So we can't go back... but going forward is an Orwellian nightmare. What's to be done? Embrace globalism? Or try and stay the course (which isn't tenable).
If history is our guiding star, we're likely at a point where the board needs to be flipped and cleared before something better can bloom. Whether that happens in 5 weeks, 5 years, or 50 years, it's hard to say. Take a glass half full approach, acquire as many resources as you can, learn about how to live without modernity. I mean look at Texas... Corpses are piling up after 36 hours of no electricity.
Just for Lols, this article in Quillette puts the quasi-libertarian spin (UBI + fake job fulfillment) on how to handle the future of Glubb's worldview. The comments at the bottom are gold.
In other words, our national histories are propaganda, not well balanced investigations.
I'm not sure that the entirety of western civilization (or any population for that matter) can handle the mental weight of "well balanced" anything. We are fallible creatures who strive to simplify our lives and every year we move into the future is creating a more intricate world that is favoring specialization at the expense of being "well rounded". With that, humanity is pushing away from personal responsibility and towards accepting their fate as "cattle" in the technocracy(whether they are aware of it or not). We may not have enough "table flippers" left in the gene pool to reset our course :/
Even "unoccupied" land is owned by someone, there's no frontier to satisfy our exploratory, expansionary urge. There's no challenge to travel, pretty much anyone can get more or less anywhere inhabited on the planet in less than 72 hours if they have a budget on the order of a middle class American's vacation.
That's why I think we need to take colonizing nearby objects in space seriously. It gives us an expansionary purpose to satisfy that genetic urge.
Look for similarities and differences throughout world history, seek to understand the different sets of systems, and go from there. You may find people that speak (write) openly on image boards. While there is considerable freedom of speech on these forums, they still have much less freedom of speech in practice than multiple image boards.
If you are sincere and honest, and genuinely care about things, you may find some extremely bitter truths. Be prepared to face such in multiple different ways.
So we can't go back... but going forward is an Orwellian nightmare. What's to be done? Embrace globalism? Or try and stay the course (which isn't tenable).
Spend the 1-2 hours it takes to read this today: http://people.uncw.edu/kozloffm/glubb.pdf
If history is our guiding star, we're likely at a point where the board needs to be flipped and cleared before something better can bloom. Whether that happens in 5 weeks, 5 years, or 50 years, it's hard to say. Take a glass half full approach, acquire as many resources as you can, learn about how to live without modernity. I mean look at Texas... Corpses are piling up after 36 hours of no electricity.
Just for Lols, this article in Quillette puts the quasi-libertarian spin (UBI + fake job fulfillment) on how to handle the future of Glubb's worldview. The comments at the bottom are gold.
https://quillette.com/2020/09/30/pasha-glubb-and-avoiding-the-fate-of-empires/
ty ty, cheers
I will, thank you.
As I read this line -
I'm not sure that the entirety of western civilization (or any population for that matter) can handle the mental weight of "well balanced" anything. We are fallible creatures who strive to simplify our lives and every year we move into the future is creating a more intricate world that is favoring specialization at the expense of being "well rounded". With that, humanity is pushing away from personal responsibility and towards accepting their fate as "cattle" in the technocracy(whether they are aware of it or not). We may not have enough "table flippers" left in the gene pool to reset our course :/
We've run out of space.
Even "unoccupied" land is owned by someone, there's no frontier to satisfy our exploratory, expansionary urge. There's no challenge to travel, pretty much anyone can get more or less anywhere inhabited on the planet in less than 72 hours if they have a budget on the order of a middle class American's vacation.
That's why I think we need to take colonizing nearby objects in space seriously. It gives us an expansionary purpose to satisfy that genetic urge.
Look for similarities and differences throughout world history, seek to understand the different sets of systems, and go from there. You may find people that speak (write) openly on image boards. While there is considerable freedom of speech on these forums, they still have much less freedom of speech in practice than multiple image boards.
If you are sincere and honest, and genuinely care about things, you may find some extremely bitter truths. Be prepared to face such in multiple different ways.