Message from @Anthony Sealy - MO
Discord ID: 412779792526475264
All that said, Evola is still useful. His emphasis on tradition, order, and transcendence is the start of an important discourse for modern minds. And yet, like Plato, you should read him with a healthy degree of criticism.
@William_1994 - WA on the metaphysical front, I have recently begun to wonder if different races and species attract souls from different sources. Some say that DNA is shaped like a receptor, and if it is in fact a receptor, who knows what variety of signals it is capable of receiving. Just a random thought.
@Benjamin Matthew-MI Welcome to the ILC server! Feel free to join us tomorrow night for our last discussion on Why We Fight. I believe we are getting together at 8 EST
Sounds good. Thank you.
I find Evola frustrating af, precisely because of what @William_1994 - WA said above.
Just sharing a video I hadn't seen before. It's D. Duke addressing Faye at Amren 2006. Faye responds. Gives some insight to Faye's take on the JQ, which we discussed. https://youtu.be/RELmEPUy6lQ ... also linked are Amren's and Duke's responses to the discussion.
Didn't intend for screenshot preview. If I should have linked that differently, please let me know.
Ya good, bruv
IE tech support hours
Meredith Brace of San Diego, California, believed in integration. She lived in
a white area, but the neighborhood school, Harding Elementary, was 90 percent
Hispanic. She thought whites should go to Harding rather than escape to a white
school. Even before her son was old enough to enroll, she joined the Harding
PTA, raised money for Harding, and went door-to-door to promote it to white
neighbors. After her son began to attend, she became president of the PTA, and
set up after-school art and theater classes to bring whites and Hispanics together.
They were disbanded because so few people took part.
She kept her son at Harding for three years before finally giving up. “[W]e
have nothing in common [with Hispanics],” she said. “Every time my husband
and I would go over for an event, my husband would feel like it was his first
time. We haven’t made any friends.” Her son made no friends either. “He hasn’t
been invited to a birthday party,” she explained. “There is absolutely no after-
school interaction. For his birthday, he invited four of his classmates. Only one
came.
F
F
@Deleted User That's really cool, man. Do you often attend meetings like that?
Polish do that too, my ex who was polish told me to never say to her parents that I had some Ukrainian.
Second. Both parents were full blooded polish.
Hung out with other Polish, went to Polish church, etc
I hear him
white culture is difficult for people to grasp in America because it is the dominant culture (still) and so it's just "normal".
Mrs. Brace joined her neighbors and transferred her son to Hope Elementary
School, which was still 73 percent white. As one white parent explained, “[I]f
half of [the neighborhood] is going in that direction, maybe we can carpool.”1
It is lunch time at the Westerly Hills Elementary School in Charlotte, North
Carolina. Black and white children sit next to each other in what seems to be
complete disregard for race. The school appears to have passed what educators
call the “lunchroom litmus test,” of whether children make friends across racial
lines. But the test is rigged. The children have assigned seats; that is the only
way to get blacks and whites to eat together.
@SamanthaM I agree. It was just strange to see it coming from poz Southern California.
>ethnic identity
@Deleted User I can hear you now, so keep doing whatever you just did
I went to a high school that was 95% white 👌🏼
@Daniel Turch Lucky you!
just googled the demographics, 97% white
What a shame
rural kentucky 👌🏼
@John O - Libertarian meetings?
Any political meeting
Yes
I go to this club's meetings weekly.
Dude, you're a really high energy guy. Keep it up, bro
@SamanthaM The Jewish Generation?
Generation J?
@Deleted User That's the Libertarian group? What was the name again?
i think a large part of it is an attraction to exoticism
That too