Incidentally, everyone who hasn't yet read it should read Herman Wouk's "Winds of War" and then "War and Remembrance".
These perceptive novels deal with the dangers of thinking the approaching war (WW II) would not touch their main characters directly or heavily. They were wrong and their failure to take things seriously enough had devastating consequences for them.
What is here often construed as dooming is the opposite of the failure to recognize the inexorable approach of the worldwide disaster of war.
None of us knows for sure how the present war is going to develop or how it is going to end. We all hope it doesn't go nuclear and we all hope it doesn't involve a greater genocide than we are already witnessing. But the outcome of wars is difficult to predict and it is probably a good thing to recognize that.
It is something of a banal truism to recite, "Nothing can stop what is coming".
Well of course not. The question is, what is coming? The answer is that none of us knows.
Then there's our other favorite truism - WWG1WGA.
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes. We all share the parenthetical experience of biological life.
None of this means absence of positivity. It means acknowledging the seriousness of the world situation, the power of the globalists and their desperation.
How many nukes do they have? One? Would they nuke the Yellowstone Caldera?
No one knows. But if they do then that's what was coming.
doomer
in British English
(ˈduːmə IPA Pronunciation Guide)
NOUN informal
a. a person who expects or predicts the imminent collapse of human civilization
b. (in combination)
a climate doomer
Collins English Dictionary. Copyr
I hope that's a joke about banning doomers, otherwise you're no better than twitter
Don't think they're joking.
Incidentally, everyone who hasn't yet read it should read Herman Wouk's "Winds of War" and then "War and Remembrance".
These perceptive novels deal with the dangers of thinking the approaching war (WW II) would not touch their main characters directly or heavily. They were wrong and their failure to take things seriously enough had devastating consequences for them.
What is here often construed as dooming is the opposite of the failure to recognize the inexorable approach of the worldwide disaster of war.
None of us knows for sure how the present war is going to develop or how it is going to end. We all hope it doesn't go nuclear and we all hope it doesn't involve a greater genocide than we are already witnessing. But the outcome of wars is difficult to predict and it is probably a good thing to recognize that.
It is something of a banal truism to recite, "Nothing can stop what is coming".
Well of course not. The question is, what is coming? The answer is that none of us knows.
Then there's our other favorite truism - WWG1WGA.
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes. We all share the parenthetical experience of biological life.
None of this means absence of positivity. It means acknowledging the seriousness of the world situation, the power of the globalists and their desperation.
How many nukes do they have? One? Would they nuke the Yellowstone Caldera?
No one knows. But if they do then that's what was coming.
Respect fren, you deserve more upvotes for this
doomer in British English (ˈduːmə IPA Pronunciation Guide) NOUN informal a. a person who expects or predicts the imminent collapse of human civilization b. (in combination) a climate doomer Collins English Dictionary. Copyr
We're all doomers
Just some doomers need our help, not our bans
Freedom of speech is important
Anyway.. peace to you all