Nothing.
Let's test your creative intelligence. Watch the last sketch, the prison scene, and tell me what it means to you.
Last edited by Axl Rose; 09-12-2016 at 04:04 PM.
That's because you like most have no political or artistic ap ude
Stopped watching at the "$1900 rug"
I have th same rug and paid $79 for it use it in the dogs room![]()
Cool story bro.
BTW are we supposed to watch all the scenes leading up to the prison scene? Cause you just say "Watch the last sketch".
I watched the first one, then skipped thru most of the middle and watched the whole prison scene.
assel, give your take, I'm sure it's valuable.
Is this like the paintings that were done by monkeys, displayed at a NYC snob gallery are great human work and all the puffed ups commented on the deep inner meanings?
I'll let a few others have a go at it first
chicken
The sketch seems to be a layered commentary on denial, the "comfort of captivity," and white guilt & genocide.
Charles' character is minding his own business when he's picked up by the police for a crime. We have no idea whether or not he actually did it, and indeed, it doesn't matter. He's going to be punished, guilty or not. Like Sam says, whites today are practically told that being born as white is tantamount to "original sin."
The case seems to be, however, that he is innocent. He goes into it having perfect faith that the system will grant him justice. Instead, he's imprisoned.
His response to all of this is denial. What he says to the judge when being told his sentence, him talking to himself in his cell, what he says while gambling with the guards. He holds onto his laid-back at ude and apathy as he's unblinkingly gambles away more years of his life, as he gets stabbed by fellow inmates.
Finally, he's released. He gives an indifferent farewell to the guard as he's let out, and walks home. Only his home is in ruins. He has nothing. He then marches off to a bed, that has written on its side "To Go To Sleep Forever". His deathbed. He knows he wasted his time, that he should have fought back, and that its too late. Only now does he finally become angry. Notice he comes out of prison as a skinhead, and throws a tantrum after everything is already lost much like skinheads today. But it is of no consequence. He's already lost everything.
It's basically a two-pronged commentary.
1. How people are perfectly happy to live in captivity, because fighting back is too hard. Too risky. This is why so many people (whites especially) are either apathetic, or going along with the bull hoping they can "exonerated." Key exhibit, white people that buy into social justice/BLM/etc.
2. Whites are allowing themselves to be crushed by the systems we helped put in place, and our response is to ignore/deny it, or join in. By the time we realize we ed ourselves, it will be too late. Our home will be gone. There will be nothing left to do but go to sleep forever.
Ummm most ppl allow themslvs to b crushed by d system. Chinese, africans, euros, latins, etc
Dumb to think only crackers fall in this category
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