10 Comments
Jan 10Liked by Joseph Jordan

you spoil us, danke schoen

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Jan 10Liked by Joseph Jordan

Great article. Interesting to hear about past market manipulation with all the craziness surrounding bitcoin recently. I wonder how many of them made money after the SEC's bit of "fake news" this afternoon?

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Jan 10Liked by Joseph Jordan

Great article, great content, I just ordered the book. Thanks for all that you do.

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Jan 10Liked by Joseph Jordan

Keep up the good work Striker! We love ya

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Jan 10Liked by Joseph Jordan

Keep up the good work. History of the jew is fascinating

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founding
Jan 13Liked by Joseph Jordan

Some would write that it was the Medici bank in Florence would invent the bill of exchange and the letter of credit as Sombart would suggest come from Jews which I wouldn’t deny either? Did Jews take over the Medici banking? It would seem there is interplay with Amsterdam and London and Florence in the history. What is the Medici role in this? Do we know?

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founding
Jan 13Liked by Joseph Jordan

My first intro to Sombart was German socialism. I’m excited that he re-discovered this scholar. Such great work

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Is there a way to download the mp3?

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Hey, senpai noticed me. while I'm here, I want to encourage you or someone who writes for you to look into Jewish eschatology and messianic prophecy. Has so much to do with our current geopolitical situation and the literature is hard to find, so barely anyone knows about the topic. 🤝

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Feb 10·edited Feb 10

Excellent. As a mild critique, I would suggest (next time or in general for similar topics) a brief introduction up front as to who Sombart was and why we should care about what he has to say. Like straight from jewish wikipedia: "Werner Sombart was a German economist, historian and sociologist. Head of the "Youngest Historical School," he was one of the leading Continental European social scientists during the first quarter of the 20th century. This commentary pertains to Sombart's truly prescient views on the origins of European Jewish power and how it is directly relevant to our modern world."

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