@ArdainianRight
>We know all about why you shouldn't get your politics from Hollywood.
If that were the case we wouldn't see surges of military sign ups after every major military film like Top Gun releases.
If you can't give up movies entirely, stick to independent and B-movies (see if independent film festivals are still around) or at least avoid the ones involved by obvious spooks. Look up all the actors involved and see if they have any intelligence connections. People like George Clooney, Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Angelina Jolie, and Brad Pitt are clearly hired by government agents and any works involving them should be avoided like the plague.
@ArdainianRight You should avoid older movies too. Look up Operation Mockingbird and see how Hollywood has been working with the CIA for decades.
@ArdainianRight @hachi Just looking at sites like this makes me glad that I was never into comic books.
@PurpCat @RustyCrab @collappsar @JeffGrimesArt @The_Almighty_Kek @burner @Hoss @coolboymew @sun At least do something more clever like fucking with the host file and making a bunch of crazy redirects.
@stormbringer Okay, that makes sense. Maybe that was hard to explain to little children.
My parents said that the light was "blinding" and I always thought that it literally caused drivers to loose their eye-sight. My only other guess was that the light resembled the huge, bright headlights of trucks so it gave the illusion that a giant truck was closely following them.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how the ceiling lights in cars are distracting to drivers? I'm pretty sure anyone who grew up before the Nintendo DS or GBA SP remembers late-night roadtrips and wanting to play their handheld consoles. So they reach for the light only for their dads to smack their hands away from them.
Years later, I can drive with that light on and I don't feel distracted at all.