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55
Consoom Deodorant 🧼 (media.scored.co)
posted 1 month ago by USSDefiantJazz on scored.co (+0 / -0 / +55Score on mirror )
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NikolaiVsevolodovich on scored.co
1 month ago -4 points (+0 / -0 / -4Score on mirror ) 1 child
So you're a pajeet?

What do you say to people who say to stay in your own country and make it better, rather than bringing your problems here?
steele2 on scored.co
1 month ago 8 points (+0 / -0 / +8Score on mirror ) 3 children
Every White Christian should travel extensively, especially when they're young and before they start a family (like I did), so they can fill their lives with as much experience and knowledge as possible without relying on pure research or false (((mainstream media narratives))).

Truly understanding the world takes effort and that effort is an investment.

ImBillCurtis on scored.co
1 month ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror )
You’re supposed to travel the world and experience cultures, especially as a White man. It gives you appreciation for what you have. Unfortunately, retards mistake that for promoting globalization or whatever.
NiggerWithAForklift on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
How much did you save up before you could confidently go and travel? I want to do this but I'm by myself with no one supporting me and no fallback plan or family
steele2 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
I saved to buy a house since I was 14.

I was 26 years old when I traveled extensively in 2000.

I had $48,000 savings. I kept $5000 available and put everything else in quarterly term deposits at about 8.5% (from memory, I think that's correct).

I moved my sister into my apartment so I had it waiting for me when I got back. I paid her first two months rent as a thank-you and thankfully, she honored the agreement. I really LOVED that apartment. Some of the best memories of my life was spent there.

I'm unsure how much I spent to travel, but most of it was covered by the term deposit interest payments. I generally spent nothing, but I did lose a year of regular income but it was well worth it.

Be mindful I was mostly traveling in 3rd world countries which made it cheaper.

NiggerWithAForklift on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 2 children
Incredible! I am 25 and have about $100k. I have been working full time since I was 19. If you were me where would you go and would you still use CDs to make income? (8.5% is huge idk where I could find that)
steele2 on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Keep in mind inflation has almost doubled the USD since 2000 and you're right about term deposit rates sucking in modern times.

>If you were me where would you go

That depends on what you're interested in.

When I was 26, I wanted to see the remote communities of Tibet before the Chinese railway was complete.

I believed this was my last chance to see history before it was gone forever - places were tiny communities still practiced the white scorpion religion of Bon and had never seen a White man.

I wanted to stay in the main Buddhist temples in Tibet and study with the monks.

I wanted to see and stay in the Ganden and Drepung Monastery in and near Lhasa.

I wanted to see Everest from both the Tibetan and Nepalese sides and climb it at least half way up.

I wanted to see just how filthy New Delhi was and visit the Taj Mahal and participate in the Kumbh Mela (largest religion gathering in human history).

I wanted to stay in the Jain monasteries in New Delhi and see the burning ghats of Varanasi.

I wanted to climb Everest to see how far I could make it before I started bleeding from my lungs and brain (HAPE / HACE).

I wanted to live in Tokyo long enough so it felt like home. 'Also wanted to climb Mt. Fuji.

I wanted to stay in the Muslim districts of New Delhi to confirm how disgusting moslems are.

I wanted to live in Paris long enough so it felt like home, so I knew the people and the streets.

I wanted to see Rome, the Vatican, Italy.

I REALLY wanted to pay my respects to Germany, especially Berlin and pretend it was 1937.

I wanted to live in London and slowly work my way up to Wales and then Edinburgh and Glasgow, spending weeks exploring the highlands on foot and camping.

Walking between cities and countries was painful, especially with injuries, but I have no words to express how it changed me.

Sleeping in train stations. Broken toes, cracked ribs and blisters 1/10th of an inch thick from hiking and mountain climbing. Not being able to recognize myself in the mirror because I lost so much weight.

A large part of what motivated me is I wanted more of a connection to the world: I wanted to see pictures of the Eiffel Tower, the Champs-Elysees, the Louvre, the Colosseum in Rome, Westminster Abbey and Buckingham Palace, Tokyo central and mount Fuji... and know the streets behind those photos and the locals who lived there by name and as drinking buddies.

I wanted to see those photos and feel the same sensation of driving past the house where I was born or my first apartment. Like those places were part of me.

So I did.

It was magnificent.

(I should have said more about Nepal because that was awesome too! Switzerland and Liechtenstein are beautiful too. And the Milford Track in New Zealand is a spectacular and hilariously safe and relatively short fun experience.)

But I have no idea what you need to experience.
mommamany on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Well done on being able to save so much at a young age!
mommamany on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
This was really well said.
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