A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
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to the server to view the underlying object.
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"content": "The Alberta independence movement should make a habit of hosting rodeo rallies. Picture a stampede of thousands of Alberta horse riders with Alberta flags riding in giant circles on the prairie, and kicking up columns of dust which could be seen for miles. <br /><br />The foundation of Alberta's independence spirit, like that of Mongolia's, lies in its unbounded potential for pastoralism and husbandry. <br /><br />Alberta should also import thousands of Bactrian camels to both release into the wild, and also to find niche ways to integrate the specie into the economy. Bactrian Camels are well adapted for the harsh climates of Alberta, Montana and Wyoming. <br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QiFip54HJo\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QiFip54HJo</a> ",
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"published": "2025-06-07T04:14:53+00:00",
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"content": "The Alberta independence movement should make a habit of hosting rodeo rallies. Picture a stampede of thousands of Alberta horse riders with Alberta flags riding in giant circles on the prairie, and kicking up columns of dust which could be seen for miles. \n\nThe foundation of Alberta's independence spirit, like that of Mongolia's, lies in its unbounded potential for pastoralism and husbandry. \n\nAlberta should also import thousands of Bactrian camels to both release into the wild, and also to find niche ways to integrate the specie into the economy. Bactrian Camels are well adapted for the harsh climates of Alberta, Montana and Wyoming. \n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QiFip54HJo ",
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"content": "Contradicting the general buzz in the alt media and the assertions I made on my previous post (dated June 1st), Alexander Mercouris and Andrei Martyanov have both stated (on their respective platforms) that the attacks on the Russian bombers do NOT have nuclear implications. These bombers were older soviet planes, and legitimate military targets. So the operation was a somewhat sensational PR stunt with limited results, but NOT an action which would lead towards the more serious nuclear implications. <br /><br />The most serious aspect of the attacks were the bombings of the civilian passenger trains, which Putin has declared a terrorist attack. Putin has also suggested reclassifying the Zelensky regime to a terrorist organization, and switching the SMO towards anti-terrorist protocols, which by implication would not preclude decapitation strikes on Zelenski himself and his staff, a move which Putin up to this point has refused to authorize.<br /><br />Linked: Video updated by Alexander Mercouris from yesterday evening (June 4th)<br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfPc3zdaewc\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfPc3zdaewc</a>",
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"published": "2025-06-05T19:51:10+00:00",
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"content": "Contradicting the general buzz in the alt media and the assertions I made on my previous post (dated June 1st), Alexander Mercouris and Andrei Martyanov have both stated (on their respective platforms) that the attacks on the Russian bombers do NOT have nuclear implications. These bombers were older soviet planes, and legitimate military targets. So the operation was a somewhat sensational PR stunt with limited results, but NOT an action which would lead towards the more serious nuclear implications. \n\nThe most serious aspect of the attacks were the bombings of the civilian passenger trains, which Putin has declared a terrorist attack. Putin has also suggested reclassifying the Zelensky regime to a terrorist organization, and switching the SMO towards anti-terrorist protocols, which by implication would not preclude decapitation strikes on Zelenski himself and his staff, a move which Putin up to this point has refused to authorize.\n\nLinked: Video updated by Alexander Mercouris from yesterday evening (June 4th)\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfPc3zdaewc",
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"content": "Striking nuclear strategic bombers which were purposely made vulnerable in order to comply, in good faith, with a nuclear treaty, is insanely dangerous. This is very minor element of Russia's nuclear assets, yet the repercussions remain deadly serious. <br /><br />Apparently a few containers full of Ukrainian drones, carried on the backs of 18 wheelers, were smuggled deep into Russian territory and one of these 18 wheelers was delivered/parked near an airbase in the Murmansk Oblast. The driver's were just ordinary workers delivering cargo and had no idea that they were delivering a Trojan horse for the enemy. Once the containers were parked in the correct locations, the containers opened and the drones attacked strategic bombers of the Russian nuclear fleet which were parked in exposed locations in accordance with the new START Treaty, where major nuclear powers are expected to park their bombers openly on airfields so that satellite imaging of all interested parties can continually verify that these planes have NOT been deployed. <br /><br />So far there has been no official response from the Russian Federation. It is probable that some sort of kinetic response is imminent. Moscow will be employing their best strategic thinkers to game things out in a hundred different ways. If Moscow decides to take a hard line, a significant proportion of the satellites over the global stratosphere could be destroyed. However, one should even keep an eye out for the general evacuation of major cities. <br /><br />A few bombers were damaged, and one irreparably according to some reports. With limited damage from the attack, hopefully Moscow finds a way to respond without the onset of a regional or global Armageddon. But what kind of madness is this for the West to technologically assist a regime that is toying with the nuclear cards?<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYG_t5CBS0g\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYG_t5CBS0g</a>",
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"published": "2025-06-02T02:00:43+00:00",
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"content": "Striking nuclear strategic bombers which were purposely made vulnerable in order to comply, in good faith, with a nuclear treaty, is insanely dangerous. This is very minor element of Russia's nuclear assets, yet the repercussions remain deadly serious. \n\nApparently a few containers full of Ukrainian drones, carried on the backs of 18 wheelers, were smuggled deep into Russian territory and one of these 18 wheelers was delivered/parked near an airbase in the Murmansk Oblast. The driver's were just ordinary workers delivering cargo and had no idea that they were delivering a Trojan horse for the enemy. Once the containers were parked in the correct locations, the containers opened and the drones attacked strategic bombers of the Russian nuclear fleet which were parked in exposed locations in accordance with the new START Treaty, where major nuclear powers are expected to park their bombers openly on airfields so that satellite imaging of all interested parties can continually verify that these planes have NOT been deployed. \n\nSo far there has been no official response from the Russian Federation. It is probable that some sort of kinetic response is imminent. Moscow will be employing their best strategic thinkers to game things out in a hundred different ways. If Moscow decides to take a hard line, a significant proportion of the satellites over the global stratosphere could be destroyed. However, one should even keep an eye out for the general evacuation of major cities. \n\nA few bombers were damaged, and one irreparably according to some reports. With limited damage from the attack, hopefully Moscow finds a way to respond without the onset of a regional or global Armageddon. But what kind of madness is this for the West to technologically assist a regime that is toying with the nuclear cards?\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYG_t5CBS0g",
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"content": "The other obvious reason that congress has not been vigorously attacking Trump is that the state of Israel is facing an existential crisis. It seems as though Trump has made a \"deal with the devil\" so to speak, essentially telling Israel, if you let me have my way with things, I won't pull the plug on Israel. Hence the full might of the Israel Lobby is being used to restrain congress from attacking Trump, and any democrats who do step out of line and attempt to impeach him are quickly brought to heel. <br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds</a>",
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"published": "2025-05-27T18:33:09+00:00",
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"content": "The other obvious reason that congress has not been vigorously attacking Trump is that the state of Israel is facing an existential crisis. It seems as though Trump has made a \"deal with the devil\" so to speak, essentially telling Israel, if you let me have my way with things, I won't pull the plug on Israel. Hence the full might of the Israel Lobby is being used to restrain congress from attacking Trump, and any democrats who do step out of line and attempt to impeach him are quickly brought to heel. \n\nhttps://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds",
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"content": "There has been remarkably little resistance from the American establishment since the start of the Trump presidency. Congress has remained exceptionally inactive and quiet, while Trump governs mostly through executive order. It almost seems as though the American establishment recognizes the fact that this country cannot move any further forward, at this juncture, without conceding the rise of a powerful executive to bring a degree of coherence and order to the nation. <br /><br />Insofar as universities are concerned, Trump is striking the very highest collegiate institutions of the nation. Once the Ivy Leagues have been brought to heel, the rest will follow. So far 2.2 billion in endowments are frozen at Harvard, no international students are permitted to enter or return, and now the remaining $450 million in grants are being cancelled. <br /><br />How is President Trump doing this? A power argument from the Federalist Society claims that the Constitution gave exclusive power to the congress to pass bills authorizing the raising of taxes and the expenditure of treasure, however, it is the discretion, prerogative and privilege of the executive branch, to choose whether and where the funds are actually disbursed. The Trump Administration is using this constitution prerogative to govern in a much more arbitrary and lively fashion than has been the custom of previous presidents. <br /><br />This will be an unstoppable precedent, and a salutary transition away from unchecked oligarchy, and towards the normalization of a strong and independent executive power structure. A feat which many did not think possible within the constraints of the current constitution. Once the executive has gathered sufficient power, the Oligarchy will not be able to turn things back around. <br /><br />Excerpt from the Article:<br /><br />\" 'Going forward, we also encourage your agency to seek alternative vendors for future services where you had previously considered Harvard,' reads the letter, signed by Josh Gruenbaum, the commissioner of the GSA's Federal Acquisition Service. \"<br /><br />*Trump administration moves to cancel remaining federal funds to Harvard*<br /><a href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds</a><br />",
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"published": "2025-05-27T18:17:09+00:00",
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"content": "There has been remarkably little resistance from the American establishment since the start of the Trump presidency. Congress has remained exceptionally inactive and quiet, while Trump governs mostly through executive order. It almost seems as though the American establishment recognizes the fact that this country cannot move any further forward, at this juncture, without conceding the rise of a powerful executive to bring a degree of coherence and order to the nation. \n\nInsofar as universities are concerned, Trump is striking the very highest collegiate institutions of the nation. Once the Ivy Leagues have been brought to heel, the rest will follow. So far 2.2 billion in endowments are frozen at Harvard, no international students are permitted to enter or return, and now the remaining $450 million in grants are being cancelled. \n\nHow is President Trump doing this? A power argument from the Federalist Society claims that the Constitution gave exclusive power to the congress to pass bills authorizing the raising of taxes and the expenditure of treasure, however, it is the discretion, prerogative and privilege of the executive branch, to choose whether and where the funds are actually disbursed. The Trump Administration is using this constitution prerogative to govern in a much more arbitrary and lively fashion than has been the custom of previous presidents. \n\nThis will be an unstoppable precedent, and a salutary transition away from unchecked oligarchy, and towards the normalization of a strong and independent executive power structure. A feat which many did not think possible within the constraints of the current constitution. Once the executive has gathered sufficient power, the Oligarchy will not be able to turn things back around. \n\nExcerpt from the Article:\n\n\" 'Going forward, we also encourage your agency to seek alternative vendors for future services where you had previously considered Harvard,' reads the letter, signed by Josh Gruenbaum, the commissioner of the GSA's Federal Acquisition Service. \"\n\n*Trump administration moves to cancel remaining federal funds to Harvard*\nhttps://www.npr.org/2025/05/27/nx-s1-5413188/trump-harvard-federal-funds\n",
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"content": "Merely permit companies (without risk of fines for breaking the law) the option of separating the work domains of the sexes, then birth rates will return to healthier levels AND productivity will increase. This is by no means a \"fix all\" to the West's problems, which in all probability still remains in terminal decline. However, such a concession would be remarkably simple AND easy to implement -- furthermore, such a policy would be one of the most effective means of conserving what remains of the West's vitality.<br /><br />Men have the sexually motivated drive to run the most competitive of enterprises, where women do not carry the same sexually evolved motivations in this regard (while many have the ability, an extremely exceptional few have sufficient motivation for the highest order of competitive enterprises, a drive which is supplied by human male sexual evolution). Those companies which permit the separation of sexual domains in the workplace will rise to the top, and those who do not will become un-competitive and risk going out of business (except in the case that a sexually integrated workplace is carefully supported by government funding or global banking institutions).",
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"content": "Merely permit companies (without risk of fines for breaking the law) the option of separating the work domains of the sexes, then birth rates will return to healthier levels AND productivity will increase. This is by no means a \"fix all\" to the West's problems, which in all probability still remains in terminal decline. However, such a concession would be remarkably simple AND easy to implement -- furthermore, such a policy would be one of the most effective means of conserving what remains of the West's vitality.\n\nMen have the sexually motivated drive to run the most competitive of enterprises, where women do not carry the same sexually evolved motivations in this regard (while many have the ability, an extremely exceptional few have sufficient motivation for the highest order of competitive enterprises, a drive which is supplied by human male sexual evolution). Those companies which permit the separation of sexual domains in the workplace will rise to the top, and those who do not will become un-competitive and risk going out of business (except in the case that a sexually integrated workplace is carefully supported by government funding or global banking institutions).",
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"content": "A golden age begins during the onset of a time period when the majority of the population uses money as the primary mechanism to actuate their economic intercourse. A dark age begins during the onset of a time period when the majority of a population does NOT use money as the primary mechanism to actuate their economic intercourse.<br /><br />During the time that the economy of a population is actuated by money, the population is by definition undergoing liquidation -- cultural and demographic collapse being a natural result of a population submerged, atomized and catabolized by mammon. <br /><br />The golden age is the observable flowering of the germ of civilization, and a dark age is the observable death of the flower. Though the organism, reflecting closer the costumes of mycelial networks, is more akin to a flowering mushroom than a flowering plant.<br /><br />Those populations which are able to sustain their fertility and culture during (and after) a golden age are the ones that adopt special rules in regard to their relations with mammon. The Amish, for instance, interface with money at the highest echelons of their social order; the heads of household may transact business, but family members engage with money minimally, if at all. Even in a modern traditional nuclear family, it is customary only for the parents to interface with money, and any \"allowance\" given to adolescent children is dependent only on the good standing of the child, rather than depending on any measure of how much or how little work the child may have done in the household in a given week, viz. \"to each according to their needs, from each according to their ability\". <br /><br />The warlords of the dark ages claimed all spoils and booty of war and distributed everything amongst their followers as they saw fit. At the end of the day, all wealth was subject to the purview of the warlord, and it was up to him to distribute it in such a manner as to optimally inspire loyalty. <br /><br />At the end of the Roman Empire, the first monastic communities were those which establish themselves in the wilderness, living in communal settings, and living directly off of the subsistence of their own labor. During the later stages of empire, only non-monetized communities which posed no threat were allowed to exist, such as monastic orders or exceptionally inaccessible swamp peoples, desert nomads or hill tribes. <br /><br />When the gothic tribes entered the borders of the Empire, the germ of feudalism immediately became known. Free holding farmers labored directly for their own subsistence and shared a reasonable portion of their surplus in trade for protection (a \"reasonable portion\" as compared to the taxation from the empire).<br /><br />Many modern men of the 21st century are living a life that is reflective both in character (and reflective of the historical timeline), as that of St Augustine of Hippo. St Augustine spent the the first 3+ decades of his life living a typical Roman life of pleasure and hedonism, according to his whims, but eventually, in seeking the deeper nature of things, Augustine began to recognize the fact that the world he knew, a world governed by mammon, was crumbling, and something akin to a \"kingdom of heaven\", or a post mammon world was soon to be born. After his conversion to Christianity during his 31st year, Augustine forsook the pleasures of worldliness and sought a life of asceticism and abstinence. <br /><br />Post mammon societies can be sterile, such as the setting of a monastery, or they can be quite fertile, such as the setting of a subsistence peasant village. Nonetheless, the recognition of the necessity of maintaining minimal relations with mammon, is the first step towards restoring cultural and demographic vitality when healing from a \"golden era\" of empire. <br /><br />Augustine of Hippo lived from 354 to 430 AD. Hence he would have been a contemporary of the first sack of Rome by the Visigoths under Alaric in 410. St Augustine did not live to see the final dismantling of the Roman Imperial title in 476 by the Germanic chieftain Odoacer, but he was acutely aware that this day was imminent. <br /><br />Where does the Anglo-Saxon world stand relative to this timeline? The ancient Roman world was able to revitalize itself with continuous infusions of barbarian populations for many centuries, from around the time of the life of Julius Caesar, all the way to the end in 476. Tacitus tells us the Roman General, Agricola, expressed excitement and enthusiasm, at the prospect of the native Britonnic and Celtic populations entering into the ranks of the empire. He correctly surmised that these population infusions would be of the very highest quality and vitality. What can the modern Anglo-saxon world hope to gain in terms of longevity and vitality, when it comes to their own present infusions of migrants?<br /><br />Will the majority of the world's economy continue to be actuated by the dollar? Or even by gold for that matter? Many regions in north America will, at some point, experience a post mammon reality. What might this look like? Which regions of North America will also act as a veritable Constantinople, retaining their higher civilizational forms, even acting as instruments towards birthing the next classical renaissance of North America? Venice, Genoa and Florence were some of the earliest European cities to restore the institutions of moneyed economies and rule of law, via commerce with Constantinople, followed by the caliphates, then the the transient crusader kingdoms, and finally as well financed participants in the age of exploration, before at last becoming exhausted of their Visigothic and Lombard vitality. <br /><br />In the 21st century, the vitality of the populations of Europe and North America are exhausted by way of the institutions of mammon, and the cities are visibly crumbling. What will a post dollar, post financial world look like in the West? Is a Dark Age imminent for some parts of North America? Is it indeed here already?<br /><br /><a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo\" target=\"_blank\">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo</a>",
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"published": "2025-05-24T01:24:40+00:00",
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"content": "A golden age begins during the onset of a time period when the majority of the population uses money as the primary mechanism to actuate their economic intercourse. A dark age begins during the onset of a time period when the majority of a population does NOT use money as the primary mechanism to actuate their economic intercourse.\n\nDuring the time that the economy of a population is actuated by money, the population is by definition undergoing liquidation -- cultural and demographic collapse being a natural result of a population submerged, atomized and catabolized by mammon. \n\nThe golden age is the observable flowering of the germ of civilization, and a dark age is the observable death of the flower. Though the organism, reflecting closer the costumes of mycelial networks, is more akin to a flowering mushroom than a flowering plant.\n\nThose populations which are able to sustain their fertility and culture during (and after) a golden age are the ones that adopt special rules in regard to their relations with mammon. The Amish, for instance, interface with money at the highest echelons of their social order; the heads of household may transact business, but family members engage with money minimally, if at all. Even in a modern traditional nuclear family, it is customary only for the parents to interface with money, and any \"allowance\" given to adolescent children is dependent only on the good standing of the child, rather than depending on any measure of how much or how little work the child may have done in the household in a given week, viz. \"to each according to their needs, from each according to their ability\". \n\nThe warlords of the dark ages claimed all spoils and booty of war and distributed everything amongst their followers as they saw fit. At the end of the day, all wealth was subject to the purview of the warlord, and it was up to him to distribute it in such a manner as to optimally inspire loyalty. \n\nAt the end of the Roman Empire, the first monastic communities were those which establish themselves in the wilderness, living in communal settings, and living directly off of the subsistence of their own labor. During the later stages of empire, only non-monetized communities which posed no threat were allowed to exist, such as monastic orders or exceptionally inaccessible swamp peoples, desert nomads or hill tribes. \n\nWhen the gothic tribes entered the borders of the Empire, the germ of feudalism immediately became known. Free holding farmers labored directly for their own subsistence and shared a reasonable portion of their surplus in trade for protection (a \"reasonable portion\" as compared to the taxation from the empire).\n\nMany modern men of the 21st century are living a life that is reflective both in character (and reflective of the historical timeline), as that of St Augustine of Hippo. St Augustine spent the the first 3+ decades of his life living a typical Roman life of pleasure and hedonism, according to his whims, but eventually, in seeking the deeper nature of things, Augustine began to recognize the fact that the world he knew, a world governed by mammon, was crumbling, and something akin to a \"kingdom of heaven\", or a post mammon world was soon to be born. After his conversion to Christianity during his 31st year, Augustine forsook the pleasures of worldliness and sought a life of asceticism and abstinence. \n\nPost mammon societies can be sterile, such as the setting of a monastery, or they can be quite fertile, such as the setting of a subsistence peasant village. Nonetheless, the recognition of the necessity of maintaining minimal relations with mammon, is the first step towards restoring cultural and demographic vitality when healing from a \"golden era\" of empire. \n\nAugustine of Hippo lived from 354 to 430 AD. Hence he would have been a contemporary of the first sack of Rome by the Visigoths under Alaric in 410. St Augustine did not live to see the final dismantling of the Roman Imperial title in 476 by the Germanic chieftain Odoacer, but he was acutely aware that this day was imminent. \n\nWhere does the Anglo-Saxon world stand relative to this timeline? The ancient Roman world was able to revitalize itself with continuous infusions of barbarian populations for many centuries, from around the time of the life of Julius Caesar, all the way to the end in 476. Tacitus tells us the Roman General, Agricola, expressed excitement and enthusiasm, at the prospect of the native Britonnic and Celtic populations entering into the ranks of the empire. He correctly surmised that these population infusions would be of the very highest quality and vitality. What can the modern Anglo-saxon world hope to gain in terms of longevity and vitality, when it comes to their own present infusions of migrants?\n\nWill the majority of the world's economy continue to be actuated by the dollar? Or even by gold for that matter? Many regions in north America will, at some point, experience a post mammon reality. What might this look like? Which regions of North America will also act as a veritable Constantinople, retaining their higher civilizational forms, even acting as instruments towards birthing the next classical renaissance of North America? Venice, Genoa and Florence were some of the earliest European cities to restore the institutions of moneyed economies and rule of law, via commerce with Constantinople, followed by the caliphates, then the the transient crusader kingdoms, and finally as well financed participants in the age of exploration, before at last becoming exhausted of their Visigothic and Lombard vitality. \n\nIn the 21st century, the vitality of the populations of Europe and North America are exhausted by way of the institutions of mammon, and the cities are visibly crumbling. What will a post dollar, post financial world look like in the West? Is a Dark Age imminent for some parts of North America? Is it indeed here already?\n\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo",
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"content": "The strip of higher fertility lands shown in this video reflect a high elevation PLUS high calorie prairie/grassland geography. Such a geography is conducive ONLY to pastoralism and/or basic ranching. Pastoralism is the father of patriarchy in every history of man. It is a geography that is situated to maximally resist any notions of state domination, to include institutional matriarchy, even when matriarchy as an institution is being financed by the global elites and the world bank. The world's steppe lands are permanently resistant to every attempt to be dominated by civilizations from the river valleys, commercial leagues or chattel slave states. This has been the way of things for thousands of years, since the onset of civilization generally. <br /><br />The steppe lands do not generally possess the highest fertility rates in the world, historically speaking. This title belongs to the slave states, who are in the habit of employing low value added mass labor, and who's ambition it is to maximize their populations through husbanding, or otherwise capturing foreign peoples. As an anecdote, high value added economies cannot coexist with high fertility populations, because high valued added economies require high concentrations of capital. High concentrations of capital can only be sustained in an environment which is governed by the rule of law, and with the general principle being equality before the law. Equality, of course, results in the collapse of fertility rates. <br /><br />In most species, the pursuit of procreation is the prerogative of the male sex. Without nature's drive from the male specie, very little procreation may occur. If men hold a higher status, this will naturally result in more babies. With women's reproductive rights being protected within the dominions of commercial states, reproduction necessarily collapses, and what little reproduction does occur tends to be disorderly and dysgenic. Financed feminism is a relatively convenient and humane mode of population control for commercial trading states, who historically have resorted to child sacrifice or other extreme measures. <br /><br />In higher civilizations, fertility rates are directly correlated with the relative status of the sexes. If women have a slightly higher status than men, the fertility rate will fall below replacement levels. If women have a slightly lower status than men, the fertility will rise slightly above the replacement rate. If women hold a status that is drastically below that of men, such as in Confucian China, Absolutist (17th century) Europe, or the cultural domains of any historical pastoral culture, then the fertility rates will be quite high (5+). <br /><br />High concentrations of capital result in representative government, which is merely a disguise for Oligarchy. The newfound equality of all people's before the law, under such circumstances, results in a drastic reduction in the fertility rate. Only high capital environments can afford a police state which might result in a matriarchy or gynocracy. This social engineering is nearly impossible on the steppe lands. One might ask, why then does it succeed in the mountainous regions further to the West? <br /><br />This is because, during this exceptionally high capital environment of the early 21st century, the gravitational pull of capital based commercial society has outweighed the gravitational pull of calorie based subsistence societies in these more mountainous regions. The high calorie element of the steppe lands allows these pastoralists to subsist economically with minimal influence from the global commercial state, unlike their neighbors in the mountains. The strip of land showcased in this video has a similar fertility rate to modern Mongolia, though it is still no where close to Afghanistan or Sub-saharan Africa.<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSy6J0jsn7w\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSy6J0jsn7w</a>",
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"content": "The strip of higher fertility lands shown in this video reflect a high elevation PLUS high calorie prairie/grassland geography. Such a geography is conducive ONLY to pastoralism and/or basic ranching. Pastoralism is the father of patriarchy in every history of man. It is a geography that is situated to maximally resist any notions of state domination, to include institutional matriarchy, even when matriarchy as an institution is being financed by the global elites and the world bank. The world's steppe lands are permanently resistant to every attempt to be dominated by civilizations from the river valleys, commercial leagues or chattel slave states. This has been the way of things for thousands of years, since the onset of civilization generally. \n\nThe steppe lands do not generally possess the highest fertility rates in the world, historically speaking. This title belongs to the slave states, who are in the habit of employing low value added mass labor, and who's ambition it is to maximize their populations through husbanding, or otherwise capturing foreign peoples. As an anecdote, high value added economies cannot coexist with high fertility populations, because high valued added economies require high concentrations of capital. High concentrations of capital can only be sustained in an environment which is governed by the rule of law, and with the general principle being equality before the law. Equality, of course, results in the collapse of fertility rates. \n\nIn most species, the pursuit of procreation is the prerogative of the male sex. Without nature's drive from the male specie, very little procreation may occur. If men hold a higher status, this will naturally result in more babies. With women's reproductive rights being protected within the dominions of commercial states, reproduction necessarily collapses, and what little reproduction does occur tends to be disorderly and dysgenic. Financed feminism is a relatively convenient and humane mode of population control for commercial trading states, who historically have resorted to child sacrifice or other extreme measures. \n\nIn higher civilizations, fertility rates are directly correlated with the relative status of the sexes. If women have a slightly higher status than men, the fertility rate will fall below replacement levels. If women have a slightly lower status than men, the fertility will rise slightly above the replacement rate. If women hold a status that is drastically below that of men, such as in Confucian China, Absolutist (17th century) Europe, or the cultural domains of any historical pastoral culture, then the fertility rates will be quite high (5+). \n\nHigh concentrations of capital result in representative government, which is merely a disguise for Oligarchy. The newfound equality of all people's before the law, under such circumstances, results in a drastic reduction in the fertility rate. Only high capital environments can afford a police state which might result in a matriarchy or gynocracy. This social engineering is nearly impossible on the steppe lands. One might ask, why then does it succeed in the mountainous regions further to the West? \n\nThis is because, during this exceptionally high capital environment of the early 21st century, the gravitational pull of capital based commercial society has outweighed the gravitational pull of calorie based subsistence societies in these more mountainous regions. The high calorie element of the steppe lands allows these pastoralists to subsist economically with minimal influence from the global commercial state, unlike their neighbors in the mountains. The strip of land showcased in this video has a similar fertility rate to modern Mongolia, though it is still no where close to Afghanistan or Sub-saharan Africa.\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSy6J0jsn7w",
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"content": "It almost seems better to be ruled by fear and autocrats, who ultimately have an interest in the legacy of their nation, rather than being ruled by politicians, oligarchs and other foreigners, who govern by lies and intrigue, and who have no interest in the ultimate consequences of their manipulations. <br /><br />",
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"content": "It almost seems better to be ruled by fear and autocrats, who ultimately have an interest in the legacy of their nation, rather than being ruled by politicians, oligarchs and other foreigners, who govern by lies and intrigue, and who have no interest in the ultimate consequences of their manipulations. \n\n",
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"content": "I stumbled upon this astonishing soundtrack while listening to an Asmongold stream, and I had to use the Shazam music recognition app to identify it, as I do not recall hearing it before. I thought it had just a few elements similar to Morrowind, so it did not surprise me that it was from the Skyrim OST (Title: Sovngarde). <br /><br />What came to mind while listening to this music was the sheer caliber of self flagellation and asceticism that may become necessary to endure the next chapters of history. The ominous uncertainty of how the next phases of history might play out is unsettling, however, what is even more disturbing is the patent naivety of the American masses, of whom many will be spiritually unprepared. <br /><br />~~~~<br /><br />Knight Hospitaller: I go to pray <br />Balian of Ibelin: For what?<br />Knight Hospitaller: For the strength to endure what is to come.<br /><br />(Kingdom of Heaven, 2004)<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBPwCmU0V-Q\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBPwCmU0V-Q</a>",
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"published": "2025-05-12T05:57:03+00:00",
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"content": "I stumbled upon this astonishing soundtrack while listening to an Asmongold stream, and I had to use the Shazam music recognition app to identify it, as I do not recall hearing it before. I thought it had just a few elements similar to Morrowind, so it did not surprise me that it was from the Skyrim OST (Title: Sovngarde). \n\nWhat came to mind while listening to this music was the sheer caliber of self flagellation and asceticism that may become necessary to endure the next chapters of history. The ominous uncertainty of how the next phases of history might play out is unsettling, however, what is even more disturbing is the patent naivety of the American masses, of whom many will be spiritually unprepared. \n\n~~~~\n\nKnight Hospitaller: I go to pray \nBalian of Ibelin: For what?\nKnight Hospitaller: For the strength to endure what is to come.\n\n(Kingdom of Heaven, 2004)\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBPwCmU0V-Q",
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"content": "An important analysis, and a probable explanation as to why President Ibrahim Traoré was the guest of honor for the May 9th victory day parades, second only to President Xi Jinping of China. <br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEwE7UYOG7Y\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEwE7UYOG7Y</a>",
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"published": "2025-05-11T05:22:11+00:00",
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"content": "An important analysis, and a probable explanation as to why President Ibrahim Traoré was the guest of honor for the May 9th victory day parades, second only to President Xi Jinping of China. \n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEwE7UYOG7Y",
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"content": "As a classification of hero, Gonzalo Lira was a Martyr, who was instrumental in opening the eyes of the American people, and who chose to continually risk and finally gave his life for his commitment to the truth. Many heroes go unsung, because people do not know about their actions, hence it is important to recognize heroes when possible. <br /><br />When the time comes to build a hall of heroes for this present time, Gonzalo Lira should be given a bronze or marble statue, sitting on a bench in deep contemplation, smoking a cigar, with an adjacent plaque containing some of his most memorable quotes. The memory of the particular details of his memory may fade into oblivion, yet may the spirit which animated him carry on into immortality.<br /><br />Currently Reading *On Heroes, and Hero Worship, and the Heroic in History* by Thomas Carlyle (1841). <br /><br />(A potentially complementary piece of music for Gonzalo Lira's Memorial)<br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2viwZVJqWbA\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2viwZVJqWbA</a><br /><br />(A potentially fitting piece of music for the Hall of Heroes branch: The hall of the Martyrs)<br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aE0neN9mvcY\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aE0neN9mvcY</a><br /><br />(Video of Gonzalo Lira's poster in front of the US embassy in Moscow)<br /><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVztWyexZgM\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVztWyexZgM</a><br /><br />",
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"published": "2025-05-11T05:19:27+00:00",
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"content": "As a classification of hero, Gonzalo Lira was a Martyr, who was instrumental in opening the eyes of the American people, and who chose to continually risk and finally gave his life for his commitment to the truth. Many heroes go unsung, because people do not know about their actions, hence it is important to recognize heroes when possible. \n\nWhen the time comes to build a hall of heroes for this present time, Gonzalo Lira should be given a bronze or marble statue, sitting on a bench in deep contemplation, smoking a cigar, with an adjacent plaque containing some of his most memorable quotes. The memory of the particular details of his memory may fade into oblivion, yet may the spirit which animated him carry on into immortality.\n\nCurrently Reading *On Heroes, and Hero Worship, and the Heroic in History* by Thomas Carlyle (1841). \n\n(A potentially complementary piece of music for Gonzalo Lira's Memorial)\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2viwZVJqWbA\n\n(A potentially fitting piece of music for the Hall of Heroes branch: The hall of the Martyrs)\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aE0neN9mvcY\n\n(Video of Gonzalo Lira's poster in front of the US embassy in Moscow)\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVztWyexZgM\n\n",
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"content": "I have lived all over the State of Missouri for the past 5 years. Ellis library is probably my favorite library in the state, mostly for its architecture but also for its relatively substantial book collection (compared to most modern American universities). During the 1 year I lived in Columbia I would visit often to browse old texts, even though the structure is generally occupied by barbarians and acolytes of the matriarchy, with the exception of a few depressed Asians.<br /><br />The architecture of the classical era is inspiring. Built in 1915, Modern companies can only dream of harnessing the gilded age genius, and pre-WW1 peasant vitality to build such structures. <br />So far In Kansas City, my favorite building is Union Station, originally erected in 1914. Kansas City's university library, however, is quite inferior in both aesthetics (with a \"modern\" exterior look), and it's collection so far does not seem to be as impressive. <br /><br />Marginally related post from Milo<br /><a href=\"https://x.com/Nero/status/1920286649600380985\" target=\"_blank\">https://x.com/Nero/status/1920286649600380985</a><br /><br /><br />",
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"published": "2025-05-10T02:11:37+00:00",
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"content": "I have lived all over the State of Missouri for the past 5 years. Ellis library is probably my favorite library in the state, mostly for its architecture but also for its relatively substantial book collection (compared to most modern American universities). During the 1 year I lived in Columbia I would visit often to browse old texts, even though the structure is generally occupied by barbarians and acolytes of the matriarchy, with the exception of a few depressed Asians.\n\nThe architecture of the classical era is inspiring. Built in 1915, Modern companies can only dream of harnessing the gilded age genius, and pre-WW1 peasant vitality to build such structures. \nSo far In Kansas City, my favorite building is Union Station, originally erected in 1914. Kansas City's university library, however, is quite inferior in both aesthetics (with a \"modern\" exterior look), and it's collection so far does not seem to be as impressive. \n\nMarginally related post from Milo\nhttps://x.com/Nero/status/1920286649600380985\n\n\n",
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