ȺηтнαѕGαтє
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Stryn, Norge🇳🇴 c.1921
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Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
The enemy destroys the roots of your culture tree, and the rootless tree eventually withers away and dies. The enemy will come in secret in the dark of night and sprinkle seeds of foreign tree/culture in the place where your native tree/culture once stood and then convince you that this brand new foreign tree that grew in the place where your native tree once stood is your own, is your native tree, and you believe it, and accept a foreign tree as being native to you. After taking down the power and strength of your ancestral culture, the enemy gave the remaining survivors a Stockholm syndrome, in your surviving ancestors started to eventually identify with their captors
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Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
Some Christians say that obviously the pagan cultures were weaker than Christianity because Christianity was able to overcome them. It’s a very complicated topic, but part of it has to do with the fact that Christianity was globalist religion from the start. This religion behaves like a Borg that assimilates all in its path. Christianity was only able to overtake independent pagan tribes and kingdoms after Christianity itself became powerful by bringing many individual independent pagan tribes under one Christian banner by converting each one of them separately. After a pig in kingdom converted to Christianity, other newly converted Christian kingdoms and tribes then thought of other Christian kingdoms and tribes as their Christian brothers, and allies against pagans
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Nationalism is Beautiful 🤍❄️
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Forwarded from Eurotopian
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This episode of The Fyrgen hits home on the topic of "law" and how we are being held captive by complying with directives that we never really agreed to, and definitely never voted on. This phony "law" and "religion" is something we must overcome if we are to be responsible for our future.👇🏻👇🏻
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The Fyrgen Podcast - Episode 15: Citizen or Pagan?

Listen on Telegram here

citizen (n.): c. 1300, citisein (fem. citeseine) "inhabitant of a city or town," from Anglo-French citesein, citezein "city-dweller, town-dweller, citizen".
pagan (n.): c. 1400, perhaps mid-14c., "person of non-Christian or non-Jewish faith," from Late Latin paganus "pagan," in classical Latin "villager, rustic; civilian, non-combatant"

A basic introduction to ideas surrounding the concept of citizenship, the legal fiction, the 'person' and how we're enslaved by Vatican, Judeo-Christian Canon Law.

Visit fyrgen.com for past episodes and info on how you can support this podcast.

Also available on Odysee.
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Forwarded from Official_Celtic_Films
Celtic Druid hillfort called Dùn da Lamh standing above Strathspey, Scotland; digital illustration by Robert Marshall. Estimated to be 3500 BCE to 1800 BCE and lasted up until 500 CE.

Celtic Films - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticFilms/3344
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Forwarded from ᛉᛟ Viðr ᛟᛉ
Hail Freyja
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Forwarded from The Cult of the North
Норвегия
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