• Moghul@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    “I see now that the circumstances of one’s birth are irrelevant. It is what you do with the gift of life that determines who you are.” - Mewtwo

  • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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    11 months ago

    “Animals don’t behave like men,’ he said. ‘If they have to fight, they fight; and if they have to kill they kill. But they don’t sit down and set their wits to work to devise ways of spoiling other creatures’ lives and hurting them. They have dignity and animality.” ― Richard Adams, Watership Down

    That book does a really good job of presenting just how shitty humans are pretty much throughout, without coming across as being preachy or sanctimonious, and I like that.

    • xkforce@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Meanwhile:

      Cats: torture their prey to death as a form of play.

      Dolphins: you dont want to know.

      If a person did half the stuff animals do, no one could look at them the same again.

      People do some awful things but we are also probably the only species that has members that sympathise with other species above ourselves.

      • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        I once walked past like 20 ducks tearing apart one female to rape her. I’ll never feel bad eating meat.

      • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Exactly what defines us is the sitting down and setting our wits to something.

        Sometimes it’s horror, sometimes it’s greatness.

        But everytime it’s more prominent than anything other animals can do.

        Because wits is the trait that succeed in evolution, it’s the trait that gives you more agency.

      • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        we are also probably the only species that has members that sympathise with other species above ourselves

        I don’t buy that for a second, and neither would you if you’ve ever had a beloved pet. These little furry guys treat you like their bff, I can honestly see why some humans refer to them as fur babies.

        And it’s not just cats, dogs, and crows. If you know where to look (shoutouts to the BigBoye subreddit, for example), you can find evidence of all sorts of animal species befriending humans or other species outside their own.

      • JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        So much of that is dead wrong:

        Cats: torture their prey to death as a form of play.

        “Play” isn’t just an idle pursuit. It’s also a form of safe practice of one’s life pursuit. In the case of cats, they evolved to be almost 100% carnivores, so it’s natural for them to live, breath, and yes practice / play at honing their pursuit and kill skills. It is literally their fundamental job that separates them from dying off.

        Dolphins: you dont want to know.

        Let’s not forget two things here: 1) much of the rapey stuff (as with ducks) also serves the fundamental life model of reproduction being one of the highest natural priorities, however its accomplished; 2) dolphins are hella smart, just like us, and if anything, it goes to show that smart species with idle time can devise some pretty wild pastimes.

        If a person did half the stuff animals do, no one could look at them the same again.

        To compare the lifestyles of a single animal species (humans) with all the others is a fool’s mission. In fact, most animals live fairly predictable, innocuous lives. They have their classic interactions with the world and don’t tend to bother other species-- mainly because it’s not worth their time.

        People do some awful things but we are also probably the only species that has members that sympathise with other species above ourselves.

        Nonsense. Pretty much all higher social / tribal animals can pretty easily sympathise / empathise with other species, such as our fellow apes, dogs, cetaceans, corvids, elephants, parrots, and even domestic cats.

        @[email protected]

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          It’s also a form of safe practice of one’s life pursuit. In the case of cats,

          much of the rapey stuff (as with ducks) also serves the fundamental life model of reproduction

          That doesn’t refute the poster above. Humans have evolutionary imperatives too.

          They have their classic interactions with the world and don’t tend to bother other species-- mainly because it’s not worth their time.

          That’s not nobility as the original Watership quote implies but a simple lack of capacity to conceive and implement evil. The original quote could equally wax poetic about how rocks don’t try to spoil other creatures lives.

          I agree that animals can also sympathize with other species. Intelligence is a spectrum.

          • JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            That doesn’t refute the poster above. Humans have evolutionary imperatives too.

            It does when you put it in context, tho, that being that the poster above did not refute Adams’ point in any meaningful way. Specifically-- rape isn’t ordinary in terms of two-sex species, and is likely a poorer long-term survival mechanism compared to courtship species.

            That’s not nobility as the original Watership quote implies but a simple lack of capacity to conceive and implement evil. The original quote could equally wax poetic about how rocks don’t try to spoil other creatures lives.

            That’s not correct. Higher animals certainly possess more self-awareness than rocks, and have (as you say) a spectrum of capacity for self-awareness, for reflection, and for modifying one’s behavior.

            The real point is this-- unlike all known animals, we collectively have the information available to us of how terribly our existence and practices are fueling one of the greatest extinction events in Earth history… on track with causing civilisation to collapse, likely causing most of humanity to soon die out, if not go entirely extinct. We have not just that info based on the science, facts & reality, but the average mental capacity to understood and take necessary action to prevent all this. Or at least, we “had.” Instead we’ve collectively chosen to pursue our individual lives and let things sort themselves out. Well, good luck with that.

            Adams’ quote was perfectly fair IMO.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              poorer long-term survival mechanism compared to courtship species.

              Evolution doesn’t care about ideal mechanics- only good enough. Rape was common in the ancient world. Rape happens today despite the long term survival favoring long term pairs.

              Higher animals certainly possess more self-awareness than rocks

              I was relating the spectrum of intelligence. That is human is to animal as animal is to rock. I didn’t claim that animals have no awareness but that they are less than humans. So attributing nobility to what is really a lack of ability is like attributing nobility to a rock.

              A rooster would plot and murder its neighbors if it had the intelligence and opposable thumbs to make weapons.

              • JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee
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                11 months ago

                Evolution doesn’t care about ideal mechanics- only good enough. Rape was common in the ancient world. Rape happens today despite the long term survival favoring long term pairs.

                There’s certainly some facts & reality there, professor, but that still doesn’t change the fundamental point which Adams’ made, and I defended. It’s like you’re freely swinging from ‘matters of proportion’ to binary values in order to fit your argument.

                So attributing nobility to what is really a lack of ability is like attributing nobility to a rock.

                Which was a poor analogy from day one, considering the many permutations.
                Also-- that’s a pretty weird, tight-ass understanding of what Adams meant by “nobility.”
                Like, seriously…?

                A rooster would plot and murder its neighbors if it had the intelligence and opposable thumbs to make weapons.

                Okay, you win on that one-- I fear you’re exactly right there; ala chickens being such unnecessary assholes towards each other and other creatures.

                Tell you what, though-- feel free to have the last reply.
                It’s like you dance around a smidgen of a circuitous argument, but can never actually figure out what you’re actually trying to say. (or think) Good luck, you.

                • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  but that still doesn’t change the fundamental point

                  A poster pointed out that animals aren’t better than humans and will do anything they can get away with just like humans. You attempted to appeal to evolution which I refuted. The refutation means Adams is wrong. Animals are like humans because humans are animals too.

                  It’s like you dance around a smidgen of a circuitous argument

                  You insult when you’ve been proven wrong. Nice.

        • xkforce@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          People are not automatons that are obligated to no longer think a behavior is fucked up just because that behavior benefited these animals in terms of increasing the liklihood of them passing down their genes.

          As for one species empathising with another, that is a far cry from empathising more with another species than your own or being willing to sacrifice yourself for the benefit of another species. I WAS NOT saying that no species empathises with another.

          • JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            People are not automatons that are obligated to no longer think a behavior is fucked up just because that behavior benefited these animals in terms of increasing the liklihood of them passing down their genes.

            Sure, that’s fine. Label and condemn as you like.
            My point is, that’s not a relevant rebuttal to Adams’ quote, as most sexually dimorphic animals do not behave that way. I.e., females generally select their partners, and are not commonly raped. Indeed, that’s part of the whole long-term survival point-- that ‘courtship’ species have better chances for genetic diversity & fitness for their environs.

            As for one species empathising with another, that is a far cry from empathising more with another species than your own or being willing to sacrifice yourself for the benefit of another species. I WAS NOT saying that no species empathises with another.

            *shrug*
            Okay, if you say so. It sure sounded like it, but maybe I misread.

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        11 months ago

        Richard Adams wrote it based on his military time. Certain features of the book are clearly informed by his experience, like how they’re constantly talking about how fatigued or rested they are, based on the speed they’ve been traveling or working and how long they’ve been at it.

        He said he based particular characters on particular people he knew. The seagull was a big explosives guy, Bigwig was a tough-as-hell officer that he really liked working with, and so on.

          • Thassodar@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            Yeah Animorphs as a kid had a darkness that Goosebumps couldn’t touch. The first one for me was realizing that one of the party members was forever stuck as a fucking bird, and they had whole chapters of his perspective getting used to the fact that his former life is gone. That was unheard of at the time.

            • naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              11 months ago

              Tobias. Totes tragic.

              Rachel becoming a fucked up person who only knew how to live in war was also great.

              Tomorrow when the war began was another childhood fave of mine.

              I wouldn’t say that sort of stuff was unheard of. My mum gave me some super tragic books about Polish kids during the war, there was loads of stuff with like thawing dead soldiers enough to steal boots etc. My mum’s Polish so fed me a lot of grim stuff to read to help understand her parents and their experiences. Idk if you’re usaian? maybe popular stuff was a bit more sanitised because of moral majority stuff?

              • Thassodar@lemm.ee
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                11 months ago

                Yeah I’m American and we had mostly Scholastic book fairs and the school library to count on for books. Animorphs, being published under them, was heavily advertised at the fairs.

                Considering myself to be an “advanced” reader I’d stick to the young adult books, but mostly sci-fi (Dune) and fantasy (Dhampir). For 5th or 6th grade me, though, Animorphs was engaging enough until a new book came out and was constantly checked out at the library.

    • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      That kind of attitude is steeped in human supremacy. Even fucking plants do warfare. We’re not special, even in our capacity for evil.

      • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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        11 months ago

        Sure, but they don’t consciously choose to do it. Fungus doesn’t decide that it’s going to make life miserable for the plant it’s growing on, a tall shade tree doesn’t decide to starve the smaller plants beneath it of sunlight. We’re unique in our capacity to see a possible course of action, do an in-depth analysis of the effects that it will have, see every foreseeable shitty outcome, and decide, consciously, to do it anyway.

        • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          This is idealistic bullcrap. When you actually look at nature you see lots of examples of lifeforms just choosing violence for no good reason.

  • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, chapter 10 is pretty rough, particularly this stark line:

    “Slowly but surely, everybody in the house began to starve.”

    I read the book to my daughter a few years back and I’d forgotten quite how bleak things are before all the fun stuff that people remember.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      11 months ago

      Roald Dahl did not fuck around. He grew up in one of those psychopathic early-20th-century British boarding schools, and then went to Africa once he graduated, and World War 2 broke out and he fought in Egypt and Greece.

      He wrote children’s literature because kids tend to vibe with how his brain works, but he was not playing games. Read his adult short stories sometime.

      Edit: From his autobiography, from early on in his time in Africa:

      Suddenly, the voice of a man yelling in Swahili exploded into the quiet of the evening … He was yelling from somewhere behind the house. “Simba, bwana! Simba! Simba!”

      Simba is Swahili for lion. All three of us leapt to our feet, and the next moment Mdisho came tearing round the corner of the house yelling at us in Swahili. “Come quick, bwana! Come quick! Come quick! A huge lion is eating the wife of the cook!”

      That sounds pretty funny when you put it on paper back here in England, but to us, standing on a veranda in the middle of East Africa, it was not funny at all.

      Robert Sanford flew into the house and came out again in five seconds flat holding a powerful rifle and ramming a cartridge into the breech. “Get those children indoors!” he shouted to his wife as he ran down off the veranda with me behind him.

      • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Yeah, I’ve read a couple, one about a frozen leg of lamb, I remember. He was a pretty dark character, including holding some deeply offensive views.

        Talented guy when he was focusing his work though - there was a great anthology TV series in the UK called Tales of the Unexpected, some episodes of which I think were based on his more adult writing (including the leg of lamb one).

        • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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          11 months ago

          Are you gonna try to tell me the oompa-loompas weren’t so much happier moving to England and working in the factory instead of being in their home

          But listen to them singing their working-songs

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          11 months ago

          Holy hell, dude… I’m looking over the list now and just reading plot synopses is getting me unsettled.

          Honestly I think the two autobiographical books, “Boy” and “Going Solo” are probably better than the short stories unless you’re in a pretty twisted mood. If you’re in for the darker material, a random selection of short stories I liked:

          • “Mr. Feasey” is a very mild one that still has the Roald Dahl dark energy about it.
          • “Pig” is a deeply unsettling one.
          • “They Shall Not Grow Old” is haunting but quite good.
          • “Man From The South” is a fairly famous one that’s also very dark and unsettling.
          • Pantherina@feddit.de
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            11 months ago

            She was a strict vegetarian and regarded the consumption of animal flesh as not only unhealthy and disgusting, but horribly cruel. She lived upon lovely clean foods like milk, butter, eggs, cheese, vegetables, nuts, herbs, and fruit and she rejoiced in the conviction that no living creature would be slaughtered on her account, not even a shrimp. Once, when a brown hen of hers passed away in the prime of life from being eggbound, Aunt Glosspan was so distressed that she nearly gave up egg-eating altogether.

            Lol

            That story is really strange though

        • BanjoShepard@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I’ll add “The Great Automatic Grammatizator.” It’s my favorite by far, but I like all of the stories in “The Umbrella Man and other stories.”

  • TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    "I like you as you are Exactly and precisely I think you turned out nicely And I like you as you are

    I like you as you are Without a doubt or question Or even a suggestion Cause I like you as you are

    I like your disposition Your facial composition And with your kind permission I’ll shout it to a star

    I like you as you are I wouldn’t want to change you Or even rearrange you Not by far

    I like you I-L-I-K-E-Y-O-U I like you, yes I do I like you, Y-O-U I like you, like you as you are"

    • Mr. Rogers
    • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      There’s so many good Mr. Rogers quotes. What a wholesome human. I’m sad I wasn’t around to witness the height of his cultural relevance, but the beauty of him and his teachings were their timelessness. May his work be immortalized.

      PBS had so many kind, gentle people working to remind us that there is love, kindness and hope in the world if we just take time to make room for it.

    • bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin. It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming downstairs, but sometimes he feels that there really is another way, if only he could stop bumping for a moment and think of it.

      I think that this captures so much of the human condition.

  • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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    11 months ago

    “If the world chooses to become my enemy… Then I will fight. Like I always have.”,

    Shadow, Sonic 06

    Ozai: (bitterly) It was to teach you respect.

    Zuko: It was cruel! And it was wrong.

    Ozai: Then you have learned nothing.

    Zuko: No, I’ve learned everything! And I had to learn it on my own.

    Avatar: the Last Airbender

    “They say suffering brings wisdom. If that is the case, then I intend to make you very wise.”

    Optimus Prime, Transformers Comics

  • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    “Man, don’t you know? The law ain’t made to help earthy cats like us. Here on our planet, back in the old days - back in the real old days - it was just every man for himself, scrooblin’ and scrat-scroblin’ for the good stuff, the greenest valleys. And the strongest, meanest men got the best stuff. They got the green valleys and were like ‘The rest of you, y’all scrats get sand.’ And that’s when they made the laws, you see? Once the strong guys got it how they liked it, they said ‘This is fair now, this is the law.’ Once they were winning, they changed the rules up.” —Jake the Dog, Adventure Time, “Ocarina”

  • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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    11 months ago

    Pretty much the entirety of the Animorphs book series, but I guess there was a reason for it. But for some kids books, holy hell.

    “See, win or lose, right or wrong, the memory of violence sits inside your head. It sits there, like some lump you can’t quite swallow. It sits there, a black hole that darkens hope, and eats away at everyday happiness like a cancer. It’s the shadow you take into your own heart and try to live with.”

    • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Man if they tried to put that in a Dark Knight comic the editor would probably want them to tone it down

      • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        11 months ago

        Probably so. That’s a great little quote from the books, but the stories and descriptions and gruesome torture and trauma and death and moral delimas and specicide in those books are just crazy.

        If it wasn’t sex or rape, it was on the table.

  • agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Avatar Legend of Kora, Varick says:

    ‘If you can’t make money during a war, you just flat-out cannot make money.’

  • xkforce@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    The land before time. Littlefoot sees his shadow and thinks its his mother, realizes its not and that hes very very alone.

  • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    “Death is only the beginning” - Imhotep’s last line in The Mummy.

    A man that has been dead for a couple millenia and is about to return to death utters these ominous words. Yes, it’s probably just to leave the story open for a sequel, but the metaphysical implications are terrifying. He knows what it’s like, and he’s claiming that so much more comes after, but we’re just left with a vague notion of what it could be. What could this mean? Is there sunshine and rainbows? Eternal torture? An endless void? An infinite realm of possibilities has just opened up for us, the audience.

    But there’s no time for that shit, there’s gold and Benny’s a greedy sack of shit, the temple’s crumbling, and once they escape there’s a celebration and denoument to be had! We’ve all but forgotten that threat—or promise, as the case may be.

    One of the best ways I have ever seen writers leave the door ajar for a sequel. There’s no hand pushing up through the rubble, no sinister laugh as the screen fades to black, no “did anyone remember to check that he died for sure?” no cheesy gimmicks. Just an ominous vaguery, that may be about hinting at another installment, but still works by itself as a raw line that goes hard af.