Re: I'll talk about a bunch of things here
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2025 1:54 am
https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Lilith ... _Sherwood)
If someone commits, even if ordered to commit, some unprecedented atrocity, shouldn't they be executed in a way that would make future people hesitate if they are asked to do anything similar? Maybe they might investigate themselves a bit more, asking for more information, but instead, nothing happened to any of these monstrous criminals, the ones ordering the crimes, the ones acting on those orders, and the ones making the weapons that do this to hunan beings, civilians of all ages, animals, and other wildlife and organisms like plants, poisoning the air, water, crops. Similar crimes poisoning people are underway right now, and most people expect no justice and welcome into their countries the soldiers who have commited crimes similar to the worst German and Japanese war criminals.
Added in 3 minutes 2 seconds:
All this is because of the title, "New Here".
I'm meditating on this very disturbing piece of media that is much maligned but made so many changes and pushed so many things, including yucky digital video filming technology which didn't look very nice at the time and very heavy bluescreen/greenscreen cgi stuff, all of which was new. It tormented people with retconning, it overdid it with everything, multiplying things like crazy and taking away specialness from Stormtroopers, Jedi, and Boba Fett, among other things, and introduced lots of annoying things. Apparently the critics were bribed or made it clear to a new generation how wrong they were by rating it higher than Episode 1 which was better in multiple ways, even though people were extremely disappointed with that.
Amazingly, the story seems to sort of be coming through now, 20 years later, with robot armies and talk of training children on A.I. and farming babies like clones and whatever else, like that most hated film series at the time it came out ended up being prophetic, more so than the much loved original trilogy which didn't really predict anything unless they blow up Alderaan (Iran). All the stories from Star Wars are pretty nightmarish and horrible, and for such a large playground, it largely seems focused on all sorts of misery, and it is a horrible "Galaxy" to be part of, so I'm glad that it is Far Away, except it isn't at all, and was always about here, things that had already happened, and were to come, but really I hope that at least such or delayed or completely derailed. I'm afraid if art is making things head in the wrong direction and even giving maniacs ideas.
That was the original stuff that the whole of Star Wars and the Clone Wars idea was originally coming out from, and it was focused on an extremely surveillance heavy world of authoritarian domination and complete control, making people feel trapped even within vast spaces, which exist in all the early Science Fiction films of George Lucas.
The character that stood out the most for people had been one of the most unique seeming, Boba Fett, who seemed to be operating outside of the rules while still profiting from the existing systems.
A character invented much later is named Montross, and may be even more like what people had been imagining Boba Fett may have been like, and was inspired by this character:
https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Leonard_Smalls
These aren't meant to be as random as they might seem, but each is about how they keep renewing an idea repeatedly. Boba Fett's early concept was based on Clint Eastwood's "The Man With No Name" character from "The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly" Spaghetti Western series, and the Spaghetti Westerns were trying to renew the older Western films after they had fallen out of fashion over tkme in the United States Of America, which had also been their original setting. It took those out of that setting, filming them in other places by cultures unfamiliar with much of the makeup behind those films, instead with different background references informing their ideas.
Later, the same pattern was followed with the short on words character of Darth Maul, who then had another version of him created in later stories named Savage Opress, voiced by the same actor who voiced Montross, and Opress and Montross are similar names also, plus Montross was likely trying to make the name close to Monstrous, and they just went right ahead with the name "Savage". The characters are aldo ideologically similar, where they try to humanize and make more heroic or anti-heroic Jango Fett and Boba Fett, and then need to make the new version that opposes them to be more "chaotic", unpredictable, and further beyond the rules and systems or ways in which they might be controlled or manipulated, like with money ir something. People who can't be bought in some way are represented as the most dangerous of all, but to who really? That tells you how ingrained trying to represent the maintenance of the status quo or repeated power structures and hierarchies are, even during periods where one might not have imagined similar influence was in play.
https://i.postimg.cc/RFy4jn5L/1000146250.png
They did this with Obi-Wan Kenobi also, years earlier:
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Joruus_C%27baoth
Then again with Taron Malicos:
https://www.reddit.com/r/StarWars/s/yOXy2LJmCH
With a similar sequence as with the duplications and creations that led to the character Savage Opress, even connected to the same planet, Dathomir.
It is like they have some notes and ideas in some books and films and just keep repeating them in different ways and for different reasons because a certain character can't be distirted or changed in those ways, so they have to find other ways to do it with a clone, sometimes literally, of the character.
Weirdly, Mark Hamill seems to look like Emperor Palpatine.
Star Wars has to be the most culturally relevant and influential film series and franchise in human history so far.
It was once New and even called "A New Hope".
https://biblehub.com/luke/9-25.htm
This has connections to the constantly "New" idea:
I may move all 2026 posts in threads other than mine to my threads, with a preference for the frequently used ones, or to use them to aldo put into circulation others that I've made, so long as the posts seem to fit well enough in those, but for the sake of preserving the archive, I'll likely leave posts from 2017 alone, unless I notice something that might get me in trouble or something if connected to me or other projects in some way, in this age of 1984 style children making constant gotcha accusations.
If someone commits, even if ordered to commit, some unprecedented atrocity, shouldn't they be executed in a way that would make future people hesitate if they are asked to do anything similar? Maybe they might investigate themselves a bit more, asking for more information, but instead, nothing happened to any of these monstrous criminals, the ones ordering the crimes, the ones acting on those orders, and the ones making the weapons that do this to hunan beings, civilians of all ages, animals, and other wildlife and organisms like plants, poisoning the air, water, crops. Similar crimes poisoning people are underway right now, and most people expect no justice and welcome into their countries the soldiers who have commited crimes similar to the worst German and Japanese war criminals.
Added in 3 minutes 2 seconds:
All this is because of the title, "New Here".
I'm meditating on this very disturbing piece of media that is much maligned but made so many changes and pushed so many things, including yucky digital video filming technology which didn't look very nice at the time and very heavy bluescreen/greenscreen cgi stuff, all of which was new. It tormented people with retconning, it overdid it with everything, multiplying things like crazy and taking away specialness from Stormtroopers, Jedi, and Boba Fett, among other things, and introduced lots of annoying things. Apparently the critics were bribed or made it clear to a new generation how wrong they were by rating it higher than Episode 1 which was better in multiple ways, even though people were extremely disappointed with that.
Amazingly, the story seems to sort of be coming through now, 20 years later, with robot armies and talk of training children on A.I. and farming babies like clones and whatever else, like that most hated film series at the time it came out ended up being prophetic, more so than the much loved original trilogy which didn't really predict anything unless they blow up Alderaan (Iran). All the stories from Star Wars are pretty nightmarish and horrible, and for such a large playground, it largely seems focused on all sorts of misery, and it is a horrible "Galaxy" to be part of, so I'm glad that it is Far Away, except it isn't at all, and was always about here, things that had already happened, and were to come, but really I hope that at least such or delayed or completely derailed. I'm afraid if art is making things head in the wrong direction and even giving maniacs ideas.
That was the original stuff that the whole of Star Wars and the Clone Wars idea was originally coming out from, and it was focused on an extremely surveillance heavy world of authoritarian domination and complete control, making people feel trapped even within vast spaces, which exist in all the early Science Fiction films of George Lucas.
The character that stood out the most for people had been one of the most unique seeming, Boba Fett, who seemed to be operating outside of the rules while still profiting from the existing systems.
A character invented much later is named Montross, and may be even more like what people had been imagining Boba Fett may have been like, and was inspired by this character:
https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Leonard_Smalls
These aren't meant to be as random as they might seem, but each is about how they keep renewing an idea repeatedly. Boba Fett's early concept was based on Clint Eastwood's "The Man With No Name" character from "The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly" Spaghetti Western series, and the Spaghetti Westerns were trying to renew the older Western films after they had fallen out of fashion over tkme in the United States Of America, which had also been their original setting. It took those out of that setting, filming them in other places by cultures unfamiliar with much of the makeup behind those films, instead with different background references informing their ideas.
Later, the same pattern was followed with the short on words character of Darth Maul, who then had another version of him created in later stories named Savage Opress, voiced by the same actor who voiced Montross, and Opress and Montross are similar names also, plus Montross was likely trying to make the name close to Monstrous, and they just went right ahead with the name "Savage". The characters are aldo ideologically similar, where they try to humanize and make more heroic or anti-heroic Jango Fett and Boba Fett, and then need to make the new version that opposes them to be more "chaotic", unpredictable, and further beyond the rules and systems or ways in which they might be controlled or manipulated, like with money ir something. People who can't be bought in some way are represented as the most dangerous of all, but to who really? That tells you how ingrained trying to represent the maintenance of the status quo or repeated power structures and hierarchies are, even during periods where one might not have imagined similar influence was in play.
https://i.postimg.cc/RFy4jn5L/1000146250.png
They did this with Obi-Wan Kenobi also, years earlier:
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Joruus_C%27baoth
Then again with Taron Malicos:
https://www.reddit.com/r/StarWars/s/yOXy2LJmCH
With a similar sequence as with the duplications and creations that led to the character Savage Opress, even connected to the same planet, Dathomir.
It is like they have some notes and ideas in some books and films and just keep repeating them in different ways and for different reasons because a certain character can't be distirted or changed in those ways, so they have to find other ways to do it with a clone, sometimes literally, of the character.
Weirdly, Mark Hamill seems to look like Emperor Palpatine.
Star Wars has to be the most culturally relevant and influential film series and franchise in human history so far.
It was once New and even called "A New Hope".
https://biblehub.com/luke/9-25.htm
This has connections to the constantly "New" idea:
I may move all 2026 posts in threads other than mine to my threads, with a preference for the frequently used ones, or to use them to aldo put into circulation others that I've made, so long as the posts seem to fit well enough in those, but for the sake of preserving the archive, I'll likely leave posts from 2017 alone, unless I notice something that might get me in trouble or something if connected to me or other projects in some way, in this age of 1984 style children making constant gotcha accusations.