B
Buster Bluth
Guest
100% agreeThat is just an incredibly ignorant and offensive viewpoint.
100% agreeThat is just an incredibly ignorant and offensive viewpoint.
Not that it's time to knock the man, and he was a genius, but Robin Williams was one of the biggest buyers of jokes in comedy. He'd go to a show, see a joke he thought fit him, and buy it from the guy.
Many people do that and just steal it, but Williams helped many young comics out financially.
Just saying, a lot of his stand up wasn't his per se.
I totally agree. I'm just saying that Robin Williams was known for being one of the biggest purchasers of jokes. I'd probably argue that delivery is more than 50% of it anyway.There's a lot of guys that this applies to. IMO a good comic is 50% quality of jokes, and 50% delivery of them. That's why there are way more writers than comics. If anybody could do what the "faces" can on stage, it wouldn't be such a small pool that comprises them. For every Louis CK (100% self written), there's 50 Dane Cooks (steal/buy jokes).
you can DEFINITELY tell in the "fart" scene, Matt Damon's reaction is way too "real".
"Suicide contradicts the natural inclination of the human being to preserve and perpetuate his life. It is gravely contrary to the just love of self. It likewise offends love of neighbor because it unjustly breaks the ties of solidarity with family, nation, and other human societies to which we continue to have obligations. Suicide is contrary to love for the living God."
- Catechism of the Catholic Church
That is just an incredibly ignorant and offensive viewpoint.
That's stupid.
100% agree
So you guys disagree with the catholic church or with tussin?
Well, it's not like it would be the first time the Catholic Church has been wrong....
I don't recall saying that. I am not even Catholic. I just was asking.
Well, it's not like it would be the first time the Catholic Church has been wrong....
So you guys disagree with the catholic church or with tussin?
Suicide is a decision made out of desperation, hopelessness, isolation and loneliness. The black hole that is clinical depression is all-consuming. Feeling like a burden to loved ones, feeling like there is no way out, feeling trapped and feeling isolated are all common among people who suffer from depression.
People who say that suicide is selfish always reference the survivors. It's selfish to leave children, spouses and other family members behind, so they say. They're not thinking about the survivors, or so they would have us believe. What they don't know is that those very loved ones are the reason many people hang on for just one more day. They do think about the survivors, probably up until the very last moment in many cases. But the soul-crushing depression that envelops them leaves them feeling like there is no alternative. Like the only way to get out is to opt out. And that is a devastating thought to endure.
Until you've stared down that level of depression, until you've lost your soul to a sea of emptiness and darkness... you don't get to make those judgments. You might not understand it, and you are certainly entitled to your own feelings, but making those judgments and spreading that kind of negativity won't help the next person. In fact, it will only hurt others.
So...
Where are the tributes and accolades for one of the greatest actress in history, Lauren Bacall?
So...
Where are the tributes and accolades for one of the greatest actress in history, Lauren Bacall?
You kidding me? Better go start the Big Sleep.
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@Tussin: The ease with which you say that he "had choices" and "took the easy way out" betrays a dangerously oversimplified understanding of the mental disease, i.e. depression, and the effect it has on the decision-making and thought-processing of the human mind. To be sure, it is not as if he had no choices at all and that this result was entirely inevitable, but the idea that you are forwarding assumes that you are dealing with a fully healthy and correctly-wired mind. If that assumption were true, the hurling of words like "coward" and "selfish" might stand, even if it lacks empathy; as the assumption is not, your words not only lacks that empathy, they also fail in soundness.
@Those giddily tossing around the Catechism like a stawman: The Church would probably also consider the will of the person committing the act. If a healthy-minded person were to choose with their full volition to take their own life, the quoted paragraph from the Catechism would likely be fully applicable. Query the likelihood a healthy-minded and otherwise healthy person would voluntarily take their lives, but that isn't really within the scope of the current discussion. If, in contrast, a person who is not mentally in full health, what can we say about that person's volition? And if the passage quoted from the Catechism is directed toward fully volitional acts, to what extent does it apply to the situation of those whose volition is impaired?