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Aryavarta, the local name for what we were once as was definitely was a high civilization, modern day India, not so much today. At one point sumeria and greece were high too, you can't take away their history to claim that their present shortcomings represent the same people, they clearly don't.
This comment was a little personal regardless. I don't know david Fuentes and the word Aryan denotes people who have paternal lines from the eurasian steppe. It has existed in Sanskrit since it found usage. I never claimed being white lol. If by david you mean nick then you should know I've spoken only bad things about him.
Clarence Thomas is a learned person, yet he isn't Aryan and that's completely fine, he's doing well and did good things. Your remarks seem callous.
Are you arguing that Clarence Thomas is not a man of high culture?
How do you distinguish between being "learned" and "cultured", or between " highly cultured and low?
Aryan is a specific descriptor in Sanskrit. Thomas is an erudite man who has done well but that is not Aryan, the term has been in use by my culture since it began, way before it was used again by the other descendants in Europe.
It describes men of long lineages from the original line who stand by the values their ancestors lived by. These things have been fleshed out very well in the Vedas, Upanishads, all good Hindu texts and even the works of traditionalists like Julius Evola.
You just said that "the word Aryan denotes men of high culture" now you're claiming that it's just some Sanskrit nonsense, which is it?
it is a Sanskrit word for people who come from an Aryan lineage and act in accordance with the ideals that were laid down in the Vedas. My usage of that term has been totally consistent and Clarence Thomas is a man of high culture but not Aryan which is completely fine. I never claimed it to be otherwise, you can re-read my previous comments where I reiterate this twice in each of them.
So it is some Sanskrit nonsense then. Why do you beleive that I (as a non-Indian) should give a damn?
I simply described a term that was at the forefront of everything good in a once high civilization, that was impactful enough to later be repurposed by people beyond the Indo-Aryans in the modern world and your past three comments have been about the word being bunk, me not being an Aryan and how you should not care about it. This is not in good faith at all, you are free to not care, or call anyone an Aryan.
No you did not, you made a specific claim and then backed down/tried to re-frame it as something else when challenged on the details.
This is from the first comment where I used the word, sanskritization means people adopting names and customs, I did not move goal posts or partake in motte and bailey here. You are welcome to re-read it till you understand my point above which was as direct a statement about indo aryan people as any.
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