They're so mysterious and weird! What is he doing! What is he feeling?!
Can they think about things that aren't happening!?
Re: coul u suk my dik
Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2020 6:06 pm
by cxwx
Re: coul u suk my dik
Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2020 11:50 pm
by MPD
Re: coul u suk my dik
Posted: Sat Feb 22, 2020 8:12 pm
by Eight Bit Alien
Even that young, you can look in his eyes and tell he's planning to plow Sue...
Re: coul u suk my dik
Posted: Sat Feb 22, 2020 8:14 pm
by Eight Bit Alien
one of the greatest images in all of comics is Namor screaming like a mentally ill homeless man, threatening a bunch of eskimos with a frozen Captain America.
its a link i presume redirects to a pdf copy of a book by carl schmitt called land and sea
Carl Schmitt (1888–1985), one of the leading conservative legal thinkers of the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany, is best known today for his critique of liberalism. Between the late 1930s and mid-1950s, Schmitt wrote numerous articles and two books addressing the mythical and geopolitical significance of land and sea. In recent years, these texts have begun to attract attention from historians as well as theorists. This article reconstructs the origins of Schmitt's theories about land and sea, and shows how they developed in the context of his efforts to delegitimize the British Empire and justify the persecution of Jews. It also explains how Schmitt selectively misread the history of maritime law in order to critique the ‘freedom of the seas.’ Finally, it reveals that the meaning Schmitt ascribed to ‘the opposition of the elements of land and sea’ changed dramatically to suit his political needs. For all their evocative qualities and insights, Schmitt's texts on land and sea do not constitute a coherent theory, but rather a shifting field of polemical positions in search of theoretical support.