Henry Ford's International Jew.
I have three of the four editions in hardback by scholar select. I can’t find #4
I do have a single complete copy from the 40s or 50s. It’s very cool.
You ca find the Henry Ford and other based book here:
Henry Ford's International Jew.
I have three of the four editions in hardback by scholar select. I can’t find #4
I do have a single complete copy from the 40s or 50s. It’s very cool.
You ca find the Henry Ford and other based book here:
I'd start with the bible. I think it will be outlawed soon.
I don't doubt it will be outlawed. Thankfully I've always had enough copies to be able to give one to anyone who asks.
King James Version not that bull shit NIV.
After 1676? it was dishonestly revised but translation errors were continued to be fixed. Which is why someone else is telling you 1611, which is the last revised version which doesn't conflate Jew with Israelites.
Regardless, multiple versions are likely very useful. Including modern translations. As the are likely to have additional translation corrections.
There are numerous King James versions -- try to get the 1611 version, which is the first.
Both KJV and NIV are complete garbage, versions that were made by politically motivated assclowns, go with the directly translated literal version. I know something lie that exists, I found it somewhere on an imageboard.
You are so right, and are wise. The KJV is the only one I ever reference.
There is a different translation coming out it seems daily, many of them designed to confuse the faithful, and we know that Satan is the author of confusion, not God (1st Corinthians 14:33)
Never works anyways. It was banned in China for a long time; if not still.
Tischendorf Greek text annotated as well as lexicons, grammar guides, and a guide to learning Koine Greek would be useful.
King James?
Indeed.
Great minds, as they say...
The equality act is going to decimate things for the church.
Just stop...that isn't the way things are going, at all. You don't need to ban the bible when most churches are preaching antithetical things to it anyhow.
Encyclopedias from before 1970.
Probably need to go back further...for dictionaries too
My thoughts exactly.
Mein Kampf
The Gulag Archipelago
Where There Is No Doctor
Where There Is No Dentist
The Encyclopedia Britannica
Where There Is No Dentist
One of my future dystopian nightmares.
Allz you really need are pliers and whiskey. If Grampa can do it, so can you.
The Turner Diaries
Just bought that one.
Isn't that fiction?
fiction like 1984 is fiction
Probably you'll want to get copies of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution for the United States of America and other founding documents of the USA. Also the Federalist and anti-Federalist papers, Common Sense by Thomas Paine; pretty much anything by the Founding Fathers of the USA.
Since all of the above documents are basically thought crime they will be made illegal soon. Speaking of thought crime, probably it wouldn't be a bad idea to get 1984 and Animal Farm by Orwell too.
I agree with your selections of source material but none of this stuff will be made illegal.
You must be new here.
You must be new at grown up life. I am sure this place is full of despair ridden faggots who hype the fear as an excuse for not accomplishing shit
Here's a few you may want to save.
Dude, thank you.
They will ban the dystopian novels first because they won't want people to see the playbooks they are currently using and plan to use.
I think the playbook they use more than any other is "The Rape of the Mind" by A.M. Meerloo. https://files.catbox.moe/pdk3le.pdf
The Innocents Abroad - Mark Twain
INNOCENTS, you lunkhead
Encyclopedia sets are pretty helpful, and should be pretty cheap.
Probably best to get a set from the 60s or 70s and a modern set. That way you can have up to date info but still be able to refer back to times before communists started rewriting history.
I picked up a set from '58. Pretty cheap. No mention of the "holocaust" as a term but it logs "more than 5 million jews were killed during WW2", in a single line, among the rest of the war details.
A pre-1980 New World Book of Knowledge set is a must for any teen, I loved them (they got destroyed in a flood)
Get the classics; encyclopedias and dictionaries pre 2000; back in my day there were "firefox" books that dealt with living and manufactury at a survivalist level (making paper, textiles, glass, pottery, tanning, hunting etc) Books on nursing and medicine (including obsterics), useful medicinal plants and herbs; farming and animal husbandry; potable water; simple weaponry and g u n powder/explosives...
Yeah. I was checking to see if anyone mentioned the Firefox series. They are a must, but they are very expensive. There is a few books from a guy named John Rice Irving. He has a place called the Appalachian museum in Tn. He went around collecting items and information from the people of the Appalachian mountains. There are even plans and how to instructions on making your own muzzleloader. They were pretty good books.
First, it's Foxfire, not Firefox.
Second, only the first few are worth a shit.
Third, it's in GA (Rabun Gap), not TN.
Forth, they aren't technical manuals, they are documentation of a forgotten way of life. E.g., the article on log cabins begins with assuming a built up foundation--useless if you are actually trying to build a cabin--then it goes on to give a description of how the existing cabins were built, not the most practical way to actually build one.
High school students taking notes from some old codger on how his mom use to put turpentine and snake piss in his ear to heal warts is a waste prepper library space.
I own the complete set. they are nice, but not "practical", nor technical, nor necessary.
"First"
"Second"
Blah blah!
Whatever shithead.
I haven't seen a foxfire book in years. So I mistakenly called them Firefox. "My Apologies"
Now as for your reading comprehension. My comments about the museum in Tn is correct. Oh, sure, I know all about the teacher and students in Ga and their books. If you will notice, I had stopped talking about them,( others had already mentioned them), and I had started telling about the Appalachian Museum in Tn. The gentleman that started the museum and wrote his books wanted to do something to save the way of life of the Appalachian people.
Look it up and give them a visit. It's a nice little place.
They are still going strong. Buying the entire collection is a goal.
EXCELLENT books, I had forgotten tme. Most libraries have them.
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