Nah, salting the earth is something they love teaching in church, about how to deal with evil things that god cursed. It's similar to how if you asked them about sodom and gomorra, or mention lot, they'll probably remember the bit about his wife being turned to a pillar of salt for disobeying. The various horrible things are often the bits they remember from that book...until it's inconvenient and they need to pretend they didn't happen.I don't know why I find this so funny. Maybe because "salting the earth" seems like something so intellectually beyond Homer's reach, it lays bare the passive-aggressive contempt he has for his good-natured neighbor?
Salting the earth predates christianity by at least a millenium, as something conquerors did to symbolically or literally render the conquereds lands infertile as an expression of their complete domination and destruction. According to legend, the Romans notably salted Carthage after the final victory in the Third Punic War, pretty much because they hated the Carthaginians so much they'd rather raze the city to the ground and make it so nothing could ever grow there again as an ultimate insult, than take it for their own. Possibly never actually happened tho, or at least not the salting part.Nah, salting the earth is something they love teaching in church, about how to deal with evil things that god cursed. It's similar to how if you asked them about sodom and gomorra, or mention lot, they'll probably remember the bit about his wife being turned to a pillar of salt for disobeying. The various horrible things are often the bits they remember from that book...until it's inconvenient and they need to pretend they didn't happen.
It most certainly is, I just mean that to people today, as far as familiarity of the term "salt the earth", for someone like Homer, who is about as backwoods, barnyard stupid of a cross section of 'murica as you can get, it would be biblical. Also the context of doing it to the super religious, bible thumping neighbor as an insult, further reinforces the christian connection for the layperson, as far as where they would've heard of it. I'm 100% certain it's not christian original, very few things are. But outside of classical history buffs, nobody's going to think about Carthage and the 3rd Punic War, when referring to it. They probably have never heard of either thing to be honest.Salting the earth predates christianity by at least a millenium, as something conquerors did to symbolically or literally render the conquereds lands infertile as an expression of their complete domination and destruction. According to legend, the Romans notably salted Carthage after the final victory in the Third Punic War, pretty much because they hated the Carthaginians so much they'd rather raze the city to the ground and make it so nothing could ever grow there again as an ultimate insult, than take it for their own. Possibly never actually happened tho, or at least not the salting part.
Tho I'm guessing it's just one of the many many things christians appropriated and then pretended was their thing long enough for people to start believing it.
Or it's just something people did back in ancient times and some supposedly "very intelligent" atheists have never read any actual history books and just attribute anything negative as being spawned from religion.Salting the earth predates christianity by at least a millenium, as something conquerors did to symbolically or literally render the conquereds lands infertile as an expression of their complete domination and destruction. According to legend, the Romans notably salted Carthage after the final victory in the Third Punic War, pretty much because they hated the Carthaginians so much they'd rather raze the city to the ground and make it so nothing could ever grow there again as an ultimate insult, than take it for their own. Possibly never actually happened tho, or at least not the salting part.
Tho I'm guessing it's just one of the many many things christians appropriated and then pretended was their thing long enough for people to start believing it.
No, I think you're just being hipster-atheist again and just want to make something up to blow off steam.It most certainly is, I just mean that to people today, as far as familiarity of the term "salt the earth", for someone like Homer, who is about as backwoods, barnyard stupid of a cross section of 'murica as you can get, it would be biblical. Also the context of doing it to the super religious, bible thumping neighbor as an insult, further reinforces the christian connection for the layperson, as far as where they would've heard of it. I'm 100% certain it's not christian original, very few things are. But outside of classical history buffs, nobody's going to think about Carthage and the 3rd Punic War, when referring to it. They probably have never heard of either thing to be honest.
Seeing as you don't even know what the word atheist means, I don't really fucking care what your opinion on the matter is.Or it's just something people did back in ancient times and some supposedly "very intelligent" atheists have never read any actual history books and just attribute anything negative as being spawned from religion.
No, I think you're just being hipster-atheist again and just want to make something up to blow off steam.
Anyway, on topic.
Yeah, but look at the picture....
Considering the level of bullshit plot armour the Joker has, I'd entirely believe that.
I've heard Scottish people who didn't seem to be speaking English when they were speaking English. Them accents tend to be thick. Irish seems to go that way, too.
I am sorry, this made me laugh so much. I do feel bad for people that can't say certain words because that are heavy accents.