Registered User
Posts: 152
(7/29/02 7:26 pm) Reply
Re: ...
Quote: next to where it says gays are evil
I know of no place in the Bible where "gays" themselves are referred to as being evil. However, Homosexual CONDUCT is explicitly condemned.
dioramaboy Registered User
Posts: 23
(7/29/02 9:50 pm) Reply
Re: Evil Men and Women
On my list, there would be nobody. Because as far as I'm concerned there's no such thing as evil. There's just the misguided, miseducated, and misconditioned. Apperently even Hitler was a nice person to meet in person in a non-Nazi setting.
All always go back to the quote, "Nobody is born evil." Which is totally true, evil (immoral, negative behavior) has to be learnt.
I think it's wrong to call somebody "evil" or put somebody in the category of "evil." Every person has their reasons for being the way they are, and whether they're right or wrong is another issue.
And NO I'm not supporting "evil" acts of any kind. Thoguh I do think that even the most "evil" can be changed to "good."
"A clever man commits no minor blunders."
- Goethe (1749-1832)
Registered User
Posts: 153
(7/29/02 10:29 pm) Reply
Dildorammerboy
Dildorammerboy's idiotic, contradictory quotes of the day:
Quote: (1) ". . .as far as I'm concerned there's no such thing as evil."
Quote: (2) ". . .evil (immoral, negative behavior) has to be learnt."
Dildorammerboy's stupid quote of the YEAR:
Quote: "Apperently even Hitler was a nice person to meet in person in a non-Nazi setting."
I suppose the fact that "Hitler was a nice person to meet . . . in a non-Nazi setting" is supposed to negate the fact that he presided over the murder of over 6-million innocent human beings.
But, as Dildorammerboy says: "every person has their reasons for being the way they are," even poor wittle "misguided," misunderstood Hitler. It's a shame that Dildorammerboy wasn't around during Hitler's formative years, when he could have given wittle Adolf the proper amount of nurturing and tender loving care. Or maybe if Dildorammerboy was around during WWII he could have convinced the "misguided, miseducated, and misconditioned" Hitler that to murder millions of people is "immoral, negative behavior." After all, "even the most 'evil' can be changed to 'good.'"
Registered User
Posts: 158
(7/30/02 5:41 pm) Reply
Moloch
No, I haven't seen it. Is it good? Who was the director?
dioramaboy Registered User
Posts: 24
(7/30/02 10:50 pm) Reply
Re: Idioticness
Well if you actually believe that I believe the things that I supposedly said, your mistaken.
As for my quotes of the and day; ". . .as far as I'm concerned there's no such thing as evil." and ". . .evil (immoral, negative behavior) has to be learnt." I still maintain that "evil" doesn't exist. But, since the word "evil" is used soo much in today's society I can't just stop using it. Perhaps I could of put the word "supposed" before each mentioning of the word "evil."
The quote of the year; "Apperently even Hitler was a nice person to meet in person in a non-Nazi setting." It was totally true. Before the war Hitler's family and friends (most of which weren't insane) loved him and considered him normal. I've read a lot about and seen a lot about Hitler and the rise and fall of Nazi Germany. The fact is that before the war he liked to take the kids of the family to the north shore of Germany (though Hitler couldn't swim) or to France. It was only after the war that Hitler's family and friends were divided into the crazy and non-crazy so to speak. If course I'm not supporting the man, I'm just saying that he was a man. He cryed, he bleed when you cut him, he had passions and faults. Most people nowaday and ever since the war seem to consider Hitler as almost this non-human, this persona, this stat. He was just a man.
He studyed Fine Arts (same thing as me) in university, then got into politics. It's his parents and his environment that is to blame for most of what he eventually became.
As far as I'm concerned, EVERYONE has the potential to be a Hitler or Stalin sort of person.
To KillCommies directly, "Insult is not becoming of anyone"
"Hitler smiled too"
"A clever man commits no minor blunders."
- Goethe (1749-1832)
Registered User
Posts: 458
(7/30/02 11:15 pm) Reply
Re: Idioticness
MOLOCH
GERMANY | RUSSIA | FRANCE
directed by
Alexandre SOKOUROV
Prix du scenario (1999)
Actors
Leonid MOSGOVOI
Elena RUFANOVA
Synopsis
An ominous fortress perched high above the clouds... A woman alone prances in the nude on its majestic terraces. She knows that she is under surveillance, and waves randomly to spying telescopic eyes. The restless Eva awaits the arrival of her beloved "Adi". The monotonous calm at the isolated retreat is broken by the Führer and his entourage: right-hand man Martin Bormann and propaganda specialist Joseph Goebbels with doting wife Magda at his side. Everything seems in order for a restful 24 hours of table talk and strolls amidst dramatic views of the Bavarian Alps - even if it is the spring of 1942... But the confusions of a woman caught up in the complexities of a man incapable of human intimacy have made Eva as volcanic as her beloved. Hers is the only voice that dares contradict the Führer.
Registered User
Posts: 459
(7/30/02 11:18 pm) Reply
Re: Idioticness
well i used to know some good horror movies board but i dont anymore...
if you stay as civilised and polite as you are, ill let you know if i find some
Registered User
Posts: 460
(7/30/02 11:32 pm) Reply
Re: Idioticness
old silent films? sure... eisenstein and so on... and all the real old movies with silly stories about wives and orphans... and the pianist in the left of the screen playing the musical part
do you think we can open a discussion about movies in the music or general section? it doesnt fit anywhere that's a shame
Registered User
Posts: 461
(7/31/02 5:05 am) Reply
Re: Film
why not? it would be a good idea! i can help you but right now im spending twenty days in england... well se that on august 20 if you want
i already have three ezboards running though...
where are these pics from? (except for the baron munchausen and the seven samourais ones)
Registered User
Posts: 162
(7/31/02 1:20 pm) Reply
Re: Film
The film stills (starting at the top row, left to right and excepting the ones from "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" and "Seven Samurai") are as follows:
(1) Steven Bednarski and Katie Shingler as siblings "Leon" and "Ursula Linden" in the movie "Pin" (1989). Director: Sandor Stern. A very twisted movie.
(2) Hans Adalbert Schlettow as "Hagen Tronje" in the silent film "Siegfried" (1924). Director: Fritz Lang.
(3) 16-year old Anna Mae Wong as a Mongol slave in the silent film "Thief of Bagdad" (1924). Director: Raoul Walsh.
(4) Roger Jacquet as "Peyton Farquahr" in the French short film "La Rivière du Hibou" (known in the U.S. as "Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge," based on Ambrose Bierce's short story of the same title) (1964). Director: Robert Enrico. Great film. Won the 1964 Academy Award for Best Short Film with Live Action Subjects, the Cannes Grand Prix, and a television Emmy Award (It was shown as an episode of Rod Serling's "Twilight Zone"). It is the only film ever to have won an Oscar and an Emmy. There is no dialogue in the film.
(5) Ralph (pronounced "Raif") Fiennes as "Lenny Nero" in the movie "Strange Days" (1995). Director: Kathryn Bigelow. This film is good, in part, because you get to see Juliette Lewis' tits.
(6) Paul J. Smith as "Slue" and Brad Dourif as "Weasel" in the movie "Sonny Boy" (1990). Director: Robert Martin Carroll. A very twisted movie, also starring David Carradine (of television's "Kung-Fu" fame) as "Pearl," the homosexual, transvestite "girlfriend" of "Slue," a 300+ pound small-town criminal.
Edited by: KillsCommies at: 7/31/02 3:31:35 pm