tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5549306427964459740.post2806615260878282817..comments2023-12-23T05:14:34.273-05:00Comments on Wit's End: A Solitary Picnic, Thinking of Richard NixonGail Zawackihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01800944469843206253noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5549306427964459740.post-60373740600649517232010-07-04T21:20:57.715-04:002010-07-04T21:20:57.715-04:00AhHa! Coming from the Maestro of Doom, a high com...AhHa! Coming from the Maestro of Doom, a high compliment indeed! Thank you!Gail Zawackihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01800944469843206253noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5549306427964459740.post-44811866834801288802010-07-04T17:44:33.402-04:002010-07-04T17:44:33.402-04:00What a beautiful presentation you did! Excellent ...What a beautiful presentation you did! Excellent job.<br /><br />Hedges essay hit me quite profoundly. I think he's wrestling with the profundity of our inaction.<br /><br />I think we all are. We are both witnesses to our self-destruction and its willing participants. <br /><br />What needs to be done to stop this lethargy is nearly incomprehensible, actions so violent and so extreme that undermine and threaten every single aspect of our way of life, that we avoid this by every means humanely possible.<br /><br />Obviously, it is not in our nature to become what we abhor, and thus we will all die, having comitted ourselves to the perceived path of a "lesser evil". <br /><br />~Survival Acres~Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com