Alexiev, when was that?Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 1:46 am...In my youth, America was far closer to civil war than it is now, and far more divided than it is now.
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Alexiev, when was that?Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 1:46 am...In my youth, America was far closer to civil war than it is now, and far more divided than it is now.
England is in a very different position, or stage, than is the US. I have a feeling that England definitely, and other European countries very likely, are truthfully moving in the direction outlined by that researcher.Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 1:46 am I watched about 5 minutes. I agree that identity politics are silly and counter productive. But civil war is unlikely. In my youth, America was far closer to civil war than it is now, and far more divided than it is now. Also, the "identity politics" in the time of our actual civil war were far more dramatic.
I don’t see it. I spent some time examining America’s civil war and I can’t see it as a war based in identity politics. What do you mean?Also, the "identity politics" in the time of our actual civil war were far more dramatic.
I see your point. I agree mostly. What you describe is what my outlook has always been.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 7:41 pm Fair enough. You do understand, though, a great many Americans are not married to Right & Left distinctions, yes? Theirs is an American sensibility which I've described in-forum as distinctly libertarian (lower case, non-political, non-ideological), a mind your own business, keep your hands to yourself...or else frame of mind.
The 1970s. I wasn't quite old enough to be drafted -- by the time my student deferment ended the draft and the war was over. But in the late 1960s and early 70s America was very divided.
That may be for some Americans but that's not how America itself operates. Perhaps the West has learned a lesson: never trust or believe any promises made by Americans again.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 7:41 pm
Fair enough. You do understand, though, a great many Americans are not married to Right & Left distinctions, yes? Theirs is an American sensibility which I've described in-forum as distinctly libertarian (lower case, non-political, non-ideological), a mind your own business, keep your hands to yourself...or else frame of mind.
Yeah, that's the era I assumed you were referring to.
A long trajectory of events, and an entire causal chain, evoked as it were the manifestation of Donald Trump. You could say he is a manifestation from within the psyche of America. And that is a confused psyche and even a sick psyche.
"Evolve" or evaporate or erase?Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 1:46 amI watched about 5 minutes. I agree that identity politics are silly and counter productive. But civil war is unlikely. In my youth, America was far closer to civil war than it is now, and far more divided than it is now. Also, the "identity politics" in the time of our actual civil war were far more dramatic.
Cultural diversity promotes creativity and change. I was in Toronto on business 20 or so years ago on the day Quebec almost voted to cecede. Driving my airport cab driver was a Pakistani immigrant. "Ah, it is the weeping time for the Canada," he told me. Could a native Englush speaker have been more eloquent? The francophones were worried that their language would evolve and become corrupt. So what? Why is that a bad thing? Why do we want to preserve Western culture unchanged? Perhaps foreign influences can be positive.
I suggest understanding a very real and a consequential shift in perspective and outlook that is what “stands behind” what is termed identitarianism and therefore “identity politics”.Othala (ᛟ), also known as ēðel and odal, is a rune that represents the o and œ phonemes in the Elder Futhark and the Anglo-Saxon Futhorc writing systems respectively. Its name is derived from the reconstructed Proto-Germanic *ōþala- "heritage; inheritance, inherited estate". As it does not occur in Younger Futhark, it disappears from the Scandinavian record around the 8th century, but its usage continued in England into the 11th century, where it was sometimes further used in manuscripts as a shorthand for the word ēðel ("homeland"), similarly to how other runes were sometimes used at the time.
Whatever Obama did, his presidency couldn't have had an impact this big. The main cause of the chaos in the US ahs to be 9/11 which was staged. Ther US government killed 3000 of its own people, lied to hundreds of millions, and the whole world.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 11:31 amA long trajectory of events, and an entire causal chain, evoked as it were the manifestation of Donald Trump. You could say he is a manifestation from within the psyche of America. And that is a confused psyche and even a sick psyche.
The “flames of division and hatred” were, in truth, stoked by the presidency of Obama. The origin of “anti-whiteness” for example and an activist’s program for the redefinition of America.
A real conversation about what is happening and why would be intensely interesting and certainly worthwhile. Sad though that there is no one available who can see beyond the tip of their nose or that has any genuine interest in honest analysis.
“Belief [metaphysical, religious belief] is an understanding that there are truths outside nature and outside the contingent universe that's in front of us that are absolute. The left-wing view that it's all relative or we make it up as we go along, is false. And the the more primordial we are, the more we live in accordance with what we might become, the more we link with those concepts which are eternal and that exist outside us.”
No. Overwhelmingly, Americans support the Ukrainian people (as they do the Russian people). As I say, the nation (the people) is not synonymous with the State.
Seems to me, by seekin' sumthin' other than war or total surrender for Ukrainians, he has demonstrated he did.Trump should have paid attention to them.
They do share a purpose: to remake hosts countries.You make them sound like infiltrators with a shared purpose.
That is what seems to be what's happening.to say that they are willingly raising non-Europeans is nonsense.
I didn't say, or hint at, that.Trying to use Trump to get rid of the Western establishment
You deliberately — or is it unconscious? — desire to twist what I suggest. I point out that behind Obama’s public TeeVee face, that another “face” operated. His activism, whether understood as good or bad, set many currents in motion. And in a certain sense his activism evoked Donald Trump.
Hoo boy! Atla I knew the “true you” would jump out at some point!