

it would be as equally legitimate to say 'the planet let us evolve these clever brains, lets use them to keep the world how we like it'. what gives us the right to do that? nothing. what says we shouldn't? nothing either.
overrated dead idiot.
i just can't stand how some people hold him up as some kind of arbiter of truth.
i just can't stand how some people hold him up as some kind of arbiter of truth.
Its being able to think deeper than a puddle that has a lot of people liking him and his material.
it would be as equally legitimate to say 'the planet let us evolve these clever brains, lets use them to keep the world how we like it'.
Carlin at his best was a brilliant satirist. But in his later years, he began to suffer from Lenny Bruce Syndrome -- getting progressively angrier and preachier while forgetting to be funny.the message i get from that video is 'why bother? give up and die already'.
That was the message that *most* of Carlin's routines propounded, at least after he started to get really into the 'grumpy old man' type (pretty much everything after What Am I Doing In New Jersey?).
I still love his "Wonderful WINO" radio routine, with Al Sleet, the hippy-dippy weatherman.Then again, what do I know, my favorite routine he ever did was The Indian Sergeant which is when he was still a suit-wearing clean-shaven dude.![]()
I still love his "Wonderful WINO" radio routine, with Al Sleet, the hippy-dippy weatherman.Then again, what do I know, my favorite routine he ever did was The Indian Sergeant which is when he was still a suit-wearing clean-shaven dude.![]()
"Tonight's forecast -- DARK!"
Well on a physical level we're fragile in different ways. Without all of our inventions, ounce for ounce we couldn't match the robustness of a dinosaur. It's undeniable that we have the advantage of intelligence and the inventions we've crafted with it, which does make us much more formidable. But we've also established a very fragile food chain to feed our rapidly growing population. One break in it and it all comes tumbling down. It's very easy for the human race to lose vast portions of its population in a rather short period. If we pollute our environment enough to make it difficult to live, a lot of people will certainly die, but I'm sure some will survive and find a way to keep going. It'll be a vast difference of life quality compared to what we have now, though. That's the thing... we're living like kings relative to life quality conditions the human race had endured just a few hundred years ago. But a collapse of our infrastructures (power and food) will result in it going far back before that.This, of course, is the main and undeniably accurate point that Carlin makes in the routine. We can be as anthrocentric as we like, but we're showing no evidence of being less fragile than, oh, the dinosaurs - rather the reverse.
One of his funniest and most accurate routines was his rant on germs:
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X29lF43mUlo[/yt]
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It's undeniable that we have the advantage of intelligence and the inventions we've crafted with it, which does make us much more formidable.
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