I wasn't alive then, but I wonder if this type of corruption has always existed in the legal profession, or if it's a symptom of our broader cultural degradation.
Has anyone else noticed that in old photos people are dressed in suits (even the poor)? Look at how people dressed and expressed themselves in the 1920s and compare that to how we dress and express ourselves today. The so-called 'uneducated' in the 1920's could articulate themselves better than most of the so-called 'professionals' today.
We seem to have a lot of people in positions of power and responsibility who are mentally incapable.
And look at the advertisements, the movies, the t.v. shows, the half-time superbowl shows -- all seem to be organized by degenerates. These are not normal people, interested in goodness and truth, family, and good upbringing. Everything, even family oriented gatherings, include some sort of sexualization.
When you stream old movies from the 90's and 80's, the quality of the script is so much better. Especially in the 80's.
There must have been a generational turnover that occurred in Hollywood in the 80's and 90's, because by the time you get to the 2000s all of the good writing -- for the most part -- vanished. I could never write a movie script. I'm a terrible writer. But one doesn't have to be a magnificent writer or storyteller to see a significant degradation in quality over the past 30 years or so.
There are plenty of well written movies made every year since the birth of movies, even today as we speak, you just have to find them. Just because you are not aware of them does not mean they don't exist. You need to broaden your horizons.
I'm in my 70s. My grandfather who was born in the 1880s, always wore suit and tie, every day, all day, no matter what he did, even when he was retired, even 25 years into retirement.
Ethics, morals, dress fashions, styles, come and go over the centuries. There has always been corruption, in every profession, it's not new. We have to always be vigilant, fight for our rights, question everything, and read, read, read. Learning is a lifelong experience and endeavor.
As Ronald Reagan once said:“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.”
I wish you were right, but twerking over unconcious bodies and pushing people off the subway doesn't seem like a generational idiosyncracy.
Taking fentanyl until death doesn't seem very normal either.
Mindlessly chanting 'palestine shall be free from the river to the sea" without being able to name the river or point to Israel on a map is probably a sign of insanity.
Placing poop into a can, and then displaying the can in an art museum under the rubric that all art is 'subjective' with no 'universal' element of beauty seems to ignore most of human history.
I think we are living in a decaying, degenerate society that is in serious decline.
And as you've probaby noticed, we don't have very many readers in America.
The woke New York Times published an article implying that the personal attacks against Fani Willis were racist.
They failed to mention that she:
1. Hired a man she was in a relationship with.
2. That her lover billed the city for more than a half million dollars.
3. That her lover has zero experience in RICO.
4. That she's been out to 'get trump' since the moment she took the job. That was her #1 goal, which as you can imagine fits in quite well with other radicals in Fulton county. The county best known for it's bizarre 'deep state' shennagins every four years.
She's terribly corrupt.
Another wonderful product brought to you by the radical left, George Soros foundation.
Are there any examples of this 50 years ago?
I wasn't alive then, but I wonder if this type of corruption has always existed in the legal profession, or if it's a symptom of our broader cultural degradation.
Has anyone else noticed that in old photos people are dressed in suits (even the poor)? Look at how people dressed and expressed themselves in the 1920s and compare that to how we dress and express ourselves today. The so-called 'uneducated' in the 1920's could articulate themselves better than most of the so-called 'professionals' today.
We seem to have a lot of people in positions of power and responsibility who are mentally incapable.
And look at the advertisements, the movies, the t.v. shows, the half-time superbowl shows -- all seem to be organized by degenerates. These are not normal people, interested in goodness and truth, family, and good upbringing. Everything, even family oriented gatherings, include some sort of sexualization.
When you stream old movies from the 90's and 80's, the quality of the script is so much better. Especially in the 80's.
There must have been a generational turnover that occurred in Hollywood in the 80's and 90's, because by the time you get to the 2000s all of the good writing -- for the most part -- vanished. I could never write a movie script. I'm a terrible writer. But one doesn't have to be a magnificent writer or storyteller to see a significant degradation in quality over the past 30 years or so.
It's pervasive. Total cultural decline.
There are plenty of well written movies made every year since the birth of movies, even today as we speak, you just have to find them. Just because you are not aware of them does not mean they don't exist. You need to broaden your horizons.
I'm in my 70s. My grandfather who was born in the 1880s, always wore suit and tie, every day, all day, no matter what he did, even when he was retired, even 25 years into retirement.
Ethics, morals, dress fashions, styles, come and go over the centuries. There has always been corruption, in every profession, it's not new. We have to always be vigilant, fight for our rights, question everything, and read, read, read. Learning is a lifelong experience and endeavor.
As Ronald Reagan once said:“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.”
I wish you were right, but twerking over unconcious bodies and pushing people off the subway doesn't seem like a generational idiosyncracy.
Taking fentanyl until death doesn't seem very normal either.
Mindlessly chanting 'palestine shall be free from the river to the sea" without being able to name the river or point to Israel on a map is probably a sign of insanity.
Placing poop into a can, and then displaying the can in an art museum under the rubric that all art is 'subjective' with no 'universal' element of beauty seems to ignore most of human history.
I think we are living in a decaying, degenerate society that is in serious decline.
And as you've probaby noticed, we don't have very many readers in America.
The woke New York Times published an article implying that the personal attacks against Fani Willis were racist.
They failed to mention that she:
1. Hired a man she was in a relationship with.
2. That her lover billed the city for more than a half million dollars.
3. That her lover has zero experience in RICO.
4. That she's been out to 'get trump' since the moment she took the job. That was her #1 goal, which as you can imagine fits in quite well with other radicals in Fulton county. The county best known for it's bizarre 'deep state' shennagins every four years.
She's terribly corrupt.
Another wonderful product brought to you by the radical left, George Soros foundation.
George really knows how to 'pick-em'
Good show. 100% correct.
Yes.