Christians killed millions in Ireland [3:14]

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"Christians killed millions in Ireland." Me: This must be Christian universal love. The history of Ireland confirms that Christianity—in any form—is antithetical to the organic spirit of a people. 1. Christianity as a Tool of Degeneration: The conflicts in Ireland, though framed as religious, reveal the deeper disorder introduced by Christian universalism—eroding true hierarchical order and replacing it with egalitarian strife. 2. Cromwell’s Puritan Fanaticism: A manifestation of Christianity’s inherently leveling and destructive nature, where zealotry served not faith but the uprooting of tradition. 3. Penal Laws & Spiritual Enslavement: The suppression of Irish Catholics under Protestant rule exemplifies Christianity’s divisive essence—replacing indigenous cohesion with sectarian servitude. 4. The Great Famine & Christian Hypocrisy: While not direct slaughter, the indifference of a supposedly "Christian" empire exposes the hollowness of its so-called charity. Conclusion: Christian "love" is a chthonic deception—a lunar cult of weakness, binding the masses to a slave morality. Ireland’s suffering is but one testament to its corrosive influence. Metaphysical part: The Olympian Ideal and the Critique of Natural Law The modern world’s decline stems from the inversion of traditional hierarchies, where the material principle (the masses, democracy) has usurped the formal principle (the State, hierarchy). This breakdown reflects a regression from the Olympian, virile, and spiritual order to a chthonic, maternal, and egalitarian disorder. Natural law, a cornerstone of modern subversive ideologies, embodies this regression. It is rooted in a utopian view of human nature, proclaiming universal equality and innate rights—principles alien to the traditional worldview. In reality, "natural law" is not an eternal truth but a product of a specific, decadent civilization—one that rejects hierarchy in favor of a materialistic, egalitarian ethos. H


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