Some Facts About Gerald Ford (1913-2006):




1. Extensions on the latter provisions left the people confused and unaware. Once, when the daylight still was able to bake our faces, there was enough energy in my mind to be able to speak it.

Without wind, the sun cannot leave such sordid impressions so as to present a world full of love and bereft of capitalist darwinism. Do not engage the weather--it is a machine beyond reasoning.

2. When, in our days of youth, we were exposed to the relational manifestations of utter malevolences, there was no reason to further bury your brow.

3. The verdict: total incomprehensible accordances. Songs ring in our ears. Always songs about making love but not much else is being constructed. The realm of social concern has therefore been reduced to copulation. (Post-) Modernist Freudians would search for a social allegory comparison here, but none can be made. The whole notion of societies fucking each other plays into political and social discourse all the same, although any more specific taxonomies regarding this notion are inherently messy and apt to misinterpretation. Most understandable in terms of American social metaphor would be incest, though we might as well go ahead and call it by a more accurate term: cannibalism.

Cannibalism is exactly what proponents of the current social system promote. Any system based on the institutionalized and systematic exploitation of its own members in order to incur a feeling of "success" is doing nothing short of eating those of its own.

4. People are like that.

5. Buildings are like that.

6. Trees can be made to sing, but only if they are first sung to.

7. Every evening the sun performs a ritual of release and then quick decay. Ephemeral as it is, every evening can seem like a little apocalypse.

8. Beams of rays and rays of beams are manifold. The sky shoots information like a camera and the objects of nature are their receptors. Shadows are ignorance; they do not know or even think to know about the sun.

The earth is almost certainly always one astronomical unit distant from the sun. The daytime sky is 3-D. When night falls, we skip backward one dimension.

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