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https://files.catbox.moe/9tjjh8.pdf https://open.substack.com/pub/antipolitics/p/the-suffering-is-the-point It's not the blackpill. It's the reality pill.

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There's a huge disconnect about society and each individual's role. It's not ok to let others take care of things because they won't.

I'd be happy to have you expand that a little. It reminds me of a discussion I had with the pharmacy lady yesterday.

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Essentially most people are not doers but takers. They don't offer much in terms of contributing but love to complain how awful things are. Then there are opportunists who understand this phenomenon and take advantage of it by pretending to offer things people want, but actually do something harmful. There's a concept called diffusion of responsibility. You remember the "Q" phenomenon where we were lied to that white hats were working behind the scenes to subdue the tyrants. This is a war tactic that prevents the enemy from acting because they believe someone else is taking responsibility. Guess what? It never happened. The "Red wave" never materialized, remember?

Then you have people who don't wait for government to do things. Government, being an euphemism for someone else. For example: I don't expect the government to help anyone because I've never witnessed one action they took in my whole life that showed any propensity towards helping anyone other than a group of controlling elitists. Therefore, I'm not waiting now. I've already prepared for the collapse of our economy and social structure. It's happening right now as I type. I don't know how much help I can/will be towards people who are blinded by the illusions they believe in when suddenly they find themselves enslaved, unable to survive.

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The opportunists do a lot of damage. People think the time (and money) invested into them will generate political results. People like James Lindsay prevent rightward movement by holding up the long dead corpse of classical liberalism, for one example. (Now I'm inspired to make a meme.)

The Q thing was weird. I couldn't buy into it because it felt so fake. A lot of intelligent people were sucked into it. I don't even want to criticize the believers harshly. They did dig up a lot of dirt, but connecting dots is a messy process for the best investigators.

The 'Red Wave' was obviously the GOP playing make-believe. I was skeptical at the time, but it really was a compelling narrative. Thing is, there really should have been a red wave. There was no reason for Republicans to lose any race that mattered during midterms. Except one. They never intended to win, and they advance messaged to voters "WE TRIED OUR BEST GUYS". No mercy whatsoever to the GOP elite, especially the lizards in DC.

I've already prepared for the collapse of our economy and social structure.

We've been waiting for a few generations now. I recently came to believe that they can, through some techniques I don't know of, keep the economy on life support for an unnaturally long time. People assume that their taxes pay for everything USGov does. It ain't so. Your taxes aren't even enough to pay the interest on the debt by now.

To be clear, I strongly approve of any White man preparing for economic/social turbulence. It just might be a mistake to assume it will happen in your own lifetime. My father though it would come in the 1980s, having seen the persecution of Nixon and devastation of Carter. Then Regan made it seem like everything was getting fixed up, and Clinton continued the stage magic.

We've been doing politics wrong, because we haven't been thinking about it correctly. There's a reason I call myself rightist now, It was necessary for me to drop liberal, conservative, and libertarian. I think there's something that all these traditions have in common, but I'm reluctant to name it. Seems very likely that most people have a different ... experience.