Great satire: Katrina and People Like Us
Sep. 8th, 2005 02:06 pmThis is the funniest skewering of the self-important I've seen in a long time, and applies to a lot of the posting here recently as well as to HuffPo.
I knew if I restrained myself from writing about it, somebody else would do it better.
In a related note, Yahoo put together a meta-list of "missing people" sites, and when I put Volney's name in, it turned out he was being sought by several people. I transferred the info to Volney via Bear411, and he swore he'd have gotten around to them eventually. :-)
I knew if I restrained myself from writing about it, somebody else would do it better.
In a related note, Yahoo put together a meta-list of "missing people" sites, and when I put Volney's name in, it turned out he was being sought by several people. I transferred the info to Volney via Bear411, and he swore he'd have gotten around to them eventually. :-)
no subject
Date: 2005-09-09 04:05 am (UTC)I'd prattle on about this for hours, but I have to shove on. The tarantula is looking for me.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-09 04:11 am (UTC)Your point re: satire is well taken. But without it those who are sure of themselves would run roughshod over those of us who know enough to be uncertain.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-09 04:28 am (UTC)As for satire, I [perhaps vaguely] recall that one of the Celtic triads lists mockery as one of the Druids' special powers. It worked because they were, as ecclesiastics and philosophers, intimately connected with military and civil administration. It was also a power of the bards. A few instances in the Mabinogion associate it with the wives of powerful men. Basically anyone who controlled language could ruin the reputation of(or destroy the confidence of) even the bravest and most capable king, or bring the most deserving villain to ruin.