Message from @ETBrooD
Discord ID: 640425796904812546
It's also likely that the Grimm brothers put their own spin on the stories
So to sum it up, it proves nothing about consistent values
It proves that people propagated their beliefs regardless of literacy
Which is really a self evident point anyway
Propapagated their beliefs... through time?
So three or four generations later those beliefs would be consistent?
Across all or most people?
Mutations of beliefs occurred mainly through wars and other upheavals like famine
That's a non-answer
And even such events were recorded and passed down as folklore
*getting increasingly bored*
Not to mention, mutations didn't cause rapid changes. So for instance, it would be highly rare for a stable society to go from rejecting homosexuality to accepting it, unlike in today's post modern age
Aight, no answer then
I wanted to go to bed anyway, gn8
That's the answer
Nope it's not
Read again
Ok read it again, it's still a non-answer
> So three or four generations later those beliefs would be consistent?
> Across all or most people?
I provided the answer that it mutated very slowly, and only changed substantially if there were wars or other major events
@EmoGazebo And then one day, for no reason at all...
Don't worry, Hitler made sure no new Nazi uprising could happen in the coming decades
<:sarGOY:462286263622303754>
Just in case you don't understand the meaning of that
Hitler is at fault that Nazis are now powerless
<:sarGOY:462286263622303754>
What, you resort to trolling now? I must say I'm disappointed, you never gave up before
I thought you will understand the obvious reference by the second time
I do understand it, but it's so simplistic and boring that I don't care
It has everything to do with Hitler's faults and nothing to do with (((propaganda))) against Nazi Germany?
Oh it's both
But Hitler is the one who did the irreperable damage to his own cause
In case you can't follow the logic
The strong wins the war. But then the victims outnumber the strong. And thus the strong loses.
> Frankfurt am Main (AFP) - The eastern German city of Dresden has declared a "Nazi emergency" as officials warned of a rise in far-right support and violence.
>
> The city is the birthplace of the Islamophobic Pegida movement, which holds weekly rallies here, while the anti-immigration Alternative fuer Deutschland (AfD) party won 28 percent in September regional elections.
>
> Dresden's city council on Wednesday backed a resolution against far-right extremism with the title "Nazinotstand?", or "Nazi emergency?".