Video version of this article
0:07:39
This is not the ONLY reason, of course, but the a MAJOR cause. See also my video about "The Decline of the West (True Millennial Woers)": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eilZTgurr4 and my video about family values in Christianity: https://www.youtube.com...
Greetings. Oh crap, it's like hitting a rock. But not all Scandinavians are rock hard these days, are they? Why? Let's find out.
I'm going to talk about Scandinavians in particular, but this applies to all protestant countries in Europe. Remember that. The Reformation was a reformation of Christianity. What they wanted to do was to reform Christianity and return it into being a Jewish religion, because that's what it originally was.[1]And then when this Jewish cult came to Europe, it was changed dramatically and the Europeans incorporated a lot of pagan stuff into their version of Christianity. So, Catholicism is like 90% paganism: pagan symbols, pagan saints, pagan high festivals, pagan songs, and so forth and so forth. So, they wanted to reform it. And what they did was to remove the pagan stuff that they called sorcery and superstitions. They removed a lot of pagan high festivals. They removed the pagan songs, most of them. They removed the pagan art, beautiful art. They removed the pagan saints, and so forth. And what they ended up with was Protestantism.
"Dear Jesus Christ, I have now taken all the pagan beauty from thy temples and removed them. I have taken all those old pagan songs and removed them from your temple. I have turned your temple into the most boring building in the world. Hallelujah!"

The Italians, they can feel a connection to Catholicism because it's 90% paganism. The Spanish people can feel a link to their Catholic religion because it's 90% paganism. The Polish people can feel a connection with their roots because their religion is 90% paganism. But if you go to Finland, you go to Norway, you go to Sweden, you go to Denmark, you go to England, you go to Northern Germany, you go to Holland, you go to the Baltic states, they have no reason whatsoever to feel a connection to Christianity or their version of Christianity. Because it's not paganism. They removed all the pagan stuff.
The result was that in the Protestant countries, not a lot of people are Christians. About 3% of Norwegians go to church outside of the Yule Eve.[2]On the Yule Eve, maybe 10% go to church. If you take a look at Poland, Catholic Poland, numbers are a little bit different. Spain, Italy, very different.

And then you have the problem, namely, the morals of Christianity are not the morals of Christianity. It's pagan. The idea that women are not supposed to sleep around is a pagan idea. Honesty, honour, kindness. All the good stuff in Christianity, it's pagan. Pagan to the core. Family values, that part of Christianity has started to celebrate from the 1960s onwards, it's not Christian. It's pagan.[3]
So, when you go to Scandinavia and people associate all these things with Christianity, a religion they detest intensely.
"Dear Jesus Christ, we have now taken all that sorcery stuff, all these pagan traditions, and thrown them out the window into the pits of hell, where they belong. And we are left with a pure type of Judaism called Protestantism. Thank you, Lord. Hallelujah."
The problem, though, is that when people reject Christianity, they have a tendency to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
The Reformation already ensured that the pagan stuff was removed, most of it. Not all the high festivals, not all the morals, but most of the pagan stuff was thrown out. And so much was thrown out that the Protestant countries reject Christianity. The vast majority don't want anything to do with it. And they throw the baby out with the bathwater. And therefore, they behave like that. They become immoral, they sleep around. They do all the things that they think is anti-Christian.
The European nature is good and moral, family-embracing, kind and honest to the core! Reject the desert poison, but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Revive your European spirit! Return to your strong roots! Heil Óðinn!
I'm going to talk about Scandinavians in particular, but this applies to all protestant countries in Europe. Remember that. The Reformation was a reformation of Christianity. What they wanted to do was to reform Christianity and return it into being a Jewish religion, because that's what it originally was.[1]And then when this Jewish cult came to Europe, it was changed dramatically and the Europeans incorporated a lot of pagan stuff into their version of Christianity. So, Catholicism is like 90% paganism: pagan symbols, pagan saints, pagan high festivals, pagan songs, and so forth and so forth. So, they wanted to reform it. And what they did was to remove the pagan stuff that they called sorcery and superstitions. They removed a lot of pagan high festivals. They removed the pagan songs, most of them. They removed the pagan art, beautiful art. They removed the pagan saints, and so forth. And what they ended up with was Protestantism.
"Dear Jesus Christ, I have now taken all the pagan beauty from thy temples and removed them. I have taken all those old pagan songs and removed them from your temple. I have turned your temple into the most boring building in the world. Hallelujah!"

Protestant church.
The Italians, they can feel a connection to Catholicism because it's 90% paganism. The Spanish people can feel a link to their Catholic religion because it's 90% paganism. The Polish people can feel a connection with their roots because their religion is 90% paganism. But if you go to Finland, you go to Norway, you go to Sweden, you go to Denmark, you go to England, you go to Northern Germany, you go to Holland, you go to the Baltic states, they have no reason whatsoever to feel a connection to Christianity or their version of Christianity. Because it's not paganism. They removed all the pagan stuff.
The result was that in the Protestant countries, not a lot of people are Christians. About 3% of Norwegians go to church outside of the Yule Eve.[2]On the Yule Eve, maybe 10% go to church. If you take a look at Poland, Catholic Poland, numbers are a little bit different. Spain, Italy, very different.

Protestant mass.
And then you have the problem, namely, the morals of Christianity are not the morals of Christianity. It's pagan. The idea that women are not supposed to sleep around is a pagan idea. Honesty, honour, kindness. All the good stuff in Christianity, it's pagan. Pagan to the core. Family values, that part of Christianity has started to celebrate from the 1960s onwards, it's not Christian. It's pagan.[3]
So, when you go to Scandinavia and people associate all these things with Christianity, a religion they detest intensely.
"Dear Jesus Christ, we have now taken all that sorcery stuff, all these pagan traditions, and thrown them out the window into the pits of hell, where they belong. And we are left with a pure type of Judaism called Protestantism. Thank you, Lord. Hallelujah."
The problem, though, is that when people reject Christianity, they have a tendency to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
The Reformation already ensured that the pagan stuff was removed, most of it. Not all the high festivals, not all the morals, but most of the pagan stuff was thrown out. And so much was thrown out that the Protestant countries reject Christianity. The vast majority don't want anything to do with it. And they throw the baby out with the bathwater. And therefore, they behave like that. They become immoral, they sleep around. They do all the things that they think is anti-Christian.
The European nature is good and moral, family-embracing, kind and honest to the core! Reject the desert poison, but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Revive your European spirit! Return to your strong roots! Heil Óðinn!
- Early Christians was just another type of Judaism, and 100% of the Early Christians were Jews.
- And many of the people in Norway who actually go to church are not Norwegians.
- See my video called "Family values in Christianity?"