if you've ever heard of kabbalah but never understood what it was then this book is a perfect introduction. and it's very short, so go on. >post theme https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWfy9eHtrrw&t=273s
I hope this isn't going to be a repeat of that time a single guy takes advantage of the vague direction of the thread and drops his entire surface-level political eBook collection that, for the most part, defends Zionist concepts.
You want forbidden knowledge? Go read Controlled Germ Warfare NC3130, and anything "leaked" by Marcy M. The former should be on The Pirate Bay.
magical thinking is fun but sadly there isnt forbidden knowledge. the closest thing to forbidden knowledge would be not-yet-mainstream scientific theories or tax advice
The biggest forbidden knowledge is that occultism is bullshit. Religions are bullshit. All that exists is matter and this world. Second, life is a continuous struggle for survival of the fittest. Third, everyone is a selfish asshole, some just hide it better. Fourth, morality is relative. Fifth, the state and the elite are never your friends and are the final bosses in the game.
>>203016 You are already living by Crowley's viewpoint since nobody does anything they don't want to. If you are doing something then you do it because of yourself and because you want it on some level.
NDE isn't different from dreams. All of this paranormal or occult nonsense was designed for bored people who dislike this world and want to live in a fantasy tale.
>>203017 It's not a belief though, it's the truth. Anyone who disagree with it is lying to you, either trying to deceive you on purpose or they are just way too blind.
Natural law full seminar by Mark Passio, 8 hours but is worth it. Real laws of universe, why morals arent relative, what is freedom and slavery, why the world is in its current state
Cosmic abandonment, 2 hours. Origins of humanity and religions, proof that humans were created by aliens, humans are a defective species, self loathing issues in most of the human population and some elites descent from aliens
>>203030 Truth is independent of what you or me think. I could believe in something else but I would be fooling myself then and reality would slap me in the face eventually.
>>203015 >the state and the elite are never your friends and are the final bosses in the game yeah, but they would never hide anything from you to get a leg up, that would be crazy wouldnt it. definitely dont look into any hidden knowledge of any kind, its not worth your time ive seen it all (trust me bro).
oh snap, it's my main man mark passio. i loved the talk about the cult of ultimate evil. not only does the dude give quality talks, i am always blown away by his slideshow skills.
easily the best slides i have ever seen in in any presentation ever. i don't think he uses powerpoint, i think he uses some apple software for it but that doesn't account for the selection of high quality pictures. i'd love a presentation software tutorial by the dude.
>>203024 this guy is not only the ultimate neckbeard, he's incredibly patronizing. Natural law and the associated common law scam will get you fucking jailed
>>203048 >he's incredibly patronizing yeah yeah, shut the fuck up and watch the whole video. if youre comparing natural law to common law you clearly dont know what the fuck youre talking about.
you actually believe that or is this just what all the smart people say so you merely repeat it without understanding what it implies?
IT companies are currently getting rid of people and AI age has begun.
maybe it's time for you to listen to the smart people again and find out their current opinion because repeating their opinion from 10 years ago doesn't seem to cut it anymore.
if i learn to code now, when will i be good enough to land a position.
1 year 2 year 3 year
doesn't matter. so i learn to code better. meanwhile the AI also learns how to code better. you've seen these videos of AI translating human language
"ay yo so check this out, i need me an app that has a picture of a gun on it and when i tap the gun then the loudspeaker make a shooting sfx and the screen has an explosion effect on it."
into functioning programs.
that technology exists today. you think in X years when i am done learning how to code i have caught on to the AI and even surpassed it to do things it can not do? that sounds delusional bordering on stupid to me. you will never win a race against someone who can run 50 times as fast as you can, doesn't need to rest, eat, sleep and trains all day.
the audacity to even suggest programming as anything but a waste of time at this point in the game.
>>203066 Learning to code doesnt do anything for you if you cant socialise with people well enough. Normalfags must want to work with you for hours everyday and you must be able to tolerate it, year upon year upon year.
>>203124 >Normalfags must want to work with you for hours everyday and you must be able to tolerate it
who cares how much they pay me, if these are the work conditions, being in the same room with a bunch of people who watch sports ball, eat fast food, drink alcohol, play call of duty and watch marvel movies.
imagine being in a room with normies for hours on end and having to listen to their dumb words and emotions then the allegedly good pay is not worth the torture.
imagine listening to all day to some middle aged succubus from marketing who tries to tell you how bad she has it because she tries to get you to compliment and notice her.
>>203114 depending how much pay you demand, how quickly you learn, and how familiar you are with desktop computers, I'd say it could be weeks, to months, a more likely case would be 0.5-2 years, particularly for saturated languages like PHP, Java, JavaScript.
Not gonna respond at all to your doomposting, woe-is-me, AI terk muh jerb. If you are too lazy to learn to code, simply say that, do not deflect.
I still believe that programming is the new form of literacy, even if that ends up being some form AI-prompt engineering, that would be a fine and normal trend for the work of the programmer to be tool-assisted, and increasingly abstract and high level.
>>203118 A popular one in the market you wish to work in. I would say it's hard to go wrong with the ones I listed above as well as Python.
>>203124 I find that working in a technically oriented team to be easier socially than the other low-skill white or blue collar jobs I had. I think the autist and schizoid bluntness that a lot of wizards is both accepted and normal in a software team, if carefully coupled with souless corpospeak
>>203131 >imagine being in a room with normies for hours on end and having to listen to their dumb words and emotions then the allegedly good pay is not worth the torture. what is remote work for 200$ >imagine listening to all day to some middle aged succubus from marketing who tries to tell you how bad she has it because she tries to get you to compliment and notice her. more likely to happen if you are a telemarketer, groccery store clerk, etc. programmer teams are 98% male and generally insulated from HR (succubi haven)
>>203140 >Not gonna respond at all to your doomposting
in general people are not gonna understand things when they are paid not to understand them. did not mean to scare you or poop on your party.
i'm merely observing the progress and since AI can already solve simple problems that means there will be less simple problems for the human programmers. as the years go on the level of problem necessary to justify a human programmer will continually climb and what i was trying to communicate is that there is the real possibility that the speed at which this bar is rising might be (or might one day soon be) increasing with the same speed that it takes for a human to learn a particular language meaning it will prevent average humans from entering this job market completely.
i don't see how you can act like this is conspiracy theory. to me this is argumentation is logically sound and a likely scenario of the near future. i guess you don't like it and your emotions short circuit your logic about it, which i don't blame you for but i do look down on you for it.
>>203039 All those "hidden knowledge" and occult stuff you refer to are bullshit distractions invented by the aristocracy to keep goys like you distracted with fairy tales about satan, heaven, hell and such. Meanwhile they are taking the bread out of your mouth and taking away your house while you are occupied with finding de epic truth and enlightenment.
>>203200 The Jewish Question is literally propagated by feds and Jews to turn nationalism into an untenable freakshow incapable of properly recognizing goy members of the elite, you know that right?
>>203200 >Meanwhile they are taking the bread out of your mouth and taking away your house and they tell you about it and do it right in front of you? huh. well at least on the planet i live, criminals know that if people arent aware that a crime has been committed then they cant defend against it. the average person does not hear about foreclosures and poverty and think that the jews have rigged the monetary system against people to covertly steal their wealth and enslave them, they think of these things as facts of life and accept them. hell, even believing that a government would purposefully do wrong to its subjects in any way isnt a widely held belief. you really need to take a break from imageboards if you want to properly assess what is or is not occult knowledge in this world.
>>203202 I'm afraid you will need to explain this to me in more detail.
>>203214 What, "government bad" is an extremely popular sentiment and most people do have it in some form. >and they tell you about it and do it right in front of you? Yeah but nobody cares as long as it doesn't happen to them personally. Of course the state and elite try to justify what they are doing but most people do realize that they can't depend on either of these things or groups. So the majority just sucks it up and decides that slaving away isn't so bad. And if they are good at kissing ass then they may rise high enough on the social ladder to be able to wield power over others too. States work like organized crime or mafia. Everyone wants to be part of the baddies but few can do. Most people just stay suckers and do whatever the state wants them to so they don't get into any conflict or problem.
>>203143 it can only solve problems with a huge number of examples totally unlike a human programmer. i know you are all anti-learn-to-code but you cant also righetously claim your ignorance. i didnt say it wasnt a possibility, but you are just parotting news clips and lack any further insight – exactly why theres nothing in your doom posting to respond to. you acting like the job market is competitive means you cant learn any skills and are doomed in some hypothetical future just makes you doomed in the very real present. meanwhile I'm making six figures, never see my coworkers in person, and don't have a degree. cope.
>>203361 >it can only solve problems with a huge number of examples totally unlike a human programmer.
this addresses zero of the concerns raised and does not even make clear that you understood what was proposed.
judging the quality of your response i can't help but wonder if you don't belong to those people who should rather let the AI do the talking for you because then your emotions can't make you say things you believe defend your honor but reveal how worried you most likely are. i would suggest not taking this so personal?
>>203015 we know occultism/esoterism/paranormal are fake amd gay but organizations like these >>203411 make life more interesting. also post more related pics please?
>>203361 >meanwhile I'm making six figures, never see my coworkers in person, and don't have a degree. cope. not everyone is born handsome and with a nice sounding voice. people get hired based on whether they're liked (eg. attractiveness bias), not just their skills
>>203419 >not everyone is born handsome and with a nice sounding voice
that's idiocy. you start in live preconfigued by the choices of your parents. however you physically grow into the direction of your personality.
by the time you are an adult you have grown into what you thought would be the best configuration and that includes attractiveness, voice, hair and all the other things you believe you are unfairly disadvantaged about.
but it is not unfair because you are now what you wanted to be when you were younger.
iaaa iaa iaa because every science-minded smart person knows every human is nothing but the result of the genes and there is nothing you can do about it and therefor you can never be blamed for how your configuration turned out.
well minions, look where it got you: undesirable physically, psychologically and emotionally, constantly worried about when the miocarditis is gonna drop.
>>203463 Well that's a partial truth. Genetics make you prone to some diseases but due to specific weakness to environment or particular types of food that can be managed when known >"Ultrapowerful metabolism" book
I was expecting something more along the lines of 7chan's /jew/ board like practical, financial lifehacks. My advice is to set your expectations extremely low and budget accordingly. Spend money like it will be gone forever and you will never have money again. The learn 2 code shit is probably not going to pan out. Imagine worst-case scenarios always.
>>203670 I'm not saying it's impossible but you shouldn't max out your credit card to buy a gaming PC with the expectation of landing a comfortable job.
Another unrelated hack: whatever that thing is you are avoiding, do it for one hour a day. If that fails, one half hour. It doesn't have to be all or nothing.
>>203679 >exponential backoff I didn't know it had a name. Partially achieving your goals is probably better than not at all. That's my latest cope and I'm sticking with it.
>>203685 It's not typically applied to human behavior, its a CS/network concept to prevent an overload of data sent when one service doesn't respond in a timely manner. I've never heard it used for human behavior, specifically, but it's generally the same, if it doesn't work at N minutes go to N^2 or 1.6N, rinse repeat until some threshold like 15 retries has been reached (more necessary for a computer because you can't always tell if it's off or overloaded)
>>203111 this, I learned to code now I'm looking for a job.
Problem is I don't remember how to do crap like flatten a binary search tree so I'm probably going to become some IT slave for a year or two before I can pull it together but then my resume will look like shit. So yeah fun times and it's my own fault.
I can share the secrets of the Apocalypse and how to shape the coming of the end and the new beginning.
When you have read the "Golden Ass" and "the corpus Hermeticum" the pics Trixie, the imitation of christ and have completed and alchemical journey. Then you will be bestowed the secret knowledge.
This isn't forbidden knowledge meant to be used, but it's something that a large majority of people will have never seen because this entire fiasco was contained to a relatively obscure imageboard that died in 2017, I think. I've had this document for a long time, and I feel like this is a fun time to show it off. Don't take anything seriously except the fact the guy who made this got raided by the FBI pretty shortly after drawing attention to himself. As far as I know, they didn't get anything on him. I'm not completely sure, though.
Tech jobs have never been for those faint of heart. I say this because to become employable you have to learn a staggering amount of knowledge (that most people would find boring.) Then, over time: that knowledge goes out of date. In most other professions you don't have to constantly update your knowledge. It's always a struggle to stay relevant and demonstrate that your 'years of experience' aren't just you getting sluggish compared to zoomers that all want your job.
Tech has very good perks. It lets you work at home, choose your hours, get paid well, and treated well. Contrary to what people think you only have to work about 2 - 8 hours a day – and you can skip whole days without even being noticed. There are even people who work multiple tech jobs at once and become millionaires. The thing is – this all requires passion. I am being honest when I say that it really can be so boring that if someone offered you 500k to finish a project you would be unable to do so. People who are autistic have an edge in tech (they're the ones who excel at the technical stuff.) I do think that people here over-emphasise the need to communicate. You don't really need to do that but you do need to know what to do to get hired (protip: its not doing leet code.)
Where am I going with this? Basically I'm saying tech requires a massive investment for a good pay off. If you want to simply get up and running fast (because you need money soon) I honestly wouldn't recommend it. It will be years before you make any money and there are trades that you can do alone that will let you live comfortably without dealing with people.
>>209013 The only people who are any good at that never found that stuff boring in the first place. If you read bios of programmers, most of them started as kids. >In most other professions you don't have to constantly update your knowledge I don't think this is true for the professions. >trades You can make doctor money as a plumber, but I don't think it would qualify as a comfortable.
>>209308 plumbing is easily one of the greatest 'side hustles'
it is not technically difficult, there is just a lot to learn. average joe typically has a problem or a leak, and it needs fixed immediately, they cant afford to learn how to do it themselves. so you have to call upon people who have spent time learning it all to fix it for you. even basic shit like unclogging a toilet, or turning off the water supply when it is overflowing, or even knowing what the water supply valve is…. is arcane to a vast amount of idiots out there
>>209317 electrician is the same way. the electrical set up in a house is not that complex. ironically, both these trades and many more have ( licenses) to gatekeep the labor market. it keeps the boomers in these professions making mint while youth struggle to meet the requirements
>>209667 In countries like india and indonesia, an electrican earns not much more than the guy digging a ditch, and about the same as a plasterer. Without regulations, they're just manual labor jobs for the most part.
>>209013 What I don't understand about programming is what constitutes actually programming something? Say I "make" a basic game that runs in the terminal, but really I copypasted the code offline and tweaked a few lines to make it work. Does that constitute actually programming something? I don't really think so, it's no different to copypasting the answers from a cheat sheet. But for 99% of what people do involving learning programming around me, that's what they do.
Like I'm a stubborn cunt that refuses to ever look at other people's code until I've done something, and I just prod along doing things the hard way making stupid errors. But I feel like my stubbornness is holding me back.
>>209671 the skilled vs unskilled labor is mostly a meme. unskilled should,mean something you can teach in a very short time period. this is most jobs if you remove all the gatekeeping. on the otherhand you have people with degree; that actually need that schooling making shit money because of labor market bs
>>209675 Yeah, and jobs like electrician can be further broken down to their skilled and unskilled components. Digging a trench, hand wiring the phase and neutral to electronics or running cables through buildings is often 60-80% of the work in any given day. That shit is purely unskilled work.
The medieval guild system is actually back for most western countries. The same excuses the guilds used to regulate their trades the government uses now >It's about consumer safety >It's about quality
>>209013 on hackernews everyone is saying that even if you have 15 years of top level experience you need social connections to get a job. People that we could never compete with are sending hundreds of applications for barely 1 interview. Tech is over. Communication and ""networking"" IS a requirement that filters wizards out