4 Good Things Coming Out of This Mess

I thought 2019 was about as low as the culture of the West could go. Between drag queens in kindergartens, an angry autistic girl hailed as a saint and screaming at the UN, and semi-sane Wokesters openly promoting racial hatred (this time against whites), I figured there wasn’t much lower to go.

But there was, of course; there’s always violence at the end of the line. It took three months of universal house arrest, tens of millions unemployed, a semi-scary virus and a vicious murder to do it, but we finally reached that depth.

Now our cities burn while TV cameras focus on vapid, narcissistic and sociopathic talking heads. There are no adults on the stage.

But, there are good things coming out of this.

#1: The Parent & Child Reunion

Since roughly 1900, the children of the West have been forcibly separated from their parents: physically, intellectually and even emotionally. This was done, as we all know, in the name of education (a fine goal by itself), but it quickly overpowered family life altogether.

Consider, please, that the center of family life, around which all activities are organized, has been the school. No other organizational format was even considered by most people.

And then, in an instant, it was gone. A century’s worth of inertia simply evaporated. This left parents to re-organize in a hurry, but several lessons (with the usual exceptions) are already coming out of it:

  1. Parents are learning that they like being a bigger part of their children’s lives.

  2. Parents are discovering that the kids learn more at home and are happier doing it.

  3. Children have become part of the world again, rather then being foreign creatures who had to be sequestered.

These are healthy things. On top of that, children who are taught as home (or via any form of tutoring) are better critical thinkers than kids locked into government schools. That’s going to have big effects over time… and positive ones. (There’s a reason Ivory Tower sycophants are freaking out over this.)

#2: Faith In Public Institutions Has Broken

Yes, this is a good thing. We’ve been, to paraphrase The Declaration of Independence, suffering a long chain of abuses, because humans are more disposed to suffer than to change.

Just about everyone complains about politicians, just about all of the time. But we’ve preferred to complain and the reds or the blues, rather than face the scarier fact that the system itself was broken. Now it can barely be avoided.

The cops have disgraced themselves by killing a black man, by nearly killing a white grandpa, by arresting people for going to church, and so on. “Fellow-officers” showed themselves to be complicit with the “bad eggs,” police unions have proven to be utterly contemptuous, and both state and local prosecutors have joined them.

Politicians of every flavor have shown themselves to be feckless, stupid, false, angry, brutal and power-mad. And crazily narcissistic, of course.

The arrogant new tech giants displayed their willingness… nay, their eagerness to censor… seeing all who fail to worship their narrow and brittle philosophy as ignorant, dangerous buffoons.

I could go on (you undoubtedly have your own favorites), but I’ll move along. Suffice it to say that the only public institution that hasn’t overtly disgraced itself is the military, but this isn’t over yet and their status is already past its expiration date.

#3: “The Markets” Have Been Unmasked As Rigged

The middle class, lower middle class and the poor all know that the Treasury (and central banks world-wide) have saved their friends (banks, corps and “the rich”) while tossing them crumbs and expecting them to be thankful.

The interest rates on credit cards, at the same time (and at some point it really does pass into usury) keep rising. Tens of millions of jobs have been lost, but real estate taxes remain and rise, as do other taxes.

On the other hand, the upper middle class – the 401(k) class – has been wildly protected, in the form of a stock market that has levitated in spite of world-wide disaster. (This is not to demonize the upper middle class; most of them are decent people who are stuck in this crazy situation the same as everyone else.)

At this point everyone knows that it’s all a big charade: that “fundamentals,” “market forces,” and so on are meaningless: What the Treasury buys, goes up.

God help us.

#4: Mindless Consumerism Has, Perhaps, Broken

Americans, and Westerners in general, have been addicted to status symbols all through my lifetime. When I was a boy people joked about “keeping up with the Joneses,” but it was only funny because it was true.

Bear in mind that this was a cultured addiction. Empowered by a perfect storm of big business intent, mass media and the “science” of propaganda, it worked insanely well, to the point where most people bought carts full of stuff, not because it made their lives better, but because they were induced to buy it by publicity campaigns.

To put it succinctly, America, since about 1920, shifted from a needs culture to a wants culture. And, since the US was the world’s primary generator of images, the rest of the world tended to follow.

Now, with need returning, that particular flavor of crazy may end. This is still uncertain, mind you, but the longer the pain continues, the more likely it becomes.

So…

So, there really are good things in the midst of this insanity. Please do whatever you can to move them along.

**

Paul Rosenberg

freemansperspective.com

12 thoughts on “4 Good Things Coming Out of This Mess”

  1. man you nailed it quite well!massive undermining of government interference 2 and propaganda.thanx it will be interesting going forward.

    1. A few years ago, I realized that “mind control”, as nutty as portrayed in the mainstream, is assumed to be possible and desirable by everyone who spends money in advertising (at least advertising that goes beyond “here’s who I am and what I do” to “here’s why you should do business with me”.)

      So, #4 above may mean that more individuals are developing a defense against mind control, aka advertising and propaganda. Or at least have entered an environment where they are not as quick to act on external media suggestions as before.

      It is interesting if the window of peak suggestability starts and maybe ends with the existence of the Federal Reserve Bank.

  2. Keep counting…
    5. Gun control groups have shut up. They’ve lost not just momentum, but serious territory, as their donors repurpose their monthly contribution funds towards the purchase of personal firepower. Since there is a sucker born every minute, these groups will start rolling forward again as soon as the “current emergency” is over and about six months have passed — just as they did after the LA riots — but for now, the silence (particularly from David Hogg) is refreshing and welcome.
    6. The biggest socialist enclaves in America are self-destructing. While I feel somewhat sympathetic towards the subset of residents who consistently voted against the current crop of fluff-heads in power, the results of socialism are now naked and exposed. A liberal classmate of mine posted today, “my second (or third) [reaction to the Floyd incident] was Minneapolis? Really? In this bastion of liberalism in the US? Have been surprised to learn that Minneapolis has one of the largest black-white wealth/income gaps, among other inequities. Turbulent times help us challenge more deeply what we’ve previously taken as truths.” I hold no hope at all that this process will deliver her anywhere near to my own worldview, which finds all these elements 100% consonant and rational.
    7. Attempts at exporting the looting and rioting to “deplorable country” have been swiftly and effectively quashed either by the government or by the public itself. The “militia of the whole” has so far proven to be quite competent, despite the government having totally abrogated its responsibility for training it.

  3. 8. Those who would censor others are being exposed and coming out of the closet. Exactly how this will be resolved is not at all clear, but my sense is that hopefully alternatives will be developed so that Google, Facebook, Twitter and others lose their defacto monopolies on communication. Too many have been comfortable with their “private” monopolies and are learning the hard way that alternatives need to be developed and sought out.
    9. The privacy of the individual has become more and more important as we all have had to deal with an experiment in socialism that has taught us how much power the government thinks it has over our daily life. Wear masks and do social distancing, unless of course you are rioting or “peacefully protesting.” Keep your businesses, churches, synagogues, mosques, etc., closed in spite of demonstrations that those requirements were not doing any good, or at least more harm than the supposed benefits.

    1. “…hopefully alternatives will be developed so that Google, Facebook, Twitter and others lose their defacto monopolies on communication.”
      This has already been happening! May I suggest Startpage as a great alternative for internet search, Flote.app to replace Facebook/Twitter, and LBRY.tv for YouTube.
      These three: Startpage, Flote, and LBRY, are all founded and run by people who are committed to individualism and fiercely opposed to statism.

  4. Thanks for the perfect summation.Let’s hope this awakening can aid us in the difficult times ahead.

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