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Peter Sweat
npub1r0dh...xl67
Anti-Communist | Anti-Woke | Bitcoin | Political Satire Truth is not narrative. Narrative is not truth.
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Peter Sweat 9 months ago
Get ya covid boosters!!! "chronic, prolonged, "excitotoxic" activation of the neuroglial immune system in the brain." You gave yourselves a lobotomy. *A brain that is "stuck" in tear down mode with constant immune stimulation* Yum Yum gimme some!
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Peter Sweat 9 months ago
If you got a bunch of covid boosters congrats. You clever peanuts either gave yourself basically aids, turbo cancer or a lobotomy. That's the dastardly thing about it. The State didn't have to line the kulaks up against the wall this time. They tricked them into killing or lobotomizing themselves. You have to notice the weird, childlike behavior coming from some of these people. I have a particular family member with two master's degrees who can barely handle the distress of a gnat landing on her now.
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Peter Sweat 9 months ago
"What is in the sky?" "The firmament. You can learn all about it or just accept that smarter people than yourself are passing on divine knowledge after studying scripture." These dipshits will all claim to be atheist but don't realize they're in a cult and replaced God with science.
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Peter Sweat 9 months ago
The males replaced God with science worship. The females replaced God with "the universe" and crystals. "The universe wanted this to happen!" "Trust the universe, it knows what it's doing." "The universe is sending you a message, listen."
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Peter Sweat 9 months ago
No such thing as an “Atheist.” They just replace God with themselves. They think they are gods.
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
Start holding judges and prosecutors criminally liable if they release a dangerous person out onto the streets and they harm someone.
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
Imagine a system where the logic is present, the structure exists, but none of the components are meaningful, or even executable, unless an external, time-sensitive, or unpredictable key is inserted that deciphers the role of each variable. The system can't even remember how to be alive unless the key teaches it what its own parts mean.
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
Crypto is fighting back onward and upward today. Better get your buy in.
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
I was push mowing my yard with headphones on a while back with a very small window of time before my son's bus. A car pulled up, rolled down their window and started talking to me. I made eye contact and then continued mowing just as I was. They acted pissed at being ignored and drove away. Some may think this is rude behavior on my part. But from my perspective, it's rude and entitled to expect a complete stranger to stop what they are doing to tend to whatever you want. People aren’t background characters to your story. Now get off my lawn!
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
The Anti-Natalist Death Drive: [Why some choose not to reproduce—and why others want you to stop too] In recent years, a quiet but increasingly aggressive ideology has started to take hold online: anti-natalism—the belief that bringing new life into the world is inherently immoral. What once sounded like a fringe philosophical stance has evolved into something more dogmatic. It’s no longer just a private decision. For some, it’s become a moral campaign. It used to be enough to simply say, “I don’t want kids.” That’s a personal decision, and it deserves respect. But something shifted. Now, for a growing subset of activists and influencers, it’s not just about opting out. It’s about talking you out of it. It’s about shaming those who find joy in family, mocking children, and portraying parents as selfish or delusional. This isn’t framed as a lifestyle choice—it’s a moral obligation. They don’t see children as possibilities. They see them as mistakes. And while these arguments often wear the clothing of climate concern or ethical reflection, there’s often something darker underneath. A resentment. A bitterness. A rejection of life itself. When the Virtue Is Not Existing: There are people who say they don’t want to have children because the world is difficult. That’s fair. No one should be forced into parenthood. But there’s a growing number who go further and insist no one should have children. And the reasoning they give can sound virtuous on the surface—until you stop and actually examine it. Let’s look at the emotional core of some of the rhetoric: “I’m enlightened enough to see how awful the world is, and noble enough to break the cycle.” This is the performance of moral superiority. It frames the absence of children not as a personal lifestyle decision, but as a sacrifice for the good of humanity. It’s not just “I don’t want kids”—it’s “I’m brave enough to not continue the cycle.” This logic creates a new moral hierarchy. In it, reproduction isn’t neutral—it’s selfish. Life itself becomes a guilty act. And those who refuse to participate are elevated as the most ethical of all. But this worldview isn’t brave. It’s cynical. It denies the possibility that life can be more than suffering. It assumes that pain is the default and that beauty, love, and purpose are illusions. It gives people a sense of superiority not by doing anything, but by withholding—as if that alone makes them wise. “I feel broken. The world feels broken. So let’s stop making more of it.” This isn’t a philosophical stance—it’s a projection of personal pain. And it's everywhere. Some people have suffered. Some feel isolated, depressed, or deeply wounded. Instead of healing, they turn that pain outward and call it clarity. “Because I suffer, life itself must be broken.” This leads to a false universal: the belief that the world is too cruel for anyone. That it’s better to never be born than to risk pain. But this isn’t about compassion. It’s about fear. It’s about trying to prevent the experience of others by assuming their suffering in advance. People who carry this belief aren’t wrong to feel hurt—but they are wrong to insist that no one else should try to build joy, to grow, or to hope. “Why should you get to feel joy and legacy when I only see decay?” Here’s where the mask really drops. This isn’t about ethics. It’s about envy. Some of the online rhetoric isn’t quiet despair. It’s loud, bitter resentment. Hatred of children. Hatred of parents. Hatred of people who have the nerve to feel joy or meaning in a world they think is beyond redemption. Children represent potential, innocence, and future. Families represent connection. In the eyes of someone who has lost connection to meaning, those things can look like insults. It becomes, “If I can’t have joy, you shouldn’t either.” That’s not moral reasoning. That’s spite. This is the emotional root of so much of the hostility you now see online—especially toward women who choose motherhood, toward families who celebrate life, and toward anyone who believes the future is worth building. But Haven’t the Greatest Among Us Also Suffered? Yes. And that’s exactly why the anti-natalist argument falls flat. Human greatness is not built in the absence of suffering. It’s built in response to it. Frederick Douglass escaped slavery and turned his pain into a lifelong fight for justice. Frida Kahlo painted through agony and made art that still speaks across generations. Joseph Lister was mocked for saying germs were real. He saved millions by refusing to back down. Stephen Hawking, imprisoned in his own body, gave us visions of the universe that changed the way we think about time, space, and existence itself. All of them suffered. And all of them used that suffering to move the world forward. Pain alone isn’t what makes life meaningful. But what we do with pain—that’s where meaning is born. The Desire to Create Is Not the Problem: Human innovation is rooted in struggle. Fire, medicine, music, freedom, flight—none of these came from comfort. They came from tension, danger, fear, and persistence. If the world had always been safe and easy, we would never have built anything. We would never have needed to. That doesn’t mean suffering is good. It means humans are good enough to overcome it. That’s something the anti-natalist can’t acknowledge. To them, the existence of suffering invalidates life itself. But the truth is the opposite: the existence of life that pushes through suffering is what makes humanity worth preserving. You Don’t Have to Reproduce to Respect Life: If someone doesn’t want children, fine. That’s their decision. It doesn’t make them less human. But the moment that decision turns outward—into contempt, into scorn, into a doctrine that says, “You’re selfish for hoping, you’re deluded for building, you’re blind for loving”—they’re no longer just opting out. They’re trying to pull others down with them. You can live a childfree life and still love humanity. You can choose not to bring children into the world and still believe the world is worth something. But if your worldview requires everyone else to give up on meaning, on love, on legacy, or on the possibility that things can get better—then it’s not compassion you’re preaching. It’s despair.
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
It's hard to be more of a loser than being traumatized over a blue jean ad
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
it feels like some people, especially on the left, treat language like a secret cipher, like they're in on some hidden knowledge and you're just too dumb to notice
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Peter Sweat 10 months ago
No child believes they were born in the wrong body until a creepy adult deliberately puts that idea in their head.