timschapker wrote:Is the idea of community antithetical to personal freedom?
theCryptofishist wrote:Hermits have a lot of personal freedoms.
Simon of the Playa wrote:theCryptofishist wrote:Hermits have a lot of personal freedoms.
so do hermetics.

Ugly Dougly wrote:It was once OK to drive around the open playa at any speed day or night. Wheee! huh?
It was also OK to go out onto the open playa and camp by yourself in the darkness, under the stars. Wheee! huh?
Then somebody got run over and died.
theCryptofishist wrote:Ugly Dougly wrote:It was once OK to drive around the open playa at any speed day or night. Wheee! huh?
It was also OK to go out onto the open playa and camp by yourself in the darkness, under the stars. Wheee! huh?
Then somebody got run over and died.
It's my understanding that we still have those freedoms, but not at the burn.
ygmir wrote:
Just sayin "freedom" is a very relative term.

Savannah wrote:So--ultimate freedom? Of course not. I would posit that true freedom, whatever it's worth, can only be found alone. In mixing with others, one sacrifices a little freedom for other things, which may or may not be worth it to the individual.
Are we acknowledging the true nature of our community, are we imperfectly moving towards an ideal world, or are we deluding ourselves by reciting a kind of patriotic slogan about freedom, self-expression, and inclusion in BRC?
Savannah wrote:* And it sounds like your Temple Burn experience was really irritating for you. I wish I had a mutant vehicle, Tim. I would let you sit on it, so you wouldn't have to deal with jerks. I hope it was still a worthwhile evening.
. . . I was on shift during the Temple Burn, and comforted myself by driving a golf cart around the perimeter on my way to various destinations.
MyDearFriend wrote:I can't believe I'm taking shit from a meat-cake-with-teeth. :lol:
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