Her big butt was said to contain a separate universe plus a worm hole.

🕯️ What Is Dark Academia? According to Wikipedia and Book Riot, Dark Academia is: A literary and aesthetic subculture centered on elite education, classical literature, Gothic architecture, and philosophical obsession. It romanticizes melancholy, intellectual suffering, and taboo inquiry—often involving themes like death, forbidden knowledge, and moral ambiguity. It emerged from Tumblr and Instagram in the 2010s and surged during the COVID-19 pandemic. 🧠 Why Taboo Subjects Thrive in This Space Dark Academia creates a cultural permission slip to explore: Controversial ideologies (e.g., Nietzschean will to power, aestheticized fascism) Psychological manipulation and groupthink (as seen in novels like The Secret History) Moral relativism, where truth is subjective and power is seductive This aesthetic can become a gateway for more serious ideological drift—especially when paired with real-world academic environments that reward transgression over truth. ⚠️ The Danger You’re Pointing To You’re suggesting that Nazi-style propaganda techniques—like moral inversion, language control, and group conformity—can hide in plain sight within these romanticized academic subcultures. And you’re right to be concerned. When taboo becomes trendy, and when rebellion is aestheticized without moral grounding, dangerous ideas can be reintroduced under the radar.

✡️ Blog Mission Statement: Truth with Conviction This blog exists to speak clearly in a world clouded by confusion. I stand unapologetically for faith, for freedom, and for the enduring values that built Western civilization. I write not to please institutions, but to challenge them—when they drift from truth, when they abandon reason, and when they betray the people they claim to serve. What I Stand For: 🕊️ Pro-Religion: I affirm the moral and spiritual foundations of a life rooted in faith. Religion is not the enemy of progress—it is its conscience. 🇮🇱 Pro-Israel: I support Israel’s right to exist, defend itself, and thrive as a beacon of democracy and Jewish identity in a hostile region. 🗳️ Pro-Trump / Pro-GOP: I support the populist realignment that puts working people, national sovereignty, and common sense above elite ideology. ✡️ Pro-Jewish: I stand against antisemitism in all its forms—whether it comes from the far left, the far right, or the academic elite. What I Reject: Gaslighting and fake news masquerading as journalism Academic orthodoxy that silences dissent and rewards conformity Cultural nihilism that tears down without building up What I Believe: Truth is not a negotiation. Power must be held accountable. And excellence—when pursued with courage—can still change the world. 🌍 A New Frontier of Faith, Freedom, and Film Mission Statement This blog is a voice for those who believe that truth, tradition, and excellence still matter—and that they must be defended, rebuilt, and reimagined in a world that often forgets them. We stand at a crossroads: Where Asia’s democratic nations—Japan, South Korea, and India—form a quiet but powerful cultural and strategic kinship with Israel and the United States. Where Europe, once a beacon of civilization, now teeters toward the very ideologies and authoritarian impulses we once fought to overcome. And where China’s rise reminds us that freedom is not inevitable—it must be chosen, cultivated, and protected 🕊️ What We Believe Tradition is not a relic—it’s a compass. The shared values of democracy, faith, and national identity connect free nations across continents. Film and storytelling must be renewed. The cultural imagination has been hijacked by cynicism and mediocrity. We must demand more—more beauty, more truth, more courage. Independent structures are the future. The old institutions—media, academia, even Hollywood—are collapsing under their own contradictions. New frontiers must rise from outside the gatekeepers. Faith in humanity is not naïve—it’s necessary. We believe in the dignity of the individual, the power of moral clarity, and the urgency of rebuilding what’s been lost. ⚠️ What We Reject The gaslighting of the public by media and academic elites The erosion of truth through ideological conformity The descent of Europe into bureaucratic decay and cultural amnesia The manipulation of art and storytelling into propaganda 🚀 What We Aim to Do This blog is a platform for renewal. A place to think clearly, speak freely, and imagine boldly. We are not here to follow trends. What I aim to do is progress at a good pace and demonstrate how these ideals outperform anything ever seen in history. 🚀 A Living Blueprint for Civilizational Renewal Mission Statement This blog is not just a platform for ideas—it is a demonstration. A real-time unfolding of how faith, tradition, excellence, and independent vision can outperform the broken systems of the past and the hollow ideologies of the present. I aim to progress at a deliberate, unrelenting pace—not chasing trends, but building a foundation that lasts. Every post, every insight, every critique is part of a larger project: To show that these ideals—rooted in truth, sharpened by history, and animated by courage—can outshine anything modernity has produced. 🧭 What Guides This Work Faith over cynicism Tradition over rootlessness Excellence over mediocrity Independent creation over institutional decay 🌍 What We’re Building A renewed alliance of free, democratic nations—anchored in shared values, not bureaucratic treaties A cultural renaissance in film, art, and storytelling—driven by moral clarity and aesthetic ambition A new intellectual frontier—outside the academy, beyond the algorithm, and grounded in timeless principles 🔥 Why It Matters Because the world is watching. Because the old world is collapsing. And because we can do better—much better—than anything history has yet seen.

Listen to this article 2 min Democratic lawmakers say their voters are enraged at the lack of ability to counter President Donald Trump's agenda, with some saying they could resort to "violence," Axios reported Monday. The outlet says it spoke to over two dozen House Democrats to measure the temperature of the Democratic base. What it found was red-hot anger and a burgeoning desire to circumvent the rule of law, where explanations that Democrats simply don't hold enough power in Washington fall on deaf ears. "We've got people who are desperately wanting us to do something... no matter what we say, they want [more]," Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., told the outlet. Most of the lawmakers spoke on condition of anonymity. Schneider's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. ELON MUSK SAYS US IS RULED BY 'PORKY PIG PARTY' AS TRUMP DEFENDS HIS VISION AGAINST FORMER ALLY'S CRITICISM Jeffries speaks at US Capitol House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries rallies Democrats against the Republican budget plan on the House steps at the Capitol in Washington. (AP/J. Scott Applewhite) "Our own base is telling us that what we're doing is not good enough... [that] there needs to be blood to grab the attention of the press and the public," one such lawmaker said. Another said their constituents are convinced that "civility isn't working" and that they should prepare for "violence... to fight to protect our democracy." A third lawmaker described some of the messages from people online as "crazy ****," saying that some told them to "storm the White House and stuff like that." The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. TOP DEMOCRATS ADMIT ‘FAILURE,' FECKLESSNESS ON BORDER IN SCATHING NY TIMES REPORT Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill. wearing a blue tie Rep. Brad Schneider said Democratic voters want "more" resistance to Trump. (Reuters/Sarah Silbiger) Another lawmaker compared Democratic voters to the "Roman coliseum." "People just want more and more of this spectacle," the lawmaker said. Other constituents have insisted that lawmakers take on the risk themselves, with one lawmaker saying they were told they should be willing to get "shot." "What I have seen is a demand that we get ourselves arrested intentionally or allow ourselves to be victims of violence, and... a lot of times that's coming from economically very secure White people," another lawmaker said. What this means (Analysis) Scorched earth policy following civil war efforts, cause: by fish out of water movements following political losses. Activist politics go outside of political norms leading to power trips, power grabs, and power lust.

AB 715 PASSES THE ASSEMBLY! California’s landmark bill to counter antisemitism in schools has passed the Assembly with overwhelming bipartisan support: 64-0! 👏 HUGE thank you to authors @AsmRickZbur & @AsmDawnAddis and chairs of the Black, Latino, Native American, AAPI, and Jewish Caucuses for being our champions. This significant step forward is also thanks to the tireless advocacy of 47 Jewish organizations across the state – and the 700 of you who joined us in Sacramento to lobby or testify this month. Now, the bill moves to the Senate. Let’s keep the momentum going! Much love to California, and love for love itself.

The Middle East could become a very productive spot in the future. It could be something tremendous.

Based on Intuition I don't think this guy is so bad. I believe he has bigger fish to fry than the fear we have as Jews. Can we Jews honestly believe that establishment politicians are safe?

BALD FAT WOMEN APPROVE OF MY IDEAS.

The public is too public, because it feels like more private parts coming out and freak shows of shame and guilt. Plus the lack of material that expands into non existent realities terrifies me. Contact them soon.

My thoughts on the Big Beautiful Bill: It is much more principled than I would have expected it to be and should cause much discussion rather than displays of childish wrath.

Faculty Protests and Their Impact at UC Berkeley has a long history of faculty activism on Israel-Palestine, dating back to the 1980s and intensifying with the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement in the 2000s. Faculty in departments like Ethnic Studies, Middle Eastern Studies, or Sociology have often been vocal, participating in protests, signing divestment petitions, or embedding anti-Israel perspectives in teaching, which Cravatts argues can cross into antisemitic tropes by framing Israel as uniquely oppressive. Your memory of faculty-led protests near Chipotle in 2011—likely near Sproul Plaza, a hub for such activity—suggests a dynamic where academic authority lent protests a veneer of legitimacy, yet their public presence felt intimidating, especially when Jewish perspectives were sidelined.This menacing quality you describe aligns with Cravatts’ critique of faculty who prioritize ideological activism over balanced scholarship. For instance, protests that single out Israel while ignoring Jewish historical trauma (e.g., the Holocaust or diaspora expulsions) can feel like gaslighting, romanticizing resistance while minimizing Jewish vulnerabilities. This was evident in Berkeley’s 2010-2011 divestment campaigns, which sparked heated campus debates and left Jewish students feeling targeted, as reported by the ADL. Your experience of these protests as non-educational reflects a broader concern: faculty activism, when unchecked, can shape ethnic studies curricula in ways that marginalize Jewish narratives, a problem AB 715 seeks to address.