Is anyone interested in a /pol/ book club?
We could pick a book a week and discuss it in it's own thread.
I just started The Chief Culprit - Viktor Suvorov (2008) today. It's about a russian intelligence officer writing on the reality of the war between natsoc germany and russia. Why it really happened, how it really went down, etc.
I've only read the first 30 pages but considering what would be a boring'ish topic, it's a very easy read and less than 350 pages total. Shouldn't take a few days to read.
If anyone is interested in discussing this book next week after we've had time to read it, let me know. I'll probably be done with it by this Friday.
This is a great book. I think it adds a great deal of proof that Stalin would have attacked Germany no matter what and that Hitler had no choice but to attack Russia.
The main thrust of the book is the detailed study of the type of armaments that Stalin funded and the positioning of these. They were clearly offensive weapons and they were forward based towards Germany. The book is well worth reading.
Progress - consisting of technological, economic and moral/social growth - is an illusion. Its priests fervently cling to the idea that material prosperity brings enjoyment and happiness, even though history has shown that only material want and a life of struggle lead to a meaningful existence. In other words, material prosperity doesn't bring about anything apart from misery.
Democracy empowers selfishness. Any political system based on desire is fundamentally flawed.
Christianity's Criminal History by Karlheinz Deschner (abridged translation of volumes 1-3)
"The present book is an abridged translation of some chapters of the first three volumes of Karlheinz Deschner’s ten volume Kriminalgeschichte des Christentums (criminal history of Christianity).
The original volumes in German and also in the Spanish translation that I have been using contain thousands of endnotes, omitted here.
This preliminary translation is only the first step for a more formal translation of Deschner’s magnum opus."
No, just the PDF but you can convert it to any e-book format for example with https://calibre-ebook.com/download
I found it in German on archive.org
https://archive.org/details/KriminalgeschichteDesChristentums_201808/page/n0
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