(Part 2) Top products from r/StrangerThings

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We found 25 product mentions on r/StrangerThings. We ranked the 79 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/StrangerThings:

u/PresidentialSophist · 1 pointr/StrangerThings

Well you see, the reason I defend Operation Condor and Cold War FP is because of this debate about the best form of government.

Let's say group A wants to form a Marxist vanguard party and wishes to suspend democracy due to democracy being a tool of the bourgeois. So they run in the next election says they want to suspend democracy to give the people the true power through a dictatorship of the proletariat. Sounds pretty cool right? Labor rights, free stuff, worker's paradise! Sounds like the kind of political system for me. Except, oh no, it doesn't work like that. Instead of a worker's paradise, it devolved into a secret police state where no property, personal, economic, political or spiritual rights exist. Well shit, what am I supposed to do now?

My point is that yeah, we should kill people that meet two criteria, those criteria being:

  1. The desire to act out a totalitarian state, dismantling natural rights in favor or greater control of the state in people's lives and

  2. The ability to carry out said desires.

    So no I don't think we should bust into every fourteen year old's room that browses /r/LateStageCapitalism and murder them, but if they grow older, begin to voice totalitarian, anti-market opinions, begin to arm up and talk of revolution, then yeah let's get some deathsquads.

    If nazis were a credible threat to our democracy, we certainly should eliminate them, the same for the anarchists, socialist and other totalitarian ideologies.

    Pinochet, Franco, Salazar and Peron were hardly totalitarian, they were people who just wanted to see their country do better. Now, thanks to their efforts, those countries all enjoy successful liberal democracies today.

    I have some reading lists which would be better than reading internet forums posted anonymously about political economies that have never worked.

    The Condor Years

    Diplomacy by Kissinger

    Bloodlands: The Land Between Hitler and Stalin

    The Black Book of Communism

u/scarlet_stormTrooper · 3 pointsr/StrangerThings

one of my Criminal Justice professors recommended this book: legacy of ashes
Not entirely focused on the MK Ultra but good nonetheless.
It's a very good read.

Also the Men Who stare at Goats a good cinematic example.

It's very intriguing to see how they added the program into the show. Very cool way to introduce 11 (messed up) but cool.

u/iStrigoi · 2 pointsr/StrangerThings

This is the shirt I'm going to use.
https://www.amazon.com/Horace-Small-Classic-Sleeve-Security/dp/B00CV92KLK/ref=pd_sim_193_2?_encoding=UTF8&refRID=XRZ4EBF7EKEWHC4V21SC&th=1&psc=1

The pockets are not as accurate as I would like. The pocket flaps are flat instead of pointed, and there is also a pleat in the pocket.

I did find this one which has pointed pocket flaps, but the pockets themselves are still pleated.
https://www.amazon.com/First-Class-Polyester-Sleeve-Uniform/dp/B00GH2K1IQ/ref=cts_ap_3_vtp?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_p=2897711222&pf_rd_r=940PEF9BV2DY00BWKSG0&pd_rd_wg=GX6JH&pf_rd_s=desktop-detail-softlines&pf_rd_t=40701&pd_rd_i=B00GH2K1IQ&pd_rd_w=96MAb&pf_rd_i=desktop-detail-softlines&pd_rd_r=940PEF9BV2DY00BWKSG0&_encoding=UTF8

I think I'm going to go with the first one since it will be easier for me to exchange if it doesn't fit me the way id like.

I haven't been able to find a shirt without pleated pockets yet.

u/speedy3702 · 12 pointsr/StrangerThings

>This must-read novel, based on the hit Netflix series, Stranger Things, explores Max's past--the good and the bad--as well as how she came to find her newfound sense of home in Hawkins, Indiana.

https://www.amazon.com/Stranger-Things-Runaway-Brenna-Yovanoff/dp/1984895958

u/Calvincoolidg · 1 pointr/StrangerThings

It looks like a space pen or an ink less pen
Space pen:
Fisher Space Original Astronaut Space Pen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0015ZP2AC/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_eCKMxbMRTBN4E

Ink less pen:
Jac Zagoory Beta Silver An Axel Weinbrecht Design Inkless Pen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005GLYH8O/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_rBKMxbSP8YVQ7

u/IISycHII · 2 pointsr/StrangerThings

Thank you! If anyone else comes into this thread looking for a link HERE it is.

u/Ajram1983 · 4 pointsr/StrangerThings

There are 2 official books.
Stranger Things: Suspicious Minds: The First Official Novel https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1787462021/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_tai_rnHzDbTJQG8MV

Stranger Things: Darkness on the Edge of Town: An Official Stranger Things Novel https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1984819917/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_tai_NnHzDbM70MCEX

u/J0bon · 27 pointsr/StrangerThings

Maybe he was just so done will all this shit like being trapped in hell and being possessed by a Lovecraftian horror that he saw death as the preferable option. Speaking of which, does Will still have "true sight" now that the gate is closed? If so, he might wanna start carrying a few of these around just in case the mind flayer tries again.

u/Amy_Ponder · 5 pointsr/StrangerThings

In Kiev they gave me an apartment. It was in a large building, where they put everyone from the atomic station. It's a big apartment, with two rooms, the kind Vasya and I had dreamed of. And I was going crazy in it!

I found a husband eventually. I told him everything—the whole truth—that I have one love, for my whole life. I told him everything. We'd meet, but I'd never invite him to my home, that's where Vasya was.

I worked in a candy shop. I'd be making cake, and tears would be rolling down my cheeks. I'm not crying, but there are tears rolling down.

I gave birth to a boy, Andrei. Andreika. My friends tried to stop me. "You can't have a baby." And the doctors tried to scare me: "Your body won't be able to handle it." Then, later—later they told me that he'd be missing an arm. His right arm. The instrument showed it. "Well, so what?" I thought. "I'll teach him to write with his left hand."

But he came out fine. A beautiful boy. He's in school now, he gets good grades. Now I have someone—I can live and breathe him. He's the light in my life. He understands everything perfectly. "Mom, if I go visit grandma for two days, will you be able to breathe?"

I won't! I fear the day I'll have to leave him. One day we're walking down the street. And I feel that I'm falling. That's when I had my first stroke. Right on the street.

"Mom, do you need some water?"

"No, just stand here next to me. Don't go anywhere." And I grabbed his arm. I don't remember what happened next. I came to in the hospital. But I grabbed him so hard that the doctors were barely able to pry my fingers open. His arm was blue for a long time.

Now we walk out of the house, he says, "Mommie, just don't grab my arm. I won't go anywhere." He's also sick: two weeks in school, two weeks at home with a doctor. That's how we live.

[She stands up, goes over to the window.]

There are many of us here. A whole street. That's what it's called—Chernobylskaya. These people worked at the station their whole lives. A lot of them still go there to work on a provisional basis, that's how they work there now, no one lives there anymore. They have bad diseases, they're invalids, but they don't leave their jobs, they're scared to even think of the reactor closing down. Who needs them now anywhere else?

Often they die. In an instant. They just drop—someone will be walking, he falls down, goes to sleep, never wakes up. He was carrying flowers for his nurse and his heart stopped. They die, but no one's really asked us. No one's asked what we've been through. What we saw. No one wants to hear about death. About what scares them.

But I was telling you about love. About my love . . .

--Lyudmilla Ignatenko, wife of deceased fireman Vasily Ignatenko. Excerpt from Voices of Chernobyl by Svetlana Alexeivich (Part 6/6)