People like this Robin Hood guy like to think it's just communism, like it's just an ideology and there are no real people with names and addresses that are doing these things. There is no group you can actually point to. They have to keep it this way in their minds because if there actually is someone they can point to then that means logically they would have to commit to doing something about it.. And that is just tooooo scary.
Forwarded from Jacs Pepper
Them: You won't be able to attend a concert or football games
Me: I don't mind
Them: You can't go to a large shopping mall
Me: I'll survive
Them: You can't drink at the pub
Me: I no longer drink
Them: You can't enter night clubs
Me: I don't go out at night
Them: We'll tell your employer
Me: I don't have one
Them: We'll take it from your salary
Me: I don't have a salary
Them: You can't go to your job
Me: I don't have or want your job
Them: You can't be in the city
Me: I prefer living out in nature
Them: You can't go to McDonald's or Burger King
Me: I haven't in years anyway
Them: You can't eat at restaurants
Me: I'll order takeaway
Them: You can't shop at large grocery stores
Me: I grow my own food and buy from local farmers
Them: You can't be part of society
Me: I already checked out
Them: Your kids can't come to school
Me: I'll homeschool
Them: You'll be on your own
Me: I'm surrounded by my family and tribe and all the people reaching the same conclusion all over the world
Them: You can't choose for yourself
Me: I just did
Them: What can we tempt you with?
Me: Nothing
***
When they have nothing you want they have no power.
And that's when power comes to the people.
Me: I don't mind
Them: You can't go to a large shopping mall
Me: I'll survive
Them: You can't drink at the pub
Me: I no longer drink
Them: You can't enter night clubs
Me: I don't go out at night
Them: We'll tell your employer
Me: I don't have one
Them: We'll take it from your salary
Me: I don't have a salary
Them: You can't go to your job
Me: I don't have or want your job
Them: You can't be in the city
Me: I prefer living out in nature
Them: You can't go to McDonald's or Burger King
Me: I haven't in years anyway
Them: You can't eat at restaurants
Me: I'll order takeaway
Them: You can't shop at large grocery stores
Me: I grow my own food and buy from local farmers
Them: You can't be part of society
Me: I already checked out
Them: Your kids can't come to school
Me: I'll homeschool
Them: You'll be on your own
Me: I'm surrounded by my family and tribe and all the people reaching the same conclusion all over the world
Them: You can't choose for yourself
Me: I just did
Them: What can we tempt you with?
Me: Nothing
***
When they have nothing you want they have no power.
And that's when power comes to the people.
Forwarded from Renegade HQ
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Folk Wisdom & Ways
There was a time when almost every rural British family who kept bees followed a strange tradition.
Whenever there was a death in the family, someone had to go out to the hives and tell the bees of the terrible loss that had befallen the family.
Failing to do so often resulted in further losses such as the bees leaving the hive, or not producing enough honey or even dying.
Traditionally, the bees were kept abreast of not only deaths but all important family matters including births, marriages, and long absence due to journeys. If the bees were not told, all sorts of calamities were thought to happen. This peculiar custom is known as “telling the bees”.
The practice of telling the bees may have its origins in Celtic mythology that held that bees were the link between our world and the spirit world. So if you had any message that you wished to pass to someone who was dead, all you had to do was tell the bees and they would pass along the message.
The typical way to tell the bees was for the head of the household, or “goodwife of the house” to go out to the hives, knock gently to get the attention of the bees, and then softly murmur in a doleful tune the solemn news.
Little rhymes developed over the centuries specific to a particular region. In Nottinghamshire, the wife of the dead was heard singing quietly in front of the hive,
“The master's dead, but don't you go; Your mistress will be a good mistress to you.”
In Germany, a similar couplet was heard,
“Little bee, our lord is dead; Leave me not in my distress”.
But the relationship between bees and humans goes beyond superstition. It’s a fact, that bees help humans survive. 70 of the top 100 crop species that feed 90% of the human population rely on bees for pollination.
Without them, these plants would cease to exist and with it all animals that eat those plants. This can have a cascading effect that would ripple catastrophically up the food chain.
Losing a beehive is much worse than losing a supply of honey. The consequences are life threatening.
The act of telling the bees emphasizes this deep connection humans share with the insect.
.................................
Art: “The Bee Friend”, a painting by Hans Thoma (1839–1924)
Credit for words Mark D'Aguilar
Whenever there was a death in the family, someone had to go out to the hives and tell the bees of the terrible loss that had befallen the family.
Failing to do so often resulted in further losses such as the bees leaving the hive, or not producing enough honey or even dying.
Traditionally, the bees were kept abreast of not only deaths but all important family matters including births, marriages, and long absence due to journeys. If the bees were not told, all sorts of calamities were thought to happen. This peculiar custom is known as “telling the bees”.
The practice of telling the bees may have its origins in Celtic mythology that held that bees were the link between our world and the spirit world. So if you had any message that you wished to pass to someone who was dead, all you had to do was tell the bees and they would pass along the message.
The typical way to tell the bees was for the head of the household, or “goodwife of the house” to go out to the hives, knock gently to get the attention of the bees, and then softly murmur in a doleful tune the solemn news.
Little rhymes developed over the centuries specific to a particular region. In Nottinghamshire, the wife of the dead was heard singing quietly in front of the hive,
“The master's dead, but don't you go; Your mistress will be a good mistress to you.”
In Germany, a similar couplet was heard,
“Little bee, our lord is dead; Leave me not in my distress”.
But the relationship between bees and humans goes beyond superstition. It’s a fact, that bees help humans survive. 70 of the top 100 crop species that feed 90% of the human population rely on bees for pollination.
Without them, these plants would cease to exist and with it all animals that eat those plants. This can have a cascading effect that would ripple catastrophically up the food chain.
Losing a beehive is much worse than losing a supply of honey. The consequences are life threatening.
The act of telling the bees emphasizes this deep connection humans share with the insect.
.................................
Art: “The Bee Friend”, a painting by Hans Thoma (1839–1924)
Credit for words Mark D'Aguilar
Forwarded from Aryanism
Many of you know of the account of Germania which was written by the Roman historian Tacitus a few decades short of 2000 years ago. Our kinsman, Grizzly Saxon, shared something with us that is not well know about this text, and he encouraged us to share it with you. Here are some quotes from the conversation with Grizzly:
“Germania by Tacitus is what led to Germanic Romanticism (not because Romantic means ‘coming from Latin culture’ but because it represented the ideal). It then paved the way to the Third Reich and the studies the SS had to make to join it.”
With regard to the last remaining text of ‘Germania’ Grizzly related,
“It was the *last* written text available, and Uncle H got a hold of it.” Grizzly went on to note that all other copies of ‘Germania’ had been destroyed at this point, but Hitler and the National Socialists ensured that this last copy was preserved. This is why we have access to this important text today.
Grizzly concluded that, “It's chilling to think how our people would be now without that text. It’s as if Muninn brought it down himself to rekindle our Memory. The strength of a single treatise about our people, put in the right hands.”
If you haven’t already, pick up a copy of this great work by Tacitus, which sheds an important light on what Germanic Aryan culture was prior to the Christian subversion.
Thank you to Grizzly Saxon for sharing this account with us. Head over to his channel @europeanart, to see the curation of beautiful European art!
@AryanSpirituality
“Germania by Tacitus is what led to Germanic Romanticism (not because Romantic means ‘coming from Latin culture’ but because it represented the ideal). It then paved the way to the Third Reich and the studies the SS had to make to join it.”
With regard to the last remaining text of ‘Germania’ Grizzly related,
“It was the *last* written text available, and Uncle H got a hold of it.” Grizzly went on to note that all other copies of ‘Germania’ had been destroyed at this point, but Hitler and the National Socialists ensured that this last copy was preserved. This is why we have access to this important text today.
Grizzly concluded that, “It's chilling to think how our people would be now without that text. It’s as if Muninn brought it down himself to rekindle our Memory. The strength of a single treatise about our people, put in the right hands.”
If you haven’t already, pick up a copy of this great work by Tacitus, which sheds an important light on what Germanic Aryan culture was prior to the Christian subversion.
Thank you to Grizzly Saxon for sharing this account with us. Head over to his channel @europeanart, to see the curation of beautiful European art!
@AryanSpirituality
Forwarded from Das Volk Des Nordens
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcS9IcJzAow
This is very narrow sighted in regards to the worship of Aten and seems to purposefully obfuscate the realities of its corresponding faith. Aten was a sexless "unknowable" "spirit" god who was represented as a solar disk with rays descending with hands bearing ankhs, symbols of life and political control in Egypt. In the latter half of Akhenaten's reign, the Aten was forbidden to be depicted as anything other than the hieroglyphs representing its name, ATN. Idols were deemed profane, other gods were outlawed, the old priestly order of the indigenous religions, especially Amun the ram-headed sun god and Amun-Ra were outlawed, temples shut, and all grain and tithes directed to the new capitol of Akhetaten in roughly the middle Nile. The people of the new capitol retained some idol worship based on the archaeology, especially relating to the hippo goddess of fertility and protection of newborns, fearing the fate they might suffer perhaps.
The king Akhenaten was originally born Amenhotep IV, but changed his name when he changed his faith, abandoning the patron god Amun of his dynasty. He went beyond this act though, and because the Aten is sexless, he began to take on a feminized appearance. He gained weight, stopped exercising, reduced his manly physical qualities like body hair, and began to develop breasts and started wearing more feminine clothing. His wife did the opposite, wearing a goatee at times, taking on a more masculine appearance, with well-toned arms and a more assertive demeanor. All of this is depicted in the royal-commissioned stone carvings of the time found throughout Egypt.
The military order was not on board with the changes however, and after Akhenaten died, his chief generals such as Eiy controlled his son Tutenkhamun and changed his name to honor the cult of Amun once more. Tutenkhamun may have not been in favor of this practice however given that he was ostensibly murdered in his young adulthood and the kingdom entered a state of civil war until the Ramessid dynasty came to power in the subsequent period.
The Ramesids and several of the generals in the civil war expelled, according to records found throughout Egypt, the Aten priests and cult worshipers out of the Kingdom of Egypt. Egypt under Akhenaten had reduced in size due to the internal struggles of the king and the borders had shrunken back from the Levant and Libya to roughly its present day boundaries in the Sahara and on the Sinai Peninsula. So, when the Atenists were expelled, they were expelled over the Sinai beyond the bounds of Egypt and back into the Levant and Arabia.
Several scholars, including Sigmund Frued, believe that this group of Atenists, who may have been descended from Semitic speakers of the Levant, were the foundation for the myths of the Hebrew Book of Exodus and the origin of the Jewish people in Canaan. Frued even related Moses with a potential Atenist chief priest of this era, leading his spiritual covenant out of turmoil. It is very narrow minded and obfuscatory to equate Aten worship, who's qualities remarkably match those of the Abrahamic Semitic religions, with the qualities of the Aryan deities originating on the Pontic Steppe and Prehistoric Europe.
This is very narrow sighted in regards to the worship of Aten and seems to purposefully obfuscate the realities of its corresponding faith. Aten was a sexless "unknowable" "spirit" god who was represented as a solar disk with rays descending with hands bearing ankhs, symbols of life and political control in Egypt. In the latter half of Akhenaten's reign, the Aten was forbidden to be depicted as anything other than the hieroglyphs representing its name, ATN. Idols were deemed profane, other gods were outlawed, the old priestly order of the indigenous religions, especially Amun the ram-headed sun god and Amun-Ra were outlawed, temples shut, and all grain and tithes directed to the new capitol of Akhetaten in roughly the middle Nile. The people of the new capitol retained some idol worship based on the archaeology, especially relating to the hippo goddess of fertility and protection of newborns, fearing the fate they might suffer perhaps.
The king Akhenaten was originally born Amenhotep IV, but changed his name when he changed his faith, abandoning the patron god Amun of his dynasty. He went beyond this act though, and because the Aten is sexless, he began to take on a feminized appearance. He gained weight, stopped exercising, reduced his manly physical qualities like body hair, and began to develop breasts and started wearing more feminine clothing. His wife did the opposite, wearing a goatee at times, taking on a more masculine appearance, with well-toned arms and a more assertive demeanor. All of this is depicted in the royal-commissioned stone carvings of the time found throughout Egypt.
The military order was not on board with the changes however, and after Akhenaten died, his chief generals such as Eiy controlled his son Tutenkhamun and changed his name to honor the cult of Amun once more. Tutenkhamun may have not been in favor of this practice however given that he was ostensibly murdered in his young adulthood and the kingdom entered a state of civil war until the Ramessid dynasty came to power in the subsequent period.
The Ramesids and several of the generals in the civil war expelled, according to records found throughout Egypt, the Aten priests and cult worshipers out of the Kingdom of Egypt. Egypt under Akhenaten had reduced in size due to the internal struggles of the king and the borders had shrunken back from the Levant and Libya to roughly its present day boundaries in the Sahara and on the Sinai Peninsula. So, when the Atenists were expelled, they were expelled over the Sinai beyond the bounds of Egypt and back into the Levant and Arabia.
Several scholars, including Sigmund Frued, believe that this group of Atenists, who may have been descended from Semitic speakers of the Levant, were the foundation for the myths of the Hebrew Book of Exodus and the origin of the Jewish people in Canaan. Frued even related Moses with a potential Atenist chief priest of this era, leading his spiritual covenant out of turmoil. It is very narrow minded and obfuscatory to equate Aten worship, who's qualities remarkably match those of the Abrahamic Semitic religions, with the qualities of the Aryan deities originating on the Pontic Steppe and Prehistoric Europe.
YouTube
Lost Golden City of Aten Discovered - ROBERT SEPEHR
Archaeologists announce discovery of 3500-year-old "lost golden city" in Egypt. It was the capital of Amenhotep III, father of Akhenaten, grandfather of Tutankhamun. Researchers are calling this the most important discovery in Egypt since King Tut's tomb.…