Message from @Just a weirdo
Discord ID: 527738632233025547
People used to live under empires just fine, you don't necessarily *need* Nation States.
i can still cooperate with other races but why can't i stick to mine?
you can
You can stick to your white commune, and become a laughing stock for the observers
brutal
>laughing stock
lol ok
>hurr i'm a retard for wanting to be around people that are like me
you sound like a radical liberal individualist
which proves my point in intern. cap = intern com
you can choose to associate with who ever you like, most white people have white friends and family members, same goes for blacks ppl
Tribal association declined greatly once nation-states developed. You do not really have any tribal association in Finland, for example. Once the nations merge, same will happen to nations - they will become much like counties are today
but it's SOCIALLY COHESIVE because it's HOMOGENOUS
which is the point
Its not
yeah it is lol
Finland in 1918 had huge civil war, one of the most brutal in Europe, brother killed brother and father killed son
I lost the topic was afk
Homogenous is Subjective.. depends on what frame you're using..
yes
is Israel Homogenous?
not really
but it's a Nation State
it is a jewish state, for jewish people
dude, have you ever seen a reformist and orthodox jews together?
Yeah but what kind of Jewish People?
they can't fucking stand each other
because thats religious
so race doesn't unify them then
argument won
they still have common group interests
which they push
Reformist vs Talmudic Jews?
Ashkenazim vs Sephardim
Israeli Communist Party doesn't share "group interest" with Likud
there is diversity within a group
always
yes
ideological sure
doesn't mean i want to be flooded with somalis
there are two poles - the species and the individual. Between these two *irreducible points,* number of aggregations and distributions of belief, behaviour and such emerge.
Nation is not foundational
race is not foundational
but species and individual are
those, then, deserve to be the foundations for social politics