Message from @Perihelion - CA

Discord ID: 547522188526354495


2019-02-19 20:31:26 UTC  

oh that wasn't meant to bantz you

2019-02-19 20:31:53 UTC  

I just lazily took a picture off activism photos

2019-02-19 20:37:15 UTC  
2019-02-19 20:40:24 UTC  

I saw this was being talked about the other day but didn't get a chance to read all of it; What's everyone's thoughts on automation? Where is the line between too much automation where you're hurting people and enough to where we can live comfortably?

2019-02-19 20:41:41 UTC  

The line is full employment

2019-02-19 20:42:14 UTC  

The solution is to create work in fields humans find instinctively fulfilling.

2019-02-19 20:42:35 UTC  

Most automated jobs now are soul crushing anyway.

2019-02-19 20:43:17 UTC  

To make work simply outlaw certain goods. For example. All children toys must be hand crafted.

2019-02-19 20:43:43 UTC  

All food must be grown on family farm under 200 acres etc.

2019-02-19 20:45:38 UTC  

You could also ensure full employment with public works or enviromental conservation projects. Or just go old scool and build pyramids.

2019-02-19 20:47:36 UTC  

I like the idea of forcing all food to be organic, local, and family owned.

2019-02-19 20:48:08 UTC  

But hey we could build pyramids too

2019-02-19 20:48:51 UTC  

My marketing book talks about whites becoming a minority <:nervous:359009898115104770>

2019-02-19 20:49:28 UTC  

@Perihelion - CA I would agree with these things in a perfect world but realistically, in the US, where do you see automation/job market in say, 25-30 years

2019-02-19 20:50:07 UTC  

Look up "openai attention language model white paper"

2019-02-19 20:50:36 UTC  

And learn to code

2019-02-19 20:52:00 UTC  

The only thing with "learn to code" is you don't need say 250 people to program and supervise machines that do the work of 250 people

2019-02-19 20:52:33 UTC  

In next 25 years huge amount of work to implement replacement

2019-02-19 20:53:05 UTC  

After hopefully you own capital/investments

2019-02-19 20:57:34 UTC  

Source?

2019-02-19 20:57:42 UTC  

Surname analysis says otherwise

2019-02-19 20:58:10 UTC  

But entire mediteranean was pretty huwhite back then

2019-02-19 20:58:26 UTC  

all the blonde statues

2019-02-19 20:58:34 UTC  

not everyone was blonde of course

2019-02-19 20:59:33 UTC  

Look at apostle paul having roman citizenship for one easy example

2019-02-19 20:59:57 UTC  

Hello everyone I hope everyone had a nice Day

2019-02-19 21:02:48 UTC  

New guy (1/4 Italian) chiming in on the subject - much of the northern Italian ancestry, or at least cultural aspects, were allegedly influenced by the Etruscans, but the origin of the Etruscans is largely ambiguous

2019-02-19 21:04:23 UTC  

Ahh, I will admit I'm not as versed on the subject as I probably should be - I just wanted to jump in and converse with people since I'm new to Identity Evropa

2019-02-19 21:04:56 UTC  

I took a course on the matter though, most of my focus was on Roman-onwards however

2019-02-19 21:05:22 UTC  

I was under the impression that the Etruscans were distant relatives of the Basques?

2019-02-19 21:05:42 UTC  

@Nemets Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

2019-02-19 21:08:31 UTC  

Since you seem so versed on the subject, out of curiosity, my Italian family members come from outside of Naples, Frigento to be precise, would that be considered to be predominantly Etruscan historically/culturally?

2019-02-19 21:09:47 UTC  

@Nemets Really? I thought the fertile crescent farmers were late comers to Europe and there were already Indo-European and pre-Indo-European populations there.

2019-02-19 21:10:33 UTC  

@Paul H - MI More Samnite I believe with some Magna Graecia thrown in.

2019-02-19 21:13:29 UTC  

wait? isnt the world only leik 300 years old?

2019-02-19 21:13:59 UTC  

I see, I'm curious as to finding out what we culturally descended from pre-Roman. I know that a very distant relative (similar spelling of our surname) was a Roman political figure as the family name was inscribed on several government buildings, thank you @Virgil, I'll read up on this

2019-02-19 21:22:50 UTC  

@Nemets damn I thought IE wasn't founded until 2016 we're a lot older than I thought

2019-02-19 21:23:30 UTC  

@Paul H - MI Interesting! But sometimes people named their families after famous figures like generals, kings, saints, presidents etc.

So I wouldn't get your hopes up too much. But it would be pretty cool if true.

2019-02-19 21:24:55 UTC  

@Virgil my uncle paid some genealogists to trace it back, and they got as far as pre-Roman, but you're probably right. ๐Ÿ˜…

2019-02-19 21:28:38 UTC  

We can at least accurately trace the Italian side back several centuries, but my great-grandfather (and something of a mentor) was a soldier in Division "M", and that's one of the greatest sources of pride I had the privilege of experiencing personally

2019-02-19 21:37:46 UTC  

@Jacob You havenโ€™t even begun to scratch the surface. The rabbit hole goes deeper than you could ever imagine. IE always was, always is, and always will be.