#christopher howell
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Nietzsche’s unmasking of Christianity is a potent challenge. It is, I believe, unanswerable without apokatastasis. But with universal reconciliation, Nietzsche’s charges fall by the wayside. The accusations of secret animosity, of glee in the face of eternal suffering, become untenable. Nietzsche himself is not beyond the scope of redemption and we can—and must—learn to love him too. We will have no need for masks in the afterlife, for we will be unafraid to bare our faces in all honesty. “For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.”
I believe, in his own way, Nietzsche knew this. In 1885, after winning a settlement against his publisher, the perpetually impoverished Nietzsche came into some extra money. Once he took care of his debts, the first thing he did was buy an engraved tombstone for his father. Pastor Carl Ludwig Nietzsche had been dead for over thirty-five years, but it is clear that Nietzsche continued to love him and think about him, even as he turned so viciously against his father’s faith. As he wrote in Ecce Homo only a short time before his breakdown, “I regard it as a great privilege to have had such a father.” In this new tombstone, Nietzsche carved an inscription, a truth we have been striving towards this entire essay. He chose “Love never fails.”
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The Outsiders (1983) Dir. Francis Ford Coppola
#my gifs#filmedit#filmblr#movieedit#chewieblog#userstream#cinemapix#moviegifs#doyouevenfilm#the outsiders#ponyboy curtis#johnny cade#christopher thomas howell#ralph macchio#dailyflicks#theoutsidersedit#the outsiders 1983#daily80s#80sdaily#80ssource#fyeahmovies#userfilm
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Side Out (1990) // dir. Peter Israelson
#C. Thomas Howell#Peter Horton#Christopher Rydell#Side Out#Peter Israelson#my caps#my edits#*sideout
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Introduction Post!!
hellooooo!! let’s be mutuals!! my name is Kat (she/they) i’m 18, i’m from sydney, australia. i’m queer, in a relationship with my wonderful girlfriend <3
i’m a massive fangirl, my whole life kinda revolves around the people i’m a fan of!! the main fandoms i’m in are:
- One direction (as a group and as solo musicians)
- Dan and Phil (i’m going to TiT december 9th 🤭)
- Sturniolo Triplets
- 9-1-1 (incl. lone star)
- Yungblud
- Pretty Little Liars
- Dylanisintrouble
- SIX the musical
Also i am a fanfic girlie until the day i d!e 😤
now to add an absurd amount of tags 💅
#intro post#one direction#harry styles#louis tomlinson#niall horan#liam payne#zayn malik#dan and phil#amazingphil#daniel howell#terrible influence tour#sturniolo triplets#nicolas sturniolo#nick sturniolo#christopher sturniolo#chris sturniolo#matt sturniolo#matthew sturniolo#pretty little liars#pll#911 abc#911 lone star#911 show#yungblud#bhc#dylan is in trouble#six the musical
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He’s just some guy (affectionate)
#every character on this site#and every guy I know#it’s fantastic#tis i#blorbo#blorbo from my shows#feel free to tag your blorbos#aragorn#steve harrington#rick o'connell#clint barton#dan howell#phil lester#roy harper#christopher pike#boys#sokka#eve baird#seeley booth#peter parker#peter b parker#stiles stilinski#scott mccall
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Josh Kovensky at TPM:
Many MAGA influencers have an apocalyptic story to tell about the country, the political divide, and where we’re all headed, and they’re already using it to lay the groundwork for crossing what has long been a red line: deploying the military for domestic law enforcement purposes. In this MAGA fever dream, everyone has their part to play. They believe that they’ll be caught up in it; you might be, too. It goes something like this: If Donald Trump wins in November, people will protest. Riots will break out. The left, they theorize, will go all-out to stoke organized violence around the country, clearing the way for a newly inaugurated Trump administration to step in and make unprecedented, widespread use of the U.S. military to restore law and order.
This dark vision of the future draws on deeply pessimistic theorizing, on lectures about Marxist anti-government ideology seemingly ripped from the Cold War, on memories of the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, and on claims that Democrats and the left will be unable to accept a Trump victory. It all comes against the backdrop of senior officials around Trump and Trump himself reportedly having been eager to invoke the Insurrection Act while he was in office, and mulling its actual use if he’s re-elected. In this situation, a second Trump administration would invoke the law to deploy the military to enforce immigration laws as part of a broader mission at the southern border — a proposal Trump has often spoken about publicly. But it would also make that invocation to do something far more extreme and at odds with American history: use the military against protestors.
[...] In the minds of Trump’s supporters, this planning is justified — in line with Trump’s promise of “retribution.” In their telling, he’s already borne those same slings and arrows that he envisions for his opponents: years of attempts by the “deep state” to thwart his administration, followed by supposedly unjust political prosecutions. He is punching back. It sets the stage, for Trump and those around him, to claim they are simply engaged in a tit for tat: using the machinery of the state to suppress his political opponents. And, in a stunning coincidence, those same opponents will happen to be violently rioting just as Trump takes office — at least in the fantasies of these hardcore supporters. Peter Feaver, a scholar of civil-military relations at Duke University, told TPM that the powers of the executive had “evolved” over the years, and that their responsible use had it come to “depend on electing a principled President.” Feaver served on the National Security Council in the George W. Bush and Clinton administrations. He added that the judiciary has long given the executive branch the power to use the Insurrection Act to override state law enforcement, in part out of deference to national security decision-making. Federal troops have been deployed domestically in dozens of situations; to quell the 1992 Los Angeles riots, to ensure desegregation efforts, to break up railroad strikes.
[...]
Higher stakes
For many right-wingers, the summer 2020 Black Lives Matter protests serve as a benchmark, often invoked when forecasting the kind of developments that they see as inevitable over the coming months, and requiring a tough response following a potential Trump victory. On the right, those protests are regarded as the high-water mark of recent left-wing violence.
As MAGA influencers tell it, the media and local, Democratic-controlled city governments ignored wanton lawlessness and violence, leaving shop owners and police squads to fend for themselves among violent mobs. The sense of grievance that’s emerged ignores the reality that many of the 2020 marches against police brutality were peaceful and managed to avoid burning down any police stations or looting stores. But the memory of that moment of activist mobilization remains powerful, among this set, and continues to inspire fear. Howell and others said that in their view, the November election would lead to a far greater level of chaos across the country than what was seen in summer 2020.
“Much more is at stake,” Douglas Wilson, a Moscow, Idaho pastor who has become influential in conservative circles, told TPM. “With the killing of George Floyd, it was simply an opportunity to vent, but no actual power was at stake. And with the presidential election, it would be actual power.”
Setting aside the crimped definition of “power” here, Wilson envisions left-wing self-preservation as further inflaming the imagined post-election violence. “If Trump wins, a lot of high powered, highly placed people are going to go to jail,” Wilson added. “They don’t want to go to jail.” Wilson has become increasingly influential among self-described Christian Nationalists, who see Trump as a vehicle to punch through an agenda that would try to reshape American society, bringing it closer to their hardline interpretation of Christianity. Wilson appeared last September at an event held on Capitol Hill called “Theology of American Statecraft.” He spoke immediately after a talk given by Russ Vought, a former Trump Office of Management and Budget director who has taken a leading role in developing policies for a second administration, including through Project 2025.
[...] A review of the paper that Vought referenced, authored by former DHS acting secretary Ken Cuccinelli and another staffer, shows that it answers an undisputed question: Does the Posse Comitatus Act, which blocks executive branch officials from deploying troops domestically, allow the president to use the military to defend the border? That part of the paper answers a question that’s long been settled: The Pentagon regularly deploys troops in support of protecting the U.S.-Mexico border, though not in a law enforcement capacity. But as the New York Times first reported, the document makes extensive legal arguments for using troops to arrest people as part of a domestic deployment.
[...] “This is actually the longest the United States has ever gone without an invocation of the Insurrection Act since the first version of the law was enacted in 1792,” Nunn, a fellow at the Brennan Center, told TPM. (The last time the Act was invoked was during the 1992 Los Angeles riots, when state and local law enforcement briefly lost control of sections of the city.) He noted that the Act is intended for situations in which civilian law enforcement cannot cope; thanks to heavy investment in state and federal law enforcement, Nunn said, those kinds of emergencies have become exceedingly rare.
Using the military against peaceful demonstrators would cut against a foundational element of American public life: the right to freely and peacefully make your views about the government known, absent government retribution. “To the extent that any candidate or person in the orbit of a candidate is suggesting a preemptive plan to invoke the Insurrection Act, that’s inappropriate,” Nunn said. “The purpose of this law is to respond to sudden emergencies. If you are planning it months in advance, that’s by definition anticipating an abuse of the law.” Neither of the two missions that the Trump team is envisioning — immigration enforcement or putting down protests — falls remotely within the ambit of why people join the military, Nunn added. “People who join the military don’t do so because they look to be deployed against their fellow Americans,” he said. Domestic law enforcement, among other things, is not seen within the military as its job. “It’s not what they want to be doing. They want to be focused outward, on defense.”
MAGA influencers are seeking to justify use of military force on domestic soil for law enforcement purposes if Trump wins to be used against anti-Trump protests.
#MAGA Cult#Donald Trump#2024 Presidential Election#2024 Elections#Insurrection Act#Mike Howell#The Heritage Foundation#Jeffrey Clark#Gavin Wax#Christopher F. Rufo#Russ Vought#Douglas Wilson#Left Wing Violence#Posse Comitatus Act
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Foyle's War S02E04 - The Funk Hole by Anthony Horowitz
Celebrating 20 years of Foyle's War 🍾
This is the first episode of Foyle's War I ever saw and still one of my favourites. I can't believe it's 20 years ago today.
This series changed my life (quite literally, as I sit here in a foreign country married to a fellow FW fan with a house and a dog together 😍)
#foyles war#michael kicthen#honeysuckle weeks#twentieth anniversary#christopher foyle#samantha stewart#anthony howell#ds paul milner#anthony horowitz#ITV#foyle friday one day early
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Foyle’s War
season 1, ep2 ‘The White Feather’
#detective drama#detective drama tv-series#british tv-series#foyle's war#Christopher Foyle#wwII#wwii tv-series#Anthony Howell#Charles Dance#Michael Kitchen#Honeysuckle Weeks#Paul Brooke#Tobias Menzies#english country style#english country house#english countryside
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Vault unveils its 2024 creator lineup
Vault unveils its 2024 creator lineup #comics #comicbooks
While the specific projects haven’t been revealed (other than Slash’s which features Tim Seeley, Jim Terry, and Steven Kostanski and Pete Wentz’s which features Hannah Klein, artist Lisa Sterle), Vault has shown off the creators who we can expect to see on the shelves from the publishing in 2024. The full list includes: Alex SchlitzAmalas RosaBen McCoolBrenden FletcherCavan ScottCassio…
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#alex schlitz#amalas rosa#ben mccool#brenden fletcher#cassio ribeiro#cavan scott#christopher cantwell#cody ziglar#collin kelly#comic books#Comics#corin howell#dailen ogden#dani#daniel kraus#david db andry#eliot rahal#gio sposito#greg pak#hannah klein#jackson lanzing#jim terry#john bivens#john jennings#lisa sterle#michael moreci#nathan gooden#nicholas eames#paul cornell#pete wentz
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Creep Out // Freak Out by Gary V (formerly Prism Tats) from the album Prism Tats - Directed, Photographed, and Edited by Christopher Good
#music#prism tats#gary v#garret van der spek#anti records#video#music video#christopher good#andreina byrne#mary quinn#nichole taylor#kim morris#brandon nemeth#nick howell#jimmy darrah#lydia schneider#Youtube
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Anniversary Tournament
Last year for Doctor Who's anniversary I ran a tournament between Doctor Who stories, and I wanted to so something different again this year. A tournament between real people important to the history of Doctor Who, actors, writers, producers, directors, composers, production designers. Technically it'll be a tournament for the most infuential person to Doctor Who and its development over the years, but really I want it to be a celebration of all of these people, and not just the winner.
To that end, the nomination form, you can also submit nominations normally, ie sending me an ask or replying to this post, however I won't be accepting propaganda through those methods.
I'm thinking I'll close nominations on the 18th of November, that might change but probably not by much
Current Nominations:
if green then at least one person has submitted propaganda for them
Actors
Arthur Darvil
Billie Piper
Carole Ann Ford
Christopher Eccleston
Colin Baker
David Graham and Peter Hawkins
David Tennant
Frazer Hines
Freema Agyeman
India Fisher
Jacqueline Hill
Jodie Whittaker
John Simm
Jon Pertwee
Lisa Bowerman
Liz Sladen
Matt Smith
Ncuti Gatwa
Nicholas Courtney
Pat Gorman
Patrick Troughton
Paul McGann
Peter Capaldi
Peter Davison
Rodger Delgado
Sean Carlsen
Sophie Aldred
Stuart Fell
Sylvester McCoy
Tom Baker
William Hartnell
William Russell
Composer
Delia Derbyshire
Dudley Simpson
Murray Gold
Paddy Kingsland
Peter Howell
Rob Harvey
Ron Grainer
Segun Akinola
The BBC Radiophonic Workshop
Designers
June Hudson
Peter Brachacki
Raymond Cusic
Directors
Christopher Barry
Graeme Harper
Paddy Russell
Rachel Talalay
Richard Martin
Waris Hussein
Fandom
Marnal Gate
TARDIS wiki creator
The Audience
Craig Ferguson
Producers
Barry Letts
Graham Williams
John Nathan Turner
Philip Hinchcliffe
Verity Lambert
Julie Gardner
Writers (including script editors and showrunners)
Alan Moore
Anthony Coburn
Chris Chibnall
David Whittaker
Donald Wilson
Douglas Adams
Eric Saward
Gerry Davis
Grant Morrison
John Lucarotti
Johnathan Blum
Justine Richards
Kate Orman
Kit Pedler
Lance Parkin
Lawrence Miles
Marc Platt
Paul Cornell
Robert Holmes
Robert Shearman
Rona Munro
Russell T Davies
Steven Moffatt
Terrance Dicks
Terry Nation
Other/impossible to categorise
all the thousands of people who've worked behind the scenes
Michael Grade (BBC higherup who hated doctor who so so much)
Peter Cregeen (actually cancelled Doctor Who)
Sydney Newman
Nicholas Briggs
Gary Russell
John F Kennedy
Sue from Catering
The real historical figures who've appeared in the show
Shakespeare
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most are closed but links below
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Side Out (1990) // dir. Peter Israelson
#C. Thomas Howell#Christopher Rydell#Courtney Thorne-Smith#Side Out#Peter Israelson#my caps#my edits#*sideout
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Alice Howell (Distilled Love, Cinderella Cinders, His Wooden Leg-acy)— Total chaos. Combines inherent dignity with absolutely no grasp of social customs or normality. Accidentally spreads mayhem wherever she goes. Slapstick hijinks out the wazoo. 10/10 no notes
Peter Cushing (Frankenstein Created Woman, Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell)—Peter Cushing may ooze poise and elegance in his movies, but there are countless examples of him ending up disheveled, distressed, and being harried by the likes of Andre Morell, Vincent Price, or Christopher Lee. He's lanky as hell and more often than not plays absolutely bonkers scientists trying to transplant souls and discover a genetic cause for evil. He's got it all: spindliness, big (often sad) eyes, plays kooky characters...what's not scrunchy about this little dude??
This is round 2 of the contest. All other polls in this bracket can be found here. If you’re confused on what a scrungle is, or any of the rules of the contest, click here.
[additional submitted propaganda + scrungly videos under the cut]
Alice Howell:
youtube
youtube
Peter Cushing:
Clip of him being resurrected, then launching into an excited monologuing about his soul and how it might have stayed in his body. Bonus points for the wild hair and close-up on those cheekbones!
youtube
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Edward England
Edward England was an Irish pirate who operated in the Caribbean, the Eastern Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean between 1717 and 1720 during the Golden Age of Piracy (1690-1730). Captain England’s successful but brief pirate career came to an end when he was marooned by his crew on the island of Mauritius in 1720.
Early Career
Captain England has his own chapter in the celebrated pirate’s who’s who, A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates, compiled in the 1720s. The book was credited to a Captain Charles Johnson on its title page, but this is perhaps a pseudonym of Daniel Defoe (although scholars are still debating the issue, and Charles Johnson may have been a real, if entirely unknown pirate expert). As with many other pirates, the General History is an invaluable source on England’s career, even if there are fictional additions to the factual information laboriously garnered from such sources as court records, official documents, and letters of the period.
Edward England’s real name was possibly Jasper Seager (or Seegar). Like many pirates of the period, England was obliged to join a pirate crew after the ship on which he was serving was captured. England had been an officer on a Jamaican sloop when it was taken by Christopher Winter, who was based at the pirate haven of New Providence in the Bahamas. The General History gives the following not unfavourable assessment of England’s character:
England was one of those men, who seemed to have such a share of reason, as should have taught him better things. He had a great deal of good nature, and did not want for courage; he was not avaricious, and always averse to the ill usage prisoners received: he would have been contented with moderate plunder, and less mischievous pranks could his companions have been brought to the same temper, but he was generally over-ruled. (114)
Following the successful attacks on pirates in their haven at New Providence (now Nassau) by Woodes Rogers, Governor of the Bahamas from 1717, England sailed across the Atlantic to continue his piracy elsewhere. Several merchant ships were captured in the Azores, Cape Verde Islands, and off the coast of West Africa.
In 1718, England himself obliged an otherwise honest man to turn pirate when he captured the Welshman Howell Davis who had been chief mate on a slave ship, the Cadogan of Bristol. The captain of the Cadogan was murdered, and Davis was given command of the slaver despite refusing to formally sign England’s ship’s articles and become a part of his pirate crew. Impressed with Davis’ courage, England allowed him to sail off. Davis ended up in Barbados where he was captured. Davis managed to escape prison, and he continued a pirate career on both sides of the Atlantic, a spree that ended with his death on Principe Island in 1719.
England was, for a time, an associate of the most successful of all pirates in the so-called Golden Age, Bartholomew Roberts (aka 'Black Bart' Roberts, c. 1682-1722). In the relatively small world of pirates, Roberts had taken over the crew of Howell Davis after the latter’s death. Roberts and England operated off the coast of Guinea, West Africa. England operated two ships: his own sloop and another prize renamed Victory. Command of the latter was given to John Taylor and together they raided the western coast of India and took more prize ships. When required, provisions were taken on board at the pirate base on Madagascar.
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