Exuberance Spatula


There was a quaint and ascerbic little politics satire essay titled "A Modest Proposal" (Jonathan Swift) which stated that the British should do away with the massess of homeless children on the streets of London by rounding them up and using them as sacrificial lambs and sources of cannibalistic policies of human food extraction since the English government was failing to place them in foster homes.

This essay, like the orphanhood-infrastructure analytical "Oliver Twist" (Charles Dickens), explores the complexities surrounding 'lifestyle' governance as it applies to a modernizing era of politics humor.

"Ravenous" (1999) presents the controversial idea that America's brand of capitalism instills in people the notion that profit is as important as temperance.

Boyd is an awkward American soldier who must come to terms with his own frailties before he can deal with the diabolical Colonel Ives, a nihilist and social cynic bent on cannibalism and general 'bureaucracy cynicism.'

It seems that "Ravenous" (1999) serves as a sign-post of modern exuberance.



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Wow. I could not agree more. Nice synopsis; well written. Have you written any others?

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