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Roosh Hour #66 – Gay Terror Month
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<blockquote data-quote="Rivershield" data-source="post: 1492716" data-attributes="member: 18947"><p>Before I say anything, I'm reluctant to answer this because Roosh gave me a ban warning for my previous comment.</p><p>So let me be clear: I'm not trying to advocate violence, I'm merely describing the reasons I think it's important to have guns, and the context I live in. I'm just describing how I sincerely feel.</p><p></p><p>That said, the purpose of having a gun is not just personal safety, but to be able to overtrow your government if needed. Maybe you live in Sweden, a country that used to fit your description. But look at how they are now. I've actually met a few nationalist swedes, some of which were christian, and they all said they need guns.</p><p>Besides, my own country will never fit the recquirements you mention. Brazil has miscigenation at its very core. We brazilians were forcefully stripped of our guns despite people voting to keep them. I'm not joking, there was a popular vote, the people voted to keep their guns, the governement just straight up ignored the result and forced everyone to give up their guns or go to jail. This was right before some major gun manufacturers were preparing to open business here, so we would have access to the same type of guns americans had. At the time we only had access to very old pistols and rifles meant for hunting and personal protection, which is why nobody thought about rebellion.</p><p>With the ban, none of these companies ever stepped foot here.</p><p></p><p>Why do you think they did it? Right after that, the PT party (Worker's Party, communists disguised as liberals - at the time we didn't knew) got into power and literally almost started a revolution. They conspired with Farc and Red Command (communist militias) and used Gibs to appease the masses, and the combination of this is the reason the Favelas exist. Now the outlaws are armed and we, honest hard working people, aren't. We are totally at the hands of either drug traffickers or corrupt politicians.</p><p>I swear to God almight I would rather die fighting than live like this forever. To be forever ashamed of my country. Many brazilians, specially the christian ones, feel the same.</p><p>And you will too. The US is on the path of becoming Brazil 2.0.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rivershield, post: 1492716, member: 18947"] Before I say anything, I'm reluctant to answer this because Roosh gave me a ban warning for my previous comment. So let me be clear: I'm not trying to advocate violence, I'm merely describing the reasons I think it's important to have guns, and the context I live in. I'm just describing how I sincerely feel. That said, the purpose of having a gun is not just personal safety, but to be able to overtrow your government if needed. Maybe you live in Sweden, a country that used to fit your description. But look at how they are now. I've actually met a few nationalist swedes, some of which were christian, and they all said they need guns. Besides, my own country will never fit the recquirements you mention. Brazil has miscigenation at its very core. We brazilians were forcefully stripped of our guns despite people voting to keep them. I'm not joking, there was a popular vote, the people voted to keep their guns, the governement just straight up ignored the result and forced everyone to give up their guns or go to jail. This was right before some major gun manufacturers were preparing to open business here, so we would have access to the same type of guns americans had. At the time we only had access to very old pistols and rifles meant for hunting and personal protection, which is why nobody thought about rebellion. With the ban, none of these companies ever stepped foot here. Why do you think they did it? Right after that, the PT party (Worker's Party, communists disguised as liberals - at the time we didn't knew) got into power and literally almost started a revolution. They conspired with Farc and Red Command (communist militias) and used Gibs to appease the masses, and the combination of this is the reason the Favelas exist. Now the outlaws are armed and we, honest hard working people, aren't. We are totally at the hands of either drug traffickers or corrupt politicians. I swear to God almight I would rather die fighting than live like this forever. To be forever ashamed of my country. Many brazilians, specially the christian ones, feel the same. And you will too. The US is on the path of becoming Brazil 2.0. [/QUOTE]
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