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Notes -
Yarvin is basically a historian and has a lot of interesting insights on the past. He also turns his analysis on the present and comes up with interesting ideas there as well.
However he often veers into recommendations on how to fix things, and I think he's less qualified on that point.
He also grew up as a State Department brat, which gives him a lot of knowledge about how things actually operate in high level government.
I think that "castes of the united states" and "the bdh-ov conflict" represent a decent model for understanding the current political conflicts in the US. In a better world undergrad polsci students would be expected to read them.
https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2007/05/castes-of-united-states/
https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2007/05/bdh-ov-conflict_07/
Also he's much less verbose in interviews. I'd suggest watching his interviews with Michael Malice, but that's a decent time commitment.
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