Why do all young black people act like this all the time now?
Even the middle class ones.
Any explanation?
>>135483741
Well, you are a nigger, so why don't you answer the question?
>cultural marxism
Because it's part of their thing to freak out at everything.
Middleclass nigs also do it because they want to fit in with the lower class nigs. You could have one that only has white friends and he'll turn into that as soon as other nigs are around just to fit in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQ06n3TXwzM&list=PLwGDlMXf_ihtsIABBnnjcg4NTCEIs2wAY&index=4
Redpill me on this.
>>135483666
Satan speaks
>>135483666
i am part german (less than 50%, but definitely a large part of my ancestry). there's no fucking excuse. i am ashamed of them. not because "muh holocaust". not because of any of the points you cite before that. because of the current situation. they're fuck-ups. they're too stupid to stand up for themselves and they react with anger and violence at the people who tell them to do so. i hate them. i normally don't tell people i'm "german" and just say i'm western european. the germans are the worst country of all of them there. they suck huge dicks and they're cucks. i CANNOT defend them
>>135483666
>top one
Rome fell because catholicism made it degenerate, just like in the modern era, massive immigration is a symptom of a deeper problem in the society which is no longer able to defend or support itself.
>second one
Crusaders came from all over Christendom, not just Germany. The sack of Constantinople wasn't even led by Germans.
>third one
Atrocities committed between Christian offshoots is the norm, not the exception. Catharism and various other offshoots were crushed, Orthodox and Catholic Christians raped and murdered each other. The size of the conflict between Catholics and Protestants was bigger, yes, but it was also to be expected.
>WW1
I agree with this one at least
>ww2
This one is just dumb, Prussia is Germanic, Hitler wanted a united Germany. Not exactly "dubious." You're also blaming Hitler for the Eastern Bloc, but if the Wiemar republic did not become Nazi Germany, Stalin's prepared invasion of Europe would've pushed all the way through to Iberia and all of Europe would've fallen to communism while American soma drinkers of the era became evermore complacent. Nazi Germany' war against Russia aside, the American occupation of West Germany alone halted the Soviet advance.
>last one
Every leader in Europe is in bed with the international Jewry at this point except for the countries refusing refugees. It's not exclusively Merkel doing this, you're just blaming her because Germany is an economic powerhouse in comparison to the other European countries, so with the exception of France none of the other countries have a real presence as the "face of the EU"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMOllAKpvek
>FUCKING BASED
kek
I hope he knows he's gotta go as well
>>135483565
what the niggly niggerton is going on here
>>135483679
I almost wish he was preaching about killing us. I feel like talking to this kid would resemble this scene from the classic, Air Bud.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2fkzL8pauM
should the US have the death penalty for illegal border crossing? you can deport these parasites and by the end of the week they can be back here like nothing ever happened. i've heard stories of beaners getting picked up by immigration after they get off work, only to be back in time for their shift the next day.
the only way to stem the flow, it seems to me, is to execute these pieces of shit when they come across, and let them know we mean business. otherwise THEY WILL CONTINUE TO DESTROY OUR NATION FROM THE INSIDE OUT AND THERE IS NOTHING ANYONE CAN DO ABOUT IT
sorry if it's harsh but there's not any other way when they literally just laugh at the idea of "immigration officials"
>>135483458
Obvious question is obvious
Pedophilia isnt real
All kids do that. I used to as well. Biting foam is normal.
>>135483528
Gaaay
Why languish in degeneracy when you can be cleansed by the blood of Jesus?
https://youtu.be/RrjgePKgYUc
>>135483430
Holy vocal fry Batman!
>>135483546
Their thought leaders:
Amazing Atheist.
Sargon of Akkad
ShoeOnHead
Jeff Holiday
Their Tranny:
Blair White
Their Hitman:
Cuck and Tea
They portray themselves as pseudo-intellectuals, but bully and harass people because they are not cool enough or have enough subs to be their friend (Crazy Hair) or work to destroy the lives of those they disagree with (Rage After Storm).
Tell me again, why does /pol/ support these guys?
>>135483365
all of pol supports them sure ok
>>135483365
/Pol/ worships the skeptic community for the same reason most secretly wish to be blacked
I'll let you figure out the why.
>>135483365
most of us don't
only newfags and redditors think the sceptic community makes good content
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XC4vIBZkRSk
>>135483188
Keked and checked.
>>135483188
Soon the Sonic fans will start seeing past the bullshit of the far left too.
I am 100% "sicilian." Whatever that means. What am I? I gather that I am apparently am not white. But I am smart and extremely good looking. I feel like all the various peoples who occupied Sicily and raped our nuns over the years has produced a top-tier organism through genetic diversity. Am I wrong. Besides that, what am I?
>>135483153
100% BLACKED
>>135483153
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3yon2GyoiM
>>135483394
As President Trump and congressional Republicans ponder big tax cuts to boost the U.S. economy, Kansas has become a cautionary tale.
>Prodded by Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican, Kansas embarked on a major tax overhaul in 2012, reducing the top income tax rate from 6.45 percent to 4.9 percent and eliminating income tax on some businesses altogether.
>Convinced they could turn the state into a heartland magnet for businesses seeking to flee high-tax states on the coasts, Republican lawmakers instead punched a huge hole in their budget. Facing mounting bills and shrinking revenue, the Legislature last month defied Mr. Brownback’s veto and moved to reverse some of its cuts.
>Whether the Kansas experiment is a referendum on conservative, low-tax policies is an open question. Obsession with tax rates often obscures other factors in businesses’ decision-making, such as the availability of a good workforce, quality of life for employees, and proximity to airports and other infrastructure, analysts say.
>“You can’t just have the tax issue in isolation,” said Richard C. Auxier, a tax policy researcher at the Urban Institute. “There’s no clear link between tax cuts and growth.”
>With the next big round of gubernatorial elections looming next year, debates over competitiveness and supply-side tax policy are likely to heat up.
>At the national level, the Trump administration is counting on a massive tax rate cut to pay for itself in the long run through accelerated economic growth. Mr. Brownback’s office is rejecting complaints by liberals and centrist Republicans in the Legislature that the tax cuts did not attract enough business to the state to pay for themselves.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/jul/3/kansas-tax-cut-failure-an-economic-warning-to-repu/
>“In efforts to make Kansas the best state in America to raise a family and grow a business, Gov. Brownback cut income taxes for all working Kansans and completely lifted the income tax burden from small businesses. It worked,” said communications director Melika Willoughby. “Kansas set a record for new businesses formed every year since the tax cuts, and the state’s unemployment rate is under 4 percent — the lowest it’s been in over 16 years.”
>Kansas is hardly the only state facing a budget impasse. Deep-blue Illinois is struggling with its own tax-and-spending problems, in part a legacy of generous pension promises to state workers that the state cannot meet.
>But Mr. Brownback’s critics say overall growth and job creation lagged behind the national average and even behind other Midwestern states despite the tax cuts in 2012 and 2013.
>At the same time, the state was facing an estimated $900 million budget deficit over the next two years despite a series of spending cuts. The state Supreme Court ordered the state government to increase funding for lagging public schools by $293 million over the next two years.
>It’s hard to celebrate because Kansas is in such shambles,” state Rep. Melissa Rooker, a Republican from Kansas City suburb of Fairway, told The Wichita Eagle after the June vote to override Mr. Brownback’s veto of tax hikes. “The magnitude of the problems that we have to correct is so great.”
>Adam Michel, a tax policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said Kansas’ problem wasn’t the tax cut but how the state handled it. He said eliminating taxes for some corporations created an incentive for businesses to “recharacterize” income, which created an unsustainable financial picture.
>“Their reform wasn’t designed properly,” Mr. Michel said.
>Other commentators haven’t been so kind. William G. Gale, an economist and senior fellow at the left-leaning Brookings Institution, noted that Mr. Brownback in 2012 promised that the tax cuts would represent “a shot of adrenaline in the heart of the Kansas economy.”
>Mr. Gale wrote in a blog post last month: “While the tax cut turned into a debacle, there is a potential silver lining: three clear messages for policymakers on federal tax reform. First, tax cuts won’t boost growth. Second, special tax rates for businesses will surely generate tax sheltering and revenue losses, but will not produce much new business activity. And third, most important, when Americans see what their tax dollars buy, they choose higher revenues and more government spending over lower taxes and draconian program cuts.”
>Tax cuts and business decisions
>Done right, however, tax cuts can draw businesses to states, Mr. Michel argued.
>“We see in large, aggregate data that tax cuts would affect a company’s decision,” Mr. Michel said. “If you’re going to build a factory in a low-tax state versus a high-tax state, you’re going to pick the lower-tax state. It’s not always the case that the company leaves a high-tax state, but their next factory or venture, the lower tax rate will be a factor.”
>General Electric Co., the technology conglomerate, faced such a choice.
>GE officials warned Connecticut Gov. Dan Malloy in 2014 that the state’s business tax was already high and the company would consider moving if it was raised.
>Mr. Malloy, a Democrat, promised he wouldn’t raise the tax. After winning his re-election bid in 2014, he announced $750 million in new business taxes. Massachusetts lawmakers swept in to offer GE $25 million in property tax breaks and $120 million in grants toward public works.
>GE broke ground on its new headquarters in Boston this year. Boston offered more than tax relief, though.
>GE Chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt cited the region’s concentration of high-quality universities, Massachusetts’ commitment to research and development, and the state’s tech-savvy workforce.
>“Boston was selected after a careful evaluation of the business ecosystem, talent, long-term costs, quality of life for employees, connections with the world and proximity to other important company assets,” Mr. Immelt said in the press release announcing the move.
>In a study of the move last year, Manhattan Institute fellow Aaron Renn said Boston has the right combination of workforce availability, accessibility and growth potential that draws companies to the area. With the right incentives, including tax breaks, companies can be enticed to move to such states.
>It’s all about finding a mix that fits a company, analysts said. Arizona and Florida have some of the lowest corporate tax rates in the nation, but they also have some of the lowest high school graduation rates in the country.
>Wisconsin might have higher graduation rates, but its population migration continues to be net negative — meaning more people are moving out of than into the state.
>Chris Edwards, an analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute warns that states can make only marginal changes because the federal government represents such large parts of their economies.
>“State governments follow the national government,” he said. “The federal government is so much bigger and overwhelms what states can do.”
>Amid global competition for businesses, there is only so much one state can do to affect outcomes, analysts said, and tax policy is just a small part of that.
>“The federal government dominates everything states do,” Mr. Edwards said. “The federal government is so much bigger and overwhelms what states can do.”
https://twitter.com/JulianAssange/status/891224966749982720
Historical Context:
7 Days in May
The Movie That JFK Wanted Made, But Didn't Live to See
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWO-XnAwGrA
http://blogs.weta.org/boundarystones/2014/05/13/movie-jfk-wanted-made-didnt-live-see
bumppp
Ok fellow Americans where are you niggers from and why is your state better than the other 49
Northern Michigan here
Fuck detroit and fuck flint and fuck niggers
>>135482591
Massachusetts
BTFO the Bongs once, and we will do it again you tea-niggers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_FwBZ6sdTY
>>135482591
nuke NYC pls
Do women really have souls?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzyRs1jcD9A
>>135482479
if it exists women certainly don't have it
They are certainly incapable of love outside their family and children.
They can throw anyone to the side of the road like a piece of trash on a whim.
>>135482479
news flash
no one has a soul
Do your parents love you?
Use this map to find out!
https://www.oswaldmosley.com/an-outline-of-mosleys-ideas/
Will give mercy bump so I can read this first
>>135482280
Your OP is bad and you should feel bad. Interesting read
>Europe One Nation – Mosley advocated the policy of Europe One Nation stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. This self-sufficient area would contain all the raw materials, food, technology and manufacturing capacity it needs to be free of chaotic world markets and exploitation by global finance. Only by adopting a leading role in what will become the most powerful civilisation the world has seen can we hope to free Britain and Europe from subordination to the major power blocs of America, China, India, the EU. This is no time to become a small country. The present European Union is corrupt, bureaucratic and unaccountable. It should be replaced by a United Europe that speaks with one voice on foreign policy, defence and essential economics – and leaves everything else to the autonomous choice of its member states.
His view of what is a fascist European Union would be interesting to be expanded upon a single paragraph.
>>135482280
2/?
>That money is simply a means of exchange for work done – it is not a commodity to be traded or gambled on the world’s stock markets at the expense of the nation and its people. A culture that promotes the acquisition of money without the physical / intellectual effort to earn it is morally wrong. Mosley sought a ban on financial wealth being passed on to more than one generation. Both central and local banking must be drastically reformed – Real investment is too important to be left to bankers driven by the size of their monthly bonuses: Government must have stronger controls over the money supply and the regulation of banking procedure. The Central Banking system must be removed from control by a handful of individuals, and placed under the control of government, because without control over the nations money and its supply all government is powerless. Banking must be viewed as a service to the community – not an opportunity for gangster bankers to get rich quick.
I like this view of a labor backed currency, but wonder if it could survive the advent of mass production and later automation