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ThePopCan 4 points ago +4 / -0

This and the Iran comments suggest to me they're trying to gauge public interest.

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ThePopCan 6 points ago +6 / -0

Hayek, a Nobel-prize-winning Austrian economist and agnostic-verging-on-atheist (much like his American disciple George F. Will), pointed out in part five of The Fatal Conceit* that the extended order has been both fostered and protected by [Christian] religious tradition and its practitioners; that our society cannot, as the social constructivists / socialists believe, be / have been rationally constructed (i.e. traditional morals, and the economic conventions we know to work, "fail to meet rational requirements", which is not to say that they are not true), and that the result we enjoy is contingent on that arguably fragile or tenuous sweet spot reached by countless generations of individual efforts invisibly coordinated by tradition and inherited culture. It is there, on that sweet spot where we stand between instinct and reason; between the extremes of hubristic claims of rationalistic order and chaotic primitism. (Hayek also concedes that Christianity beat all others in the 'Darwinism' of religious faiths.)

Tocqueville (Democracy in America), Mandeville (see Honour and Usefulness...), Kuehnelt-Leddihn (Leftism Revisited, Timeless Christian), Chesterton (The Everlasting Man, Orthodoxy), and John Adams, among others, all agreed, albeit using different terms, that statesmen "may plan and speculate for Liberty, but it is Religion and Morality alone, which can establish the Principles upon which Freedom can securely stand."

If the majority discount the transcendental presuppositions that our civilization is based on or eliminate the religious / our culture's Christian sensibilities, then we will succumb, ultimately, to gross utilitarianism and or tribalism. E.g. if man is not seen to be made in the image of God, and is therefore not inspirited with an immortal verve demanding of respect, and does not receive rights from God, then he is replaceable, extinguishable, and more or less sentient meat whose governors do not secure his rights but confer them. (Secular / humanist arguments for natural rights and natural law, for instance, inevitably fall through without such a transcendental or supernatural appeal to an objective Truth at the first sign of scarcity, difference, or competition. That may explain why humanists like Jordan Peterson--cognizant of Nietzsche's need for super men upon realizing that normal men without God would bring Hell to Earth--act as if they believe for the sake of the system that brought us universal suffrage, stability, literacy, and Hayek's beloved extended order...)

To your point, and this point Rodney Stark elaborates on in length in The Triumph of Christianity, western culture is the product of the Christian worldview. The alt-right (i.e. Spencer-types) disagrees, positing that Christianity weakened and destroyed Europe. In the so-called Dark Ages, which were neither dark nor dim, arts and science and the light of antiquity survived in the monastery and the Church. The light of Rome was kept alive by the Roman Church, while the barbarian and feudal lord resuscitated the paganism, child sacrifice, and demon worship of flattened Carthage.

The French philosophes--whose hype men later claimed them to have effected the Enlightenment, not realizing that they were merely expounding upon Christian premises and conclusions--supposedly brought in the age of reason, though Aquinas had long beaten them to it.

The slowly apostatizing Protestant English's Black Legend sought to discount the Christian Church as a means to spite the Spanish, and they similarly castigated Rome for invented crimes (Dinesh Dsouza and countless others have demonstrated the whole-cloth fabrication of the Galileo persecution story and others).

Like altruism, which certainly predates Christianity, in Christianity and unlike in any other cult, critical concepts found elsewhere only piecemeal were together codified, and refined into an unparalleled orthodoxy over two millennia. That orthodoxy--which prizes most love for God and neighbor, the unity of the family, responsibility, and self-sacrifice for deferred pleasure, as well as honesty, humility, prudence, temperance, patience, peace, and justice, and a host of other complementary notions, customs, and concepts of being--when followed by a resolved people we are fortunate to belong to, anchors them in that sweet spot. That anchorage is not guaranteed however nor is our culture. Lose the cult, lose the culture. Lose the calibrant, lose the sweet spot. Lose the sweet spot and the culture, and you'll lose the West.

*https://mises.at/static/literatur/Buch/hayek-the-fatal-conceit.pdf

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ThePopCan 5 points ago +5 / -0

Alternate headline: Trudeau Goes From Crying For Dead Kids To Making Sure That More Babies Are Murdered

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ThePopCan 4 points ago +4 / -0

3 Tanzanians on why Taiwan should her der

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ThePopCan 1 point ago +1 / -0

Good man. Why miss your kids' childhood to save a country that wants to destroy itself? Makes sense to me.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +2 / -0

Oh, I'm well aware. There's a one-pager listing all the Fortune 500 companies operating in Xinjiang with tie-ins to forced labor chain. Then there's the tens of billions of dollars the CCP spends every year on its foreign influence campaign, buying journalists and deference in the Western media.

The best book on CCP strategy and direction, though it's now about 5 years out of date: https://elkitab.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/by-Michael-Pillsbury-The-Hundred-Year-Marathon-3572536-z-lib.org_.pdf

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +2 / -0

My pleasure. People tend to recommend his book Orthodoxy, which he wrote before himself converting or rather as he was mentally in-process (from a solipsistic atheist), but Everlasting Man packs a more powerful punch. The first few chapters serve as a rebuttal of H. G. Wells' The Outline of History, whereas the last few chapters are a phenomenal argument for / defense of Christianity.

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ThePopCan 6 points ago +6 / -0

G.K. Chesterton once noted: "Christendom has had a series of revolutions and in each one of them Christianity has died. Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it had a god who knew the way out of the grave."

-1
ThePopCan -1 points ago +2 / -3

Wait until you learn about the first Welsh Prime Minister of Britain, Lloyd George--the father of the English provider state--who was a Hitlerite and an apologist for Germany's national socialism.

0
ThePopCan 0 points ago +2 / -2

No foreign entanglements.

Why are Americans in Syria? Is it about the Qatar-Turkey pipeline versus the Iranian pipeline? Is it all about what AIPAC wants? Why did the State Department and the Pentagon arm ISIS in southern Syria (Operation Timber Sycamore) or fake the gas attacks? Russia protects the Christian population by saturation bombing jihadists, so there's no reason to stick around.

Why are Americans in Iraq? Democracy won't stick, and even if it did, through majoritarianism in a place rife with sectarian violence, you're bound to get a civil war and or a military dictatorship. (See how 'democracy' has turned out in South American and in Africa.)

No foreign entanglements. If the military industrial complex just wants a payday and statists just want to continue expanding the powers of the executive branch, identify Communist-occupied China for the threat it is, and begin prepping for war. (It won't be pre-emptive per Bush Doctrine, Perle, Wolfowitz, granted the CCP made and accelerated the spread of a biological weapon, albeit a nerfed one. It's retaliatory against a genocidal terror state, and a great opportunity to test out America's suborbital kinetic weapons as well as give Space Force an opportunity to turn the Forbidden City into Fallout Town.)

2
ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Here's a interesting road map of socialist efforts provided in Dr. Stephen R.C. Hicks' Explaining Post-Modernism: https://i.imgur.com/QQNz1lb.jpg

The audiobook is on YouTube in its entirety here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQcNjHNXnEE&ab_channel=CEEVideoChannel

The last third details where we are now, how post-modernism has repackaged socialism, and what it means for western society today.

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ThePopCan 14 points ago +15 / -1

It's unclear how long she'll remain in the position, however, granted Justin Trudeau's track record of firing independent-minded women from First Nations backgrounds. Recall: Wilson-Raybould began serving as Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada (MOJAG) on November 4, 2015, becoming the first Indigenous person and third woman to hold the office, but was then fired by Justin Trudeau when she refused to let SNC Lavalin off the hook for criminality simply for the sake of Liberal voters in Trudeau's riding.

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ThePopCan 1 point ago +2 / -1

Thanks for posting this.

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ThePopCan 1 point ago +2 / -1

Sarcasm?

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ThePopCan 0 points ago +1 / -1

That being a big bold shot, here's a chaser: F.A. Hayek's "Road to Serfdom" (Full PDF): https://cdn.mises.org/Road%20to%20serfdom.pdf

0
ThePopCan 0 points ago +1 / -1

aka the White Paper

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Then said he unto them, But now, he that hath a purse, let him take it, and likewise his scrip: and he that hath no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Note: no CBC reporter-cum-eye-witness has claimed it to have been an act of terrorism.

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ThePopCan 0 points ago +1 / -1

He is a flowery writer, but I found reading him years ago very helpful in terms of preparing myself to then read the Federalist Papers, Hayek, Tocqueville, etc. Once you figure out his pacing, learn what traduced and paucity mean, you're off to the races and equipped with a slightly enlarged lexicon.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Those are phenomenal reads. The slimmed-down version is his latest, The Canadian Manifesto. Also Richard Gwyn's biography of John A (The Man Who Made Us) is top notch.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Wiki (if that's good for anything) corroborates your understanding: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_State_of_Iraq_and_the_Levant

I think there was a mutation of the organization in Syria via Operation Timber Sycamore, when the US armed and trained anti-Assad forces, though admit ignorance of details re: near-east post 2013.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Smart enough to have made himself a brand and run a tight ship, even if he clearly rode on Peterson's coattails.

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ThePopCan 2 points ago +3 / -1

Destroying forward operating bases of the 2,000-year-old institution that will outlast them and their ideologies.

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