Haaland has the most magnetic aura because:
-He's disciplined
-He takes care of himself
-He treats his body like a temple
-He's goofy
-He laughs at himself
-He doesn't care how he's perceived
-He's kind to animals
-He's family oriented
-He's masculine but not performative
“Alcohol is speedrunning a state you’re supposed to build naturally.” 🥃
— it gives you a fake preview of confidence, relief, love, and looseness
— but the real goal is learning to access that state without the bottle
— sleep, health, discipline, presence, and self-knowledge are the slower path—but they actually last
Tristan Tate perfectly explains why multiculturalism in Ireland, the UK and everywhere else is EVIL. 😳
"I like gin, whiskey, rum. These are all wonderful drinks. What do you get when you mix them all together? Sh*t."
"Dubai, you wake up to the call to prayer here. I'm a Christian. The call of prayer is blasting. I'm like, Yeah, this is their country."
"You go to England, it's like, oh, let's all be multicultural all of a sudden!?"
"I want to see white English people walking around, not armed police going there to shoot down terrorists."
"It should be the English culture only in England. It should be the Irish culture in Ireland." 🇬🇧🇮🇪
Live biblically:
- eat lots of steak, butter, organs, figs, milk and honey
- honor your body as a sacred vehicle, reject casual sex
- get married and have lots of babies
- turn water into bone broth
- buy lots of land and till the soil
- reject materialism
- let there sunlight
- cultivate masculinity and femininity
- love thy neighbor
- have faith, trust in God
- live your for a noble purpose that you're willing to die for
- carry a staff around
- wear lots of linen shalls
- rest on Sundays
- build an ark and escape modern society
Tom Barry in the 1960s complaining that many of the ‘best parts of the country’ are being ‘given to foreigners’
What would he think of IPAS centres and vulture funds?
I’m a patriot in the abstract sense - I don’t love my country as it is, nor do I love for the most part my countrymen.
The Ireland I love is not the Ireland that is or even the one that was, but the one that could have been - the unrealised dream, of an Ireland Gaelic and free.