@lego_gerald: Brick Fest Sacramento 2024 #LEGO #legotiktok #legotiktoker #legotok #legofan #legoset #legobuild #fyp #legos #legocollector #brickfest #sacramento #brickfestlive #legoland

LEGO_Gerald
LEGO_Gerald
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Region: US
Monday 16 September 2024 01:08:54 GMT
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mrdad2434
mrdad2434 :
What did you buy?
2024-09-16 02:28:17
1
studality.stevex
Studality Brick-Art Sets :
they seem to be hit and miss.
2024-11-10 14:26:48
1
brickblastlive
Brick Blast :
Wow love it! We’re hosting a LEGO Fan Convention in Santa Clara CA in 2026! Check out our page and website to learn more! Lots of vendors and local exhibitors!
2025-11-04 15:26:25
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Nationalism often speaks the language of sacrifice, honor, and duty. It asks ordinary people to love lines on a map deeply enough to fight, suffer, and sometimes die for them. Yet those same borders seem to operate differently depending on who approaches them. For the poor, a border can become a battlefield, a checkpoint, or a barrier that defines their opportunities. For the wealthy, it is often little more than a destination on an itinerary, crossed with a passport, a business-class ticket, and the confidence that money can solve most inconveniences. The contrast raises an uncomfortable question: if nations belong equally to all their citizens, why do the costs of patriotism and the benefits of globalization seem so unevenly distributed? This does not mean that love for one's country is meaningless. Communities, cultures, histories, and shared identities matter deeply. But every ideology deserves scrutiny when it asks some people to sacrifice far more than others. Throughout history, those who carried the greatest burdens of war were rarely those who made the decisions that led to it. The young buried beneath flags are often not the same people who negotiate trade deals across continents, own homes in multiple countries, or move capital wherever it is most profitable. Perhaps the real philosophical question is not whether borders should exist, but why the value of a human life so often changes depending on which side of them a person was born. Follow : @philosophy.zero  #existentialism #stoicism #deepquotes  #creatorsearchinsights #insightsearchcreator
Nationalism often speaks the language of sacrifice, honor, and duty. It asks ordinary people to love lines on a map deeply enough to fight, suffer, and sometimes die for them. Yet those same borders seem to operate differently depending on who approaches them. For the poor, a border can become a battlefield, a checkpoint, or a barrier that defines their opportunities. For the wealthy, it is often little more than a destination on an itinerary, crossed with a passport, a business-class ticket, and the confidence that money can solve most inconveniences. The contrast raises an uncomfortable question: if nations belong equally to all their citizens, why do the costs of patriotism and the benefits of globalization seem so unevenly distributed? This does not mean that love for one's country is meaningless. Communities, cultures, histories, and shared identities matter deeply. But every ideology deserves scrutiny when it asks some people to sacrifice far more than others. Throughout history, those who carried the greatest burdens of war were rarely those who made the decisions that led to it. The young buried beneath flags are often not the same people who negotiate trade deals across continents, own homes in multiple countries, or move capital wherever it is most profitable. Perhaps the real philosophical question is not whether borders should exist, but why the value of a human life so often changes depending on which side of them a person was born. Follow : @philosophy.zero #existentialism #stoicism #deepquotes #creatorsearchinsights #insightsearchcreator

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