Thursday, August 17, 2006

elementary behaviour

Suicide is Murder - Meaning that the ultimate form of a rule of fear is to make it illegal to kill yourself. Attempted suicide is attempted murder of the first degree, and thus falls apart the regime. (lol try to take away their right to kill themselves and see where that gets you. Helmet laws.)

Murder is Suicide - Meaning that our growth on all levels increases with our numbers, ie that 100% indpendency from one another is also detrimental to our overall growth. (Having other people around is a bonus as much as it can be a consequence. Killing people for no reason is just a waste. Too many people can be a problem if they are all fighting eachother. Witha little working together we can just make ourselves immortal, or at least regenerateabley immortal, and then killing eachother will lose its point, and thus its power. It'll just make more dangerous things fun! Hooray! Coliseum Deluxe! Everyone gets to play god and theres no worry of every dying. take away peoples largest fear, and what do they do then?)

I'd like to see that. You can bet i'm gonna do it.

...

"You're trying to say he uses fear as a weapon?" - The Capitalist

"Not only does he weild it, but he understands it! That's what makes him so dangerous, so invincible. Gentleman! The time is now! We must harness him or destroy him! Which shall it be?!" - The Pope

(The capitalist doesn't use fear as a weapon, he just fucks with people. He's rich, he doesn't need to impose fear as a weapon like The General or the Pope, he just buys what he wants. He's kind of detatched from reality when compared to the other two. But he has no real aims of his own, other than to get richer, so his ferocious power is so gross as to be sluggish and its speed depends on his technology. Being uncreative himself, he can only try and play the market of the people that make up his power, his slavestock.

The general and the pope, on the other hand, know very much the power of fear over a man, the general more of fear of mortality and the pope fear of damnnation. But the general only understands the mortal fears, and understands that there are some without fear, but that they still die. The pope thinks that mental/spiritual fears are the most powerful, more than physical fears, and thinks that any man without fear is a poison, and can be killed. The pope doesn't know how to question, unlike the other two. And the general is afraid of being damned, but is confident in his physical strength as a winning strategy. The capitalist partying all the time, obviously not caring about religion but not wanting to get beat up, and the pope being afraid of only power greater than his own, thus the unknown, and sparking a lust to attain ever more power to somehow squash the fear.)

There, villains. poof. Now you want to read about the hero, i presume.

well i'll save him for later. Heroes, rather. As i like to think about it. (Mutual heroes. Only a hero for the other person, in a sense. With hero-splash on bystanders.)

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

the capitalist can institute fear of not gaining money in people-- the idea that total failure in life is because of no monetary successes, and the fear that money is necessary to one's life by removing the people from the old ways of self dependence and reliance... to make them dependent on his system, he makes them fat, dumb, and happy (and LAZY), by he convincing people that his way is the convenient way, the right way, the best way, and the ONLY way, and makes them covet things they don't really want or even need...

Deadpool said...

deer anonymoose:

actually, the capitalist uses all other fears, besides might and the unknown, he's more utilitarian, but he doesn't do it out of lust for power like the pope or out of control issues like the general. he just does it because it feels GOOD to do it, he does it for personal reasons of the flesh, cuz he's a sick bastard.

weeeee!