Theme: Civilization

  • I dont want to respond to the rude and ignorant but: –“Belief in magic remains

    I dont want to respond to the rude and ignorant but:

    –“Belief in magic remains widespread across many parts of Africa, deeply intertwined with cultural, spiritual, and social practices. This persistence can be traced to a few key factors. First, traditional African worldviews often don’t draw a hard line between the natural and supernatural. Spirits, ancestors, and mystical forces are seen as active participants in daily life, influencing everything from health to harvests. This holistic perspective has been resilient, even alongside the spread of Christianity and Islam, which often adapt to or coexist with these older beliefs.
    For example, in many communities, practices like divination, healing rituals, and protective charms are still common. In West Africa, Vodun (or Voodoo) thrives, not just as religion but as a cultural framework, with practitioners in Benin, Togo, and Nigeria wielding influence. In Southern Africa, sangomas—traditional healers in Zulu and other cultures—use herbs, bones, and spiritual insight to address physical and metaphysical issues. A 2021 study from the University of Cape Town noted that over 70% of urban South Africans consulted traditional healers at least once, showing how these beliefs hold firm even in modernizing areas.
    Colonialism and globalization didn’t erase this. Instead, they layered new systems over the old. Missionaries might’ve called it “superstition,” but locals often blended Christian prayers with ancestral rites. Today, you see Pentecostal churches in Nigeria casting out “witches” while traditional juju priests offer parallel services. Economic and social instability also play a role—when modern systems fail, people turn to what’s familiar and trusted. During the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, some rejected medical aid in favor of spiritual cures, a choice tied to both distrust and belief.
    Data’s patchy, but anecdotes and surveys suggest magic’s grip is strong. The Pew Research Center’s 2010 report on sub-Saharan Africa found that in 19 countries, a median of 41% believed in witchcraft, with figures like 93% in Tanzania. Urbanization and education tweak the expression—younger generations might lean on “spiritual entrepreneurs” online—but the core belief doesn’t fade. It’s less about “magic” as a Westerner might picture it (wands and spells) and more about a lived reality where the unseen shapes the seen.”–

    2010 report titled Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa. This study was conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, based on over 25,000 face-to-face interviews across 19 sub-Saharan African countries between December 2008 and April 2009. Specifically, the statistic about a median of 41% believing in witchcraft is drawn from Chapter 3: Traditional African Religious Beliefs and Practices. You can find the full report on the Pew Research Center’s website at: https://t.co/ZfVcK8M7gx under the section for religious studies, published April 15, 2010.

    The fact that this is common anthropological knowledge… and you dont know it. Well that says enough.

    Reply addressees: @faircareceo @Johnny2Fingersz


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-02 16:32:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1907471318339170305

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1907205987443835367

  • Unfortunately this is still more true than not. But I have faith in at least chr

    Unfortunately this is still more true than not. But I have faith in at least christian africans. https://twitter.com/real_lord_miles/status/1907019191623753817

  • “Emmanuel Todd predicts the fall of the Soviet Union because the satellite state

    –“Emmanuel Todd predicts the fall of the Soviet Union because the satellite states (like Poland) and internal (Moslem) ‘satellite states’ will prove non-absorbable. He also predicts that the USA + Islam were heading towards conflict because of, in large part, Anglo-Saxon feminism. The predictive power of this anthropological approach is also visible in the deep anti-universalism of the authoritarian family. The gypsies, for instance, refuse to be absorbed by other cultures even though they have no identifiable ideological commitments.”–


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-01 17:35:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1907124775975272448

  • The year 2000 wasn’t a tipping point because of the date problem in computers, b

    The year 2000 wasn’t a tipping point because of the date problem in computers, but in the end of the postwar period, and the gradual collapse of our civilization and the consequential collapse of all others into the chaos that comes with the sound of marching feet.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-31 02:58:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1906541684101705934

    Reply addressees: @partymember55

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1906521657608380679

  • I am correct and there is no synthetic historian who would disagree with me

    I am correct and there is no synthetic historian who would disagree with me.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 18:39:22 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904241647329968183

    Reply addressees: @ProductionMan @MikeChardin

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904240440809078818

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @BlakeAn77455669 @ProductionMan @MikeChardin It’s european. E

    RT @curtdoolittle: @BlakeAn77455669 @ProductionMan @MikeChardin It’s european. European civ can fight today and ally tomorrow. Always been…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 18:25:10 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904238071950069836

  • It’s european. European civ can fight today and ally tomorrow. Always been so. B

    It’s european. European civ can fight today and ally tomorrow. Always been so. Because the origin is entrepreneurial warriors (land pirates) on economic ventures. Democracy and rule of law are outgrowths of the only possible means of organizing pirates. The reason it’s in christianity is precisely because the middle east is so low IQ, so tribal and clannish, and therefore so petty. As such Jesus and the church were talking to the petty people (women, slaves). Not european men of military service and property and duty to one another.

    Reply addressees: @BlakeAn77455669 @ProductionMan @MikeChardin


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 18:25:04 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904238049133006848

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904236538814415204

  • I’m not leaving anything out. I’m outlining an argument. And no amount of WhatAb

    I’m not leaving anything out. I’m outlining an argument. And no amount of WhatAboutIsm will modify the argument. Everything good in christianity was already present in the west. And everything bad (the entire mythicism-fictionalism-lying using false promises) is from christianity. Dark age ignorance that was a catastrophe that the restoration of greco-roman learning after 1200 saved us from semitic manufacture of superstition and ignorance.

    Reply addressees: @ProductionMan @MikeChardin


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 03:09:48 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904007713715347456

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1904005235309445168

  • Anything good in christianity was present in proto germanic, in greece and rome.

    Anything good in christianity was present in proto germanic, in greece and rome. Had rome had the time to finish one of the related cults (sol invictus for example) the evil that is the abrahamic system of lying and sedition would never have been able to take route. Just as today, we are too tolerant of islam, they were too tolerant of christianity. And the medievals too tolerant of Judaism. China would never and did never make display that tolerance and they were and still are correct that it is civilizational cancer.

    Reply addressees: @ProductionMan @MikeChardin


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 01:55:57 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1903989128334868480

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1903987143011365148

  • No, Europe was a majority aristocratic (military) civilization, and this meant a

    No, Europe was a majority aristocratic (military) civilization, and this meant a permanent underclass. Christianity gave the underclasses a means of status seeking (a) they could comprehend (b) didn’t require the ability and competency of the aristocracy. It started as a religion of women, became a religion of the weak, expanded into a religion of the rent seekers, and did so not by spreading greek and roman reason, but by the feminine construct of the abrahamic deception which started as the jewish undermining of the west, and was reformed into the marxist sequence and around 1900 into the muslim fundamentalist sequence. The only substantial problem is that (a) women are the voters who disable the civilization by evading responsibility, (b) immigrants from non-responsible civilizations ally with women, and (c) the folly of progressive optimism (responsibility evasion), by failing to respond to islamism as thoroughly as we did to world communism, and jewish economic and political sedition that preceded it.

    Sorry.

    Reply addressees: @ProductionMan @MikeChardin


    Source date (UTC): 2025-03-24 01:53:05 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1903988405853392897

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1903987143011365148