55

The Big Picture

Eddison Flame

Photo Credit: Tiago Gerken onUnsplash

There is a trend that seems to have been going on in the world for a pretty long time now. Rulers in the world have been actively suppressing a particular kind of social movement whenever and wherever it appears. These movements vary in name and in scale, but they are united in principle. In principle, what they all have in common is they are inspired by and founded upon principles of cooperation among people.

Consider for example the United States’ long standing anti-socialist policies toward Latin America. These have led the overthrow of one socialist government after another all throughout Latin America and for many years. Even now this policy has not changed, an overthrow attempt in Venezuela is ongoing. Commenting on the subject publicly in mid February Trump tweeted, “We are here to proclaim that a new day is coming in Latin America. In Venezuela and across the Western Hemisphere, Socialism is DYING…”.

Even more, as documented by Wayne Madsen for the Strategic Culture Foundation, a number of right wing leaders throughout south and central america have recently come together to form an official coalition whose purpose is to, essentially, combat socialist movements in the region. They seek to, “eradicate all vestiges of Venezuela’s late president, Hugo Chavez, and Brazil’s wrongfully-imprisoned past president, Inacio Lula da Silva.”

Another example is the hippy movement of the sixties. This was a movement that, somewhat unexpectedly it seems, grew up right in our own backyard. This movement was also rooted in principles of peaceful cooperation among people, and it too was ruthlessly stamped out by our own government. As Richard Nixon’s chief of domestic policy stated in an interview with Dan Baum for Harpers Magazine:

The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

There are many many more examples of this type of thing occurring throughout history, this fight against cooperative movements goes back ages. The real question is, why do they keep having to stamp these movements out? Why do they need policies aimed at combatting these kinds of cooperative movements? And why do these movements keep coming back?

It’s almost like, to them anyway, the world has contracted some kind of disease that keeps breaking out all over the place. Whenever they take their eye off some place, people start cooperating again, and they have to hurry in and smash those communities to bits before the cooperative ideas start to spread.

For them, this seems to be the crux of the problem. The cooperative paradigm is the better, more efficient paradigm. Why else would people keep doing it? Even when they know the U.S. will try to crush them, even now in Venezuela while the U.S. is actively crushing them, the people remain dedicated to socialism. Once people have seen how much better a cooperative paradigm is, they don’t want to go back to the competitive one.

We can do a little thought experiment here to illustrate the point. Consider the two paradigms. One group says society will be more efficient if everyone competes with everyone else. Another group says society will be more efficient if everyone works together. One group suggests that everyone will be better off if we all fight over everything, and whoever gets the most stuff gets to keep it all, and if someone doesn’t get anything at all, too bad. The other group says that if we all work together, we can ultimately accomplish much more and we can simultaneously ensure that everyone always has at least enough to get by.

Do we even need to analyze these alternatives? How can anyone with even a shred of intellectual honesty argue that people will get more done fighting amongst each other than they will by working together? It’s absolutely ludicrous! If these people weren’t actively trying to destroy us all the time, the situation would be quite funny.

The problem for us is, they are trying to destroy us all the time! These people are extremely dangerous. They are literally killing people in wars all over the world for profit. Their actual policy is to actively identify and destroy collectivist movements of any kind wherever they appear, and they do this using all kinds of brutal tactics. These people rule the world, and they have endless resources at their disposal. They are rich, they are powerful, and they are thugs.

Still, they have a problem. Their problem is that the truth is on our side. Their problem is that the cooperative paradigm is the better paradigm. This is why they have to keep stamping out movements whenever they pop up, because they don’t want the word to get out. They don’t want people to find out that a better paradigm exists.

This ties in to a related topic, that poverty is a feature not a bug of the current system. Poverty is actually a useful feature for the super rich. If you want people to do things that they would otherwise not want to do, you have to have some kind of leverage over them. You have to engineer a situation where if they refuse to do what you want them to do, then you can make them suffer. This is poverty.

If you want someone to work for long hours in an uncomfortable and unsafe factory, the alternatives have to be pretty bleak. They have to pretty much be living in abject poverty. In fact, for the rich capitalist, the more rampant poverty is, the more power he wields. If people are really poor, I’m talking on the brink of starvation poor, they can be convinced to do all kinds of horrible things for a just a bit money.

So this is the real reason why the rulers of the world are quick to stamp out such cooperative movements. These movements threaten to undermine their leverage, their control over the people. If everyone starts taking care of everyone, it could get to the point where all the people have enough to eat and a place to sleep. Then people will not behave like slaves anymore. If people are generally satisfied and taken care of, how can they be exploited? This is the problem for the capitalists.

Their greatest fear, by far, is that some cooperative ideology could take hold of the people everywhere. It would undermine their whole power structure. Without their leverage over the poor, the rich have no power.

Having said all that, here is the bigger issue I want to address. We need to recognize where we stand. We need to recognize the mortal danger these people represent to we the people. We need to recognize how they see us, not as people but as slaves. We also need to recognize that what these people value most is power, and that any attempt to free ourselves is, to them, a direct assault on that very thing they love the most.

If we were to free ourselves. If we were able to reshape society into a cooperative one, everyone would win, but in their minds they would have lost. They would have lost their control over society, which to them is the most important thing in the world. So this is not something they will allow.

Recognize too that they have seen the world this way all along. They have always considered us to be like cattle. Their job has always been to keep us at work and focused on anything but them. They have always well understood the stakes and what could go wrong for them. They have always known that if we did figure out what is really going on, then we might rise up against them. They are well aware of this, and they have always been prepared to put us back in line, (as quietly as possible of course, so as not to upset the rest of the herd).

So the point is this, they have always been fighting against cooperative ideologies, and they are prepared now to fight us again the next time we try to rise up. In fact, they have certainly seen the shifting tides. They are aware that people are waking up, and they have been making preparations for it. They are beginning to lock down the internet. The police all over the western world have been militarized. They are working hard to take away peoples guns. These people are preparing to go full authoritarian. They are preparing to lock down all of society. The question is, are we prepared to resist when they do?

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BigB
BigB
Apr 8, 2019 12:20 PM

The really big picture is reality: and our place in it. Are we really – as Sartre would have it – thrown and abandoned in a hostile and meaningless universe …burdened with the self-responsibility of making what little sense we can of it – (ontologically) ‘ens causa sui’ (self-caused or self-described)? Or as Eliot would have, as the “Deception of the Thrush” “Go, go, go, said the bird: humankind Cannot bear very much reality” Humankind cannot bear very much reality because it has a vested interest in unreality. Reality is nondual: our descriptions of reality – our language and logic functions – are militantly dualising. Dichotomising dyadic descriptions that can only reach beyond their structure as poetic allusion. Capitalism exploits the seeming gulf between the real and the unreal description – to create its own niche market as a quasi-real dualised imaginal. Capitalism can only not operate outside its own-created,… Read more »

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Apr 9, 2019 1:35 PM
Reply to  BigB

BigB: the South Downs must be wonderful for the contemplation of, and meaning of life, and this system we all live under. Your comments are much appreciated BigB.

binra
binra
Apr 9, 2019 4:20 PM
Reply to  Gezzah Potts

We rented a caravan at a nice site there once and one morning were jointly and wordlessly moved to extend a little pre breakfast walk into a wider exploration of trek up along the Downs. Something in the day – no words – but more a feeling. At one point up and away from any village or shop I felt thirsty and within a few moments saw a large cistern. Anyway its top cover was chained but I felt to climb up and just check it … and it was only draped around the clasp and not padlocked. So just beneath the lid was a ballcock valve and handscoops of water. The experiencing of life as a gift isn’t necessarily a result of great achievements or problem solving. I don’t know that we would have had that walk or that day if we had interjected normal behaviours like nipping back… Read more »

dhfabian
dhfabian
Apr 7, 2019 9:49 PM

The idea of some sort of socialist/leftist movement in the US is an absurdity. For the past quarter-century, liberals/liberal media have promoted capitalism via defining one of its products — the middle class, the deserving servants of the corporate state — as the paradigm of moral virtue, human superiority. There has been no interest in examining the consequences of capitalism, our quietly growing poverty crisis.

eddisonflame
eddisonflame
Apr 7, 2019 10:26 PM
Reply to  dhfabian

I truly do appreciate your cynicism dh, but just because the leftist movement appears emaciated now, does not mean it will be so for much longer. People are waking up. The quietly growing poverty crisis you speak of is not going away, it is only growing. As I say, time and again, the next economic downtown will greatly exacerbate the situation. Soon the U.S. will have a legitimate leftist movement. If you look with the right kind of eyes you can see it growing already.

Ramdan
Ramdan
Apr 7, 2019 7:13 PM

I would say the Big picture runs deeper than just “competition vs. cooperation”, or simply that the “competition vs. cooperation” is the observable expression of a deeper sitting divide. It goes to materialistic vs. non-materialistic perspective, self vs no-self, egotistic vs spiritual. The materialistic ego needs to own something, needs to be someone…once “you” are someone who “owns” something the rest follows….cause if you own ➡️you “have” to defend it against all “others”…It is the “I” vs the “Them”… For the Ego is not enough a beautiful landscape but only if the landscape is his, even if that ownership is a mere peace of paper with letter that the ego believe means something in reality (until war comes and good-bye paper, good-bye landscape, good-bye owneship). To support this anti-natural perspective then a suitable narrative needs to be MADE UP : “I am superior cause I am more this and that”… Read more »

taybow
taybow
Apr 7, 2019 4:56 PM

Probably most forms of government would work if you could just find honest and just officials to oversee them. It doesn’t seem possible in this world. The U.S. has a great constitution that tried to design balances to protect against abusive government officials, but there are too many that are corrupt. It would be the same with socialism, communism or a monarchy.

eddisonflame
eddisonflame
Apr 7, 2019 5:15 PM
Reply to  taybow

Power corrupts. That’s true. Any system relying on an absolute authority is bound to fail because humans almost inevitably end up abusing their authority. Even if some humans are able to avoid it, power eventually passes to someone who will abuse it.

This is why we need to implement voluntary and decentralized systems of governance.

traducteur
traducteur
Apr 7, 2019 3:04 PM

Robert Tressell’s classic novel, The Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists, sets forth a full and fair picture of the socialist ideology, and it’s enough to make one’s blood run cold. No private ownership of land: I wouldn’t own this farm, producing vegetables, meat and firewood for my family and walking through my woodland for pleasure and exercise, and then leaving the place to my children when I die. No, some commissar might allow me to live here provided I toiled like a slave growing cabbages or something, but as soon as I weakened or grew old, I’d be herded into some state-run old folks’ home, and someone else would have the use of the farm. If it weren’t a matter of weakening or getting old, but perceived slacking, it’s not an old folks’ home that I’d be railroaded into, it’s a political re-education camp, probably for a twenty-year stretch. No private trading of… Read more »

Ramdan
Ramdan
Apr 7, 2019 3:51 PM
Reply to  traducteur

Why do you believe the picture of that novel IS the picture? Ownership is a story tale, we own nothing in this world, in this life…if that were the case we could determine what happens to it in ALL regards and at ALL times (if it rains or not, if its productive or nor and so on) For believers, God is the ultimate owner and “he” has no papers backibg his claim, nor does he comes to reclaim what is his. For non-believers, Nature is the ultimate owner….and it behaves exactly the same way God’s behaves Can’t you imagine a different picture where so called “ownership” is not needed, neither a commissar and all the rest of the horror movie? Can’t you not picture something where you own nothing, work for the benefit of others, including your childrens who will take care of you once you are old and at… Read more »

Ramdan
Ramdan
Apr 7, 2019 3:58 PM
Reply to  Ramdan

Btw traducteur, .I grew up in a socialist country then I moved around to capitalist, come back to Socialist.
My mother passed away, my father is long time gone…Nobody came to take them to an “old people house”, no comissar or anything or anyone (besides death when it was time) came to the door…nobody gave “my” land to anyone….

Some Random Passer-by
Some Random Passer-by
Apr 7, 2019 3:52 PM
Reply to  traducteur

Do you refuse subsidies?

bevin
bevin
Apr 7, 2019 4:12 PM
Reply to  traducteur

” I wouldn’t own this farm”
It would be interesting to learn how you came to ‘own your farm’. Who owned it before you and what the farm is composed of in terms of land. How much of it was common land in 1750? How much of it was farmed on a two or three field system, divided into strips? If it was part of a great estate when was the estate assembled, and when was it broken up and sold off.
If you really believe that Robert Tresell’s novel gives a proper idea of what socialism meant a century ago you are remarkably naive. If you believe that it explains what socialism means in 2019 you are an idiot.

eddisonflame
eddisonflame
Apr 7, 2019 5:04 PM
Reply to  traducteur

“and then leaving the place to my children when I die”

Leave something better to your children when you die then a mere place. Leave a whole society. A society guaranteed to provide for each of them whatever the circumstances. That is the better legacy.

Your “place” could easily be destroyed by a natural disaster or stolen by thugs, and then what will your children do in this world where only the strong survive. Where are they then?

No, it’s your vision for society that makes the blood run cold. We see the results of your system. It leads only to war, enslavement of the poor, and destruction of the environment. Probably soon we will even see global nuclear war added to the list of consequences for your system.

BigB
BigB
Apr 7, 2019 6:47 PM
Reply to  traducteur

Traducteur

Private property rights are fine. Except when they are transferred from ‘natural persons’ to ‘legal persons’ – which allows Nestle to own a nations water supply ….forcing young mothers to choose between choleric pond water and baby formula – because they can’t afford both. Then they kinda stink. Capitalism is inhumanism writ large too.

summitflyer
summitflyer
Apr 7, 2019 9:50 PM
Reply to  BigB

You hit the nail right on the head .Thank you.

Rob Sharrock
Rob Sharrock
Apr 8, 2019 5:13 PM
Reply to  traducteur

Have you actually read The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists? I have and I don’t recognise your description of it.

Democracy failed. Extremists are winning
Democracy failed. Extremists are winning
Apr 7, 2019 2:48 PM

“Rulers in the world have been actively suppressing a particular kind of social movement whenever and wherever it appears”

And these anti-socialism rulers have always been actively promoting conservatism and Christianity in one way or another. While church attendance is down, Christian representatives are elected in record numbers.

Christians conservatives are one side and reality suggests that white supremacists and extreme right wing parties and factions are the other side of the same coin.

Lupulco
Lupulco
Apr 7, 2019 2:06 PM

Interesting article and thought provoking. But it as been said before and with similar results for its leader and his followers; Our Father who art in Heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done. On Earth as in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, Lead us not into temptation, But forgive us our temptations as we forgive others. For yours is the kingdom, the power and the glory. Does it sounds familiar? A true socialist, but the establishment of his day Killed him. Then Infiltrated and corrupted his teachings to do their own will. ref; Paul and then Constantine. Constantine legitimised the Christian Church, which went on to be the first global corporation. This global corporation did not allow any dissenters [especially weak ones] but did tolerate powerful ones. The Coptic Church and the Eastern Orthodox [ref the tripartite meeting in Nicea.] now Iznik… Read more »

Dingdingding
Dingdingding
Apr 7, 2019 1:28 PM

The title doesn’t exaggerate. This is the biggest, broadest picture. There is just one thing to add. So-called socialist or left ideologies are a partial subset of cooperative ideologies. There is a a specific cooperative tendency with international institutional and legal support from two thirds of the world’s nations comprising 80 per cent of world population. Here it is. https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Solidarity/Pages/InternationalSolidarity.aspx The human right to solidarity. You want to know who’s on your side against the USG, look at the GA and charter body votes on this. It’s like a roster of all official US enemies and threats. The real vanguard of American civil society has already hitched onto this. Look at what the black alliance for peace is doing: https://blackallianceforpeace.com/ The human right to solidarity draws on and integrates human rights and humanitarian law with the old bolshy concept of internationalism from below. When you’re ready to decapitate the CIA… Read more »

Philpot
Philpot
Apr 7, 2019 1:14 PM

I am essentially a child of Thatcher – I loved her but could see her faults too. I prospered as a teenage ‘entrepreneur’ in late 80s/early 90s. However… the demonisation of socialism worries me greatly. To call basic human care (as in much of Latin America) as rampant socialism is utter nonsense. In the so-called free market UK we have (thank the Lord) free access health care and a social security net. We are far more ‘socialist’ in practice than anywhere in Latin America. As a term of abuse ‘socialism’ as applied to Venezuela or anywhere else in Latin America is a joke – the people are often barely above subsistence. They need a lot more socialism to get to European concepts of free market. The USA is now a failing dictatorship with terrible education and health care. Given the choice of the USA or Maduro, as a Thatcherite I’d… Read more »

Some Random Passer-by
Some Random Passer-by
Apr 7, 2019 2:52 PM
Reply to  Philpot

…the so-called free market UK we have (thank the Lord) free access health care and a social security net…

Not for long though.

NHS is just a logo for private companies to hide behind. And as for social security…

https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/tory-council-set-to-force-disabled-people-into-residential-care-to-cut-costs/

_Always_ judge a society by how they treat their weakest!

Thatcher started all of this, the only good thing she did was die.

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Apr 7, 2019 3:23 PM
Reply to  Philpot

Actually there isn’t , never has been and never will be a ‘free-market’ The ‘free-market’ is a purely ideological construct with only the remotest relationship with the real market. The real market is a conjoint relationship between political and economic power. Only the existence of state power ensures the approximate existance of an actually existing markets. Always and everywhere markets are manipulated to suit powerful economic interests. Public goods are the absolute prerequisite for the accumulation process of capitalism. These public goods consist of infrastructure, laws, regulations, education, health systems, long and highly developed cultures and monetary systems which are indispensible.

The real questions are therefore: who makes the law and regulations; what are the rules and regulations; who profits by the rules and regulations.

Archie1954
Archie1954
Apr 7, 2019 7:12 PM
Reply to  Francis Lee

Political and economic collusion? Isn’t that the definition of Fascism?

mark
mark
Apr 7, 2019 10:57 PM
Reply to  Francis Lee

The system we have is nothing remotely resembling free market capitalism, which only exists in an economics text book. What we have is crony capitalism, crapitalism, parasitic finance capitalism, corporate welfare, or a looting kleptocracy. Call it what you like. Call it fascism, call it fried chicken if you like. We have never had free market capitalism anywhere in the world, at most some approximation of privileged monopolistic exploitation. All of the supposed bastions of free enterprise turn out to be something very different when you do no more than look a little more closely. All the titans of Silicon Valley just milked the publicly funded R&D of the military industrial complex. They were allowed to reap the colossal benefits of public investment. Drug companies extract monopoly pricing, charging $750 for a pill that costs a few cents to produce. The development costs of that drug have already been publicly… Read more »

binra
binra
Apr 12, 2019 12:34 AM
Reply to  mark

“Carnegies and Rockefellers did at least produce things of lasting value” Or of lasting toxicity – if you are on the other side of the balance sheet. I don’t know that political critiques often question the basis of politics by stealth – as by subversion and capture of medical and other leading scientific institutions. Broad spectrum dominance is assigned to US but the parasitic agenda is transnational. Different facets are gotten to play different roles – and some of these can be huge diversions while such things as (eg; mandatory vaccinations, are introduced. But hey these are our protection and security and are tested for safety and we can see this is being done on our behalf – right? You know where power is being abused by what you are not allowed to challenge or openly discuss. I’m not against the freedom to explore, use or choose methods of pre-crime… Read more »

olavleivar
olavleivar
Apr 7, 2019 12:43 PM

The thing is .. the ones who are persecuted are NOT the LEFTIST LIBTARDS … who are Supported and who are the STORMTROOERS of the GLOBALIST OLIGARCH AGENDA … like ANTIFA and that sort of LOW CEREBRATED TRASH … the REAL DEFENDERS of EUROPE at moment are PATRIOTIC EUROPEANS ..neither LEFT not RIGHT … defending their ANCIENT CULTURES against being overrun…. or ” EXCHANGED ” …. by Corrupt Billionaire Bankster INSTIGATED MIGRANT INVASIONS

milosevic
milosevic
Apr 7, 2019 2:13 PM
Reply to  olavleivar

LEFTIST LIBTARDS

Why don’t you go back to 4chan, where you belong?

Ramdan
Ramdan
Apr 7, 2019 4:11 PM
Reply to  olavleivar

What ancient cultures? The ones preceding Roman invasions? The ones that were called “barbarians”?
Or are you talking even “more” ancient?…Neanderthals maybe??

Some people tend to forget their (ours) origins constructing an “identity” based on carefully selected episodes and fascinating accounts depicting only glorious days…

Seamus Padraig
Seamus Padraig
Apr 7, 2019 4:21 PM
Reply to  olavleivar

You’re not wrong. When self-described leftists proselytize for open-borders, globalism and ‘free’ trade, they only serve the most anti-worker elements in the political system. The oligarchs they are inadvertently helping are hard at work trying to engineer a race war to forestall the class war that will otherwise happen. We are running out of time …

Ramdan
Ramdan
Apr 7, 2019 6:26 PM
Reply to  Seamus Padraig

“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—      Because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out—      Because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—      Because I was not a Jew. Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.” The problem is not of open or closed borders. The problem lies on the causes of that migration which is the destruction of livelihood in places like Lybia, entire Africa, Syria….ans so on….the causes of the migration are the wars and the killings supported and carried by the highly cultivated Europe and the exceptional americans…which has managed to make believe that killing can be do foe good reasons…with the good reasons being a complete… Read more »

Gwyn
Gwyn
Apr 7, 2019 12:04 PM

I really like the following definition of true communism/socialism, which (if memory serves) is by Robert Griffiths, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Britain:

”A highly altruistic and advanced progression of the pre-elites hunter-gatherer world.”

BigB
BigB
Apr 7, 2019 11:55 AM

It is not a cooperative ideology that is being violently suppressed – but the natural human condition of empathy and cooperation. I’m not interested in the ontological archaeology of the current convergence crisis – but that is what it amounts to. The entire capitalist Cartesian Error Protocols – which have involuted and degenerated into the Capitalist Extinction Protocols – are a fabrication. A state constructivist ideological fabrication that we are all educated in to, yet more and more , we the people, can perceive that they do not work. The question remains as to whether that incipient feeling can be self-organised into a viable community of equals, in societies of cooperation and shared common ownership of the life commons and necessary resources. As I have argued elsewhere, not whilst we are reliant on oil. Capitalism is hydrocarbonism: subject to entropic decay and limitation. Decay which concomitantly decays and delimits the… Read more »

David Wells
David Wells
Apr 7, 2019 1:16 PM
Reply to  BigB

Have you ever considered writing in English? It’s a lovely language.

Maluka
Maluka
Apr 7, 2019 11:43 AM

https://www.voltairenet.org/article205934.html

On the squalid piece of shit Elliot Higgins and the other deadshits at Bellingcat.

Elliot Higgins is a lying puss filled turd.

milosevic
milosevic
Apr 7, 2019 2:17 PM
Reply to  Maluka

— conversely, perhaps he’s a lying turd-filled pustule.

summitflyer
summitflyer
Apr 7, 2019 11:49 PM
Reply to  Maluka

Thanks for the link .New information for me.And yes Elliot Higgins is a POS just like many others in his circles.
Cheers.

binra
binra
Apr 7, 2019 10:23 AM

The Herod syndrome is the Principality that runs fearfully insecure because it is usurping power rather than resting in its true nature – for a prince inherits and extends sovereignty for the Land and the People, but assuming power as a personal attribute is an invisible set of robes that demand sacrifice of true vision in order to survive in a personal attribute of fear and insecurity – and thus defence. The parable of the tenant farmers is where the Master leaves them in charge, but in his absence they assume possession and control, when the Messengers come from the Master – the tenant farmers kill them. Running off with a false sense of power is a prodigal dream cum nightmare. The inducement to seek to be as gods in the Garden, crept into the mind through thoughts of self-lack that induced a temptation to self-expansion – and Fall –… Read more »

Some Random Passer-by
Some Random Passer-by
Apr 7, 2019 8:59 AM

I realised many years ago that we are worthless. It’s an unpleasant thought to deal with, but there is no escaping this reality. I’m not really that well educated, but I have a great memory. I remember being taught about the mining done in the past, and how the pit ponies were rescued, but the men were left to fend for themselves. What’s honestly changed since then? Billions of lives have been ground up. Some for localised profit (crime etc) but most for the greater good (whoever they are…) As the writer says, we are cattle. For milking mostly, but like all cattle, slaughter is an inescapable destiny also. What can we do? The Gilles Jaunes are the best template we have. And here in Britain, we don’t share the solidarity the French have. I keep thinking of that lousy film, Shooter. The (stereotype) politician gloats “You’re either at the… Read more »

Mucho
Mucho
Apr 7, 2019 6:49 AM

The UK Rave/free party scene is a good example. That scene was based around some very forward thinking, co-operative minded folk who just wanted to party, everyone’s invited. It was revolutionary, for these shores. The police to this day ruin many parties and they are not the all inclusive spaces they once were. A friend told me about a party they had near Brighton, said it went on for a few days but ended when a load of full on meatheads arrived en masse, organised, smashing the place up causing all sorts of problems, beating people up etc. It took me about a nanosecond to twig what was going on. These were paid to go in and do that, by the authorities. The British establishment are fucking cunts, and that is exactly the sort of lowlife behaviour I expect form them. They were probably some undercover military wing. Why the… Read more »

Pablo
Pablo
Apr 7, 2019 12:45 PM
Reply to  Mucho

If the ‘Dead Head’ fans of the Grateful Dead and the ‘Hippie’ counterculture of the 60’s is anything to go by (see Dave McGowans book “Weird Scenes Inside The Canyon: Covert Ops and the Dark Heart of the Hippie Dream” about the connections between the offspring of Senior Military figures that somehow seemed to be leaders of the counterculture that all somehow lived at Laurel Canyon, close to the secret Lookout Mountain Military base/film studio) then likely as not the UK rave scene was similarly a controlled movement to put the youth of the day into a suspended adolescence playpen where they would be incapable of radical action or serious thought that could have challenged the establishment status quo. It also creates a “Social Enemy” i.e. an accepted external menace, that is essential to social cohesiveness as well as to the acceptance of political authority. The menace must be believable,… Read more »

Clam B
Clam B
Apr 7, 2019 4:51 AM

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1889421.You_Gentiles

A terrific read for you poor pasty faced slobs

You can download a pdf from archive dot org

wardropper
wardropper
Apr 7, 2019 5:07 AM
Reply to  Clam B

No thanks.
We don’t live in that world any more.

milosevic
milosevic
Apr 7, 2019 5:52 AM
Reply to  wardropper

We don’t live in that world any more.

— or so goes the Official Story.

WHEN VICTIMS RULE — A Critique of Jewish Pre-eminence in America

Clam B
Clam B
Apr 7, 2019 6:23 AM
Reply to  wardropper

So you are a subject steering committee member then are you.? A khaki troll…is that your pathetically embarrassing game.?

I don’t think anyone here gives a rats for your wet blanket technique. Risable. Amateurish little boy thing you are.

bevin
bevin
Apr 7, 2019 4:29 PM
Reply to  Clam B

And you, presumably, are the angry subject of a conspiracy too big to buck, screaming out to be freed from a slavery that it wholly notional, the product of an imagination with room only for nightmares.
The world that I live in is barely controlled by a capitalist class rapidly reaching the end of its tether, reduced to blowing smoke into the eyes of its antagonists in the hope that they will turn on each other, blaming their problems not on their obvious cause but on immigrants, white people, jews, terrorists, leftists, homophobes, lesbians, catholics, calvinists, muslims, the unemployed, tax dodgers, grooming gangs, irish people, London, Corbyn, the list is as long as it is pointless.

milosevic
milosevic
Apr 7, 2019 11:37 PM
Reply to  bevin

Only one of those groups is effectively a class category. It’s not really a conspiracy, if they do it right out in the open, and use their control of politicians and the media to suppress all opposition. In an October 2018 survey of 800 American voters who identify as Jewish, conducted by the Mellman Group on behalf of the Jewish Electoral Institute, 92 percent said that they are “generally pro-Israel.” In the same poll — conducted after the United States closed the Palestinian diplomatic mission in Washington, moved the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, appointed a fund-raiser for the settlements as U.S. ambassador and cut humanitarian aid to Palestinians — roughly half of American Jews said they approved of President Trump’s handling of relations with Israel. On what is considered the most divisive issue in U.S.-Israel relations, the establishment of Israeli settlements in the West Bank,… Read more »

Caring understanding nurturing type
Caring understanding nurturing type
Apr 7, 2019 4:47 AM
wardropper
wardropper
Apr 7, 2019 5:11 AM

Not quite.
The EU serves Washington, and Washington rather likes it that way.
It won’t admit it too freely, though.

summitflyer
summitflyer
Apr 8, 2019 12:07 AM
Reply to  wardropper

But the times ,they are a changing.

Fair dinkum
Fair dinkum
Apr 7, 2019 4:36 AM

Peter Kropotkin, along with many other Anarchists, realised cooperation was as natural as evolution. In fact, the most successful species were those that cooperated. Kropotkin called it Mutual Aid.
Humans dancing or playing music together is a beautiful example of cooperation.
Emma Goldman put it best:
‘If I can’t dance, it’s not my revolution’

summitflyer
summitflyer
Apr 8, 2019 12:11 AM
Reply to  Fair dinkum

I love this one .

binra
binra
Apr 9, 2019 2:48 PM
Reply to  summitflyer

Being moved is literally to be transported. The nature of dance as a physical embodiment is more apt as a metaphor for true Creation than breathing Life into clay – although the forming or structuring arising from the living expression of receiving and giving as one movement can also be seen as a form given life – and the underlying energetic communication translated into movement of pattern of form is of course akin to our deepest understandings of the natural world AS an energetic expression of explicate expression to implicate ‘music’ or the call to move. Ritual forms of dance may be associate with shamanic or ‘magical’ forms that served purpose. An intentional invocation and alignment for the appropriate qualities. In human terms the purpose to which anything is put, makes it what it is and not the form. Some dance to remember, some dance to forget. But apart from… Read more »