So Jow Forums, what exactly is it that this guy is trying to get at?

so Jow Forums, what exactly is it that this guy is trying to get at?

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Is that from the bible or something? I dont get it...

If he redpills the world on the Phoenicians, it’s over. He’s getting very dangerously close.

>fortnite

Elon Musk is Plus Ultra

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It's not from the Bible. 2deep4me

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>This trigger the boomer
Also, who is Eliot?

i think he's talking about T.S. Elliot
>This triggers the Zoomer

Good old phlebas.

He's telling whites to consider the future of their country and race

The guy on the right

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ok so i read this and basickly its saying you gunna die nigga

"everybody dies, do something important with your life"

It's T.S. Eliot, it says right in the twat

i think he's saying even the powerful and mighty jews die though. no matter how rich and powerful and jewish you are, jew and gentile both end up like phlebas.

Phoenicians are ancient history r-right?

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Qrd on plus ultra please

"Look to Windward" and "Consider Phlebas" are also the names of two of the Culture novels by Iain M Banks.

youtube.com/watch?v=DHBLqFR1fKs

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That death takes us all, even if you're a Jew. It's just a low key threat to Semites. No big deal.

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Commentary
The major point of this short section is to rebut ideas of renewal and regeneration. Phlebas just dies; that’s it. Like Stetson’s corpse in the first section, Phlebas’s body yields nothing more than products of decay. However, the section’s meaning is far from flat; indeed, its ironic layering is twofold. First, this section fulfills one of the prophecies of Madame Sosostris in the poem’s first section: “Fear death by water,” she says, after pulling the card of the Drowned Sailor. Second, this section, in its language and form, mimics other literary forms (parables, biblical stories, etc.) that are normally rich in meaning. These two features suggest that something of great significance lies here. In reality, though, the only lesson that Phlebas offers is that the physical reality of death and decay triumphs over all. Phlebas is not resurrected or transfigured. Eliot further emphasizes Phlebas’s dried-up antiquity and irrelevance by placing this section in the distant past (by making Phlebas a Phoenician).

>If he redpills the world on the Phoenicians, it’s over. He’s getting very dangerously close.

plz explain, what's up with the phoenicians

t?w! ~e- (e* e9l1 d7h!

but you didn't hear it from me