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August 18th, 2016 | #781 |
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I read Linder's part and I liked it very much. He went straight to the point. Love how he attacked the conservative koshers.
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August 18th, 2016 | #782 |
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Will start reading:
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August 22nd, 2016 | #783 |
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Haven't read these forgotten classics yet...
but plan to:
- Machiavelli's The Prancing Prince: A "flamboyant" heir oversees the construction of Renaissance Italy's first public bathhouses. - Sir Walter Scott's Ivan's Ho: A stiletto-heeled hooker on the streets of London turns tricks "knightly." - Boccaccio's The Polaroid Decameron: Yeah, you can take "those" kind of pictures with it. - Cervantes' Donkey Hotey: About the wild adventures of a Tijuana showgirl and, well, you know... - Evelyn Waugh's Maidenhead Revisited: Hey, wait a minute...that's impossible! - Daniel Defoe's Doll Flanders: Chester the Molester gets busted in a XXX theatre doing the nasty with his inflatable "date"; Pee Wee Herman ducks out in the nick of time. - Flaubert's Madame's Ovaries: French housewife misses visit from her "monthly friend"; has some serious explaining to do to her impotent husband. - Dickens' The Old Perversity Shop: Adult toy store is raided; town's mayor caught with pants down; already handcuffed when police arrive. - E.M. Forster's A Room with Mirrored Ceilings: The naughty goings-on between Kim Kardashian, a parrot, and a pair of midget wrestlers in the No-Tell motel. - Steinbeck's Of Gerbils and Men: Two itinerant farm laborers do more than just bale hay and feed the chickens, lemme tell ya. - Sylvia Plath's The Ball Jar: Indispensable for the frustrated feminist wondering just what to do with "them" after they've been attacked, hacked, and removed from the sack. Both book and jar make a great coffee table conversation piece. - John Updike's Rabbit Fun: Easter Bunny is in for one helluva surprise as the tables are turned on the nose-twitching little fucker when Bi-Curious George attempts to unwrap his basket and see what he's packing. - Wilkie Collins' The Moon-boned: On a "scared straight" visit to a maximum security prison two adolescent males decide to moon the inmates. As the book's title might suggest, it wasn't such a bright idea after all.
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Wit' jews ya lose; wit' rope deah's hope. - Bugs Last edited by Matthaus Hetzenauer; August 22nd, 2016 at 11:33 AM. |
August 22nd, 2016 | #784 | ||
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August 24th, 2016 | #786 |
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George Orwell - "Literature and Totalitarianism" - http://orwell.ru/library/articles/to.../english/e_lat
I think that grow shallow and readers and writers. "Our technology skills directs us on a short and simple texts with one clear value. Literature produces complex texts. .......... We must understand that a thoughtful reading of complex texts is a skill that very soon will be available for very few people." Director of the State Literature Museum - Dmitry Bak - http://www.vesti.ru/doc.html?id=2703441 |
August 24th, 2016 | #787 |
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And your reason for saying so?
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August 24th, 2016 | #788 |
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I read texts in Russian more than 30 years. During this time I developed the taste for Russian language. This fact allows me to have the own opinion about the Russian writers without recourse to the opinion of experts. I believe that Solzhenitsyn wrote on the level very distant from the outstanding. I think that Solzhenitsyn praised for political reasons, rather than for his talents. I do not think my opinion the only correct one, and so, in turn, would like to know: Why Solzhenitsyn should be considered genius? |
August 25th, 2016 | #789 |
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Юрий Авербах - "Что надо знать об эндшпиле".
(Translation: Something that you should know about the endgame). Perhaps that in English it is called - "Chess Endings: Essential Knowledge". "Yuri Lvovich Averbakh (Russian: Ю́рий Льво́вич Аверба́х; born February 8, 1922) is a Soviet and Russian chess player and author. As of 2016, he is the oldest living chess grandmaster. He was born in Kaluga, Russia. He was chairman of the USSR Chess Federation from 1973 to 1978. His first major success was first place in the Moscow Championship of 1949, ahead of players including Andor Lilienthal, Yakov Estrin and Vladimir Simagin. He became an International Grandmaster in 1952. In 1954 he won the USSR Chess Championship ahead of players including Mark Taimanov, Viktor Korchnoi, Tigran Petrosian, Efim Geller and Salo Flohr. In the 1956 Championship he came equal first with Taimanov and Boris Spassky in the main event, finishing second after the playoff. Averbakh's other major tournament victories included Vienna 1961 and Moscow 1962. He qualified for the 1953 Candidates' Tournament (the last stage to determine the challenger to the World Chess Champion), finishing joint tenth of the fifteen participants. He also qualified for the 1958 Interzonal at Portorož, by finishing in fourth place at the 1958 USSR Championship at Riga. At Portorož, he wound up in a tie for seventh through eleventh places, half a point short of advancing to the Candidates' Tournament." Text by Wikipedia. By the way, my paternal grandfather claimed that he taught him to play chess in their childhood. But in Averbakh's memories I haven't found anything about it. |
August 25th, 2016 | #790 | |
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This one man let the world in on the true nature of the crimes and atrocities that occurred during the Stalinist era: almost single-handedly he opened the books on the horrors that transpired in the gulags and the millions who died in these forced labor camps; he elaborated in detail Uncle Joe's purges and show trials of the 1930s; he brought into an even clearer light the terrors inflicted on virtually the entire civilian population by the state's ultra-paranoid security systems, the fear of that dreaded knock on the door in the wee hours of the morning; he told of the forced famine in the Ukraine, the purpose of which was to eliminate those there seeking independence; and the list goes on and on. In fact, as you probably know, AS did such a fine job of exposing Stalin's crimes that Khrushchev himself used the book to put the final nail into the coffin of Stalin's cult of personality. But it wasn't just the nonfictional Gulag books that deserve such high praise. His sociopolitical novels One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (this being the very first account of prison camps published in the USSR) and Cancer Ward both had an enormous impact on how the USSR's past is viewed by the world today. 'nuff said?
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Wit' jews ya lose; wit' rope deah's hope. - Bugs |
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August 27th, 2016 | #791 | ||||||
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But if you wish to hear from me the complete definition of Solzhenitsyn, then here it is: Solzhenitsyn was the literary section of Western propaganda specifically against the Soviet Union and more generally against communism in general. Quote:
Your definition alludes to the fact that he was a genius. The best writer of the year can not be a genius possible, but the best writer of the century, who bypassed tens of thousands of other writers, simply must be a genius. Quote:
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The ideological work was carried out by him and as resulted of it 'how the USSR's past is viewed by the world today'. Quote:
Last edited by Alex Him; August 27th, 2016 at 05:28 AM. |
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August 27th, 2016 | #792 |
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Удо Ульфкотте - "ПРОДАЖНЫЕ ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ любая правда за ваши деньги"
"Udo Ulfkotte (born 20 January 1960) is a German journalist. He was formerly an assistant editor for the German main daily newspaper, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ). Ulfkotte studied jurisprudence and politics at Freiburg and London. Between 1986 and 1998 Ulfkotte lived predominantly in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Jordan. According to Ulfkotte, the CIA and German intelligence (BND) bribe journalists in Germany to write pro-NATO propaganda articles, and it is well understood that one may lose their media job if they fail to comply with the pro-Western agenda. In 2014, Ulfkotte published Bought Journalists ("Gekaufte Journalisten"), in which he claims that the CIA and other secret services pay money to journalists to report a particular story in a certain light." Text by Wikipedia. As described above the book shows how some German journalists are sold to large corporations (ThyssenKrupp), billionaire from Oman (Sultan Qaboos), NATO, US and etc. I knew this before about the "democratic" media. However it's interesting for me to know how it works on the particular country. |
August 27th, 2016 | #793 | |
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Now we're splitting hairs with the definitions of "brilliant" and "genius". Being brilliant doesn't necessarily imply that a man is a genius, not in my book anyway; I see the latter as one step above the former. Wrong; at least half wrong anyway. You may not pay attention to how strongly AS is promoted in the West -- this being understandable considering the fact that you are Russian -- but to the people of the USSR's main adversary during the Cold War, Americans, most of the well-read in the history of such affairs do indeed pay attention. And no, I don't wonder "why Khrushchev had to fight with dead Stalin." If NK had tried to fight him while alive he himself would've wound up on a slab, wouldn't he? -- the man wasn't stupid. AS's revelations simply armed NK with the ammo needed to spit on the grave and memory of that mass-murdering sonofabitch. And lastly, no, I don't believe for a minute that NK was so fond of the truth; only in the instance of Stalin I don't believe he was bullshitting at all.
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Wit' jews ya lose; wit' rope deah's hope. - Bugs Last edited by Matthaus Hetzenauer; August 27th, 2016 at 10:23 AM. |
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August 28th, 2016 | #794 | |
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You have expressed your opinion, and I expressed my point of view. I know English isn't too good. Therefore, I can not discuss the complex and delicate things in this language. Excuse me. |
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August 29th, 2016 | #795 | |
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btw -- No need to apologize for your English as my Russian isn't exactly up to par. (Actually, I'm bullshitting: English is my only language; I can't speak/write a lick of any other. Typical dumbass American, eh? )
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August 29th, 2016 | #796 |
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A little more than halfway through Durant's The Story of Civilization: The Age of Faith, and the man's still batting a thousand here. I give it a four -- out of a possible four -- star rating.
I ordered Spengler's Decline of the West from my local library a little over a week ago. It's en route from somewhere out of state (don't know what part of the country exactly) and hopefully it'll be here any day. I've been meaning to read this bad boy for years now, and finally I'm getting around to doing just that.
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Wit' jews ya lose; wit' rope deah's hope. - Bugs Last edited by Matthaus Hetzenauer; August 29th, 2016 at 10:28 AM. |
August 29th, 2016 | #797 | |
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If you know very well only the mother tongue, it already is a great achievement. For many years, I have a dream to know well the Russian. So far, this dream has not been fulfilled by me. And when I learn other languages, it allows me to notice some peculiarities and properties of my mother tongue. I can not get this knowledge just by studying my mother tongue. For example, there is no the articles like a(an)/the in the Russian |
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September 3rd, 2016 | #798 | |
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September 4th, 2016 | #799 | ||
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Haynes Ford Ranger Pickup repair manual.
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September 5th, 2016 | #800 | |
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I really should read this someday. I enjoyed The Fame of a Dead Man's deeds, but somehow haven't got around to reading this one.
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