by Hugh Manatee Wins » Tue Mar 21, 2006 9:33 pm 
			
			Guilty as charged. And I'll take the opportunity for a moralist rant about why. Your welcome.<br><br>I've learned the hard way that information is a life and death matter. Bandwith is eaten up with amusements and puzzles <br>Cultural creatives are diverted into either amusing or confusing others  quite easily. This is the divide between Americans holding a gun and Americans holding a mouse.<br><br>I'm deliberately focused on warning against the intelligentsia's fetish for paradox, obfuscation, and mixed messages.<br>Yes, fetish. Or perhaps more like brain food gluttony.<br><br><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong><!--EZCODE ITALIC START--><em>'See what you want to if you can see anything'</em><!--EZCODE ITALIC END--> productions like Morrison's are part of the problem.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br><br>I just read the storyline synopsis at wiki and it is grotesquely violent.<br><br>Then switches to peace-loving at the very end with a follow-up analysis that says 'get beyond both sides-type thinking to another way.'<br><br>Well...ok. Did we need the Clockwork Orange treatment for that? Indulgence in vice and horror just to pull out a 'see the light and sin no more' ending? Hmmm.....<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Morrison presents a magnitude of ideas to the reader, one of which is that humans are like larva waiting to evolve into flies. The realm where these "flies" would live is never revealed (due to a human's inability to imagine anything beyond the third dimension), <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>but it is hinted at in the beginning of the series that in this realm everyone will hear what they need to hear, creating a utopia.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--> It is this "eternal" language that the Knights Templar were protecting. Percy Shelley, a poet who Morrison made into an Invisible for the sake of the series,<!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong> theorized that utopia could be found in the mind and that it was "waiting for [humanity] to grow up and recognize it and come home". In other words, humanity holds utopia within themselves and only when they see through the binary interpretations of reality the Invisibles and the Outer Church offer can they access it.<br></strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br>Morrison also had Percy Shelley and his friend, Lord Byron (also an Invisible), argue about whether or not mankind truly wants to be free. Byron believes that "men are like sheep", while Shelley belives they have "a drive towards liberty". This debate is brought up many times throughout the series since much of humanity is content being controlled (albeit unknowingly) by the Outer Church, <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>while the Invisibles fight to be individuals, free to make their own decisions.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>Um...the Invisibles slaughter people vigorously for almost the entire series.<br><br>I don't buy this analysis and it smells like 'V for Vendetta' with the same cover story that it "gives you something to think about."<br><br>Yup. A trail of bloody body parts. Think about that? No thanks.<br><br><br><br> <p></p><i></i>