A website.. I forget the name of the website.. I think it's called.. World's Socialist Website.. something like that.. I forget the exact name of the website.. but this website stated that when terrorist crash .. when they ram a plane into a business highrise or two and kill thousands of people.. that constitutes a contract with the Government of the country in which they these terrorists do this.. therefore.. the terrorists are collaborating with the Government in perpetrating this murderous terrorist act.. that was how this website.. a Socialist website.. stated the matter.. Alexis Luthor knows its bullshit.. that a terrorist action no matter how murderous still nevertheless constitutes a legal contract with the Government of the country which is the location of the murderous terrorist action in question..
... Steven Spielberg's "Superman: man of steel" is a movie about two subjects.. if Woody Allen made movie's, as he stated, about the two themes he believed in, sex and death.. Steven Spielberg has made a Superman movie about the two themes of debt and theft... Alexis Luthor believes in debt, that's the thing.. Alexis Luthor things debt.. is actually.. good.. it's contractual.. you build contracts with debt... I lost count of the number of contracts Alexis Luthor built and established in this movie.. but he brought the science and techniques of contract-building into the realm of true quantum physics in this movie.. I'm thinking after I see this movie.. after I buy a book, I know I've built a contract.. the purchase of that book is a contract I've built which is going to build a legal incorporated future for me.. Alexis Luthor taught me that in this movie.. every single time Alexis Luthor buys a book.. and I think he owns at least at the bare minimum two hundred books, many, many, many of them textbooks .. in this movie.. they're all in neat piles in his household's living room.. Alexis Luthor knows that every single purchase of a book he made was a contract with a company.. and that now he has a relationship with that company.. it's in the computers.. in the digital receipts in the computers at the store-tellers.. so he's thinking.. Alexis Luthor is thinking.. what Castle have I built around myself.. this is also how Alexis Luthor feels fairly good about debt.. how he feels debt means... "investment".. tomatoe, tomato..
.. okay.. just about every single character in this movie steals .. a lot.. a whole lot.. Clark Kent steals money in an almost colloquial, legal way... I think Lois Lane shoplifts close to an amount that covers 80 billion dollars... I mean Lois Lane shoplifts 80 billion dollars worth of merchandise in this movie.. however she's considered an anomaly.. also.. well.. because.. she's Lois.. Lana Lang does the aristocratic, white-collar fraud and knows how to play the party so it's like.. wait.. this is really hard to figure out.. see.. the way Lana Lang convincingly-to-others understands it.. she's like a lot of women who technically steal more than, well, men.. but Lana Lang is very adroit at explaining that whereas women steal more often than men.. men steal far, far, far greater amounts than women.. also, Lana Lang is very clear on the point that .. well.. here's the thing.. Lana Lang occupies upper-middle management.. and she deftly mentions and deftly dismisses the allusion that people in higher levels of management actually have access logistically to greater reserves of money .. even digital .. or especially computer digital credit.. in corporations.. not so, Lana Lang clearly evinces.. no such business, no such parson, no such fender.. it's just not.. this theory.. the thing is.. on the radar of sensible studies on the subject.. point, dealt and made.. uh, anyway.. so Lana.. like.. right.. so.. she also mentions anectodal case-studies of women who made Roman apologies.. aka excuses for gentle corporate fraud.. this is the exception among women, Lana justly claims, making excuses for it.. or Roman apologia.. and these are anectodal case-studies anyway.. aka.. isolated occurrences of women doing so.. not the statistical rule of thumb..
.. so.. enter Lois Lane... who does not concur, to put it very, very fiercely mildly.. with a single one of these things that Lana Lang has said more than once.. it actually pains Lois Lane.. causes deep emotion pain and emotional pangs what are these just convictions of Lana Lang.. it might be because Lois Lane's father, played by Douglas Rain, tells her as a little girl that he always wished she'd been male.. so she could grow up to be his adult son.. Lois Lane could become an adult man if Lois Lane's father had had his way and if, as he puts it, her Lois Lane's mother had not let him down in this regard.. the funny thing about all this is, and here's the cracker, Lois Lane finds all the aforementioned truly an endearing quality of her father's personality.. she rather loves him for believing all this, Lois Lane (Victoria Hill) does.. it's this kink in Lois Lane's psychological makeup that I adore about how Victoria Hill plays her..
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