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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Cave Painter Join Date: Mar 2011 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 940
| "Did that thing really sink?" "Those who cannot remember history are destined to repeat it," right? Thought the Titanic Disaster Was Just a Movie That's right, and WAR OF THE WORLDS and GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK were real history, too. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Tonari no Totoro | Re: "Did that thing really sink?" "There goes my last drop of hope for humanity, wasted forever, like the oxygen these people breathe." This one sentence of his sums up my entire view on the human race in general. ![]() How idiotic can someone get? Next they'll be asking if the United States Civil War was real or just an idea to have popped into someone's head for movies. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Shropshire
Posts: 4,147
| Re: "Did that thing really sink?" For a lot of people, life consists of 'being entertained'. Everything they see and hear is entertainment. Not for one second do they imagine that some of that entertainment is based on fact. On the other side of the coin I used to work with two fairly 'intelligent' people in their mid-twenties who thought that Close Encounters was based on fact. So, I suppose, we just can't win. I suppose it comes down to education in the end. I do remember that my history classes were very boring and poorly taught. I was saved by having a good set of encyclopaedias at home. Nowadays kids have the internet and the problem with that is that the truth and the rest of the rubbish carry the same weight. |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,141
| Re: "Did that thing really sink?" A thought to cheer up the author of the article: when oxygen is breathed, it isn't destroyed, merely used in some chemical reactions to create more complex molecules; other biological processes can release molecular oxygen. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Truth. Order. Moderation. | Re: "Did that thing really sink?" I don't think it's a question of school education, mosaix, not for this particular example, since I wouldn't expect history lessons to deal with the Titanic itself. How many of us know about the Vasa, another ship which sank on its maiden voyage? Granted it didn't have the same loss of life, but it was another example of inadequate planning and poor decisions. However, the difference between the two is publicity -- and that's what this shows about the ignoramuses in the article. Film after film after film has been made of the Titanic and its events; every year something is written about it in the papers and is shown on the news, about survivors, about diving to the ship, about memorabilia, about the films themselves -- and every single piece written will have referred to the real events of 1912. These people have gone through life wholly oblivious, wholly uncurious, wrapped up in their own self-satisfied cocoon, not reading any articles anywhere, not thinking about anything except their next drink, next drug, next idiotic TV programme. That is where the ignorance arises, from their failure to read and think and wonder. /rant over |
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Cave Painter Join Date: Mar 2011 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 940
| Re: "Did that thing really sink?" Quote:
It's just amazing to find people oblivious to things like the Titanic disaster when it has become a common figure of speech (at least among English speakers). How about the 1938 WAR OF THE WORLDS broadcast? Surely everyone knows about that, and had a good laugh at all the stupid Americans... or not, because that "same" radio play has panicked audiences several times since then. In Ecuador, the radio station was burned down by an angry mob (20 people died), yet many still do not know about it. But the manipulators and power brokers noticed. They learned how many people have trouble distinguishing fact from fiction, and they learned how easy it is to sway people with a few hysterical words and some cheap photography. (UFOs? Loch Ness monster? BLAIR WITCH PROJECT? The nightly news...) Heck, the US Navy received letters during the initial run of GILLIGAN'S ISLAND wondering if they were going to do anything to rescue those poor people. | |
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