In Its Purest Form
29 points
12 days ago
| 2 comments
| lareviewofbooks.org
| HN
fifticon
11 days ago
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peoples' outrage at this book appears to be inversely proportional to how much they have read or understood it.
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Tade0
11 days ago
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Similar thing, though due to different reasons, with Mein Kampf - I seriously doubt more than a minor fraction of all neonazis read the whole thing because:

1. It's a brick at ~780 pages in the full text version.

2. The Austrian painter was an even worse writer and the book reads like a huge rant the likes of which you could read on Voat back when it still existed.

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graemep
11 days ago
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Mein Kampf IS a rant.

I recommend people read it so you can understand how people like that think. This is also a valid reason for reading Lolita (although at least Lolita is well written).

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01HNNWZ0MV43FF
11 days ago
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Just skimming the Wikipedia article, it seems like conspiratorial thinking is a factor. That reminds me, I need to sit down and finish the new Contrapoints video on conspiracies
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TimorousBestie
10 days ago
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The Contrapoints video is a bit repetitive in places, but very good. She continues to impress.
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cafard
10 days ago
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It has been years since I read Lolita, but I don't think that one comes away from it with any insights into the mind of the pedophile. It was pretty clear in reading it that it was a grim story underneath, something intermittently mentioned by the narrator.
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