ジョン・キューザックのインスタグラム(johncusack) - 8月18日 08時42分
quisquinn
You want to read Murray Stein's collections of writings of Jung's from this time, it's called JUNG ON EVIL. Jung never wrote a book on evil, but Stein collected essays and even letters to Freud! He describes the sense of anger and betrayal in Germans after WWI that prevented clear headedness and made people susceptible to a psychopath's grooming. Holds up to modern science. We now know that when stressed, testosterone blocks access to the Neo cortex, leaving us emotional and without critical thinking skills, we fixate on our ideas - our thoughts, feelings and beliefs, since we don't have the basic skills to discern a fallacious argument, distorted thinking pattern or rhetorical device, and we tend to oversimplify - one of the 8 essential ingredients of critical thinking is to ward of oversimplifications - like all or nothing thinking. Dweck out of Stanford's tiny insightful book, Mindset also shows how today, we align with the anger and betrayal - a fixed mindset is pervasive in our culture - meaning we too must rise above our pride to be humble and curious.
desireebuckman
...I had a mentalpausal moment there, the name of the movie was just "Max" about Max Rothman, an art dealer and more who tried to foster the young Adolf's creativity. Such an important film to educate people not only about the young Hitler and some of the historical context that contributed to how he became Hitler...but unfortunately in the age we are living in, people, many people, NOT ALL, seem to confuse the historical tid bits and dramatic interpretations of history without actually educating themselves on the real events. We only recently "celebrated " the 100th anniversary of WWI, including Armistice Day, but I fear we haven't learned anything from history.😕 Thanks again for being thought provoking with no ego involved ( or less than you certainly could put out there at least) and doing what you can to help others. I would love to meet you someday and just have a nice long conversation. Please come back to Santa Rosa and I can show you around Sonoma County a bit.🤗😉😘
desireebuckman
I remember that movie you were in as the art dealer who showed the young Adolf's art post WWI, and I thought it was a very good depiction of the confluence of factors that led to him becoming the " Hitler " we all know now more from movie and the history channel than a real life personal context, and there are so few left who lived through it and truly understand what happened then...and what IS happening now. I took a great art history class once and I remember the teacher explaining to us that the era between the end of WWI and what led up to WWII, was called "The Age of Anxiety" and it is my humble opinion that we are living in a similar age. Thank you for sharing all of your thoughts and really a part of yourself, but also spurring on real conversations about things and not just making statements. Keep on keeping on man you ROCK!!!😍😎🤗😎😘
haasekatharina
I' m not a fan of kitsch....This just doesn' t describe a german housestyle...maybe 30 or 40 years ago...l'm also not a Fan of the unrealitic plastic deers and blinking Santa clauses at Christmas and halloween...oh my gosch..This is america style...sorry...This is of course not Kitsch..IT's art...I guess...😎😘
troy3danto
Not what I expected to read tonight.
Never heard it described that way, that the Nazis were into, above all, their own image in the world.
I feel like that’s happening to us with Instagram, etc. We’ve sort of been headed down a narcissistic road since being delivered by social media.
mo.sportsfan
Ego, fear, and the mighty propoganda machine was mastered by Hilter and the Nazi regime. Dictators in the last 70yrs haven't strayed too far from this but with todays social media they are able to feed into the public's individual narcissism. Pu
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