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never seen such a hovel of a neglected mess devoid of any valuable assets crucial in forming opposition to our evil oppressors.

Here are the virtues. If you are doing the opposite, you are vicious, not virtuous.

Being Aryan by blood alone is not enough if you are not virtuous or at least in pursuit of virtue.

Plato on Virtue:

In different periods of his writing, Plato argues for different conceptions of the unity of the virtues. He always denies that one can possess one virtue without possessing the others. He first supposes that all virtues are one, since they are identical to knowledge. This goes with an analysis of the emotions that ties them closely to judgements about what is best. In the Republic, he ascribes different emotions to three different ‘parts’ of the soul, and associates distinct virtues with these (with justice as a virtue common to all three). Philosophers possess all these virtues together; even common men who can achieve a virtue only to a limited degree must achieve the other virtues to the same degree. All men can be happy to a degree within Plato’s utopia.

                    Christian   Plato       

                    Chastity        Wisdom      
                    Temperance  Temperance/ Moderation  
                    Charity          CommonGood  
                    Diligence       Fortitude   
                    Patience        Prudence   
                    Kindness       Justice     
                    Humility        Courage     
never seen such a hovel of a neglected mess devoid of any valuable assets crucial in forming opposition to our evil oppressors. Here are the virtues. If you are doing the opposite, you are vicious, not virtuous. Being Aryan by blood alone is not enough if you are not virtuous or at least in pursuit of virtue. Plato on Virtue: In different periods of his writing, Plato argues for different conceptions of the unity of the virtues. He always denies that one can possess one virtue without possessing the others. He first supposes that all virtues are one, since they are identical to knowledge. This goes with an analysis of the emotions that ties them closely to judgements about what is best. In the Republic, he ascribes different emotions to three different ‘parts’ of the soul, and associates distinct virtues with these (with justice as a virtue common to all three). Philosophers possess all these virtues together; even common men who can achieve a virtue only to a limited degree must achieve the other virtues to the same degree. All men can be happy to a degree within Plato’s utopia. Christian Plato Chastity Wisdom Temperance Temperance/ Moderation Charity CommonGood Diligence Fortitude Patience Prudence Kindness Justice Humility Courage

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[–] 0 pt

[you fuckhead retard]

GAME AND MATCH.