Thank you David! I agree! I'm visiting my native Iceland right now, and the level of "trans" insanity here is incredible, thanks mostly to the media, both state and private, whose cosplaying-reporters employees are thoroughly "trans"washed.
Is it possible that icelanders have a higher T level and that has caused a bumper crop or trans identified people. Also, what happens when a person in Iceland stand up in the middle of a room and says, “you know, this is all very dumb”?. I know if I did that at my work they would automatically blame my religion for inducing homophobia, but in Iceland is there a general resistance to standing up against the grain?
Oh, absolutely! We are a very sheep-people. Just this afternoon, I was at Reykjavík's main shopping centre, and the store assistant recognized me (I was a TV news reporter/anchor when I lived here, but that was over 25 years ago, so it rarely happens), and she said, "everyone agrees with your articles (Iceland's oldest and only conservative trad.media newspaper recently began accepting my articles again after years of keeping me on their blacklist, which most other media still do), they just don't dare saying so out loud!" I've never experienced – only seen it in movies! – this level of brainwashing in people, and it's especially creepy to see it in one's friends and family members. The TDS is bad in the US, and I lost friends of many years there when I became a former lifelong Democrat, but the insanity is so much more intense here. I mean, Trump is not their president, and they don't hate him for the same reasons his opponents in the US do – who are largely ignorant about why they hate him, but when you magnify that ignorance x100... They just know that they's supposed to hate him, but they don't know why, and of course they can't explain it. "OMG, what does it feel like there...Aren't you afraid?" and I just look at them, why on earth would you think that? And they can't answer it! and they're so used to never having to explaining their reasons for it.
As my friend Kevin Bass says, "we are all going to die very soon, there is no time to worry about what others think about you". I would encourage your Icelandic friends to just, as a social experiment, just confidently say one unpopular thing that they believe. See if people hate you for it! They probably will not be hated, and they could even try it in a town on the other side of the island. Sicily is such an interesting contrast, where people always say outrageous stuff and then turn around and act totally friendly with each other. I know several far rightists and far leftists who are friends.
Sorry to butt in here, but by any chance do you know whether Sardinia is like Sicily in this regard? I'm thinking of retiring in Sardinia, but I don't want to live anywhere that is taken over by trans madness or where I might be shunned for my beliefs.
It depends who you are around. In Cagliari, I would expect it to be like the big cities of Europe. The further out you live, the less intrusion--except for Italian television, RAI
I think the reason they are claiming that there is more work to do in Iceland is that they are running smack into the reality that their lives are still not fulfilling and there are biological and psychological dimensions to gender that are simply too difficult to psychologically overcome.
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Thank you David! I agree! I'm visiting my native Iceland right now, and the level of "trans" insanity here is incredible, thanks mostly to the media, both state and private, whose cosplaying-reporters employees are thoroughly "trans"washed.
Is it possible that icelanders have a higher T level and that has caused a bumper crop or trans identified people. Also, what happens when a person in Iceland stand up in the middle of a room and says, “you know, this is all very dumb”?. I know if I did that at my work they would automatically blame my religion for inducing homophobia, but in Iceland is there a general resistance to standing up against the grain?
Oh, absolutely! We are a very sheep-people. Just this afternoon, I was at Reykjavík's main shopping centre, and the store assistant recognized me (I was a TV news reporter/anchor when I lived here, but that was over 25 years ago, so it rarely happens), and she said, "everyone agrees with your articles (Iceland's oldest and only conservative trad.media newspaper recently began accepting my articles again after years of keeping me on their blacklist, which most other media still do), they just don't dare saying so out loud!" I've never experienced – only seen it in movies! – this level of brainwashing in people, and it's especially creepy to see it in one's friends and family members. The TDS is bad in the US, and I lost friends of many years there when I became a former lifelong Democrat, but the insanity is so much more intense here. I mean, Trump is not their president, and they don't hate him for the same reasons his opponents in the US do – who are largely ignorant about why they hate him, but when you magnify that ignorance x100... They just know that they's supposed to hate him, but they don't know why, and of course they can't explain it. "OMG, what does it feel like there...Aren't you afraid?" and I just look at them, why on earth would you think that? And they can't answer it! and they're so used to never having to explaining their reasons for it.
As my friend Kevin Bass says, "we are all going to die very soon, there is no time to worry about what others think about you". I would encourage your Icelandic friends to just, as a social experiment, just confidently say one unpopular thing that they believe. See if people hate you for it! They probably will not be hated, and they could even try it in a town on the other side of the island. Sicily is such an interesting contrast, where people always say outrageous stuff and then turn around and act totally friendly with each other. I know several far rightists and far leftists who are friends.
Sorry to butt in here, but by any chance do you know whether Sardinia is like Sicily in this regard? I'm thinking of retiring in Sardinia, but I don't want to live anywhere that is taken over by trans madness or where I might be shunned for my beliefs.
It depends who you are around. In Cagliari, I would expect it to be like the big cities of Europe. The further out you live, the less intrusion--except for Italian television, RAI
I think the reason they are claiming that there is more work to do in Iceland is that they are running smack into the reality that their lives are still not fulfilling and there are biological and psychological dimensions to gender that are simply too difficult to psychologically overcome.