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To celebrate WW1/WW2 is to celebrate the horrific death and annihilation of our ancestors & our future. Our youth, across Europe, committed acts that ruined many a life in causing many a death.

Interviewer: "Was it all worth it?"
Veteran: "No... Never would I volunteer again"
Has anyone noticed the very best views in #England are the ones without a trace of modernity? Preservation is a skill. Pointless progressivism is a talentless crime. #Rochester, #Kent.

📸 @VinnieSullivan
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"The" - A Prioritization Of Specific Epochs

Our view of histories entirety is often narrowed down to a few brief occasions, simply by their titles.
If you have serious mental health issues, suggesting this to you will be deemed as highly offensive. However, expose a serious regime, and they'll call you crazy all the way to the nuthouse.
Why, in today's times, would anyone go clubbing or late night drinking when all of your mistakes and moments of freedom are filmed by strangers to humiliate you for the rest of your day's. The freedom to make mistakes ended in my youth. Today, all I see are predators and victims.
Vin's Neologist Innovations
- 'Mountain Syndrome

I'd like to coin another term to explain the eternal feeling of unfulfillment suffered by many outgoing men.

This perpetual sense of longing is a the result of having but one lifetime, whilst cursed with the need for achievement of the kind that will either not exist, or be humanly unreachable.

'Mountain Syndrome', is the feeling of a mountaineer desperately missing his wife and home when upon the mountain, but unable to live without the mountain when among home comforts.

Comfort and greatness are so mutually unexclusive, no great man who admires either will ever know true contentment.

Text: @VinnieSullivan
Paintings: Wanderer above the Sea of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich & Young Man at His Window by Gustave Caillebotte
Our quest for meaning is often why its never truly found.
If we did not care, nothing would matter.
But as we do, everything does.

Text:
@VinnieSullivan
Painting: ‘Anguish’ by Friedrich Albrecht Schenck’s
2024/10/01 14:32:06
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