Nexist Xenda'ths 🇺🇸 🇹🇼 🇭🇰

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Nexist Xenda'ths 🇺🇸 🇹🇼 🇭🇰

Nexist Xenda'ths 🇺🇸 🇹🇼 🇭🇰

@dar205

Thelemite, Traditionalist, Radical Aristocrat, Anarch, Autarch, Panentheist. Modern society works fervently to put vulgarity within the reach of everyone-Dávila

Roseburg, Oregon, USA เข้าร่วม Mart 2008
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Aydin Paladin🍸👑🇺🇸🇬🇬✝️📊
I can't even listen to my gay emo music anymore. It disgusts me. I don't know what this means. I need some new music, though, I suppose. Pls gib suggestions;
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Álmos
Álmos@ThaddeusPapist·
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John Michael Greer
John Michael Greer@JMGreerWriter·
One of the greatest failures of contemporary mainstream spirituality is its insistence that what's spiritual must be nice and kind and loving and pretty. That's not even remotely true, of course, and one of the reasons I enjoyed writing my tentacle novels so much is that they gave me a convenient fictional framing to talk about how there's no contradiction between the terrifying otherness of the Divine and the possibility of constructive relationships between gods and human beings. Real gods and goddesses are crap-your-pants frightening; so are angels -- that's why the first thing angels generally say when they appear to people in the various scriptural passages is "Be not afraid." If what appears to you is cute and harmless, it's not divine, it's an astral toy you've created for yourself as a substitute for the Divine.
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Being Libertarian
Being Libertarian@beinlibertarian·
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Alexander Raynor
Alexander Raynor@alex_raynor1968·
Locchi on Romualdi In this thought-provoking essay, Giorgio Locchi explores the essence of fascism through a philosophical and historical lens, engaging deeply with the ideas of Adriano Romualdi1 and Friedrich Nietzsche. Locchi argues that fascism is not merely a political movement but an expression of a broader superhumanist worldview—one rooted in a unique understanding of historical time. Read it here: nouvelledroite.substack.com/p/locchi-on-ro…
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Nexist Xenda'ths 🇺🇸 🇹🇼 🇭🇰
Not meaning to be a Debbie Downer, but this claim ("That X will make Philosophy degrees profitable") cycles through popular country every couple of decades or so.
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Erik Voorhees
Erik Voorhees@ErikVoorhees·
The world doesn’t realize this yet but AI will finally make philosophy a highly marketable skill
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@GPrime85 It's weird how deciding issues on your own rather than letting a group mind decide is considered "disloyal" -- though I suppose disagreeing with a hive mind is disloyal to that hive mind. It is not, however, opposed to Freedom.
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George Alexopoulos
George Alexopoulos@GPrime85·
Indeed, moderates like me only vote Republican because we dislike Democrats way more. Call us "disloyal" if you wish (personally I believe most GOP reps are two-faced, compromised traitors who are only loyal to Satan) but remember that moderates represent millions of votes. Piss enough of us off and we'll be happy to vote third party or not at all.
The President of all the Gays@cyre2067

@GPrime85 Or "You've expressed criticism of Dear Leader, THAT MAKES YOU A LIBTARD! HAR HAR HAR!" ...no, actually like many of Trump's voters, I'm a moderate republican that leans toward liberty and small govt, but feel free to keep alienating people like me as the midterms approach.

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owen cyclops
owen cyclops@owenbroadcast·
1 out of 3 kids has a CPS investigation at some point, in the united states. but, check this out: only 1 in 8 experience confirmed maltreatment. so if 33% of kids come under CPS at some point, but only 12.5% have confirmed maltreatment, thats another way of saying that the other chunk, 20.5% come under CPS investigation without any maltreatment being found. so, by normal standard statistics, over 20% of kids in the US (one out of five) have a CPS investigation where no wrongdoing is actually found. so, did you know that you live (if youre american) in a country where one fifth of kids get a CPS investigation where no issue is ultimately found? that’s crazy. this means that one fifth of kids in the US have their family lives - what word do you want to use here? rustled? disturbed? it’s at least a scary thing obviously - let’s say “shaken” by a CPS investigation where nothing is ultimately found to have happened. now, let’s keep going: each of those kids has parents. let’s say those parents are embarrassed, or asocial - what’s the lowest number of people (specifically: friends that are parents) that they would mention this to? three? that seems like the lowest possible estimate. now, we’re losing track of the math, because these numbers will start to overlap - but it doesn’t really matter. so 20% of kids get one of these unsubstantiated investigations - that means you have a massive number of parents who are directly aware of someone who has their life disrupted in this way. and then, if even one of those friends tells one other parenting friend, you’re actually easily in a situation where most (“most” only means over 50%) active parents in america are zero to two degrees away from one of these investigations. but, people don’t really openly talk about them. no one is advertising that this happened to them for obvious reasons, and most people aren’t publicly sharing “this happened to my friend” stories. so, it’s almost a secret or concealed form of knowledge that couldn’t be designed better to spread covertly among active parents without being known about by the population at large. so, what’s the point? my point is: this is a huge unspoken factor in parents general wariness to let their kids do things that are generally considered unsafe or even potentially risky. if you take these percentages, if you have six parents sitting around, and someone starts saying: “i don’t see why you don’t just let your kid [go to the store alone, ride their bike alone, things like that]” - odds are one of the parents sitting there either already had a CPS investigation or knows someone that did - but they aren’t going to say this out loud. so everyone just says, “haha - yeah”, and moves on. what is called “helicopter parenting” presumably has some root in millennial neuroses that is unrelated to this. however, this is a big part of what it’s plugged in to that gives it a huge amount of its juice. one in three kids come into contact with CPS at some point. how much is this actually shaping our culture? if you randomly selected ten american kids, odds are that one or two of them will get an unsubstantiated CPS investigation at some point in their life? how can that be real? thoughts for the mind.
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