Covid hysteria has officially become the biggest cult in world history.
(media.conspiracies.win)
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I had never saw this shit after the Dark Ages, mind you.
The Dark Ages is the only thing comparable to this and the consequences of covid world will go beyond serfdom into a complete society wreckage with all ability to recovery from the ashes gone for at least this century.
I'm starting to think the "Dark Ages" and much of our accepted historical timeline is a hoax, or at least heavily altered. I don't think the "Dark Ages" even happened as we're told.
For me the Dark ages is more like the Zionist cabal (or at least its prototype) overthrown Rome and turned it into a "right is wrong and wrong is right" society. Like this. You do not see that type of regression from something as extravagant as Rome unless the ones doing it are Zionist elites. It's most certainly not an era where the Papacy is good and valiant knights fight each other.
The papacy took over Rome and compromised it. Zionists do not do polytheism. This is just Canaan wearing Rome's shell.
https://stolenhistory.net/threads/greenland-theory-apocalypse-now-2014.5516/
rome was about as community oriented as a gang bang involving priests. how the fuck do you take something that rewards evil and punishes good (as all societies throughout history have) and turn it into something that rewards evil and punishes good? short answer: you can’t.
shut the fuck up about things that you have no personal experiences with and therefore VERY limited ACTUAL knowledge of. start with 1975 cambodia. move on from there. i’m all about constructively criticizing clown world believe me, but you’ve gotta understand that the stuff you say has an impact on the mental health of vulnerable ppl. this isn’t 1975 cambodia. try to stay on fucking topic amigo.
I just finished reading a history book about medieval Europe, it was a time of constant change, turmoil and political flux. The Entirety of Europe changed over the course of the end of the Roman Empire and the realisation that "greater Christendom" was the replacement, however that slowly petered out and "ended" as an idea around the time of the anti popes and Philip the 3rd IIRC. Which led to the rise of nationalism as an idea and the modern concept of the nation state.
It's a very dense book and I didn't remember most of the names and dates but there wasn't really a time where nothing was happening, whether it was the increasing technology that allowed farming and feudalism to develop or the rise of city states based around maritime trade.