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IMDB rating: 5.60 Plot: Nowhere chronicles a day (and night) in the lives of a group of 20 or more alienated Los Angeles teenagers in their personal lives of despair, alienation, failing relationships and more. Centering on one 18-year-old named Dark, an alienated UCLA film student; his bisexual African-American girlfriend Mel; her purple-haired, acid-tongued lesbian girlfriend Lucifer; Dark’s homosexual classmate Montgomery; and Montgomery’s poetess friend Alyssa. Other characters include Dark’s friend, a queer industrial rock star named Cowboy; his drug-addicted lover and band mate Bart; the local drug dealer Handjob and his live-in S&M girls Kris and Kozzy; the metal-mouthed, wise-cracking intellectual Dingbat; her older brother Duckey, the bulimic Egg; Alyssa’s self-destructive twin brother Shad and his girlfriend Lilith; Mel’s little brother Zero and his blond girlfriend Zoe, plus a Teen Idol so famous that no one needs to utter his name, a trio of Atari gang members, nattering Valley girls, scary drag queens, a pragmatic party, and a mysterious alien from outer space that only Dark sees. |
Actors: Duval James,Bexton Nathan,Mayweather Joshua Gibran,Diaz Guillermo,Jordan Jeremy,Boyce Alan,Simmons Jaason,Comedy,Drama,Sci-Fi,
Why do you think the world would be a better place with/without any religion?
This is for both atheists and the religious. I personally am an agnostic atheist, but I feel that, according to me, the delusion of religion somehow strengthens the morality and sense of conscience in us. Please leave religious extremism out of your answers. Well because it is obvious, and honestly they are not actually following their religion. My parents are muslims, and nowhere in the quran does it encourage groups like al qaeda who kill innocent people in the name of god.
It most definitely does. The fear of god must have stopped at least one person in the world to do something bad.
*from doing something bad
No, you can have your religion. Just don’t expect me to feel the same.
Donna, New Year, same me. | Feb 07, 2010
I seriously couldn’t disagree more with your assertion that religion ’strengthens the morality and sense of conscience’.
Basically you’re saying that a lie is best in the long run because the believer in it "feels" good and comfortable living in a delusion. Interesting premise but the conclusion rings moot.
Sure, a happy person is less likely to act out violently. Here’s the problem: Delusional thought breeds unhealthy loyalty and produces violence.
We’ve seen this phenomenon (for lack of a better word) all throughout human civilization’s history.
de ?ac


