Hi nanons! Whatcha reading lately?
I'm a bit starved of literature as of late, and am curious about the reading habits of inherently highly intellectual nanons.
You could also mention your favorites and just generally discuss literature.
I am currently reading "The Sky My Kingdom by Hanna Reitch". It's a pretty comy autobiography of the first women fighter pilot.... who happened to fight for the 3rd Reich of Germany. It's a pretty stellar example of how meritocracy produces )))strong((( women whereas feminism produces (((strong))) women. It's nice that I can read a this book by a national socialist around normies too since politics aren't very prolific in the book. At least, so I've been told by others who've read it, understood through reading the summary, and am currently verifying with how far I am in the book.
>look at dis stwank indipinkidink whamenz
>it's okay when da nahtzeez do it
there is almost never an excuse for women to be in the military, end of story. Women should stay in the kitchen.
looks like white people were cucks even during the 1930s.
>>11007 I'm trying to get into 19th-20th century Japanese literature, not really sure where to begin though, somebody has recommendations?
>>11008 And so begins the thread derailment...
I heavnt been reading lately as much i would like and as i used to. When i did it was mostly historical WWII topics, some SCI FI and all the Jeremy Clarksons books (i think i read all of them). Right now, and maybe som1 can recomend something, im looking for something along the lines of "1984" and "Brave new world". Got any good titles that can supplement those two?
>>11008 >there is almost never an excuse for women to be in the military, end of story
I agree. I never mentioned anything about liking her participation in the military. It's just that her prowess """"""against all odds""""" is historical proof of merit being more meaningful in the pursuit of women's equality than legislation. I'm not saying I like this pursuit in the form of natural ability in merit or through spawning women's (((rights))) legislation. Just that the story of Hanna Reitch serves as tautologous proof of the destructive properties of feminism.
>>11013 The very fact that women, who never ever previously were allowed near a battlefield nor they ever wanted to, are being forced by the State to become faux-men and die where the men already failed is telling enough.
I remember Evola roasting both fascists and natsocs for being too modern too degenerate to succeed, but haven't got my hands on Fascism Viewed from the Right yet.
Sumerian swindle is an interesting book although a bit too long and at times too boring for my taste.It involves history and basic economics describing the creation of loans and interests.It's fun to read if you know how to skip pages.
>>11048 This is a very good book that needs a good editor to cut away 3/4 of it. The writer is a good historian, perhaps, but a terrible self-editor. It can be condensed fourth-fold with no loss of meaning at all.
Hi nanons! Whatcha reading lately?
I'm a bit starved of literature as of late, and am curious about the reading habits of inherently highly intellectual nanons.
You could also mention your favorites and just generally discuss literature.
I am currently reading "The Sky My Kingdom by Hanna Reitch". It's a pretty comy autobiography of the first women fighter pilot.... who happened to fight for the 3rd Reich of Germany. It's a pretty stellar example of how meritocracy produces )))strong((( women whereas feminism produces (((strong))) women. It's nice that I can read a this book by a national socialist around normies too since politics aren't very prolific in the book. At least, so I've been told by others who've read it, understood through reading the summary, and am currently verifying with how far I am in the book.