GregariousTheGreat

363 posts

GregariousTheGreat

GregariousTheGreat

@GreatGregarious

Bishop of Rome. Apocrisiarius of Constantinople.

Katılım Mayıs 2020
480 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@AllyFogg @YorkieYO When you flood Britain with millions of tribal Mirpuris they don't become Britons. Instead, your country starts to resemble Mirpur.
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Ally Fogg
Ally Fogg@AllyFogg·
@YorkieYO We can start with the fact that we don’t advocate that and never have. Then move on to the fact that class transcends national borders and always has
Ally Fogg tweet media
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@DIAS I mean, you're right. It shared much in common with the mediteranean world. But what makes it worth remembering is what set it apart.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@Imran_HussainMP Thought it was a hot spot of pakistani / mirpuri r*pe gangs. No wonder everyone wants to leave it but its new occupiers.
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Imran Hussain MP
Imran Hussain MP@Imran_HussainMP·
Bradford is a proud, multicultural city with huge talent and ambition. We speak over 100 languages, have the best food in the country, and showed the world what we can do through City of Culture. Now we need the investment to match that ambition: more support for young people, local businesses and Bradford’s economic growth.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@TuttReal There is something particularly foul about upper-class diasporoids that grew up with servants not far removed from slaves coming to the metropoles of empire to play marginalized.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@GarySpedding Islam is built to engineer demographic majorities. Muslim men may marry non-muslim women and their children become, by law, muslim. Muslim women may not marry non-muslim men. Over the centuries, this produces demographic majorities. Israel is just playing the card it was dealt.
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Gary Spedding
Gary Spedding@GarySpedding·
I oppose ethnocracy and artificial demographic engineering for the purposes of maintaining an ethnic majority. Please also note that no 'Arab' state in the world today is currently classified as an ethnostate. Your islamophobia is in the wild claims, assumptions and generalisations you are making... you are now even claiming to know what Palestinians want despite the fact a wealth of data and information is available proving the contrary. Palestinian Christians, for example, do not want an Islamic State. Most secular Palestinians also do not want an Islamic State. Palestinians have also overwhelmingly stated repeatedly that they do not seek the ethnic cleansing of Jews or any other groups from Palestine upon liberation. I have lived in Palestine. I have travelled the entire region extensively. I was most recently there for 5 months last summer.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@mehdirhasan The basic problem is that you might have loved watching "The Life of Brian," which makes fun of Jesus, Jews, and Romans, and religion, but would immediately balk if the same comedic treatment were meted out to Muhammad and Islam.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@dee_of_e This shit is so funny. Anti-gentrification discourse is just anti-immigration discourse for non-whites. You can try and dress it up with respectable-sounding cultural theory babble about why one version is different but it's really just raw tribalism.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@joakial_ Cultures are not interchangeable lego. There is a reason his grandparents are from Denmark and England and not Bangladesh and Congo.
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Joakim 🌹🇳🇴🇪🇺
King Harald V: “Norwegians come from North Norway, Central Norway, Southern Norway – and all of the other regions. Norwegians have immigrated from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Poland, from Sweden, Somalia and Syria. My grandparents came here from Denmark and England 110 years ago.”
Joakim 🌹🇳🇴🇪🇺 tweet media
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@joakial_ New "Norwegians" are not letting their own ethnicities dissolve in a purely inclusive civic nationalism & instead live in enclaves little different from their home countries. When there are enough of them, you will be asked to conform to their culture.
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Joakim 🌹🇳🇴🇪🇺
Being Norwegian is not about blood purity or Viking ancestors. It is about living here, contributing, speaking the language, and choosing Norway as your home. Anyone who does that can become Norwegian. Our nationalism is inclusive, based on shared values, not ethnicity.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@EnesDemir035 @sharghzadeh Sure. As with all things, it's some combination of both internal and external problems. I don't understand why you are so hostile to the idea that external invasion was a problem. For my part I am not hostile to the idea that internal conflict was likewise a problem.
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Qaramanli
Qaramanli@EnesDemir035·
@GreatGregarious @sharghzadeh Yeah and that all happened to be the fault of outside forces and not the deep corrupt broken system within the empires that made it plunge into a civil war every other year? That is quite a convenient excuse to make, remind me why the sacking of constantinople happened again?
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@EnesDemir035 @sharghzadeh Imperial cities depend on their empire. There’s a reason Justinian built Hagia Sophia and then there was less and less built on that scale after the empire was carved up by Arabs, Turks, Latins, Venetians and so on.
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Qaramanli
Qaramanli@EnesDemir035·
@GreatGregarious @sharghzadeh I love how you purposely use vague large strokes. The sacking of the city and decline is the direct responbility of the sacking by Latins. Whilst the empire as a whole was more done so by Turks. But we are talking specifically about the city, not the whole empire.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@EnesDemir035 @sharghzadeh Yeah, the latins were responsible for its decline too. Manazikert and 1204, both responsible. But Latin crusades don't mean that turkish settler colonialism in anatolia didn't likewise destroy eastern roman culture, economy, and society. They were attacked from east and west.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@pissvortex Yeah but what about the right of return? Surely the palestinian diaspora will come back and not choose to stay in other countries, tiliting the demographics back in favor of arabs.
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ape attack survivor
ape attack survivor@pissvortex·
I’m sorry but the opportunity for a simple democratic or two-state solution has long passed. When South African Apartheid ended, the question of how it should be handled was relatively straightforward, as granting democratic rights to the vast majority of the population theoretically ensured that the white minority government could be out-voted. Israeli settler-colonialism and genocide has advanced to the point where Israeli Jews outnumber Palestinians. Treating this like a simple instituting of liberal democracy is very obviously not enough anymore. There needs to be the same level of international accountability as the Nazi regime. We simply cannot allow Israelis to legitimize their oppression with a democratic vote; There is going to have to be fucking Nuremberg trials bare minimum
Arno Rosenfeld@ArnoRosenfeld

24% of American Jews support replacing Israel with a binational state — I believe this is a record high (by a lot)

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Qaramanli
Qaramanli@EnesDemir035·
@sharghzadeh Also what the hell is he talking about. Constantinople was a sacked and extremely shithole city by the time Turks conquered it and revived it to its former glory and prestige. Istanbul till this day is one of the greatest city in the world because of Turks.
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Owen Jones
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno·
Marching against genocide is a hate march. Marching to "stop Islam", kick out Muslims and prepare for civil war isn't a hate march. The world has been turned on its head.
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@elonmusk aren't you the guy who famously "derailed" attempts at highspeed rail in favor or "hyperloop" idiocy?
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GregariousTheGreat
GregariousTheGreat@GreatGregarious·
@kunley_drukpa hmmm. Basically fine spaces receiving mass influx of new participants, lowering quality for all. Reminds me of something but I can't quite put my finger on it.
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ɖʀʊӄքǟ ӄʊռʟɛʏ 🇧🇹🇹🇩
See:
ɖʀʊӄքǟ ӄʊռʟɛʏ 🇧🇹🇹🇩@kunley_drukpa

WHAT IS ‘ETERNAL SEPTEMBER’? Useful term to conceptualise repetitive, asinine or low-level ‘discourse’ online, especially in formerly ‘more intelligent’ spaces experiencing a mass influx of new participants - “Eternal September”. The term originates in the early history of the internet and describes a fundamental shift in how online communities behave once they are exposed to continuous mass participation. It first emerged in the early 1990s in reference to Usenet, one of the first large-scale online discussion systems. For many years, Usenet experienced a predictable annual cycle tied to the academic calendar. Each September, new university students gained access to the internet and began posting, often unfamiliar with established norms of online conduct, known as then as ‘netiquette’. Older users would spend several weeks correcting mistakes, sharing community ‘lore’, pointing newcomers to FAQs and enforcing community standards. By October, most new users had either adapted or left and the community returned to a relatively stable equilibrium This pattern ended in 1993 when commercial internet providers, most notably America Online, opened Usenet access to millions of subscribers. Unlike universities, these services added users continuously rather than seasonally and provided little guidance on existing norms. The influx of newcomers became constant and overwhelming, far exceeding the community’s ability to socialise them. As a result, the corrective phase never ended. September became permanent, giving rise to the phrase “Eternal September.” While the term originally referred to this specific moment in Usenet’s history, it has since become a broader metaphor for what happens when an established online culture is inundated by perpetual growth. Maybe you can think of parallels here! At its core Eternal September describes the breakdown of shared norms under conditions of unbounded scale. Early online communities were small enough to rely on informal social enforcement. Participants recognised one another, reputations mattered, bad behavior carried social costs etc. Norms such as staying on topic, avoiding repetition and not wasting people’s time with your dumb stupid retarded priors posts were essential to keeping discussions usable. Because growth was slow and predictable, these communities could absorb newcomers without losing coherence. Eternal September marks the point at which this balance collapses - as the number and rate of new participants make informal governance (broadly-defined) ineffective The consequences are the loss of this kind of ‘historical memory’ are both cultural and structural. As newcomers vastly outnumber long-term participants, veteran or ‘oldhead’ influence diminishes and the incentive to teach these norms erodes. (4chan used to have the motto “lurk more” for this purpose). Experienced users grow fatigued from repeating the same talking points, always making corrections etc and often disengage, taking the community’s memory and knowledge with them. Norms that once defined the place are diluted or replaced, the ‘Coca Cola Effect’ runs riot - often shifting toward simplicity and immediacy rather than depth or rigour. On social media platforms lowest common denominator influencers grow more than more reflective, intelligent influencers etc. The culture adapts to what requires the least shared context, often at the cost of quality or nuance [1/2]

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