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@BorealBaron • 36,747 subscribers
Humanism is cope. Entertainment account.
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Future historians will say that this was the most important and revealing interview of our time.
βόρειος βαρόνος1,076,957 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr
0:32
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The most rational and fact-based history discussion with blacks
βόρειος βαρόνος268,924 Aufrufe • vor 10 Monaten

Trump talking about his German and Scottish heritage: his grandfather was from Kallstadt, in the Kingdom of Bavaria, and his mother was from the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Is he embarrassed by this? Does he portray these places as part of a "slob continent" that doesn’t innovate?
βόρειος βαρύς334,753 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

LMAO, this is the actual ending of Fight Club in China.
βόρειος βαρόνος162,968 Aufrufe • vor 10 Monaten

Zemmour in France is now on a book tour promoting Judeo‑Christianity as an “identity,” just like his ally Tommy Robinson is doing in the Anglosphere by promoting Evangelicalism. This strategy may have worked in the US and Brazil, but it has zero chance of succeeding in Europe.
βόρειος βαρόνος105,208 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

The Venezuelan Chavez regime is a New Left movement that, much like the average college professor who served as its advisors, cannibalizes right-wing thought for left-wing purposes. Chavez himself regularly quoted Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Carl Schmitt in the same breath he cited Chomsky. He was an intellectually curious person, and from the outset, his government embraced these professors and intellectuals, seeing them as instrumental in improving the image of Chavismo in European and American academic circles and the press. As a result, many foreign intellectuals, college professors, and writers received money from Venezuela and were invited there as advisors. These same people took cues from Chavez’s ideology to apply it to European and American left-wing movements. After denying on TV interviews that he was a socialist before coming to power, he aligned his regime with other left-wing movements in the Americas, such as Cuba, Nicaragua, and left-wing parties in power in Argentina, Mexico, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil, etc. The regime also welcomed foreign terrorists from groups like the IRA, FARC, and ETA, providing them sanctuary in Venezuela. Over 17 members of ETA, responsible for the deaths of dozens, including the murderous De Juana Chaos, are comfortably living in Venezuela. Some even became prominent members of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) or were paid pensions directly by the party. Chavez clouded his speeches with references to “sovereignty,” “patriotism,” and “anti-imperialism,” while attacking the “criollo bourgeoisie,” but his XXI-century socialist government was never genuinely sovereigntist or just about Venezuela. Instead, it was internationalist, like any left-wing movement. He sought to spread his Bolivarian revolution not just across Venezuela’s borders, but far beyond, even across the ocean. This was made possible by the country’s vast oil wealth, which, for a decade, allowed Venezuela to be the highest-growing country in South America and to finance and promote left-wing takeovers in other countries of the region. It also helped develop pan-Latin American organizations with the mission of articulating a new geopolitical pole opposed to the United States. I think this contradiction between his nationalist discourse and expansionist hostility toward foreign enemies is why Chavez’s political legacy is in jeopardy. That said, I believe that if Chavez were still alive today, there would be little chance of the regime being toppled. But with a buffoon like Maduro at the helm, the military may have second thoughts. If they were clever, they would rid themselves of the Maduro and appoint a more capable and serious leader. That said, Venezuela has always been the most rebellious and volatile country in the Americas. And it is important to remember that Chavez wasn’t really a dictator but a man who had been elected by Venezuelans. Those who think the regime can be easily purged and replaced with a pro-American, liberal capitalist one are foolish.
βόρειος βαρόνος45,655 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

1999 Austrian election. Jörg Haider's FPÖ became the largest party on the right. A coalition government was formed, but it collapsed due to the foreign sanctions and hysteria provoked by his persona, which persisted until his death. How have things changed in Europe? Thread🧵:
βόρειος βαρόνος123,311 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

New Translation: Speech delivered in Spanish by Léon Degrelle at the Spanish Circle of Friends of Europe, Barcelona, 30 January 1981, on the 48th anniversary of Hitler's rise to power. Topics: Greece and Rome, Pillars of Europe (Min 00:12) Adolf Hitler, Universal Genius (Min 6:10) The Plutocracy Against Hitler (Min 09:12) National Socialist Social Policy (Min 15:25) Economic and Social Success of National Socialist policy (Min 18:32) The New Europe (Min 20:22) Spiritual Life, Foundation of the Social Order (Min 26:10) The Role of European Youth (Min 26:48)
βόρειος βαρύς85,160 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

A quick Basque language lesson from this Carlist priest:
βόρειος βαρόνος47,979 Aufrufe • vor 9 Monaten
0:44
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This is the best sex scene in the history of motion pictures.
βόρειος βαρόνος48,276 Aufrufe • vor 9 Monaten

This is a leader of men. A man of great power. He is untamed; Pictish blood runs through his veins. The lintel of his kitchen door is adorned with large fasces. Under his command, they have one mission: to cook the perfect lobster ravioli. You will never understand.
βόρειος βαρόνος102,026 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

I thought that they were wearing balaclavas…the absolute state of Basque nationalism.
βόρειος βαρύς127,511 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren