segunda-feira, 9 de junho de 2025

BloodSoil - The World is Sick, We are the Cure

18 comentários:

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https://x.com/ExxAlerts/status/1932339729611026486

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“Long periods of peace and quiet favor certain optical illusions. Among them is the assumption that the invulnerability of the home is founded upon the constitution and safeguarded by it. In reality, it rests upon the father of the family who, accompanied by his sons, appears with the axe on the threshold of his dwelling.”
-Ernst Jünger

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"Well, but this strong pessimism, with which belongs the contempt for mankind of all great fact-men who know mankind, is quite a different matter from the cowardly pessimism of small and weary souls which fear life and cannot bear to look at reality. The life they hope for, spent in peace and happiness, free from danger and replete with comfort, is boring and senile, apart from the fact that it is only imaginable, not possible. On this rock, the reality of history, every ideology must founder.
Little as one knows of events in the future - for all that can be got from a comparison of other civilizations is the general form of future facts and their march through the ages - so much is certain: the forces which will sway the future are no other than those of the past. These forces are: the will of the Strong, healthy instincts, Race, the will to possession and power..."
-Oswald Spengler

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"By nature and from the first, it is not justice which rules the earth but force… Force has the advantage of the primus occupans, which is why it can never be annulled or really abolished from the world: it must always be appealed to, and the most that one can hope for is that it will stand on the side of justice."
-Arthur Schopenhauer

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"The only solution for bad and violent people are good people that are more skilled in violence"
-Japanese Samurai code Bushido

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"There exists a law, not written down anywhere but inborn in our hearts; a law which comes to us not by training or custom or reading but by derivation and absorption and adoption from nature itself; a law which has come to us not from theory but from practice, not by instruction but by natural intuition. I refer to the law which lays it down that, if our lives are endangered by plots or violence or armed robbers or enemies, any and every method of protecting ourselves is morally right."
-Marcus Tullius Cicero

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"Among my shock troops I’ve had a lot of so-called "weird people". In peace (they say)these people are dispensable, in times of hardship, and for me then - they were priceless! At that time, in the beginning, a single one of them was worth as much as 50 bourgeois. How loyal, how trustful for me they were. And their alleged brutality? They were just a bit closer to nature. At that time, I began to loathe the bourgeoisie so much!"
-Adolf Hitler

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"A true King never desires shadows, puppets, and automatons as subjects, but rather he desires individuals, warriors, living, and strong beings; and in fact, his pride would be to feel himself to be a King of kings."
-Julius Evola

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"War must be, while we defend our lives against a destroyer who would devour all; but I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness... I love only that which they defend."
- J.R.R. Tolkien

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"Let every man remind their descendants that they also are soldiers who must not desert the ranks of their ancestors, or from cowardice fall behind."
-Plato

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Pauline Lecomte: “In your opinion, what is the most powerful insight presented by the Iliad?”
Dominique Venner: “Strength and beauty. The Iliad is not just a poem about the Trojan War, it is about fate as it was understood by our Borean ancestors, whether they were Greek, Celtic, Germanic, Slavic, or Roman. The poet sings about nobility in the face of war, brave heroes who kill and die, the sacrifice of those who defend their motherland, the sorrows of women, the farewell of the father to his son that lives on, the strain of old age. He sings about a great many more things: the ambitions of kings, their vanity, their quarrels. He sings about bravery and cowardice, friendship, love, and tenderness. Of the need for glory that pulls men up to the height of the gods.”
-Dominique Venner

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"The order of castes, the highest, the dominating law, is merely the ratification of an order of Nature, of a natural law of the first rank, over which no arbitrary fiat, no "modern idea," can exert any influence. In every healthy society there are three physiological types, gravitating toward differentiation but mutually conditioning one another, and each of these has its own hygiene, its own sphere of work, its own special mastery and feeling of perfection. It is not Manu but Nature that sets off in one class those who are chiefly intellectual, in another those who are marked by muscular strength and temperament, and in a third those who are distinguished in neither one way or the other, but show only mediocrity -- the last-named represents the great majority, and the first two the select. The superior caste -- I call it the fewest -- as the most perfect, it stands for happiness, for beauty, for everything good upon earth.
In all this, I repeat, there is nothing arbitrary, nothing "made up"; whatever is to the contrary is made up -- by it nature is brought to shame. . . The order of castes, the order of rank, simply formulates the supreme law of life itself; the separation of the three types is necessary to the maintenance of society, and to the evolution of higher types, and the highest types -- the inequality of rights is essential to the existence of any rights at all. A right is a privilege. Everyone enjoys the privileges that accord with his state of existence."
-Nietzsche

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"...killing did not appear to be as serious a fault as betrayal, or even mere lying. A warlike ethics would also lead to more or less this attitude and it would be inclined to limit the principle of solidarity by means of those of dignity and affinity. The soldier can regard as comrades only those whom he holds in esteem and who are resolute to hold to their posts, not those who give way, the weak or the inept."
-Julius Evola

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"Preparatory human beings. — I welcome all signs that a more virile, warlike age is about to begin, which will restore honour to courage above all! For this age shall prepare the way for one yet higher, and it shall gather the strength that this higher age will require some day — the age that will carry heroism into the search for knowledge and that will wage wars for the sake of ideas and their consequences."
-Nietzsche

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"I discovered a staggering truth: that the life of a man does not consist of the wretched years that drag themselves from the cradle to the grave, but of a few, rare, dazzling flashes of lightning; those are the only ones worthy of being called life. The moments we owe to war, love, adventure, mystical ecstasy, or creation."
-Dominique Venner

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"Traitors and deserters are hanged on trees; cowards, shirkers, and sodomites are pressed down under a wicker hurdle into the slimy mud of a bog. This distinction in the punishments is based on the idea that offenders against the state should be made a public example of, whereas deeds of shame should be buried out of men’s sight."
-Tacitus

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“Two types of morality must not be confused: the morality with which the healthy instinct defends itself against incipient decadence, and another morality with which this very decadence defines and justifies itself and leads downwards.”
-Nietzsche

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"My firm conviction... is that the highest purpose of life is to forward the growth of a superior humanity, whose role is to rule a healthy world. No means are too ruthless that can bring us nearer to that goal."
-Savitri Devi