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John Titor's Legacy
Titor and Washington
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<blockquote data-quote="Judge Bean" data-source="post: 8149" data-attributes="member: 42"><p><strong>Titor and Washington</strong></p><p></p><p><em><strong>in some way, I think it could be a good thing, a clean slate, all the evil perpetuated by our government washes away, and a better place for future generations. A heavy price to pay, certainly, but if I had children one I would most certainly pay</strong></em> --justoneme</p><p></p><p>Here's my problem with this Titoresque idea: while it is true that you can begin anew without the bother of ambiguous and compromised lives, I question whether anyone will have the spirit left to create new lives after the tragedy. I look at the Titor statements about a better life after so much death as being rationalizations, and a method of mourning. Remember that he speaks 20 years after the holocaust: how great the loss must be to have to rationalize it that much later.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Judge Bean, post: 8149, member: 42"] [b]Titor and Washington[/b] [i][b]in some way, I think it could be a good thing, a clean slate, all the evil perpetuated by our government washes away, and a better place for future generations. A heavy price to pay, certainly, but if I had children one I would most certainly pay[/b][/i] --justoneme Here's my problem with this Titoresque idea: while it is true that you can begin anew without the bother of ambiguous and compromised lives, I question whether anyone will have the spirit left to create new lives after the tragedy. I look at the Titor statements about a better life after so much death as being rationalizations, and a method of mourning. Remember that he speaks 20 years after the holocaust: how great the loss must be to have to rationalize it that much later. [/QUOTE]
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John Titor's Legacy
Titor and Washington
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