Once again the jew learns that his golem will turn on him. It's almost like the myths and fables a culture has are warnings specific to that culture that they have trouble remembering.
Jews have the fable of the Golem.
White have the fable of "The Scorpion and the Frog", "The Farmer and the Viper", "Hansel and Gretel", and the warnings against Vampires.
The arrogance is what gets me. It's like a guy teasing a dog, getting bitten, and going right back again because a dog has no right to bite the lies of them.
If you hang around twitter, you'll find smarmy midwit like the guy in the video almost everyday. Before their absolute control freak nature, their arrogance is what people need to pay attention to. They didn't suffer the retribution in really long time, and they become really smug and delude themselves that their high verbal IQ is what gives them the free pass from accountability.
I think the fable of the Mermaid is a bit better than Hansel&Gretel... You can have something you love, even something weird, but the moment it becomes known in the open to everyone, it turns to seafoam and disappears. Gatekeep your hobbies.
Once again the jew learns that his golem will turn on him. It's almost like the myths and fables a culture has are warnings specific to that culture that they have trouble remembering.
Jews have the fable of the Golem.
White have the fable of "The Scorpion and the Frog", "The Farmer and the Viper", "Hansel and Gretel", and the warnings against Vampires.
The arrogance is what gets me. It's like a guy teasing a dog, getting bitten, and going right back again because a dog has no right to bite the lies of them.
If you hang around twitter, you'll find smarmy midwit like the guy in the video almost everyday. Before their absolute control freak nature, their arrogance is what people need to pay attention to. They didn't suffer the retribution in really long time, and they become really smug and delude themselves that their high verbal IQ is what gives them the free pass from accountability.
I think the fable of the Mermaid is a bit better than Hansel&Gretel... You can have something you love, even something weird, but the moment it becomes known in the open to everyone, it turns to seafoam and disappears. Gatekeep your hobbies.