Message from @Orchid

Discord ID: 363731665715068934


2017-09-25 23:24:10 UTC  

also a classic

2017-09-25 23:36:47 UTC  
2017-09-26 02:13:40 UTC  

great

2017-09-26 13:41:57 UTC  

^long ass blogpost, a very interesting read about africa

2017-09-26 19:51:33 UTC  

I‘m currently reading „A Race Against Time“, which is a collection of different articles. It‘s not a fun read, but there are a lot of interesting facts in there. I skipped a few articles that did not sound that interesting. Most of the ones I skipped regarded SJW tactics.
I would recommend you read it and skip articles that don‘t sound that important.

2017-09-27 02:01:58 UTC  

whats it about? do you have a link to it?

2017-09-27 02:28:37 UTC  

started listening to this podcast recently, about the social decay in the west: http://www.socialmatter.net/category/weimerica-weekly/

2017-09-27 12:33:35 UTC  

@Orchid Well the article's topics vary, but mostly about race, politics and organisations regarding race, a little bit of history, social matter and philosophy.

2017-09-27 12:33:43 UTC  

All focused on race

2017-09-27 12:35:14 UTC  

I dont have a pdf of it, but it shouldn't be that hard to find.

2017-09-29 19:20:50 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/359486648368627713/363404776312143872/How_the_Catholic_Church_Built_Western_Civilization_-_Woods_Thomas_E._Jr__4949.pdf

2017-09-30 12:04:53 UTC  

I finished reading Euthyphro and the Apology. What should I read next?

2017-09-30 12:05:34 UTC  

Crito?

2017-09-30 12:07:38 UTC  

I recommend A Practical Heathens Guide to Asatru to anyone interested in Nordic Paganism or Proto-Indo-European history in general

2017-09-30 15:36:48 UTC  

There is one about about Socrates' death. Comes right after Crito but I forget its name @P14 ... Phaedo?

2017-09-30 15:42:19 UTC  

Yes, Phaedo

2017-09-30 15:42:29 UTC  

I think I'll read Crito first though.

2017-09-30 15:48:10 UTC  

Yes, you have to

2017-09-30 16:59:46 UTC  

just started watching this guys videos, has some interesting stuff: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoH8_2jjMYjZ9Lsiv0wIiZg

2017-09-30 18:51:52 UTC  

someone on pol mentioned cd3wd, a giagantic collection of information

2017-09-30 18:52:09 UTC  

theres a ton of stuff in this thing, but the info in that site is incomplete

2017-09-30 18:52:21 UTC  

im downloading a 26gb torrent that should have all of it

2017-09-30 18:52:50 UTC  

here it is if anyones interested

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/359486648368627713/363760120124932096/cd3wd-2012-6-dvds-core.torrent

2017-09-30 22:51:02 UTC  

https://alexandria-library.space/files/

2017-10-01 11:26:45 UTC  

A report about how fragile the world food supply is

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/359486648368627713/364010245221253131/Food_System_Shock_June_2015.pdf

2017-10-01 13:32:31 UTC  

^ I highly recommend "The Vikings" and "Hitlers Empire"

2017-10-01 20:30:14 UTC  

Taller people have lower longevity, a higher chance of getting cancer and CHD.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1071721/

2017-10-01 22:24:19 UTC  

Already posted this in Maine, but here it is again, the book is worth reading

Here are my notes form reading Carnegie:
1. Dont criticise
2.Pay honest tribute
3.Remember people's names and use them
4.Listen closely and encourage your conversational partner to talk
5.Talk about things that your conversational partner is interested it
6.Avoid any argument

Now, this is also part of my notes, but I don't know if it was part of Carnegie's book, or something else, anyways, here it is:

Four types of personalities. If you figure out which one your conversational partner is, it will be easy for you to manipulate them. The categories are:
1.Dominance
2.Harmony
3.Balance
4.Stimulant
I don't remember how they were defined, but I guess its not hard to figure out.

Effective phrases to use when trying to convince someone:
1.You don't have to do this
2.I don't know if you want this
3.Now that we're done

General tips:
-get attention
-keep it simple
-repeat

2017-10-03 10:56:35 UTC  

Plato (Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo)
Aristotle (a selection)
Thomas Aquinas - Summa Theologica
Niccolo Machiavelli - The Prince
Thomas Hobbes - Leviathan
Jean Jacques Rousseau - The Social Contract
Adam Smith - Wealth of Nations
Thomas Paine - Common Sense
John Stuart Mill - On Liberty
Hegel - The Philosophy of Right
Friedrich Nietzsche - On the Genealogy of Morality
Karl Marx - Das Kapital
Adolf Hitler - Mein Kampf
George Orwell - Animal Farm & 1984
John Rawls - A theory of justice

2017-10-07 23:15:30 UTC  

Leviathan, by Thomas Hobbes, a great philosopher.

2017-10-07 23:16:22 UTC  

It's about the need for the masses to have some form of governance over them. It's a good way to understand why anarchies fail again and again, and why the state is a nessecary evil.