Some thoughts on Hinduism - Based purely on discussions with actual Hindus.

I am disappointed, kiwis.
When somebody opens up a discussion in a polite manner like this, instead of gloating online how their religion is better and his people will replace yours, you should engage with some level of politeness, or at least neutrality if you cannot handle typing one considerate post.
I discovered Hinduism through my mom, she gave me Ramayana to read as a child, later Mahabharata. If you like RPGs and hero journeys, well, you'll like these ancient books too.
When I grew up I discovered a great set of books written by a Romanian fascist and Hindu sympathizer, Mircea Eliade, they're quite famous: History of Religions, but sadly not that well known in the West. The books have large sections for Hinduism, Islam, Christianity and more, about their historical conflicts and development. Eliade himself is a fascinating personality, typical for the European philosopher and scholar, esoteric right wing archetype - he even was an open supporter for the Iron Guard. India and Hinduism were large parts of his vision on mysticism.
Recommend reading all books mentioned.
Streetshitting is a funny stereotype and meme, same as with the world superpower by 2050 or w/e, but if you want nourishment for your mind and smarts, get them books and start ingesting knowledge.
Before anyone dives into the vedic studies, I highly recommend people to read Rene Guenon's "introduction to the Hindu Doctorine", sinceany will go in with a Eurocentric hubris instead of an open mind.
I didn't think it was necessary until actually talking to people about hinduism.
 
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Why read a book and bluepill-indoctrinate yourself on some street shitter religion when you know in advance that it hasn't produced anything of value for the last 3000 years. Indians literally don't do anything except try to infiltrate sites and try to get you to fit into their caste system. That's all Hinduism is, they came up with some bullshit to get ahead and said, oh it's based on name now. Nobody is going to make that system for other people's last names it will always be for themselves in first on the top. That's why they made it, to get ahead, now several millennia later you feign interest in a literal pyramid scheme. This is just another example of "India has a diverse culture" but nobody ever explains what that is or how it makes them better than anyone else. Fuck Hinduism, if it's so great then go migrate to those countries.
 
As a surface level observation yeah, but I also wonder if the multiple arms thing was supposed to represent fast movement instead. I’d ask a pajeet myself but most of them are college educated Brahmins and they don’t exactly like whitey over here.
The explanation is a little more simple. The multiple arms is a demonstration of their power, to perform numerous tasks at once. It's mainly symbolic.
 
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A lot of the responses in this thread demonstrate that whites/the west need a far more rigid caste system than what we have now. If you cannot control your nigger-licious impulses to just shitpost "pajeet pajeet shit poo arms nigger" in what used to be a nominally interesting thread, then frankly you just need to be put in your place and not trusted to do much of anything more except dalit-level social duties, like handling the garbage of your superiors.

Street shitters 1, based white Christkikes 0.
 
And yet even with the extra arms they still haven't done anything in 3 millennia except jerk off with them
India was one of the richest places on Earth for most of its history and under the Mughals came extremely close to an actual Industrial Revolution. I think it ultimately didn't succeed because the financial system needed to create capital for industrialization wasn't there. Islamic banking rules around interest really limit your ability to invest and borrow money.

So the Europeans took the technological lead, especially in finance, and quickly outpaced India in terms of technology and economic power. Even then the British conquest of India was a gradual process that relied more upon divide-and-conquer tactics than military supremacy.

A similar situation happened in Qing China, although they also had self-inflicted problems that set them back. You can compare the Qing to Japan's experience for a similar parallel.
 
India was one of the richest places on Earth for most of its history and under the Mughals came extremely close to an actual Industrial Revolution.
They didn't though, lol

I think it ultimately didn't succeed because the financial system needed to create capital for industrialization wasn't there. Islamic banking rules around interest really limit your ability to invest and borrow money.
Good

So the Europeans took the technological lead, especially in finance, and quickly outpaced India in terms of technology and economic power. Even then the British conquest of India was a gradual process that relied more upon divide-and-conquer tactics than military supremacy.
Yep, that's why we copy them instead of failed brown countries
 
They didn't though, lol
Of course, but were your ancestors part of any kind of Industrial Revolution?

My own just spent their lives mining coal, first in a Galicia and then America. Nothing to do with the Industrial Revolution, just kike slaves back in the Holy Motherland happy to find a place where we'd be treated like human beings.
No complaints there, fuck Muslim savges.
Yep, that's why we copy them instead of failed brown countries
Amazingly Islamic finance fucked them all up and led to widespread poverty. They'd probably welcome us back at this point.
 
Pennsylvania, specifically in the east around Wilkes-Barre.

I wish I could edit those goddamn typos due to phoneposting, they are driving me nuts.
I thought at first you were talking about Galicia in Spain, I knew Basques had settled up there.
Pennsylvania makes sense. Only plurality Polish county in the US is there (Luzerne).
 
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I thought at first you were talking about Galicia in Spain, I knew Basques had settled up there.
Pennsylvania makes sense. Only plurality Polish county in the US is there (Luzerne).
Good old Luzerne County, my dad got his associates' from LCCC back in the day. Our family was from Nanticoke specifically, which was even more heavily Polish than the county itself. It's amazing seeing all those mine tailings and other relics of the anthracite era around the region combined with a nuclear power plant.

The name Galicia is incredibly confusing by itself given the Spanish one is the first one people whose ancestors didn't emigrate from that specific part of Eastern Europe think of. I'm not sure how that region got the name.
 
Never heard of it. Maybe plausible but dubious as Asoka (a warlord which vastly expanded the Indian Empire) famously converted to Hinduism which is supposedly why the subcontinent is predominantly Hindu.
Unless the British were capable of inventing a an entire historiography and fabricating evidence, I doubt that's actually how it went down.
Apologies if this has already been pointed out, but this is wrong. Asoka converted from Hinduism to Buddhism.
 
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