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Reason: None provided.

Point One: Before discovering theDonald, I floated over to Reddit and...nah, I'll pass. Not only are the front page topics lame and lefty, so is the formatting. I'm sure back in the day it was a great place, but like all scientific truths, such as F=ma, it is an incontrovertible fact that libtards ruin everything and Reddit is no exception. Since Reddit became the Daily Kos in message board form, I thought, "Meh, I'll check out some non-libtard alternatives and see if they have boards on topics I'm interested in or whatever." So I checked out VOAT and, after channeling John Kerry, I liked it until it I didn't. After scrolling through innumerable "The Jooooooos" posts and wading through a morass of pseudo-intellectual posturing on why God is dead and atheism is the key to happiness, I dropped it like a Democrat dropping pallets of fake ballots in Milwaukee at 3am in the morning. TheDonald just rocks. I love this site. But like any normie, I get tired of politics and like to discuss/learn about other things. I hope the Moderators will develop a .win site that can become a viable Reddit alternative that will allow us to start discussions on such topics as Frederick the Great, which would be cool.

Point Two: I didn't know that Frederick the Great was homosexual! I'm going to research that as I've become obsessed with Napoleon and the Napoleonic Wars lately. If anyone else is interested in Frederick the Great and Prussian History, check out Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 by Christopher Clark. And since the history of Prussia and France are intertwined, read Napoleon: A Life by Andrew Roberts, Russia Against Napoleon by Dominic Lievin, and The Crimean War by Orlando Figes (it occurred over forty years after the Napoleonic Wars, but was a result of unresolved issues derived from that period). Similarly, WWI can also be argued as being derivative of unresolved issues originating from the Crimea War, and since the German military establishment was Prussian, The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman is a great introduction to the conflict.

I'm rambling. Anyway, Happy New Year and best wishes to everyone in 2021!

58 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Point One: Before discovering theDonald, I floated over to Reddit and...nah, I'll pass. Not only are the front page topics lame and lefty, so is the formatting. I'm sure back in the day it was a great place, but like all scientific truths, such as F=ma, it is an incontrovertible fact that libtards ruin everything and Reddit is no exception. Since Reddit became the Daily Kos in message board form, I thought, "Meh, I'll check out some non-libtard alternatives and see if they have boards on topics I'm interested in or whatever." So I checked out VOAT and, after channeling John Kerry, I liked it until it I didn't. After scrolling through innumerable "The Jooooooos" posts and wading through a morass of pseudo-intellectual posturing on why God is dead and atheism is the key to happiness, I dropped it like a Democrat dropping pallets of fake ballots in Milwaukee at 3am in the morning. TheDonald just rocks. I love this site. But like any normie, I get tired of politics and like to discuss/learn about other things. I hope the Moderators will develop a .win site that can become a viable Reddit alternative that will allow us to start discussions on such topics as Frederick the Great, which would be cool.

Point Two: I didn't know that Frederick the Great was homosexual! I'm going to research that as I've become obsessed with Napoleon and the Napoleonic Wars lately. If anyone else is interested in Frederick the Great and Prussian History, check out Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 by Christopher Clark. And since the history of Prussia and France are intertwined, read Napoleon: A Life by Andrew Roberts, Russia Against Napoleon by Dominic Lievin, and The Crimea War by Orlando Figes (it occurred over forty years after the Napoleonic Wars, but was a result of unresolved issues derived from that period). Similarly, WWI can also be argued as being derivative of unresolved issues originating from the Crimea War, and since the German military establishment was Prussian, The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman is a great introduction to the conflict.

I'm rambling. Anyway, Happy New Year and best wishes to everyone in 2021!

58 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Point One: Before discovering theDonald, I floated over to Reddit and...nah, I'll pass. Not only are the front page topics lame and lefty, so is the formatting. I'm sure back in the day it was a great place, but like all scientific truths, such as F=ma, it is an incontrovertible fact that libtards ruin everything and Reddit is no exception. Since Reddit became the Daily Kos in message board form, I thought, "Meh, I'll check out some non-libtard alternatives and see if they have boards on topics I'm interested in or whatever." So I checked out VOAT and, after channeling John Kerry, I liked it until it I didn't. After scrolling through innumerable "The Jooooooos" posts and wading through a morass of pseudo-intellectual posturing on why God is dead and atheism is the key to happiness, I dropped it like a Democrat dropping pallets of fake ballots in Milwaukee at 3am in the morning. TheDonald just rocks. I love this sitem. But like any normie, I get tired of politics and like to discuss/learn about other things. I hope the Moderators will develop a .win site that can become a viable Reddit alternative that will allow us to start discussions on such topics as Frederick the Great, which would be cool.

Point Two: I didn't know that Frederick the Great was homosexual! I'm going to research that as I've become obsessed with Napoleon and the Napoleonic Wars lately. If anyone else is interested in Frederick the Great and Prussian History, check out Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 by Christopher Clark. And since the history of Prussia and France are intertwined, read Napoleon: A Life by Andrew Roberts, Russia Against Napoleon by Dominic Lievin, and The Crimea War by Orlando Figes (it occurred over forty years after the Napoleonic Wars, but was a result of unresolved issues derived from that period). Similarly, WWI can also be argued as being derivative of unresolved issues originating from the Crimea War, and since the German military establishment was Prussian, The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman is a great introduction to the conflict.

I'm rambling. Anyway, Happy New Year and best wishes to everyone in 2021!

58 days ago
1 score