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Globalized Jewry's networked operations, alongside "resident" jews inside each nation, are performed in order to cause "de-nationalism, the bastardization of other nations"

submitted by Flanders to whatever 7 hoursJun 19, 2025 21:27:35 ago (+3/-0)     (whatever)

[Flanders]: The last quoted portion above is from Hitler's own description. "Hitler, Germans and the "Jewish Question", p. 94 (1948)
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Carl Jung would likely have agreed, and he knew about parasaitic nature of the jews:

Carl Jung (about Jews):
https://media.scored.co/post/g9BrOHQaHAUZ.jpeg

"The Aryan unconscious has a higher potential than the Jewish."

"The Jew who is something of a nomad has never yet created a cultural form of his own and as far as we can see never will, since all his instincts and
talents require a more or less civilized nation to act as host for their development."

"The Jews have this peculiarity with women; being physically weaker, they
have to aim at the chinks in the armour of their adversary."

- C.G. Jung, "The State of Psychotherapy Today", Collected Works (Routledge), vol. 193
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"It is a quite unpardonable mistake to accept the conclusions of a Jewish psychology as generally valid, the differences which actually do exist between Germanic and Jewish psychology and which have been long known to every intelligent person are no longer to be glossed over"
- "The Relations between the Ego and the Unconscious", vol. 7 192
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"Who has fully realized that history is not contained in thick books but lives in our very blood?" - Carl Jung
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"I have treated many hundreds of patients. Among those in the second half of life - that is to say, over 35 - there has not been one whose problem in the last resort was not that of finding a religious outlook on life." - Carl Jung
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"Resistance to the organized mass can be effected only by the man who is as well organized in his individuality as the mass itself." - - Carl Jung
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Carl Gustav Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who founded the idea of analytical psychology.

"Jung was born in 1875, near Lake Constance in Switzerland. His father was a village pastor, something that gave Jung a unique insight into Christianity. He married in 1903 and had five children. Jung trained as a psychiatrist and worked at the Burghölzli hospital in Zürich, where he came across Sigmund Freud’s work, in which he was immediately interested. After a period of correspondence, Jung became an uneasy pupil of Freud’s. They collaborated in setting up and popularising Freud’s psychoanalysis in its difficult early years, when this radical new understanding of the mind was meeting much opposition.

Jung was openly acknowledged as the heir apparent to Freud’s legacy for a while, until the differences in their theoretical positions and personalities became manifest and they split irreconcilably in 1913. This split capitulated Jung into a personal but ultimately creative crisis, and he emerged from this period of self-exploration and discovery having developed the concepts that were to become the cornerstones of analytical psychology.

Jung was a complex and controversial character, probably best known through his ‘autobiography’ Memories, Dreams and Reflections (actually it was dictated to his assistant Aniela Jaffé, who had a significant influence on the form and content of the book, omitting what she felt inappropriate). Jung had his own shadow side, and his relationships with women and his alleged anti-Semitism in the war years have been discussed extensively (see, for example, chapter 7 in Jung – A Very Short Introduction by Anthony Stevens).

He died in Küsnacht, Switzerland in 1961, however his legacy lives on with the SAP, and across the world where his ideas remain a part of society’s collective thinking.

The core of Carl Jung’s theory system was the belief that the whole of the individual’s experience should be respected and included, rather than aspects being pathologised or disavowed; this included the individual’s unwanted ‘shadow’ aspects – such as, for example, their aggressive, envious, destructive qualities, as well as their spiritual longings and experiences. Jung’s was a vision that embraced the heights and depths of human experience.

The most famous idea of Jung’s is his recognition of the psychological value of spiritual experience, particularly in an era where traditional religious belief was waning and church attendance across Europe was declining. Jung recognised that these spiritual longings, beliefs and experiences stemmed from the psyche’s intrinsic striving toward wholeness, which required that the individual move beyond, and expand, their everyday view of themselves, opening themselves up to the functioning of the deeper psyche and the functioning of what he called ‘the self’."

[MORE]:
https://www.thesap.org.uk/articles-on-jungian-psychology-2/carl-gustav-jung/


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