When I came back from Afghanistan, at 3am I flew into Boston and was greeted by a group of Vietnam vets saluting and shaking our hands. These vets told us they wanted to make sure no soldier came home ungreeted like they were. It made me cry then and it makes me cry now. Edit: apparently my story is controversial. No I don't agree with everything that happened in Afghanistan, I joined as a medic to help people and that's what I did. I have love in my heart for every race and religion anyone who ended up on my table was treated to the best of my abilities. I am a single human who's belief can and did disagree with my government. I shared this story because I thought it was relevant to the topic of the video. You want to try to hold me accountable for my government's position. I suppose that's your prerogative or you could ask questions and I will share my honest opinion and feelings about my time and experiences.
@vashranoid3 ай бұрын
You landed at a civilian airport when coming back from Afghanistan? Would have thought military personnel (which is implied in your post) would have landed at a military facility?
@BenDavis-w7h3 ай бұрын
@@vashranoidHe probably went on leave after deployment. I know I would take any chance of leave as soon as I could
@Angryspec3 ай бұрын
@@vashranoidit’s very common for US military personnel to take civilian flights to and from war zones. Sometimes you get a military flight sometimes not. Depends on a lot of variables.
@jeffdishong48533 ай бұрын
Wow, that was awesome of them!! I thank you for your service my friend. I served in Bosnia w/a French NATO unit. I understand how these Vietnam Veterans feel being forgotten,or worse. I hope someday that governments learn some lessons, but that’s just wishful thinking 😂
@jeffdishong48533 ай бұрын
Well, so far on our planet biology has been shown to have a very hard time changing. Thank goodness. Of course I have no idea what may come, but i do know that im not helping create that tower of Babel!!!!
@xPantsMcGeex3 ай бұрын
Fry: "I heard one time you single-handedly defeated a horde of rampaging somethings in the something something system" Brannigan: "Killbots? A trifle. It was simply a matter of outsmarting them." Fry: "Wow, I never would've thought of that." Brannigan: "You see, killbots have a preset kill limit. Knowing their weakness, I sent wave after wave of my own men at them until they reached their limit and shut down. Kif, show them the medal I won."
@KarlDRG3 ай бұрын
Peter turbo moment
@swiftmatic2 ай бұрын
Kif: 《sigh》
@oscar278Ай бұрын
Must've been a British officer
@patrickday420612 күн бұрын
Sounds like a politician
@Shrikinator10 күн бұрын
Wow, nobody here seems to recognize that Zapp Brannigan reference, except for swiftmatic.
@nobody87173 ай бұрын
Actually, we in the industrial complex prefer the term "Sustainable War" as it is more accurate to our long-term goals.
@laviedandre3 ай бұрын
Nice!
@UnfollowYourDreams3 ай бұрын
Actually, we who fight your sustainable wars prefer to call you guys "capitalists".
@Jamfar7773 ай бұрын
"No such thing as a sustainable war, it's a lie we don't believe anymore" 🎶🎶
@zarombiste91583 ай бұрын
Difference is that in sicialistic kommunist countries can’t buy anything for you pay because there are no products
@UnfollowYourDreams3 ай бұрын
@@Hat_With_A_Hat_On the difference is the quality of life. When the economy is centred arround humans instead of capital, the average standard of living is much higher.
@xtremeranger303 ай бұрын
Little tidbit is Heinlein loved reading the Forever War and personally congratulated Haldeman receiving his Nebula award.
@REHANKHAN-en5zn3 ай бұрын
Heinlein?
@rogirek33623 ай бұрын
@@REHANKHAN-en5zn Robert Heinlein, the author of Starship Troopers, the book to which The Forever War was a response.
@MediocreAverage3 ай бұрын
Didn't know that, thanks! If I had to give 3 books for ppl to read, to understand war properly is: Starship Troopers, Heinlein. Forever War, Haldeman. Regeneration, Barker. 3 different perspectives. And a bonus mention to Forever Peace.
@Cliffdog3 ай бұрын
Haldeman also said getting this congratulations was more important to him than the Neubla award itself, both brilliant Sci-fi authors 👾👽
@Thrainite3 ай бұрын
@@CliffdogAlso two men who were veterans of vastly different wars. In short, I wonder what future scifi authors who experienced GWOT will write for military scifi.
@sunniedunbar68893 ай бұрын
There was a serious brain drain too. Soldiers needed to be smarter due to the conditions of a war in space. Our smartest sent off to die.
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
Yep. Only those with high IQ got drafted, if I remember right.
@needy35353 ай бұрын
IQ isn't real and is just a remnant of phrenology. everyone is capable of "becoming intelligent" when they have access to education, though others will excel in specific fields. this reads more like a society shifting towards funding a war rather than investing in their members education and well being. something we should all be extremely familiar with.
@needy35353 ай бұрын
@ScribeOfAcadia do they hate you or the empire that has subjected them to war, economic disparity and the destruction of their autonomy?? we should fund each other's well being because we are all human, and we all deserve food and shelter. but I mean if you're admitting that you already hate them for not being like you, we know there's no reasoning with you.
@Tigerblade20023 ай бұрын
@@alanpennie8013 being a former military recruiter, I can vouch for that, Friend! However, suggest that your google "McNamara's Morons" for a rather interesting and possibly disturbing footnote about the draft during the Viet Nam War.
@elijahherstal7763 ай бұрын
@@needy3535 I don't hate you until you start spewing commie gibsmedat drivel.
@jeffdishong48533 ай бұрын
I served in Bosnia . Alienation affects most soldiers to some degree. I am forever stuck in 1997.
@Vindolin3 ай бұрын
It must be horrible to have to listen to Barbie Girl over and over again.
@PhilipDudley33 ай бұрын
For me, 2010.
@loganyoutube54183 ай бұрын
Sounds like you are rightfully guilty over participating in a war you had no business in
@apxth_y3 ай бұрын
@@loganyoutube5418there are few statements/opinions quite as ignorant as yours. have you ever served? have you asked why this person served? have you thought about criticizing their government instead of them? perhaps they were a defender rather than an offender. i’m anti-war myself, but what you said isn’t how you go about talking about it.
@Tweak-xt5qu3 ай бұрын
I wish you all the best, youll feel better the more you seek help. I know that it can be so exhausting and expensive, but it’s worth in order to feel good. Have a great day :)
@thenight5273 ай бұрын
"In the grim Darkness of the far future, there is only war."
@KalousTheGuy3 ай бұрын
"And blood, lots of blood. Matter of a fact, you might say that's all there is. There is the blood, and there is nothing else"
@Freefall3473 ай бұрын
@@KalousTheGuy don't forget the skulls for the skull throne.
@rinzlr35543 ай бұрын
IS THAT A COMPLAINT? I THINK WE HAVE A HERETIC
@rossgadsby96633 ай бұрын
So what you expect me not to go out of my way to random worlds to extinguish Xenos? That's some first rate Heresy and the Inquisition has been notified
@DG-iw3yw3 ай бұрын
Well, id adjust that statement to say that war is one of the only certainties, for us anyway...
@JerR223 ай бұрын
"War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope." -Smedley Butler
@dangerousdays20523 ай бұрын
Too bad no one in these cdomments seems to understand that and are praising American soldiers aka, war criminals that mass unalive civilians in wars for profit.
@JerR223 ай бұрын
@yourt00bz Not all of us care to view great people through authoritarian lenses. I'm sorry that you're so attached to identify with grades others have made for others.... Good day. Edit: And I saw some of your other comments, I'm glad you're privy to the agenda, however, why not just state this without attacking me? If you see the real agenda, it's to keep us fighting and attacking each other based on a CLASS system. It matters not ones origin, as we all come from a great and wonderful mysterious place... Don't shoot the messenger bro, we're on the same side. Be well.
@arthurdent10973 ай бұрын
@@JerR22 I think Gen Butlers rank and experiences lend extra weight to his statements about the reality of war schemes. They're not statements based on academic theory that's detached from real life experiences.
@gauravphalke83223 ай бұрын
War Is a necessary evil,,the wounds maybe deep,,but war slingshots technology,, Wether ce GPS of chemotherapy are the product of war
@floydbaker22403 ай бұрын
I agree with both of you to a degree, but side with the "his rank adds weight" but that may be my prior service bias.
@khango61383 ай бұрын
I am a native Vietnamese with family and relatives from both sides of the civil war, and have experienced life both in Vietnam where I grew up and in the US. I read The Forever War during a period of great but also traumatic emotional development. I can relate in an odd way to the main character of this book, and by extension Haldeman himself. Great read, i always revisit the book once a year. P.s. I did not grow up during wartime, my parents were children in the waning years of the war. However the impact of the war was still felt in someway by children of that generation. Some families, from both sides, came out of it worse than others. And some children have inherited more inter-generational trauma than others.
@johnrivers38133 ай бұрын
I agree, you don't need to grow up in a war torn nation to experience the psychological side effects. If anything children of parents who experienced war suffer as well. I think that's the real insidious nature of war is that once it's over, it's never really over for people who've lived it. It takes a lot of work from both mental health practitioners and from the patients themselves to even remotely recover from it.
@khango61383 ай бұрын
@@johnrivers3813yes I fully agree. Unfortunately, mental health service and professionals were not available for my parents, and currently remain limited. Mental health issues in my home country carry a stigma, and people, older folks especially, carry emotional wounds that never heal because they think themselves strong and therefore refuse mental health care, and look down upon those who seek it. I love my parents, but it remains true that I've had to seek therapy and essentially heal on my own and with the help of friends, away from my family.
@killbotone62103 ай бұрын
Great comment. And youre right, trauma experienced by parents is quite often counter transferred to siblings unconsciously.
@FUNKY_BUTTLOVIN3 ай бұрын
Yeah it is interesting, how trauma often has a more profound effect on the children of the victims, than it even has on the victims themselves. The UK did a study in the years after 9/11 and the tube attacks, trying to find which biographical traits, or combinations of which predict who will become a terrorist. It was a waste of effort mostly, but they found just one trait that had any significant correlation, and that was being the child of refugees. While it is still rare even for that demographic for it to grow so far, they found that children who grow up seeing their parents discriminated against by the society in which they live, will often just grow up to see that society as being fundamentally evil. And as such, deserving destruction. Also and entirely separately, you can Google sometime, "what are the three kinds of imprinting humans do?" Humans do very little imprinting, we imprint on our family, men alone imprint on their ideal mate, and everyone also does "limbic imprinting." Limbic imprinting is, during the period of time when you are a nursing baby, you will imprint on your mother's (or whichever woman nurses you) sympathetic tone. Your body's alarm response will feel hers, and grow to match it. Your baseline anxiety level, for all your life, will be whatever your mother's anxiety/fear level was, during the first few months in which she nursed you. It doesn't seem to make much sense for it to work this way for humans, but it greatly increases the chance of survival to adulthood for babies of low-status apes. But yeah, it means if your mom is traumatized whenever she is 19 and nursing you with a genocide playing out in the background, you are going to be sympathetically tuned like that, like she is in that moment, for all your years.
@atxmaps3 ай бұрын
I worked in VN from 2008 to 2012. I was dating a girl from Da Lat and we went to visit her family there, we worked in HCMC. We were walking downtown. It’s a pretty town. I was telling her how I didn’t have a car in High School but my friends did. And she sincerely said aww that’s hard. Then we passed a building in the town square and she told me that was where her and her mother and her sister and her would walk to daily to get a ration of rice. Their house was easily over a mile away. It would have been in the mid 1980s when she was a kid and around the time I was in High School. I felt an inch tall complaining about that stuff. Cringe! I told her that she said she hadn’t even thought of it.
@bitterlilraccoon3 ай бұрын
Sexuality themes aside, Forever War suddenly reminded me of one of my favorite (and first) sci-fi universes: Battletech. The setting itself is designed to perpetuate war and alienation as a theme which crops us like weeds in every aspect from the novels to the games. Humans merge with machines to become gods, nation states form, split and cannibalize each other like a forest of bacteria under a microscope. In at least one story arc, the descendants of a great war hero self-isolate to avoid being caught in a pending series of civil wars, only to then return to the setting hundreds of years later as a techno-eugenics cult with bizarre customs hell-bent on reconquering the Earth. Who needs aliens when humanity does a splendid job of making aliens of itself?
@alexlopez75063 ай бұрын
Sounds similar to the story of the game Horizon Forbidden West. Wonder if the devs got inspiration from Battletech now
@davestier62473 ай бұрын
The phone company doesn't f@%k around.
@bitterlilraccoon3 ай бұрын
@@davestier6247 The phone company are also weirdos
@davestier62473 ай бұрын
@@bitterlilraccoon you're not wrong
@CinHotlanta3 ай бұрын
As different as humanity will be in a thousand years, imagine what Florida Man will evolve into
@yankeepapa3043 ай бұрын
Haldeman's character became a "regular" due to a total lack of ability to reintegrate. Most of my generation who served (I just turned 75) pulled one tour of duty and then took the dive back into society...with mixed results. I turned 21 a month after my enlistment in the Corps up. I looked 14... Entering college was an adjustment in the Fall of 1970... Not a "hostile" campus environment...but alien for all that... The people who graduated from high school in the Spring of 1970 and moved directly to college very different from so many who graduated in 1967. . In 1965 a Marine infantry squad leader (Sgt.) might have been 24 or 25... In 1969 he might be 19 or even 18. War not only inflates the currency...but also the leadership. The Corps went from 170,000 in 1965 to 300,000 in 1968. "War is boyish...and is fought by boys..." Herman Melville YP
@travismcdonald1482 ай бұрын
Man I felt this shit. I started running a division of 15 nuclear trained machinist mates on a submarine when I was 22. It's incredible the amount of responsibility that can be loaded onto young, and inexperienced men.
@YoutubeCommenteroftheYear2 ай бұрын
You old soldiers never miss a chance to talk about your days of service like they were your high school football glory days. You were a heel for a government that did not and still does not care about you. You can rationalize it any way that you want, but just call it like it is: you’re a bootlicker. In a different time and place, you would have been one of the guys on trial at Nuremberg.
@kevingrozni3 ай бұрын
The Forever War has always been my favorite SF novel. I'm also fortunate enough to have had Joe Haldeman as a professor during the years he taught writing at MIT. A great book, and a great man. Haldeman fun fact: after having been wounded twice in Viet Nam, he was shot again in Florida while riding a bike along the highway.
@DicePunk3 ай бұрын
That must have been such a privilege. The Forever War remains one of my favourites. And Forever Peace was even better.
@davidantonsavage62073 ай бұрын
Thanx for the additional fun fact in your comment. I have a friend who grew up in Florida and really hates the place. He's going to enjoy hearing a reminder of why he'll never ever set foot in that state again.
@OfficialROZWBRAZEL3 ай бұрын
@@DicePunk haven't slept, at first thought you were saying 'That must have been such a privilege.' about him getting shot in Florida
@bear36163 күн бұрын
Hey, should I not watch the video? Should I go read the book? I barely watched the video and the book has peaked my interest.
@jesseberg32713 ай бұрын
I think it can be hard for some of us to really understand how radical some of these ideas were, because of how obvious they are to us. Yes, TFW's handling off sexuality is crude, awkward, and ultimately selfdefeating. But the simple fact that it wasn't "gay=bad" was radical for its time. We should also try to keep in mind that the audience he was writing for wasn't used to this message, and may have needed to have it repeated, just to be able to hear it.
@bentuovila52963 ай бұрын
I think that also goes to prove some of what the book has to say about alienation. It wasn't written that long ago in historical terms. Yet here we are alienated from it because of a rapidly changing culture and someone from them transported to now wouldn't know what to think.
@tarnetskygge3 ай бұрын
@@bentuovila5296 the book makes the only honest observation anyone can make about the sexual mores of other generations. Unless you believe we, by grace of god, are living during the one moment in history when sexual morality has been perfected, you have to conclude that everyone who ever moralised or passed judgement about such things is full of shit.
@AnthonySmith-x5z3 ай бұрын
@@tarnetskyggei dunno about that but i can say thing right now aren't natural as most of the world has SUB replacement birth rates.
@giovannicervantes20532 ай бұрын
I read a twinge of shame in how mandala was going on and on and i just thought "Joe fucked either a ladyboy or a trench buddy and he felt real bad about it afterwards"
@mbaxter223 ай бұрын
The Forever War is a timeless classic. It made more of an impact on me than any other sci-fi I ever read as a boy. I was thinking about it for years.
@kenban85333 ай бұрын
Glad to see Joe Haldeman getting coverage on this channel. One of the first sci-fi writers I read, and still one of my favorites. A gritty, brutal, cynical take on war.
@davidhanson87283 ай бұрын
I first read this in the early 80's. My brother was a big scifi/fantasy reader and first handed me Starship Trooper. I thought it was great and then he handed me Forever War afterwards. Forever War blew me away. I enjoyed Starship Trooper, but saw how shallow it was compared to Forever War. It was my first encounter with time dilation. I loved this concept in science fiction.
@stoobeedoo2 ай бұрын
I loved the Forever War. It was my first introduction to time dilation, too (and B-theory of time). It hurt my brain to understand it at first, but when I finally could grasp the ideas behind special relativity, it changed my perspective of time and my place in it. Got me interested in understanding physics (at least a layman's understanding, anyway). The book was great, though. Didn't really enjoy the sequel anywhere near as much, but got through them.
@ki36572 ай бұрын
I also loved Forever War. That and Marsbound are still my favorite scifi stories. Really stuck with me as a 17yo. I'd never read anything quite like it.
@micklaws55203 ай бұрын
Thank you ,as always, for your insight and analysis. As a Vietnam Vet, after I got home I was adrift and a stranger in my own country. I managed to finish a degree then left to work overseas, for most of my life.
@Tigerblade20023 ай бұрын
If this is your research, I find it thoroughly impressive, Sir. Something that I hope to emulate. I am largely self-taught because I find it difficult to learn in a classroom environment. I have found out recently that it was exacerbated by ignorance of my recently confirmed autism. So, at 65 years old, I hope to improve my abilities as a writer, composer and researcher by studying how people such as yourself do your work since emulation has been the main process I've used to educate myself. i am quite sure after you read this, you'll dismiss me as some wacko. That's quite alright, I am used to it. Thank you very much for sharing your fantastic insight once again.
@scottlangley55963 ай бұрын
Why would anyone think you're a wacko? It sounds like you wear this self-imposed badge with honor? Or do you want to be called a wacko? It's strange.
@russellg14733 ай бұрын
@@scottlangley5596yeah it IS a badge of honor but us autists do not expect you to understand
@KevyMenday3 ай бұрын
I do the same to improve myself!
@christiant39073 ай бұрын
Subscribed. Make something!
@Tigerblade20023 ай бұрын
@@scottlangley5596 have you ever heard the phrase, "Never have a battle of wits with an unarmed person?"
@dontforgetyoursunscreen3 ай бұрын
Always interesting to find a video which hasn't been out long enough for someone to have watched the entire thing yet
@GoatCemetery3 ай бұрын
even if they watched it at 2x speed lol
@moosiemoose13373 ай бұрын
As a time traveler, I find this comment offensive.
@rodClark7173 ай бұрын
@moosiemoose1337 at least you can snipe from the past, leaving a mystery poo in his loo oughta do
@SofaKingShit3 ай бұрын
And yet there's 85 comments nonetheless. As for me I'm 1:13 in and it was about time.
@DG-iw3yw3 ай бұрын
35 hours of video uploaded to this god forsaken cesspit a day (this channels alright tho)
@Dr.Gainzzz3 ай бұрын
Quinn, this video was BEYOND Phenomenal. You really nailed the theme of the book and what veterans go through and the crushing reality of our future. Bravo sir.
@pbbbht3 ай бұрын
This book isn't cited as often as Starship Troopers in how it influenced HellDivers II, but I feel like it was almost as influential in the game's story's/world's creation.
@ThommyofThenn3 ай бұрын
Just as was the case with ST, some HD players don't realise it's satire and take it as a genuine endorsement of their facist views
@thebigenchilada6783 ай бұрын
@@ThommyofThennI’ve literally never encountered a single person who has the viewpoint but i’ve seen a dozen who believe that these non-existant people exist lmao.
@pbbbht3 ай бұрын
@@thebigenchilada678 I've seen it. They're real and the kinds of people easily swayed by propaganda
@ThommyofThenn3 ай бұрын
@@thebigenchilada678 you know every person who has ever existed or might possibly. Very cool big guy!
@thebigenchilada6783 ай бұрын
@@ThommyofThenn i’m almost certain you were trolled into believing this. You’re telling me that someone looked at helldivers 2’s trailer and said “yup, so true!” As if the satirical bug killing game is in any way remotely applicable to their own lives or views. Where exactly do you encounter these people?
@hillogical3 ай бұрын
at 6:43 I have to pause and come back at a later date. First, I'm a fan of yours Quinn. So I'll take your word that this book is good. Second, I'm an Iraq war vet. I'll have to get this book, read it, then come back and watch the rest of your video.
@thelostcosmonaut55553 ай бұрын
A vet myself, I picked this book up at the MWR library towards the end of my deployment. Interestingly enough, I read Starship Troopers at the beginning of my deployment. I highly recommend The Forever War as well.
@LordCakeskull3 ай бұрын
I read this book when I was 14 and it had a great impact on me. It's the reason I never joined the military, and why I found that physics and philosophy can be bed fellows in fiction.
@bcre8v3 ай бұрын
As a vet with 32yrs of service, thank you. This was an excellent analogy.
@Stephaneforero3 ай бұрын
Thanks for your service
@kelvinsantiago706123 күн бұрын
I second this coment@@Stephaneforero
@billthevillageidiot40693 ай бұрын
The Graphic novel adaption of the book by Marvano (NBM Publishing - also in collaboration with Joe Haldeman) is worth getting and reading :)
@gdc47363 ай бұрын
"Wait a minute... you mean that... on board... everyone on the ship is homosexual?"
@cyriltournier3 ай бұрын
The graphic novel is fantastic
@TheShutteredRoomАй бұрын
I love your channel, and must congratulate you for its quality and detail. Thank you.
@earleaccount3 ай бұрын
Excellent review as always Quinn. I read this book, of all ironic places, when I was deployed in Iraq in 2016. I found this in a drawer of a desk at our company headquarters and read it over the course of two days and loved it. I had no idea that Haldermann was a veteran himself but I can certainly see it now in his writings. i also didn't know the inspiration for the book was the Vietnam war, but it is clear as day to me now. Thank you for reviewing this. Keep up the good work man!
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
It definitely reads like the writing of a vet, with exchanges like, "It's so sneaky". "It's so army."
@earleaccount3 ай бұрын
@@alanpennie8013 That, and just the way he writes in the beginning when the characters are going through training. I read this and even then I thought this had to either be written by a veteran, or someone who knows veterans.
@davidrhode70193 ай бұрын
On the topic of sci-fi novels written from the non-human perspective: There are several I can think of: Nor Crystal Tears, by Alan Dean Foster. This is part of his Commonwealth novel series, and tells the story of the foundation of the Humanx Commonwealth from the perspective of a Thranx, an insectoid alien. There is also The Genocidal Healer, told from the perspective of a non-human doctor dealing with the guilt of failing to correctly diagnose and treat a planetary plague. This is one of Alan E. Nourse's Sector General series. The author C.J. Cherryh has written several series told mostly from the perspective of non-humans. There is the Faded Sun Trilogy, told from the perspective of a Mri, one of a species of warriors honor-bound to serve another species, the Regul. And her Chanur series is told primarily from the perspective of a hani ship captain, caught in a conflict between the humans, the kif, and the knnn. Now, one question is, are these alien perspectives alien enough? That, I believe, is up to the reader to decide...
@wbrennan22533 ай бұрын
And now to find my copy of "Nor Crystal Tears" and reread it.
@42Oolon3 ай бұрын
Thanks! I really appreciate you highlighting this book, one of the best examples of the genre.
@beskamir59773 ай бұрын
I just noticed that the description has an actual summary of the video! I wish more people used the description for summaries rather than purely ads. Definitely one of those smaller things that I really appreciate about your work but didn't immediately notice.
@TheCalico693 ай бұрын
Knocked it out the park with this one. The critique was flawless; Besides your dune stuff, my favorite yet.
@cavok84Ай бұрын
I’m so happy to see you cover forever war. I love this book. I don’t share the perspective that its social themes are dated. But, to me, I think that the criticism would more aptly be that it seems uncharacteristically without modern euphemism, it can be curt, and, in current non-descriptive parlance, “problematic”. I do, however, think that the view and perspective attributing a “dated” nature, in a sci-fi fan’s review-is a novelty of the last 5 years. This is a minor gripe. I love your videos and really enjoy your views and tellings!
@lucasjohnson38863 ай бұрын
I really like the section at the beginning of the video where you go over some of the history of science fiction. A whole video on the topic would be super interesting to watch!
@Brokentwobutton2 ай бұрын
I randomly looked up Revelation Space when thinking about the Ultras and got through your vid on the Dawn War before i realized I'd watched or listened to ALL your stuff on ASoIaF and Dune years ago. I'm really glad you're doing well at this, your sharp perception and ability to compile oculted themes in these works really impressed me and after binging 4 of your vids from the past year, the hunger to finish The Sprawl and Inhibitor trilogies reawakens.
@Der0Nibelung3 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering one of my favorite novels! Years ago, it took about a second reading to realize that the entire book is from a first-person point of view of William. No conversations or scenes, other than inner dialogue, outside of the main character. A lot of work for the lead if ever made into a movie...
@bilabrin23 күн бұрын
Great book. One of my favorites! Thanks for covering this.
@sunniedunbar68893 ай бұрын
The appetite for allegory is not to be underestimated.
@LOSTnerd8153 ай бұрын
Hey, Quinn! Just want to say that your Dune videos helped me out of a rut. With all the horrible news coming out of Gaza/Palestine, I needed something to take my mind off things here on Terra. I binged them all (and even rewatched them, what a dense and imaginative world). A friend is a big fan of the series, but she never mentioned how weird it is, like truly. It's an amazing world and I thank you for covering it with so much love and care.
@henryneubert77983 ай бұрын
I want to become a writer and I noticed that The Forever War was one inspiration for my sci-fi novel. The feeling of alienation takes place at the start of the plot and the urge to leave earth is what causes the main characters to end up in a warzone, on the wrong side of a pointless war.
@JCDadalus3 ай бұрын
A beautiful endorsement Mr. Quinn. I have read these on deployment during my time in the Navy along with other great books like Heinlein's Starship Troopers and Frank Herbert's Dune series. Your recommendations are always spot on.
@intevolver3 ай бұрын
Vernor Vinge's "A Deepness in the Sky" from 1999 also follows a society of spider people. His novel "A Fire Upon the Deep" 1992 (same series) explores a medieval society of distributed intellects for whom one 'person' is distributed across several creatures in a pack. I highly recommend Vernor Vinge's Zones of Thought series for its exploration of both time dilation at sub-FTL travel and his exploration of how non-human intelligences might think and act.
@cheezus47723 ай бұрын
Yep, thats the first one that came to mind for me as well. Been decades since i read it so the specific plot is long lost in time but it remains in my memory as both thought provoking and easy and pleasant to read
@GodwynDi3 ай бұрын
Rainbows End is my favorite book of his.
@Hirohitorunguard3 ай бұрын
Ever since i started watching this channel I have begun reading far more than I ever thought I would. It is bizarre how much resistance there seems to be to the concept of reading books, and once you break through that barrier it is like unlocking an almost endless archive of media that was hidden in plain sight.
@ravenheartwraith3 ай бұрын
This was a great book! glad to see you are covering it. One thing I love is just how different society becomes between each mission the guy goes on, so much to the point where he decides "well this place sucks, might as well go back out again" haha.
@saintcalibre3 ай бұрын
Cannot begin to tell you how much my week needed an injection of intelligent and thought-provoking content. Excellent video as always. Yours is my most anticipated channel on KZbin.
@Dickie720023 ай бұрын
Multiple time GWOT veteran. I related to this after so many deployments. The war had no end in sight and we kept being sent right back. The GWOT was the Forever War.
@sprinkle613 ай бұрын
Terrorism is an idea, you can't fight an idea, it doesn't have armies or navies, it lives in the minds of the alienated, and can pop up anywhere you get enough alienated men, and such a war can truly be fought forever, since every heart and mind cannot be won.
@mx-hx3 ай бұрын
What is GWOT?
@zachdebuhr63473 ай бұрын
@@mx-hx war on terror
@Dickie720023 ай бұрын
Global War on Terror, or “GWOT,” but also used to describe diplomatic, financial, and other actions taken to deny financing or safe harbor to terrorists. This also included operations in the greater Middle East including Afghanistan and Iraq, also Africa and the Philippines.
@shorelord_actual3 ай бұрын
You would do well to put quotes on "terrorists".
@psych0r0gue13 ай бұрын
This is the most amazing video you have ever done. Speculative fiction is always social commentary, and for you to connect these books to such relevant history is a supreme accomplishment. You really take your rightful place as a significant public intellectual with this one. Bravo sir! Encore!
@Pfasma53 ай бұрын
Your commentary is so insightful and interesting. Thank you for your videos
@fenwickrysen3 ай бұрын
Thank you for finally covering this series. It has been one of my favorite series for decades, and one I have often recommended to young sci-fi readers. Thou Art Awesome, Quinn. Thank you.
@ganjaman596503 ай бұрын
"in the future everyone is gay" The guy almost had it in 1973. If he had said "in the future everything is gay" then he would be correct...
@coryneartheprecipice3 ай бұрын
I love this book!!! I’ve read it 4 times already and I continuously draw similarities between the story and the characters with myself and my 26 year career in the Army. Quinn, thank you for taking time to truly break this book down as you did/do with DUNE!!! Outstanding job
@alanlittlemoon81943 ай бұрын
I have been following your stuff since the beginning Quinn and your scholarship has gotten better and better. It was great to begin with.
@BretHiggins3 ай бұрын
You should be proud of this review. Perfect insight along with the understanding of where Haldeman was at the time, the political climate when he was writing it and meshing it seamlessly and keeping it streamlined. This is up there with your work on Dune.
@Apathesis03 ай бұрын
I have spent entire afternoons watching your Dune videos. Your channel is fantastic.
@panecondoin15223 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. Quality content and delivery. Please keep going, Quinn!
@jdkem1046 сағат бұрын
I’m so glad you are covering this! Honestly this is one of my most favorite books of all time! I read this in highschool and I still think about it all the time!
@larrylambert12203 ай бұрын
One of my favorite books. Thanks for doing a video for this one, Quinn.
@KerenskyTheRed3 ай бұрын
Finally, I'm so excited you are finally covering this gem!
@ZomBiezley3 ай бұрын
Great video. Future Shock, as coined by Alvin Toffler, is definitely a major theme as well Even dropped by name, "but in a physical sense". Williams captain said it with that first encounter with taurans in the collapsar
@josephmccarthy236524 күн бұрын
I've really enjoyed watching your videos, thank you for making them.
@sayrebonifield46633 ай бұрын
Once you have Starship Troopers and The Forever war covered, the next steps are The Eternity Brigade and John Steakley’s Armor.
@eloquentsarcasm3 ай бұрын
Armor has been a favorite of mine for ages, I bought several copies when I was in the Army because I'd loan it out and either me or the guy who had it would PCS, lol.
@enzannometsuke88123 ай бұрын
@@eloquentsarcasm yup, Armour is brilliant, it just keeps getting better and more interesting as uut progresses
@thetonetosser3 ай бұрын
Quinn. Thank you for this in depth analysis. I've read the book a couple of times and on my travels, have listened to the audio book. You've brought several things here to my attention that I hadn't considered over the years.
@faolitaruna3 ай бұрын
Marvano’s illustrations for the graphic novel version of The Forever War add visceral horror to the story.
@hendrsb333 ай бұрын
The series sits with pride on my shelf!
@LocoCoyote2 ай бұрын
well done. very well thought out and well articulated. Thank you so much for sharing it.
@danilo.castelli3 ай бұрын
Man, I'm a Sci-Fi fan since my childhood and a Dune fan since my 20s, but your channel has really fired me up about Sci-Fi in general. Thanks to you I read Children of Time. A great novel, so original. And a challenging read because of my fear of spiders. I really think you should do a video about Cli-Fi. The Ministry For The Future of Kim Stanley Robinson is a prime example.
@Charlotte_Martel2 ай бұрын
I'm in the middle of Ministry for the Future now. It would be amazing to hear Quinn's take on the book, and I would love to see an adaptation.
@barrypitzer1303 ай бұрын
Thank you, Quinn, for opening this allegory to our times. Very nicely done. Kudos.
@jcwoodman52853 ай бұрын
Whaaaaat! History by Quinn? Well done! You can really feel the 70s social concepts in Haldemans work....
@nc19013 ай бұрын
I'm gonna need an order of more 40 min + videos from you Quinn. Just too good to listen to you talk about these books you read and your thoughts on them too. Great work. Interesting book also.
@TheAckattack133 ай бұрын
You should check out The Black Company. Its a fantasy series but similar in a way to Forever War. A vet writing about things he knows, but it follows a mercenary company working for the evil empire.
@sayrebonifield46633 ай бұрын
The Black Company is great, but I would never recommend it over or before Malazan Book of the Fallen.
@Emanon...3 ай бұрын
Any other recommendations in a similar genre/theme?
@TheAckattack133 ай бұрын
@@sayrebonifield4663 malazan is great if u dont want to know whats going on lol
@GodwynDi3 ай бұрын
@@sayrebonifield4663I would every day of the week.
@bulasev3 ай бұрын
I have read many many sci-fi books in my life but I don't remember many that left such a huge impression on me. I keep going back to it in every couple of years.
@maximiliankelland25463 ай бұрын
Thanks for the new Vid Quinn. Just started reading book 8 of The Culture by Ian M Banks and I’m sad to be approaching the end of the series.
@wayneosborne25063 ай бұрын
I’m on my third go through the series. Never gets old.
@JustinWestbrook-be1mp2 ай бұрын
Quinn’s ideas is KZbin’s best content creator hands down!🙌🙌
@ezanakassu3 ай бұрын
0:16 I thought uncle Ruckus was about to pop out of nowhere hahahaha
@BlaireSnorlax3 ай бұрын
Well well well...
@MochiNPRA3 ай бұрын
As someone who is getting back into reading, discovering your channel has been a godsend. Keep up the great work and please have more book recommendations. Im slowly watching through your vids and have lots of books on my readlist now.
@antonsimmons85193 ай бұрын
I feel that "Total Blackout" is also relevant, here. The hanging, ghoulish realities and costs of war are really on display in that one. It's not sci-fi, but...well, it's not entirely NOT...
@michaeldudley68013 ай бұрын
Well done Quinn. I have been watching your videos for years and I always enjoy your reviews. Thank you for posting!!!
@bertellijustin63763 ай бұрын
As a straight dude I’ve taken the homosexuality topic as a clear indicator that it goes both ways. A straight man in a gay world is no different than a gay man in a straight world. The straight man can’t change his sexuality to match the gay world in the same way a gay man can’t change his sexuality in a straight world. Charlie’s ability to change to straight is no different than a gay man pretending to be straight can easily choose his homosexuality to express in a world that it is acceptable. The book was written when homosexuals were genuinely despised by a large portion of the world.
@bertellijustin63763 ай бұрын
*Western world.
@bertellijustin63763 ай бұрын
It’s like this, Charlie was always straight but the governments influence kind of forced him to act and appear as a homosexual. When given an o to be his genuine self he chooses to be what he always was. The same way gay men who once had to pretend to be straight to conform to society can now “reveal” and live as their genuine self. It always seemed as a means of puttin the predominately straight reader into the homosexuals shoes of the time the book was written. Reading it as a teen boy in the 80s it was an eye opener on how gays must have felt at the time. Even then homosexuality was still seen as odd or even unacceptable.
@ElGato19473 ай бұрын
Quinn's consistency in delivering high quality content is amazing. He's inspired me to read many sci-fi novels. Thx, Quinn!
@notsuretoday3 ай бұрын
"The idea of the gov. psychologically conditioning the entire populace to be gay is a bit silly" [watches Olympics opening performances] "Ooooooooh..."
@matsab79303 ай бұрын
If you watch a drag show and are ‘conditioned’ to be ‘gay’ then I’ve got some news for you… You’re gay.
@danielshaffer26093 ай бұрын
I appreciate that you took the time to do a sort of lit review and establish context before your breakdown, top quality as always, Quinn!
@John_Pace3 ай бұрын
One aspect not mentioned is that Mandela had an IQ160, as it was deemed that weapons systems by then were so complex, that they required geniuses to use them. And only all candidates of IQ 160 were conscripted to this war.... no US Senators sons here.. Paul Hardcastle "19" says it all, like this book.....
@swordskillz13 ай бұрын
My older sibling was killed in Vietnam which lead to me joining the military. After I got out I was struggling with the return to civilian life and being a dad. At one point my pregnant wife was hospitalized and I found John Steakley's Armor in a waiting room. Being a post Vietnam era book it was a direct opposite to Starship Troopers. It was re-aligned my thinking with things I was struggling with at the time.
@LateNightHam3 ай бұрын
Welcome home my man. I'm glad you got the happy ending (I hope).
@cchurch5723 ай бұрын
Thank you for a solid review and analysis. Always a good to see some new Quinn videos on anything
@ArchTymeWizard3 ай бұрын
This channel is the best, literally keeps me sane listening at work to get thru mind numbing days.
@RustyPawzАй бұрын
You make me want to read again! Thank you so much quin ❤
@charlieboone12983 ай бұрын
As a gay, closeted high-schooler, this more correct reading of the sexual politics of the book were lost on me due to me finding gay people and myself just as weird and alienating. Nevertheless, the fact that it was a personal reaction based on what Mandela was used to as opposed to moral condemnation helped matters immensely.
@superbrian79973 ай бұрын
Detroit Become Human by David Cage is one of my all-time favorite video games 🎮 and it’s all about Androids going rogue or becoming “Deviant”. And I wish it would’ve made some strong parallels to how we humans can see other human variants behaviors as deviating from what nature intended. Like homosexuality for example.
@matthewwalker55043 ай бұрын
For anyone who loves science fiction you make amazing videos. You're really great at communicating how interesting and how deep are all these cool science fiction stories really are. All the best man keep up the great work.
@Omnifarious03 ай бұрын
I didn't see "Starship Troopers" as glorifying the military. It's intention was to propose an answer to a question, which was "How can a democracy function when its citizens vote for their own interests to the exclusion of the shared interests of everybody?". I think this is still a cogent question, though I'm not sure that the answer presented by "Starship Troopers" is the right one. I really appreciate your perspective on the sexuality components of "The Forever War". I thought it was weird, but as a straight guy, I didn't have the experiences necessary to pick it apart in that way. I suspect that homosexuality is actually an adaptive behavior, honestly. I have some guesses as to why, but I'm eagerly waiting for Bret Weinstein to detail the hypotheses he has about it because I'm sure his background as an evolutionary biologist renders his hypothesis far more worthy of testing than my guesses.
@enysuntra13473 ай бұрын
Look at it from another perspective. Starship Troopers is no utopy, but a dystopy. Heinlein very often stressed he greatly values freedom and individuality and detests Soviet communism. Yet the teachers use the same arguments why this society was "scientifically proven" the best. That's a core Soviet propaganda point. Heinlein shows what will happen if in a society, people no longer care for the common duties and obligations. The world isn't an "answer" to "how should democracy look like", but a cautionary tale: "this is how democracy WILL look like if we come across an existential threat unprepared". And suddenly, all the one-dimensionality of the characters, all the dubious choices up to war crimes, everything falls into place. The Arachnids are presented as un-changing, there IS no dialogue or compromise with them - as far as the government, authoritarian because of public political disinterest, knows. To survive, those willing to defend humanity suddenly get all the bargaining power and form a caste - exclusionary, as "those unable to serve in the military" (like Heinlein IRL) are used for pharmaceutical testing - and suddenly have the exclusive monopoly on political power. Heinlein calls to not let it come to that, to shoulder the burden of defense mutually and solidarily together.
@Omnifarious03 ай бұрын
@@enysuntra1347 - That's a very interesting idea. I hadn't thought about it from that perspective. But it does make a lot of sense as a perspective on the book. I think the book makes a lot of people uncomfortable partly because of the idea it proposes, the idea that citizens do have some obligation to be statesmen in the small. I don't think that idea is one a lot of people like to hear as the primary motivation because the fundamental basis of their politics is a selfish resentment of others. I suspect then that the obvious militarism becomes a target to discredit and distract from the main idea. Your framing is a really excellent one from the perspective of getting people to engage with the main idea, regardless of whether it was Heinlein's intention or not.
@matsab79303 ай бұрын
I don’t know why you’d wait for the opinion of an idiot to form your views on homosexuality. On ivermectin, Brett claimed that it was "a near-perfect COVID prophylactic". The imbecile didn’t get vaccinated, and instead claimed that ivermectin was a perfect cure to covid that was apparently only being withheld for the benefit of ‘big pharma’. He was wronged back in the campus protest era, but like so many wronged he has pivoted into the realm of absurd conspiracy in response to his unfair treatment.
@enysuntra13473 ай бұрын
@@Omnifarious0 While Heinlein was sympathetic to the military, I read - in rereading, not the first time! - the militarism of Starship Troopers as a description what will happen. Servicemen now have a very good societal standing in the Ukraine, because they are those who defend the society. IMO this goes on steroids if the threat is as existential as the Arachnids. The better conclusion is not "Starship Troopers bad because of militarism", but the question: "How can we avoid extreme militarism in a society that has to defend itself?" This question was prevalent at the dawn of the Cold War when Heinlein wrote Starship Troopers, and in February of 2022, it suddenly became very relevant again, especially if a Red Chinese invasion attempt on Taiwan is indeed a question of "when" and not "if".
@MAOofDC3 ай бұрын
@@enysuntra1347China will never be able to invade Taiwan without using nukes or using extreme amounts of blood and material. The first thing they would have to do is build the world's largest navy. The United States has the current world's largest Navy, has 11 super carriers along with all the support and fleet ships needed to defend each of the carriers. The Chinese have three regular carriers one of them is a Soviet Era ship. They are building a fourth ship but are decades away from being able to field anything close to the size and fighting power of the US Navy. Assuming the US Navy doesn't add to or even modernize the current fleet, then China would have a chance in a straight up fight. Assuming thet get their naval assets in order , then China will have to frost train then concentrate their forces in preparation for an amphibious landing. It will need to be the largest one ever seen in human history, many times larger than what was put together for D-Day. China would then need to somehow trick all of the world's intelligence gathering apparatuses including satellite assets that can sit over China and watch. That China's very large concentration of troops and naval assets is not the prelude of an invasion. Assuming China gets all of that done without preventive strikes disrupting the preparations. The Chinese Armada will then have to cross the Formosa Straight averaging 180 km from the mainland to the island it will take most of the day to get there. It will be a day in hell for the Chinese Navy. As shore-based anti-ship missiles, naval and land-based aircraft, and of course scores of surface ships and submarines that had days if not weeks to get into the area, all light up the now target rich environment turning the bottom of the Formosa straight into a ship graveyard. Assuming after a day of hell at sea for the Chinese Navy the battered armada didn't turn back and finally make landfall on Taiwan. An island that is either a mountainous or an urban environment. The most defender friendly environment man has found so far in warfare. Top that off with an island population that has had military conscription for generations meaning almost the entire population males except for children know how to fight as a military. While the bloody fighting is happening on the island the 180 km long supply line on the open ocean will be raided non stop. Forcing the Chinese troops to either find food ammunition and medical equipment locally or go without. When they go without long enough and they will no longer be a threat. Then IF (super big if here) the Taiwanese Government were to fall to Chinese forces, there would still be generations of guerrilla warfare afterwards. China and Taiwan are never going to be unified through warfare. Taiwan doesn't have the capability to take over China and China can only take over Taiwan if the rest of the world lets them. Even then it would cost so much in blood and equipment it would be a Pyrrhic Victory. Ultimately weakening the victors on the world stage and possibly even the fall of their governments from internal strife. The only way China and Taiwan will ever unify is through willful diplomacy. Which is unlikely but not impossible.
@r.allengilbertjr.64573 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this book Quinn. This is one of my absolute favorite books. It's a superb story ahead of its time.
@digitalbookworm56783 ай бұрын
Why couldn't the whole world have heeded Eisenhower's warning? 😮
@HiggsBosonification3 ай бұрын
$$$
@zotaninoron35483 ай бұрын
Because it wasn't a warning to everyone. To some it was opportunity.
@RememberTheDuck3 ай бұрын
It is absurd to think that the creation of one weapon would bar the creation of another; inversely, it is also absurd to think that the destruction of one weapon would bar the creation of others... it's the worst catch-22 of all human warfare (and I'd assume "alien" warfare, as well). If we suddenly quit after developing our first nuclear weapons, we would be living in a vastly different world, under the shadow of whoever chose to continue developing those weapons. If we had destroyed our nuclear weapons, someone else would have developed their own in secret. There's no outcome where we "win"; there's no world (past or future) where weapons stop being built or stop being "useful". By the time Eisenhower could give that warning, the arms race was already in full swing, and we have only continued to move towards militarization and "defense" spending ever since. Where there's blood, there's money to be made, unfortunately.
@米空軍パイロット3 ай бұрын
@@RememberTheDuckHell, the fast pace of the arms race began back in the industrial revolution, and to a slower extent, the beginning of life on Earth. There was nothing Eisenhower could do.
@dangerousdays20523 ай бұрын
Because most people are busy praising war criminals, aka American soldiers.
@Chappie1143 ай бұрын
I just finished the audiobook a few days ago and as someone who served for 10 years I can say this book hit differently. Having gone away for long periods of time without contact to the outside world it's really jarring, some of the things you see or hear when you pop back into civvy life. Friends have moved on or have kids etc and it feels like it was all just on pause for you, but the world moved on
@brianstiles17013 ай бұрын
You're back! Hooray!
@SMRMUSICATX3 ай бұрын
Thanks Quinn. I read Children of Time because of your vid as well as The Sparrow
@user-lp7tx1fe6t3 ай бұрын
The ending is incredibly dumb but i love this book, it was one of my first sci fi reads
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
It does end with a whimper. But that's ok. I'm happy to get some sort of happy ending.
@khango61383 ай бұрын
I think the ending was intentionally anticlimactic. The final battle of the war was not some epic confrontation that determined the fates of the civilizations involved, it was simply the last little spark in a conflict that was ultimately pointless. That was Haldeman's whole thesis I feel, pointless fighting leading to pointless deaths. In the end, the best part is simply that the war ended and peace was achieved finally and belatedly.
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
@@khango6138 Stephen Baxter's Xeelee series was much more bleak and much more cosmic.
@khango61383 ай бұрын
@@alanpennie8013 I might check that out, thank you.
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
Mandella's homophobia is interesting because readers are now in the position of the *future men* concerned by a vet's reactionary views. Nowadays TFW seems to have a good deal in common with the 1993 film Falling Down.
@MrRickstopher3 ай бұрын
Haldeman has some of the best short stories with various subjects like ptsd and addiction set in various sci-fi scenarios.
@jimboslam3 ай бұрын
I knew Quinn was gay so i was interested in his take of the gay story line of this book. What an incredibly measured take on it all.
@alanpennie80133 ай бұрын
Mandella got a very bad case of *the not gays*.
@GrEaTDemOnBlade3 ай бұрын
Why do homosexual people get this tunnel vision with everything, and only viewing things through a "gay lens" so to speak, as if being gay gives you some sort of new outlook on life? Always strikes me as you're making it a personality.
@hendrsb333 ай бұрын
@@alanpennie8013 Mandela was "tolerant". Good thing because he was vastly outnumbered. 😆
@Penfolduk0013 ай бұрын
I'm kind of surprised no mention was made of the connection to Heinlein's Starship Troopers. Although I can accept that Quinn wanted to review and critique The Forever War in its own right. As to the representation of gayness in the novel. Yes, it was clumsy but has to be viewed in relation to real-life discourse at the time. And unfortunate current paranoia in some circles of a nonsensical "Gay Agenda".
@pedarogue31633 ай бұрын
I am so glad this video has been made! I am not a total Sci-Fi buff apart from Dune and Star Trek, but I listened to the Audiobook of "Forever War" a couple of years ago and I was instantly fascinated. "Forever War" is such an intelligent, sensitive and sensible book, great literature in general, I loved it so much and I am very happy that you got around talking about it.
@biocapsule73113 ай бұрын
As a gay guy... when you reach the point about how this book weirdly obsess about clarifying his straightness, I laugh out loud. It happens, especially when homosexuality is just getting certain exposure and acceptance. Decades ago I heard a story about a gay guy whom a co-worker (whom apparently wasn't a looker) found out, and made the gesture of saying "I just want you to know that I am fine with you being, but I am straight." with the appreciative reply follow by "Just because I am gay, doesn't mean I am into every guy." There's just a period of time when people just didn't understand what being gay means, what it means for the LGBT movement.
@frederickshasel50323 ай бұрын
Wtf are you on about, who gives a shit about LGBT stuff, this video is about the forever war
@meganstorm32483 ай бұрын
Well, huh. I just got done paying a small novel about how completely contradicted that take is by my own experience as a bi trans man. My assumption was generational divide.... I don't want to get any closer to the "you're younger so you're wrong" trope (especially without even appearance for support). ... But I will ask if you know what "don't touch that dial" means, lol 😉
@mortarion98133 ай бұрын
@@biocapsule7311 Still is the case for some less well-off or more hardline countries, actually. Which makes it all the funnier for me.
@VectorZero3 ай бұрын
It's a favourite, especially the eschatological aspects of the societal progression whilst soldiers in relativistic reality return to find the society they left wiped away.
@Henrique-Santos3 ай бұрын
We've been waiting and it's finally here
@theirnameiscole3 ай бұрын
Love this and your commentary as always, thank you Quinn 🙏
@TheoriginalQward3 ай бұрын
I feel you missed the point of the focus on sexuality. It was showing at that heterosexuals the perspective of homosexuals in the current society. This is shown in the conversations with the others as they were asking him questions about being hetero and how they found it weird. Later, his female comrade getting drunk and wanting to sleep with him to "see what its like." The whole thing is the mirroring of the homosexual experiences in the 70's. I read it as "Hey reader, how would you like it if society judged you based on who you chose to love? Try seeing it from another perspective." Maybe I am wrong.
@jfkst13 ай бұрын
Which also misses the obvious that heterosexual reproduction is required to sustain population until technology is able to replace it.
@tarnetskygge3 ай бұрын
This was the impression I got. Also it's obviously a step towards the eventual clone society humanity evolves into.