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Old December 13th, 2014 #70
ILM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex Linder View Post
If you're going to make your job teaching, then...

...you'd better genuinely love learning (so that you're always driving to expand your range and depth)...

...and you'd better know a hell of a lot of stuff.

If you qualify, then it's a perfectly respectable vocation.

The US badly needs a more intellectual subculture to compete with the dominant judeo-retard culture. Too much emphasis by far is placed on sports. US culture was set in religion and business and sports, and it can't really be changed easily. There is a lot of talk about education, but that is a euphemism for money. Americans only respect learning if it leads to money, otherwise they see it as worthless.

America needs a different and better culture than what can be found in the North or the South. Some Southerners may disagree, but that's how I see it.

Will be recording chapter 7 today, it will be shorter, about an hour.
The culture and schools produce mediocricy. Christianity is a big part of this. It teaches a slave morality, turn the other cheek, accept your shitty life, be a "good" person, don't be rebellious, don't question authority. Christianity is Anti-intellectualism. Joseph Atwill talks about it more in detail and draws good conclusions.

The food plays a big part in this since it is purely politics. Why do you think bread was so heavily spread during the Christianizationin of the norden? Or the spread of pufa in the world after ww2. Or the suppresion of honest nutritional science.
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"The men the American people admire most extravagantly are the greatest liars; the men they detest most violently are those who try to tell them the truth." - H.L. Mencken