Kind of ties into the Protocols
Yeah, almost every protocol is a version of "harrass them until they say 'fuck it' and let us take over".
I have actually come to the conclusion that self agency is in a way, similar to a lactic acid tolerance for physical pain, but in a temperance sense. Many don't have the attention span because they actually feel some kind of distress when in cognitive crisis. Clown World is a place to park yourself when not relieving the cognitive crisis. It's kind of like taking alcohol or some other coping mechanism. If we can keep our tolerance to being in the crisis state we might have the attention span to actually resolve a few paradoxes. Without resolving them (i.e. figuring out what is really going on) we just waste a lot of time fighting cyclical battles like bashing feminists or arguing with 'leftists' at work. Once working through a paradox, we find we can embrace new ideas that allow us to correlate reality with a stronger model and then predict future events more accurately.
It turns out there are many layers of red pills, rather than just one red pill because of this. People who stop looking for new red pills often fall back into the matrix and stop being useful.
I think this is the double edged sword of memes.
There is one meme that most people already know but need to be reminded of: an innocent man said: "we can't worship money and legalisms." and they killed him for it. I'd even say that outside of cities, people operate on the NAP without knowing it. We have the tools to govern ourselves. Something I wrote down came up last night: local elections matter. I suppose if you're in a big city full of dissimilar people, it's pretty much pooched, but small and especially medium-sized towns have the ability to put their foot down. Cities should be quarantined anyway. (or at least not have territorial voting power but that's a whole other story)
This reminds me of an interesting and relevant quote:
If you want to make something "thrilling", you make it forbidden. Tell me, what's the most loudly forbidden thing, the most sensationalized thing, now coming at you across the airwaves? This may have all just sounded like a moralistic sermon from Rev. Jerry Falwell. I will always insist that I am the LEAST moralistic person in that I have no superstitious fears or hang-ups typically connected with a reactionary society. Patterns are merely there to be observed and studied, in a detached manner, so that we may be able to use them for our own purposes. And we see how our Enemy is using them, literally orchestrating them, towards its own peculiar ends. It's that end that we don't like.
-- James Mason, Siege [Vol. XIII, #12 -Dec, 1984]
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