Rat Tales – Taki’s Magazine – Taki’s Magazine
Unlike Kate Smith, who is dead, Cher could apologize, but she won’t.
— Read on www.takimag.com/article/rat-tales/
A little satirical humor.
Unlike Kate Smith, who is dead, Cher could apologize, but she won’t.
— Read on www.takimag.com/article/rat-tales/
A little satirical humor.
Why the MSM is So Invested in the Sargon Smear/Hate Train
— Read on www.bitchute.com/video/fRJmlBm6JxY/
They fear his ideas
QUESTION: Do you see this new age of the internet destroying jobs that result in a Great Depression as you have illustrated with the advancement of the combustion engine in altering the agricultural economy as we move into the future? What is the future for our children? Thank you KL ANSWER: Society historically moves through these great advancements. As an empire rises, civilization expands where coming together means the sum is greater than the individual or small bands of tribes. The oldest known city, discovered in Turkey, shows advanced houses with wall paintings and modern advancements. Coming together created more jobs where someone artistic could then create paintings in houses rather than tilling the soil. Civilization becomes the key to advancement. What then happens is the government becomes corrupt and greedy. Once you reach that stage, people begin to leave the main centers. In the case of Rome, it peaked around 180 AD with a population of about 1 million and it collapsed to just 15,000. As people fled the cities due to corruption, society then moved back to fragmentation and into the feudal age. People then worked as serfs, tilling the soil for the landowner, and received free lodging along with 20% of the crop. Then the Black Death came and wiped out 50% of the population during the 14th century. Suddenly, there was a shortage of labor so landlords began to pay wages on top of the free lodging and food deals. Government smelled the money and began to tax. This led to the first tax rebellions during the 1300s. The first peasant tax uprising over taxation was in France during 1358. This was followed by a similar uprising against taxation in England led by Wat Tyler in 1381 that was a bloody affair. With the invention of the steam engine, the industrial revolution began. Trains became the 19th-century version of the internet. This gave birth to mail order. Suddenly, companies like Sears could publish a catalog and it was distributed around the country by trains. People would go to a local general store and order from the catalog and Sears would then ship the order by train. It is the very same business model as we see today with Amazon, it is just more instant now with the internet. This time, there is no need to go to the general store to order. You do that online, so now the modern business model replaces the general store. Governments have relied upon consumer taxes, so as stores vanish, they will go after sellers on the internet which creates a question of jurisdiction legally. How can a state punish a company who is not located in their state? How can they demand they pay taxes when there is no right to representation in that state? Sounds familiar – NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION! The bottom line is always the same. The taxation and rule of law have collapsed and moved into the same position that threatens the break-up of nations, once again, as has every empire to date. In this regard, the internet is not merely the next advancement in society so children should be looking at technology for the future and not the old traditional jobs. The various governments will collapse for they have abused their power and are unsustainable. Society will have to go through a readjustment on a major scale. It is not all doom and gloom. This is also a fantastic opportunity to hit the control-alt-delete button and begin anew.
— Read on www.armstrongeconomics.com/armstrongeconomics101/understanding-cycles/the-next-major-shift-in-society/
It seems as if the cycle of Resentment and Revenge is so fundamental to human nature that it cannot be cured by humanistic solutions—but could it be countered by the theological virtues? (essay by Dwight Longenecker)
— Read on theimaginativeconservative.org/2019/04/politics-resentment-revenge-dwight-longenecker.html
We must adjust to changing times and still hold to unchanging principles. — Quote by Jimmy Carter
— Read on www.heartlight.org/cgi-shl/quotemeal.cgi
COMMENT: I found your comment most interesting on curiosity as the driving force being Einstein and the key for everyone to follow no matter what the field. This is precisely what is ignored in school. They teach you to memorize, not to challenge the status quo. Thanks HF REPLY: Yes, my professor friend who explained that to me really did open my eyes. It is incredibly important to encourage curiosity in your children. Curiosity is the required step to discovery. If you are not curious, you will never discover anything. Samuel Butler (1835–1902) defined genius as “a supreme capacity for getting its possessors into trouble of all kinds.” All the studies of genius reveal that teachers like children with high IQs. Yet, they view those with creative minds who are curious as trouble makers because they always ask “Why?” and challenge the teacher. As a result, intelligent but uncreative students will conform to the demands of society. That is why they say A students work for C students, and B students work for the government. Then there is the saying that those who are creative just do while those who lack that creativity teach, and those who cannot teach, teach gym (lol). Victor Goertzel and Mildred George Goertzel in their 1962 book “Cradles of eminence,” found that the parents of gifted children were often curious, experimental, restless, and seeking answers in themselves. E. Paul Torrance of Minnesota found that 70% of pupils who rated high in creativity were rejected by teachers who picked a special class for the intellectually gifted. The Goertzels concluded in their Stanford study of genius that teachers selected bright children over creative and curious children. Those teachers would have excluded people such a Winston Churchill, Thomas Edison, Pablo Picasso, and Mark Twain just to name a few. There are what have become known as “genius grants,” which are handed out for original creativity. The MacArthur Fellows Program awards unrestricted fellowships to talented individuals who have shown extraordinary originality and dedication in their creative pursuits and a marked capacity for self-direction. These fellowships are awarded for exceptional creativity, promise for important future advances, and potential for the fellowship to facilitate new work. You cannot be creative without CURIOSITY. We wrongly call Einstein a genius, assuming he knew a lot like a dictionary. That was by no means his gift. It was curiosity.
— Read on www.armstrongeconomics.com/world-news/education/einstein-curiousity/
Curiosity and questioning everything is the key.
Here’s a new thing we’re no longer allowed to say
— Read on mailchi.mp/tomwoods/chase-tweet
No country in history has ever given back to a sworn enemy militarily essential territory that has been captured in a defensive war. Predictably, the European Union opposed the U.S. recognition of the annexation. But it provided no compelling argument,
— Read on www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13976/trump-is-right-about-the-golan-heights
Ruby Ridge – Wikipedia
— Read on en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_Ridge
This is what happens when federal bureaucrats run amok with no accountability. An FBI sniper shot Weaver’s Wife through a kitchen window while she was holding a baby in her arms, and got away with it. The sniper was promoted rather than prosecuted.
There is a book out there written by Weaver with his side of the story. These alphabet agencies have been engaged in some bad deals since their inception. There are good, honest, and moral people working for them, but the bad ones need to be prosecuted when they break the law. Just like the rest of us.
Friedrich Nietzche’s “Ecce Homo” lays waste to centuries of an ethic of inhibition and restraint. Intellectually brutalized, bloodied, and tortured, the nineteenth-century philosopher presented himself in his final and last words to a world he wanted to overthrow. Behold the man. To be more accurate, behold the demon… (essay by Bradley J. Birzer)
— Read on theimaginativeconservative.org/2019/03/behold-demon-friedrich-nietzsche-destroyer-bradley-birzer.html
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