Thulean Archives

About Old Funeral & Norway

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DescriptionGet my books from here: https://www.amazon.com/Varg-Vikernes/e/B00IVZ2KPO/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1

Related videos:
The North Korean video about The West: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyFH19nm2e4

My video about Iraq: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRATeUEBWJQ

The Skin and Bone Old Funeral track: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyT8vYYpurM

Music from the "last Soviet dictatorship" Belarus. Compared to the ultra pro-European Western Negro rap music, this is obviously evil Communist crap: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hh5yL-UWyDg
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Uploaded2017-05-28
It hasn't rained in a while and I'm pretty sure that the lawn to the neighbour hasn't changed a lot since yesterday. But yeah, cutting the lawn today as well. Great. I'm not going to talk about that though. What I'm going to talk about, let's find out. I'm going to talk a little bit about Old Funeral and my childhood, or some childhood experiences. I came to think of it, you see. Old Funeral, they had a song called Skin and Bones. I've tried to find the lyrics for that song online, but I can't find it anywhere. And the reason why, oh no, she's done. I can hear the birds again. I'll just enjoy this for a little moment. Okay. They had a text called Skin and Bone and the lyrics were so extremely racist, you wouldn't believe it. Which probably explains why I can't find it online, because I'm pretty sure the guys in Old Funeral don't want you to know just how racist it was. It was a song about starvation victims in Ethiopia and of course they kind of made fun of them and described them in a rather racist way. And then I thought, why did they have such attitudes? And this brings me back to childhood elementary school. As you know, I started, actually my first year in school was in Baghdad, in Iraq. I talked about that experience in a separate video. So when I came back to Norway and started in the first grade in elementary school, I had a different background than the other kids in school. It's probably rather unbelievable for Frenchmen, for example, but in the Norwegian school system, they forced all the children to collect money for starvation victims in Ethiopia. Because you know, they were starving there over and over again because a lot of missionaries had gone down there and ensured that a lot of them survived. And as you know, when that happens, they deplete the land. They cut down everything to have firewood, they kill all the animals to have something[1] to eat and so forth. So they caused a starvation, a famine, and this happened over and over again because the missionaries kept going down there and helping them to survive, right? And back in Norway, we were ordered to collect money with these, go from door to door and collect money for the victims in Ethiopia. And as you can expect from me, I refused, yes. And what the system in Norway did was to say that if you refused, then you had to pay a hundred Norwegian kroners from your own pockets, because everybody had to contribute.[2] Of course I refused, but they forced my parents to pay a hundred kroner to the starvation victims in Ethiopia, because I refused. And in this, this sounds rather totalitarian, I know, and it was. And further, this is not the only thing they did, you see. They did a lot of things to pressure, to push, to force the children into collecting money for the starvation victims in Ethiopia. And one of the things they did was to promise a fantastic vacation to some sort of vacation resort for the entire class, school class, to the class in Bergen that was able to collect the most money. Therefore they started some sort of competition between different schools and different classes in each school to be able to, you know, who is going to collect the most money for the starvation victims? And everybody, oh, they wanted this vacation, right? So what do you think happened when I refused to collect any money? I was, of course, you know, I was not contributing, you know, I was ruining their chance to win this fantastic vacation, which, by the way, might well have been absolute nonsense. Just something they said to make, you know, the poor, innocent, naive children collect money as much as they could. And of course, they used children for this, because, you know, if you have a small blonde girl at your door asking you, can you give some money? You're probably more likely to do it, aren't you? So they were manipulating people using the children, and they were using the children in public school, and the children had no choice, so that's how it worked.[3] So when I didn't, when I refused, of course, all the other children were, you know, put up against me, because I wasn't contributing, I was ruining their chance to win, and I was really disliked for a long time in that class, you know, a couple of weeks after that. And then, of course, this was in elementary school, and it didn't just happen once, it happened several times. This is how they manipulate children, this is how they use children in Norway. And of course, I'm pretty sure 90% of all the money collected went straight to the administration of this helpful organization, and, you know, the rest, maybe 1% went to starvation victims, and the rest in the pockets of corrupt people, so... And of course, if you do this to children, you force children into doing child labor for starvation victims in Ethiopia, that the same organizations, you know, they had caused these famines to begin with, by helping as many children as possible to survive.[4] You know, if you hadn't done anything, then it would balance itself out down there, only they wouldn't have more children than they would have been able to feed, but when you have these missionary Christian health organizations feed them artificially, so to speak, and then[5] they leave, of course it causes a huge famine one generation later on. So they did this several times in my childhood in elementary school, and I refused every[6] single time to participate, and yeah, that's all I had to say really. Just explaining a little bit about how the totalitarian state of Norway works. And I am talking about this because we always describe North Korea as being totalitarian and such, but our own systems are not any better.[7] And I would recommend that you watch a documentary about our world from the view of North Korea. It's pretty interesting, and it's also pretty close to the right-wing extremist view on the world here in Europe and America and so forth. I've put up a link to that at the end so you can see it, very interesting, and it should open some eyes. You will be red-pilled by North Korea much more than you will ever be red-pilled by our[8] own media. Thanks for watching, bye bye.[9]
  1. They turn EVERYTHING into a desert.
  2. 100 NOK is about 11 EURO today. It was worth much more in the 1980s.
  3. Internationally, Norway then boasted about how "willing" Norway had been to give money to the victims. "Look how much WE give, in comparison to YOU. Ha ha. We are SO MUCH BETTER than you."
  4. Their modern medicine ensured that almost ALL the African children survived.
  5. I guess that's the only way they can have more Christians in this world.
  6. And apparently made the guys in Old Funeral pretty frustrated.
  7. And Belarus.
  8. Notice how lawn mower comes back right when I finish here. It must have grown too much whilst I made this video.
  9. An image showing the Mental Landscape of Soviet Norway.