Message from @stem
Discord ID: 636568311659757574
fakt
most white americans who have been here for hundreds of years don't know their roots in detail
i'm not saying this is good or bad
it just is
family is much less important in a large settlement than in a small settlement
d20 we're saying only then was a true nuclear family possible
as per the map definition
in daily life, and life in general
extended family I mean
They don't know their roots in detail because of racemixing lol
I don't mean black on white I mean English and French and Spanish and Ukrainian and etc; etc;
Pan-Europeanism is a product and cause of cosmopolitanism
we need to clearly separate the is from the ought
and not assume that everything in the past was what people on the far right think it should be today
It's not what I think it should be, it's what I know it was
I'm a huge history nerd, I am very familiar with all of this information
shut your whore mouth ((mom))
read this
but the thing is, i don't think that other northern europeans are particularly different from anglos
especially when you consider how easily they assimilated in the US
yes
*Words to watch for
Femenoid/femoid: a sexist term used to refer to women as non-human*
<:steflol:561214382181318656>
femcel
thats a myth
she-womb
it's hard to top breedingstump
partly, i am saying that i think that this commonality among northern europeans goes back before the middle ages
and it would not have manifested the same way before
*She's found a positive way to engage her sons.
"The kids and I are conspirators together," she said.
She might point something out and then tell her boys, "These alt-right guys were trying to trick you. Like they think you're dumb and you're not. You're smart."*
agree d20
you can look even at indo-european culture more generally, which appears to have been focused very much on individualism, competition, and individual greatness
My family is 100% Anglo and neither mine nor any family I know had this experience
what experience beady
Literally my grandfather and great uncles built three houses next to each other, on the same street
you never had uncle and aunt meetups?
I was raised living next-door to my cousins
k
No, I never had the experience of my family unit breaking apart