birth" not a birth certificate. I may possibly be a muslim/african born person, I guess.


amych - Apr 24, 2012 6:38:20 am PDT #2155 of 30001
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

pssst, Sophia is the president, pass it on!


tommyrot - Apr 24, 2012 6:51:29 am PDT #2156 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

It’s Official: James Cameron and Google Unveil Plans for Asteroid-Mining

A recently announced space venture backed by James Cameron, Google executives, and others isn't scheduled to formally announce its plans until later today, but as of late last night, the news is official: Planetary Resources, Inc. is fixing to do some asteroid-mining. Here's everything we know about the venture so far.

This is big news on several fronts, not the least of which being the fact that this venture stands to reinvigorate the world's passion for space exploration. Money can be a powerful motivating factor, and all indications suggest that there a LOT of it to be made mining resources like water and precious metals from near-Earth asteroids


Amy - Apr 24, 2012 7:00:34 am PDT #2157 of 30001
Because books.

At its best, the Western style of parenting aims to help children live authentically, that is, to take on the responsibility to decide for themselves what to do and how to live.

Teaching children how to live capably and independently in the world, anyway. I'm not sure what authenticity has to do with it.


Sophia Brooks - Apr 24, 2012 7:02:32 am PDT #2158 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

How do you live "inauthentically"- isn't the fact that it is life make it authentic? I am more used to art/theatre described as inauthentic, which makes more sense to me.


Gudanov - Apr 24, 2012 7:09:16 am PDT #2159 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

How do you live "inauthentically"- isn't the fact that it is life make it authentic?

I surround myself with cardboard cutouts of my robot army and of the groveling masses. My house is actually pretty small, but I've built a gigantic paper-mache volcano completely around it so I can pretend it's a secret lair.


Tom Scola - Apr 24, 2012 7:10:48 am PDT #2160 of 30001
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

In contrast, what is authentic is what is our own—what we have that we have made our own. My understanding and discourse is more authentic the more it comes out of my own experience, thought and judgments. My life is more authentic the less it is dominated by “the everyone” and the more it is governed by my own understanding, concerns, desires, tastes, goals, etc. One of the clearest articulations of this idea of authenticity comes in Leo Tolstoy’s novella, The Death of Ivan Ilyich. Tolstoy tells the life of a man who becomes successful and respectable by ignoring his own moral intuitions and living according to the bourgeois values of “the everyone”:.

Tolstoy doesn’t tell us what exactly Ivan Ilyich did; he doesn’t denounce this or that immoral act. The point is that Ivan let his own sense of good and bad be overruled by the dictates of common opinion. The tragedy of his life is not that he failed to achieve something, but that the ideals he did succeed in reaching were not truly his own. The novella has often been read as a condemnation of the bourgeois ethos whose highest values are success and respectability. It has also been read as an indictment of conformism. While both these readings are plausible, at the deepest level the novel is about inauthenticity. What is wrong with Ivan Ilyich’s life is not just that it was guided by a narrow and superficial set of values, but that Ivan simply accepted those values without questioning them.


Toddson - Apr 24, 2012 7:11:34 am PDT #2161 of 30001
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

Actually, Gud's one person I think could do that ....


Jesse - Apr 24, 2012 7:20:57 am PDT #2162 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

My life is more authentic the less it is dominated by “the everyone” and the more it is governed by my own understanding, concerns, desires, tastes, goals, etc.

As a person who generally likes things that are popular, I hate that shit so much. I authentically like popular arts!