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United StatesBernd2022-02-01 01:30:13 · 4yNo. 134243reply
I'm beginning to suspect Western Europeans are pussies
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 01:33:15 · 4yNo. 134245reply
Have you adjusted those percentages by:
* considering that a large percentage of "Wectern Europeans" are actually from other, including Eactern European countries?
* that those Eactern Europeans are the subpopulation that left their home countries, thus only the ones who would fight for their country remained?
SwitzerlandBernd2022-02-01 01:37:20 · 4yNo. 134246reply
I just don't want to die for jews. I would fight to defend my house and my family but not for a whole country and for the jews that govern us.
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 01:47:25 · 4yNo. 134247reply
What more proof does anyone need to see that "da jooz" is a (probably Russian) psyop?
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 02:20:14 · 4yNo. 134248reply
Nobody cares about your schizo opinion, Almnazi.
Saint PetersburgBernd2022-02-01 02:25:07 · 4yNo. 134249reply
both stupid points, only in France do immigrant populations constitute more than 90% of the total population
RussiaBernd2022-02-01 04:24:54 · 4yNo. 134250reply
That's literally iq map
United StatesBernd2022-02-01 04:49:12 · 4yNo. 134252reply
Better be careful, that means Ukrainians are super-geniuses.
RussiaBernd2022-02-01 04:56:06 · 4yNo. 134253reply
Your thoughts are in different direction
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 06:44:14 · 4yNo. 134257reply
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 07:36:11 · 4yNo. 134259reply
>Finland and Turkey are in the same IQ tier
no
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 08:39:35 · 4yNo. 134262reply
If you are at the state that you have internalized that politicians = the country, then the game is already over for Germlings.
 
I for one wouldn't fight for Sanna-Marin the fish eyed sociopath, but i would if the existence of land of the Finns was in mortal danger. Politicians aren't the country, but rather the temporary captains of the ship. You can always get rid of them if they become too shitty. Believing this to be impossible means that you don't have a nation anymore, but rather oligarchs and their property in which you happen to live in. Once you internalize that to be the way of things which you can do nothing about, the nation's soul is dead.
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 08:52:54 · 4yNo. 134264reply
Chinks and their old concept of mandate from heaven is actually pretty based, and is pretty much the reason why the old imperial China lasted pretty much unchanged for thousands of years. Even if it collapsed like 100 times, it always stitched itself back together and kept more or less the same values and systems.
 
Mandate from heaven roughly speaking is the idea that the ruler is basically the steward of the nation and "keeping the country together for the heavens". In that concept if the ruler is wise and just, it's the moral duty of the citizenry to follow the ruler, but if the ruler is incompetent or unjust, it's the moral duty of the citizenry to revolt and overthrow the ruler.
This is why China has had so many civil wars, but still always(until the commies came) stitched itself back together and just continued on with more or less the same system.
 
I don't believe modern countries should become Imperial China 2.0 or anything close to it, nor do i think it would even be possible, but there's something to be learned from it. I believe something like that is a pretty healthy balance of respecting the citizenry without compromising the overall stability and longevity of the nation.
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 08:55:34 · 4yNo. 134265reply
let me correct myself
 
>20% of germans would choose to die because of their decisions
 
 
 
I've been moving all my life, I have no home, I speak this language but yet I don't feel connected.
I'd die for my family but not for this cultureless gray piece of land.
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 09:45:08 · 4yNo. 134267reply
It's certainly better than how the concept of divine right of kings was interpreted in Europe, where it has been used to justify reinstatement of royal dynasties whose kings have previously proven incompetent…
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 10:17:16 · 4yNo. 134272reply
We all are products of our environment to an extent.
So i do empathize with you. I would probably be the same, if i were born elsewhere.
 
After WW2 Germany became the social experiment about socially engineering an entire nation into becoming pushover indecisive pseudo-pacifists that would be easy to control and be of no threat ever again.
 
Finland, while being being allied with the Nazis avoided this fate due to switching sides at the last second, thus Finland kept the original leadership and the political structure it had during the war.
Here WW2 veterans are worshipped, and they are the eternal political issue where if some political entity wants to score free points, they'll just cry about how the veterans are being mistreated, and it will actually work.
Same shit can be seen how Finnish Bernds go on and on about the Winter War etc. It's the reflection of Finnish society where that's just something Finns do; circle jerk about how shit Russia is and how grandpa kept Finland independent.
Hell, me typing this post right now is part of this. I am societally programmed to be like this, and so are the Germlings.
 
My experience with Germlings is that anything even vaguely related to the veterans or war is frowned upon, and the old Germany has very little if anything at all positive to give, and is best ignored.
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 10:45:28 · 4yNo. 134278reply
>and the old Germany has very little if anything at all positive to give
 
old germany isn't just 1933-1945
 
All there is left now is a lazy, soulless consoomerist generation. Personally, I would have loved to experience the old Germany.
 
 
The grass is always greener on the other side I guess.
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 10:48:54 · 4yNo. 134279reply
>old germany isn't just 1933-1945
I didn't mean it was. But i haven't seen many Germlings(at least the normies) openly say how any point of their past history was that great to begin with, but just militarism and bigotry from beginning to the end, and they are very proud of not being "like the Germans of old".
 
It could be that i have encountered the absolute schizos of the German society and this isn't the norm, but that's my experience.
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 10:49:53 · 4yNo. 134280reply
did you meet those on KC or was it some smelling hippies studying abroad in Helsinki?
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 10:50:38 · 4yNo. 134281reply
Latter.
That being said Bernds aren't entirely representive of the general population either.
United StatesBernd2022-02-01 20:08:05 · 4yNo. 134455reply
who is that in the middle?
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 20:16:00 · 4yNo. 134457reply
>who is that in the middle?
I'm not sure whether you're trolling or not. But it's Annalena Baerbock, Germany's foreign minister.
RussiaBernd2022-02-01 20:20:38 · 4yNo. 134459reply
 
>old imperial China lasted pretty much unchanged for thousands of years. Even if it collapsed like 100 times, it always stitched itself back together and kept more or less the same values and systems.
>just continued on with more or less the same system.
 
You do realise that it's not a good thing, right?
 
>China has had so many civil wars, but still always(until the commies came) stitched itself back together
 
Again, a revolution is never a good thing. It's literally a nation devouring itself in the hopes that the butterfly would be more beautiful than the larva. The results are disappointing in 90% of cases.
 
>I don't believe modern countries should become Imperial China 2.0 or anything close to it, nor do i think it would even be possible, but there's something to be learned from it. I believe something like that is a pretty healthy balance of respecting the citizenry without compromising the overall stability and longevity of the nation.
 
Modern nations have constitutions for that - sets of rules that set the directions in which these countries evolve. Because in order to stay alive you have to constantly evolve and change. Stagnation for a nation is comparable to a coma for a human being.
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 20:22:01 · 4yNo. 134460reply
>You do realise that it's not a good thing, right?
It is not -
>a revolution is never a good thing. It's literally a nation devouring itself
but not for this reason.
 
It is bad because such arrangement doesn't allow China to be dismantled.
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 20:22:12 · 4yNo. 134461reply
>a revolution is never a good thing
>Because in order to stay alive you have to constantly evolve and change.
This contradicts each other.
RussiaBernd2022-02-01 20:23:12 · 4yNo. 134462reply
 
Leave China alone, Balkan terrorist.
 
 
It's not's. Revolution =/= evolution.
GermanyBernd2022-02-01 20:24:28 · 4yNo. 134463reply
>Revolution =/= evolution.
Revolution is evolution in bursts. As a German I also strongly disagree with you that revolution are never good things. At multiple times in our history, tyranny was overthrown through revolutions.
SloveniaBernd2022-02-01 20:25:48 · 4yNo. 134464reply
China as a civilization has been tremendously hindered by existence of China as a geopolitical entity.
It is an institution perhaps even more harmful than Islam.
FinlandBernd2022-02-01 21:01:54 · 4yNo. 134471reply
>The results are disappointing in 90% of cases.
In China's case the result was the same system but without the despot and the issues he caused.
This meme that revolutions lead to worse systems is a meme that exists outside of the Chinese system. Imperial China in a way had the permanent revolution thing going on for thousands of years that commies so much strove for.
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