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webdaemon — Head

Published: 2006-04-02 23:06:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 77; Favourites: 0; Downloads: 18
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Description Statue taken at the DeYoung Museum. This thing was like 6 feet tall. Yeah, it's head!
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Comments: 8

kezs [2006-06-17 19:57:10 +0000 UTC]

grandpa!!!!

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webdaemon In reply to kezs [2006-06-17 20:49:50 +0000 UTC]

lol

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RickManuel [2006-04-04 02:55:08 +0000 UTC]

Wasn't this the guy from "Legends of the Hidden Temple"?

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webdaemon In reply to RickManuel [2006-04-06 04:10:24 +0000 UTC]

Could be...

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RickManuel In reply to webdaemon [2006-04-06 05:30:08 +0000 UTC]

Hehe... you named this "head"

I'm all immature out of the need to balance myself. Observe:

The call to “clear the ground” is a common theme across both stories. With many philosophies, there is a call to cast out any ideas that go against it. Even in Catholicism, the first and most fundamental school of Christianity, we find the Nicene Creed. “We believe in one God, the father, the almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is seen and unseen… We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. We believe in one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.” It continues. The nature of temptation is that it is beautiful, so as to draw others into it. The devil is beautiful, the antichrist is beautiful, the forbidden fruit is beautiful. The Nihilists and the Destructors are compelled to destroy the artifacts that remind others of a different time, lest their pawns be drawn to them like moths to a flame. They dance a well-known step, like the conquistadors burning the books of the Aztecs and Hitler’s extermination of the Jewish people.
The absence of love is the simplest concept to understand. If the Nihilists love, they have to admit that something more than the individual exists. They likewise cannot permit themselves to truly hate, as you cannot have one without its opposite. If the Wormsley Common Gang, or rather, if their leader had felt either love or hatred for the man they referred to as “Old Misery” their act would have no real meaning. In T.’s own words, “There’d be no fun if I hated him.” They would not be able to destroy something they loved and not feel a horrible and sickly remorse. They would do nothing but derive pleasure from destroying something hated. The lack of motive and reason behind the act, it’s real and true chaos, is what gave it meaning. It has purpose because it has no purpose.

I'm English Homework Busy... -_-

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webdaemon In reply to RickManuel [2006-04-06 05:45:28 +0000 UTC]

Um, did that have anything to do with head?

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RickManuel In reply to webdaemon [2006-04-06 05:53:05 +0000 UTC]

Secretly, many things have a lot to do with head

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brennennn [2006-04-03 00:09:12 +0000 UTC]

"Yeah, it's head!"

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