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TESTEMONAIL:  Right and Discordianism allows room for personal interpretation. You have your theories and I have mine. Unlike Christianity, Discordia allows room for ideas and opinions, and mine is well-informed and based on ancient philosophy and theology, so, my neo-Discordian friends, open your minds to my interpretation and I will open my mind to yours. That's fair enough, right? Just claiming to be discordian should mean that your mind is open and willing to learn and share ideas. You guys are fucking bashing me and your laughing at my theologies and my friends know what's up and are laughing at you and honestly this is my last shot at putting a label on my belief structure and your making me lose all hope of ever finding a ideological group I can relate to because you don't even know what the fuck I'm talking about and everything I have said is based on the founding principals of real Discordianism. Expand your mind.

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Heh. Sound familiar?

Started by Cain, December 04, 2011, 01:21:09 PM

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Cain

Kissinger argued....that there were two kinds of state systems, "legitimate" and "revolutionary" ones.  In the former, all member states accepted each other's fundamental legitimacy and did not seek to undermine them or otherwise challenge their right to exist.  Revolutionary state systems, on the other hand, were constantly beset by large conflicts because of the unwillingness of certain of their members to accept the status quo.  An obvious example of a revolutionary state is the Soviet Union, which since its inception was committed to the struggle for worldwide revolution and the global victory of socialism.  But liberal democracies like the United States have at times acted like revolutionary ones as well, when it sought to promote its form of government in unlikely places from Vietnam to Panama.  Revolutionary state systems are inherently more prone to conflict than legitimate ones: their members are not content with co-existence and regard every conflict as a Manichean struggle over first principles.

- Francis Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man, page 250

Mesozoic Mister Nigel

Hm, very interesting, and incredibly revealing.
"I'm guessing it was January 2007, a meeting in Bethesda, we got a bag of bees and just started smashing them on the desk," Charles Wick said. "It was very complicated."