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Thanks for the title, Boss. When I was a kid my hometown basked in that (uncertain) period of peace and prosperity between Korea and Vietnam. It bustled with busyness and it seemed like everyone knew everyone and there was always more. Even the poor felt included. Half a century later, peace has fled for good and prosperity too, leaving only vacant storefronts and neighbors who do not know each other. Perhaps this was inevitable; perhaps it is progress. But there are moments when it feels like a lifetime is just too much to witness, just too long to live. Nobody loves a corpse. ~mce
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Nov 19, 2015
Nov 19, 2015 at 10:45 AM UTC
My Hometown
Thanks for the title, Boss. When I was a kid my hometown basked in that (uncertain) period of peace and prosperity between Korea and Vietnam. It bustled with busyness and it seemed like everyone knew everyone and there was always more. Even the poor felt included. Half a century later, peace has fled for good and prosperity too, leaving only vacant storefronts and neighbors who do not know each other. Perhaps this was inevitable; perhaps it is progress. But there are moments when it feels like a lifetime is just too much to witness, just too long to live. Nobody loves a corpse. ~mce
mike-essig
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Nov 19, 2015
Nov 19, 2015 at 10:45 AM UTC
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