Message from @cdemir93

Discord ID: 360452341469675520


2017-09-20 23:35:54 UTC  

@Orchid found it

2017-09-20 23:35:55 UTC  
2017-09-21 01:48:40 UTC  

Jared Diamond? Isn't that the man who wrote Guns, Germs and Steel?

2017-09-21 01:48:46 UTC  

^^ this is from the guy who wrote guns germs and steel so take his stuff with a grain of salt, how ever he is very good at observing societies and cultures and his writing is good

2017-09-21 01:48:56 UTC  

yep

2017-09-21 01:49:57 UTC  

Ah. Gotcha. I'll give it a look over

2017-09-21 01:51:43 UTC  

im only half way through world until yesterday, so far it basically talks about how small tribal cultures resolve conflicts and deal justice,
How societies collapse is a historical retelling of past cultures that got wiped out such as easter island and some isolated viking tribes, and tries to find connections between all of them

2017-09-21 01:54:33 UTC  

You would like: "On Heroes, Hero Worship and The Heroic in History" by Thomas Carlyle. It's what I'm reading right now

2017-09-21 01:57:20 UTC  

interesting, i would like that

2017-09-21 01:58:10 UTC  

It's from the late 1800s if I'm not mistaken, so the writing is a bit hard to mount if you're not used to reading it, but it's intelligible enough once you start going.

2017-09-21 01:58:57 UTC  

Here's the ebook

2017-09-21 03:24:56 UTC  

I would like to generally put forth three classic Sci-Fi books, if you haven't read them already:
George Orwell's _1984_, Aldous Huxley's _Brave New World_, and Ray Bradbury's _Fahrenheit 451_. In that order, given their relevance. If you must pick only one, do choose _1984_. I'll be working to find a PDF for everyone, in case you don't have the means to purchase it or it's banned/restricted.
And yes, I know it's likely most people here have read this, but given the impact these books have and the parallels there are, I find it important to make sure.

2017-09-21 03:25:45 UTC  

Great list, I was going to suggest Orwell as well as Brave New World too.

2017-09-21 03:26:10 UTC  

1984 is definitely the most important.

2017-09-21 03:45:22 UTC  

Jack Donovan. Start with 'the way of men' and 'becoming a barbarian'

2017-09-21 03:45:46 UTC  

^ i just bought way of men, gonna read soon

2017-09-21 15:48:55 UTC  

Cool, you won't be disappointed. It's a quick book but packed with good info. I'm working my way through 'a sky without eagles' currently, it's a collection of his speeches and essays on a good variety of topics.

2017-09-24 20:03:05 UTC  

I was very disappointed with Becoming a Barbarian.

2017-09-24 20:03:34 UTC  

The Way of Men was amazing and the second was rage tear of a cringy Neo-Pagan.

2017-09-24 20:03:43 UTC  

ew

2017-09-24 20:03:58 UTC  

Along with a 'dindu nuffin' ethics system.

2017-09-25 00:59:53 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/359486648368627713/361678154357538817/The_Doctrine_of_Fascism.pdf

2017-09-25 01:00:06 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/359486648368627713/361678216944943115/100_Questions_Asked_and_Answered.pdf

2017-09-25 16:54:24 UTC  

Just a reminder we are non ideological, our only goal is a white state.

2017-09-25 17:07:42 UTC  

that is ideological

2017-09-25 17:08:00 UTC  

but we will have to figure out a governmental system at some point

2017-09-25 17:08:18 UTC  

But I get what you're saying

2017-09-25 19:57:09 UTC  

Ayy, my order (Sun and Steel) has arrived 😄 Now that's /fitlit/ for you

2017-09-25 19:57:29 UTC  

have fun reading it

2017-09-25 19:57:32 UTC  
2017-09-25 19:57:46 UTC  

I will!

2017-09-25 19:57:50 UTC  

Got 2 books first though :3

2017-09-25 19:57:57 UTC  

One about Sparta and one about the finnish winterwar

2017-09-25 19:58:34 UTC  

Do you have pdfs of them?

2017-09-25 22:24:54 UTC  

Of my books? I bought them at the book store 😅

2017-09-25 23:13:42 UTC  

Something I listened to a while back - its an interesting summary of various major inventions throughout human history and how they work