what is morality

Tressie 2022-04-22 07:01:32

Vanity, hypocrisy, vulgar, filthy, disgusting, and depraved, does it mean that desire is dirty, or is the process of satisfying desire dirty? Because it knows that it is a mercenary animal, pretending to be sympathetic, pretending to be superior, pretending to have humanistic concern, pretending to understand others, pretending to be aloof, pretending not to be Desire dominates, denies one's desire, cries out that he is knowledgeable, cries out that all beings are equal, cries out for religion, cries out for neutrality, cries out for compassion, cries out for those theories, cries about human nature Desires are revealed in the face of their true nature. Men have never one day truly empathized with women. They can talk about gender equality and the pain and social pressure that women have to endure. They can condemn and speak politically correct words in a politically correct tone. They can pretend to be sympathetic. At the end of the film, "Haven't you slept with countless men?" The truth is ridiculous, hypocritical, disgusting, disgusting, and the truth is revealed

What is the morality of the bourgeoisie with an irrelevant face? Those "psychologists" who have psychological terms in their mouths every day? Or the so-called "scholar" who has read thousands of books with higher education and pretends that he has no "dirty desires" but is no different from a genital?

What are women in this society? Are repressed desires shameful forever passive? Only men can unrestrainedly release their desires women are forbidden. The world's sense of taboo against women makes everything shameful Menstruation is shameful sex is shameful release is unfeminine. Silent women can only tell their stories secretly, but they are still dirty, they are still betrayed by hypocrites, they think the world is a little white, and there is a little truth, goodness and beauty, but they are revealed under the ugly genitals, only pitch black

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Extended Reading

Nymphomaniac: Vol. II quotes

  • Joe's Father: I've found my tree. My soul tree. And no, it's not that one, okay, 'cause then I would be dead.

    [shows Joe a large oak tree]

    Joe's Father: This is my tree.

    Joe - 10 Years: It's not an ash tree.

    Joe's Father: No, it's an oak tree.

    Joe - 10 Years: It has two trunks.

    Joe's Father: Yeah, isn't it great? It shows itself to both sides, the lake and the forest.

    Joe - 10 Years: But, dad, how does a tree get two trunks?

    Joe's Father: The most common reason is that the top broke when it was very young.

    Joe - 10 Years: That means that you've been broken once. Have you, dad?

    Joe's Father: [long pause] It seems that it can be rather revealing... to find your soul tree.

  • [opening narration for "The Gun"]

    Joe: Whether I left society or it left me, I cannot say. I suppose you can make an argument for both sides. I was on my way to the shady side of the debt collecting business, which, among other things, involved stuff like burning people's cars.