tpaine posted:Now THAT is a book, you DON'T wanna get thrown at you!
hahha
HenryKrinkle posted:http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/08/13/leftist_planet?page=0,0During the Cold War, this sort of ideological tourism was almost exclusively a progressive domain; the sugar-cane plantations of Cuba heaved with vacationing European and American compañeros, but few free market acolytes turned up in Augusto Pinochet's Chile to witness pension privatization or marvel at his market liberalization program.
uh...
hard to tell if that was written by this michael moynihan
Michael C. Moynihan is an American journalist and managing editor of Vice magazine. Before that he was a senior editor of the libertarian magazine Reason. Moynihan founded the English language magazine based in Stockholm, Sweden, the Stockholm Spectator. He was a resident fellow of the free-market think tank, Timbro.
After censorship by Comedy Central of an episode of South Park in 2010 that featured a depiction of the Prophet of Islam, Muhammad, Moynihan announced his support for the protest movement, "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day".
or this one
Michael Moynihan (b. January 17, 1969, Boston, Massachusetts) is an American journalist, publisher and musician. He is best known for co-writing the book Lords of Chaos, about black metal. Moynihan is founder of the music group Blood Axis, the music label Storm Records and publishing company Dominion Press. Moynihan has interviewed numerous musical figures and has published several books, translations and essays. In the 1990s, Moynihan was frequently identified as a fascist or neo-fascist by some critics and fans. Moynihan accepted these descriptions with reservations in the 1990s
probably the first one because a fascist wouldn't sound like such a fucking pussy
getfiscal posted:trolling ... is drunk or high or mental
deadken posted:yesterday i read extension du domaine de la lutte and the day before i finally got round to hollow land and read it all in one day; its really good but i find it kinda cute the way weizman feels the need to keep pointing out that when he talks about the elasticity of israel's borders he doesn't mean that if you ran headfirst into the apartheid wall you'd be catapaulted backwards into the surrounding hillsides with a satisfyingly resonant 'sproing' noise
http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3501588
aerdil posted:vice magazine is such shit, not surprising at all its run by libertarians
http://www.streetbonersandtvcarnage.com/blog/the-lynching-of-lesley-arfin-what-really-happened/
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
MadMedico posted:http://www.streetbonersandtvcarnage.com/blog/the-lynching-of-lesley-arfin-what-really-happened/
hey i got written about in that blog once
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
so good
EmanuelaOrlandi posted:MadMedico posted:http://www.streetbonersandtvcarnage.com/blog/the-lynching-of-lesley-arfin-what-really-happened/
hey i got written about in that blog once
i havent read it, but, he was right
it's not rly exciting or nething but there is a picture of me
babyfinland posted:Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
so good
Yeah it’s cool, I’m up to the soviet invasion. Good journalistic storytelling prose but with a light touch….i read great war for civilization by Robert fisk and it’s cool but he’s the dourest motherfucker ever.
HenryKrinkle posted:
if nobody minds me asking, what happened?
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
i just requested this from the library, for some reason ive been interested in reading some more modern type history so hopefully this works out. just about finished with sayings of the desert fathers, v. interesting stuff
Tsargon posted:Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
i just requested this from the library, for some reason ive been interested in reading some more modern type history so hopefully this works out. just about finished with sayings of the desert fathers, v. interesting stuff
yo ironically i tend to read only modern history....what's some good accessible ye-olde shit that will open a new love in my heart....i tend to view everything before 1800 as a Game of Thrones/Monty Python skit hybrid
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Tsargon posted:Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
i just requested this from the library, for some reason ive been interested in reading some more modern type history so hopefully this works out. just about finished with sayings of the desert fathers, v. interesting stuffyo ironically i tend to read only modern history....what's some good accessible ye-olde shit that will open a new love in my heart....i tend to view everything before 1800 as a Game of Thrones/Monty Python skit hybrid
oh, i apologize, when i said modern stuff i meant like last 40 years, i generally stick around the 19th and early 20th century in my reading. the last history book i read (unless you count sayings of the desert fathers) and really liked was 'the british industrial revolution in global perspective' by robert c allen, which is a bunch of stuff comparing the english economy in the 18th century to france, holland, india, and china, and looking at why the industrial revolution happened there instead of in the other leading economic powers of the time.
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Tsargon posted:Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
i just requested this from the library, for some reason ive been interested in reading some more modern type history so hopefully this works out. just about finished with sayings of the desert fathers, v. interesting stuffyo ironically i tend to read only modern history....what's some good accessible ye-olde shit that will open a new love in my heart....i tend to view everything before 1800 as a Game of Thrones/Monty Python skit hybrid
read montaillou
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Tsargon posted:Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Killing the Cranes, i believe BF recommended it
dumb Soviets, dumb NATO
i just requested this from the library, for some reason ive been interested in reading some more modern type history so hopefully this works out. just about finished with sayings of the desert fathers, v. interesting stuffyo ironically i tend to read only modern history....what's some good accessible ye-olde shit that will open a new love in my heart....i tend to view everything before 1800 as a Game of Thrones/Monty Python skit hybrid
levi strauss
Neither his record of service as an educator and courtier, nor his presidency of the academy, nor his steadily growing list of scholarly publications could save Gundling from degenerating into a figure of ridicule at the court of Frederick William I. In February 1714, the king demanded that he deliver a lecture before the assembled guests on the existence (or not) of ghosts while taking regular dr
aughts of strong drink. After much raucous hilarity, two grenadiers escorted the inebriated commercial councillor back to his room, where he shrieked with terror at the sight of a figure draped in a white sheet emerging from a corner.Provocations of this kind soon became the norm. Gundling was confined in a chamber where the king kept a number of young bears while fireworks were rained down into the room from above; he was forced to wear outlandish courtly attire modeled loosely on French fashions, including a towering wig in an outdated style that had belonged to the previous king; he was force-fed laxatives and locked in a cell overnight; he was pressed into a pistol duel with one of his chief tormentors, the joke being that everyone but Gundling knew that the weapons contained no shot. When Gundling refused to grasp or fire his gun, his opponent discharged a spray of burning powder into his face, setting fire to his wig, to the huge hilarity of all present. He was prevented by his debts from leaving Berlin and constrained by the pleasure of the king his master to return daily to the scene of his humiliations, where his honour and reputation were martyred for the amusement of the royal court. Under these pressures, Gundling’s liking for drink soon developed into fully fledged alcoholism, a weakness that, in the eyes of his detractors, merely enhanced his suitability for the role of court fool. And yet Gundling continued to generate a flow of learned publications on such subjects as the history of Tuscany, imperial and German law, and the topography of the Electorate of Brandenburg...
Gundling even had to to lerate the presence in his bed chamber of a coffin in the form of a varnished wine barrel inscribed with a mocking verse:
Here there lies within his skin
Half-pig, half-man, a wondrous thing
Clever in his youth, in old age not so bright
Full of wit at morning, full of drink at night
Let the voice of Bacchus sing:
This, my child, is Gundeling.
Reader, say, can you divine
Whether he was man or swine?
After his death in Potsdam on 11 April 1731, Gundling’s corpse was publicly displayed propped up in the barrel in aroom lined with candles, dressed in a wig hanging down tothe thighs, brocaded breeches and black stockings withred stripes – all clear references to the baroque culture of the court of Frederick I. Among those who came to ogle atthis macabre spectacle were commercial travellers on their way to the great fair at Leipzig. Gundling and his barrel were buried soon afterwards under the altar of the village church outside the city. The funeral address was given by the writer (and sometime Gundling-baiter) Fassmann, thelocal Lutheran and Reformed clergy having conscientiously refused to take part.