I know I am not the one you asked for, but I myself have been contemplating on this. So I'll post what I have come to understand.
The creation of culture is rooted in ancestry. Ancestry refers to the lineage and heritage of a people, and provides the foundation upon which culture is built. It carries with it the memories of language, belief systems, myths (spiritual and moral teachings), and shared histories. These elements, passed down through generations, begin to form the basis of how a group understands itself and its place in the world.
As communities evolve, they adapt to their specific environments, and in doing so, they shape cultural practices that respond to their surroundings. What people eat, how they dress, the tools they use, and the rituals they perform are all shaped by the conditions their ancestors faced - climate, terrain, available resources, and social structures. These practices then become traditions, and over time, they weave into the cultural fabric of the community.
Culture is then passed from generation to generation not just through formal instruction but through lived experience - through stories told around fires, through songs sung at ceremonies, and through the repetition of daily habits that hold meaning. These traditions may evolve, but they retain a connection to ancestral origins, and provide a sense of continuity and identity.
Even as cultures change and interact with others, the thread of ancestry remains present. It grounds people, offering a sense of belonging and historical depth. Cultural expressions like festivals, clothing, language, and rituals often serve to honor and preserve this connection. In this way, culture becomes both a living expression of ancestry and a vessel through which that ancestry continues to influence the present.
But culture is also fluid in many ways. It’s shaped not just by bloodlines, but by environment, traditions, class, geography, generation, and personal experience. For example, people of the same race living in different regions often develop distinct customs, dialects, food traditions, and a way of life. This is a given, and gives birth to subcultures.
This is reflected in the Grand Ritual of Zeus, where the hymns in the ritual serve a beautiful tapestry of divine names, woven across cultures and mythologies. At its heart, it’s about recognizing the shared spiritual lineage of humanity - and that’s exactly where cultural ancestry fits in.
Cultural ancestry provides the many lenses through which we perceive and name the Divine Gods and Goddesses of Humanity. The divine might be One, but each culture, shaped by its environment, history, and values, expresses that One in its own way. When you invoke Zeus, Raijin, Thor, Tlaloc, and Viracocha in one breath, you’re acknowledging that though the names differ, the divine impulse is shared. It’s a spiritual unity through ancestral diversity.
Cultural ancestry gives rise to distinct symbols, deities, and rituals. These become the mythic expressions of how each people relate to cosmic forces, be it thunder, sky, justice, creation, life, and death. The invocation of many names across cultures is an act of recognizing divine universality through the particulars of heritage. It’s a way to honor the spiritual wisdom of our ancestors, while still pointing to something beyond them. So, the Grand Ritual serve what ancient mystics, poets, and philosophers often sought: it unifies multiplicity into divine singularity - a cosmic One reflected in a thousand cultural mirrors.
Moreover, a subculture branches off from the main culture. It shares many elements with the dominant culture but has its own distinctive values, styles, or interests. Subcultures can form around music, fashion, traditions, profession - anything that brings people together around a shared identity that’s a little different from the mainstream.
Subcultures can still be very loyal to ancestry. For example, second-generation immigrants might form subcultures that blend their ancestral heritage with the dominant culture they were raised in. You’ll see this in language hybrids (like Spanglish), fusion food, or streetwear that incorporates traditional patterns or symbols. It’s a way of keeping ancestry alive while adapting it to a new context.
Then there’s counterculture, which takes on a stronger stance. It actively resists or rejects the dominant culture. It's not just different, it's oppositional. Countercultures often emerge when people feel that the dominant culture is oppressive, shallow, unjust, or disconnected from ancestral truths.
Counterculture can be a form of cultural resistance, a way to protect ancestral ways from being erased. Think of the Temple of Zeus which reclaim our ancestral heritage and revive our spiritual practices once banned. Or think of the 1960s counterculture in the West, which challenged traditional values, war, and consumerism.
Therefore, ancestry plays a role in all three: Culture preserves and normalizes the ancestral lineage. Subculture negotiates and adapts it. Counterculture defends it or rebels against a culture that has buried it.
So, you could say culture is a river. Ancestry is the source. Subcultures are the tributaries. Counterculture is the current that tries to change the flow.
Multiculturalism on the other hand, oftentimes lead to the diminishing, and even disappearance, of certain cultures. This is because multiculturalism blurs the lines of distinct cultures to the point where none are fully and truly preserved. This includes one's ancestry to the point of eradication of certain races, mainly Whites.
Multiculturalism then, can therefore diminish ancestry since it is about blending everything into sameness, then it risks erasing what makes each culture, each lineage, sacred and unique. Because of this, it reflects communism, since multiculturalism can demand conformity to new norms of tolerance that don't leave space for traditional values and way of life.
For example, communist regimes historically attempted to suppress certain cultural expressions such as languages, belief systems, even entire traditions, in favor of a single, unified identity. In Maoist China or the Soviet Union, indigenous cultures, religious practices, and ethnic identities were often suppressed to promote a single national or proletarian identity. The idea was to erase divisions that stood in the way of "unity" (a one-fits-all system), but in doing so, many unique cultures were nearly lost.
This is why the Jews, for example, do not accept multiculturalism in Israel, as they claim themselves Israel is a Jewish state only for Jews, as they know multiculturalism will diminish them. This is why they push multiculturalism on the West, to diminish and eradicate the White Race.
Each Gentile culture, rooted in its own ancestry, therefore deserves to be embraced and honored. That is at the heart of true cultural respect and human dignity. Ancestry isn’t just a historical detail - it’s the living memory of a people. It holds the stories, the pain, the wisdom, the survival, the joy. When a culture is honored, it allows people to feel seen, not just as individuals, but as part of something larger than themselves, something carried through generations. It gives roots, and through roots, it gives purpose.
Therefore, every Gentile culture has value because every ancestry carries a unique thread in the fabric of humanity. When we honor those threads, we don’t weaken the whole, we strengthen it.
I hope the above clarifies a little more about this.
Hail Zeus!