How would you define 'just world' thinking?
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Replying to @realMaxCastle @alt_kia
"In the story, Canute demonstrates to his flattering courtiers that he has no control over the elements (the incoming tide), explaining that secular power is vain compared to the supreme power of God."
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I am extremely suspicious of anyone who says "trust in God" as their answer to "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?"
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Replying to @realMaxCastle @alt_kia
Dolores 🏴 ✨ Retweeted Outsideness
Dolores 🏴 ✨ added,
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Replying to @AmbrosialArts @alt_kia
Don't see him saying trust anything here.
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Replying to @realMaxCastle @alt_kia
Given how he praises Cnut, I'll believe he doesn't want me to trust in his petty God when he stops being surprised when people announce their intent to rebel against it. This might be a result of threat underfitting, but I don't particularly care.
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Replying to @AmbrosialArts @alt_kia
Again Gnon is not god, but a not-god. It is Nature in all of its entropic terror/beauty. You can't rebel against it because it is the field on which all rebellion takes place. You can 'rebel' against the water because you can't breath it but that is largely a waste of energy...
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...and speeds up the drowning.
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Replying to @realMaxCastle @alt_kia
Sure you can break Nature. You just have to break physics.
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