I'm not too much in global politics. I'm much more interested in local politics and personal stories/memoirs. Currently reading "The Prairie Populist" which is about George Hara Williams. Kinda interesting how Socialist and Marxists thrived in the Prairies before and after WW2.
Read it. It's fascinating. If you ask a random person in Toronto or Montreal in which province thousands of white socialist farmers advocated against fascism with even violent methods, they probably wouldn't guess Saskatchewan.
It's really something. The Liberals were in power back then in Saskatchewan and they tried to associate the CCF with the NSDAP, because the CCF advocated for Socialism and the NSDAP had the word Socialist in their name.
Ordinary men : Christopher r browning
Brothers kramazov : Dostoyevsky
Devils : Dostoyevsky
Road to Wigan pier : Orwell
For whome the bell tolls: Hemingway
Man and his symbols : Carl jung
Ok. I don't see anyone talking about the Holocaust on here. I just don't think its fair to single out Jews for the troubles we are in today. Ask yourself this. If the Jews really ran the world, why are they implementing this mass vaccine program in Israel? Certainly, there are Jews in high positions of power, but these psychopaths, IMO, don't show any favoritism to the hoi polloi, regardless if youre a Jew or non Jew.
I always have a little voice back in my head telling me that one day I will be killed by a little Ted K, because I'm developing agricultural machines which don't need human input to harvest food.
No man, you’re helping. Ideally you’re helping them be exclusively dependent on satellites. If we can get can get all agriculture wholly dependent on our complex infrastructure, one big solar flare will accelerate the deindustrialization process.
Sometimes I have a bad feeling about it, especially when we test prototypes and nearby farmers come to watch it. Some are cool with it and ask questions like "So I can just click on a button at home and that thing will harvest the whole field without me? That's great", but others have a look in their eyes, a fearful one. They think about being replaced, being unemployed, having no future.
Then you ask yourself is this really the world you want your children to live in? And in the end it doesn't matter if you want or not, because it will be the world of your children. One way or another.
The further the majority of people become over socialized, and lose the basic skills needed to provide ones basic needs, the greater the risk that the entirety of our civilization will crumble if key infrastructure fails.
If the power grid failed in our grandparents age, society would be in a much better position to keep itself alive than in today’s society where most people don’t even maintain a garden.
The more complicated the machinery, the fewer people there are who understand every aspect of it. As technology grows in complexity, our technicians understanding grows increasingly abstracted from the underlying architecture.
I won’t be surprised if we see systems designed and diagnosed primarily by machines. This is a very fragile place to be. The loss of top to bottom understanding manifests in bugs that get obfuscated away rather than fixed.
Just think of how much of today’s world is dependent on cloud resources. You see how much of the internet breaks of Google or AWS has an outage. It is only going to get harder to emerge from a catastrophe as we become more dependent on complex technology.
Gad Saad's new book The Parasitic Mind
I'm not too much in global politics. I'm much more interested in local politics and personal stories/memoirs. Currently reading "The Prairie Populist" which is about George Hara Williams. Kinda interesting how Socialist and Marxists thrived in the Prairies before and after WW2.
Read it. It's fascinating. If you ask a random person in Toronto or Montreal in which province thousands of white socialist farmers advocated against fascism with even violent methods, they probably wouldn't guess Saskatchewan.
It's really something. The Liberals were in power back then in Saskatchewan and they tried to associate the CCF with the NSDAP, because the CCF advocated for Socialism and the NSDAP had the word Socialist in their name.
http://digital.scaa.sk.ca/gallery/persuasion/themes/politics/politics1.html
Didn't work that well and kinda funny if you think about the current political landscape.
Born here, raised here and I will die here. There is something about this flat, endless horizon that calms my soul.
No registration, but you need insurance.
Yes, on public land.
They will drive down only when you call them.
Spoiler, people will be much more interested in the people you have over and will talk about it much more in a small town.
Every book by Antony C. Sutton Tragedy and Hope by Caroll Quigley Anything by Stanislav Grof
Also highly recommend Manifest Destiny by William Engdahl
Ulysses, Satanic Verses, Midnight children, The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, Tropic of Cancer...
The Madness of Crowds by Douglas Murray
The Mitrokhin Archive
It's dry. There's an absolute shit ton of detail. It's long.
But if you want a greater insight into the fact the the USSR won the cold war, then read it.
Lost in the Jungle
The Forever War
No Easy Day
Animal Farm
there's a list of unrelated genres that are good
Ordinary men : Christopher r browning Brothers kramazov : Dostoyevsky Devils : Dostoyevsky Road to Wigan pier : Orwell For whome the bell tolls: Hemingway Man and his symbols : Carl jung
50 Shades of Grey
Seymour Hersh - Biography
Splinterlands A Novel Feffer, John
Kissinger - Diplomacy
Russia and the West Under Lenin and Stalin - George Kennan
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers - Paul Kennedy
Whats with the pointed remarks against Jews?
Do you believe you are awakening people by recommending books or giving off the idea that the "Jews" are the ones that run the world?
Ok. I don't see anyone talking about the Holocaust on here. I just don't think its fair to single out Jews for the troubles we are in today. Ask yourself this. If the Jews really ran the world, why are they implementing this mass vaccine program in Israel? Certainly, there are Jews in high positions of power, but these psychopaths, IMO, don't show any favoritism to the hoi polloi, regardless if youre a Jew or non Jew.
I'm reading bonfire now. Second time and it's just as great. I also like A Man In Full by Tom wolfe.
I always have a little voice back in my head telling me that one day I will be killed by a little Ted K, because I'm developing agricultural machines which don't need human input to harvest food.
No man, you’re helping. Ideally you’re helping them be exclusively dependent on satellites. If we can get can get all agriculture wholly dependent on our complex infrastructure, one big solar flare will accelerate the deindustrialization process.
Sometimes I have a bad feeling about it, especially when we test prototypes and nearby farmers come to watch it. Some are cool with it and ask questions like "So I can just click on a button at home and that thing will harvest the whole field without me? That's great", but others have a look in their eyes, a fearful one. They think about being replaced, being unemployed, having no future.
Then you ask yourself is this really the world you want your children to live in? And in the end it doesn't matter if you want or not, because it will be the world of your children. One way or another.
I think that we progressed too far (technologically) to ever fall back into a dark ages timeline.
The further the majority of people become over socialized, and lose the basic skills needed to provide ones basic needs, the greater the risk that the entirety of our civilization will crumble if key infrastructure fails.
If the power grid failed in our grandparents age, society would be in a much better position to keep itself alive than in today’s society where most people don’t even maintain a garden.
The more complicated the machinery, the fewer people there are who understand every aspect of it. As technology grows in complexity, our technicians understanding grows increasingly abstracted from the underlying architecture.
I won’t be surprised if we see systems designed and diagnosed primarily by machines. This is a very fragile place to be. The loss of top to bottom understanding manifests in bugs that get obfuscated away rather than fixed.
Just think of how much of today’s world is dependent on cloud resources. You see how much of the internet breaks of Google or AWS has an outage. It is only going to get harder to emerge from a catastrophe as we become more dependent on complex technology.
Anne Applebaum? The WaPO shilling, virulent anti-Russian crank?