endangered races

Knowing your enemy in order to counter them is like understanding a disease—there's always a risk of falling ill if you don't yet have the cure.
When you read a book about Nazism that isn't a Nazi book, the authors tell you all the reasons why Nazism is evil. Well, in a way, it's because they've read those Nazi books themselves—they went straight to the source to understand the danger firsthand.

When parents raise their children in a religion with good intentions, there's a risk that their children might come into contact with disturbing elements. The risk is minimal, but it's not zero. That said, this risk exists even when children aren't raised in any religion... But what's the best way to protect the child? Should we introduce them to the dangers or let them figure it out on their own if they ever encounter a risky situation?

If you spend your whole life in your room reading books that tell you going out into the city is dangerous, you only have a theoretical understanding of reality—a knowledge that isn't reality itself. And if you later have children, how will you talk to them about the outside world if you've only experienced it through books? That world exists beyond paper or a computer screen... Your children might only want to experience and see with their own eyes the reality that resembles the stories their parents told them.




Poetry by Albert Vynckier The PoetBay support member heart!
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Written on 2025-03-10 at 17:52

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