Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Contact Information

I am not going to be dense and give out all of my personal contact information flat-out.

However, I will give out the email attached to this blog, which I check regularly. Please give me a couple days to respond.

If you would like to contact me, please feel free to do so!

Twitter: @RealTheoBrave
Gab: @TheRealTheo
Email: TheodoreBrave@gmail.com

Thank you!

Donate

The purpose of this post is to connect you, the reader, with a mechanism in which to support me and my intellectual endeavors. Mainly College.

I am currently enrolled in my first year at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia.
I am a business-economics major.

Here is a link to my GoFundMe campaign, where a little more information can be found.

https://www.gofundme.com/FundTheo


Book Roll

This Post is to document some of my reading endeavors.
There will be a couple of categories of books:

Books I have read
Books I am reading
Books I will read and currently own
Books I will read but do not own

If you have a book suggestion, feel free to email me about it. Bonus points if you buy it for me. Obviously, books that I do not own will not be a priority on my reading agenda.

I do not have as much free time as I would like, but I do read inhumanly fast, and I read for comprehension. This list is not all-inclusive. I am starting this list when I am 20 years old, so almost all of the books that I have read before now will not be on the list.


Books I have read
Art of the Deal by Donald Trump
How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott Adams
Strengthsfinder 2.0 by Tom Rath from Gallup
Pursuit of God by A.W. Tozer
Gorilla Mindset by Mike Cernovich

Couple of hundred misc. books

Books I am reading
The Bible (perpetually)
Influence by Robert Cialdini

Books I will read and currently own
https://www.scribd.com/document/37053680/The-Garbage-Generation-by-Dr-David-Amneus

Books I will read but do not own
The Byzantine Empire by Charles Oman
Cuckservative: How Conservatives Betrayed America by Vox Day, John Red Eagle
Ideas have Consequences - Richard M. Weaver

Blog/Website List

The links provided in this post do not reflect the views of myself, Theodore Brave.

These links differ in nature. Some are scholarly, some political, some Christian, some pagan, some scientific, some insane, some 'deplorable', and some literally deplorable.

That being said, there is a quote that is attributed to F. Scott Fitzgerald that goes thusly:

"The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function."

I use a diversity of worldviews to sharpen my own. This is not an all-inclusive list.

Feel free the browse around, but don't complain to me about the content, I am not the one producing it.

In no particular order:

http://voxday.blogspot.com/
http://alphagameplan.blogspot.com/
https://heartiste.wordpress.com/
http://www.dangerandplay.com/
http://blog.dilbert.com/
http://www.breitbart.com/
http://www.drudgereport.com/
http://news.infogalactic.com/
http://www.anonymousconservative.com/blog/
https://dougwils.com/
http://www.returnofkings.com/
http://www.rooshv.com/
https://www.menofthewest.net/
http://www.zerohedge.com/
https://www.infowars.com/
https://freedomainradio.com/
https://www.youtube.com/user/stefbot/videos
https://www.youtube.com/user/PrisonPlanetLive/videos
https://www.youtube.com/user/whitehouse/videos





Monday, March 6, 2017

Book Review: The Art of the Deal


Donald Trump has given us peasants a pleasant read, detailing his super secret awesomeness. How charitable. Truly. There are 8 main things that I have outlined in the book.


1.) Think Big


Fear exists in the unknown, but who gives a crap? You miss 100% of the shots you don't take, so take them all.

2.) Know your market



In his book he says he doesn't like to hire a lot of number-crunchers or analysts, as he trusts his own instincts more. This way of management is also obvious in his very successful bid for the Presidency, considering his ridiculously small number of personal political operatives.

3.) Enhance your location



Location, location, location. Buy you don't need the best location to be successful. Trump frequently has settled for the second-best, and improved it through what he calls promotion and psychology. Why pay a stupid amount of money for the best, when you can pay a smaller amount for the second or third best and with a little effort make it into the best?

4.) Deliver the goods



You can talk the talk all you want, but if you walk like a baby, you're not going to get very far. If you say you are going to do something, do it. Trump's past history of the implementation of this philosophy gives him incredible credibility.

5.) Get the word out



The media loves a story. Be bold, be ambitious. When you are asked a question, try to frame a positive answer no matter what. Promotion is a big deal when it comes to deals, and a few examples in his book demonstrate how you can use the media as a weapon against your opponents to get a better deal.

6.) Protect the downside and the upside will take care of itself



If you are prepared to accept the worst possible outcome, then anything that happens afterwards is a positive result.

7.) Fight back



Don't be a wuss. Anyone who voluntarily gets beaten up without putting up their hands is a total loser. Even if you end up getting knocked out, you went down swinging.

8.) Have fun



Trump derives his enjoyment from winning. For him, money is a good way to keep track of just how well he was winning.


I would rate the book:

B
This book was a wonderful peek into the inner workings of one of the most successful Americans ever. Whether you like him or his politics or not, the book provides a great guideline for how one's outlook should be if they wish to climb the ladder of success. I noted ONE typo. His outlook is very masculine, typical of an Alpha-type. His detailing of a week in his life is very surprising. It is very stream-of-consciousness oriented. Probably Ghost-written though.

I would like to note now that my rating is completely arbitrary, as I do not have an organized system for rating books. I liked the book, okay? Especially his personal frame. There may be a little bias in my completely meaningless rating.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

Book Review: Strengths Based Leadership



I recently finished a book lent to me by a friend, Strengths Based Leadership by Tom Rath and Barry Conchie from the Gallup Press.

It has strong data-based analyses of what makes a leader Great, a Team exceptional, and a break-down on why it is that people follow.

Here are four things that I got out of the book.

1.) 4 Domains of Leadership Strength

Those are Executing, Influencing, Relationship Building, and Strategic Thinking. The moment I read this, I immediately made a prediction that I would be mostly a Strategic Thinking leader with maybe a little Influencing thrown in. As it turned out after I took the Strengthsfinder 2.0 Test, my top 5 Leadership Skills are:


Strategic Thinking:
   Input
   Analytical
   Intellection
   Learner

Influential:
   Competition

2.) Individuals need not be well rounded, but teams do.

This is self explanatory, I've always known that my natural inclination to want to fill up a team with a bunch of stat-nerds and math-geeks is potentially self-destructive.

3.) Members of strong teams are as committed to their personal lives as they are their professional lives.

Some individuals have the impression that as long as you work hard you can be lazy at home and live a good life. Alternatively, they view their work as a chore that sucks the energy out of them and so when their attention is brought to their personal lives, their own mindset hamstrings their ability to live with natural happiness. Mindset is everything.

4.) Followers Four Basic Needs

Trust, Compassion, Stability, Hope.
I tend to think of how other people act unempathetically due to my high IQ. I am socially awkward in any type of new or unpracticed situation. That being said, having large statistical studies to understand what drives followers is useful to someone like myself. 


I would rate this book an arbitrary:
B

The book is incredibly data-driven and fact-based, but it lacks any kind of emotional drive to action and their example stories of successful people who used their Strengthsfinder strengths wasn't a very compelling persuasion attempt. I was disappointing to find that there was only about 100 pages of actually book material, despite the book being about 300 pages. The rest of the book was mostly explanations, data, research, and references. It would have been more fitting to fit all of this information into a more compact paper and release it into the community that way. But hey, Money has got to be made somehow.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

Hultgreen-Curie Syndrome


Hultgreen-Curie Syndrome: The lethal disease that strikes female pioneers. Named after Kara Hultgreen and Madame Curie, the syndrome has struck down numerous brave women on the frontiers of female innovation, including the first woman to use a washing machine, who tragically drowned in it, and the first Roman woman to eat reclining on a couch, who choked to death on a grape.



This is a very serious disease. As a morally functioning member of our modern society, I simply cannot allow this pandemic to be untreated. Some of our mostest bravest Women are being sacrificed needlessly on the front lines of civilizational progress. 


This guy over at Didact's Reach gives us another definition:

Based on what I can see, Curie-Hultgreen Syndrome might best be summarised as "a cognitive impairment disorder which results in the victim assigning undue importance and privilege to a woman in any given field of professional, scientific, academic, or martial excellence simply because she is a woman".

History does not repeat itself,  but it does have patterns. Let's hold off on the first female US President. It would be a shame if this debilitating disease were to take hold, and the country were to suffer catastrophic consequences as a result.



Thanks for your time,

Theodore

Mind-Reading Technology


This article detailing an advancement in reading people's minds is interesting.
'We want to develop an implantable device that decodes the signals that occur in the brain when we think about a word, then turn these signals into a sound file that can be reproduced by a speech device.'

Such a novel device would communicate people's intended thoughts via an electronic speaker or writing device, but the team still has a lot more research to conduct.

They have been able to reproduce a word a person has just heard on a machine, by monitoring temporal lobe activity in a neurosurgical setting. 

Using electrodes placed on the surface of the language areas of the brain of awake patients, they monitored the pattern of electrical responses of brain cells during perceived speech.

The scientists then created a computer model that could match spoken sounds to these signals.

'We recorded electrical signals directly from the human language areas when a person heard words,' Knight explained.

'We then decoded these electrical signals and were able to turn them into sound files that reflected what the person heard, with remarkable accuracy.'

The research is being conducted for the use of individuals who may be unable to speak due to a neurological disease or are in a paralyzed condition. The article focuses on the positive aspect of quite literally reading people's minds. Another upside to this kind of technology is the potential to make irrelevant torture techniques, as a military entity could theoretically just strap some electrodes on a prisoner and tell them "don't think of a pink elephant", at which point the prisoner's brain would naturally begin thinking about the elephant, the shade of pinkness, how large it is, what it would sound like, its last known exact location, etc. 

But then again, the military is the government. And government doesn't exactly have a nice bright and shiny track record of treating it's own citizens very well. The State would have a cookie-cutter way of pulling information from any resistance fighters' minds. They don't even have to be resisting physically. They could simply be committing Thought Crimes, and The State could find out about it. 

This technology also introduces a grey area into law, where if you aren't a Free Speech fetishist, then you have to deal with the idea of whether or not an individual thinking something and a machine repeating what they think as speech is a violation against the individual or not.

It's always good to imagine the dark side of all these cool and futuristic science fiction becoming reality. One day, you may have to deal with it.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

How to be transparent


Mike Cernovich does a little magic number on Journalists.

You aren’t as smart as you think you are.
I’m a published legal scholar and author. Compared to a physicist, I’m not that smart.
You’re a tier in intelligence below me.
That doesn’t mean you can’t do a good job. I write better than nearly every physicist because writing and analysis are separate skills.
But you do need to get over yourselves. If people disagree with you, it’s not because “Herp derp they are stupid!”
People disagree with us for any number or reasons unrelated to IQ. Some have a different filter on life. We are all biased.

I especially liked his thoughts on who journalists should really go after, speaking truth to power and all that.

Mike is doing incredibly well in such a short amount of time. This is due to his general talent stack and mindset. People should take the time to learn from him.

If you want to know his secrets, there is a way you can do so. It's a very closed-doors service called "The Internet", in which some website called Dangerandplay.com literally has explained everything Mike has done/does to become successful. I mean, it's almost as if he is literally telling his enemies what he is going to do and then does it.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

Cartels as Terrorists


Brandon Darby of Breitbart throws out one of those sticky ideas that no one thinks of until it is said, then everyone is like "ohhhhhh! yeah, of course!".

“Most of the politicians in the border states are actually surrogates or have been surrogates of the criminal organizations that control those regions,” Darby said during a live taping in the border city of Laredo of the C-SPAN show Washington Journal. “Ultimately it going to take that (declaring cartels as terrorists) to stop them.”
As a terrorist organization, the U.S. could go after the corrupt politicians that protect them, the banks that funnel their money and other entities that the criminal organizations rely on. The measure is the same that authorities eventually did with narco-terrorist in Colombia such as the FARC, he said. While there are drug cartels like the Sinaloa Federation that tend to leave the public alone for the most part, in the case of the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas, the brutality with which those cartels victimize the innocents is enough to warrant the tittle.

I've always wondered why the US hasn't actively tried to defeat these Terrorist Cartels. With this idea out on the free marketplace, maybe we can get to a point where we can properly defend ourselves and our borders from the Terrorist Cartels that smuggle all the drugs into the US and take advantage of young women who choose to migrate.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

Experiment Failed.


The US Gov't was built upon a unique experimental governing system.

The founding fathers developed a system that would permit the best of society to vote for their representative to the government.

Only people with skin in the game were permitted to direct the future of the Nation.

A couple of generations later and *poof* the entire concept of a representative democracy was perverted by the permittance of foreigners and women gaining the right to vote.

This has observably shifted the political spectrum into anti-nationalist sentiments and incentivizes individuals to vote for their own welfare instead of the good of the Nation.

Our government has, faster than any other government in history, become irreversibly corrupt, partly due to the age of industrialization and information coming within quick succession of each other.

I see two viable alternatives.

The first is to throw out the idea of a representative democracy, and go straight to a direct democracy system. 200 years ago, there was no mechanism to allow for the type of voting that we are capable of today. With modern technology, there is no reason individuals cannot vote directly through a free market system for laws and international representatives. This form of governing is untested in modern Western Civilization.

The second is to develop, ground up, a Monarchy with parliamentary representation. A monarchic form of governing has done the most work in advancing civilization, conserving culture, and defending a population throughout the centuries. This is a tried and proven form of governing that keeps a culture preserved.

I don't know what the best way to govern a population is, not one person really does. But I do know that what we have in place now is not working. The details can be worked out in time, but something has to change.


Gracias por leer mi blog,

Theodore

Warhammer 40k Convergence Attempt



I read a lot. At least one of my weekly books for the last 6 months has been a Warhammer book. I a significant portion of my paycheck on reading.

I go full geek mode when people start talking about my personal SF/F preferences. This is unacceptable behavior by the SJWs. I am deeply concerned for the future of my all-male planet-conquering fantasyland.

And Slaanesh? They complain about Slaanesh? He's like SJW role model. In some books he is a man, in others he is a woman. He/She doesn't discriminate against anyone so long as they follow his ecstasy-driven agenda. He/She accepts all forms of the SJWs too: Pedos, Crybullies, Race-Baiters, Womyn. All he/she does is bring eternal bliss and happiness to a population, why wouldn't you want Slaanesh in the WH40k universe if you are a SJW?

Because they don't think, that's why.

Thank you for your time,

Theodore

Handedness/Chirality in Nature


There are some pattern points I have found in life regarding the left and right handedness of nature.

Right and Left handed objects are inherently different. They cannot be superimposed upon each other, and they cannot be rotated, shifted, or manipulated in order to match their counterpart.

The best example to an educated individual can be found in organic chemistry:

The triangle means the atom is pointing out towards you, the dashed line means it is pointing out away from you. Straight lines mean it is on the same rotational plane.


If you didn't waste thousands of dollars on college to get a piece of paper, the best example is literally your right and left hand:

 


No matter what which way you try and move your hands, you will find that you cannot turn your right hand into your left hand and vice versa without literally taking apart your cells and re-arranging them. 


The political spectrum is also aligned Right vs. Left:
 

Even your brain is incompatible with itself:

 


It should come as no surprise then, that facial analysis and Physiognomy can also have Chiral properties. 


This is a pattern that is fun to recognize, and invokes my curiosity. If you can think of more Chirality in Nature, leave a comment with it.


Thank you for your time

Theodore

Carly Fiorina is a Feminist.


Surprise. 

“I think feminism is when everyone has the opportunity, just like every man has the opportunity, to use every single one of their God given gifts and live the life they choose,” Fiorina stated during her speech. “Mrs. Clinton, news flash — I’m a feminist and I’m not voting for you.”

Florina bashed Clinton, Obama, Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) who Fiorina says are locking arm-in-arm to sell progressivism to the American people.

“Progressivism really is the collection, the concentration of power in too few hand so that too few people tell the rest of us how to live our lives,” Fiorina criticized. “The tyranny of the few over the many.”

Break-down:

1.) She is a feminist

2.) Defines feminism as egalitarianism, despite the modern incarnation of feminism being everything but.

3.) Virtue-Signals by attacking obvious Leftist targets

4.) This is golden, "...concentration of power in too few hand so that too few people tell the rest of us how to live..." See, if only there were just a little bit more people who hold all the power, then everything would be okay. Just a couple more human beings and all this Chronyism would be fine.


And this is who Ted Cruz "picked" as his Veep. Typical Beta behavior.

When I was watching her in the debates, all I heard her say was how she wants to go to war with everybody. She is one of those republicans who think Russia is still the greatest threat to the US in the world. You can't get more establishment than Carly Fiorina.

Just another point for the argument that Women shouldn't be allowed into leadership positions. (Humor me)

To be clear, I am not saying that I believe that Women shouldn't be allowed into leadership. I'm just saying other people have argued this point very clearly.


Thank you for your time,

Theodore

"I Don't Like Math"


I recently had a conversation with a Lady Friend, and it went a little like this:

TB: What are you studying?

LF: I'm getting a business degree,

TB: So you want to be a secretary?

LF: Very Funny.

TB: I thought so, too.

LF: My dad wanted me to get an engineering degree, but I Don't Like Math.

TB: You mean you don't like being bad at math?

LF: Okay, no, but I'm pretty decent at it

TB: Really?

LF: Seriously! I was in honors math in High School!

TB: You might as well be getting a Philosophy or Gender Studies Degree.

LF: Hey, Philosophy is my minor.

TB: I have to go, bye,


my lady friend there needs to change her mindset if she wants to get smarter. I used to say I didn't like math, then I realized that it was just because I did not enjoy practicing skills. So I learned how to practice skills, and then found that mathematics came a lot easier when I wasn't depressed every time I had to start on my homework


TYFYT,

Theodore

P.S. I ended up changing my degree from Pre-Med to Business-Economics.

Book Review: How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big


I recently finished two books that I thought were very interesting.

The Art of the Deal, by Donald Trump
and
How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams

Scott Adams has very different political views than I do, but he has given me some useful tips on how to live my life. The five ideas that stick out to me are

1.) Willpower is a limited resource.

   My knee-jerk reaction to this idea was to say it was bull, and to start pounding my chest in a proclamation of my infinitely limitless willpower. As it was expanded upon in the book, I began to see parts of my life in which this was true. If I have an extremely tough workout planned and a meal prepared afterwards, I tend to be more open to cheating on my meal more than if I had a normal workout and the same meal prepared. This may have a biological aspect to it, which leads into...

2.) Energy is a predictor of success.

   It doesn't take a genius to take a look at their lives and notice that when they had more energy, they seemed to be more successful. It is very probable that the effect is cyclical, in that when one is successful then they are given a boost of energy. A good way to start that cycle is to self-affirm...

3.) Self-affirmations are magical, and they work.




   This idea is tangled up in the whole 'power of positive thinking' category. Although it may seem arbitrary, there is some kind of neurological sci-fi that goes on in your brain when you repeatedly state your intentions (i.e. "I will be a famous author", "I will be fit and cut"). It is important not to affirm specific goals, as they may end up having a negative consequence if goals are not completed. There is an alternative to goals, and that is...

4.) Systems are for Winners, Goals are for Losers.

   Goals are good in the short term, and if objective measurements are absolutely necessary. What it is not good for is building a long-term successful philosophy. Goals can be failed. They can be demoralizing, and unexpected variables can pop up that can render them useless. A common factor in successful people is that they implement systems. Systems are probably common in your own life too (if you are successful at something) and they are often confused with goals. for example:
Goal: Lose 10 pounds
System: Go to the gym every day
Goals are one-and-done achievements, while systems are a way of life. Systems leave a little wiggle room for day-to-day variations. For example, if one is feeling terrible one day and does not wish to work out, then they miss their weight goal the next day. On the other hand if you implement a system of going to the gym every day, then you could simply walk in the gym, look around disgustedly, and walk out. This way, the system has continued to be implemented, instead of your goal failing. Systems have a way of correcting themselves, and eventually you will walk into the gym the next day and feel like working out again. A common failing of companies and CEOs is that they focus on individual goals and numbers, trying to raise those numbers specifically instead of examining the system in general and implementing successful designs. When one does fail, it is important that they...

5.) Fail Forward.



   This one I would consider general knowledge, but it is always a good idea to learn from one's mistakes and change the habits that didn't work into ones that do. Although my preferred mindset is to learn from others, as my favorite saying goes: "Smart men learn from their mistakes. Wise men learn from the mistakes of others."

Overall, I would rate the book:

A

The book is well written, and has some persuasive arguments based on Scott Adams' own life story. There was only ONE typo that I detected. I did enjoy his style of writing, lacing the book with a subtle sense of humor, fitting of the author of the Dilbert cartoons. It was organized topically, with short chapters in general. The journey through his battle against Spasmodic Dysphonia was touching, and left me feeling connected and inspired. His blog can be located at Dilbert.com

I would like to note now that my rating is completely arbitrary, as I do not have an organized system for rating books. I liked the book, okay? Especially how he kept politics out of it.

Thanks,

Theodore