Are traditions important?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
Or watch Eastenders or Corrie ....
But it can be no different from attending Party Conference every year. Or watching firework displays on Bonfire Night. Or going to the Proms. Or watching Morris Dancers on 1 May (is the garb any less funny?) Or any number of entertainments that happen every year. People watch/listen to them.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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p. g. tipps
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIf your life is so grey that it needs to be livened up by watching men in funny hats marching up and down, maybe you should get out a bit more! (Or get your own funny hat)
Buckingham Palace, Horse Guards Parade, the Edinburgh Tattoo etc are well worth a visit ... have you never been?
I suspect I may 'need to get out' rather less than the "average" musician/composer and I'm already blessed with quite a few 'funny hats', thank you ... in fact I have one just like Jeremy Corbyn's!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostNot entirely out of character you make a quite illogical and unconnected assumption.
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostBuckingham Palace, Horse Guards Parade, the Edinburgh Tattoo etc are well worth a visit ... have you never been?
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Originally posted by french frank View PostA tradition becomes a ritual. Some people listen to The Archers every day too.
But it can be no different from attending Party Conference every year. Or watching firework displays on Bonfire Night. Or going to the Proms. Or watching Morris Dancers on 1 May (is the garb any less funny?) Or any number of entertainments that happen every year. People watch/listen to them.
Likewise, attending a political party conference or watching Bonfire Night firework displays annually might be an acquired habit but the tradition - or "tradition" - is surely the party conferences of the Bonfire Night displays themselves? "Going to the Proms" is no different to attending any other concert (apart from the fact that promenading there is unusual) but it might be argued that the Proms themselves have now become a kind of tradition - or "tradition" - purely because they've been held annually since 1895. Discretion precludes me from commenting on Morris Dancers or anyone who watches them. The mare fact that some people watch/listen annual entertainments annually again does not, it seems to me, constitute a tradition - or "tradition" - in and of itself, even if the events themselves might have come to be perceived by some, rightly or wrongly, as representing such.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostNot entirely out of character you make a quite illogical and unconnected assumption.
Buckingham Palace, Horse Guards Parade, the Edinburgh Tattoo etc are well worth a visit ... have you never been?
I suspect I may 'need to get out' rather less than the "average" musician/composer and I'm already blessed with quite a few 'funny hats', thank you ... in fact I have one just like Jeremy Corbyn's!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWith your love of military parades you'd doubtless be very happy living in N Korea, I would imagine.
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p. g. tipps
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI banned The Archers in our house earlier this year, so it only gets listened to on headphones, or when I'm out. This saves me at least 90 minutes each week.
I am, like all true liberals, very much for INCLUSIVENESS ... we now must willingly embrace the whims and desires of all minorities, however thoroughly bizarrre these may seem to us ... yes, even being forced to listen to The Archers.
Easy, huh ... ?
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostSurely that is a somewhat dictatorial and quite shockingly exclusive attitude, Dave ... ?
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