I'm a major proponent of keeping culture alive no matter what. I grew up Consuming Product from well before I was born and I think all children should as well, if not just to cultivate an understanding of where we came from, how things have changed, and how things can improve.
But remakes aren't some sinister plot to destroy the original. They're just business. Skylar the Zoomer doesn't want to play a game that's capped at 640x480 and uses prerendered graphics. He doesn't want to play his dad's childhood MMO. He wants new and shiny. Even if it's the same thing, that coat of paint means everything to him, because he is a child and children are shallow.
The best thing you can do is vet everything your child is interested in. Shield them from the repulsive propaganda. Don't let them watch Blue's Clues Mutilate Your Children Spectacular or Talking Head Urges White Genocide. But do talk about it. Let them know that there are evil people who use entertainment as a smokescreen for malicious intent. Teach them how to tell the difference. I had that shit figured out by the time I was a teenager because my parents gently encouraged me to see the world for what it really was. That's all it took.
I had that shit figured out by the time I was a teenager because my parents gently encouraged me to see the world for what it really was. That's all it took.
That's the most encouraging part to read from your post. That your parents cared enough to help you see the world for it is.
I think it's easy to swallow the doom-pills when you read and see so many stories from young kids (especially those in the early teenage years) talk about experimenting, and searching, and seeking out their identity from within the cultural strongholds of the Globalists, which typically consists of all the anti-white, globohomo propaganda we all despise here.
I'm a major proponent of keeping culture alive no matter what. I grew up Consuming Product from well before I was born and I think all children should as well, if not just to cultivate an understanding of where we came from, how things have changed, and how things can improve.
But remakes aren't some sinister plot to destroy the original. They're just business. Skylar the Zoomer doesn't want to play a game that's capped at 640x480 and uses prerendered graphics. He doesn't want to play his dad's childhood MMO. He wants new and shiny. Even if it's the same thing, that coat of paint means everything to him, because he is a child and children are shallow.
The best thing you can do is vet everything your child is interested in. Shield them from the repulsive propaganda. Don't let them watch Blue's Clues Mutilate Your Children Spectacular or Talking Head Urges White Genocide. But do talk about it. Let them know that there are evil people who use entertainment as a smokescreen for malicious intent. Teach them how to tell the difference. I had that shit figured out by the time I was a teenager because my parents gently encouraged me to see the world for what it really was. That's all it took.
That's the most encouraging part to read from your post. That your parents cared enough to help you see the world for it is.
I think it's easy to swallow the doom-pills when you read and see so many stories from young kids (especially those in the early teenage years) talk about experimenting, and searching, and seeking out their identity from within the cultural strongholds of the Globalists, which typically consists of all the anti-white, globohomo propaganda we all despise here.