..I just can’t stop the thoughts produced by this song lol. “raise a glass to our, our (the speaker stutters trying to find a word to land on). Our heterogeneity (the quality or state of being diverse in character or content) he lands on. As if our society achieving the most diverse culture possible is some pinnacle of human achievement. Not that it’s not a great thing, but seriously, this is what we are raising our glass for? Our remarkable resilience from calamity? That we have yet to nuke ourselves back to sticks and stones (if we’re lucky). All in all, it’s a slap in the face of a song to humanity, to awaken. To become awake, not Woke.
@danielwot Yeah, raising our glass to the resilience of our making our own calamities instead of raising a glass to not making them in the first place. I think it could be an example of the disingenuous nature of the preacher. It all depends on how one takes the song. Maynard's lyrics are like tarot cards.
@danielwot Yeah, raising our glass to the resilience of our making our own calamities instead of raising a glass to not making them in the first place. I think it could be an example of the disingenuous nature of the preacher. It all depends on how one takes the song. Maynard's lyrics are like tarot cards.
..I just can’t stop the thoughts produced by this song lol. “raise a glass to our, our (the speaker stutters trying to find a word to land on). Our heterogeneity (the quality or state of being diverse in character or content) he lands on. As if our society achieving the most diverse culture possible is some pinnacle of human achievement. Not that it’s not a great thing, but seriously, this is what we are raising our glass for? Our remarkable resilience from calamity? That we have yet to nuke ourselves back to sticks and stones (if we’re lucky). All in all, it’s a slap in the face of a song to humanity, to awaken. To become awake, not Woke.
@danielwot Yeah, raising our glass to the resilience of our making our own calamities instead of raising a glass to not making them in the first place. I think it could be an example of the disingenuous nature of the preacher. It all depends on how one takes the song. Maynard's lyrics are like tarot cards.
@danielwot Yeah, raising our glass to the resilience of our making our own calamities instead of raising a glass to not making them in the first place. I think it could be an example of the disingenuous nature of the preacher. It all depends on how one takes the song. Maynard's lyrics are like tarot cards.