2F/2F
Member
Hi, Adam,
You really have nothing to apologize for. I wasn't offended, and your comments were not out of line. But I appreciate it anyhow.
IME, photography attracts all persuasions of people. In any art, you have to expect that there will be many people involved in making social commentary – and people whose views are primarily socially and environmentally rooted, rather than individually rooted. This is not to say that photography is by definition an art, but it certainly is used artistically by many people. Some art will always be simply aesthetic, and other art will always be political/social. If photography attracted only left-wing loons or only right-wing cranks, there is no way I would be able to stand it. But, as I see it, it attracts a great variety of folks. This adds to my enjoyment of it.
I am not a communist, by the way. History has shown that this only works well in small societies ("communes," you might say
). There is no way that it makes any sense to me on a national scale; you cannot get everyone on the same page enough to prevent totalitarianism from being practiced to keep order, and human greed always pervades and perverts. I am in some ways socialist, and in some ways libertarian. I vote for candidates from various parties, but I hope that one day after I am long gone, political parties (and nations, for that matter) are eliminated completely. Though I must admit that I do think unchecked and rampant capitalism (in which powerful corporations and individuals end up determining political policy, as opposed to the general populace – hardly a "democracy") and, even more importantly, the fact that capitalism-rooted beliefs have become a system of values for personal life are some of the best ways we have invented to drive humanity and the Earth straight into oblivion, and quickly.
You really have nothing to apologize for. I wasn't offended, and your comments were not out of line. But I appreciate it anyhow.
IME, photography attracts all persuasions of people. In any art, you have to expect that there will be many people involved in making social commentary – and people whose views are primarily socially and environmentally rooted, rather than individually rooted. This is not to say that photography is by definition an art, but it certainly is used artistically by many people. Some art will always be simply aesthetic, and other art will always be political/social. If photography attracted only left-wing loons or only right-wing cranks, there is no way I would be able to stand it. But, as I see it, it attracts a great variety of folks. This adds to my enjoyment of it.
I am not a communist, by the way. History has shown that this only works well in small societies ("communes," you might say
