"Politics is downstream from culture."
The stories we tell our children become the guideposts of the civilization those children will build. The culture and civilization we see around us is the result of the legends and myths our people were told to aspire toward as children.
Consider what the children of the various generations absorbed into their young minds.
The children of the 1920s and 1930s read pulps and listened to radio dramas about heroism, adventure, capable men and beautiful women - but not discernment and wisdom, so they were "heroically" marched off to war for the jews without questioning why.
The children of the 1940s and 1950s watched tv and movies about soldiers, spacemen cowboys and superheroes - but they were given no sense of family or tribe, so they became self-absorbed monsters.
The children of the 1960s and 1970s were told tales about crime and suffering - but given no hope, so they became despondent.
The children of the 1980s and 1990s were told stories about absurd power fantasies - but heroes who "played fair" and villains who couldn't kill, so they grew up not prepared for the real world.
The children of the 2000s and 2010s were faced with social engineering about "being whoever you imagine yourself to be" and "acceptance" - but their genuine identities were supplanted with artificial ones, so they grew up to be delusional.
The purpose of fiction is to inspire and to teach. It has a moral element to it. The results of these stories, the conclusions, establish a framework in the minds of the audience, intentional or otherwise. And the more malleable the mind, especially in youth, the more solid these frameworks become.
We need to rebuild with our own myths, based on morals and truth, rather than the ones fed to us by the jews.
(post is archived)