What Shaped Your Political Views?

Khaemwaset

Djiboutian ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ฏ | ๐’–๐’†๐’„A๐’—๐’ƒ ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ด
VIP
I grew up in diverse London so I am fine with lots of different ethnic groups.
However the constant disrespect from cadaan in both the left and right made me not like them much.

I had a bit of an identity crisis in secondary school since the west african/Caribbean kids used to say "somalis are not black" and excluded me, whilst at the same time you would have teachers talking about slavery whilst staring at me as if my ancestors didn't kick their ass. I remember in class once I talked about being from djibotui and was talking about old horn african cities like zelia and harar but the teacher started talking to me about my tribal rituals like I come from the Congo and ignored the African history I was telling her about.

I never had a hatred for any specific race but I remember somalis were targeted by madows here in London a while back when we were new, so much that when I was as young as 13, my mum was telling me to avoid some majority black parts of the city because somali kids were getting killed there which made me not like getting involved with that community as well.

So basically I grew up with all the downsides of being black whilst getting none of the positives, this is why in some other threads you see me say I refuse to identify with black people and this Is why.

Into my mid teenage years I started to become much more aware about society and also started reading through history books like crazy even till today. I started to specifically start learning about horn african/somali history and this gave me a proper foundation in which I started to gain a sense of "Somaliness".
This came at the right time as I started to feel contempt for the west as I started to see myself as simply a guest who's simply here to earn money and get an education before going back to my own country, unlike in America, I can't call myself British because that is a collection is Cultures that is not mine, I know there are things like "black british" but that's mostly just for carribeans who think they're English.
So as I came to this revelation, I looked at the state of my country and was severely disappointed by the state of the whole region, on top of a failed somali nation, a big chunk of somali land and people are in foreign hands which just made me enraged.

There were many people who I met with an inferiority complex to whites, however, I was lucky to be raised by parents who raised me to take massive pride in being somali. This got me into some weird situations, especially with those insecure of their identity, when I proudly talked about being somali whilst the nation was a failed state, as these people didn't understand how I could be proud of something they saw as a terrorist shithole. I still didn't give a f*ck.

This and many more stuff in my life, lead me to being a proud somali nationalist who might come off as facistic at times.
I don't have hatred for any people's, but I also wouldn't hesitate to support genocide against people who try invade the homeland.
 

Internet Nomad

๐‘ฎ๐’๐’๐’† ๐’‡๐’๐’“ ๐’ˆ๐’“๐’†๐’†๐’๐’†๐’“ ๐’‘๐’‚๐’”๐’•๐’–๐’“๐’†๐’”
VIP
For me my internet experiences and covid
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Internet Nomad

๐‘ฎ๐’๐’๐’† ๐’‡๐’๐’“ ๐’ˆ๐’“๐’†๐’†๐’๐’†๐’“ ๐’‘๐’‚๐’”๐’•๐’–๐’“๐’†๐’”
VIP
I grew up in diverse London so I am fine with lots of different ethnic groups.
However the constant disrespect from cadaan in both the left and right made me not like them much.

I had a bit of an identity crisis in secondary school since the west african/Caribbean kids used to say "somalis are not black" and excluded me, whilst at the same time you would have teachers talking about slavery whilst staring at me as if my ancestors didn't kick their ass. I remember in class once I talked about being from djibotui and was talking about old horn african cities like zelia and harar but the teacher started talking to me about my tribal rituals like I come from the Congo and ignored the African history I was telling her about.

I never had a hatred for any specific race but I remember somalis were targeted by madows here in London a while back when we were new, so much that when I was as young as 13, my mum was telling me to avoid some majority black parts of the city because somali kids were getting killed there which made me not like getting involved with that community as well.

So basically I grew up with all the downsides of being black whilst getting none of the positives, this is why in some other threads you see me say I refuse to identify with black people and this Is why.

Into my mid teenage years I started to become much more aware about society and also started reading through history books like crazy even till today. I started to specifically start learning about horn african/somali history and this gave me a proper foundation in which I started to gain a sense of "Somaliness".
This came at the right time as I started to feel contempt for the west as I started to see myself as simply a guest who's simply here to earn money and get an education before going back to my own country, unlike in America, I can't call myself British because that is a collection is Cultures that is not mine, I know there are things like "black british" but that's mostly just for carribeans who think they're English.
So as I came to this revelation, I looked at the state of my country and was severely disappointed by the state of the whole region, on top of a failed somali nation, a big chunk of somali land and people are in foreign hands which just made me enraged.

There were many people who I met with an inferiority complex to whites, however, I was lucky to be raised by parents who raised me to take massive pride in being somali. This got me into some weird situations, especially with those insecure of their identity, when I proudly talked about being somali whilst the nation was a failed state, as these people didn't understand how I could be proud of something they saw as a terrorist shithole. I still didn't give a f*ck.

This and many more stuff in my life, lead me to being a proud somali nationalist who might come off as facistic at times.
I don't have hatred for any people's, but I also wouldn't hesitate to support genocide against people who try invade the homeland.
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Iโ€™ve taken the politicalpill thanks to my 21yrs of inceldom.

All politics are inherently self-interested. Altruism is a lie, a fabrication a posteriori. This is a line of thought you can find in such intellectuals as Max Stirner, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gustave Le Bon, and Yuval Noah Harari. The reason this isn't clear is because humans use the tactics of plausible deniability and shared fictions to advance their interests. This is a lying strategy a step above the very basic dissimulation and treachery tactics chimpanzees are known to use to climb the steps of power. Also, people are often unaware of the subconscious/unconscious drives in their ideology.

I am going to translate several human political sentences into their true meanings.

We need socialism for the greater good -> I resent having to wageslave like a mule and I secretly hate my boss. I am not as successful as I had hoped, I have lost all of my money on booze and cigarettes, and I am envious as f*ck of rich people who live a more comfortable life than mine. I want to rob them like a common criminal but because it's illegal and I don't want to be hanged, I want to convince a sufficiently large number of co-conspirators to let me do it and partake in the theft.

Alternatively: I am a tenured university professor. So far, I have achieved a good amount of success in my life, but I want to have it all. The status, the es, the money and the political power. That's why I am a communist. I hate the nobility and the rich. In the Soviet Union, university professors ruled over the former wealthy and noblemen, as it should be.

We need feminism now!
-> My greatest fear is being married off by my parents to an ugly man and having to obey him until my dying breath. I will gladly submit to Chad and offer my buttocks to him for a good spanking, but the perspective of an ugly man doing this to me makes me gag.

White Nationalism is our only future! We need a future for white children and the beauty of aryan women!
-> I am white, but ugly, friendless, powerless and a loser. Dumb Stacies tower over me and humiliate me on a daily basis. My status in the modern West is lower than that of the lowest Negro during apartheid. Give me back my status! Give it back to me! I deserve it for being a white man! *starts sobbing*

You can find the true hidden motives behind every "altruistic" political platform if you search long enough. Is it cynicism? I dare say it's basic evolutionary psychology. And if you do a rigorous self-assessment, you'll realize that, chronologically, your subconscious feelings of inferiority and envy came before the intellectual rationalization.
 

Internet Nomad

๐‘ฎ๐’๐’๐’† ๐’‡๐’๐’“ ๐’ˆ๐’“๐’†๐’†๐’๐’†๐’“ ๐’‘๐’‚๐’”๐’•๐’–๐’“๐’†๐’”
VIP
Iโ€™ve taken the politicalpill thanks to my 21yrs of inceldom.

All politics are inherently self-interested. Altruism is a lie, a fabrication a posteriori. This is a line of thought you can find in such intellectuals as Max Stirner, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gustave Le Bon, and Yuval Noah Harari. The reason this isn't clear is because humans use the tactics of plausible deniability and shared fictions to advance their interests. This is a lying strategy a step above the very basic dissimulation and treachery tactics chimpanzees are known to use to climb the steps of power. Also, people are often unaware of the subconscious/unconscious drives in their ideology.

I am going to translate several human political sentences into their true meanings.

We need socialism for the greater good -> I resent having to wageslave like a mule and I secretly hate my boss. I am not as successful as I had hoped, I have lost all of my money on booze and cigarettes, and I am envious as f*ck of rich people who live a more comfortable life than mine. I want to rob them like a common criminal but because it's illegal and I don't want to be hanged, I want to convince a sufficiently large number of co-conspirators to let me do it and partake in the theft.

Alternatively: I am a tenured university professor. So far, I have achieved a good amount of success in my life, but I want to have it all. The status, the es, the money and the political power. That's why I am a communist. I hate the nobility and the rich. In the Soviet Union, university professors ruled over the former wealthy and noblemen, as it should be.

We need feminism now!
-> My greatest fear is being married off by my parents to an ugly man and having to obey him until my dying breath. I will gladly submit to Chad and offer my buttocks to him for a good spanking, but the perspective of an ugly man doing this to me makes me gag.

White Nationalism is our only future! We need a future for white children and the beauty of aryan women!
-> I am white, but ugly, friendless, powerless and a loser. Dumb Stacies tower over me and humiliate me on a daily basis. My status in the modern West is lower than that of the lowest Negro during apartheid. Give me back my status! Give it back to me! I deserve it for being a white man! *starts sobbing*

You can find the true hidden motives behind every "altruistic" political platform if you search long enough. Is it cynicism? I dare say it's basic evolutionary psychology. And if you do a rigorous self-assessment, you'll realize that, chronologically, your subconscious feelings of inferiority and envy came before the intellectual rationalization.
Incorrect i wont elaborate just know you are Incorrect
Cope and Seethe
Deal Reaction GIF
 

Somali Saayid

There is no surrender, We lose or We Die.
VIP
I grew up in diverse London so I am fine with lots of different ethnic groups.
However the constant disrespect from cadaan in both the left and right made me not like them much.

I had a bit of an identity crisis in secondary school since the west african/Caribbean kids used to say "somalis are not black" and excluded me, whilst at the same time you would have teachers talking about slavery whilst staring at me as if my ancestors didn't kick their ass. I remember in class once I talked about being from djibotui and was talking about old horn african cities like zelia and harar but the teacher started talking to me about my tribal rituals like I come from the Congo and ignored the African history I was telling her about.

I never had a hatred for any specific race but I remember somalis were targeted by madows here in London a while back when we were new, so much that when I was as young as 13, my mum was telling me to avoid some majority black parts of the city because somali kids were getting killed there which made me not like getting involved with that community as well.

So basically I grew up with all the downsides of being black whilst getting none of the positives, this is why in some other threads you see me say I refuse to identify with black people and this Is why.

Into my mid teenage years I started to become much more aware about society and also started reading through history books like crazy even till today. I started to specifically start learning about horn african/somali history and this gave me a proper foundation in which I started to gain a sense of "Somaliness".
This came at the right time as I started to feel contempt for the west as I started to see myself as simply a guest who's simply here to earn money and get an education before going back to my own country, unlike in America, I can't call myself British because that is a collection is Cultures that is not mine, I know there are things like "black british" but that's mostly just for carribeans who think they're English.
So as I came to this revelation, I looked at the state of my country and was severely disappointed by the state of the whole region, on top of a failed somali nation, a big chunk of somali land and people are in foreign hands which just made me enraged.

There were many people who I met with an inferiority complex to whites, however, I was lucky to be raised by parents who raised me to take massive pride in being somali. This got me into some weird situations, especially with those insecure of their identity, when I proudly talked about being somali whilst the nation was a failed state, as these people didn't understand how I could be proud of something they saw as a terrorist shithole. I still didn't give a f*ck.

This and many more stuff in my life, lead me to being a proud somali nationalist who might come off as facistic at times.
I don't have hatred for any people's, but I also wouldn't hesitate to support genocide against people who try invade the homeland.
I'm taking a stand with you. I didn't know anything about our dhaqan and culture before I started researcher it, this is when I became a self declared Somali Supremacist.
 

Hamdule

J Haplogroup Enthusiast
Growing up in Africa, all i was exposed to was inequality. So from day my political views were progressive.

I was a strong patriot while I was growing up, despite the fact that the nation I supported did nothing beneficial for my family, who saw dead bodies left and right when they were young. Moving from one area to another, leaving their own homes at a young age in search of a better chance, and having siblings born in separate cities despite being only a year or two apart.

hearing your parents stories of losing their siblings on their way to find an opportunity, people they loved, people they knew gone just like that. your neighbors with similar stories, single mothers fled their homes because of the conditions their homes offered.

I was always progressive, as young kid practicing military forms to one day serve Somalia, to one day make Somalia a place where people can call home, a place where people go to find an opportunity. I was young and naive and thought people had the same mindset as me.


But I was mistaken; instead of thinking as a collective, people actually think as individuals who are fighting for some sort of collective. Even in Somalispot, children born into privilege talk about the land they plan to purchase in Somalia. But, I wonder if these individuals are aware of the inequity they are creating at home. residences costing about $79K while the typical person earns just over $1,000 year

Humans are selfish, politicians are greedy and we as the common people have turned into greedy people, supporting the displacement of others who are similar to us in order to benefit the wealthy and privileged. The conflict in SL is a prime example of how people are encouraging the eviction of numerous Somali citizens in order for the so-called government to exploit the land in the SSC.

Parallel to this, when I moved to the west, the inequity I had been exposed to was still with me. I attended a school with low-income students, which meant that the institution had issues. When those who entered the country illegally struggle, the government does nothing except quickly hand out subsidies to the wealthy. Healthcare being out of control and being unable to see a doctor due to possible fees.


There is inequality everywhere, but the fact is that as humans, we are hardly making any efforts to improve our circumstances. Instead, we are governed by psychopaths who take pleasure in our misery and in exercising their authority over us. While we are cursed with temporarily embarrassed millionaires, we can absolutely do better.
 
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