Anonymous ID: 66f238 Jan. 27, 2022, 10:19 p.m. No.15481073   🗄️.is đź”—kun

People were certain the vax narrative would collapse with children. They thought that nobody will endanger their kids for something trivial.

That view had 2 major flaws. First. Yes the vax is NOT about health. But what it's really about is not trivial.

Second. It doesn't include most of human history.

The vax is about faith. To the system. All of it. Top to bottom. From taxes to comforts. Vaxxing your kid and accepting its likely death is simply a sacrifice to those comforts. Because they are what the system offers. Technology the daughter of Science. And studying history will reveal that people will very easily sacrifice their offspring to preserve their system of faith.

Here is an extreme but very good example.

Minoans. You all know im sure that the minoans were an ancient Greek civilization that was wiped out by the eruption of the volcano in Thera Santorini.

True. Recent archeological discoveries have revealed that the Minoans and the Mycenians (House of Atreides ie) are the same people genetically and that the minoans are at least 1500 years older than previously thought. It is also believed that Plato's myth of Atlantis that Plato brought from Egypt when he visited the Greek refugees of the Doric descent who saved copper age Greek history from the invasion and took it to Egypt, refers to Thera.

Imagine now all that in your head. A stable civilization. Highly advanced culturally and economically. Lasting for millenia. Not one. Multiple millenia. Plural. And then one day Poseidon (greek volcanos all sea volcanos belong to Poseidon) destroys it. All of it. An eruption that changed not only the greek world but all of human history. In an instant. Gone.

Put your self in the position of a Minoan. A member of a civilization that may had ritualisticly kill war prisoners and hostages but never sacrificed children. Yet now at the end after the explosion, archeology has shown that the survivors did sacrifice children to the gods in the ruins of their temples.

Why? To bring back their world. Isn't that worth your children's lives? You can always have more kids. But your world?

Do you see now?

The same reason explains why people will look at you straight in the eyes and say : "yes i think its perfectly normal for humans inhabiting this earth for untold time all of sudden now require a drug and equipment to survive on earth's surface forever and ever as if we're on Venus. Yes i always believed that was normal even when i didn't "

Think of a person who says that to you as an aztec explaining to his child that without human sacrifice corn won't grow and how the effects of monoculture are just an indication of just more blood needed. Maybe his own.

You think because we have practical electricity things are different? No. They're not. WE are different. The dissidents. The normal people? They're always the same.

And that is why as dissidents the only way for us to survive is to rule.

Do you see now?

 

https://gab.com/kalogerosstilitis/posts/107639371717758880

Anonymous ID: 66f238 Jan. 27, 2022, 10:28 p.m. No.15481109   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1115

How the Capitol attacks helped spread Christian nationalism in the extreme right

For many in the right-wing extremist fringe, Christian nationalism is becoming a shared language.

January 26, 2022

 

When supporters of former President Donald Trump rallied near the White House on Jan. 6 of last year, a boisterous pocket of young men waving “America First” flags broke into a chant: “Christ is King!” It was one of the first indications that Christian nationalism would be a theme of the Capitol attack later that day, where insurrectionists prayed and waved banners that read “Proud American Christian.”

 

It also announced the presence of followers of Nick Fuentes, a 23-year-old white nationalist and former YouTube personality who was subpoenaed this month by the U.S. House of Representatives committee investigating the Capitol attack. (Though a person holding a flag reading “America First” — Fuentes’ personal brand — was among the first to barrel into the Senate chamber during the insurrection, there is no evidence Fuentes entered the Capitol himself.)

 

“Christ is King” is not controversial in itself: The phrase is rooted in Christian Scripture and tradition. But Fuentes’ supporters have given it a different connotation. They have chanted it at anti-vaccine protests and the anti-abortion March for Life, some of them holding crucifixes aloft. It was heard in March, at an America First conference, where Fuentes delivered a speech saying America will cease to be America “if it loses its white demographic core and if it loses its faith in Jesus Christ.” Fuentes also declared the country “a Christian nation.”

 

The religious fervor of Fuentes’ followers is part of an unsettling resurgence of faith-based appeals among right-wing extremists in the aftermath of the insurrection. With so many ideological strands animating the far-right — including racism, antisemitism, and fervent nationalism — a shared affinity for Christian nationalism has come to serve as a unifying element, scholars of extremism say.

 

And as Christian nationalism’s presence grows, experts are concerned it could expand extremism’s influence over other, more moderate conservative politicians and groups.

 

“Christian nationalism — and even the idea of separatism, with a subtext of white, Christian and conservative-leaning — took a more dominant role in the way that extremist groups talk to each other and try to propagandize in public,” said Jared Holt, who studies extremism at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab.

 

Christian nationalism has a deep history in America’s racist right-wing, said Kelly J. Baker, author of “Gospel According to the Klan: The KKK’s Appeal to Protestant America, 1915-1930.” Fuentes’ rhetoric “could have come word for word from a Klan speech in 1922,” she said. “The Klan’s goal here was patriotism and nationalism, but it was combined with their focus on white Christianity.”

 

Intermingling patriotism and piety has become common even among groups better known for nationalist violence than adherence to a particular faith. The Proud Boys, a chauvinist organization whose members trampled and burned Black Lives Matter banners at Washington, D.C., churches a year ago, were spotted praying together the morning of the insurrection.

 

[Continued]

 

https://religionnews.com/2022/01/26/for-right-wing-extremists-a-renewed-embrace-of-christian-nationalism/

Anonymous ID: 66f238 Jan. 27, 2022, 10:33 p.m. No.15481140   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Imagine Chinese were 2% of the population of Japan, yet most of the media, business, academia, cultural, and government institutions were dominated by Chinese through ethnic loyalty and nepotism.

 

They’d say things like “As fellow Asians, we’re the worst. We need to change everything about ourselves to not be so Asian” to the Japanese, while themselves preserving and defending their Chinese heritage and interests.

 

Claiming humanitarian reasons, they’d welcome the stranger into Japan, legally allowing a million immigrants from all over the world per year stating Japan has always been multiethnic and multicultural, just look at the Ainus and Ryukyuans, and say how much more tasty the food is now that it’s not just bland rice and fish, until the Japanese were under 50% of the population, but said China was to remain for Chinese only.

 

They’d tear down historic Japanese architecture, and build square box apartment complexes for all the new arrivals, and remove statues of historical and cultural figures and heroes for not representing their diverse society and for historical grievances of former wars.

 

Every TV show the Chinese produced would have the Japanese male as retarded, effeminate, or weak, while Japanese women were always with the strong and dominate Nigerian having mixed kids, making this seem normal until the Japanese population emulated it.

 

As more immigrants couldn’t fit into a Japanese society, all the institutions controlled by the Chinese openly advocated they needed to dismantle Japaness, systemic Japanism, and Japanese supremacy.

 

And if any Japanese spoke out against it, they’d be called Japanese supremacists. And if anyone noticed it was the Chinese doing it to them, they’d be called anti-Chinites. Meanwhile, a huge number of Japanese would say things like “The Chinese are our greatest ally who are Chosen By God, and those who stand against China stand against God!”

 

Meanwhile, the Chinese would rub their hands together as they had destroyed the Japanese nation and people from within because they hated the Japanese all along.

 

I know, far fetched and unbelievable right?

 

https://gab.com/WriteWinger/posts/105906044687335637