Message from @Arthur Konrad
Discord ID: 420561794935816194
I don't think people think otherwise but we end up in crises since the world shifted gears and placed strong barriers around these zones in the early 2000s but what do with this flow of immigrants since it's not a case of completely stopping it
Say for a country like mexico
where the southern border is heavily guarded but 100s still make it in
Honestly I think the immigration issue is overblown. All we really need to do is start enforcing current immigration law (getting rid of sanctuary cities ) and we are good.
Yeah the US law is lax
A big problem is the low birth rates amongst Europeans
And the high birth rates amongst non Europeans
but it still won't help when the most usual case is people overstaying their visas
in a case like the states
True
birth control my friend
Nothing we can do about that tbh.
Short of some horrible human rights violations which I'm not willing to talk about
I think the birth rates will be going down steeply for non europeans except for a few nations but idk the places in africa and asia where it was a huge problem are becoming decently developed
I'm only talking about America.
I could give half a shit about any other country
the problem is the country side like in china and other manufacturing powers is absolutely improvised
ahhh fair enough
that's a whole other story
Yeah
It kind of helps to differentiate between purely intellectual assessment of historicity, and one's personal affinities, and in that regard, Spencer is honest
He does not like all that macabre Old Testament stuff and that's about it
Like, everyone has some inborn aesthetics and style, and for most Europeans, they are not to be found in the OLd Testament
LIke, when I was as young as like 10 years old and got close and personal with the story of Exodus, even at that young age, when I was not yet informed in political opinions, or anything, I had this instinctive feeling of feeling sympathy for the Pharaoh and his family, and feeling angry at Moses and his kin and their wrathfulness
I mean, a kid sees Pharaoh, sees his stern, beautiful appearance, their class, their noble, stylish clothing, shaven heads, their reservedness, their speech in short, punctual sentences, even his children look dignified, mature, stern, noble
it instantly reminds you of a father figure
and on the other hand you have that god-forsaken rabble, that 24/7 screaming, yelling, cursing t heavens, at each other, at hells, at everything
that separation of spirits, that hysteria, that constant agitation, unruliness, insurrection
golden calf worship, thunder striking form heavens slaying people to the left and right, these stampedes
I feel no sympathy for Pharaoh just like I feel no sympathy for the brits after they took extremist passports away. If you want to keep a bunch of rabble on your door step and are actively stopping them from leaving or even worse inviting them in then you deserve all the bullshit wrath
that never ending speeches, never ending preaching, too long sentences, too little said with so many words, too much wrath, malice, bad spirits, lowly instincts, too much thirst for power and treasures
yeah, but the whole story about Pharaoh not wanting them to leave is their version. For all we know, Pharaoh might as well insisted that they leave
But we can't make that assumption and the only source we have is that one source. So it should be taken at face value or discarded and ignored. Considering you are entertaining the story your only logical course of action is to take it at face value. Otherwise you are just making things up out of thin air
I'd rather discard it and not talk about it.
I personally think it's a good story about race mixing and why we shouldn't do it. It's a metaphor
My key point is that these natural feelings are surpressed from very early age, you are instructed to believe that you *must* like the other guys, because they told you they are *good* even though the nature of this *good* eludes you most of the time, since all you see is a mob
I see what you're saying. But I don't necessarily agree in this case. I think in this instance it was pretty obvious who the good guys were.
Nobody knows what "good guys" even means until he is given a one huge discourse on the "goodness" within family, state institutions etc
All you know as a 10 year old kid is that you dont like the feeling of something
Right