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never let live a coward you have humiliated. He may recover his balls enough to shoot you in the back.”
Psychologists call that normalcy bias. Tonn called it moral cowardice.
Kalergi plan,
“Democracy could work, to a point, among men of equal stature who had skin in the game. It could even be seen as a civilizational evolution to prevent the warrior caste from constantly eating itself. “But it failed badly at scale. The American people had been so well protected since 1900 that they no longer knew danger in the slightest.
“Christianity largely had been cucked as an institution. Their last vestiges of real power, the Evangelical Right, died in scandals of cocaine, hookers, and luxury yachts in the ’80s. The strong men turned away, and the remaining weakling clergy paid lip service to the core doctrines. Men whose grandfathers had died at Tarawa and Okinawa made a baker fight all the way to the Supreme Court over a gay wedding cake.
‘Caedite eos. Novit enim Dominus qui sunt eius.’”
A man that could and would fight with his fists tended to also fight just fine with a rifle.
The wild and sovereign men of all time know this. Make them afraid to leave their fortresses, and the battle is half won.”
“They don’t give it to you because it’s a privilege; they give it to you as a means of ensuring you can curb-stomp the serfs if they get out of line.”
“Each cycle, our bloodlines grow stronger. We call it Orlog, or race memory. Primal layers is another translation, and perhaps a better visual. The things we learn to do, our bloodline can master more easily. Some call this instinctive ability, which is close to right. Our ancestors refined themselves as they reproduced, each generation learning from the last. Not only piling knowledge past knowledge, but in the blood itself.

