Retweeted Brett Stevens (@amerika_blog):
.@ThaRightStuff My tribe is Western Europeans. I wish every other tribe goodwill in their own nations. #tcot #altright #nrx
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-15 07:49:00 UTC
Retweeted Brett Stevens (@amerika_blog):
.@ThaRightStuff My tribe is Western Europeans. I wish every other tribe goodwill in their own nations. #tcot #altright #nrx
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-15 07:49:00 UTC
Retweeted Brett Stevens (@amerika_blog):
You’re not right-wing until you want aristocracy, nationalism, free markets and transcendental guidance. #tcot #nrx #altright
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-15 07:49:00 UTC
a ted talk that doesn’t suck and doesn’t require magic
http://www.ted.com/talks/garrett_lisi_on_his_theory_of_everything
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-15 02:45:00 UTC
http://www.wsj.com/articles/how-global-elites-forsake-their-countrymen-1470959258ITS BECAUSE THEY FOLLOW INCENTIVES: WORKING FOR EACH OTHER RATHER AT OUR EXPENSE RATHER THAN WORKING FOR COMPETITIVELY FOR US.
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-13 07:48:00 UTC
–“the default mode of the modern age is the disruption of the family. No need for the Others to play the devil.”— Adam Voight
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-12 09:48:00 UTC
MIKHAIL VOLOSHIN ON BELIEF
—“BELIEF, IN THE THIRD PERSON:
The verb “to believe” makes sense when (and only when) used in the third person. “Christians believe that the resurrection happened,” for example. Or, “AGW alarmists believe that increasing atmospheric CO2 levels will result in a hyperlinear increase in global temperature.”
BELIEF MEANS COUNTER-FACTUAL
By its nature, “to believe” implies counterfactuality. If the speaker wishes to convey that the contents of a subject’s mind are in accordance with reality, the speaker doesn’t use the word “believe”. The more natural words then would be “know” or “realize” or “understand”. I.e. “The West has known since at least Aristotle that the Earth is round.” To say, “The West has believed…” rather than, “The West has known…” implies that this “believed” assertion is incorrect, i.e. counterfactual — at least from the POV of the knowledge base of the speaker.
BELIEF, IN THE SECOND PERSON: CONDESCENSION
To use “believe” in the second person is inherently condescending — to say to someone, “You believe X,” implies that you *don’t* hold X to be true, and think your listener holds or espouses a counterfactual belief.
BELIEF, IN THE FIRST PERSON: REDUNDANT
To use “believe” in the first person is, at best, redundant. It is functionally equivalent to say, “I believe it’s raining,” “I know it’s raining,” and “It’s raining.” In colloquial conversation, people use the modifier “I believe” as a sort of hedge against the accuracy of their own statements. I.e. in practice, “I believe it’s raining,” would indicate that the speaker recognizes the possibility that it might in fact *not* be raining — that is, “I believe X”, ironically, means that the speaker in fact *does not* believe X, or at least not fully.
At worst, using “to believe” in the first person begs for an instance of Moore’s Paradox, and indicates a serious case of doublethink. “I believe that people can be born the wrong gender, and I also believe that gender is a social construct. Stop questioning my beliefs!” Moore *believed* that no person could sustain a recognition of the counterfactuality of their own beliefs; Moore had apparently never met any actual human beings.”— Mikhail Voloshin
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 12:40:00 UTC
RT @MartianHoplite: Serve the lord who would serve you; but not the lord who would serve you for dinner. https://twitter.com/curtdoolittle/status/763627580960505856
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 07:16:33 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/763635197799636992
RT @MartianHoplite: Noblesse oblige is simple common sense. People will support an order that works for them, but not one that doesn’t. htt…
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 07:16:24 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/763635158104805376
RT @MartianHoplite: @von_Dienen someone called me “the downmarket @curtdoolittle” once. I think he meant it as an insult. But I took it the…
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 07:15:43 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/763634986977206272
https://t.co/bVfQ82vpTzRetweeted Eli Harman (@MartianHoplite):
Serve the lord who would serve you; but not the lord who would serve you for dinner.
Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 03:16:00 UTC