𝕋𝕙𝕖 𝔸𝕖𝕥𝕙𝕖𝕣𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕞 – Telegram
𝕋𝕙𝕖 𝔸𝕖𝕥𝕙𝕖𝕣𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕞
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"The shape of a society, more than anything else, is determined by the average intelligence of the population. So, the dumbing down of Sweden means that its infrastructure, both physical and intellectual, cannot be maintained.

"China doesn’t need to invade any other countries in order to rule the world. It will do so by simple virtue of remaining the same mostly-homogeneous Han society that it has been for the last 6,000 years. Clown World’s collapse became inevitable after China refused to accept the foreign elite that planned to leave the USA in 2015; now all China has to do to ensure its global dominance is play a long game watching the West descend into relative retardery and barbarism.

"The free movement of peoples is one of the most destructive philosophies ever conceived. In time, it may prove to be as terrible as communism, or perhaps even feminism."

https://voxday.net/2024/10/05/illiteracy-is-good-for-the-economy/
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"It is expected that Iran's economic position and geopolitical influence will grow even greater soon, especially in light of the discovery of a massive lithium field containing 8.5 million tons of the precious mineral, making it the second-largest in the world after Chile. It is located in the Hamedan province in western Iran.

"Thus, this discovery is not only significant because it holds 10% of the world's "white gold" reserves, currently estimated at around 89 million tons, but also because it has the potential to buff the Iranian economy and seemingly nullify the effectiveness of the imposed sanctions. It is considered a "winning trump card" for the Islamic Republic.

"According to the Israeli expert, this discovery could have a significant impact on global energy and mining markets, as well as the global battery and electric vehicle industries. It is expected that all of this will lead to long-term changes in the global economy and politics, shifting the balance of power once again to the Middle East."

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/iran-lithium-field-discovery-to-change-balance-of-power:-isr
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🇺🇸 NYC Mayor Eric Adams Hit With Historic Federal Indictment

Adams, a retired NYC police captain, became the city's 110th mayor nearly three years ago after campaigning on a promise to reduce crime and revitalize the city. While that never panned out, he notably talked massive shit about the Biden administration not doing anything about the growing migrant problem over the last year.

Last November, the feds seized Adams' electronic devices just days after he searched the Brooklyn home of his chief fundraiser. His aides claim he's been cooperating with authorities, while Adams himself maintains that he did nothing wrong.

Meanwhile, several people in Adams' orbit have been the subjects of federal corruption investigations.

🔗 https://www.zerohedge.com/political/nyc-mayor-eric-adams-hit-historic-federal-indictment
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The death toll among fat-positive influencers is stunning.
https://twitter.com/AetherCzar/status/1840056941487263948
"Blind Item #7

"It was the girlfriend of the messaging app who set him up. Apparently, works for a foreign government as a honey trap. That government supposedly can now read the messages that were unreadable and can find the location of any user at any time."
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Forwarded from Geopolitics & Empire
When non-Western countries place curbs on their own media or suppress dissent, the US is quick to condemn this as a breach of democracy. Even in situations of breaches of law and order, rioting, and violence, when curbs are temporarily placed on social media and the internet, the US is quick to denounce them.

The US does not seem to be mindful of the contradiction between the outright steps it has just announced against RT, which violate the principle of freedom of expression, and limited restrictions that other countries take based on what they need to do domestically to curb social unrest or violence, which the US routinely condemns.

India has experienced this and has protested this interference in its internal affairs.

The West largely controls the flow of information globally. It can create and control narratives at the international level. Many in the rest of the world have felt vulnerable to the power of the West to disseminate distorted narratives about them. As far back as the 1970s, the developing world tried through UNESCO to promote a new international information order, but failed. https://www.rt.com/india/604273-india-democracy-us-rt-ban/
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Forwarded from Disclose.tv
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NEW - Lindsey Graham on Hurricane Helene: "I've been going all over South Carolina, like most people I have not slept much, but look what's going on in Israel... We have to help our friends- to keep the war over there from coming here!"

@disclosetv
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Forwarded from Bob Moran
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"Nothing illustrates the contempt and outright hatred the government has for us than what is happening in North Carolina. FEMA has spent all its funds, all their tax money, on migrants, who, btw, are illegal economic migrants. And Kamala emerges from her shroud and offers people who have lost their houses, their towns, their businesses, their cars, their possessions, pets and family members $750. On what planet does her team not realize this is criminal behavior?"

https://elizabethnickson.substack.com/p/wholesale-regime-rejection-is-global
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"What defines addicts today is anhedonia. Where in the grips of their addiction they once chased ecstasy, the best they can hope for now is a torpid equilibrium. Their ultimate sickness unto death is boredom. It is in this sense that addiction is a potent American metaphor. We are living in a culture both decadent and dreary, drained even of the salutary purposes of pleasure." https://www.city-journal.org/article/on-the-moral-status-of-addicts
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Forwarded from Megatron
JUST IN:

🇺🇲🇮🇷 Trump wants US to hit the Iranian nuclear facilities immediately

"Iranian nuclear facilities are the things you want to hit. It's the biggest risk we have. Biden should've said hit them first, and worry later." - Donald Trump

@Megatron_ron
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Forwarded from riverrun
"The striking similarities among nearly identical petroglyphs discovered in Japan, Utah, and Azerbaijan prompt intriguing inquiries into the connections between ancient cultures. These carvings, located in Fugoppe Cave in Japan, Nine Mile Canyon in Utah, and Gobustan in Azerbaijan.
Feature representations of winged or flying human figures. Despite being separated by extensive geographical distances, their presence in disparate locations raises questions about potential cultural interactions or shared symbolism."
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JUSTINIAN IN COUNCIL Photogravure from the Painting "by Jean Joseph Benjamin-Constant.

This famous painting was originally exhibited in the Paris Salon of 1888, and was presented in 1890 by G. Mannheimer to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Justinian, surnamed the Great, was the last Emperor of Constantinople, who in the sixth century, by his dominion over the whole of Italy, reunited in some measure the ancient Empire of the Caesars. The glory of his reign is the famous digest of Roman law, known to fame as the Justinian Code. The scene depicted in Benjamin-Constant's painting is a slave reading before Justinian and his Cabinet some portion of this celebrated code.

From the front-matter of the International Congress of Arts and Science (1904 : St. Louis).
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Forwarded from 𝕀𝕟𝕗𝕠 addict
This 800 years old church in norway is made entirely of woods without a single nail
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🐣 The Case for Having Lots of Kids

In “Hannah’s Children,” an economist and mother of eight interviews highly educated women with large families—and examines the reasons for America’s declining fertility rate.

Arguments about fertility rates are often made in abstract economic terms, and for good reason: the abstraction is necessary to gloss over the topic’s natural awkwardness in a society where a woman’s reproductive future is generally considered a matter of personal freedom.

To say that any one person or family should have kids, or more of them, is to violate a cultural taboo. But Pakaluk goes for it, making the case that having kids is good, not just for individuals but for society. She argues that the true damage of the birth dearth is not economic disaster but a distortion of our culture and politics.

She, and many of her subjects, see a country hobbled by relentless individualism: people turning inward, pursuing their own happiness and success instead of investing in others. “Maybe what ails us is not our freedom per se, but something we mistake for freedom—being detached from family obligations, which are actually the demands that save us from egoism and despair,” she writes.

This is the case not just for adults but for children, as well: Pakaluk points out that kids who grow up with lots of siblings learn to share space, time, and stuff; they must tolerate people who are different in opinion and personality. “The family works against individualism by asserting a communitarian reality,” Pakaluk writes.

Pakaluk and her subjects are double outliers. She focussed on women who not only have more kids than most Americans but who also graduated from college. A number of her subjects have advanced degrees; Pakaluk herself has a Ph.D. from Harvard. She picked these women because she wanted to understand the trade-offs between work and family. Becoming a mother to many children wasn’t something they defaulted to but something they deliberately chose. It’s an unusual choice: according to a 2021 C.D.C. report, the average college-educated woman has roughly one fewer kid than the average high-school dropout.

Notably, all of the women interviewed are religious—mostly a mix of evangelicals, Mormons, Catholics, and Jews. A significant number of Pakaluk’s subjects went through a journey of conversion, whether they reached for a more observant life or rejected their own lonely single-child upbringings. They are self-consciously countercultural; they disliked the standard paths offered to educated women, and went after something radically different.

For example, many of them assert that an egalitarian split in parenting duties betweens moms and dads is often impossible, especially in the early days of a baby’s life. “We had this idea like it was going to be fifty-fifty,” one mother of five with a Ph.D. says. “We had to figure out how to let go of all of that,” and how to “embrace things that seemed stereotypically gendered,” she added. The women are also clear-eyed about the fact that pursuing advanced degrees and successful careers makes it harder to have a family. “College, medical school, law school, and the like don’t require lower fertility, they just eat up childbearing years,” Pakaluk writes. “The biological deck is stacked against you.”

For these women, giving up their individual freedom by having kids led them to a deeper sense of purpose and joy. As Pakaluk writes, “My subjects described their choice to have many children as a deliberate rejection of an autonomous, customized, self-regarding lifestyle in favor of a way of life intentionally limited by the demands of motherhood.”

🔗 https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-lede/the-case-for-having-lots-of-kids
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