Anger works best when you have the moral high ground:
It was nice to read about the complexities and misdirected ambiguity of anger, especially in this day and age. There is pressure put on our generation to almost "rebel for rebellion sake" because of the omniscient surveillance through social media. This excerpt describes the importance of anger and when it should be used as a force of advancing change rather than a force of self-righteousness.
Beware the tyranny of structurelessness:
“there is no such thing as a structureless group.” stood out to me from that excerpt the most. is reinforced the ideas I've thought a lot about, the idea that you need the box in order to think outside of it.
Build strength through repetition:
To me, repetition meant to repeat the same thing over and over-almost monotonously- until whatever is being repeated becomes second nature. I've never thought of that concept on a campaign scale, let alone a community scale. The structure of repetition was a personal benefactor, but this article opens up the possibility of solidarity that's foreign to me.
It was nice to read about the complexities and misdirected ambiguity of anger, especially in this day and age. There is pressure put on our generation to almost "rebel for rebellion sake" because of the omniscient surveillance through social media. This excerpt describes the importance of anger and when it should be used as a force of advancing change rather than a force of self-righteousness.
Beware the tyranny of structurelessness:
“there is no such thing as a structureless group.” stood out to me from that excerpt the most. is reinforced the ideas I've thought a lot about, the idea that you need the box in order to think outside of it.
Build strength through repetition:
To me, repetition meant to repeat the same thing over and over-almost monotonously- until whatever is being repeated becomes second nature. I've never thought of that concept on a campaign scale, let alone a community scale. The structure of repetition was a personal benefactor, but this article opens up the possibility of solidarity that's foreign to me.
Comments
Post a Comment