---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson wrote:
 >
> I'd ride with 'em, I ain't prejudiced agin rich folk.

 Personally, I suspect that the planet would be better off if we managed to get 
all 85 of these people on one bus, and then threatened them with driving the 
bus off a cliff with them on it unless they signed over all of their money to 
the poor people they fucked over to get it. After they signed, then we'd take 
the signed papers, get off the bus and push it over the edge anyway, and then 
redistribute the funds. 
 

 I love the "we" part. As if the average human being wouldn't pocket the 
ransacked money and make off with it themselves. Rich or poor, the basic 
instinct is to survive and to survive in style. Those who claim they wouldn't 
love an extra $1,000,000 in the bank are fooling themselves. Granted, many are 
loathe to cheat and steal their way to accessing this and many would consider a 
billion dollars a little unnecessary but greed, avarice and the love of the 
good life is, to some extent, in all of us. Take a guy like Leonardo in his 
role as the Wolf, take away his gazillions and he'd still be the loan shark, 
the pimp or the drug dealer clawing his way toward his idea of fame and 
fortune. You don't have to be rich to embody all sorts of loathsome traits.

But that may just be how I feel today, after having been forced to sit through 
"The Wolf Of Wall Street." I now completely agree with everything said in the 
open letter 
http://www.laweekly.com/informer/2013/12/26/an-open-letter-to-the-makers-of-the-wolf-of-wall-street-and-the-wolf-himself
  written by Christina McDowell, daughter of one of the real-life scumbags who 
worked with the real-life Jordan Belfort. I think that Martin Scorcese, 
Leonardo DiCaprio, and all of the other producers who glorified greed and 
immorality in this film should be sentenced to spend the rest of their lives 
doing "community service" by making movies about the "little people" these 
real-life scumbags ripped off, and whose lives they ruined.

Those of you who mouth off about misogyny, you really haven't even *seen* 
misogyny until you've seen this movie. There is not a woman in the film who 
isn't portrayed as a bimbo, a hooker, and just one more rube to be fucked and 
fucked over. I literally had to take a shower after watching it. 

The experience made me rethink Martin Scorcese's work as a whole. Yes, he has 
made the occasional film that *doesn't* celebrate greed, corruption, and 
misogyny (although the only ones I can think of right now are "Hugo," "The Last 
Temptation of Christ," and "Kundun"), but those subjects have been the focus of 
and the preoccupation of almost *all* of his other films. Only 3 films as a 
director out of 55 *not* about slimeballs. And his next film is going to be 
about Frank Sinatra. What a fuckin' waste of creative talents. 
 

 I could tell this film was worth a big miss by watching 2 minutes of the 
trailer. It looked like an indulgent mess on everyone's part.
  
 > --------------------------------------------
> On Tue, 1/21/14, TurquoiseB turquoiseb@... wrote:
> 
> Subject: [FairfieldLife] New meaning for Kesey's "Are you on the bus or off 
> the bus?"
> To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Tuesday, January 21, 2014, 8:19 AM
> 
> According to a recent
> OXFAM report the 85 people who own *half of the planet's
> wealth* could all fit onto this bus:
> 
> http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/01/17/oxfam-bus-wealth_n_4616103.html 
> http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/01/17/oxfam-bus-wealth_n_4616103.html 
>
 

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