In The News

Started by DoomRulz, Nov 30, 2012, 03:53:46 AM

Author
In The News (Read 1,412,623 times)

Aspie

Aspie

#825
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

ScardyFox

ScardyFox

#826
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Aspie

Aspie

#827
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:39:32 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Meh, I'm waiting for the day acts like these become a natural fixture in everyone's lives, not because they are the current fad and engender temporary emotional gratification.

ScardyFox

ScardyFox

#828
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:41:54 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:39:32 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Meh, I'm waiting for the day acts like these become a natural fixture in everyone's lives, not because they are the current fad and engender temporary emotional gratification.

A first step of kindness - or any step - is a step in the right direction. Plenty of teens do stupid things for a lot less "bad" things in their life. Even if its temporary, or a fad if you like, it is not the norm - no matter which way its dissected. I'll take a fad that has a chance to be pass on and be remembered over the typical everyday BS that is well entrenched.

Spoiler
Meh yer face
[close]

Aspie

Aspie

#829
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:47:04 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:41:54 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:39:32 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Meh, I'm waiting for the day acts like these become a natural fixture in everyone's lives, not because they are the current fad and engender temporary emotional gratification.

A first step of kindness - or any step - is a step in the right direction. Plenty of teens do stupid things for a lot less "bad" things in their life. Even if its temporary, or a fad if you like, it is not the norm - no matter which way its dissected. I'll take a fad that has a chance to be pass on and be remembered over the typical everyday BS that is well entrenched.

Spoiler
Meh yer face
[close]


MEHHHHHH. It's not the norm because it is artificial. There is no chance of this catching on and spreading like wildfire. We are all selfish-based creatures, and once these "acts of kindness" lose their spontaneous zest and peer appeal, everything will go back to normal.

DoomRulz

DoomRulz

#830
^ Jesus Christ, you're negative. If that's the view everyone took on, then of course no acts of kindness would ever be done. It starts with a change in mentality and behaviour and yes, it could potentially spread like wildfire as you said.

Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Damn dude, you're finding all the good stuff. Kudos to ya :)


ScardyFox

ScardyFox

#831
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:51:42 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:47:04 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:41:54 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:39:32 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Meh, I'm waiting for the day acts like these become a natural fixture in everyone's lives, not because they are the current fad and engender temporary emotional gratification.

A first step of kindness - or any step - is a step in the right direction. Plenty of teens do stupid things for a lot less "bad" things in their life. Even if its temporary, or a fad if you like, it is not the norm - no matter which way its dissected. I'll take a fad that has a chance to be pass on and be remembered over the typical everyday BS that is well entrenched.

Spoiler
Meh yer face
[close]


MEHHHHHH. It's not the norm because it is artificial. There is no chance of this catching on and spreading like wildfire. We are all selfish-based creatures, and once these "acts of kindness" lose their spontaneous zest and peer appeal, everything will go back to normal.

I didn't say it was the norm, I implied it should be the norm and is better than the norm. Her reaction can't be coined as artificial - generated by grief or not doesn't take away from the gesture. They're still her feelings, her desires, her reaction. If one is inspired that doesn't make it fake - it means you have grown on some level.

One act of kind spontaneity is better than a myriad of coldness - wildfire or no wildfire. If (and more like when) it goes back to normal (if we're calling it that), that act will forever be placed in her mind and the minds of the people she has touched upon. It echos - even if its as something as minor as looking back, several years ago, to when a girl decided to pay for my meal and it was just nice. Regardless if its totally life altering or not.

I'm off to bed - I left you a swipe on another post. FIND IT.

Aspie

Aspie

#832
Quote from: DoomRulz on Mar 06, 2013, 11:57:13 PM
^ Jesus Christ, you're negative. If that's the view everyone took on, then of course no acts of kindness would ever be done. It starts with a change in mentality and behaviour and yes, it could potentially spread like wildfire as you said.

Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Damn dude, you're finding all the good stuff. Kudos to ya :)


Can't change our instincts, and that's where most of our mentality is derived.



Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 07, 2013, 12:00:20 AM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:51:42 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:47:04 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:41:54 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:39:32 PM
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 06, 2013, 11:36:18 PM
Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Meh, she's doing it to cope with her own mourning process.

Either or, the fact that it caught on and cascaded out is what matters more.

Meh, I'm waiting for the day acts like these become a natural fixture in everyone's lives, not because they are the current fad and engender temporary emotional gratification.

A first step of kindness - or any step - is a step in the right direction. Plenty of teens do stupid things for a lot less "bad" things in their life. Even if its temporary, or a fad if you like, it is not the norm - no matter which way its dissected. I'll take a fad that has a chance to be pass on and be remembered over the typical everyday BS that is well entrenched.

Spoiler
Meh yer face
[close]


MEHHHHHH. It's not the norm because it is artificial. There is no chance of this catching on and spreading like wildfire. We are all selfish-based creatures, and once these "acts of kindness" lose their spontaneous zest and peer appeal, everything will go back to normal.

I didn't say it was the norm, I implied it should be the norm and is better than the norm. Her reaction can't be coined as artificial - generated by grief or not doesn't take away from the gesture. They're still her feelings, her desires, her reaction. If one is inspired that doesn't make it fake - it means you have grown on some level.

One act of kind spontaneity is better than a myriad of coldness - wildfire or no wildfire. If (and more like when) it goes back to normal (if we're calling it that), that act will forever be placed in her mind and the minds of the people she has touched upon. It echos - even if its as something as minor as looking back, several years ago, to when a girl decided to pay for my meal and it was just nice. Regardless if its totally life altering or not.

I'm off to bed - I left you a swipe on another post. FIND IT.

YOU LIE. ALL OF IT. INCLUDING YOUR IMAGINARY SWIPE.

DoomRulz

DoomRulz

#833
Quote from: Aspie on Mar 07, 2013, 12:04:29 AM
Quote from: DoomRulz on Mar 06, 2013, 11:57:13 PM
^ Jesus Christ, you're negative. If that's the view everyone took on, then of course no acts of kindness would ever be done. It starts with a change in mentality and behaviour and yes, it could potentially spread like wildfire as you said.

Quote from: ScardyFox on Mar 06, 2013, 11:28:21 PM
Need more teens like this in the world. Perhaps nowadays more than ever.

Damn dude, you're finding all the good stuff. Kudos to ya :)

Can't change our instincts, and that's where most of our mentality is derived.


What kind of excuse is that? So to hell with everyone else, we're all inherently evil people so f**k em all?
Part of being human means evolving.

Aspie

Aspie

#834
We're not Pokemon. We stopped evolving a long time ago, and nothing in the world suggests otherwise.

Ratchetcomand

Ratchetcomand

#835
Quote from: scarhunter92 on Mar 05, 2013, 11:40:35 PM
He wasn't a very bad person. He wasn't a very good one either. I appreciated how passionate he was and that's pretty much my opinion on the subject.

R.I.P.

From what I remember reading that he pretty much control every one lives. I don't see how anyone could miss this guy?

chupacabras acheronsis

chupacabras acheronsis

#836
they're brainwashed.

People cried for Kim Jong Ill too, and he couldn't even sing.

DoomRulz

DoomRulz

#837
^ They were forced to, believe it or not.

Quote from: Aspie on Mar 07, 2013, 12:24:24 AM
We're not Pokemon. We stopped evolving a long time ago, and nothing in the world suggests otherwise.

Physically yes but mentally we're always moving forward. Why do you think technology is advancing so fast?

Quote from: Hellspawn28 on Mar 07, 2013, 12:26:49 AM
Quote from: scarhunter92 on Mar 05, 2013, 11:40:35 PM
He wasn't a very bad person. He wasn't a very good one either. I appreciated how passionate he was and that's pretty much my opinion on the subject.

R.I.P.

From what I remember reading that he pretty much control every one lives. I don't see how anyone could miss this guy?

From what I gather, he was revered for telling the U.S. to piss off whenever they wanted something.

chupacabras acheronsis

chupacabras acheronsis

#838
He was revered because he took a bunch of land and made houses for the poor and then stole some more to pay for it and fed the poor and continuously kept earning the popular vote as he slowly eroded the civil rights and destroyed all private property and made life hell for everyone above certain arbitrary line of wealth. Typical socialist stuff.

DoomRulz

DoomRulz

#839
No, that's not socialism. That's being stupid.

AvPGalaxy: About | Contact | Cookie Policy | Manage Cookie Settings | Privacy Policy | Legal Info
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Patreon RSS Feed
Contact: General Queries | Submit News