Joined January 2021
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
MY REVIEW OF DISCLOSURE DAY -- A DIRECT ASSAULT ON CHRISTIANITY (AND SPIELBERG'S WORST MOVIE) Because of how intentional I believe this film is in attempting to deconstruct Christianity, and because I want to warn people about not seeing it, this will be a very spoiler-filled review. You have been warned before proceeding further. This review will be done in two acts: 1) the worldview of the film, 2) the quality of the film. Neither will be positive. Disclosure Day's Worldview This is a rather blatant attempt to evangelize into a new religion. In many respects, the transition Steven Spielberg makes from his 1970s classic Close Encounters of the Third Kind, to now Disclosure Day, is very similar to what you see from a lot of the prominent UFO/alien obsession proxies like Dr. Steven Greer. At first they start off in wonderment about what else is really out there in the cosmos and whether we're alone in the universe (or Close Encounters), but they always eventually end up at the aliens are really our saviors to show fallible human beings the way to salvation (or Disclosure Day). If you only see people like Greer or Luis Elizondo on cable news networks, you'd think they're just scientifically inquisitive and want "the truth to be told." But if you watch their documentaries, as I have, it becomes increasingly obvious they are really selling a religion. Greer is basically just a wannabe prophet of the non-human intelligence phenomena as deliverers at this point, and Elizondo is on his way there by angrily dismissing the possibility this is all just a demonic spiritual deception (as he did in last year's The Age of Disclosure documentary). Here are some examples of how this film head-on intends to deconstruct Christianity (in chronological scene order): --The main character's love interest, who is now his admitted fornication partner, is a former nun. She specifically tells him early in the film she left the convent behind because "I lost my belief that God is divine." Hold on to that language later, because it's going to put everything else I point out next in its proper context. --When the shadowy agency conducting the decades-long coverup attempts to use alien technology to subvert the former nun's consciousness and turn her into a traitor, she grabs her crucifix and tries to invoke its power to resist the alien tech -- to the point she essentially stigmatas herself. However, the crucifix is rendered powerless in the face of the superior alien technology and thus she is given over to it. --The entire story is unfolding under the backdrop of pending nuclear war and planetary annihilation (between the US and Russia, of course, because apparently it's still 1985). In other words, we are in the end of days and lost as a species unable to save ourselves. We need a salvation we cannot acquire on our own. --We learn the aliens specifically chose a male and a female to be the "vessels" at the vanguard of this next step of our evolution. Which the aliens are here to guide for us, of course. It is eventually revealed the male is given mathematic revelation (or logic) and the female empathy (or nurturing) -- with the female's gift depicted as superior in its intensity. Or a divine feminine. --The climax of the disclosure broadcast occurs when the largest of the aliens is brought in by several humans in what is basically a gestatorial chair, which he emerges from to pronounce blessings upon the new Adam and Eve with a priestly whisper in his native tongue of clicks and tones (I guess Latin would've been too on the nose). The whisper is translated for all of humanity into the final line of the film: "Listen." Some might say sort of like, "Let those with ears to hear let them hear." --Though the film makes it clear the climactic day of disclosure is being felt globally, the only religion wrestling with it is Christianity. At the convent we see several of the nuns desperately clinging to their Rosaries looking for guidance, while the Mother Superior lets out a wry smile in approval of the coming syncretism. No other religion is even depicted, let alone shown to have to grasp with the significance of all this. Why is that? All the potential answers to this question are bad. Though I'd love that to be the case, Christianity is not the only global religion on this planet. Furthermore, the only Christianity depicted in the movie is Catholicism. --Now, back to the smiling Mother Superior at the end of the movie, and the former nun saying she lost her belief that God is divine in its opening act. The movie says this at the same time it makes it clear humanity needs saving, and the former nun also makes the case that even though she doesn't believe in God anymore the world needs that belief to maintain any form of order. Enter the aliens, who check all the boxes of what is required. They are sinless, while we are not. They have knowledge kept secret, that we do not. They are the only ones who can share such revelation with us, we can't acquire it ourselves. And by embracing this singular truth mankind can be saved, because we can't save ourselves. If all that's not a religion, I don't know what is. If all that's not a direct attempt to redirect Christianity, I don't know what is. Marcion, Arius, and Pelagius were more subtle. Quality of Disclosure Day Itself Thankfully, this movie is also not very good. Had it been executed better, we might really be in trouble as a people here. It's the worst movie Spielberg has ever done. The film doesn't really have a plot, but is just one long chase scene of not believable things. Like we are supposed to believe a nerd who admits he was never in the field before this, is now able to suddenly drive cars at high speed through houses and evade the world's most effective private security firm that has successfully protected this secret for over 75 years. We are supposed to believe if you hide behind rocks just five feet from that same organization's operatives they won't look for you there, or hear you running away in the woods as you step on branches. In another scene the "good guys" use the alien's invisibility technology to escape, but for whatever reasons turn on the sirens of the firetruck they're in so now "the bad guys" know they're there. Finally, we are supposed to believe that same shadowy organization ejects and just angrily gives up at the end without a fight to permit disclosure day to happen, even though they could've just pulled out their guns and shot everybody there before the cameras went live. You make these kinds of continuity and believability errors when you're more about the message than the movie. I recognize it, because it's why Christian movies were so bad for so long. More concerned with checking ideological boxes and shoehorning in favored tropes over telling the best possible story. Spielberg made mistakes with this film he would've never made before as possibly the greatest director ever. And we see a lot of left-wing Hollywood making this mistake nowadays. The industry has lost patience with subverting us with good stories over time, and it's now just knocking on doors and putting their pitch right in your face like the evangelists they are. Consider it a blessing that America's greatest director cast his pearls unto swine by shrouding all this deconstruction and deception within a hot mess of a film -- otherwise we might've had a real birth of a dangerous cult on our hands. The Lord works in mysterious ways.
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
God bless the USA.
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
Mannn stfu
Starting to realize that 90% of remake hate just stems from insecurity that what you grew up with is no longer new, and in some cases dated
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
Replying to @Shiza_Kiwami
Not at all true, it's because remakes tend to bring in a new audience that start hailing an inferior product as the replacement, standing on the shoulders of giants, if you will. Ratchet and Clank got a remake that covers the duo's origins story, but shows zero character development between the two and turns the gameplay into a mindless third person shooter. Huh, I just realized the same formula was applied to Resident Evil, Tomb Raider, and FF7...
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
Replying to @Shiza_Kiwami
Someone who says "90% of criticism of this game comes from insecurity" is not interested in having a conversation, don't delude yourself. You're just interested in insulting people and dipping away. No good faith here, only dismissal of art for being dated.
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Guys if you're going to the World Cup do not try to park at any tech company parking lots. Those are private property. Your car will be towed.
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
USA. A BBQ restaurant. The ribs had not yet been defeated, and the white cup was already watching me. Coleslaw. Cold. Quiet. Suspiciously calm. I stopped my friend. “Why is there a small bowl of snow next to the meat?” He laughed. “That’s coleslaw, man.” Coleslaw. In my land, cabbage knows its role. It stays with tonkatsu. It supports fried food with quiet dignity. It does not sit next to a mountain of ribs like a tiny cold monk trying to stop a war. Here, America placed cabbage beside smoke, sugar, sauce, and meat. This is not a side dish. This is a peacekeeping force. I ate the ribs with the gravity the moment deserved. My fingers became evidence. My mouth became a battlefield. The sauce had entered negotiations without permission. And then — I must report this calmly — I ate the coleslaw. Cold. Crunchy. Calm. For three seconds, the war stopped. “See?” my friend said. “It balances it out.” Balances it out. The ribs were attacking from the front, the sauce was climbing my hands, and this little white cup was holding the line. My friend warned me. “Don’t ignore the slaw.” Too late. I had already judged it as decoration. Honor demanded an apology. A man who underestimates cabbage has already lost once. By the time the plate was empty, I understood. I was not clean. I was not elegant. But I had survived. BBQ is not just meat. BBQ is conflict management. I know the rule now. I have made my peace with coleslaw. When the ribs shout, the cabbage listens. Who am I deceiving. I came for the meat, but I still remember the little cold monk.
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More pictures from yesterday's trip to Clear Lake next time I'm spending the night
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Wait until he tries gumbo
Currently looking for alligators in the swamps of Louisiana
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Not a single person who uses the word orientalist has ever had a correct opinion. Also, sword slur? Easily the dumbest thing I've seen on this app in years
I love that Disney changed the name of Boba Fett’s ship bc it’s called “Slave 1” but not the ship named after an orientalist sword slur
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
Jun 12
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Found a 1970 Cadillac Deville in the wild couldn't help myself and stuck some of my propaganda on the windshield
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Well I didn't catch a single bass but damn Clear Lake sure is pretty
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Prohibition on self promotion is only for insecure cry babies. Which is why it's rampant on Reddit and on discords linked to Reddit
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Acronyms are for lazy people
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People who order big orders in the Drive-Thru should go to prison
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Some fuck ass in a truck ordered a giant ass order at this Carl's Jr
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Russell Boone (Steakdriven) retweeted
Texas is really about to convert millions of Europeans and foreigners into honorary Americans. Buc-ee’s is the pinnacle of American excellence. It’s not JUST a “large gas station.” It’s an unholy sanctuary. We’re changing lives…
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