Divert the River

BLOWING THE WHISTLE ON THE DANGEROUS CULT OF HYPERIANISM

FROM THE CITIZEN JOURNALISTS OF THE AC 

10/07/2022 Post #2
 

KC Fields said on Rebhahn’s facebook page, “You think you are so next level. You are not. Stop preaching to the choir.”

That’s all that Rebhahn does – choir preaching. His audience now comprises purely his own brainwashed cultists, and he just tells them the same stuff over and over again, to the point of absolute tedium. And it’s not like he’s an engaging, charismatic speaker. 

One of the most spellbinding speakers of all time was Pythagoras, the first man to create an INTELLECTUAL religion, which was of course based on mathematics and is now known as Illuminism (centered on ontological mathematics).

Many people have a ridiculous idea of Pythagoras as a kind of Greek Buddhist, a pacifist and vegetarian and all that. They project their nonsense regarding what a great teacher ought to be like (they always imagine some ludicrous Woke Jesus guy preaching peace, love and light). Here’s a fascinating article saying that Pythagoras invented the first weapon of mass destruction! And deployed it! > > Check it out:

EL PAIS CULTURAL (Uruguay) / No 831 – 7 October 2005 > __________________________________________________

LIBROS DEL MUNDO – BOOKS OF THE WORLD  Laszlo Erdelyi

PYTHAGORAS and PARMENIDES.

The first use of a weapon of mass destruction occurred in the year 510 B.C. between the pre-classical Greeks of the cities of Croton and Sybaris, in the south of Italy. The fanatic and anti-democratic Crotonians, under the control of the famous Pythagoras, attacked and destroyed the Sybarites, known for being one of the richest communities, magnificent, democratic (and lovers of good food) people of the world. Soon the Crotonians redirected the course of the river to totally flood the city of Sybaris, killing almost the entire population. This is one of the most vibrant points of the book by Arnold Hermann on the philosophy of Pythagoras and Parmenides, entitled The Illustrated To Think Like God (Parmenides Publishing), a beautifully illustrated book that brings closer to the general public the debates that happened 2500 years ago among the ancient Greeks, those who gave the start to the discipline called Philosophy. Because these Greeks were intelligent and short-tempered, confronting myths and superstition, they went out into the streets to develop the science of logic, to popularize the use of reason. The idea was to cause the superior organs, the brain, to elaborate something more than foolish ideas. Now, the reader may ask himself what the flood has to do with philosophy. Since more than ten years Hermann has investigated the connections between Pythagoras and Parmenides, dealing with the highest scholars and getting himself dusty with all the related archeological excavations. He wants to know how and why philosophy was born, the idea of men who like to think like God and to replace him step by step, trying to resolve questions about things such as death, life, human existence and other trifles. After all he wrote three versions of the same book, two for scholars and the one here which addresses itself to the general public. With masterful skill for writing simply about the complex, the book explains through his historical and biographical context why Pythagoras believed that the nature of all things was hidden in numerical relations while he went to the war in a brutal way. It also illustrates why Xenophanes believed that true knowledge was out of reach for mortals and why the great Parmenides made the light, questioning this affirmation by Xenophanes, saying that true philosophy must base itself in on tests rather than on exclamations, an approach that made him into the father of theoretical science. In all this there were wars, deaths, treasons, ambitions, the human life in all its expression. There were also the famous philosophical debates soaked in this reality, not separate from it. Because the classical and pre-classical Greeks were also beings of flesh and bone. END

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So, the Pythagorean Crotonians were “fanatics” who detested democracy and loathed the decadent, Last Man culture of the Sybarites, the moronic people who dreamt only of wealth and pleasure. The Sybarites were self-indulgent in every way, wholly given over to instant gratification and self-gratification.

Wikipedia says, “The city [of Sybaris] was founded in 720 BC by Achaean and Troezenian settlers. Sybaris amassed great wealth thanks to its fertile land and busy port. Its inhabitants became famous among the Greeks for their hedonism, feasts, and excesses, to the extent that ‘sybarite’ and ‘sybaritic’ have become bywords for opulence, luxury, and outrageous pleasure-seeking.”

So, abandon any idea you have that Pythagoras was some absurd Wokester. He was anything but. He was a fighter as well as a dazzling intellectual. When the situation required it, he showed no quarter. He raised the red banners.

The REAL Pythagoras is so much more interesting and complex than the ridiculous caricature often presented of him as “Jesus doing math”.

The Hyperians are the modern-day Sybarites, the followers of Last Man culture.

It’s time to divert the river!

DELETE HYPERIANISM