#junger

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sottotraccia
sottotraccia

“Cercando di sembrare ciò che non siamo, cessiamo di essere quel che siamo.” 
Ernst Jùnger

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malaslecturas-peoresejemplos
malaslecturas-peoresejemplos
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malaslecturas-peoresejemplos
malaslecturas-peoresejemplos

Estos son mis principios y si no os gustan… lo siento, soy pobre y no tengo otros.

These are my principles and if you don’t like them… I’m sorry, I’m poor and I don’t have any others.

Ce sont mes principes, et si vous ne les aimez pas… je suis désolé, je suis pauvre et je n’en ai pas d’autres.

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sottotraccia
sottotraccia

Heroes, lovers and believers don´t extinguish: they are rediscovered in every age, and in this sense myth always emerges. The situation in which we find ourselves resembles an interlude in which the curtain has fallen whilst a disconcerting mutation of the workers and accessories is taking place.

Ernst Jünger

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ahumourlessworld
ahumourlessworld

“Tyranny goes by the law of the hunting preserve; if any of the young harts thinks he can defy the royal stag, they engage in a test of strength. Then all hell breaks loose.” - Ernst Jünger, ‘Eumeswil’ (1977) [p. 103]

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ahumourlessworld
ahumourlessworld

portrait by Rudolf Schlichter, 1937

“I tend to distinguish between other people’s opinions of me and my own self-assessment. Others determine my social status, which I take seriously, albeit once again within certain limits. Nor am I dissatisfied with it. In this respect, I differ from most Eumeswilers, who are dissatisfied with their positions or their standing.

I could just as easily say that I neither am satisfied with my position nor take it seriously. That would obtain for the overall situation of the city, the absence of any center, which puts every office under obligation and gives meaning to every action. Here, neither oath nor sacrifice counts any longer.

Nevertheless, when anything is possible, one can also take any liberty. I am an anarch—not because I despise authority, but because I need it. Likewise, I am not a nonbeliever, but a man who demands something worth believing in. On this point, I am like a bride in her chamber: she listens for the softest step.

My demand is based, if not entirely, then to a large extent, on my education: I am a historian, and as such I know what can be offered in terms of ideas, images, melodies, buildings, characters.” - Ernst Jünger, ‘Eumeswil’ (1977) [p. 97]

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ahumourlessworld
ahumourlessworld

Collage by Ben Giles for Harper’s Magazine (March 2023)

“PARIS, 25 OCTOBER 1941

Lunch with Ina Seidel at Prunier. She was worried about her son-in-law, whom Hess employed as his astrological advisor but who has been arrested. That surprised me, since I thought that the flight to England had happened with Kniébolo’s knowledge and possibly even on his orders. One could counter this by saying that, with the rediscovery of raison d'état [reasons of state], even having knowledge of certain secrets has become objectively more dangerous than before. Surely, that’s the case here. This daredevil exploit gives an idea of the spirit of the roulette game that controls us. The return of the structures of the absolute state, but without aristocracy—meaning without objectivity—makes catastrophes of unimaginable dimensions possible. Yet they are anticipated in a feeling of fear that tinges even the victories.

I heard something from Ina Seidel that I have occasionally heard from other intelligent women, namely that in certain figures of speech and images the precision of language leads us deep into forbidden regions that give the impression of imminent danger. We should always listen to such warnings, even when we must follow our own precepts. Like atoms, words contain a nucleus around which they orbit, vibrating, and they cannot be touched without unleashing nameless powers.” - Ernst Jünger, ‘A German Officer in Occupied Paris: The War Journals, 1941-1945’ (2019 [p. 27, 28]

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nguyenngoc-dienmayquanghanh
nguyenngoc-dienmayquanghanh

Đánh giá chi tiết máy rửa bát Junger có tốt không?

Ưu điểm

Thiết kế sang trọng, hiện đại chuẩn Đức, tinh tế, vỏ máy bằng inox cao cấp, chống oxy hóa.

Chương trình rửa đa dạng đáp ứng mọi nhu cầu sử dụng: rửa tiết kiệm, rửa nhanh, rửa chuyên sâu,…

Tự ngắt khi hết nước giúp tránh tình trạng cháy máy.

Khóa phím trẻ em giúp đảm bảo an toàn cho bé.

Công nghệ sấy nóng Junger Super Dry Tech sử dụng thanh gia nhiệt kết hợp nhiệt tồn dư của nước nóng và hệ thống quạt gió đối lưu hỗ trợ sấy khô bát chén hiệu quả.

Công nghệ AI tự động nhận diện độ bẩn và tự điều chỉnh thời gian, lượng nước rửa phù hợp.

Công nghệ khử trùng, diệt khuẩn bằng tia UV tiêu diệt đến 99,99% vi khuẩn.

Công nghệ khử mùi bằng gió tươi đối lưu Fresh Air kèm sấy nóng giúp ngăn ngừa sự hình thành vi khuẩn, nấm mốc, và mùi hôi.

Trang bị nhiều tính năng hiện đại: tự ngắt an toàn khi không có nước đầu vào, chức năng chống tràn nước/rò rỉ nước, bảo vệ quá tải - quá áp,… giúp bạn dễ dàng sử dụng hơn, đảm bảo an toàn

Nhược điểm

Bên cạnh những ưu điểm, máy rửa bát Junger có giá thành tương đối so với các dòng máy bình dân từ khoảng 10 - 28 triệu đồng. Tuy nhiên, mức giá này hoàn toàn xứng đáng với những tính năng và công nghệ hiện đại mà dòng sản phẩm này mang lại.

Tóm lại, máy rửa chén Junger xứng đáng là một lựa chọn tốt cho những ai muốn tiết kiệm thời gian và công sức trong việc rửa chén. Tuy nhiên, bạn nên cân nhắc kỹ lưỡng về nhu cầu sử dụng và khả năng tài chính của gia đình trước khi quyết định mua.

Tham khảo các sản phẩm Junger chính hãng tại: https://dienmayquanghanh.com/may-rua-bat-junger

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a-god-in-ruins-rises
a-god-in-ruins-rises
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ahumourlessworld
ahumourlessworld

“HERVIER: Has your experience in the Foreign Legion played a certain part in your relationship with France?

JÜNGER: I couldn’t say so. I had read Stanley and others, and I had always pictured the dark continent as a magnificent landscape. But all I found was sand and an unattractive military decor, so that I instantly fled. Meanwhile, my father intervened. All the documents are in the Foreign Affairs Bureau in Paris. My father moved heaven and earth for me. Just as I was about to run off a second time, I received a telegram: “The French government has granted your release; get your photograph taken!” That was the kind of thing my father always thought of. So I immediately went to a photographer, and the photo still exists. However, the experience per se was a disappointment, which, incidentally, has recurred. I spend my time chasing after landscapes that I know from books, and as a general rule, they’ve been so thoroughly spoiled by tourists that I no longer recognize my dream. So this story of the Foreign Legion is one of the great disappointments that keep recurring throughout history: each generation plunges into undertakings of that type, and this constitutes a not negligible part of literature. You always find that gap in Stendhal. He had a great image of Napoleon, while he himself had only an obscure job with his uncle Daru; while envisioning how wonderful it would be to be a cavalry officer—or how it might have been.

HERVIER: Your father’s intervention was providential, for you had put yourself in an excessively difficult predicament.

JÜNGER: It’s quite astonishing that I could have done that and subsequently become an officer. After World War I, everyone was authorized to consult my file. I read the recommendation of the highest regional officer. My father had lived more or less as an anarch: in any case, the officer wrote: “Dr. Jünger lives in comfort and pays no taxes. As for his son’s joining the Foreign Legion—that has to be seen as a youthful folly.” In the military, subordination was automatically punished with six weeks in prison. I was risking that kind of trial, which was being negotiated in Metz. But my father spent a tidy sum to hire an attorney named Grégoire, who played an important political role, and he managed to get the charges dismissed. If I had had to serve a prison sentence, I could never have become an officer.

HERVIER: Your father showed a lot of sangfroid and skill in ticklish circumstances. But what was your mother’s reaction?

JÜNGER: My mother was more impulsive. Naturally, she was scared, while my father had already studied all aspects of the situation with logic. In case I failed to get out of the Legion, he told me: “They have a training program for junior officers. You have to take it!” He had already primed himself for all eventualities, while my mother absolutely wanted to have me back.” (p. 30, 31)

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havaniero
havaniero

One of favorite writers. His book ‘In Stahlgewittern’ has still admired me. Story about strength of mind and love of life. Author fought in the WWI and his path between being as soldier to lieutenant and commander impressed

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thespecialview
thespecialview

Tauche ein in die Welt der Klänge und Mechanik im Musikautomaten Museum Seewen SO

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thespecialview
thespecialview

Eintauchen in die Welt des Wassersports! Ich hatte das Vergnügen, die atemberaubende Ruderregatta in Luzern zu erleben.

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blackswaneuroparedux
blackswaneuroparedux

Today’s veterans often come home to find that, although they’re willing  to die for their country, they’re not sure how to live for it.

  • Sebastian Junger,  Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging

Dedicated to my fellow veterans on this Armed Forces Week.

May you win the war you brought home with you.

Dum spiro spero (while I breathe, I hope).