Dr. Joseph P. Farrell | Election Fraud, Covert COVID Agendas & Nephilim Corpses

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shamangineer

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Nov 10, 2015
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Wow. This comment is late, so it is likely that no one ever reads it. Nonetheless, I encourage all of you to take a step back. Almost all of you are intelligent and thoughtful people. So why is there so much fussing and fighting over which weapon of mass distraction and division is the evil of two lessers???

Why does evidence matter? Why does the basis of government matter? Does it make sense to align ourselves with Nazis and white supremacists to avoid division? I mean obviously everything is a lie and I can't be bothered to develop a new philosophy so. . . Unify in Nihilism, all glory to the troll alliance! Pathology, ambivalence and disruption over evidence, distinction, and harmony. . .but with unity, you know? Kumbay-fuckin-ya motherfuckers!

I suppose it's just time for everyone to just get over that time months of grift and lies almost plunged us into a gaslit authoritarian hellhole. What would ever analyzing such a thing accomplish? Why would we ever want to hold those responsible FOR A FASCIST COUP accountable?

Many people live in De Nile and never even stepped foot in Egypt.

 

shamangineer

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Nov 10, 2015
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It seems that far-right militias are shifting their messaging to reform themselves publicly in the wake of the recent insurrection. Part of this PR campaign is to ally themselves publicly with BLM and Antifa in order to foment unrest in the hidden hopes of sparking a civil war.
 

dingus

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Jun 5, 2020
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Wow this thread is wild. What will sexually frustrated liberals do without their boogeyman?

I didn't vote Trump either time, because I am a Libertarian, which would put me in Le Ebil Alt Right according to the fashionably left. The absolutely hilarious thing about Trump is that he did everything to favor supposedly leftist ideals. He promoted free speech, freedom of association, gay rights, black rights, hell he even lobbied to get more H1B visas in than any other President. And on the other side of the coin, he expanded the central economy like even FDR wouldn't dream of, he straight up banned bump stocks, which was a far greater affront to the 2A than Obama ever did...

I find it straight up hilarious that the less cerebrally inclined leftists hated Trump so much when he was, when you look at actual policies, their ideal candidate. If you put a gun to my head and made me choose Biden/Hillary vs what Trump actually did, I vote against Trump ALL DAY LONG because Hillary/Biden are far more conservative in their policies. I can count on Biden to not run trillions in debt to feed jobless wonders with $2000 checks for doing exactly nothing but being a leech on society. I can also count on Biden to protect the 2A, because he really needs that NRA money unlike Trump.
 

hisich

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Nov 1, 2018
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Wow this thread is wild. What will sexually frustrated liberals do without their boogeyman?

I didn't vote Trump either time, because I am a Libertarian, which would put me in Le Ebil Alt Right according to the fashionably left. The absolutely hilarious thing about Trump is that he did everything to favor supposedly leftist ideals. He promoted free speech, freedom of association, gay rights, black rights, hell he even lobbied to get more H1B visas in than any other President. And on the other side of the coin, he expanded the central economy like even FDR wouldn't dream of, he straight up banned bump stocks, which was a far greater affront to the 2A than Obama ever did...

I find it straight up hilarious that the less cerebrally inclined leftists hated Trump so much when he was, when you look at actual policies, their ideal candidate. If you put a gun to my head and made me choose Biden/Hillary vs what Trump actually did, I vote against Trump ALL DAY LONG because Hillary/Biden are far more conservative in their policies. I can count on Biden to not run trillions in debt to feed jobless wonders with $2000 checks for doing exactly nothing but being a leech on society. I can also count on Biden to protect the 2A, because he really needs that NRA money unlike Trump.

Trump really was just another in a long line of modern Republican/Conservative frauds going back to Reagan in 1980--these types always talk a good game but essentially they govern like New Deal/Progressive Democrats. Biden/Harris (and Obama), ironically, were more guilty of the sins the Left accused Trump of than Trump himself was. I was a long-time libertarian who still likes much of the philosophy, but have grown skeptical of free-speech, free-trade, & open-borders/immigration.
 

dingus

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Jun 5, 2020
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grown skeptical of free-speech, free-trade, & open-borders/immigration.

That is pretty sad. How can you lose faith in freedom? That just means you have no faith in yourself.

To pick out the immigration part, it seems like many "libertarians" are breaking hard right on the issue of immigration, away from the traditional "let them all in and have the market sort them out" philosophy. I agree there are problems with how immigration is carried out by the government, but to say you are against open borders is just silly. Organic movement of peoples is a great thing and a human right. Why would you want to prevent the industrious global population from trying their hand at succeeding in our domestic market? The real issue is when our government takes groups of people without any cultural congruity, mass imports a diaspora into an area, forces the local population to provide infrastructure and safety net, forces the diaspora into public schools where the curriculum must be tailored to the diaspora in the disfavor of the pre-existing children, and uses government housing subsidies to guarantee the diaspora never integrates. The root problem here is government, not immigration.
 

hisich

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Nov 1, 2018
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That is pretty sad. How can you lose faith in freedom? That just means you have no faith in yourself.

To pick out the immigration part, it seems like many "libertarians" are breaking hard right on the issue of immigration, away from the traditional "let them all in and have the market sort them out" philosophy. I agree there are problems with how immigration is carried out by the government, but to say you are against open borders is just silly. Organic movement of peoples is a great thing and a human right. Why would you want to prevent the industrious global population from trying their hand at succeeding in our domestic market? The real issue is when our government takes groups of people without any cultural congruity, mass imports a diaspora into an area, forces the local population to provide infrastructure and safety net, forces the diaspora into public schools where the curriculum must be tailored to the diaspora in the disfavor of the pre-existing children, and uses government housing subsidies to guarantee the diaspora never integrates. The root problem here is government, not immigration.

I used to buy into all of that, but have realized over the last several years that borders/nations exist for a reason--mass-immigration is essentially an unarmed invasion. Foreign peoples DO NOT hold the same values that we do, and they tend to organize based on race/ethnicity to advance their own interests--not to mention the upward pressure they put on private/public resources of all kinds while putting downward pressure on wages. Having lived/grown-up in SoCal(ish) my entire life I've seen the disastrous results of mass-immigration--the link between the rising Mexican demographic & increased socialism in California govt. (which went from solidly Republican to overwhelmingly Democrat w/i my own lifetime) is undeniable. I'm beginning to feel like a foreigner in my own land.

Sadly, most people just WON'T leave each other alone in peace, and it seems Blasphemy Laws of one kind or another will exist--witness the mass-nuking of people engaging in WrongThink today. Speaking out against the insanity of Transgenderism, unchecked immigration, and even pointing out the disproportionate power of Jewish people can literally get you fired from your job. Witness the violence perpetrated by the likes of Antifa & BLM against people who simply disagree w/their political views.

Libertarians act as if all the welfare programs & bad govt. policy, etc., either don't exist or will somehow go away...total naivete, esp. considering that the immigrant hordes tend to LOVE getting 'free' shit. Mixing a bunch of incompatible foreign tribes together is absolutely idiotic. Do you think there is no link between the dramatic demographic changes and the decline of America since the 1965 Immigration Act?
 
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hisich

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Nov 1, 2018
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All that said, in no way do I blame libertarians for any of it, because they have always had zero political power & almost no influence on policy. I see a strange thing today where some people on both sides of the political divide simultaneously mock libertarians for "being irrelevant" while also blaming their free-oriented ideas for ever ill that plagues our society.
 

dingus

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Jun 5, 2020
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So I’m sure you rail against the Irish and Italians as well right? Damn St. Patrick’s day!!

The only way I would see demographic change as an “invasion” is if a certain political persuasion was imported and propagated in order to change the government of the host. In the case of Mexicans I cannot support your characterization. You bringing up Mexicans is actually humorous because that demographic is at the brink of full integration. If you didn’t notice, the LatinX vote was more Republican than ever this cycle, mainly because they now have money they don’t want the government to take. The Big Machine was already starting to ramp up the “blame Mexicans for Trump” angles before Biden pulled off the steal. Mexicans are very nearly a part of the majority culture, passing through the same phases of integration that every European diaspora experienced before them. Dare I say Mexicans have even MORE traditionally American values than most white people.

On a larger scale, how do you feel knowing that I do not share your values? I don’t share the same values of 90% of society, and I am willing to bet most people would say they can relate to about half. We are not a congruent society. I view anyone outside of my half acre as foreign to me. I view anyone outside my city as especially foreign. Your view of national borders are meaningless to me because my borders encompass only me any mine. If I held your views on foreigners I would have a very isolated experience.
 
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hisich

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Nov 1, 2018
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So I’m sure you rail against the Irish and Italians as well right? Damn St. Patrick’s day!!

The only way I would see demographic change as an “invasion” is if a certain political persuasion was imported and propagated in order to change the government of the host. In the case of Mexicans I cannot support your characterization. You bringing up Mexicans is actually humorous because that demographic is at the brink of full integration. If you didn’t notice, the LatinX vote was more Republican than ever this cycle, mainly because they now have money they don’t want the government to take. The Big Machine was already starting to ramp up the “blame Mexicans for Trump” angles before Biden pulled off the steal. Mexicans are very nearly a part of the majority culture, passing through the same phases of integration that every European diaspora experienced before them. Dare I say Mexicans have even MORE traditionally American values than most white people.

On a larger scale, how do you feel knowing that I do not share your values? I don’t share the same values of 90% of society, and I am willing to bet most people would say they can relate to about half. We are not a congruent society. I view anyone outside of my half acre as foreign to me. I view anyone outside my city as especially foreign. Your view of national borders are meaningless to me because my borders encompass only me any mine. If I held your views on foreigners I would have a very isolated experience.

I say all of this as a mixed-race person w/both Mexican blood & Irish blood--ironically I've often been mistaken for Italian, heheheh.

As I said, I used to hold some ridiculous libertarian views fairly recently myself (but still wholeheartedly agree about the nature of The State), so I can't criticize you too much. You'll either grow out of them or you won't.

As someone who lives in an area that has had a large influx of Mexicans over the last 30+ years, I find your assertion of them being 'on the brink of full integration' quite humorous indeed. I guess you didn't catch my prior comment about California becoming far more socialist as the demographic change occurred, either.

Doesn't bother me that you don't share my values, whatever you assume those to be, neither of us have the ability to alter the immigrant-invasion engineered by The Big Machine. Eventually the realization that mixing foreign/incompatible cultures/peoples together is an awful idea will become obvious to even the most naive libertarians & communists.
 

personman

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Feb 2, 2018
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Where are the pro border people talking about the actual reason most immigrants are coming here? You know, the century of our military and commercial interests decimating their homes and creating wastelands for banana/coffee/chocolate/beef/etc.. traders to extract wealth from?

Central Americans aren't fleeing Guatemala because they just want a shot at being a pop star. Their culture and land has been explicitly and systematically destroyed, and the us gov has had the hand on that rudder for the last 150 years. Stop turning functional autonomous nations into broken narco states for private profit and maybe their citizenry will stop fleeing en masse.
 

dingus

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Jun 5, 2020
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Their culture and land has been explicitly and systematically destroyed, and the us gov has had the hand on that rudder for the last 150 years. Stop turning functional autonomous nations into broken narco states for private profit and maybe their citizenry will stop fleeing en masse.

Yes, we should leave them alone to be ruled by a successful government just like........... When the hell has the world ever witnessed a government that made anyone's life better? There is no such thing as a "broken" state, they are broken by nature.

Does the United States government make life worse for everyone outside of the club? Yes. Does every single government make life worse for everyone outside the club? Yes. Government in general is the problem, not just the US government.
 

dingus

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As I said, I used to hold some ridiculous libertarian views fairly recently myself (but still wholeheartedly agree about the nature of The State), so I can't criticize you too much. You'll either grow out of them or you won't.

I can't say that I will ever "grow out" of wanting liberty. I do understand how you could view it that way. It is easy to LARP as a principled person when you have no kids and no assets. As you get older and things start to get real most un-principled people drop the act and start working towards security for their stuff. My principles have been sincerely held my entire life. Adding responsibilities like my four kids, house, and job do not make me want to throw out my principles out of fear.
 

personman

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Feb 2, 2018
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Yes, we should leave them alone to be ruled by a successful government just like........... When the hell has the world ever witnessed a government that made anyone's life better? There is no such thing as a "broken" state, they are broken by nature.

Does the United States government make life worse for everyone outside of the club? Yes. Does every single government make life worse for everyone outside the club? Yes. Government in general is the problem, not just the US government.
I understand the sentiment but the reality is that some form of social contract/organized community management system is universal in recorded human history. Obviously a "govern- [control] -ment [mind]" isn't my ideal form of social management either but I don't find the anarcho-nihilist approach very useful either.

I think if we take honest stock of all the extant societies around the world we will find that there is a happy medium between authoritarian state and anarchic control by the most physically powerful where the people as a whole experience the most freedom. My personal aim is to move my community toward that happy medium. On a personal level I think we can all do that best by limiting our dependence on large, impersonal systems. But I don't have any illusions that I'm going to be able to stop Exxon or Dow Chemical from poisoning my watershed with out a government scale organization
 

personman

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Eventually the realization that mixing foreign/incompatible cultures/peoples together is an awful idea will become obvious to even the most naive libertarians & communists.
The most influential and powerful places on earth have historically been places with lots of mixing of foreign cultures. If you don't feel like you can maintain your cultural integrity amidst an ocean of other cultures then I would suggest looking at tools to strengthen the integrity of your own internal culture.
 

dingus

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I don't find the anarcho-nihilist approach very useful either....

...I don't have any illusions that I'm going to be able to stop Exxon or Dow Chemical from poisoning my watershed with out a government scale organization

Freedom isn't "useful" and that is why people truly don't care about it. As a young libertarian I was mystified that more people weren't also the same way. The common line was that we had the best product, we just needed to get the message out better. As I got older I realized that we were wrong. We have a very unpopular product. For every COVID fearing hater of liberty, we have a corporation fearing hater of liberty. A very small minority of folks actually want true liberty for themselves and those around them, because liberty is a dangerous thing, you could kill yourself and nobody would stop you.

As to your broader point, you will find that the most just and cohesive "organized community management systems" (I like that term) are centered around the Family. As long as your tribe is based on family kinship it will operate pretty well. Once you start confederating with other families things start to break down. Once you remove the family kinship aspect entirely I cannot think of a single "system" that has made the lives of the member population better. Maybe better than an alternative form of government, but not better than nothing.

Pollution is one of the more common tropes for anti-liberty folks. Just think how easily we could take care of polluting corporations if we removed government protections from them. The government is what makes a corporation effective, by preventing the people from taking out their grievances directly against the executives that harm them.
 
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personman

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A very small minority of folks actually want true liberty for themselves and those around them, because liberty is a dangerous thing, you could kill yourself and nobody would stop you.
That is very well said. Might have to use that line in the future.
As to your broader point, you will find that the most just and cohesive "organized community management systems" (I like that term) are centered around the Family. As long as your tribe is based on family kinship it will operate pretty well. Once you start confederating with other families things start to break down. Once you remove the family kinship aspect entirely I cannot think of a single "system" that has made the lives of the member population better. Maybe better than an alternative fo
That is also a good point. I've been circling around this idea for years about the alchemical connection between the breaking of the atom and then the creation and destruction of "the nuclear family" and how that idea/agenda connects to the concerted effort to deconstruct the value and existence of cohesive familial units.

I believe that the combination that works to create stable social forms is extended familial bonds anchored to a place. Diverse cultures interface successfully and profitably for both when they are spatially stable enough to grow and develop a web of kinship. Transient populations seem to drive instability, which may shed some light on the apparent agenda for constant roving conflict to create diaspora.

I do think that society is a crystalline structure and that very small seed cells can aggregate broader stable social structures around them. That's why I've been focusing on turning more of my energies inward since the second half of last year, and creating more intentional culture around myself, my family, and my immediate circle.

Pollution is one of the more common tropes for anti-liberty folks. Just think how easily we could take care of polluting corporations if we removed government protections from them. The government is what makes a corporation effective, by preventing the people from taking out their grievances directly against the executives that harm them.

I don't think that's a fair generalization about "governments". Our particular manifestation does protect corporate interest currently for sure. And I understand that the existence of government becomes an instant target for corruption. But I don't see how we could " take our grievance directly to" the wrong doers without some overarching social structure like a government. If it just came down to might we would have to rally a group that was large and organized enough to raid their location and then exert our judgement on them or something.

My personal preference at this point would be that "incorporating" would be a pathway to various forms of limited liability provided by the organization structure but would come with strict regulation up to the point that you could be unlicensed for violations and disbanded fairly easily. For groups willing to take true responsibility for their actions there would be largely unregulated access to commercial enterprise, but the principles and employees could be ultimately held personally liable for any harm.

But I'm getting off into overly specific tangent here and I'm not super interested in discussing the minutia of macrosocial organization. I just think the issue of the despoiling of communal resources is one of the most obvious places where some sort of coherent authority with broad geographical range is valuable
 

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