6 Sept 2015

Franz Kafka - A God Among MGTOW

"He was Jewish and decided to go his own way from his faith and culture. This is what he has to say about his alienation from Judaism and Jewish life: "What have I in common with Jews? I have hardly anything in common with myself and should stand very quietly in a corner, content that I can breathe". And later on in his adolescent years, Kafka had declared himself an atheist.
He was also an existentialist. He was a man between two worlds much like myself. I was never fully embraced by people from my Eastern European background nor did I embrace it. I was also accepted by very few people in western society in general. I think the first way a man can go his own way is to do so from his country or culture of origin.
Alienation from a man's culture is one of the ultimate ways to go your own way. Nationalism and cultural values and traditions I believe are an extension of gynocentrism because women use men's cultural background to get men to compete against one another and turn against each other. It's a way for women in one nation to indirectly fight the women of another group and use their own disposable men to do the job.
And people generally mate along ethnic lines so women take full advantage of this. If you are free of your cultural heritage and don't hang out with people for your country to origin then you have more freedom then most. I of course am speaking about immigrants here. Men that have gone their own way from their origins and choose to embrace a different culture. I of course am speaking about a time before multi-multiculturalism. A time when people used to be part of the melting pot. And that's exactly what Kafka does. Nikola Tesla also did the same thing when he moved to the United States, became an American citizen and choose to speak English with no foreign accent. But unlike Tesla, Kafka was still into getting together with women but on terms that seem to be his own. He used to visit brothels throughout his life as well as having a keen interest in pornography and he was generally tormented by his sexual desires.




10 pictures paid for and licensed through BigStock.com (In order of appearance)

1. igor stevanovic - Franz Kafka statue lon the facade of his birth house in Prague
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-24...

2. anita_bonita - View From Manesuv Bridge In Prague
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-37...

3. gors4730 - Kafka Stamp
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-46...

4. StudioBarcelona - Golden Lane In Prague
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-53...

5. Fyletto - Square of Franz Kafka. Sign in Prague
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-25...

6. Pavel - Fountain Pee Men
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-82...

7. Neftali - GERMANY - CIRCA 1983: stamp printed in Germany shows signature Franz Kafka circa 1983.
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-61...

8. Pavel - Prague. Franz Kafka Museum
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-82...

9. adamico - The Tomb Of Franz Kafka
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-74...

10. igor stevanovic - Franz Kafka's statue in a Prague downtown.
http://www.bigstockphoto.com/image-82...

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