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All great books will have little reactionary bits of wisdom like this one scattered throughout. It's impossible to love a topic, write about it sincerely, and avoid doing this.

True understanding requires proper hierarchy — the acknowledgment that some thoughts, some traditions, some ways of seeing are simply better than others. When you deeply engage with any subject, you inevitably encounter the reality that some approaches work and others fail, that some methods endure while others collapse, that wisdom accumulates in certain patterns that modern thought tries desperately to deny.

Look at any master writing about their craft — whether it's cooking, carpentry, physics, or music. They'll eventually reveal truths about proper order and right relationship that sound strange to modern ears. Not because they're politically motivated, but because these truths are inevitable when you truly understand anything.

The cook must acknowledge the authority of heat and timing. The master carpenter must bow before the truth of grain and growth rings. The physicist submits to immutable natural laws. The musician yields to the mathematical truth of harmonics. Each, in their own way, discovers that reality has an order that must be respected rather than revolutionized.

Even the most progressive author, if they genuinely love and understand their subject, will accidentally stumble into eternal truths. The very act of mastery requires acknowledging better and worse, higher and lower, proper and improper order.

The more deeply someone understands and loves their field, the more likely they are to accidentally speak truth that sounds reactionary to modern ears — not from political conviction, but from direct encounter with the way things actually are.



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All great books will have little reactionary bits of wisdom like this one scattered throughout. It's impossible to love a topic, write about it sincerely, and avoid doing this.

True understanding requires proper hierarchy — the acknowledgment that some thoughts, some traditions, some ways of seeing are simply better than others. When you deeply engage with any subject, you inevitably encounter the reality that some approaches work and others fail, that some methods endure while others collapse, that wisdom accumulates in certain patterns that modern thought tries desperately to deny.

Look at any master writing about their craft — whether it's cooking, carpentry, physics, or music. They'll eventually reveal truths about proper order and right relationship that sound strange to modern ears. Not because they're politically motivated, but because these truths are inevitable when you truly understand anything.

The cook must acknowledge the authority of heat and timing. The master carpenter must bow before the truth of grain and growth rings. The physicist submits to immutable natural laws. The musician yields to the mathematical truth of harmonics. Each, in their own way, discovers that reality has an order that must be respected rather than revolutionized.

Even the most progressive author, if they genuinely love and understand their subject, will accidentally stumble into eternal truths. The very act of mastery requires acknowledging better and worse, higher and lower, proper and improper order.

The more deeply someone understands and loves their field, the more likely they are to accidentally speak truth that sounds reactionary to modern ears — not from political conviction, but from direct encounter with the way things actually are.

BY The Daily Poor


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You may recall that, back when Facebook started changing WhatsApp’s terms of service, a number of news outlets reported on, and even recommended, switching to Telegram. Pavel Durov even said that users should delete WhatsApp “unless you are cool with all of your photos and messages becoming public one day.” But Telegram can’t be described as a more-secure version of WhatsApp. Perpetrators of such fraud use various marketing techniques to attract subscribers on their social media channels. The fake Zelenskiy account reached 20,000 followers on Telegram before it was shut down, a remedial action that experts say is all too rare. The S&P 500 fell 1.3% to 4,204.36, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.7% to 32,943.33. The Dow posted a fifth straight weekly loss — its longest losing streak since 2019. The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 2.2% to 12,843.81. Though all three indexes opened in the green, stocks took a turn after a new report showed U.S. consumer sentiment deteriorated more than expected in early March as consumers' inflation expectations soared to the highest since 1981. Crude oil prices edged higher after tumbling on Thursday, when U.S. West Texas intermediate slid back below $110 per barrel after topping as much as $130 a barrel in recent sessions. Still, gas prices at the pump rose to fresh highs.
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