
I think it's trying to tell me to cover it in jam and spunk in its eye.
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 20:52, archived)

You've accidentally been sent the Voynich Manuscript instead of a camera manual, AICMFP.
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 21:07, archived)

Waco: The Rules of Engagement (1994), The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996) and Norbit (2007)
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 21:46, archived)

I just watched Ali vs Richard Dunn, then I watched the news of Hoshoryu's yokozuna promotion, yay! Might watch some radical feminist video essays and maybe a transexual friendly engineering disaster slide show later.
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 22:10, archived)

Norbit (the everyday man) meets his future wife as a child - she defends him from bullies (other countries, and later communism) and he reluctantly becomes her boyfriend (founding and expanding the union).
Fast forward a few years and Norbit is abused by his overbearing and over-controlling wife (the government), who verbally and physically abuses him (too many laws, privacy intrusion) and goes as far as to rape him (taxes) and lock him in her basement (prison) when he tries to leave (resists the government)
The scene where Norbit's wife Rasputia slides down the waterslide at the waterpark, starting out as mildly humorous to the watching public, quickly followed by screams of fear as they realise the true consequences of her actions could represent how some "good-intentioned" overbearing laws may seem good at first to the public, but in practice cause problems, or how when governments start making new laws it initiates a slippery slope that leads to communism as more and more restrictive laws are introduced.
During the film, he is terrorised by her brothers, Big Black Jack, Blue, and Earl, working as a bookkeeper at their construction company. This is undoubtedly yet another reference to taxes, as Norbit, a man managing finances, is bullied by relations of the government (who represent the IRS)
Norbit's wannabe girlfriend, the one he really pines for, is a reference to a proposed libertarian confederacy (not like the former US confederacy), where states and the citizens inhabiting them would have more freedom, or a reference to the sovereign citizen movement.
No idea what a transsexual friendly engineering disaster slide show is though.
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 22:39, archived)

www.youtube.com/channel/UCPxHg4192hLDpTI2w7F9rPg
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 23:03, archived)

Do you have a secret, brb?
( , Tue 28 Jan 2025, 23:09, archived)