12 Comments

World War III Fatigue

You may be suffering from WWIII fatigue if:

  • You don’t care at all about Ukraine
  • You care even less about Cocaine Clown
  • You care not at all about “shit my pants” Bidet, nominal prez of Clown World
  • You don’t care what pretty much any Western government official puppet/politician/clown says
  • You don’t care what any of the news channels and newspapers say
  • You hope everyone involved in the covid scam, everyone officially representing the WHO and UN and WEF dies from a very specific bio-engineered flesh-eating bacteria that starts in their anus and slowly eats them to death from the inside, without cure and specific to them and only them.
  • You are starting to realise that literally EVERYTHING on the TV and cinema and radio and newspapers is either a lie or a waste of time and so is a majority of stuff on the internet.
  • You want to unplug from Clown World in the worst way but are trapped by, variously:
    • Your own laziness
    • Your own lack of funds
    • Your own lack of skill/ability
    • Your own lack of supportive community

Do not despair, friend, there is a cure, and yes, it IS to unplug from Clown World.

Take baby steps.

In order of importance:

  • Try to get the best piece of land you can for the best price you can. If you don’t have the money think about crowdfunding it with your friends, or getting investors based on very clear and specific goals you can provide them (you build their house on it too, whatever) legalise it in writing and make it happen. Save money, convert things you don’t really need into cash for this.
  • Between trying to get the best land possible and getting something good enough faster, go for good enough.
  • Build on your land and be sure you CAN build on it before you buy. Even if it’s bare land, make sure local laws allow you to build and begin. It doesn’t need to be huge, build a small home that can house a family of four. Which, in a pinch, can be pretty tiny. Design with future expansion already in mind. One way is to design the dream home, the cut it back to bare essential spaces which can be converted to other spaces later.
  • Save as much as you can but also try to have tangible assets in things that can be converted to money even when money collapses. Land, gold, certain types of equipment, and so on.
  • Build up a knowledge library made of dead tree stuff (paper) not digital books.
  • Buy and train in the use of firearms that are legal in your area.
  • Learn new skills every day, every week, every month, every year. Practical things like building a greenhouse, planting food crops, carpentry, welding, metal casting parts, brick-laying, foundation building.
  • Find ways to generate electricity that do not need you to be hooked up to the grid and begin to implement them in your off-grid land/dwelling.
  • Invest in some old decent text books for home schooling.
  • Get married.
  • Have children.
  • Raise them.

Sounds like a lot? It is.

What else you gonna do that matters?

    12 Responses to “World War III Fatigue”

    1. realwesterner says:

      Homesteading is a cure for quite a bit…clown world fatigue included.

    2. Joe says:

      Saw these done:
      1) Build as big a main house as can be afforded, leave part of interior unfinished, just open, unfinished space. Building code may require it not be accessible so it will have to be “walled off” or designed as “open floor plan common area space” (family room, game room with pool table, etc. but this will require finished walls and electric per codes. Money can be saved by surface mounting the electric (think WireMold, etc.)) . As future budget allows (and family grows) frame in and build bedrooms / bathrooms there. PLAN PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL CAPACITY TO ALLOW EASY ADDITION OF THAT SPACE TO UTILITY LOAD. Plumbing will be the most difficult and require the most “future prep” consideration during initial design, esp. DWV (drain, waste, vent).

      2) As space need increases, build slab on grade addition(s) connected to main house with 4-8 ft “enclosed hallways”. Critical that design / construction of main house must accommodate this from initial design stage.

    3. […] wrote about World War III Fatigue and it was well received. Now let us look at the more pertinent problem, because it directly […]

    4. CPL Antero Rokka says:

      First step: get right with God, the Creator of all Creation.

      Second step: hone that mental thought process: “I WILL WIN!”

      Third step: get in shape and harden up.

      Fourth: all the rest….

      • G says:

        Yup. And the steps can be run in parallel, no need to go protestant-sequential. Hone your mind by working your ass off and praying hard when you feel like giving up (but don’t). And do sit ups, push-ups and squats every day when you can.

    5. an. on. says:

      yeah, that lack of funds bit is the showstopper for i’d imagine most folks who would ever even be reading this! finding a decent piece of unrestricted (and not wholly useless) land, and building the basics on it, thats already something in the neighborhood of half a mil on either side of the atlantic anymore. more in many regions. For an ordinary person, there is no category of frugal which will yield that kind of stash in a whole lifetime of working and saving anymore.
      dunno what real solution there is to this problem. one suspects that some years down the line holding property titles issued by the current system are going to be worth very little, direct possession will matter most of all.
      This doesnt make it any easier in the many areas where land without making serious improvements, is marginally productive at best.. but making those improvements on land you don’t own or are squatting on is almost out of the question, while waiting til it all goes down the toilet to begin is way too late. again, no good solution. certainly there are richer people who are already thinking about offering serfdom as the answer.

      • G says:

        I don’t know where you live, but you are absolutely wrong on the affordability.
        This guy

        https://youtube.com/@MartijnDoolaard

        bought his property in Northern Italy (which is far more expensive than central or southern Italy) for 29k euro.

        You can pick up decent land all over Europe, for less than that in Eastern Europe and even Italy, Spain etc. there is no house/land tax to speak of in most of Europe. The US is a crazy place where you buy a piece of land or property then you pay absurd money on it yearly, and that alone would already be enough of a reason for me to avoid it, but even so there is plenty of available land. And the rest of the world is BIG. So think outside the box. I have never had half a million and I now own 5 hectares and a decent sized house with 2 chalets. So unless you plan to “rough it” in the Hamptons, I have no idea what you are talking about. I am fairly sure with 30k you can get yourself a little plot in the middle of nowhere where you can build yourself a cabin and have a decent life hunting and growing food.
        And again, if you have any marketable skills, 30k can be set aside in a year or two of hard hard graft and scrimping and saving every penny.

        Read the four part series on this I wrote, and/or read the RPG game I wrote that essentially explains how any class of person, from single and poor to wealthy with kids or not wealthy with kids can still make a start on being safe down the line.

    6. an.on. says:

      try greece for size. upside down and backwards in every way.

      [so? That’s the point. Pre-collapsed societies are best]

      likewise in france one can occasionally find a decent parcel, probably more so than italy even.. and okay, elsewhere in europe, you might find some land cheap sometimes – you might also wait half a lifetime before you come across that deal and the s has htf while you’re still standing around waiting.

      [absolute bullshit. There are plenty of deals like that even ONLINE. So get off your ass and stop whining! There are even better deals if you spend some time on the ground and get to know the locals etc]

      and then, in most EU countries doing almost anything that you’d consider part and parcel of living off-grid etc is flat out prohibited or else involves an endless stream of slow and costly permits to the point where it’s effectively forbidden.

      [Again, simply not true. You just need to check what you can do first, as in build your own house or not, and if there is one already on, nothing prevents you from setting up solar panels and going off grid. Each country has its own rules but most of Europe is fairly tractable. Italy is probably one of the worst and you still can do most things here.]

      greece is perhaps even more psycho than most of the rest of the eu, where ‘development’ is almost entirely restricted to big dollar projects from people with political connections. But otherwise? it is illegal to even cut a branch from a tree, much less cut down a tree, in greece.

      [I’m no expert on Greece, but from what I saw of it, people do pretty much what they want. It might not be “officially sanctioned” but it’s unlikely to get pulled up. Admittedly this is a mentality most Anglos can’t deal with, but ask any Greek if they actually pay all their taxes or follow the building rules. Dream on.]

      only a few ‘cultivated’ species are legal to trim or cut, which of course also means firewood unless youre limiting yourself to deadfall which in this environment of sparse scrubland is not a whole lot. it’s illegal to put a fence around your property without a permit. it’s illegal to dig a well without a permit, or to even _own_ a well that’s not ‘registered’.

      [again, if that’s the actual case, I sure didn’t see it on my brief visit to Greece, but even if that were so, Europe is big. Pick another country]

      Even then having that well it’s illegal to draw water from it without a different permit! land ownership has been scattered into zillions of tiny plots for millennia so you are almost never going to find more than, even in a rare case, half an acre or so.. partly because it’s also illegal to build on any plot smaller than an acre, so anything that hits that magic level immediately is being sold for ‘development plot’ prices and not ‘useless land’ prices. oh, and because of every decade or so the government slapping absurd new demands on people to effectively keep their property (i.e. you must re-register your property in this new registry by the end of the year or else it’s automatically reverted to the state.. but to register it, you must bring it into compliance with all these new rules, good luck getting that all done in the next year even if you can afford it!), perhaps the majority of the land in the country is in legal limbo- not transferrable, etc. that even further constricts supply.
      i took a quick look at that fellow’s videos. pretty much everything that he does in those videos would require a permit in greece.. to the point where some people far enough out in the boonies working on something thats not likely to be visible from the air (they do buy aerial imagery to go ‘fine fishing’) will just do it without the permits and run the risk.. anywhere near any neighbors and the likelihood of being ratted out is enormous.

      [yeah… I am getting the sense you may be “learning” this from the internet. Do you actually live in Greece? I assure you no Greek is in legal compliance with 99% of any laws in Greece]

      beyond that, actually cultivating the ground? most crops are controlled in the sense that if they find you planting especially any large area (typically 1000m2, a quarter acre or 1/10 hectare is the limit) with something they will demand that you be a ‘registered farmer’ (which involves also paying intot he farmer’s social security fund, and having a vat number, and doing quarterly vat submissions, and if youre just a homesteader who _doesnt_ have much or any such turnaround prepare to be audited just on the suspicion that you’re _not_ cutting invoices, and so on) or else they send bulldozers to dig it up.

      [never heard of any Greeks getting their plots dug up. Again, I think you’re theorising off the internet. Even if not, so don’t pick Greece. You can plant whatever you want in most of Europe and certainly in Italy.]

      oh, and if there’s any tourist activity in the area (most of the country anymore) then dont try to do anything like say put up a solar panel or a solar water heater (theoretically with another permit but in practice these are never granted) because they spoil the view for tourists!
      oh, and supposing you do manage to do some rogue gardening under the radar. Some herder who comes in and grazes it all , you think you have any recourse to even get him to pay for the damage? think again! he has a right to graze your land, you didnt fence it did you? oh, wait, you did, but without a permit? better just keep your mouth shut. you did pay the money and wait a year or two for the permit to fence it? do you have reciepts proving you paid VAT for the fencing and its installation? what, you installed it yourself? you didn’t pay labor social security? that was a contractor’s job, are you a contractor?
      it’s all at the whim of whatever bureacrat feels like busting your balls. bribes dont work very well because it’s all tied in to centralized systems and the bribes have to go pretty high up the totem pole to hit the target – hence only big projects being able to afford that.

      [yeah… and now I am sure you haven’t got a clue. You’re just going by what the theory is. The practice in Greece is quite different. Because there is simply not even the manpower to enforce 1/10 of the stuff you said. And again… so don’t go to Greece]

      anyhow i could continue in this vein pretty much all day. greece is surrealistic in how fucked up it is, none of which is visible to a tourist just passing through for a week or two. if this wasnt one’s home for thousands of years and one wasn’t a citizen, i would highly recommend never coming here and certainly never living here. i did manage, through working much of my life up in western europe, to save enough to buy all of three acres – scattered across eleven different parcels – none of which have a water source (one has a well, which i had to pay 1500 bucks to register, which is also dry most years anyway) so theyre damn close to useless, less than half have road access, and a small house in our family’s village, which cost a fortune to renovate legally – nothing extravagant here, it’s all of 800 square feet and again everything that comes in and goes out has to be hauled by hand up and down steps to get anywhere near a road.
      now as for that chap in italy with his stone hut- hope he isnt trying to keep any hard-money savings for a rainy day!
      Icing on the cake was after working up in the richer NW for a decade and a half, saving every penny, finally deciding, ok, whatever ive accomplished land and house wise is as good as im gonna manage before tshtf so time to relocate to out in the boonies for good.. And bring the hard money savings down with me finally.

      [ok… I stand corrected, you are not a theorist! You’re dumb. You knew all that before going in (as a foreigner, which makes a difference) and you STILL went and did it? There I mean? Why?]

      most back and forth was by car(and ship) just because this is more civilized than going through the ordeal of flying anymore.
      Though ive crossed the CH/IT border dozens and dozens of times over the years with hardly so much as a hello from anybody at the border on either side – often theres not even anyone there – this time, the one time my car was full of important documents and a small fortune of a life’s savings in hard metal… it was all taken from me, usa-asset-forfeiture style. never mind that it is specifically exempt in europe from vat and customs duty, nevermind that in italy specifically there are presidential directives clarifying that to rule that such things are not to be touched.. the realiyt in italy is that everything is at the diescretion of the officers in charge.

      [It is, and you can have a bad day, but you usually get your stuff back if you actually take the time to do things properly. Which would be discouraged. Also, how the officer treats you often has to do with how you react and/or who you are. Sucks? Sure. But part of ANY such trip is knowing your risks. If you had previous metals they need to be below a certain quantity etc. i have flown with precious metals and I made sure I was below the limit with them. So it’s not true there are no limits. Sounds to me like you just don’t research things before jumping in feet first. Of course you can’t research everything and yes you will take hits here and there, but at least do the basics man!]

      it being the country of the mafia, those who actually do have mafia connections i’m sure sail right on through.

      [you watch too much TV. No self respecting mafia connected guy would travel with gold/silver by car! And no, the average wop here is not buddies with Don Corleone. And if you try to apply Limey/Yankee ways to a wop cop… yeah… good luck to ya!]

      any ordinary peons who dare to own anything without such connections are reminded that they’re peasants and ought not even be owning anything of value. cha ching, thanks, now gtfo of here!
      two years and a shitload of money spent on lawyers has only confirmed that it aint ever coming back.

      [well, then, I can only assume you fucked up and didn’t do any research and went waaaay over the legal limits]

      no chance in hell of saving up such a pile again now.
      oh, and did we mention that in most of europe, owning any kind of weapon is forbidden without hard to get and hard to keep permits?

      [Not hard to get at all unless you have a criminal record. And not hard to keep if you don’t commit violent crimes. You literally just need to go through the steps. But we are getting the vibe of how much you tend to half-ass the paperwork and the research, so… yeah, for you it may be hard. Also, many countries require you to have citizenship]

      greece one of the worst of all? anything with a rifled barrel is flat out prohibited- the permits for thsoe are de facto impossible to get, and one must essentially reapply for the permit over and over every three years or else lose it. Only shotguns are allowed (smoothbore of course, no ‘rifled shotguns’ like you gind in the states) and there, again, only with a permit and registration, which again, must be renewed every ten years.

      [so? Renew it. It’s not rocket science buddy.]

      Ammunition for rifled barrel weapons is prohibited as well, unless one has a magic permit for such a weapon, and even then, only 500 rounds at a time, and to buy more, you have to hand the casings over to the police for them to count, to get a ‘certificate of destruction’ for them, before you can apply , then, to the police, for another permit to purchase more ammo!

      [again, I think you’re making it worse than it is. There is no magic to it. You do have to follow the rules and fill in some paperwork. And AGAIN, if Greece really is so shit, why pick that place? Go to Hungary, or Italy, or Spain, etc.]

      talking to people who have done this, the turnaround time for that procedure is anywhere between three and nine months.
      so all you have at best is a shotgun which you must ask for permission to own (and phsyically take down to the police station for verification) every ten years, and if you live out in the boonies or on an island, and the only pathologist or psychiatrist (you need papers from both of them as well to renew the permit) is on the mainland, or if the police station that has anyone ‘qualified’ to handle registration of a weapon, is elsewhere, well, youll be paying more than the price of that piece every time you re-register it!

      [Again, look at your bellyaching! Hahhaha Oh mah Gawd! You need to show the thing once every ten years! Cry me a river. And yes, you need two doc visits here too. Takes about 5 minutes each. So, what?!?]

      nevermind that even using your bare hands or a rock or a stick, self-defense is not considered a legal right in greek law. the robber has more legal rights than you do.

      [So? That’s everywhere the same now.]

      What you see being turned upside down now in the US, has already been accomlished in greece years back.
      Conclusions: the only viable professions/lifestyles in greece are gangster, gypsy, homeless squatter, government employee, or tourist.

      [so why did you pick Greece? Go on, I am actually curious now]

      one final comment: relocating to a country where you’re not already well-immersed in the language, culture, and society, right as the shit is hitting the fan, will put you in an extremely precarious position when things do go pear-shaped.

      [Sure. Especially in a big city. In a tiny village? Not as much, but yeah, generally the case. Luckily, most European people are fairly civilised and out in a remote little village people are generally helpful. But overall, I advocate you stick to your own or close enough. All the people that came here and lived here for a time or even moved here that are foreigners are well treated, well integrated and not done in by the locals. I doubt Greece is any different as I found the average Greek to be more humane than most and the ones in tiny villages like people in tiny villages all over Europe. Generally friendly and helpful as well as generous.]

      at the very least being in a country where you’re not a citizen, unless you’re planning on living entirely invisibly (in which case you aint owning property etc anyway, so even greece would be fine for you then) is going to paint a huge target on you when people get hungry and desperate and finally figure out how to get tribal again. so a brit in northern italy? he might be their pet tourist while the going is good, but he’ll be on the menu when things head south.

      [Brits for the most part should stick to norther countries. They are not mentally suited to non protestant countries. Binary thinking basically makes you a functional retard in Catholic countries. Or African ones for that matter, though there you MIGHT have got away with being the magic white man 30 years ago. Today? Not so much.]

      anyone in the US , say your thanks to god every single day that you are where you are!

      [I wouldn’t move to the US if you paid me a million dollars to do so.]

      [All you have demonstrated here is that you made terrible decisions based on no or half-assed research and it bit you in the ass and are now forever bitter about it. I have personally known other Brits that have this very unhealthy attitude too. On various topics, from the unfairness of the legal system (any 5 year old dago, spic or Greek, laughs at the concept Anglos have that the law is to help people) to the nastiness of women (I been divorced twice and I have never been bitter at women in general, not so anglos) or the loss of earnings due to some bad deal they did. Again, I put it down to the simplistic mindset of Protestantism which permeates your cultures. Catholics are far more in tune with reality. So while we don’t get bitter at women for acting as women, or predatory governments for doing what they do, we are AWARE of the risks we take going in. And if it goes badly… eh… tomorrow is another day. I really hope you can get over your bitterness at life. It’s poison.]

    7. an.on. says:

      [Oh good! How did I know the gamma sperg would send another way of text? It’s like I am telepathic I tell ya! And will it end here? No, ladies and gents, no it will not.]

      the only reason i am in greece is because i am greek. while i’ve lived and worked in other countries i solidly believe that being a stranger in a strange land when things get weird will be even worse than being broke in your own country and society. It might surprise you but , no, i was not exaggerating, not taking from the internet any of what i said. a cousin of mine had planted a vineyard about 8 years ago. about a year and a half later a bulldozer from the municipality showed up to uproot it because he wasnt a ‘registered vinegrower’ and he had a vineyard over 1000 sq meters. they were going to bulldoze the whole thing! in the end pulling on every connection he could he managed to get them to only bulldoze it down to under 1000 sq m… that’s for real.
      no solar panels etc? thats also for real, if where you live happens to have been designated a ‘traditional settlement’ which is almost any touristy area which is half the country… of course some developer can build a huge resort hotel with swimming pools etc, (so can you if youve got millions to spend and a friend in government) but panels on the roof? not unless you can prove (using government documents, not ‘anglo’ type proof like, say photographs with attestable chronology, or something) that you had it there since before the ban went in place in ’12!
      the restrictions on firearms and ammo? not at all exaggerating.

      [ok, fair enough, let me take you at your word. My question then is: Why on Earth pick Greece?!? I sure as hell would not be in Italy if that is how things worked here. I’d rather take my chances in some bush zone in Africa or South America. And actually South America was my original first place I was going to look into and pivoted to Italy only as a result of personal issues that made it more viable. And if push came to shove and I had to pick some place in Europe I’d try Hungary or some other place regardless of language]

      the adventure with getting robbed in italy? yes, i was monumentally stupid. like i said id driven that route travelling back and forth dozens and dozens of times over the years. Every last ounce i even had receipts and 20+ years of tax declarations with me in the car. I was naive, yes. i thought worst case, in greece, some official might want a ‘souvenir’ and that would be the worst i’d see, and was prepared to consider that the price of safe transport. ‘over the limit’? there is no ‘limit’.. but unofficially the limit is ‘anything i want to take i can’ for most officials. yes, it was a lot.

      [there IS a limit. I know because I have travelled with Gold and silver and I checked first to make sure.]

      the three acres and tiny ass house i mentioned? total out of pocket on that , doing a lot of the work myself even, over about a decade, was about 300K, not 30.

      [sure, you can also pay 400k for a bridge in Saudi Arabia, but if you are greek, and from Greece, and you spent that kind of money, you probably got very ripped off. And the whole point is to buy a little place out of the way of as much officialdom as you can. In Italy there are plenty of remote little mountain villages where no one will bug you. And if I was in Greece I’d have looked for one of those… assuming I couldn’t move to Hungary instead, since, if Greece is as you say, then there is no way I’d move there]

      I might have been able to get more done quicker and cheaper by foregoing permits etc, but while working on the house and some other projects i had four different times officials sicked on me with wildly imaginary accusations having been levelled by, what amounts to, neighbors who are jealous that anybody tries to accomplish anything and try to pull ’em back down.

      [again, it’s like you are a foreigner in Greece. Are you not aware of this mentality? Did you literally do NO research first?]

      having _had_ covered my ass bureacratically i could send ’em packing all 4 times.

      [good, so you did that right at least]

      only being allowed to cut wood from particular species? again, in greece, the worst enemy after the state itself, is the snitches who live around you.. olive trees are one of the main , and among the few, species which are considered cultivated and thus acceptable to cut or prune, and thats 100% of our firewood. lacking water, my three acres are useless for gardening (and trying dryland field crops so far ive had about a 25% success rate and low yield) but its about half olive trees and so i do at least have wood. Most of the wild trees around here are pin-oak, with some regular oak, some plane trees, and a few others whose english names i dont know. Cutting even a branch from one of those is forbidden, and again, it is your own snoopy neighbors who will rat you out or else hold it over your head as blackmail to get endless favors and freebies out of you.

      [yet AGAIN. Why did you buy a property where neighbours can interfere with your daily life? Did you not select the area you wanted for the correct geographical points as I identified in my 4 part post on winning over clown world?]

      i’ve done most of what could be done in this country and do not think moving to a random other country makes any sense unless one is planning to become a refugee.
      no, visiting greece as a tourist you will not see or get a feel for most of any of this.

      [Obviously. But you said you are Greek, so you should have known all this before starting this project, no?]

      i do see you share the idea that greeks are all scammers and deadbeats.

      [no. Not what I said. As in many Souther European countries, the government makes living here as difficult as possible so a lot of people are reduced to knowingly breaking the law. Something I avoid doing but am aware many people have few options. Taxes are ridiculous in Italy as I assume they are in Greece. But at least we don’t have the kind of land taxes the Americans do, so if you own something outright it’s fairly cheap to keep it going.]

      i’d invite you to try to live here for a few years _and actually be making your living here_ and see what you think then. actual tax revenue collected by the government is as a share of the economy here, bigger than taxes collected in germany.. so if theyre still missing out on even more, then holy fuck the tax levels must be impossible to actually pay! and indeed! in greece the 30K / year you mention as what should be ‘easy’ to accomplish? in greece that level of income already puts you somewhere close to the top 5 percent of the country! the best income i can make here is doing farm and construction labor and the standard day wage for that is sixty bucks- supposing they do actually pay you, which is not always the case. It is entirely possible , especially if one is _not_ in the top 5% or so, to end up in situations where you’re expected to pay over 100% tax. What people end up paying is already
      the last drops squeezed from the stone. again, come live here for a few years as an ordinary person and we’ll see you change your opinion!

      [I don’t need to. As I explained, that is already clearly the case and if you knew that and worked overseas, I struggle to understand why you seem to not have set up some kind of investment/fund that pays you in Greece with all due taxes taken care of that allows you to exist there without starving. Certainly it’s not easy and some unforeseen costs (as I had) can severely impact you, and maybe require you to return working in those foreign lands, but wherever you set up, you should at least have a plan of how you can make it sustainable. In your case, it sounds like the best option might be to sell to one of the 5% and (especially if you are single) move somewhere else.]

      what i want to say here is, no, things are not anywhere near the piece of cake you make it sound like, and some places right next door to you are so batshit upside down crazy you dont believe it even when someone living in the middle of it describes it. Even more, as ive loved to joke many times, allow my fuckups in life to be like the shipwreck looming out of the shoals, a warning to others to avoid running aground on the same mistakes!

      [Certainly, people can learn from mistakes, and without a doubt yours is a cautionary tale, but probably, and mostly, for reasons that were entirely avoidable by you in the first place. Especially since you are greek yourself. It seems to me that you might have greek nationality but are completely unaware of how your own country worked in practical terms and were badly unprepared for the reality. Something a week of research would have highlighted for you.]

      i dont see why youre so negative ont he US, it is an enormous country with more wilderness and wild out in the boonies country than there is total area in western europe, people are armed to the teeth, and they have actual local government, local law enforcement, and local courts, which can be used against them when the globohomo empire infiltrates, but can also be the kernel of resistance and rebirth.

      [Aaaaaaannnndd once again, you prove my point. As I have said plenty of times, IF I was forced to live in the USA I would either be in the ass end of the Appalachians, fighting off the meth-heads and rednecks that don’ like no eduhkatid folks!, or doing the same in a Louisiana or Florida swamp, but as far from actual civilised towns, military bases and officialdom as possible, and even then I would NEVER feel very safe. The USA is without a doubt one of the most oppressive police states I have ever visited. The “freedom” they have is an illusion and they have zero problem coming to kill you if they decide to, with massive force. You have obviously bought into the American fable, which is, precisely, a fable. The average American is practically illiterate, obese, unable to run a hundred yards without keeling over, and about as ready to “rebel” as a fruit-fly on drugs. When and if the government thugs come and collect guns, guess what, the Yanks will give them up en masse. And those that do not comply will be droned dead in hours if not minutes. On top of all that, their food is absolute crap. it is all genetically modified and is practically impossible to eat healthily. Does it potentially have a lot of land and beauty? Sure. Are there some rock-solid Americans that can read and know we don’t live on a flat Earth? For sure. But as whole, that country is absolutely fucked. And while when you get on the wrong end of the government in Europe they may break you financially with whatever excuse, they are unlikely to shoot your dog before they set fire to your house and shoot everyone in it.]

      The only place in europe i know that has anything remotely like that is switzerland.

      [wrong. Again, you seem to have a superficial understanding of things. Switzerland “works/worked” that way while it was essentially three ethnostates in one. It is rapidly becoming diversified, and the response will be Germanic overall. Switzerland has the “advantage” of being as boring as drying paint, which is a genuine benefit, but the cost of living there is astronomical and you can’t buy land for any reasonable price. Once again, maybe some wealthy banker type wants to live near Davos, but I’m not one of them]

      in greece there is no such thing as local government. Yes there are mayors etc but theyre all employees of a central govt ministry and take orders, and get their budget, from the center. Not to mention that only candidates who suck up to allowed parties and are ‘approved’ by the government are even allowed to appear on a ballot, so elections here are almost as pointless as elections were in the ussr.

      [That’s the case in all of Europe. Are you really only realising this now? Are you actually Greek? Greeks, Spaniards, Italians, we all have known this since birth.]

      As a counterexample to prove the rule, the mayor of the island of Tinos, a couple years ago, sided with his fellow citizens in trying to block a huge wind turbine project that was being rammed through by some rich fucks with high up connections. In theory it should have been totally illegal to build so much as an outhouse in a mountainous region already designated as forest as well as a nature preserve.. those rules apply for us peons of course, him being the mayor might easily be used to block something if the center wanted to block it, but in this case, the mayor was arrested along with his fellow citizens and bodily hauled out of the place. so much for local government.

      [I really have no idea why you differentiate between local and central parasites. The odd politician that gets hit by lightning and becomes partially “honest” does not, in any way change the fact that they are a class of parassite that has as the main aim their own enrichment and lording power over others.]

    8. Georgi Dobrev says:

      “You hope everyone involved in the covid scam, everyone officially representing the WHO and UN and WEF dies from a very specific bio-engineered flesh-eating bacteria that starts in their anus and slowly eats them to death from the inside, without cure and specific to them and only them.”

      AND is sexually transmitted. This is going to make their next cocaine fueled gay orgy, that might or might not be a satanic black mass, something to remember.

    9. […] you see that, the inevitable WWIII fatigue sets in even before WWIII appears. As the meme goes: It’s all just so tiresome. And predictable […]

    10. […] regulars here will know, WWIII fatigue is a thing and the remedy is to simply do the things I keep mentioning on this blog, as well as the linked to […]

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