Can /pol/ recommend me some redpilled books about geopolitics or economics? I'm thinking of getting all three from pic-related, but I was wondering if there are better alternatives.
Any suggestions appreciated, as long as they're not tinfoil-tier
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another bump
Comprendre l'empire by alain soral (should be translated in english by now, it is available in chinese and russian)
The guy is a bit of cunt since he turned into the redpill superstar of france, shooting himself in the foot on many occasions. anyway that's good shit
the torah, the bible, and the quran
>>55369561
>>55369607
meme answes. I want something related to geopolitics, globalism, kikery and corporations. And maybe capitalism
>>55368511
>redpilled
>buying from the online jew
baka, Manoel
>>55369680
Ok portobro good luck then
>>55369680
das kapital
>>55368511
Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt.
The Revolution by Ron Paul
Anything by John Mearsheimer. He's one of the most prominent IR scholars in the world right now.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Mearsheimer
Start with The Tragedy of Great Power Politics and The Israel Lobby
>>55368511
Also
Foreign Policy of Freedom by Ron Paul
>>55368511
>Can /pol/ recommend me some redpilled books about geopolitics or economics? I'm thinking of getting all three from pic-related, but I was wondering if there are better alternatives.
Cheney's book is ghostwritten self-justification.
Kissinger is a literal kike and hasn't been right about much.
Trump is a meme and doesn't know anything about geopolitics (or macro economics honestly).
You want some good starting points, how about:
Why Nations Fail; a refutation of the feel good bullshit of Jared Diamond and the lefties and a look into why only some prosper.
The Origins of Political Order by Francis Fukuyama. Good overview and introduction to the subject.
The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker. Goes into how you're being lied to by the media every day, why violence is steadily declining and why it's not declining uniformly. Basically it's a stealth endorsement of western culture.
Economics is harder because it's almost religiously divided. If you believe in the invisible hand of the free market you read a set of books, if you believe in government meddling in the market you read another. Neither side will admit any flaws in their argument, and there's no real metastudies to prove anything other than how they're both ultimately failures.