MolotovHalfEmpty

joined 4 years ago
[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 33 points 2 weeks ago

The Americans had already used the bomb, twice, and even before that there wasn't really any doubt they would if they could. As history proved both before and after Nagasaki, the US was happy to cause any amount of death and destruction to fight the (mostly extremely paranoid and overstated) 'threat of communism'. And whatever you think about the idea of nuclear deterrence in the modern era, there's little to no doubt it was the only thing preventing the US using nukes against the USSR.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 10 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I wrote this comment for a thread that just got deleted, so I'm just gonna post it here. It's on the subject of the CIA pushing and popularising the idea of conspiracy theories in order to give themselves cultural cover...

posting

Pretty much, certainly the US government at large. People often point to the aftermath of the JFK assassination as the Warren Comission report famously referred to 'conspiracy theories' and 'conspiracy theorists' frequently and the press ran with those terms. To the degree that this idea has been 'debunked' by modern corporate media, they use the classic sleight of hand by investigating whether the Warren Commission coined those terms, rather than popularised them.

One of the primary counter-agruements these people use is that Karl Popper's influential philosophical book Open Society & Its Enemies used the terms when discussing how society creates meaning from events in 1945. And if you couldn't tell by the title of that work, yes, Popper was a reactionary with a deepseated hatred for historicism, Marxist based thought, who believed that historicism was responsible for "20th Century totalitarianism" and that liberal democracy was the only acceptable form of government (because it didn't require 'bloodshed or violence' for improvement doubt ). And yes, he was of course popular with the US political class and establishment academics at the time, meaning the very people that would go on to be part of the state (from those elected to the intelligence community) in the 1960s when they popularised the term.

If you're interested, the book Mirage Men might be worth a read. It's a history of how the US military industrial complex and government perpetuated and used the UFO phenomenon not only as a smokescreen for secret projects and military action, but also psychological operations against the public. I think someone made a documentary of it years ago, but I've never seen itnso can't say whether it's a good portrayal of the book or not.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 37 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Don't worry, the cast of the Thick Of It reboot are on it:

 

I could do like 50 of these but I have to go to sleep.

Drop me a message comrades and we'll sit on the roof...

 

Still the best Blink 182 tune they ever recorded and one of the best pop-phnk tunes of the era.

Shame Tom DeLonge got suckered into being one of the Mirage Men.

 

Look, we all get lost sometimes.

No more so that the pseuds who decided to debate whether this was actually as song about an alien or not for years.

Desert highways all look the same.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 3 points 2 weeks ago

Ooof, the Lone Gunman show. That's the real conspiracy; how a good spin-off with some great plot writing was doomed to failure by some of the absolute worst creative decisions ever.

(Also Sliders is fun, but I genuinely haven't seen an episode in 20+ years)

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

First things first... yeah, that first album is fucking class. The later albums were weirdly overproduced (and apparently a nightmare for the band) but that first one is like a great rap metal / hardcore record with some tactical Cypress Hill inspired slow down. "I'm tired of waitin', I'm tired of sleepin'" still feels like the premptive sound of nu/rap-metal for years to come but better.

Darky into Schpamb used to rock people's shit when I played it - pale audiences 'into' rap getting shellshock (but the few metal kids going nuts for that bit) when they thought the classic bravado bit was over, only to be not even close to prepared for the unleashed skate-hardcore of Schpamb!

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 2 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Boooo! Go back and read the megathread, plus seasons 1-7 as homework or you're a lib who hate's theory. soviet-playful

 

Perhaps the best indie rock tune about about the UFO conspiracy ever recorded. They put it in a (really good) episode of the X Files to throw us off the scent.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 3 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

I was literally about to post a bunch and the next one was going to be Unmarked Helicopters. One of the greatest songs written about UFOs ever, even if it didn't have the added cache of being (extremely briefly and badly mixed) in the bacjground of an X Files episode. Max fucking rocks, both as a character and a double-episode. Fuck the 'Keys of X' version that shortens it and forces the theme in at the end.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

They were a band I saw sometime in the late 90s (not sure if it was before or after the Jive deal) on recomendation of a work friend because "you like that rap and metal stuff". I saw them a few times later, but that early energy was incredible. I've never really gotten over that first album, for all its flaws, as a result.

Obviously it was later and rawer and maybe full on all the time, but It reminded me of the the first time I saw Dub War who might be one of the most underated / overlooked bands of the 90s. Partly because I went back to wathcing UK bands and when the rap/metal thing kicked off a couple of years later it already felt old and kind of a US import (apart from the aforementioned).

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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net to c/music@hexbear.net
 

You can't put a cover on the sky

Remember the 90s? Remember when people rightly identified MIC projects? But then also built a weird (but rad) secular ideology around it.

Music was better when aliens existed.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This is why I'll never leave Hexbear, I love you idiots.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 27 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Basically just the rock that keeps away tigers at this point.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 6 points 2 weeks ago

Or you're a couple who plays together and/or you have kids.

[–] MolotovHalfEmpty@hexbear.net 5 points 2 weeks ago

Perhaps not for big new Sony titles, but if you're a family / have kids you definitely want at least two as there's still lots of good couch multiplayer games out there.

If it's just for you then possibly for stick drift (rather than getting them later when they've gone up in price again) or because they still use a built-in battery instead of rechargeables, and they don't last very long by comparison (and that play time gets even lower as they age obviously).

 

Unfortunately American / British rock and roll influnence in (bad) Korea did help produce a few bangers inlcuding this fuzz soaked bit of psychadelic pop rock perfection.

Shin Joong-Hyun wasn't exactly a radical, but after the General's coup he was comissioned to write a song about the the glory of General Park Chung Hee. Instead he wrote a tune about the glory of Korea's natural beauty. He was arrested and had all his equipment confiscated.

Later he was impisoned again for selling weed, tortured, and sent to a 'psychiactic facility' where he remained imprisoned for years and banned for performing in (bad) Korea.

Unfortunately I've never known much apart from some other credits from liner notes about Lee Jung Hwa, who provides the song-making vocal.

 

A bunch of people stole a SWAT vehicle and were riding it around a parking lot. Someone add the Teriyaki Boyz track from Fast & Furious Tokyo Drift.

It's important I find it to prove my word, because what else do we have?

 

Because it's chefs-kiss

It makes me dare to dream. bloomer

 

I'm about 80% of the way through it and it's been not just a welcome distraction from a stressful couple of weeks, but one of my favourite things I've played in a long time.

Pretty chill, but still with some challenge on higher difficulties. Wonderful art style and satisfying fold-in on themselves level design. The writing is good and succinct with what could be just another cozy game unfolding into something more varied in tone and having genuine things to say about regional identity, tourism, and commerce at the expense of locals.

What really (pleasantly) surprised me was what a love letter it was to all sorts of great past video games. Sometimes via a specific mechanic, sometimes a themed level or ability. Persona, Mario Galaxy, Zelda, Ico, SSX Tricky, Fez, classic RPGs, you name it.

Anyway, I think it's pretty neat.

 

If a harcore band sings in mostly German, old fucks are wearing black and red pins by the bar, and I tell you (in English) at the bar that you're likely to get your arse kicked as American tourists, you probably shouldn't jump in with the regulars and then be all surprised-pika-messed-up when you catch a stray to the shouldershoulder to the chest.

 

"The threat of nuclear confrontation in South Africa escalated today when the ruling white military government of that besieged city-state unveiled a French-made neutron bomb and affirmed its willingness to use the three-megaton device as the city's last line of defense."

This is the news report in the actual first minute of RoboCop. Apartheid had fallen, the last retreat of capital is considering nuclear annihilation with the help of Europe. Reminder, RoboCop was made in '87, written before. If anyone has read some of the shadier history of apartheid SA at the time (bio-weapons, UK/western involvement etc) this is more of an oversimplification than something actually far-fetched.

Paul Verhoeven gets a lot of praise for big, bold, anti-capitalist and anti-fash themes. He should get more praise for the details.

 

Christmas in July.

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