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simon_enefer's profile
Simon Enefer
Simon Enefer
Simon Enefer
@simon_enefer

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Simon Enefer

@simon_enefer

Joined June 2016

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    1. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

      Did you check the sources yourself? Or are you just listening to the SJWs who want to change our very language to prevent us thinking heretical thoughts. Post-modernism isn't a political ideology, it is a religion. Reject or leave the faith and you are not wrong, you are evil!

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    2. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

      Yep, I checked the sources. They’re conveniently linked in the descriptions!

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    3. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

      2. The New Scientist ran an article on a catastrophic break in the genetic make up of Europeans. This occurred about 7000 years ago. It concluded that the original male population was wiped out by invaders who then mated with the surviving women of the original population.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    4. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

      The New Scientist has a paywall, and all I’m seeing from them is articles about invasions by the Yamnaya, an ancient Eurasian hunter-gatherer culture who probably propagated the Proto-Indo-European language group. Which video is that supposed to support?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    5. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @OhNoIts2016 @KEEMSTAR and

      That is the article! Well done. You would make an excellent researcher! Fast work. The article is fascinating as the timescales for the changes are very rapid.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    6. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

      Populations are a lot higher and more stable now than they were in the copper age though Also, invasions kill a whole bunch of people, whereas immigration... doesn’t do that

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    7. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

      Migration killed Rome which had its 2015 moment in 376AD. 250,000 Goths arrive requesting sanctuary and some thirty years later they sack Rome. This was never some deep conspiracy but the result if two very different cultures interacting.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    8. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 13
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

      I believe this is quite a bit of a mischaracterization. I should probably defer to a video on this one:https://youtu.be/BHW3Y_p2llo 

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    9. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 14
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

      Stefan's video is flawed. Rome's elite lost faith in the idea of Rome. Contrast the 5th century AD elites too the elites behaviour in the 2nd Punic War. All members of Roman society risked everything to continue and win, in the 5th Cent they made deals or entered the Church!

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    10. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 14
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      Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

      Right, I just don’t think it’s accurate to portray the Goths’ sack of Rome as being caused by unchecked immigration, or even as the turning point leading to Rome’s fall. It was a much longer process than that, and the Goths rose up due mainly to abuse.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 14
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

      It is the number that matters! A few thousand the Romans could control, disperse and assimilate. 250,000 was just too many. The Goths kept their identity, seized regions within the Empire and demanded concessions. This is what is happening in Paris today.

      9:19 AM - 14 Jun 2019
      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. mambo bamba 🍞 🌎ᵘˢᵃ‏ @mediocre_danny Jun 14
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and

          Rome had already received *millions* of immigrants before that, though. From 300 BC to 200 AD, they’d received influx after influx of peoples. It was arguably a necessary part of their imperialism, as most of those immigrants were enslaved for at least the first generation.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        3. Simon Enefer‏ @simon_enefer Jun 14
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and

          Never in these numbers in such a short period of time. Interestingly Roman Limes or borders seemed to controlling low level access to Roman territory as their primary focus. This is especially true of the North African Limes bordering nomadic areas.

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
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