Message from @Byzas
Discord ID: 540917140669202455
protect the minorities
at all costs
Because they are tools of the jews
It was antisemitic when one jew made a headline literally talking about goyim
Well, at least they're banning Muslim schools, too.
Honestly, Hitler was right in this reguard. You can call the Jew anything, and it doesn't bother them in the slightest, but call them a "Jew" and watch how much it bothers them.
I remarked to a buddy of mine recently about that
Naming is very powerful. Name the jew. Name the uniate. Name the sodomite. They all recoil
It also works especially well for whores.
Just call a some feminist dyke a whore, and watch how much it bothers them.
This is why we should never use the word "homosexual", but instead use sodomite instead.
Indeed
Ever read The Name of the Wind, or the Inheritance cycle?
Name the two real owners of the USA and you can watch boomers recoil in fear
Israel is one but what is the other
Lucifer?
Jews and gays probably
@Byzas Also no, I've never read those
Their magic systems involve naming
When you know the True Name of something, you have mastery over it
Usually it means controlling the elements but people have true names too
But the difference is, in the books, you can control someone with their Name
Whereas IRL they just get unhinged
Sounds briddy good
My demonology isn't up to snuff, but I'm pretty sure one of the ways exorcists disempower the demonic is to use their name.
Normal people using their names empowers them, but an authority of God using it does the opposite.
Inheritance cycle gets a lot of shit for using a lot of fantasy tropes but I enjoyed it back in.the day
I'll have to look into that
The elves actually speak a very Nordic sounding language instead of the usual magical fairy shit
Huh
The language is fine. It's the urgals I can't stand.
At first, the urgals are made out to look like Tolkien's orcs. Fine. And there's a lot to prove that: they slaughter innocent people, and they're pretty much the only ones who side with the main villain. And then, starting in the second book, it's slowly revealed that they're actually misunderstood, and that they can be good guys, too, without changing that much of their culture.
Also, there's this mountain that some of the badguys worship in a twisted way; but you can see that it's a mockery of Christianity, Catholicism/Orthodoxy in particular. The mountain is three topped, and there's a constant debate as to whether there's one god or three. There's also a fourth spire, lower than the others, and it's debated whether it should be worshiped at all. But the main ceremony proves it: all the worshipers drink the blood of the high priest. Sound familiar?
Sure, I enjoyed the first couple books. But from then on, things just got weirder and weirder, and I couldn't follow, and didn't really want to, either.
I didn't really draw that comparison at all. But now that you mention it I would be interested in knowing what kind of religious views the author has.
All I know is he was homeschooled and wrote book 1 at 15
I don't know his religious views. But not all homeschoolers are good Christians, unfortunately.
yeah obvs
A lot are evanjellyfish
A lot finish homeschool and get into the real world then kinda go full thot/fratboi cause they finally have freedom.
I knew a girl who went to good private school with Christian home and friends, then got to highschool and got pregnant by her sophomore year and got an abortion. She just parties all the time and still does it today.
TFW not fratboi
Feels good man