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cezxeszzd
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238 posts

Cezxeszzd - Untitled - Tumblr Blog

cezxeszzd
11 months ago

“At his most characteristic, the medieval man was not a dreamer nor a wanderer. He was an organiser, a codifier, a builder of systems. He wanted ‘a place for everything and everything in the right place.’ Distinction, definition, tabulation were his delight. Though full of turbulent activities, he was equally full of the impulse to formalise them. War was (in intention) formalised by the art of heraldry and the rules of chivalry; sexual passion (in intention), by an elaborate code of love. Highly original and soaring philosophical speculation squeezes itself into a rigid dialectical pattern copied from Aristotle. Studies like Law and Moral Theology, which demand the ordering of very diverse particulars, especially flourish. Every way in which a poet can write (including some in which he had much better not) is classified in the Arts of Rhetoric. There was nothing which medieval people liked better, or did better, than sorting out and tidying up. Of all our modern inventions I suspect that they would most have admired the card index.”

— C.S. Lewis, The Discarded Image

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Reciprocal

Reciprocal

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
cezxeszzd - Untitled
cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Jane Austen, Pride And Prejudice
Jane Austen, Pride And Prejudice
Jane Austen, Pride And Prejudice

Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
the rain repeats its story
until we have it by heart,
always the same.

lord, in between
the solitudes of birth and death
the solitudes of life
will almost do us in.

mother-tongue: after the flood by Lucille Clifton

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
EMILIA FERRETTINI ROSSOTTI

EMILIA FERRETTINI ROSSOTTI

cezxeszzd
1 year ago

you’ve done your part. you’ve prayed already. you've cried already. now, watch God do his part, let go and trust him.

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
cezxeszzd - Untitled
cezxeszzd
1 year ago

I am finding my way back to myself again. slowly, patiently, intricately. I am finding roads in between my heart and my mind that connect. I am finding melodies that taste good on my soul. I stray and i take detours occasionally, but I am finding my way back to myself again.

Unknown

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
-Shepherdess And Her Sheep-

-Shepherdess and her sheep-

cezxeszzd
1 year ago

hold up im reading more about the lionfish thing and this one island in Honduras has had such a huge problem with lionfish that the measures they have taken include

• getting special exemption from the Honduran government to allow divers access to harpoons and spears which are otherwise illegal in fishing

• public campaign to teach people how to prepare and eat lionfish (apparently they are very tasty once the poisonous spines are removed) (but watch out)

• holding lionfish combination hunting competition and cookout (reportedly they killed and cooked 1,700 in a day) (someone killed 60 of them with a rubber band spear gun???)

• most recently and apparently out of desperation, the divers in charge of culling the lionfish in the Roatan Marine Park just started. feeding the lionfish they killed to sharks. bc what else are you gonna do with it

• the sharks don’t seem to notice or be affected by the poison and begin hanging out with the divers

• the sharks then were seen hunting and killing the lionfish on their own

like this is nuts to me sorry. the sharks just had to be shown “hey this is food, did you know?? you can eat these!! here try one!!” we are possibly altering an entire foodchain bc we like feeding the big ocean wolves

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Soon You Will See.

Soon you will see.

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Jan Brueghel The Younger (Flemish, 1601 - 1678) The Madonna And Child Surrounded By A Floral Garland

Jan Brueghel the Younger (Flemish, 1601 - 1678) The Madonna and Child surrounded by a floral garland


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cezxeszzd
1 year ago

Independence Day wasn’t the day we became free as a nation.

July 4th, 1776 was the day we declared our intention to be free, whatever the cost.

This day is not about the freedom we possess, it’s about our resolution to obtain and defend our freedom even against insurmountable odds.

That’s the spirit of America: the little guy who won’t back down.

🇺🇸 Happy Independence Day, America. 🇺🇸

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
cezxeszzd - Untitled
cezxeszzd
1 year ago

I went to the Nixon and Reagan Presidential Library and Museums today!

I have a migraine from reading in the car so I'm not going to write a lot.

Nixon. I love his signature anime girlie pose :)

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

WOOF WOOF

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!
I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

THE JASON HEUSER PAINTING IN THE CORNER

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

I can now say that I am a Richard Nixon fan, he's just silly. The intro video actually called him a loser since he's always lose before he won 😭

Reagan

NOOOO NOT CUSTER 🤢🤮

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

It's still so cool that Reagan acted and was even President of the Actor's Guild.

President fandom:

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

MARX 'S THUMBS-UP IS SO FUNNY. Teach your kids about the wonders of communism RIGHT NOW. 👍

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

Horse :)

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

the glare is horrendous...BEAN PORTRAIT

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!

*😐 among us WHOHMP tat tat tat* uh....

I Went To The Nixon And Reagan Presidential Library And Museums Today!
cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Hello Tumblr

hello tumblr

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Jim Henson And Friends Meeting President Nixon In The Early 60s

Jim Henson and friends meeting President Nixon in the early 60s

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Found On Twitter

found on twitter

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
cezxeszzd - Untitled
cezxeszzd
1 year ago
My Artist Friend Produced Another Gorgeous Piece That They Didn't Want Tied To Their Own Account, This

My artist friend produced another gorgeous piece that they didn't want tied to their own account, this time of Richard Nixon. This is the same fellow who did the bongfield image.

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
"Kennedy Looked Like A Game Show Host, You Know? The Ultra-bright Smile, Gleam In His Eye And Buttered-toast

"Kennedy looked like a game show host, you know? The ultra-bright smile, gleam in his eye and buttered-toast hair. You know, perfect!"

"And Nixon looked like he crawled out of a spider hole in Iraq. He was just so sweaty, and … his five o'clock shadow [was] coming in too early. He was transforming right in front of us as he was speaking on television."

cezxeszzd
1 year ago

The Hard Hat Riot: A Forgotten Flashpoint in America’s Culture Wars

Missing from most history books is a key moment leading to the culture wars now ripping through American politics.

In 1970, hundreds of construction workers pummeled around 1,000 student demonstrators in New York City — including two of my friends. The “Hard Hat Riot,” as it came to be known, ushered in an era of cynical fear-mongering aimed at dividing the nation.

The student demonstrators were protesting the Vietnam War and the deadly shooting of four student activists at Kent State University that occurred just days before.

The workers who attacked them carried American flags and chanted, “USA, All the way,” and “America, love it or leave it.” They chased the students through the streets — attacking those who looked like hippies with their hard hats and steel-toed boots.

When my friends in the anti-war movement called to tell me about the riot later that day, I was stunned. Student activists and union workers duking it out in the streets over the war? I mean for goodness’ sake, weren’t we on the same side?

According to reports, the police did little to stop the mayhem. Some even egged on the thuggery. When a group of hardhats moved menacingly toward the action, a patrolman apparently shouted: “Give ’em hell, boys. Give ’em one for me!”

The construction workers then marched toward a barely-protected City Hall. Why? Because the mayor’s staff had lowered the American flag in honor of the Kent State dead. In a scene eerily foreshadowing the January 6th Capitol Riots, they pushed their way towards the building.

Fearing the mob would break in, city officials raised the flag.

The hard hats also ripped down the Red Cross banner that was hanging at nearby Trinity Church. They stormed a Pace University building, smashing lobby windows with their tools and beating students and professors.

Around 100 people were wounded that day, many of whom were college students. Several police officers were also hurt. Six people were reportedly arrested, but only one construction worker.

My friends escaped injury but they were traumatized.

The Hard Hat Riot had immediate political consequences. It was, in my opinion, a seminal  moment in America’s culture wars.

Then President Richard Nixon exploited the riot for political advantage. His administration had been working on a “blue collar strategy” to shift white working-class voters to the Republican Party.

“Thank God for the hard hats,” Nixon exclaimed when he heard about the riot.

But rather than passing pro-labor policies to court workers, which would go against the values of the pro-business Republican Party, Nixon sought to use cultural issues like patriotism and support for the troops to drive a wedge between factions of the Democratic Party.

Nixon invited union leaders, some of whom were involved in the riot, to the White House. They presented Nixon with a hard hat inscribed with “Commander in Chief”and an American flag pin. Nixon praised the union workers as, “people from Middle America who still have character, and guts, and a bit of patriotism.”

Nixon’s strategy to use the Hard Hat Riot to appeal to blue collar voters paid off. In his 1972 re-election campaign against the anti-war Democrat George McGovern, he secured a victory with ease and gained the majority of votes from organized labor – the only time in modern history a Republican presidential candidate accomplished such a feat.

The Hard Hat Riot revealed a deep fracture in the coalition of workers and progressives that FDR had knitted together in the 1930s, and the later alliance of Black Americans, liberals, and blue-collar whites that led to Lyndon Johnson’s landslide re-election in 1964.

The mostly white construction workers who attacked the demonstrators had felt abandoned — and forgotten – as the Civil Rights movement rightfully took hold. They felt stiffed by the clever college kids with draft deferments, and burdened by an economy no longer guaranteeing upward mobility.

The class and race based tensions that Nixon exploited would worsen over the next half century.

I witnessed this when I was secretary of labor during the Clinton Administration. I spent much of my time in the Midwest and other parts of the country where blue-collar workers felt abandoned in an economy dominated by Wall Street. I saw their anger and resentment. I heard their frustrations.

Many Democrats, whether they will admit it or not, have not done enough to respond as Republicans have destroyed unions, exacerbated economic inequality through trickle-down nonsense, tried to gut just about every social safety net we have – and stood in the way of practically every effort to use the power of government to help working people.

Today, the right is trying to channel that same anger and violence against the Black Lives Matter movement, the LGBTQ+ community, particularly drag queens and transgender people, and whatever they consider “woke.”

It is the same cynical ploy to instill a fear of “the other” as a means to distract from the oppression and looting being done by the oligarchs who dominate so much of our economy and our politics.

As such, today we face the same questions we faced in 1970:

Will we finally recognize that we have more in common with each other than those who seek to divide us for political and economic gain?

Can we unite in solidarity, and build a future in which prosperity is widely shared by all?

I truly believe that we still can.

cezxeszzd
1 year ago
Personality Politicssss

personality politicssss