While it's true that, in practice, people in postions of power and authority have abritary or delegation in how they use it (such as a Judge in a court of law, an elected offical, a company executive, etc), this view is essentially "anarchist", and doesn't bother to distinguish between different types of power, or different political, economic, or social systems. — IvoryBlackBishop
The "anarchist" stance is generally just a pretentious, antisocial attitude toward government as a "whole' — IvoryBlackBishop
Can you summarize it for me? — IvoryBlackBishop
The "anarchist" stance is generally just a pretentious, antisocial attitude toward government as a "whole' (often ignoring that even in 'pre-literate' hunter gatherer societies with presumably no "formal" law or government, there still would have been some type of informal government or hierarchy, just as there is or would be within families or any other social institution, whether or whether not it is officially or legally recognized as a "state" to begin with). — IvoryBlackBishop
Much as in the context of a family, and whatever formal or informal 'rules' the family follows or sets for themselves, their children, and so on; the anarchist view would eventually simply degenerate into nihilism (e.x. a parent parenting or disciplining their child is a form of "aggression" or "force" imposed on another without their "consent"), — IvoryBlackBishop
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↪Frank Apisa
Game of Thrones is as reliable and realistic source on the subject as a Jason Voorhes film. Didn't even bother to watch.
Having a reading level about the 6th grade, and an IQ above 95, or a society in which ugly people don't exist, would render the show unmarketable except as something to make fun of in "Mystery Science Theater". (Or as a source for even uglier and less realistic rip-offs like "Billions").
Go watch "Jason Goes To Hell: The Final Friday" on repeat for 500 hours straight (or the Jerry Springer Show, for that matter) if you want a slightly more realistic and intellectually stimulating version of the entire GoT series. — IvoryBlackBishop
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↪Frank Apisa
Why do people watch Mystery Science Theater 3000?
Me, I found it a good example of the "mass psychology" which trash like Game of Thrones is marketed to, such as how the "negativity bias" which is hardwired into us causes us to disproportionately associate "negativity" with "realism", even when it's as "realistic" as a Jason, Saw or Freddy Krueger Move.
It's a show by ugly people, for ugly people, nothing more, perhaps even less. — IvoryBlackBishop
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↪Frank Apisa
It does. — IvoryBlackBishop
It's a trash show which isn't worth a serious discussion on the subject of power (except maybe to the underclass which I'm sure is and was it's target demographic, kind of like the journalist Robert Greene's silly books, which are allegedly more popular with convicted felons than with anyone actually in serious positions of power anyway, — Bishop
Which is what I was hoping for in this thread, a serious discussion, not having my eyes tainted with the ugliness in question. (I've got to meditate now to wash it out of mind, sigh). — Bishop
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↪Frank Apisa
Read Ray Dalio, Leaders Eat Last by Simon Sinek, or Meditations on Violence by Sgt. Rory Miller for a discussion of "power" that renders this dreck obsolete, just to name one serious author on the subject for people above a 6th grade reading level.
If the show was an actual discussion of power it wouldn't sell, nor would anyone seeking to understand the power in a more serious way be naive and childish enough to think that a trash TV show would just 'give it way for free, because they're nice guys and gals", without any "catch" or something... like Mephisto to Faust...
But hey, some people believe spam emails sent to them by "Nigerian princes" as a well, so I suppose there really are people dumb, ugly, and naive enough to believe a trash TV show is actually a "how-to" guide, lmao — IvoryBlackBishop
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For what it's worth, I was trying to be a little sardonic to prove a point, maybe I overdid and got too personal, I apologise. — IvoryBlackBishop
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