Now that the dust has settled, who was in the right here?

now that the dust has settled, who was in the right here?

Might makes right. Only the one true lord of the lockerroom has the strength to decide what truth is.

Leatherman was a freedom fighter. He had the high ground, but as the underdog he was unprepared to face superior strength. Still, we must remember him for his great courage and dedication.

also, did van ever accept billy's challenge or did he pussy out?

when you hear this, you just know it's coming from some kid who was bullied all his life.

violence is the cornerstone of human social cohesion and therefore civilization itself.

kys

The weak pick at the strong to wear them down. Case in point your cuckposting.

The weak should fear the strong

Gym Boss was just joking while leather man was being malicious. Gym boss proved his alphaness against the jabroni

Boss.
He was trying to direct Leatherman to the leather club because he thought that's where someone dressed like that would be going.
It's an honest mistake.

Van simply wanted to change out of his gear after a hard gym sesh. Boss of this Gym was rude to him and clearly gay.

...

I don't remember that, was that actually in LotGH or a made-up quote? That's just about the stupidest thing I've ever heard. All wars are power struggles between the ruling classes.

That is a real quote. Yang said it to his tea boy when they were discussing the Reich. And it really is true. No one fights for a cause they don't believe is just unless they are broken, institutionalized, or sociopathic.

If you ever look at the suicide rate of US veterans you would understand what happens when someone realizes that their side was actually good to begin with. Although in that case it would be evil pretending to be good vs. Evil pretending to be good.

Is Aniki the last hero mankind has?

wasn't actually good

go back

Definitely the Boss of this Gym (Mark Wolff). Leatherman clearly knew what he was doing. He invaded the Boss' Gym on purpose, he definitely wanted to dethrone him and become the Boss of the Gym himself.

A metaphore for unchecked immigration and the current refugee crisis perhaps? Rewatching this scene one can not help but be reminded of Jean Raspail's novel Le Camp des Saints. The scene is an inversion of the books narative of simple refugees fleeing for a better world, and the death of western civilization. We see not humble people seeking a life free of violence and starvation. Rather we are presented with an agressive expansonist culture in leatherman. The people do not close their mouth to the initial push of colonization. Instead the boss of the gym loudly proclaims his territory. Given a chance to leave the leatherman believes he has intimidated the boss and smugly gloats over the thought of his imminant lordship. A mistake he will soon come to regret as Mark Wolff can contain his rage no longer. The initial silence as the boss waits for the invader to leave can be described as reminscent of Kipling's poem When the Saxon Began to Hate. Slowly, methodically the boss thinks things through trying to find a reason to avoid the fight without losing face, but the affront's are too numerous. As he slams his fusts against his locker he sets his will to the solution his intellect adviced. He would smack that ass.

Couldn't have said it better myself

oy

how do you ever recover from this?

Van Darkholme is one of the tallest asians in the world. Don't hate.

Is anyone else fascinated with the lore of gay porn? I bet I could make a youtube channel with compiled clips of dialogue from gay pornos and get a few followers. Start a few memes. Shit would be cash

Do it faggot

I don't want to actually download and watch the actions scenes though. I just want the story

If you're really straight, you wouldn't mind watching a few homosexual action scenes.