Justsomecicada
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2024
That’s a very generous way to say mass formation psychosis.but also how they could come together in solidarity.
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That’s a very generous way to say mass formation psychosis.but also how they could come together in solidarity.
I am now in a real rabbit hole when it comes to 9/11.Around 9/11 I will always read forums from the day it happened such as SA and Newgrounds even though you cant hear the voices while reading you just know the people typing are both confused and terrified.
edit: found the newgrounds thread. and the SA thread too
I wonder, does anyone think it’s possible these type of anabaptists could have survived until modern day had things gone differently? I’m more inclined to think no but I’m curious to hear you all thinkSpeaking of Christianity, here's Wendigoon covering the cult/Christian sect led by Jan van Leiden
Jack Rackham has also done a video on them. Much shorter and simplifies the cult's whole deal as being proto-Communists.
As is, I sincerely doubt that revolutionary Anabaptists had much hope of enduring beyond the first century of peasant revolts. The fact that they actively revolted against both Catholic and Protestant rulers meant that nobody would tolerate them and worked to suppress them hard, which is why the moderates fled to the Americas. From there, they have only survived so long due to the government not caring to force them to join society until the last century, and at this point they risk falling apart due to their insular nature making them as genetically fucked as Muslims.I wonder, does anyone think it’s possible these type of anabaptists could have survived until modern day had things gone differently? I’m more inclined to think no but I’m curious to hear you all think
That's really only the Old Order Amish and Mennonite communities however. Most Amish and Mennonites and up to date with technology but still adhere to their Anabaptist origins. Also, Amish-made goods are great.As is, I sincerely doubt that revolutionary Anabaptists had much hope of enduring beyond the first century of peasant revolts. The fact that they actively revolted against both Catholic and Protestant rulers meant that nobody would tolerate them and worked to suppress them hard, which is why the moderates fled to the Americas. From there, they have only survived so long due to the government not caring to force them to join society until the last century, and at this point they risk falling apart due to their insular nature making them as genetically fucked as Muslims.
Why is the nun in the first thumbnail looking like she's an Akatsuki member/wearing their drip?Christianstory is a brand new youtube account that will be covering Christian theology and the church.
A lot of museums are falling for this madness of hiding human remains too. It's all done with 'respect' in mind but none of this existed before 2020. The Penn Museum used to showcase this crushed skull of a Babylonian male, shit was totally flat, now they just show a shitty image where it was displayed. They had a few others and I am wondering what they plan to do when the new Egyptian Wing opens up in about a year considering they have one of the most extensive collections of mummies on the East Coast.
As a Native American, a lot of those strict laws, like taking rocks from federally designated lands deemed "Native burial grounds" are used by the feds to essentially shake institutions down for fine money, mafia style.As for archaeology, I've heard a lot of horror stories of some of the people who have graduated and gone into the field I can share. Most of it relates to all the laws surrounding Native American sites and how those are exploited.
I can kind of understand that one, as I have always felt very disturbed when seeing mummies just displayed and thinking about how there is a corpse in there, even if I can't see it directly. That said, the way they "respect" the bodies and bone fragments by reburying them is asinine and actively harmful to the study of those people.A lot of museums are falling for this madness of hiding human remains too. It's all done with 'respect' in mind but none of this existed before 2020. The Penn Museum used to showcase this crushed skull of a Babylonian male, shit was totally flat, now they just show a shitty image where it was displayed. They had a few others and I am wondering what they plan to do when the new Egyptian Wing opens up in about a year considering they have one of the most extensive collections of mummies on the East Coast.
Having people hundreds or thousands of years from now line up and pay money to view my remains would be the coolest thing ever.I can kind of understand that one, as I have always felt very disturbed when seeing mummies just displayed and thinking about how there is a corpse in there, even if I can't see it directly. That said, the way they "respect" the bodies and bone fragments by reburying them is asinine and actively harmful to the study of those people.
Except they don't they just keep the remains in their archives for study (Understandable) which means it is pointless virtue signalling. It all really started around 2023 when you saw articles and statements being published announcing museums new human remain policies. In pretty much every case it was due to the highly unethical acquisition of poor or black human remains for study in the 19th century that ended up in their collections. Most of these remains were never displayed but both because of Floyd and the political leanings of museum leadership, this led to museum after museum jumping on the bandwagon and hiding away every human remain, even if it is a bundle of hair or a toe bone or something.I can kind of understand that one, as I have always felt very disturbed when seeing mummies just displayed and thinking about how there is a corpse in there, even if I can't see it directly. That said, the way they "respect" the bodies and bone fragments by reburying them is asinine and actively harmful to the study of those people.
I consider it a slight saving grace that most of this madness related to museums and the archaeological field are only mainstream in the Anglosphere. The German government still refuses to give everything in the Pergamum Museum back to Iraq and Turkey for example.@Corpun I cannot state how frustrated I am with the archeological repatriation movement, and especially the “joke” about how museums are full of stolen artifacts. What was not a war trophy was often obtained from the ruins of long-extinct civilizations whose descendants are so radically removed from said precursors that giving them said artifacts would be no better than giving them to strangers. Those ruins would not be ruins if there were still people that cared about them, and in the case of Pre-Islamic civilizations it is outright suicidal to hand them over to the modern governments of those regions when iconoclasm is considered a major tenant of their religious law. Shame then that wokeness currently plagues archeology and anthropology in ways that makes Thulean cranks seem reasonable.
These native ironically have done a lot more to hurt the image of native history and to help perpetrate the myth that nothing really happen here before the arrival of the White Man.TLDR: NAGPRA has been abused since its inception by grifting assholes in Native American tribes to hide the history of tribes both extinct and extant. My professor is actually pretty sure in both of the last two cases, the artifacts are probably taken to be sold online, which is a well-known issue with sites like these when tribes do end up involved. And you can't just ignore them because even if NAGPRA doesn't actually apply, a tribe will try and invoke it and turn the whole thing into a protracted legal battle. They have no respect for the archaeological process or the actual sites in most cases and are only in it to abuse what legal powers they actually have instead of fixing their own reservations. This kvetching severely hinders understanding the history of the continent and in many cases tribes are claiming shit that didn't even belong to their ancestors. (See Kennewick Man)
I remember years ago this German museum once had these artifacts from this tribe from Nigeria. And these curators felt a sense of white guilt and wanted to return these "stolen" artifacts to a member of this tribe. They handed them to a guy who was somewhat related to one of their former kings. The curators traveled to Nigeria to where this tribe is located expecting the artifacts to be proudly displayed and only to find out they were sold off by that guy for some drinking money or whatever. Like I remember even the British Museum was somewhat moved by that gesture only forbid any "return of stolen goods" when it was revealed on what happened to those artifacts.I consider it a slight saving grace that most of this madness related to museums and the archaeological field are only mainstream in the Anglosphere. The German government still refuses to give everything in the Pergamum Museum back to Iraq and Turkey for example.
You might be thinking of the Benin Bronzes the British Museum owned. They returned them to the royal family of Benin expecting them to be put on display in a Nigerian Museum, only for them to be put in the private estate of the king, away from public eye. The Germans did return a shit ton of skulls they collected from dead Africans as part of late 19th century Phrenology studies.I remember years ago this German museum once had these artifacts from this tribe from Nigeria. And these curators felt a sense of white guilt and wanted to return these "stolen" artifacts to a member of this tribe. They handed them to a guy who was somewhat related to one of their former kings. The curators traveled to Nigeria to where this tribe is located expecting the artifacts to be proudly displayed and only to find out they were sold off by that guy for some drinking money or whatever. Like I remember even the British Museum was somewhat moved by that gesture only forbid any "return of stolen goods" when it was revealed on what happened to those artifacts.
My professor probably put it best went lecturing on NAGPRA that is is one part wanting to control the narrative of 'We were always here' and one part Natives unable to handle alternative viewpoints. Unfortunately there are many Native Americans who are interested in the deep history of their people and their origins and want that history uncovered, but there are just too many grifters, activists, and assholes eager to abuse NAGPRA to prevent any real discovery. Pretty much all major finds from pre-Columbian Nstive sites happened pre-NAGPRA, and the ones that have been researched since either use heavy oversight from local tribes to avoid controversy or are just too old to be associated with any given tribe.These native ironically have done a lot more to hurt the image of native history and to help perpetrate the myth that nothing really happen here before the arrival of the White Man.
That one guy on SA immediately pegging it as Osama Bin Laden's work even before the towers fell is insane. The "WATCH BUSH START A FUCKING WAR" comment like three replies below it is up there, too.Around 9/11 I will always read forums from the day it happened such as SA and Newgrounds even though you cant hear the voices while reading you just know the people typing are both confused and terrified.
edit: found the newgrounds thread. and the SA thread too
Potential History is still around?