The American people are smart. They've gotten sick of the predictable hyperpartisan talking points and canned anger.
The Batman type of story may stimulate children to homosexual fantasies, of the nature of which they may be unconscious.
Through TV and moving pictures a child may see more violence in thirty minutes than the average adult experiences in a lifetime. What children see on the screen is violence as an almost casual commonplace of daily living. Violence becomes the fundamental principle of society, the natural law of humanity. Killing is as common as taking a walk, a gun more natural than an umbrella. Children learn to take pride in force and to feel ashamed of ordinary sympathy. They are encouraged to forget that people have feelings.
Robin is a handsome ephebic boy, usually shown in his uniform with bare legs. He is buoyant with energy and devoted to nothing on earth or in interplanetary space as much as to Bruce Wayne. He often stands with his legs spread, the genital region discreetly evident.
Hitler was a beginner compared to the comic-book industry.
For boys, Wonder Woman is a frightening image. For girls she is a morbid ideal. Where Batman is anti-feminine, the attractive Wonder Woman and her counterparts are definitely anti-masculine.
The greatest achievement of the civil-rights movement is that it has restored the dignity of indignation.
Harnessing steam power required many innovations, as William Rosen chronicles in the book 'The Most Powerful Idea in the World. '
I have now come to a stage of realization in which I see that God is walking in every human form and manifesting Himself alike through the sage and the sinner, the virtuous and the vicious. Therefore when I meet different people I say to myself, “God in the form of the saint, God in the form of the sinner, God in the form of the righteous, God in the form of the unrighteous.
When I do it [writing] by myself, there's a lot more terror and uncertainty.
Clearly I am a very strong, top-of-the-line, always-rising-to-it personage.