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>I think you're the one who's hemming and hawing here. You >claim Dr. Melfi's rape was used as fodder for her ex-husband's >hatred of working class Italians. Then why the need to also >have him released from jail for something as absurd as >officers not following transfer protocol? Wouldn't being raped >be enough to enrage her husband? But no, government also had >to fail her,
NO SHIT!!! THATS THE POINT!!! LOL!!! I mean, really. That was the whole point. She was failed on every level- and like I said, not only did he do the deed, he got away with it.
and the only way she could get real justice (if >she chose to) would have been the ever-efficient free market >(Tony Soprano as the emblematic representation of the worst >aspects of American capitalism). There IS a message in there, >whether I can articulate well or not.
No there isn't. There just isn't. You're trying real, real hard to find one because *you want it to be there*.
>And as The Analyst pointed out, there's also the fact that >Meadow, the only true liberal on the show, is portrayed as the >most obnoxious stereotype of liberalism one can imagine. It's >so cartoonish I almost sympathize with Tony when he derides >her for her preference of "hippie" colleges like Berkeley.
LOL, she IS that liberal- but like her mother, JUST LIKE HER MOTHER, AHEM, she's really just another Soprano hypocrite who, when it gets right down to it, has no real conviction as it pertains to the things her father does. She reaps the fruits of his labors, and were she *really* bout her shit, she wouldn't have used a dime of Tony's blood money to finance her education or anything else for that matter.
He said *if anything* you could try to make a case for her character being the liberal punching bag... and he also said in the end you'd be wrong. That's still a stretch. She's not much different than a typical college student who leaves home and within two months thinks their a fucking know it all on social, political, economic, and religious topic. She's also the epitome of the kid who grows up in a superstitious (they aren't religious, really, but mostly superstitious, with catholocism as their foundation) home with a certain set of ideals around her, and when she gets away from that rigid environment, gets exposed to other ideas, begins to formulate her own. She's actually pretty common.
The whole thing is a mash of belief systems, situational ethics, manipulation, etc.... all within the context of rather vividly written and physically portrayed characters who happen to be italian american..... that's the perspective it's written with, and that's what you ignore completely. Which was also pointed out to you.
I'm sorry but your perspective is pretty off on this one.
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