Tam multa, ut puta genera linguarum sunt in hoc mundo: et nihil sine voce est.
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K. West, five years or hours, and spiders
I was listening to some David Bowie last night and was struck by the album art for Ziggy Stardust . Right above Bowie is a sign that says ...
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Following up on the idea that the pecked are no longer alone in their bodies , reader Ben Pratt has brought to my attention these remarks by...
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Disclaimer: My terms are borrowed (by way of Terry Boardman and Bruce Charlton) from Rudolf Steiner, but I cannot claim to be using them in ...
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I’ve been sailing all my life now Never harbor or port have I known The wide universe is the ocean I travel And the earth is my blue boat ho...
6 comments:
Having spent far too long living there, I posit that as a country, Canada is the epitome of the current thing.
Beware the Spirit of the Age. It can possess you.
Not long ago - 50 to 60 years - much of Canada wasn't that different from rural America. Country music, guns, trucks, etc.
Things change fast. Especially with TV and rapid population replacement.
Combining Francis Berger's and Mr. Andrew's comments and knowing the rough area where Francis Berger spent too long living, I have a neat explanation of why much of rural Canada was repelled by the metropole of Toronto (including its suburban penumbra).
People like to criticize Canada, and a lot of that is valid, but can anyone honestly say that things are much different in other Western nations? Which Western nation would have poll results significantly different from these?
And we do still have rural areas here, even if our evil overlords are actively, with specific, explicitly targetted programs, trying to destroy them with diversity.
@Joe
I agree. Many of the commenters have focused on the Canada angle, but I posted it on the assumption that something similar would be true in most countries.
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