Lyss P. Hacker

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Lyss P. Hacker

Lyss P. Hacker

@LyssPHacker

End of the Cycle Evangelist: https://t.co/nswLQuPqjO https://t.co/BJt6y99bN6

Holy Roman Empire Tham gia Kasım 2015
80 Đang theo dõi349 Người theo dõi
Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
A lot of people in the USA not long ago looked like this. I do not know where people get this idea that everybody were seriously bourgeois "when things were better".
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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
Maybe, but Evola also thought that Italy did not have very strong nobility.
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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
you did not mention one most important thing. He was riding the tiger most of his life. He did not just write Ride the Tiger - the book.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
> Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 That was the only time he saw Mussolini. People think that he was some kind of Mussolini's brain, like Dugin is considered to be Putin's brain today. That's wrong. Evola was a marginal figure in Fascism.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
> Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine Evola wrote a lot of things in Fascist Italy. Many of the things were published. Yeah, one "magazine" was not allowed to continue, but many of the things were not censored, although Evola had to censor himself a bit.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
> grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) He never wrote anything like that. Read his Fascism Viewed from the Right to see what he thought of Fascism and how was he associated with it.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
you did not mention his "philosophical" period of Magical Idealism.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
> one of the founders of Italian Dadaism probably wrong way of putting it. "Proponent" of Dadaism is better way of putting it. One of the main in Italy at that time.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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Lyss P. Hacker
Lyss P. Hacker@LyssPHacker·
Here are mistakes you made: > aristocratic Sicilian family - not true. his family was part of the bourgeoisie. this does not mean that some parts of it in the past did not have noble titles. Evola was not and did not consider himself an aristocrat, like many think.
ADONIS@adonispara

> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it

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ADONIS
ADONIS@adonispara·
> Julius Evola > born 19 May 1898, Rome > aristocratic Sicilian family > raised Catholic (rejected it early) > enrolled in engineering, dropped out before finishing > refused to be associated with bourgeois academic titles > teenage years spent reading Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and Gabriele D'Annunzio > served as an artillery officer in WWI (Asiago Plateau, 1917) > came back from the war and became a painter in the Italian Dadaist movement > one of the founders of Italian Dadaism > had a spiritual crisis after the war, came close to suicide > read a Buddhist text on shedding all identity > stepped back from the edge > quit painting entirely at 24 > spent the 1920s deep in occultism, alchemy, Eastern mysticism and Tantric yoga > led a magical-initiatory group called the Group of Ur from 1927 to 1929 > taught himself German and French fluently > published Pagan Imperialism 1928 > published Revolt Against the Modern World 1934 (his most famous book) > travelled Europe meeting conservative revolutionaries, monarchists and traditionalists > grew frustrated with Mussolini (said Italian Fascism had become mere state worship) > Mussolini's own party secretary banned Evola's magazine > Evola's last meeting with Mussolini was 1941 > moved to Vienna > his habit during Allied bombing raids was to walk the streets and contemplate his destiny > 1945 a shell fragment hit him during a bombing raid in Vienna > paralysed from the waist down for the rest of his life > returned to Italy 1948 > arrested 1951 on charges of promoting Fascism > argued in court his ideas were philosophical, not political > acquitted > wrote Men Among the Ruins 1953 > wrote Ride the Tiger 1961 > wrote his autobiography The Path of Cinnabar 1963 > spent his final years in his apartment in Rome > died 11 June 1974 > per his will, his ashes were placed in a glacier on Monte Rosa in the Pennine Alps > wrote over 36 books and more than 1,100 articles Asked to be buried on a mountain... alone.. above all of it
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DIRTY BLONDE
DIRTY BLONDE@blondemantis·
“If you perform action in accordance with your duty you will never incur sin.” BHAGAVAD GITA
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matrixbot
matrixbot@thematrixb0t·
In 1991, globalist think tank the Club of Rome released a document titled 'The First Global Revolution', in which they announced "global warming" as the new pretext to wage war on humanity. "In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill. All these dangers are caused by human intervention and it is only through changed attitudes and behaviour that they can be overcome." "The real enemy, then, is humanity itself."
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Declaration of Memes
Declaration of Memes@LibertyCappy·
The transformation of the Left explained "Rage For the Machine"
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redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
Meanwhile, at Davos, they have a witch doctor performing incantations.
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conspiracybot
conspiracybot@conspiracyb0t·
Klaus Schwab's lead adviser Yuval Noah Harari: "This is the end of human history. Not the end of history, but the end of a history dominated by humanity. The story will go on, but someone else will control it" These people are psychopaths
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The Old Pretender
The Old Pretender@Dioclet54046121·
Normies don't grasp that their incomes and assets will become effectively worthless. This will wipe out the middle class and pensioners in particular. #Gold and #silver are not speculative playthings, they are the difference between destitution or financial survival.
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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
🚨🌎 Breaking:- Ursula at The WEF ‼️ “1971 was the year the US dollar was delinked from gold” “From that instant the entire global monetary system effectively collapsed” “It was a warning in this case to decrease our dependency on foreign currency” She doesn’t say it out loud - but Ursula is talking about the inevitable Great global financial reset here.
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Red Pill Dispenser
Red Pill Dispenser@redpilldispensr·
Neil Oliver: "I firmly believe the objective is to keep the population on edge, constantly anxious about what's coming next." "Fear of disease. Engineered shortage of money. Deliberate shortage of reliable, affordable energy. Existential fear of the end of the world, and wars without end." "The only war worth fighting now is the war we must all fight against the fear, and those who sell it." 🎯
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