Every man should read to grow and learn. Share good books, and your thoughts.
Two Great American Authors that wrote Redpill books/stories are:
-Ernest Hemingway
-Jack London
Some examples of redpill stories by these authors:
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The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber - Ernest Hemingway
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The Mexican - Ernest Hemingway
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For whom the bell tolls -Ernest Hemingway
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The Sea Wolf - Jack London
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Smoke Bellew - Jack London
- The Wonder of Women - Jack London --> this title sounds simpy/cucked af but its not. Its a story about how a White explorer gets captured by indians and is forced to live among them. The beautiful daughter of the Indian chief falls in love with him and helps him escape but little does she know he has another bitch back home. Whats great about this story is it shows how a woman that is attracted to a man acts and how the same woman acts towards a man she deems "weak" (the author writes how she acted child-like around the man she loved but would suddenly transform into searing hatred around a man she hates for his weakness and simpering attitude).
These stories offer a contrast between what a man SHOULD NOT be (simpering/fearful and weak) to what a man should be (powerful/courageous/focusing on his mission). Its one thing to hear these things in abstract, its totally another to get demonstrations of these things from authors who base their characters on real men and attitudes they have experienced in their lives.
Read MoreJ.K. Rowling Keeps Getting Deals. And Journos CAN'T Deal With It.
Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling keeps getting deals and making money, such as the recently announced Amazon audiobook deal. And journos CAN'T deal, using every opportunity to attack her and fantasize about Warner Bros. taking Harry Potter from her.
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@Victor that book has actually been sitting in my library for a while. I will read it one of these days.
@Chantfire Just men being men. This book + @Typo-MAGAshiv 's recommendation is right up my alley. Gonna read these after I finish "The Courage to be Disliked". The book is nothing like the title. It's wildly different to what you'd assume from that title name.
Written by a Japanese philosopher backed solid with doctoral psychological studies, it goes through an excellent Adlerian philosophy, teleology(the third giant apart from Freud and Jung who often gets overlooked). The first topic is
Trauma doesn't exist People are not driven by past causes. but move towards goals they themselves set
An inclusive teenager who never wants to go out? He's not traumatized by anything. He just wants the attention he's always missed out on from his parents (probably). That is his goal. It's what determines his behaviors. He isn't inclusive due to past traumatic experiences, rather his behavior is driven by other motivations.
And that's only the first chapter. It's definitely reshaped and refined my perspectives on a lot of things.
Read MoreI liked the movie, I never read the book. Sounds like I might like it though. Military service or at least the willingness to perform military service was tied to the vote in ancient democracies. During the republic Rome for example voted in the comitia centuriata -by the original centuries of the Roman army. Every man who could vote belonged to one. The centuries voted in order with the most important ones going first and the least important ones were almost never needed to vote. Originally, if you belonged to the important ones, you had the money to provide full armour, at the bottom end, you just had one weapon. I do hope that one day democracy may return to a model like this. We do not need to elect representatives to vote for us any more -the internet would allow every man to vote as easily as buying something from Ebay.
I liked the book and I'm not surprised discussion of it isn't part of US government school curriculum. When an enemy who seeks your destruction has successfully infiltrated every institution of your society with the help of your disaffected countrymen, and is openly engaged in parasite-izing and subverting that host society to make it more malleable to their exploitation and manipulation, the infiltrator and their agents will not be inclined in the least to have your children be educated to see their fellow infiltrators anywhere near as clearly as prior generation might've been able to.
As for the film itself, I see it as just a typical Hollywood blockbuster, whose visual effects surprisingly hold up well over time. There have been quite a few derivative hybrid adaptations and sequels since this as well as some Japanese cartoons before the first film adaptation. Beyond that, I'm not a particularly big fan of democracy and find I don't disagree with the conclusions Ancient Greek philosophers had on the matter.
Read MoreOpen Library
Open Library is an online project intended to create "one web page for every book ever published". Created by Aaron Swartz, Brewster Kahle, Alexis Rossi, Anand Chitipothu, and Rebecca Malamud, Open Library is a project of the Internet Archive, a nonprofit organization. It has been funded in part by grants from the California State Library and the Kahle/Austin Foundation. Open Library provides online digital copies in multiple formats, created from images of many public domain, out-of-print, and in-print books.
Open Library claims to have over 20 million records in its database. Copies of the contents of tens of thousands of modern books have been made available from 150 libraries and publishers for ebook controlled digital lending. Other books including in-print and in-copyright books have been scanned from copies in library collections, library discards, and donations, and are also available for lending in digital form. In total, the Open Library offers copies of over 1.4 million books for what it calls "digital lending", but critics have called distribution of digital copies a violation of copyright law.
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Read More1mo ago Books
@carnold03 I liked the movie, I never read the book. Sounds like I might like it though. Military service or at least the willingness to perform military service was tied to the vote in ancient democracies. During the republic Rome for example voted in the comitia centuriata -by the original centuries of the Roman army. Every man who could vote belonged to one. The centuries voted in order with the most important ones going first and the least important ones were almost never needed to vote. Originally, if you belonged to the important ones, you had the money to provide full armour, at the bottom end, you just had one weapon. I do hope that one day democracy may return to a model like this. We do not need to elect representatives to vote for us any more -the internet would allow every man to vote as easily as buying something from Ebay.
Read MoreGreat movie too, frankly (at least the first one), despite Verhoeven's best efforts to satirize a book he didn't even read by portraying the the most libertarian "fascist" utopia ever set to film.