1 year ago11 points(+0/-0/+11Score on mirror)2 children
I don't think the idea of 1st, 2nd, 3rd world ever were useful.
Reality is that everyone is living in the "3rd" world.
Some people put in the miniscule extra work and restraint needed to keep their streets clean. But the default is to have dead horses and piled heaps of filth in your streets. That's the way the world is unless people spend a tiny fraction of their time and intellect exercising self-restraint and cleaning up the mess.
It's certainly an outdated label, hence why "Developed" and "Developing" are used more commonly now.
> The “three worlds” model of geopolitics first arose in the mid-20th century as a way of mapping the various players in the Cold War. ... In this original context, the First World included the United States and its capitalist allies in places such as Western Europe, Japan and Australia. The Second World consisted of the communist Soviet Union and its Eastern European satellites. The Third World, meanwhile, encompassed all the other countries that were not actively aligned with either side in the Cold War. These were often impoverished former European colonies, and included nearly all the nations of Africa, the Middle East, Latin America and Asia.
Originally those labels were used to describe 1st world countries that are aligned with the USA, 2nd world countries that were aligned with the USSR, and the 3rd world countries who weren’t associated with either.
they can't even maintain the pyramids. Apparently the pyramids are falling apart and they don't like tourists taking pictures because they don't want people to know that. If they can't even maintain their pyramids then in what planet did they ever build them?
1 year ago6 points(+0/-0/+6Score on mirror)1 child
They didnt treat the population like slaves, they just understood that the average peasant was too retarded to maintain his own property, so the King officially owned it to ensure that the peasants had to maintain their stuff.
The topic of feudalism is complex and it doesn't help that communists / marxists tried to argue that it was part of the natural progression of economies and so put it at a lower state than the so-called "free market" or as they say "capitalism" that we live in today.
Feudalism, as actually practiced, and the practice was not standard by any stretch of the imagination, is probably a better way to ensure the freedoms of the lower classes and keep the upper classes honest than any other system I can come up with. When you boil it down to its essence you see in it the profound respect for human rights and reverence towards God and creation.
To wit, understand first that the Roman Empire merely enforced a sort of what we call "capitalism". Their brand of capitalism allowed regular people to acquire and use armies, and political offices were for sale to the highest bidder, but nonetheless the average Roman citizen could buy and sell and work as he pleased, save for his future and so on and so forth. If anything, it's probably closer to what we have in the US than any other historical system that we have a lot of knowledge of.
When the Roman Empire "collapsed", people didn't know it. They just thought it was another invader taking the emperor's throne for themselves, the same as it has always been done. The significance of the fall wasn't some event but a shift in how people organized. No longer were people deferring to the Roman Empire. It gradually became an honorary title with few if any real powers. Instead, people organized their own little kingdoms and fiefdoms.
If you want to understand what is coming next in US history -- I believe it is the middle ages all over again, so it's important to understand how it developed and especially WHY it developed and was sustained for nearly 1,000 years, and what parts of it are still present today.
To summarize what I understand of it, it is very simply this: People swear loyalty to each other, and they count on each other to be there when they are most needed, and people's worth is determined by how well they execute on their sworn oaths. That's it. Lords could only accumulate as much power as they could reciprocate. If the lord wasn't able to effectively manage his domain, then his tenets would leave and go elsewhere until he got his act together, or he died and someone else replaced him, or worst of all, a higher noble threw him out. We often equate warfare with the middle ages but the truth is that it was a relatively peaceful time in European history. Before and after the Middle Ages wars were very much more common and more severe. The Middle Ages provided a framework for wars, but more importantly, a way to fight wars without destroying the farmland or the peasants who worked it.
At no point during the Middle Ages were lords and kings able to treat their subjects as slaves. It wasn't until AFTER the middle ages that we saw kings begin to imagine that they had absolute power and that subjects were mere pawns on a board to be dispensed with as they pleased. And as we saw under communism, as a society moves more towards "enlightenment" the value of human life drops rapidly.
They were the product of Egyptian and Hebrew Race-Mixing, the Egyptians were probably the browner of the 2 on account of being hamites, but pretty sure most depictions of muhammed show him as a fair skinned mediterranian man. I think as Islam expanded they started to mix with the sub-saharans (who are possibly degenerated hamites cursed by God), they became browner).
Egypt under shitskins: Shithole.