Message from @Jacob
Discord ID: 535680989175873536
(read: getting WOKE on the European radical right)
Western Europe, the bulk of my political education came from the French New Right, some Brits, and some Italians
Eastern Europe is... man, those guys are a trip because of the crazy stuff they do
man, I remember first seeing the news that Venner had killed himself in 2013
my social media feed exploded when that came out
@nord It'd be a meme if they didn't taste good. I've largely cut energy drinks out of my diet, but they mix well with gin 👀 👼🏻
I also remember when I first saw the Generation identity video
where they declared war on the Generation of '68
no, that was back in 2013 I think
update: some GI groups started in 2012
oh man, pre-2015 was great
nobody cared what happened because NOBODY had anything happen to them
so all sorts of crazy stuff was said with zero consequences
@Sam Anderson That's actually a pretty big concern for me when introducing these ideas to people. That they might not realize just how "edgy" they are and they'll accidentally self-doxx by showing people Red Ice videos at work. A lot of people don't realize that "white supremacist" refers to pretty mild stuff, so they don't realize it when they consume "white supremacist" content. That's what it was like for me when I first got into this. I was watching those White Rabbit Radio videos and was like, "huh, this stuff makes sense" and then later I found out that this is what "white supremacy" refers to.
@Jacob yeah I agree with that
i usually start with government bureaucracy incompetence/corruption
i think american history can be a big yawn for most normies... if u do introduce something visceral, and relatable like the way different races act that can be very potent... of course if the person is able to disconnect from the bs matrix most are lost in
I start with why Texas will turn blue and how that will affect them personally and then relate it to the broader issue of displacement
my biggest issue is that people just don't care and don't see anything wrong
pointing out anti-white stuff can be a good tool as well
@VinceChaos I don't know if that's a question I have a simple answer to. There was a lot of factors that led me into this movement and there's really a lot to say on the subject. I should probably write about it in long form eventually because I've had some pretty interesting experiences.
I actually remember fairly vividly my earliest memory of the word "diversity". It was in elementary school during an assembly. If I remember correctly, there was supposed to be a new kind of "theme" every year and the tradition was that the teacher would call out the word that is the new theme and metaphorically throw it and the students catch it.
This one year the word was "diversity", and the teacher does her weird ritual where she excitedly yells "diversity" and makes a throwing motion and the students try to "catch" the word. There was a lot of buzzwords thrown around in elementary school and put up on posters like "respect", "responsibility", etc.
But this one was different because no one really knew what it meant. Everyone understood why stuff like "kindness" was important, but what the hell is this "diversity" that's being thrown around? Why should I care about it? Because we learn from each others' differences? Wait, but didn't you literally just teach me about how we're all the same? And what exactly do we learn from our differences anyway? Isn't it more efficient to just read a book, unless maybe someone has an unusually compelling experience?
I know what I wrote is kinda stream of consciousness and probably sounds like a copypasta, but I'm just kinda recalling it as I go. Does that make at least some sense? The word "diversity" just kinda always sounded like bullshit because it was a prioristically assumed to be good.
Did you catch it?
dropped the ball
"show me evidence that certain people are more prone to crime."-people
"here's some FBI crime statistics"-me
"that's racist"-people
i get this often and people just refuse to even look at anything i show them, they don't care and refuse to even try to see the world differently
or maybe I ended up here *because* I was the one that caught it
bruh moment
I think reading the strange death of Europe was very changing for me but that was just one of many things.
I think it would be kind of odd to change your views dramatically based on one piece of evidence you come across rather than your opinons changing gradually.
I like to bring up how the person's family is far more prone to be a victim of an extremely violent crime if they lived in the local ghetto.
"You and I wouldn't want our family to live in the ghetto here, honestly I wouldn't want anyone to live in such conditions."
Gotta use sub conscious relations to your advantage imo
Douglas Murray’s book right? @nord for a gay neocon he’s had some good takes
Yeah it was strange at some points how he could write what he did and not be enraged about the whole thing. I think the author isn't very important to the narrative though.
Strange death of Europe means strange authors
Wow that’s early indoctrination both in your life and bc it was in the early 2000s probably @Jacob
I'm 21, so yes
I don't remember exactly what grade it was in, but it had to have been very early, since that's literally the first time I remember ever hearing the word
I was definitely 8 or younger
God, the brainwashing is so forced that talking about sounds like talking about getting molested
"I was too young to understand what was going on and why I'm being forced to say this stuff"
@Jacob age 8? step it up pal.
https://twitter.com/nursiedeb/status/1085603805390139394
indoctrination begins at age .8 now.
That... sounds like literal child abuse
Some loony I found on twitter today