
I look at the sky
always there above the walls
can't find my new shades

I look at the sky
always there above the walls
can't find my new shades

I looked more than up
when my surrounding fell down
I'm Buster Keaton

Descending into
each steps uncertain landing
the thrill of looking

The dark light controls
and waits for the dawn to turn
standing proud it bows

I'm moving through streets
passing myself everywhere
the colors distract

It's closer to dawn
standing still with the Earth's whirl
the sun doesn't rise

I came across and
I remember that it meant
numbered memories

If it's straightforward
we could untangle it all
just take off the gloves

I like to vent
but my collection is done
the world in neat rows

The crooked left side
delusional and optics
a clearly straight line

38 The happiness of the individual in the state is subordinated to the common good: what does that mean? Not that the minorities are used for the good of the majorities. Rather that the individuals are subordinated to the good of the supreme individuals, the good of the supreme specimens. The supreme individuals are the creative men, be they the best in a moral sense or the best and most useful in some other important sense, that is, the purest types and improvers of mankind. The goal of the polity is not the existence of a state at all costs, but the possibility for the supreme specimens to live and work in it. This is also the foundation on which states come into being, although people have often had a wrong idea of who the supreme specimens were: often conquerors, etc., dynasts. Ifit is no longer possible to maintain the existence of a state in which the great individuals can live and work, a terrible state based on necessity and robbery comes into being: a state in which the strongest individuals take the place of the best. The task of the state is not to enable as many people as possible to lead good and moral lives in it. Numbers do not matter: what matters is that a good and beautiful life as such should be possible in a state; that the state should provide the foundation of a culture. In short: the goal of the state is a nobler humanity. The state’s goal is beyond the state: the state is a means to an end. Today the element that binds all the partial forces together is missing: and so we see that everything is hostile to everything else and all the noble forces are engaged in a mutually devastating war of annihilation. I will demonstrate this by means of philosophy, which destroys because it is bound by nothing. The philosopher has become a public menace. He annihilates happiness, virtue, culture, and finally himself. To avoid this, philosophy must be an ally of the binding force, a physician of culture

Overlooking the street
through dirty white translucent blinds
a silent fan's noise

I've tried throwing in
my windows from not that far
the cracks still perform

I was still going
and learned how to move up
I fallen sideways

42 Those with free will, a wonderful illusion whereby the human being has made himself into a higher being; the highest nobility, noticeable in good as in bad. Yet already bestial. Anyone who raises himself above it, raises himself above the animal and becomes a conscious plant. The act of free will would be the miracle, the break in the chain of nature. Humans would be miracle-doers. The consciousness of a motive brings deception along with it-the intellect {is} the primeval and sole liar