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[–] 0 pt

Even amish can't live totally out of the system, and it's not because of a lack of will on their part, and I'm not saying their lifestyle choice is wrong

And yeah ultimately one needs to be prepared to live without fiat and everything attached to it

Because the people living in the world of infinite ponzi fiat have abused their own system via fuckyou math and fuckyou accounting, and it's going to the shitter and even them can't stop it

And they count on the fact that people can't live without fiat to capture them in the new fiat system they will unleash after the great fiat collapse

We know that, that's "conspirology 101", sort of. And it seems to be confirmed by what they actually are doing, consistently

[–] 1 pt

Of course one cannot maintain a modern lifestyle (or even a 1700s one like the Amish) completely isolated. The thing is that if people TRY they will be vastly more effective at controlling the terrible governmental situation we find ourselves in than if they simply mark a couple inconsequential government slaves on a piece of paper. The act of doing that is more harmful than doing nothing at all as it removes, in the mind of the voter, the responsibility to fix shit themselves at their own local level. Voting is a slavery system not a system of choice. To vote is to accept the control system of slavers put over you by THEIR controllers. Voting is the antithesis of action.

[–] 0 pt

Even north korea has elections https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_in_North_Korea

>Elections in North Korea are held every four-to-five years for the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA), the country's national legislature, and every four years for Local People's Assemblies.[1][2] All seats are won by the Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland.[3] The founding and ruling Workers' Party of Korea dominates the Front and holds 87.5% of the seats, with 7.4% for the Korean Social Democratic Party, 3.2% for the Chondoist Chongu Party, and 1.9% for independent deputies.[4] According to official reports, turnout is near 100%, and approval of the Democratic Front's candidates is unanimous or nearly so.[1] North Korean elections have been criticized by many as being sham elections.[5]

[–] 0 pt

Yes they do. What does that tell you?