Theme: Class

  • I give a sh-t about the working and middle classes. That’s why. ‘Cause the chanc

    I give a sh-t about the working and middle classes. That’s why. ‘Cause the chances you’re dealing with a moral person decline rapidly above and below those classes.

    I am totally done with this top and bottom against the middle.

    We need guillotines, hanging trees, pikes, crucifixions and pyres. Lots of them.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-09 07:59:00 UTC

  • The Priestly Question: On the Restoration of Aristocracy by Special Pleading by

    The Priestly Question: On the Restoration of Aristocracy by Special Pleading

    by James Augustus

    An important insight made by the Reactionaries (literary ‘priestly’ right) that is often over-looked by the martial (upper) and soldiering (mid-to-low) right is the dynamic between power & propaganda, or more accurately, the (totality of existential) dynamics concerning the distribution of rents, discretion (influence) & information.

    And we are often misguided by the fallacy of seeking agreement (through force of reasoned argument & genuine good will) amongst the lower-and-middle priestly classes under the false presumption that power follows propaganda, as opposed to propaganda as the industrial production of weaponized misinformation by priest against the aristocratic, commercial & the suggestible consumer classes.

    And we can blame the priest & Abrahamist, but really it was the mere perusal of rational self-interest given the (incentives) opportunities produced by advent of mass communications & the failure of the aristocracy to adapt to consumer capitalism (a shift of in revenues from rents on feudal holdings to rents on human holdings in exchange for cost of domestication & the product of civilizational order (commons)).

    Europe was just recovering from Abrahamic-monotheism via the Renaissance (rediscovery of Aristotelianism) & the introduction of Empiricism through the Anglo Enlightenment, when we fell to the next wave of deceits & conflations pseudo-science (Abrahamic), pseudo-rationalism (German), literary-moral-fictionalism (French), so we were never able to compete the scientific enlightenment (expand empiricism into the social sciences (law) through the falsification of ‘Man as inherently Moral’ instead of ‘Man as Rational’ (selfishly incentive-driven).

    The purpose of pseudo-science was to resist/destroy empiricism, so that a misguided West could not rule its colonial holdings (84% of the globe) empirically—& we lost the world because of it.

    And when the failures of the pseudo-scientific enlightenment began to accumulate, the response by the Priest was to attack the very notion of objectivity, and therefor measurement, accounting in political economy & scientific narrative.

    So post-modernism is merely the latest iteration of the priestly assault against Aristocracy (markets in everything).

    So to close that thought, we cannot restore the Aristocracy (markets), and by extension the West, by special pleading to the Priestly Class & its subordinates. We cannot restore the west by re-appropriation of the Church.

    The Restoration can only be achieved by our ancient practice of sovereignty by militia, which is to say reintroducing violence into the political process.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-08 22:53:00 UTC

  • “Ya know? Most of the conflation, lies and misinformation is just man makin’ sh-

    –“Ya know? Most of the conflation, lies and misinformation is just man makin’ sh-t up to supplement his inability to climb hierarchy.”—Nick Heywood


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-08 18:21:00 UTC

  • Paul Krugman, We are in a cold civil war and you are making the common feminine

    Paul Krugman,

    We are in a cold civil war and you are making the common feminine error of psychologizing it.

    In this civil war, as in any civil war, the parties are willing to incur vast losses in order to prevent the success of their enemies. And you find yourself one of the enemies. Which I suggest is history repeating itself for the same reason that it has always repeated itself: the belief that the levantine empire is preferable to the nation state.

    It’s that simple you know. If you cannot build and hold an east asian or western european nation state, you have no choice but to develop an indian or south american caste system or levantine tribal barbarism from which east and west have managed to insulate themselves – until the sixties.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-07 22:00:00 UTC

  • YOU ARE ATTRACTED TO MARXISM BECAUSE YOU ARE INFERIOR AND OF NO VALUE TO OTHERS

    YOU ARE ATTRACTED TO MARXISM BECAUSE YOU ARE INFERIOR AND OF NO VALUE TO OTHERS

    Marxism is false, pseudoscientific, and has empirically failed. The fact that you are genetically, physically, emotionally, intellectually inferior provides you with the incentive to surrender to abrahamic deceptions in the ancient world (judaism, christianity, and islam) by using the false promises of life after death if you rebel against those who are better than you are, just as marxism gives you the false promises that you will have economic social and political equality to yuor betters in the present word if you rebel against them. Both are simply lies. Nothing more. Lies for the weak of genes, body, emotions, and mind.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-07 09:44:00 UTC

  • The more ‘ascendent’ a group, the more virtue signaling by accumulated marginal

    The more ‘ascendent’ a group, the more virtue signaling by accumulated marginal differences – and NOT the physical which they cannot change.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-07 05:18:59 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/894427629272649728

    Reply addressees: @jointstocksodom @comeonpeopleV_V

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/894381171848740868


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

    Original tweet unavailable — we could not load the text of the post this reply is addressing on X. That usually means the tweet was deleted, the account is protected, or X does not expose it to the account used for archiving. The Original post link below may still open if you view it in X while signed in.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/894381171848740868

  • THE OCCULT, CONSPIRACY, FINANCIALIST, FICTIONALISTS The occult(propaganda), cons

    THE OCCULT, CONSPIRACY, FINANCIALIST, FICTIONALISTS

    The occult(propaganda), conspiracy (of common interest), and financialist(parasitism) arguments are all ‘true’ in the sense that these groups follow all these methods of self interest.

    The problem is that the occultists, the conspiracy theorists, the “kill them all” financialists, and fictionalists are either mal-educated, or mentally deficient, or both. And they are heavily indebted to their frame, and addicted to the emotional response of their frames. So they are participants in, and promoters of, the very problem they are complaining about.

    Ayelam is right. The alt right is full of postmodernists. And I sometimes I feel that a handful of us are the lone modernists out here.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-05 11:17:00 UTC

  • Left pointy hats are dunce caps. Alt Right pointy hats are tinfoil hats

    Left pointy hats are dunce caps. Alt Right pointy hats are tinfoil hats.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-04 21:37:00 UTC

  • Why does the Alt-Right include so many tinfoil hats?

    Why does the Alt-Right include so many tinfoil hats?


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-04 20:52:00 UTC

  • Daniel Gurpide Could you help me with the dates in the Rise/Collapse section bel

    Daniel Gurpide Could you help me with the dates in the Rise/Collapse section below? -thanks

    THE RULERS SPEAK IN LAW (limitations) – those who do.

    THE MERCHANTS SPEAK IN IDEALS (ambitions) – those who wish.

    THE SLAVES SPEAK IN RELIGION (resistance) – those who resist.

    LAW(MARKETS) : Rome: Real-Deflation (Everyone) SCIENCE / TRUTH

    WISDOM (FAMILIES): China: Real (Confucius) WISDOM LIT. / REASONABLE

    PHILOSOPHY: Athens: Ideal (Plato) PHILOSOPHY / REASON (RATIONALISM)

    THEOSOPHY: Phoenicia: Literary (Augustine) MYTH / ANALOGY (STORY)

    THEOLOGY: Babylon: Theology (Zoroaster) MYSTICISM / SUGGESTION

    MONOPOLY: Arabia: Unreal-Conflation (Abraham ) LIES / DECEPTION

    FOOLS talk about CONSPIRACIES

    SIMPLE people talk about PEOPLE, (No Collars – Tunics )

    COMMON people talk about EVENTS, (Blue Collars – Pants )

    EDUCATED people talk about IDEAS. (White Collars – Suits )

    WISE people talk about LAWS. (Black collars – Robes)

    THE RISE OF EUROPEAN ROME & COLLAPSE UNDER PERSIAN BYZANTIUM

    Roman Monarchy … 753 -> 510bc (243 yrs)

    Roman Republic ….. 510 -> 134 bc (376 yrs)

    Roman Empire……… 134bc -> 69 ad (

    Roman Federation .. 285 -> (East and west split)

    Roman Church Forms. 306 ->

    Roman Tolerance …. 313 (Edict of Milan)

    Forcible Conversion..380 (Edict of Thessalonica)

    Roman Fall …………… 476ad

    EVAN ANDREWS ON THE FALL OF ROMAN CIVILIZATION

    1) Invasions by Barbarian tribes

    The most straightforward theory for Western Rome’s collapse pins the fall on a string of military losses sustained against outside forces. Rome had tangled with Germanic tribes for centuries, but by the 300s “barbarian” groups like the Goths had encroached beyond the Empire’s borders. The Romans weathered a Germanic uprising in the late fourth century, but in 410 the Visigoth King Alaric successfully sacked the city of Rome. The Empire spent the next several decades under constant threat before “the Eternal City” was raided again in 455, this time by the Vandals. Finally, in 476, the Germanic leader Odoacer staged a revolt and deposed the Emperor Romulus Augustulus. From then on, no Roman emperor would ever again rule from a post in Italy, leading many to cite 476 as the year the Western Empire suffered its deathblow.

    2) Economic troubles and overreliance on slave labor

    Even as Rome was under attack from outside forces, it was also crumbling from within thanks to a severe financial crisis. Constant wars and overspending had significantly lightened imperial coffers, and oppressive taxation and inflation had widened the gap between rich and poor. In the hope of avoiding the taxman, many members of the wealthy classes had even fled to the countryside and set up independent fiefdoms. At the same time, the empire was rocked by a labor deficit. Rome’s economy depended on slaves to till its fields and work as craftsmen, and its military might had traditionally provided a fresh influx of conquered peoples to put to work. But when expansion ground to a halt in the second century, Rome’s supply of slaves and other war treasures began to dry up. A further blow came in the fifth century, when the Vandals claimed North Africa and began disrupting the empire’s trade by prowling the Mediterranean as pirates. With its economy faltering and its commercial and agricultural production in decline, the Empire began to lose its grip on Europe.

    3) The rise of the Eastern Empire

    The fate of Western Rome was partially sealed in the late third century, when the Emperor Diocletian divided the Empire into two halves—the Western Empire seated in the city of Milan, and the Eastern Empire in Byzantium, later known as Constantinople. The division made the empire more easily governable in the short term, but over time the two halves drifted apart. East and West failed to adequately work together to combat outside threats, and the two often squabbled over resources and military aid. As the gulf widened, the largely Greek-speaking Eastern Empire grew in wealth while the Latin-speaking West descended into economic crisis. Most importantly, the strength of the Eastern Empire served to divert Barbarian invasions to the West. Emperors like Constantine ensured that the city of Constantinople was fortified and well guarded, but Italy and the city of Rome—which only had symbolic value for many in the East—were left vulnerable. The Western political structure would finally disintegrate in the fifth century, but the Eastern Empire endured in some form for another thousand years before being overwhelmed by the Ottoman Empire in the 1400s.

    4) Overexpansion and military overspending

    At its height, the Roman Empire stretched from the Atlantic Ocean all the way to the Euphrates River in the Middle East, but its grandeur may have also been its downfall. With such a vast territory to govern, the empire faced an administrative and logistical nightmare. Even with their excellent road systems, the Romans were unable to communicate quickly or effectively enough to manage their holdings. Rome struggled to marshal enough troops and resources to defend its frontiers from local rebellions and outside attacks, and by the second century the Emperor Hadrian was forced to build his famous wall in Britain just to keep the enemy at bay. As more and more funds were funneled into the military upkeep of the empire, technological advancement slowed and Rome’s civil infrastructure fell into disrepair.

    5) Government corruption and political instability

    If Rome’s sheer size made it difficult to govern, ineffective and inconsistent leadership only served to magnify the problem. Being the Roman emperor had always been a particularly dangerous job, but during the tumultuous second and third centuries it nearly became a death sentence. Civil war thrust the empire into chaos, and more than 20 men took the throne in the span of only 75 years, usually after the murder of their predecessor. The Praetorian Guard—the emperor’s personal bodyguards—assassinated and installed new sovereigns at will, and once even auctioned the spot off to the highest bidder. The political rot also extended to the Roman Senate, which failed to temper the excesses of the emperors due to its own widespread corruption and incompetence. As the situation worsened, civic pride waned and many Roman citizens lost trust in their leadership.

    6) The arrival of the Huns and the migration of the Barbarian tribes

    The Barbarian attacks on Rome partially stemmed from a mass migration caused by the Huns’ invasion of Europe in the late fourth century. When these Eurasian warriors rampaged through northern Europe, they drove many Germanic tribes to the borders of the Roman Empire. The Romans grudgingly allowed members of the Visigoth tribe to cross south of the Danube and into the safety of Roman territory, but they treated them with extreme cruelty. According to the historian Ammianus Marcellinus, Roman officials even forced the starving Goths to trade their children into slavery in exchange for dog meat. In brutalizing the Goths, the Romans created a dangerous enemy within their own borders. When the oppression became too much to bear, the Goths rose up in revolt and eventually routed a Roman army and killed the Eastern Emperor Valens during the Battle of Adrianople in A.D. 378. The shocked Romans negotiated a flimsy peace with the barbarians, but the truce unraveled in 410, when the Goth King Alaric moved west and sacked Rome. With the Western Empire weakened, Germanic tribes like the Vandals and the Saxons were able to surge across its borders and occupy Britain, Spain and North Africa.

    7) Christianity and the loss of traditional values

    The decline of Rome dovetailed with the spread of Christianity, and some have argued that the rise of a new faith helped contribute to the empire’s fall. The Edict of Milan legalized Christianity in 313, and it later became the state religion in 380. These decrees ended centuries of persecution, but they may have also eroded the traditional Roman values system. Christianity displaced the polytheistic Roman religion, which viewed the emperor as having a divine status, and also shifted focus away from the glory of the state and onto a sole deity. Meanwhile, popes and other church leaders took an increased role in political affairs, further complicating governance. The 18th-century historian Edward Gibbon was the most famous proponent of this theory, but his take has since been widely criticized. While the spread of Christianity may have played a small role in curbing Roman civic virtue, most scholars now argue that its influence paled in comparison to military, economic and administrative factors.

    8) Weakening of the Roman legions

    For most of its history, Rome’s military was the envy of the ancient world. But during the decline, the makeup of the once mighty legions began to change. Unable to recruit enough soldiers from the Roman citizenry, emperors like Diocletian and Constantine began hiring foreign mercenaries to prop up their armies. The ranks of the legions eventually swelled with Germanic Goths and other barbarians, so much so that Romans began using the Latin word “barbarus” in place of “soldier.” While these Germanic soldiers of fortune proved to be fierce warriors, they also had little or no loyalty to the empire, and their power-hungry officers often turned against their Roman employers. In fact, many of the barbarians who sacked the city of Rome and brought down the Western Empire had earned their military stripes while serving in the Roman legions.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-08-04 15:29:00 UTC