It is not productive to see things in simple black and white, and talk in either anti-nuclear or pro-nuclear terms.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I wouldn't call myself anti-nuclear.
Things are not quite so simple always as black and white.
'Nuclear' is nothing but trouble. Do you say 'new-clear' or do you say 'nuke-you-ler'? Whoever invented that word had obviously never studied the human mouth. We don't have enough muscles in our face to make that group of letters come out smoothly. The word is missing a middle syllable, for cryin' out loud.
That's why for Zakk Wylde's Black Label Society the colors are black and white. There are no gray issues. Life is black and it's white. There's no in-between.
I work in colour sometimes, but I guess the images I most connect to, historically speaking, are in black and white. I see more in black and white - I like the abstraction of it.
I call white the most powerful non-color; it's clean, optimistic, powerful.
The idea of 'talking white,' a lot of people grew up around that, just the idea that if you speak with proper diction and come off as educated that it's not black and that it's actually anti-black and should be considered only something that white people would do.
As I've said repeatedly, Republicans are very good at describing things in black and white; Democrats are very good at describing the 11 shades of gray.
I generally don't think most situations can be labeled as black or white.
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'