Ever floating in the chaotic void of relitivism, each moment on the brink of implosionary collapse...oh yeah... and Making Brenna Happy.
Is there anyone out there that does not live by the Maslowian "Hierarchy of needs" (security, belongingness, aesthetics, etc. ). If you are out there, how the f**k do you do it, cause I'm falling apart at the notion that this is as it will be until the great end.
IN ORDER OF IMPORTANCE TO CIVILIZATION: Pink Floyd, Opeth, Tool, The Beatles... there are many others but none such as the entire fabric of existance hangs on as the previously mentioned four. At leisure, I basically enjoy what can be described as "bone- crushing- head- slamming metal": Sepultura, Fear Factory, Strapping Young Lad, Dark Tranquility, Don Henly, Peter Gabriel, Bjork...you get the idea. I also feel it is important to express your dislikes in this catagory. I encourage others to do the same. For instance, I hate the Rolling Stones more than Death Itself and I view the latest Nine Inch Nails abortion as the lowest point in Metal history since Led Zeppelin's "Coda"... wait...this may be overstating. Lets just say we now know for sure that if placed in a steel cage death match that Al Jourgensen would effortlessly devour Trent Reznor and all others who fruitlessly rushed to his aid.
Message to George Lucas: "Thanks for ruining one of the greatest cinematic sci-fi sagas of all time with Shitty Half- Baked backstory, Asshole".
Just don't F**K with me on Sunday mornings between 10:30 - noon. If you know then you know why.
Hunter S. Thompson's "The Gonzo Papers" - a bizzare, and frighteningly familiar recount of politics and culture from the mid. 1960's through 90's. Just another dead hero now...
I will continue to maintain that Richard M. Nixon had the propensity to become one of the greatest 20th century leaders this country, or the world, would have seen. Before his overwhelming desire for legacy outweighed his aptitude for good judgment he personified the American dream. Few great men, or women, of political importance in our nation's history can trace their 'road to realivance' back to such humble beginings. To be sure, he was a white male which by itself gave him certain undeniable advantages - some of which contributed to the same poor judgements in domestic policy previously mentioned in search for his long term mark on history. But his background and ideology gave him a rare perspective into the rights and expectations of the working class. This philosophy on government is seldom heard of or recognized today. 'Tricky Dick' was certainly not without his faults and, as mentioned, his selfishness did overtake his genuine desire for the good of his office - but he was the son of a Southern Californian lemon farmer, not a NorthEastern oil and industrial tycoon, that became president of the United States.