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- Embed this notice@Eiregoat @Terry very interesting!
>the europeans were amazingly conservative with their beliefs. The same stories, beliefs and practices show up everywhere.
I feel the same way when I read about indo-european myths, language, and customs. "Hey, I think like that and I do this!"
>Is that how it works out though?
Yes, it worked like this for 2000 years almost, until the arrival of mass media and jewish control. Christianity was one of the harshest enemies of judaism. Those that rejected the church, social outcasts and degenerates were the first to fraternize with them and go to bat for jewish emancipation!
>I think it would make more sense to teach White children their own history with their own sources of pride and their own heroes rather than feeding them the supremacy myths of a foreign culture from a young age. It's not healthy.
This is one reason I didn't like going to church. Since then, I've learned that for most of history, christianity WAS often that. Sure, there was jesus and some prophets, but they had the european saints like roman soldier St. Martin, St. Patrick and also the (greek) evangelists!
And people had folk heroes, and noblemen and knights, to look up to!