This is a summary of recent Neofeudal Review posts. While other Substacks focus on the news cycle or current politics, the intent for each article here is to touch on certain perennial truths which, hopefully, will make them retain their relevance long after their posting date.
A number of months ago I wrote a compendium post called “A dissident framework reaches dramatically different conclusions from the mainstream right.” That post compared the views expressed in my first seventeen posts with those of the conventional right, and it encouraged right-leaning individuals to expand the scope of their thinking beyond the narrow confines of media and educational propaganda, Pavlovian conditioning, and their fear of stepping outside the Overton window.
Now, the title of that post wasn’t entirely accurate. I sloppily commingled the Neoliberal Feudalism framework with that of political dissidence as a whole. The right consists of three layers:
The broad right, which John Carter points out includes a wide variety of thought and belief1 and who share objections to certain facets of globohomo, although they generally accept the egalitarianism at the heart of society deriving from Paul of Tarsus2;
A subsidiary of the broad right known as dissidents, who share a fundamental opposition to globohomo and not simply certain facets of it; and
Subsidiaries of dissidence with unique frameworks for why they fundamentally oppose globohomo, one of which is the Neoliberal Feudalism framework which is laid out in this Substack.3
This could have been better stated in the first post so it’s good to clarify now.
Anyway, it’s been another eighteen posts since the seventeen reviewed in that compendium (why seventeen or eighteen? No reason) so it’s time for another. I think I conveyed to my satisfaction the point I was trying to make there, so this will have a different focus: “The neoliberal feudalism framework emphasizes dramatically different issues from the mainstream right.” In other words, it’s not just the conclusions on issues that are different, but the issues which are emphasized or not. Additionally, the scope is different: for example, issues within the current news cycle or politics (mainstream right) vs. touching on higher-level points, especially spiritual ones, that impact people across time and space (neoliberal feudalism framework).
Ernst Junger stated that when he wrote The Marble Cliffs that he wasn’t operating in a political framework but rather a higher-level spiritual one, and I would like to think the presented approach at least attempts to do the same. Like Junger, I write for and appreciate those loners who pursue truth for its own sake, not the gray NPC herds who dutifully listen to authority or for those so-called “elites” who pursue wealth or power unconditionally, and one of these loners is worth “ten thousand raised to a power” of the NPC herds on this plane. Here’s Junger on this point:
Q: Do you think it is still possible to preserve style, this delicate and aristocratic gesture, in a world that tends towards depersonalisation and manipulation of the individual?
Junger: I would define ours as a society of massified individuals, which therefore needs very restricted elites, destined to perform a very important function. On this point, I would adhere to the Heraclitean sentence that says: “ To me, one is ten thousand”. This number should be raised to a power today.
Q: We are used to thinking of elites in more sociological than spiritual terms. What definition would you give of them?
Junger: The sociological definition of elite is already an indication of the corruption of the concept. A warning, for me, to no longer trust even the elites, but now only the great loners.
I love that last line. “A warning, for me, to no longer trust even the elites, but now only the great loners.”
With that said, let’s begin.
Environmentalism and sustainability
Mainstream right emphasis: To ignore environmentalism and sustainability, dismissing it as a left-wing issue.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: In “The sad skinsuiting of the environmental movement: turning a blind eye to the effects of unchecked world population growth due to obsession with egalitarianism” (Part 1 and Part 2), the environmental destruction caused by unchecked worldwide population growth is examined. The post concludes that our overlords are myopically focused on power concentration, paying lip service to second-order effects in the media with buzz-words but otherwise ignoring them, which is going to have disastrous effects down the road. Environmentalism and sustainability are important issues and should be emphasized, as we should all want to leave the planet in a better condition for the next generation.
This doesn’t look sustainable
Natural selection
Mainstream right emphasis: Eugenics and dysgenics are consciously ignored as “racist” and linked to Hitler.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: “The 10,000 year explosion: Rapid selection pressures in a radically changing environment” examines Cochran and Harpending’s thesis that natural selection pressures on humanity are both ongoing and occurring 100x faster than the historical baseline because of changes brought forth by the neolithic agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago. It asks to what extent humanity should try to guide selection and on what basis it should be pursued.
The neolithic agricultural revolution
2020 serving as a pivot toward an entirely new, darker and oppressive era
Mainstream right emphasis: The mainstream right ignore the broader implications of the Schmittian lawbreaking “exceptions” used by our overlords to destroy Trump and try to continue with business as usual.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: “Trump on trial: an examination of globohomo’s sword-and-shield strategy” examines globohomo’s legal and extra-legal attacks on Trump, concluding that they view him as a Schelling point/symbol for white Christian Middle America and they plan to smash him just as the Bolsheviks murdered the entire Romanov family before liquidating millions of kulaks. One should view the takedown of Trump as the prelude to much darker plans that will be hoisted onto a large portion of this country.
Trump heading to court for one of his innumerable globohomo show-trials
The Israel/Hamas war and the possibility of World War 3
Mainstream right emphasis: A blind, 2001-ish neocon energy has overtaken the narrative discourse, blind to the larger forces at play and based on the assumption that America remains undisputed top dog militarily worldwide.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: This war may open the second front (after Russia/Ukraine) of World War 3, and based on how the central bank owners operate, these plans have been prepared for decades with predetermined outcomes in mind, especially the implementation of CBDCs and the removal of free speech as an end goal. World War 2 was conducted in much the same manner; Hitler was an unknowing puppet in a larger game. Great caution and skepticism should be applied to whatever narrative globohomo pushes here.Central bank owners maintaining a balance of powers until determining which party was to be punished
The science of physiognomy
Mainstream right emphasis: Physiognomy doesn’t exist and don’t trust your instincts, trust the experts, same as the leftist position.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: In “The science of physiognomy”, the argument is presented that our instincts have evolved for millions of years to detect personality traits in others based on the way they look, dress, and carry themselves, and we do a great disservice to ourselves not to acknowledge our instincts and integrate them along with our thoughts. There should be a much greater weight put on our own thoughts and judgments and much less put on the perspectives of corrupted “science”.
The liberal mentality
Mainstream right emphasis: The mainstream right focus on holding liberals to the standards that liberals set for conservatives, i.e. focusing on liberal hypocrisy. No lessons are ever learned despite this strategy failing throughout modern history.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: “The strange relationship of liberals to power: their psychology as the forever underdog” examines the strange herd-like mentality of the liberal mind, where they always have to see themselves as the oppressed no matter how much stronger they themselves are over their perceived enemy. By framing power struggles in this manner, they are always able to justify to themselves the brutal use of power against their enemies. Given the gulf between liberal and dissident thought processes, there can be no rapprochement and there should be no political discussion with them. This point is driven home in “Navigating Schmitt’s friend-enemy distinction in an uncertain environment”, which argues that dissidents should only spend their energy having discussions with other dissidents. And in “Did the last three years of COVID happen, or was it a bad dream?”, the argument is made that political and social reality does not exist in the minds of the masses except to the extent pushed by propaganda and authority figures. Scary stuff.
Mainstream right emphasis: The standard Christian take, decisions made via free will lead to judgment and Heaven/Hell in the afterlife.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: “Ruminations on the nature of the soul” examines the personality aspects that we attribute to the soul and concludes that they do not stand up to scrutiny. Nonetheless it feels like we possess a soul, in whatever unclear form it takes, and there are positive benefits that derive from such belief.
Phineas Gage’s personality completely changed after a metal rod was slammed with great force into his skull during a work accident, disproving to an extent the link between personality and soul
Profiles in courage
Mainstream right emphasis: Who does the mainstream right admire these days – Trump, I guess? There seems to be a quiet void here as Ron “Meatball” DeSantis slinks off into the nether.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: The most admirable people are those who advanced the dissident cause and stood up for it despite unrelenting pressure. The first two examples include Ian Smith, who kept his business open during the worst of the COVID lockdowns and provided inspiration to millions, and Julian Assange, who fought to hold globohomo accountable to their own stated principles despite massive governmental attacks on him.
Ian SmithJulian Assange
The meaning crisis
Mainstream right emphasis: Maybe society has suffered a degree of nihilism, but that’s just because the country is too secular and liberal. The mainstream right de-emphasizes and doesn’t understand this issue.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: As covered in “The meaning crisis: Meaning and decadence through the history of western civilization”, society is in the full embrace of an unrelenting secular nihilistic materialism which is smothering all the joy out of life. This derives at least from the 10th century when Christianity achieved total dominion over its enemies and decadence began to creep in. We currently live in an age of pure nihilism and no meaning, regardless of the extent of one’s religiousness. There must be some sort of transvaluation of values to get out of this.
The state of the times
Mainstream right emphasis: The economy is still trying to recover from a deadly multi-year COVID shutdown while battling high inflation. Things are in the doldrums a bit even though the stock market is quite high and official unemployment is low! Very surface level analysis.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: As emphasized in “The era of empty, secular mass consumption is over”, there was a 40-year period of artificial prosperity caused by a declining interest rate environment, which hid the effects of the huge losses to manufacturing and to the social fabric at large. That artificial prosperity is over now with much higher interest rates, and things are going to get much worse. Therefore it’s important to live below one’s means and prepare with a long-term view for hardship.
The use of the U.S. military
Mainstream right emphasis: Downplays why we stayed in Afghanistan for 20 years but highlights the shamefulness of the messy withdrawal; encourages unlimited funding for Ukraine and Israel.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: As described in “A typology of globohomo-initiated wars: Assessing success or failure by the objectives sought”, the U.S. military engages in three specific types of wars, each with their own unstated objectives which are quite different from the propaganda fed to the masses. Given that the U.S. military and the U.S. itself are merely vassal states of the central bank owners, success and failure should be viewed in the context of the central bank owner objectives. When viewed from this perspective, the central bank owners appear to be close to invincible despite occasional bumps in the road. In “Half measures vs. full measures”, the post argues that if a country or entity is going to challenge globohomo they must be prepared to go all the way, because any weakness or hesitation will result in being annihilated. This is because globohomo is a totalitarian force bent on power acquisition and centralization at any and all cost.
Listening to weirdos
Mainstream right emphasis: Completely de-emphasized; listen to those who present well publicly and slickly offer dopamine hits from battling the current news cycle’s cultural war.
Neoliberal feudalism emphasis: One can learn something from anyone, no matter how strange or odd, and in fact the stranger the better because “strange” in this context means they are not a rubber-stamped NPC ready for popular consumption, so they will have something unique and different to offer. “A review of Brett Andersen’s evolutionary psychology Youtube series” examines Brett Andersen’s work with a considered eye, even though he subsequently descended into Orange Man Bad ramblings and severe schizophrenia. There’s lots to learn on the state of evolutionary science within his work, conducted as a PhD candidate at the University of New Mexico before he dropped out in the full throes of madness.
Thanks for reading and engaging on what has been an interesting Substack experience so far.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 Per here, “Religiously, the right embraces an incredible variety of creeds. Tradcaths, Orthobros, prots of every description from high church Lutheran to low church Baptist, Odinists, Neo-Hellenists, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Nietzschean vitalists, gnostics, New Agers, druids, and atheists are all found in varying degrees of abundance. Ideologically, you have neoreactionaries, traditionalists, foundationalists, Nietzschean vitalists, civic nationalists, ethno-nationalists, MAGA America Firsters, populists, fascists, national socialists, 4th Political Theory Duginists, paleo-conservatives, classical liberals, post-liberals, libertarians, anarcho-capitalists, Catholic integralists, monarchists, masculinists, and (what I think is) the most recent addition, Landian effective accelerationists.”
2 The mainstream right do not understand or accept that their core egalitarian views, whether secular or religious, tie back to Paul of Tarsus’s original transvaluation of values, where the egalitarainism at the heart of Christianity is reinforced over time as a ratchet effect. There needs to be a revaluation of values away from that to, I hope, a balance between inegalitarianism and egalitarianism. Hence almost all of the right is “mainstream” in this perspective.
3 The framework is two simple points: (1) the world is owned and controlled by a small number of families who own and control the central banks of the world, and they use divide and conquer tactics to divide people along race, sex, sexual orientation, religious grounds to keep everyone too busy infighting to focus on their theft, and (2) that this system was put into place due to egalitarianism deriving from Paul of Tarsus.
This is a post about the careful, long-term planning of the central bank owners behind World War 2 who manipulated events to bring about certain desired results. The hope is to provide perspective on how such events are unfolding today, which are developing in a similar manner, likely to result in war, panic, and finally a central bank digital currency dialectical solution. To be forewarned, this is long, detailed and technical, so bring your big boy thinking cap.
Additionally, while previously covering parts of World War 2 here and here, this elaboration is necessary for an upcoming post about the odds of success for a potential middle class rebellion against globohomo, which is an energy increasingly lurking in the background for some on the far-right. This war goes to the heart of the question: on a historical basis, has the international financial system ever been seriously challenged since it arose in the 17th century?
The commonly accepted story of World War 2 is that a hypnotically persuasive politician, drunk on aggression and power, a gambler of lives and of nations, seeing the early and continued appeasement of his foolish and weak enemies, plunged the whole world into a disastrous war.
This post will present a theory contrary to the mainstream understanding of history. It’s not that Hitler wasn’t these things – he was, although his underlying rationale is not commonly understood, dating back to a 2,000 year old conflict – nor is it meant to downplay Nazi mass murders committed in Eastern Europe, but rather to argue that the world’s central bank owners set in motion the events of World War 2, and they did so deliberately and consciously with the intention of furthering their worldwide power and control. They nurtured and brought forth the Nazi movement with a clear eye toward its – and Germany’s – future destruction. Through such destruction they planned to remove Germany’s abilities to threaten globalist rule forever, as well as dirty the cause of self-determination and nationalism throughout the West.
However, through a combination of Hitler’s strategic abilities, innovative German military tactics and technological innovations, and the clear superiority of the average German soldier compared to their enemies1, the war ended up being closer than the central bank owners had planned for. Not close enough, though.
The core of the argument is presented in the 2005 book “Conjuring Hitler: How Britain and America Made the Third Reich” by Guido Giacomo Preparata. I had originally touched on it in a footnote about the motivations of the central bank owners. The text is detailed and well-researched, and its publication unfortunately ended the author’sacademic career, whose liberal censorious views allow no dissent to their monolithic ideology. It’s an incredible book and I highly recommend it.
The book’s thesis, supported by a wealth of corroborating evidence, is that the financial powers in Britain /America deliberately built up Hitler and the Nazis in Germany, along with sponsoring the Bolsheviks in the Soviet Union from its inception, so that they would tear each other apart and leave Britain/America as the undisputed controllers of the European continent. They perused a similar successful strategy in World War 1.
The Bolsheviks were viciously anti-German, viewing the Germans as “capitalists” who had to be conquered on behalf of worldwide communism, even as they came to temporary agreements with them. The Nazis, meanwhile, considered Slavs in Eastern Europe to be sub-human untermenschen who should be exterminated in order to open up lebensraum, free space for Germans to expand eastward, and were deliberately incubated due to the particular provisions of Versailles treaty, the Dawes Plan and other measures. These ideologies were fundamentally opposed to each other, and this situation did not come about randomly — it was planned, with great foresight and intention by the financial powers who controlled Britain and America.
The animating idea: Mackinder’s Heartland Theory
The British and American approach were informed by Halford Mackinder’s 1904 Heartland Theory, which posited that control of Europe would belong either to a land power (Germany allied with Russia) or a sea power (England plus America). Under this theory one or the other would ultimately win in a zero sum game. Mackinder provided a warning to England that continent-sized powers with a strong industrial base, large populations, and national resources could dominate world politics if the sea powers were not careful. Such a power would be immune to blockades by sea, rendering British and American control of the waterways irrelevant.
This theory was hugely influential among the British elite and they adopted it wholeheartedly in their strategies. These elite thought in Empire terms, not in national or civilizational terms, as Britain had ruled the empire on which the sun never sets from the 16th century. Any concern about the mass suffering of humanity from these strategies – of millions of women, of children, of the elderly who would suffer under the expected starvation, hyperinflation or bombings – was seen as weakness, a detriment to the ruling class’s continued power and control, and those that focused on this were deliberately excluded from positions of authority.
The British empire pre-World War 1
One can see such tension historically in Rome (land power) vs. Carthage (sea power), which only ended after the Third Punic War when Rome destroyed Carthage. Cato the Elder ended every speech with “Carthāgō dēlenda est”, which meant “Carthage must be destroyed”, prior to that final war.
Mackinder’s theory served as a contrast to Alfred Thayer Mahan’s influential 1890 argument in “The Influence of Sea Power Upon History” that island states such as England or the United States could prevail in the world through sea power.
To England the worst nightmare would have been a German/Russian alliance to control the European continent, which would have relegated England to a secondary power. As such, they would do anything it took to ensure that such an alliance would never materialize, even at the cost of 70 million lives between the two World Wars and the passing of the baton of empire to America.2They viewed this as a matter of survival, an absolutely critical natural security priority, and they have retained that philosophy to this day. This perspective explains why England (and the U.S.) have worked so hard to dynamite deepening German/Russian ties in the 21st century by blowing up the Nordstream 2 pipeline (confirmed by Seymour Hersh) during the controlled Russia/Ukraine war. Have you seen Mackinder’s Heartland theory tied to the Nordstream 2 pipeline explosion before this moment? If not, why not? The same principles and theories are at play here, same as they were more than a century ago.
With that said, the point of this post is not to rehash the past for its own sake (although it may be helpful to clear the cobwebs of decades-old propaganda from a reader’s eyes), but rather to shine light on our ruling globohomo overlords, how they operate, how their planning extends for decades, and how ruthlessly and deviously they are prepared to act in relation to their plans for the world.
To understand the origins for World War 2 we must first begin with the origins for World War 1.
Let’s begin…
The late 19th century and the start of World War 1
Germany was not on the British Empire’s radar as a potential threat until it formed the Second Reich in the 1870s. It had been a fragmented backwater before then, and Britain was focused on its rivalry with France and fighting against Czarist Russia in Central Asia.
The Second Reich quickly became an imperial upstart. As the new man on the world stage they wanted attention, competition for its own sake, and sought to expand their foreign colonies. They were beginners at the game of Empire, though, and naive; its rulers were confused and unsure regarding the country’s strategic imperatives despite their nervous rhetorical bombast. Chancellor Bernhard von Bulow would decry in his memoirs that the German people had no political ability whatsoever. Even with that drawback, though, the Germans were impeccable administrators, possessed unsurpassed arts and sciences, and established an enviable network of commercial stations and railway. As the German navy grew to challenge the waterways the British grew to see them as a threat.
As their rivalry with England increased, Germany’s relations with France remained in the gutter from the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. Germany intuitively knew that it would be no good to be potentially caught in a multi-front war with France, England and potentially Russia. While Bismark tried not to antagonize Russia, Austria, its closest ally which was decidedly anti-Russia, stood in its way.
Under Mackinder’s theory the British came to believe the German/Russian alliance had to be prevented at all costs. In choosing its victim, Germany was decided to be an easier target because (1) the Reich was the dynamic half of the Russo-German threat and (2) it could be surrounded and blockaded with greater ease compared to Russia. Britain drew in France as an ally with the Entente Cordiale. Because France had allied itself with Russia by advancing them loans in 1887, and with time-honored and intense military cooperation, France was able to draw in Russia. Kaiser Wilhelm tried for rapprochement with Russia in 1905 but it was too late by then, and Tsar Nicholas was severely dressed down by his ministers for considering it. Britain drew Russia closer with the Entente Cordiale part 2, creating the Triple Entente. Germany was encircled. And worse, France had knowledge of Germany’s war plans, the Schlieffen Plan, thanks to a traitor.
The spark of World War 1, the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand, was instigated by Russia’s military attache, Colonel Victor Artamanov, who had told the chiefs of Serb intelligence to go ahead with it. Britain lied to Germany that Russia was unprepared to intervene and that Britain had no biding obligations to Russia or France; then lied to Russia that the Germans were rapidly conveying divisions to the East and that the situation looked upon the Reich with disfavor. Then Britain lied to the public by pretending to offer a mediation in the name of peace. “Britain had always been careful to spin the international tangle so as to drive the opponent in the position of the assailant, and reserve for herself the role of the peace-loving defender. This was a psychological artifice tailed for mass seduction, and the Germans had no knowledge or understanding of such tricks.” Austria issued the ultimatum to Serbia, Serbia turned it down on the orders of her patrons, and the British Treasury began printing money for war. “The war against Serbia into which Austria was deliberately incited by the ruinous intrigues of Serbia at the instigation of Russia was a trap into which Austria fell, not knowing it was fomented by Russia to create a pretext of general mobilization and war to make Austria and Germany appear to the world as the willful originators of the great conflict.” Upon hearing the news of Russia’s massing of troops, Wilhelm said:
“In this way the stupidity and clumsiness of our ally is turned into a noose. So the celebrated encirclement of Germany has finally become an accomplished fact…The net has suddenly been closed over our heads, and the purely anti-German policy which England has been scornfully pursuing all over the world has won the most spectacular victory which we have proved powerless to prevent while they, having got us despite our struggles all alone into the net through our loyalty to Austria, proceed to throttle our political and economic existence. A magnificent achievement which even those for whom it means disaster are bound to admire.”
As Germany prepared to unleash the onslaught onto the Western Front, Britain issued one last cunning call for peace provided Germany did not attack France, making Germany look again like the aggressor instead of the fool caught in the trap that it was. Abel Fery, the French Under-Secretary of State, wrote in his notebook: “The web was spun and Germany entered it like a great buzzing fly.”
Five years after WW1, a U.S. Senator, Robert Owen, undertook a deep, dispassionate study of the war’s origins and presented his findings in 1923, concluding that in 1914 Germany had no reason for war, knowing that it would have would too risky and disruptive to its burgeoning trading and commerce. When in 1916 Wilhelm brooded over the butchery at the front, he whimpered that he never wanted this war, by which he meant a massacre of global magnitude. “This is exactly right,” rejoined the British Prime Minister Lloyd George in a public response, “The emperor Wilhelm did not want this war. He wanted another war, one that would have allowed him to dispatch France and Russia in two months. We were the ones that wanted this war, as it is being fought, and we shall conduct it to victory.”
The fall of the Tsar and rise of the Bolsheviks
The scale of butchery of the war was historically unprecedented. Russia quickly got cold feet, especially with Hindenberg’s successes against them in the east. What did Russia have to gain from the war? Britain wanted to maintain its empire, France its pride, Germany its life. Russia had little to gain from this adventure. But Britain had leverage over Russia: Russia owed them a huge amount of money, a sum roughly a third of her annual income; Britain had knowledge of Rasputin’s upcoming murder a week before it happened, demonstrating a deep subversive network within Russia, and Britain threatened Tsar Nicholas with revolution: “The British ambassador in Russia himself was a the center of the scheme to overthrow the czar if he should ever lose his stomach for war…[To that end, he] had gathered a coterie of wealthy bankers, liberal capitalists, conservative politicians, and disgruntled aristocrats.” Britain was dead set at any cost to prevent a German/Russian rapprochement.
A British double-agent nicknamed Parvus set up the scheme to overthrow the Tsar with German gold, who naively thought they were putting pressure on the Tsar to withdraw from the war. The Germans, as noted above, were naive and gullible and had no understanding of the depths of political intrigues. They made excellent soldiers but, as prodders, they were easy to manipulate and control by the experienced British, who had centuries of knowledge of the subtle, nuanced levers of power. Truly, the British embodied their nickname the “Perfidious Albion”.
The Germans foolishly allowed Lenin passage back to Russia in April 1917. The subsequent ascension of the Bolsheviks (to which Jacob Schiff in the United States contributed more than $20 million of his own funds, an astronomical figure today, and the U.S. provided extraordinary support3) did knock Russia out of the war, but at a much steeper cost than they bargained for: the installation of a permanently hostile anti-capitalist Bolshevik government, owned by the Rothschild central bank owners, who would settle the war today cheaply in return for a much bigger, nastier war down the line. If Germany had understood the nature of the game being played — if they had truly understood Britain’s goals to keep Germany and Russia asunder at any and all costs — they would have worked with the Tsar and tried whatever the cost to both keep him in power and to conclude a peace treaty.
It didn’t matter that the Bolsheviks withdrew from the war, anyway, as America joined the war when the Russian front appeared to be creaking. Remember that the Rothschild central bankers owned America just like they owned Britain.4 They had completed their coup d’etet in 1913 where they set up the 16th Amendment authorizing personal income taxes, the IRS, the Federal Reserve and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) all in the same year.
America’s entry into the war proved too much for Germany which led to their surrender and the harsh, but very cleverly tailored, Treaty of Versailles.
Germany had not been defeated on its own territory. It had lost the war, but it was not destroyed. This necessitated the next long-term phase of the geopolitical game for power, with a clear objective in mind: to let Germany rebuild and rearm so that it could be, once and for all, fully and completely annihilated.
The second act of the siege
Per Preparata, the overarching story of the second act of the German siege is as follows:
After 1918 began the second act of the siege: that is, an astounding political maneuver willingly performed by the Allies to resurrect in Germany a reactionary regime from the ranks of her vanquished militarists. Britain orchestrated this incubation with a view to conjuring a belligerent political entity which she encouraged to go to war against Russia: the premeditated purpose was to ensnare the new, reactionary German regime in a two-front war, and profit from the occasion to annihilate Germany once and for all.
To carry out these deep and painstaking directives for world control, two conditions were necessary: (1) an imposing and anti-German [regime] secretly aligned with Britain had to be set up in Russia, and (2) the seeds of chaos had to be planted in Germany to predispose the institutional terrain for the growth of this reactionary movement of ‘national liberation’. The first objective was realized by backstabbing the Czar in Russia in 1917 and installing the Bolsheviks into power; the second by drafting the clauses of the Peace Treaty so as to leave the dynastic clans of Germany unscathed: indeed, it was from their fold that Britain expected the advent of this revanchist movement.
What unraveled in Germany after the Great War was the life of the Weimar Republic, the puppet regime of the West, which incubated Nazism in three stages: a period of chaos ending with the hyperinflation and the appearance of Hitler (1918-23); a period of artificial prosperity during which the Nazis were quiet and the future war machine of Germany was in the process of being assembled with American loans (1924-29); and a period of disintegration (1930-32) paced by the financial mastermind of the twentieth century: Montagu Norman, the Governor of the Bank of England.
After the incubation was completed and the Hitlerites obtained with the aid of Anglo-American financial capital the chancellorship of the Reich (January 1933), the formidable recovery of Germany began under the Nazi wing, British loans, and the financial artistry of Germany’s central banker: Hjalmar Schacht, Montagu Norman’s protege. There followed the unbelievable ‘dance’ of Britain and Nazi Germany (1933-43), led by the former to push the latter to go to war against Russia. And Russia, too, acting in sync with London, appeased the Nazis in order to lure them into the trap of the Eastern Front….Britain calculatingly prevented the Americans from opening a western front for three years so as to allow the Nazis to penetrate and devastate Russia undisturbed…In the end, after this spectacular feat of dissimulation, Britain dropped the mask and closed in on the duped Nazis, who would be crushed on two fronts by the colluded Soviet and Anglo-American forces.
We will briefly delve into each of these phases.
Phase 1, 1918-1923: A period of chaos ending with the hyperinflation and the appearance of Hitler
The Treaty of Versailles was not what it appeared to be. While on its face the Treaty was ruinous for Germany, demanding a level of reparations that could not be paid back (especially after losing 13% of her territory which included 75% of her iron ore reserves, 26% of her coal production, as well as 44% and 38% of her pig iron and steel production respectively), the Allies did not expropriate the wealth of the German landed class, which it could have done as a first step by sequestering the certificates of the German war loan from their wealthy subscribers, who held the bulk of such securities. In other words, it let German’s right-wing aristocracy, steeped in deep military and hierarchical tradition, remain intact. By structuring Versailles in this manner, it would be the common man who would be forced to bear the brunt of inflation and excess taxation, which would in turn help radicalize them: “So the Treaty was in essence an articulate trap by which the German upper class – the custodians of Reaction – were to be left untouched, and thus uncured of the feudal disease, while the grief and resentment of the underclass – the proximate victims of the reparations’ bloodletting – was counted on to provide as much fodder for ‘radicalism’ as the sheltered Junkers required to re-establish a reactionary, anti-Bolshevik regime.”
The Versailles debt bubble was twice the size of Germany’s income, so the British financiers would have known that short term disastrous hyperinflation awaited. It would have been expected that engineering such a result would result in annihilation of the country’s currency resulting in societal destabilization, which could then be “solved” via massive foreign investments thereafter in order to buy everything in Germany for cents on the dollar.
The engineered destruction of the German mark
Furthermore, France occupied the Ruhr in January 1923, which produced 80% of Germany’s remaining coal, iron, and steel. And the Soviets unleashed a Red Terror within Germany that was not designed to seize power (it couldn’t; it didn’t have any solid base of support there), but rather to help the British game to bring forth the rise of the Nazis in order to later destroy Germany: “Everything seemed to conspire in favor of the Hitlerites: they could count on London for the political and financial strangulation of the German people, and they could thank Moscow for causing all this Communist inferno, which made them stand tall as the Fatherland’s defenders.”
Speaking of the Nazis, Hitler professed a passionate admiration for Britain, whose folklore and tradition he revered and whose partnership he desired above all else. General Karl Haushofer and conservative ideologue Moeller van den Bruck at various points made clear to Hitler the testament of Mackinder and the importance of an embrace with the East, but Hitler ignored them. “This fellow never comprehends” van den Bruck confided to a friend. Hanfstaengl chalked up Hitler’s anti-Slav fixation to the influence of Alfred Rosenberg. Mein Kamph made clear he wanted lebensraum in the East:
In the concluding section of the book, the geopolitical agenda of the Third Reich was clearly exposed: ‘The aim of the German foreign policy,’ announced Hitler, ‘must be the preparation for the reconquest of freedom for tomorrow.’ Britain, indeed, was bent upon ‘world domination’,’ but she had no further interest, he added, ‘in the complete effacement of Germany’, which would bring about ‘French hegemony on the continent.’ Therefore, he concluded…Germany’s priority was an alliance with Britain. The foregoing argument…was a reiteration of the fallacious hope that Britain could be lured with such a shoddy bait as the hostility toward France,when in fact the fate of the British empire had always been staked on the prevention of the Eurasian embrace. No amount of coaxing could induce Britain to conceive her dominion otherwise.”
To be fair, though, as mentioned above, the rise of the Soviets meant that an Eurasian embrace was impossible, so Germany’s options were very limited. Additionally Hitler would later argue that a world war with Germany would bankrupt Britain and result in the end of its empire, which was also true and did happen thereafter. But Britain was more than ready to hand the baton to America, which it shared a common culture and language (and the same central bank owners) instead of letting Germany prosper.
Meanwhile, Russia had descended into civil war after the overthrow of the Tsar. The British and Americans wanted the anti-capitalist Bolshevik Reds to win against the pro-west, aristocratic, pro-Tsarist Whites, because if the Whites won then they would make natural allies for an alliance with a right-wing German resurgence (and again, everything revolved around preventing such an alliance, per Mackinder). However, the British and Americans could not look as if they were supporting the communists because it would have laid bare the scam of the whole affair, and then the Whites might turn to the Germans decisively for aid. So they publicly pretended to support the Whites and promised tremendous support while in actuality offering very little material aid, stringing along the Whites with promises of future aid and sabotaging them at every opportunity until they were finally wiped out and Bolshevism reigned supreme. Per Preparata:
“What Britain would do, with the help of America and the most heinous complicity of France and Japan, who should have had no part in this anti-European plot, was to engage in a mock fight on the side of the Whites versus the Reds, committing very limited resources and men. Thus what was in fact an operation of sabotage by neglect – a pretense to fight – was masked as a pro-White intervention, whose surreptitious objective was to instigate the Whites to combat under unfavorable conditions, deceitfully hamper their advances, prepare the terrain for their rout, and finally evacuate the Allied contingent by blaming the defeat on the putative inefficiency of the Whites.”
Meanwhile, they embedded a Jewish double agent, Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln, high up within the nationalist right wing in Germany to undermine and ruin the autocratic 1920 Kapp Putsch against the weak German government, which if it had succeeded their alliance with the Russian Whites would have been an immediate priority.5
The figures involved put the whole farce to light: “When it came to killing the Germans, America had been ready to see 2 million of its soldiers die. But when the time had arrived to fight the 3-5 million ‘evil Communists,’ London and Washington committed together approximately 1% of the American contingent in France….Siding ‘officially’ with the Whites, 500 Anglo-American soldiers were killed by the Reds in the polar north, which was part of an extraordinary double-cross of the White generals staged by the Anglo-American clubs for the benefit of the Reds themselves: such was the twisted beauty of imperial scheming.”
Phase 2, 1924-1929: A period of artificial prosperity during which the Nazis were quiet and the future war machine of Germany as in process of being assembled with American loans
The Governor of the Bank of England, Montagu Norman, was an incredible man, brilliant and devious, and a name who very few know. He was Governor of the Bank for an extraordinary duration of 24 years (1920-44) during this most unusual period of world history. He came from an important banking family on both sides of his lineage, and he was a secretive but mentally unstable genius, possessing a prodigious memory. His motto was “never explain, never apologize.” His personality was likened to that of a spider, as he had a special ability to get people to do what he wanted without it seeming like he was doing so. Norman, more than any other figure other than maybe Max and Paul Warburg and Jacob Schiff, were responsible for crafting the strategy for permanently crushing Germany. Other important parties were J.P. Morgan & Co., the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (Benjamin Strong), John Foster Dulles, others in Kuhn, Loeb and Company, and Norman’s lackey at the head of the German central bank, Hjalmar Schacht.
Montagu Norman. Unstable and eccentric, but genius physiognomy
The means by which Germany would be resurrected was with the Dawes bailout. Schacht’s plan was adopted by the financier overlords, which was to give funds for rebuilding not to the profilgate ministers of Weimar, but rather to a cluster of giant conglomerates specifically created for this purpose. John Foster Dulles recommended Schacht (an unknown minor figure) to Morgan & Co., Morgan to Norman, and Norman to Weimar’s incumbent figureheads.
As I had written elsewhere: “Lloyd George told the N.Y. Journal American, June 24, 1924, how the international bankers were the decision makers and not the heads of state of the participating countries in the settlement to the war: ‘The international bankers dictated the Dawes reparations settlement. The Protocol which was signed between the Allies and Associated Powers and Germany is the triumph of the international financier. Agreement would never have been reached without the brusque and brutal intervention of the international bankers. They swept statesmen, politicians and journalists to one side, and issued their orders with the imperiousness of absolute monarchs, who knew that there was no appeal from their ruthless decrees…the orders of German financiers to their political representatives were just as peremptory as those of allied bankers to their political representatives.’”
The Dawes bailout bestowed upon Germany five years of ‘synthetic prosperity’, her so-called ‘Golden Years’ (1924-1929). The Dawes plan was a J.P. Morgan production, directed by Norman. The key was the new agreement on reparations payments which lightened Germany’s payments, with the critical provision a new ‘transfer clause’ whereby reparations payments could be suspended if the strain against the mark should become too strong. This opened up the floodgate of international borrowing; up until 1930, some $28 billion flowed into Germany, 50% as short-term credits, like fattening a pig up for slaughter:
“This initiated Weimar’s absurd cycle of the ‘golden years’: the gold that Germany had paid as tribute after the war, sold, pawned and lost during the inflation to the United States, was sent in the form of Dawes loans back to Germany, who then remitted it to France and Britain, who shipped it as payment for the war debts to the United States, who channeled it once again, burdened with an additional layer of interest, to Germany, and so on….It did not take much to realize that the arrangement was a house of cards: the moment Wall Street decided to recall its loans, Germany would plunge into complete, irredeemable bankruptcy. What next? Nobody wished to give the prospect a careful thought. Only the fall was certain. It was just a matter of time.”
The I.G. Farben concern, one of the giant conglomerates, entered into an alliance with Standard Oil and had on its board numerous American captains of industry and business, including Paul Warburg, first member and creator of the Federal Reserve Board and Chairman of Manhattan Bank. During World War 2, Farben would supply Germany with the following essentials: 100% of Germany’s synthetic rubber, 100% of their dyestuffs 100%, 95% of their poison gas, 90% of their plastics, 84% of their explosives, 70% of their gunpowder, 46% of their aviation gasoline, 36% of their synthetic gasoline.
Paul Warburg: the originator of the Federal Reserve slavery system in America and one of the crafters of both World War 1 and 2
Britain and America raised up Germany in order to facilitate its future destruction. “Since 1924, the Anglo-Americans equipped what would become Hitler’s war machine through well over 150 foreign long-term loans contracted in less than seven years: the more thorough and elaborate the fitting, the more devastating the German army, the bloodier the war, the more resounding the foregone victory of the Allies (and the defeat of Germans, who were being set up), and the more sweeping and permanent the Anglo-American conquest. There was neither greed nor treason behind the Dawes bailout, but solely the long-term objective of fitting a prospective enemy with a view to bringing him down in a fiery confrontation – a confrontation to be orchestrated at a later stage.”
Phase 3, 1930-1932: A period of disintegration
The great 1929 Wall Street Crash was initiated by Paul Warburg as previously discussed here, in coordination with Montagu Norman. The American policy of cheap money had been to sustain the continuous flotation of German securities in New York in order to fuel Germany’s rise. With the crash Americans wanted their money back. They immediately stopped buying German securities:
As soon as the ‘stream’ of foreign money was drained out of Germany, all the trappings of the Allied bailout snapped closed upon her….As in 1923, the German Grid was literally colonized by the Allied investors: more than 50% of all German bank deposits belonged to foreigners in 1930: this was money that would vaporize at the first sign of distress. And, finally, the unshakable burden of the reparations impeded any freedom of financial initiative on the part of the Reich. The ‘Dawes machine’ had nailed Germany to the cross, right and proper.
Official unemployment in Germany rose to 5 million and major important banks failed. Tight exchange controls were initiated, but there was no return to normal. The combination of the retention of the German landed aristocratic class post-World War 1, the hyperinflation of the early 1920s followed by the Dawes loans and then economic collapse, along with the regular irritant and threat of the communists, juiced the rise of the anti-Soviet Nazis who went from 4% of the vote in 1928 elections to 37.3% in the 1932 elections. 9 million Germans were jobless out of a labor force of 20 million — two out of every five Germans employed in 1929 were without work in the winter of 1932-33.
The Nazis themselves were funded to a significant part with foreign funds:
“Who had been funding them from the beginning? According to one hideously humorous folk tale eagerly circulated, the Nazis financed themselves by way of rallies and contributions, in addition to the storm troopers’ late endorsements of razor blades called ‘Sturmer’ (‘Stormer’) and a brand of margarine called ‘Kampf’ (‘Battle’). Ten years of political activity all over the nation, and three technologically innovative, mass-publicized elections in a country half-bankrupt, funded by means of tickets, piddling donations, and margarine?….In 1934 the foreign correspondent of the Manchester Guardian confirmed the widely diffused rumor that the bulk of Nazi funding was foreign in origin.”
Hitler demanded Hindenburg’s mandate to become Chancellor, but Hindenburg hated Hitler. Hindenburg appointed brilliant Kurt von Schleicher as Chancellor of the Reich instead and he initiated a public program of large-scale work-creating endeavors. But Maxim Litvinov, who covertly ruled the Soviet Union on behalf of the central bank owners, had already told Ivan Maisky, the newly appointed Soviet Ambassador to London, that the Nazis would soon come to power. The international bankers suddenly gave the Nazis unlimited credit and president of the Reichbank and Montagu Norman puppet Schacht confided that the Nazis would be in power within three weeks. This came to pass.
Phase 4, 1933-43: The ‘dance’ of Britain and Nazi Germany
Once the Nazis were in power Britain, the USSR and the U.S. provided them with resources, military know-how, patents, money and weapons in very large quantities. Explains Preparata:
Throughout the 1930s, the United States acted as a mere supplier to the Nazis in the shadow of Britain, who produced the entire show. This show had to end with Britain’s participation in a worldwide conflict as the leader of the coalition of Allied forces against Nazi Germany. But the Hitlerites had to be duped into going to war against Russia with the guarantee that Britain, and thus America, would remain neutral: Hitler would not want to repeat the errors of World War 1. Therefore Britain had too ‘double’ herself, so to speak, into a pro-Nazi and anti-Nazi faction – both of which, of course, were components of one and the same fakery. The complex and rather grotesque whole of Britain’s foreign policy in the 1930s was indeed the result of these ghastly theatrical diversions with which the Hiterlites were made to believe that at any time the colorful Nazi-phile camp would overthrow the hawks of the War Party, led by Winston Churchill, and sign a separate peace with the Third Reach. The secret goal of this unbelievable mummery was to drive Hitler away from the Mediterranean in 1941 and into the Soviet marshes, which the British would in fact allow him to ‘cleanse’ for three years, until the time would arrive to hem the Nazis in and finally crush them.”
Preparata believed the best chance Germany had to stop this process was under von Schleicher, the ‘Red General’, or secondly if Hitler had pursued a Mediterranean policy in the war and not get sucked into the Russian morass, although I have my doubts about this given the Russians were about ready to invade Germany when Barbarossa was launched.
Anyway, in the 1930s the international financiers turned back on the tap of loans to Germany. Hitler understood and hated the game with these financiers, but he knew he had to abide by their dictates in order to accomplish his goal in the East. The Reich borrowed from the Reichbank (at interest, which is the core component of our sick central bank system as explained here), which in turn received funds from the international financiers. These funds were then used for infrastructure projects and for re-armament. Schacht reduced interest rates from over 8% in 1933 to 2.81% by 1935, enabling a tremendous amount of borrowing and furthering the German economic “miracle”: it looked as though the whole endeavor was pervaded with the lightness of a zero-interest loan.
It is not time yet!
The British had a number of opportunities to crush the Germans early, but they did not want to: the time was not ripe yet. They had spent multiple decades to get to this moment, and they did not want the opportunity to go to waste. Germany had to be allowed to grow and become a major threat to the world before they would be allowed to be destroyed; otherwise the resultant victory would not be large enough for the international financier’s purposes. When Mussolini was about to go to war against Germany over Austrian Nazis botching a coup in Vienna, Britain said ‘no’. London had further chances when Germany invaded the Rhineland with a mere three battalions, then with the Austrian annexation, then with Czechoslovakia. A group of generals led by the Chief of the General Staff, General Ludwig Beck, plotted to assassinate Hitler in 1938 if Britain gave the okay — Britain refused. Britain had detailed plans of Germany’s planned invasion of Russia with Barbarossa via Captain Winterbotham, the British spy. There was nothing that England did not know.
Then a conspiracy led by Pope Pius XII plotted to assassinate Hitler in early 1939. The message from the British: no, do not move forward. “These plots to assassinate Hitler were always a nuisance and a source of embarrassment to Britain: she did not want the fruit of her conjuration dead just yet; certainly not at this early stage. And so the stewards sabotaged this plot as well.”
Conclusion
We all know what happened thereafter:
Preparata’s thesis cleanly solves many puzzles leading up to World War 2, puzzles that are not answerable under the traditional narrative:
If it is true that the British stewards intrigued at Versailles to conjure a reactionary movement that would feed on radicalism and be prone to seek war in the East; if it is true that the Anglo-Americans traded heavily with and offered financial support to the Nazis, continuously and deliberately from the Dawes loans of 1924 to the conspicuous credits via the Bank of International Settlements in Basle of late 1944; if it is true that the encounter in Cologne in von Schröder’s manse was the decisive factor behind Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor; if it true that such financial support was accorded to make Nazism an enemy target so strong as to elicit in war a devastating response – retribution that would make the Allied victory clear-cut and definitive; if it is true that appeasement was a travesty since 1931; if it is true that Churchill refused deceitfully to open a western front for three years, during which the expectation was that the Germans would find themselves so hopelessly mired in the Russian bog as to make the British closing onslaught from the West as painless as possible; and if it is true that Hess brought with him to Britain plans for evacuating the Jews to the island of Madagascar, for such was the last policy pursued by the Germans before adopting the Final Solution – a plan that clearly was given no sequitor; if all the foregoing is true, then it is just to lay direct responsibility for incubating Nazism and planning World War II, and indirect responsibility for the Holocaust of the Jews, at the door of the Anglo-American establishment.
The result of the war was that there was no more Germany to speak of: all there remains is a benumbed population subject to permanent U.S. control and endless, soul-destroying propaganda. Innumerable horrors have been done to it, some of which are described by The Underdog here. The country remains militarily occupied to this day, occupied by one hundred and nineteen U.S. military bases:
Re-reading Conjuring Hitler in preparation for this post surprisingly left a feeling a lingering sadness on this go-around: perhaps possessing a greater understanding and weight of the horrors unleashed, tens of millions of lives lost in both wars because of the games conducted by the great powers for power and control, financed and set up by the Rothschild central bank owners for their dreams of world domination, and with the great masses of western civilization serving as mindless cannon fodder, easily susceptible to media propaganda to act against their own interests, chewed up and sacrificed on the altar of the Demiurge.
Now, the book didn’t really cover the important central bank ownership angle, an angle that was explored in depth by South African central banker Stephen Mitford Goodson and which I reviewed here. Also, Preparata portrays the international financier’s machinations as more or less brilliant and unstoppably devious and everyone else as essentially low IQ retards, easy to fool. Maybe that perspective is true, maybe it isn’t, but it’s certainly depressing. Also, it’s easy to construe the book as “look how bad the Allied powers were for giving rise to Hitler” but, without discounting the huge numbers of deaths caused by Germany, I took the lesson more as: look how much of a head-start the central bank owners and the Anglo-Saxons had on understanding the nature of power; look how brutally and unflinchingly they played the game no matter the death and destruction wrought; look at how they planned with layers of contingencies built into each plan; and look how deceptive they were, always trying (successfully) to get their enemies to be goaded into the first military move, a strategy they regularly use including in the 2022 Russian/Ukraine war.
And all for what? So the globohomo elites can control most of the world’s wealth, engage in murders and perverted sex addictions to their heart’s content, and then torture and genocide the peasants for fun and to get a rush of power and control, to feel like God? How empty that all is, how fundamentally unsatisfying. It brings to mind two things. The first is the emperor Diocletian, the first Roman emperor who ever retired. There was a large amount of political instability after he abdicated, and the citizens begged him to return in order to restore order. Diocletian responded: “If you could show the cabbage that I planted with my own hands to your emperor, he definitely wouldn’t dare suggest that I replace the peace and happiness of this place with the storms of a never-satisfied greed.”
The other story is a tribute that Kurt Vonnegut wrote for his friend Joseph Heller, originally published in the New Yorker in 2005:
“True story, Word of Honor: Joseph Heller, an important and funny writer now dead, and I were at a party given by a billionaire on Shelter Island. I said, “Joe, how does it make you feel to know that our host only yesterday may have made more money than your novel ‘Catch-22’ has earned in its entire history?” And Joe said, “I’ve got something he can never have.” And I said, “What on earth could that be, Joe?” And Joe said, “The knowledge that I’ve got enough.” Not bad! Rest in peace!”
Amen to that.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 Trevor N. Dupuy, a noted American military analyst, US Army Colonel, and author of numerous books and articles, studied the comparative performance of the soldiers of World War II. On average, he concluded, 100 German soldiers were the equivalent of 120 American, British or French soldiers, or 200 Soviet soldiers. “On a man for man basis,” Dupuy wrote, “German ground soldiers consistently inflicted casualties at about a 50 percent higher rate than they incurred from the opposing British and American troops under all circumstances [emphasis in original]. This was true when they were attacking and when they were defending, when they had a local numerical superiority and when, as was usually the case, they were outnumbered, when they had air superiority and when they did not, when they won and when they lost.” Many other noted historians agreed with this assessment
2 Preparata, Preface xix: “The leitmotiv of this book is the conscious nature of the effort expended by the British clubs to preserve the empire, it being understood that such an effort was worthwhile even if it meant surrendering leadership to the American brethren, whom the London clubs cultivated as their spiritual heirs. The message conveyed here is that Britain’s imperial way was possibly the most atrocious manifestation of machiavellism in modern history for she stopped at nothing to defend her dominant position; she knew of no means that could not justify the end. To achieve world hegemony, Britain did not retract from planning in Germany an interminable season of pain and chaos to incubate an eerie, native force, which she thought of manipulating in a second world conflict – that too a British idea. All of this was, from the beginning in 1919 till the end in 1945, a cool-headed, calculated plot. Needless to say, I am well aware that such a thesis might too easily lend itself to being booed by the patriotic ‘experts’ of Western academia as yet another grotesque conspiracy theory; but in fact this thesis provides no more than a thread with which one may finally string together a collection of clues and solid evidence, which have been available for years, and have formed ever since a platform for dissenters, that is, for those students of history and economics that have had the candor to acknowledge that the central tenet of international relations was, then as now, secrecy….all great historical developments, good or ill, are unfailingly animated, fought and countered by the initiates of the several antagonistic ‘societies’; and the herds, despite themselves, always follow. In the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, it is the Anglo-American clubs that have carried the day, and their tenure has little to do with human rights, free markets and democracy, regardless of what they may shamelessly profess. What follows is the story of the most important battle they victoriously fought so far: the horrifying campaign against Germany.”
3 Per Preparata, p. 72: “The magnitude of Western assistance to the Bolsheviks is not known, though in early 1918, for instance, it was a matter of some notoriety that the United States was conveying funds to Bolshevik Russia for purchases of weaponry and munitions via Wall Street operator Raymond Robins, for whom Trotsky was ‘the greatest Jew since Jesus.’ The significant number of contracts, concessions, and licenses subsequently released by Lenin’s empire to American firms during the Civil War, and in its immediate aftermath, formed something of a smoking gun of Bolshevism’s early Allied sponsorship: $25 million of Soviet commissions for US manufactures between July 1919 and January 1920, not to mention Lenin’s concession for the extraction of asbestos to Armand Hammer in 1921, and the 60-year lease granted in 1920 to Frank Vanderlip’s US consortium formed to exploit the coal, petroleum and fisheries of a North Siberian region covering 600,000 square kilometers.”
4 Per Preparata, p. xvi footnote 3: “So-called ‘democracy’ is a sham, the ballot a travesty. In modern bureaucratized systems, whose birth dates from the mid-nineteenth century, the feudal organization has been carried to the next level, so to speak. A chief objective of what Thucydides referred to in his epoch as synomosiai (literally ‘exchanges of oaths’), that is, the out-of-sight fraternities acting behind the ruling clans, has been to make the process of the exaction of rents from the population (a ‘free income’ in the form of rents, financial charges and like thefts) as unfathomable and impenetrable as possible. The tremendous sophistication, and the propagandistic wall of artfully divulged misconceptions surrounding the banking system, which is the chief instrument wherewith the hierarchs expropriate and control the wealth of their surrounding community, is the limpid testimony of this essential transformation undergone by the feudal/oligarchic organization in the modern era. The West has moved from a low-tech agrarian establishment built upon the backs of disenfranchised serfs to a highly mechanized post-industrial hive that feeds off the strength of no less disenfranchised blue- and white-collar slaves, whose lives are mortgaged to buy into the vogue of modern consumption. The latter-day lords of the manor are no longer seen demanding tribute since they have relied on the mechanics of banking accounts for the purpose, whereas the sycophants of the median class, as academics and publicists, have consistently remained loyal to the synomosiai. The other concrete difference between yesterday and today is the immensely increased throughput of industrial production (whose potential level, however, has always been significantly higher than the actual one, to keep prices high). As for the ‘democratic participation’ of the ordinary citizens, these know in their hearts that they never decide anything of weight, and that politics consists in the art of swaying the mobs in one direction or another according to the wishes and anticipations of the few having the keys to information, intelligence and finance. These few may at a point in time be more or less divided into warring factions; the deeper the division, the bloodier the social strife. The electoral record of the West in the past century is a shining monument to the utter inconsequence of ‘democracy’: in spite of two cataclysmic wars and a late system of proportional representation that yielded a plethora of parties, Western Europe has seen no significant shift in her socio-economic constitution, whereas America has become, as time progressed, even more identical to her late oligarchic self, having reduced the democratic pageant to a contest between two rival wings of an ideologically compact monopartite structure, which is in fact ‘lobbied’ by more or less hidden ‘clubs’: the degree of public participation in this flagrant mockery is, as known, understandably lowest: a third of the franchise at best.”
5 Preparata, 111: “Had the coup succeeded, the Versailles Treaty might have all been for naught. True, Kolchak was already finished when the Kappists invaded Berlin: thus a White, full-fledged Russo-German alliance could hardly have come into being at the time of the putsch, but a revived dynastic Reich, propped by a few satellites in Central Europe, would have certainly conspired, and successfully so, to loosen completely the unsteady grip of Bolshevism over Eurasia in the medium term by bolstering the armies of the other Russian Whites – Denikin, Yudenitch, and the survivors of the Siberian debacle.”
This post offers a preliminary analysis of the Israel/Gaza conflict from the perspective of globohomo’s broader goals and objectives.
I generally try to design my posts around social, geopolitical, and spiritual factors above the fray of day-to-day politics, because a focus on day-to-day politics generally misses the forest for the trees. But occasionally there will be event that happens that reflects on larger trends, and I’ll feel compelled to break away from the scheduled release order of posts and address the topic directly.
These events are felt as an emotional gut-punch which lingers, usually signifying the event is something that is likely to have much wider and longer-lasting repercussions than the day-to-day politics, and which I have to sit back and intellectualize the complex underlying feelings. Two of these events covered in this manner were the Russian oligarchy’s recent assassination of Prigozhin and Donald Trump being hit with a slew of frivolous globohomo criminal lawsuits. I had similar emotional gut-punches when globohomo ramped up the COVID narrative scam in March 2020, when they rigged and stole the election from Blormf in a very obvious manner at the end of 2020 and at the start of the Russian/Ukraine “Not War”.
When one of these impactful events happens, it can be hard to separate the deluge of competing propaganda “facts” and false narratives as well as their implications. For example, when the Russia/Ukraine war started pretty much everything argued on both sides was wrong. The Z-bloggers thought Kiev would fall in a matter of days, while the Ukraine bloggers thought their later counter-offensives would have spectacular results. Only when time passed and the smoke cleared did it become apparent that the “Not War” was America’s next forever war after Afghanistan, that it was designed to rape the American taxpayer and to churn dead white Christian bodies on both sides. But to this day this position is almost entirely unknown except for Rurik Skywalker and maybe a couple others.
Therefore, when assessing an event like Hamas’s attack on Israel, it is best to sit back and ponder it, to be tentative about reaching conclusions that will only be really understood down the line.
A couple things seem obvious, though:
It seems hard to believe that Israel did not have advance knowledge of a major military buildup on its border (a sentiment echoed by a popular Israeli Substack blogger),
Iran was behind the planning, funding, and supplies for the attack, the proximate cause of which is to scuttle Israel-Saudi normalization talks (which I think will be scuttled),
Iran has war-gamed the response to the broadcasted atrocities (rape, torture, and mass-murder of civilians, including announced ISIS-style publicly broadcast executions of captives) and will have lots of nasty surprises in store during a Gaza ground invasion, and urban combat will negate to a large extent Israel’s tech advantages and result in lots of IDF casualties, and
Hezbollah may enter the war at any moment, and from there it’s possible that Syria, Iran, and Israel’s Muslim population join in.
But why is this attack important? After all, Josiah Lippincott is correct that Israel is not America and that America have no business being in the region at all, given that it has enormous domestic issues to deal with and is out of money. The middle east has always been home to tribal blood feuds, and that’s not ending anytime soon. I love the little chart he led with:
“Israel is Not America”
I would much prefer to withdraw all U.S. forces from abroad and to end all foreign aid and let the world fend for itself. But that’s not the reality we live in. We currently live in Pax Americana (which is itself controlled by the central bank owners1) and Israel is an American protectorate shoved into the heart of the Arab region. It’s mere existence stirs conflict and controversy, although the Muslim world is not sympathetic either, mired in tribal backwardness, corruption, and brutality, although it’s avoided the worst of globohomo degeneracy for now.
Here is a quote from Guido Giacomo Preparata in his excellent “Conjuring Hitler” on how our central bank owning overlords operate:
“To isolate each conflict, the targeted territorial portion had to be severed from its adjacent district, and bled white by prolonged strife waged in the name of political, religious, or ethnic diversity. Thus the Anglo-Americans have always acted: in Europe by spinning everybody against Germany (1904-45); in the Near East, by jamming Israel in the heart of the Arab world (1917-present); in the Far East, by planting thorns in the side of China: Korea, Vietnam, and Taiwan (1950-present); in Central Asia by destabilizing the entire region intro tribal warfare with the help of Pakistan to prevent the Caspian seaboard from gravitating into the Russian sphere of influence.
Most importantly, in such trying games of conquest, results might never be expected to take shape quickly, but might take a matter of weeks, months or even decades. Imperial strategems are protracted affairs. The captains of world aggression measure their achievements, or failures, on a timescale whose unit is the generation.”
Think about those fault lines: (1) Germany (which is a conquered, humiliated and brainwashed American protectorate now) has shifted to Ukraine with Russia, but other than that we have (2) China/Taiwan, (3) India/Pakistan, and (4) Israel/Muslim world (with a sub-irritant of Palestinians as a thorn in the side of Israel2).
Our globohomo overlords installed each of these conflicts as a means of leverage to keep nations compliant, keeping a relative balance of power which they have done since time immemorial. As I wrote when discussing the motivations of our overlords:
The money-lenders attempted to finance both sides of European conflicts, hoping for long, drawn out wars to increase the debts owed to them and thus their leverage against the debtor kings. These lenders sought to obtain a balance of power among European countries so that if any king tried to cancel their debt arrangements they could finance other nearby countries to overthrow them. In this way they could ensure kings would pay their debts and not abrogate them by decree….
According to Professor Stuart Crane as told by Gary Allen, “If you will look back at every war in Europe during the Nineteenth Century, you will see that they always ended with the establishment of a ‘balance of power’. With each reshuffling there was a balance of power in a new grouping around the House of Rothschild in England, France or Austria. They grouped nations so that if any king got out of line a war would break out and the war would be decided by which way the financing went. Researching the debt positions of the warring nations will usually indicate who was to be punished.”
And I think that’s the cause of the emotional reaction: it may be the start of the opening of a second front (Israel/Middle East3) after Ukraine/Russia, which, if so, one can then reasonably conclude that it could lead to a third and fourth front. This is also geopolitically rational, right? Because if the U.S. gets sucked into the Middle East somehow (given U.S. Jews are in control of the government4, see also here), and given it’s military inventories are already getting low in the Ukraine war, then it would be the proper time for China to invade Taiwan, if it decides to do so, because the U.S. would not be able to competently respond.
And from there, one could imagine a U.S. draft being called. Kulak believes calling a draft would result in imperial suicide, but keep in mind that the U.S. population was ~90% against entry into both World War 1 and World War 2 before authorities managed affairs to change their minds. The U.S. population is obese, lazy, and entitled now, with very little patriotism and some degree of greater resistance to globohomo propaganda, along with trends toward increased anti-semitism5, but I don’t think it would be too hard to gear the population up for war with a false flag on domestic soil (Cyber Polygon?) or endless propaganda or otherwise (perhaps an end to free speech or an internet shutdown?). As Goering famously said:
“…after all, it’s the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it’s always a simple matter to drag the people along whether it’s a democracy, a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism, and exposing the country to greater danger.”
People are idiots and will always follow leadership during times of perceived danger, the perception of which the media controls.
The end of Pax Americana
After all, Pax America is on its last legs. The following graph visualizes Pax Americana; note especially how many bases there are in Germany.
Pax Americana wasn’t all bad, as it resulted in unprecedented global peace since the fall of the Soviet Union, per Noah Smith, who argues that we aren’t going to like what comes next:
Pax Americana resulted in global peace for 35 years
The signs are all there for Pax American to wind down: the U.S. government has too much debt, its population is set against each other, it’s military is increasingly gay, trans, non-white and woke, greatly eroding combat capabilities, U.S. manufacturing was maliciously sent abroad to China in the 1990s so that globohomo elite could profit off it and the military-industrial complex has enormous problems competently delivering weapons.
And it’s about time to end based on historical metrics, judged by the average length of time a country retained world reserve currency status:
World reserve currency
Losing reserve currency status would result in a dramatic and shocking higher cost of borrowing and inflation domestically, given the U.S. government has historically exported inflation abroad as part of the benefits it receives from the petrodollar system as described by Tree of Woe here (and part 2, 3, 4).
As Pax Americana ends – regardless of whether we have World War 3 or not – the transition to a multi-polar world will continue, and such a world is likely to result in massively higher costs of living as well as hugely spiking deaths from ethnic, religious and state conflicts moving forward.
To be clear, a transition from a unipolar to a multi-polar world does not impact the top layer of control by the central bank owners who own the BRICS central banks. I’ve touched on this point many times (see the second part of this post or this analysis of the Russia/Ukraine war); also see this post by Edward Slavsquat to get a feel for it. Alex Soros bragged about it ten years ago on Instagram, when he asked “The question is, which of these flags will fall first?” and included a photo of the U.S. flag.
The WEF itself has publicly bragged about an upcoming multi-polar world in this deleted but archived post, where it predicted:
US dominance is over. We have a handful of global powers. Nation states will have staged a comeback, writes Robert Muggah, Research Director at the Igarapé Institute. Instead of a single force, a handful of countries – the U.S., Russia, China, Germany, India and Japan chief among them – show semi-imperial tendencies. However, at the same time, the role of the state is threatened by trends including the rise of cities and the spread of online identities.
If globohomo is bragging and predicting a multi-polar world, you can be sure they aren’t losing control in it.
CBDCs and the Great Reset
As argued previously, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are primed up and ready for roll-out. CBDCs will be used to micro-manage human behavior to an extent never seen before in human history, with the greatest loss of human freedom of all time, enforced by an ultra-woke AI. If you don’t comply your funds will be stolen and you will be locked out of life. They need a major triggering event to bring this system into effect, with a shocked and terrified population calling out for a solution, any solution (which will be hand-ready to deliver); COVID was a test-run and designed to get Trump out of office (among other objectives6), as they did not plan for him to win in 2016.
This triggering event could easily be World War 3 by inciting conflict in these four primed fault line areas, and the concern is that Israel/Hamas will expand to be the second triggered fault line. World War 3 would also serve as a fantastic excuse for globohomo to shift blame for their destruction of Western economies, currencies, and populations away from themselves and onto something else, as globohomo will do anything within its power to avoid accepting public blame for their crimes.
Hopefully the Israel/Gaza conflict stays localized and does not spread further, and I will look back on this post like I look back on all the immediate post-Ukraine invasion commentary by all the squawking heads online, with bemusement and a head shake for a concern that did not materialize.
Thanks for reading.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 The 16th Amendment authorizing personal income taxes, the IRS, the Federal Reserve and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) all came into existence in 1913.
2 Gaza’s population is 3 million on a 140 square mile strip of land. It survives entirely on foreign aid, but at the same time no Arab state is willing to grant them passports to move (WSJ: “Arab countries won’t grant them citizenship. My life attests that doing so would be a boon for all involved” and see here). As such, it’s implicit purpose is to serve as an irritant for Israel, just as Israel’s existence is to serve as an irritant on the larger Arab world.
3 As one of the smartest men in the world Chris Langan has argued here and here, the central bank owners, while mostly Jewish, are more than willing to sacrifice their genetic brethren if it advances their overarching goals.
4 Per the Jerusalem Post, Jewish Journal, and Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Jews serving within the Biden administration include Antony Blinken, Secretary of State; David Cohen, Deputy CIA Director; Janet Yellen, Secretary of the Treasury; Merrick Garland, Attorney-General; Avril Haines, Director of National Intelligence; Ron Klain, Chief of Staff; Eric Lander, Director, Office of Science & Technology Policy; Rachel Levine, Deputy Secretary, Health and Human Services; Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of Homeland Security; Anne Neuberger, Director of Cybersecurity, National Security Agency; Wendy Sherman, Deputy Secretary of State; Jeff Zients, COVID-19 Coordinator; Rochelle Walensky, Director, Center for Disease Control; Jared Bernstein, member, Council of Economic Advisors; Douglas Emhoff, second gentleman, husband of US Vice President Kamala Harris.
It’s not just limited to Democrats, of course. Among the Trump administration, also per the above Jerusalem Post link, there were also a huge number of Jews. Among them included Jared Kushner, son-in-law and senior advisor; Elliot Abrams Special representative for Venezuela, then Iran; David Friedman, Ambassador to Israel; Jason Greenblatt, Special Representative for International Negotiations, the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict; Steve Mnuchin, Secretary of the Treasury; Stephen Miller, Senior Advisor, Policy; Gary Cohn, Director, White House National Economic Council; Reed Cordish, Assistant to the President, Intragovernmental and Technology Initiatives; Avrahm Berkowitz, Deputy Advisor to the President; Rod Rosenstein, Deputy Attorney General; Elan Carr, Special Envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism; Ellie Cohanim, Deputy Special Envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism; Jeffrey Rosen, Attorney General; Morgan Ortagus, Spokesperson, State Department; David Shulkin, Secretary of Veterans Affairs; Lawrence Kudlow, Director National Economic Council; Ivanka Trump, daughter, Advisor to the President; John Eisenberg, National Security Council Legal; Ezra Cohen-Watnick, Acting Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; Len Khodorkovsky, Deputy Secretary of State and Senior Advisor to the US Special Representative for Iran.
5 There has been a massive amount of anti-Jewish Islamic immigration into America as a result of predominantly Jewish-pushed open borders (see perplexed comments like this one that completely miss this point, thinking eternal blood-feuds can be negotiated with), along with white America’s increasing embitterment at the Jewish position of “closed borders for me but not for thee” given Israel has a border wall and closed immigration.
6 Other objectives furthered include: (1) it instituted permanent vote by mail in key states so that future elections would be much easier for globohomo to rig; (2) it was a test to see how weak/complaint the populations worldwide are to tyrannical dictates, and those populations failed miserably; (3) it was an opportunity to print $11 trillion dollars+ and funnel most of it to themselves, their friends and allies; (4) it was an opportunity to crush small and medium sized businesses in favor of big businesses; (5) it was an opportunity to test experimental and dangerous mRNA technologies on a wide scale. Probably some others, but those off the top of my head. It was a masterful operation. Now, they didn’t get away with permanent vaccine passports this time around, likely because the uptake on the COVID booster was terrible (~20%). But hey, they pushed the envelope and made a lot happen with it.
This post links the last 40 years of American so-called prosperity to a declining interest rate environment and massively inflating debt levels, which have raised asset prices and peppered over a deteriorating quality of life, making it easier for people to ignore. But the days of declining interest rates are over and therefore so is the party, and much harder times are ahead.
Western society is in a very unusual situation.
When the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia in 1917 on the basis of economic equality, they inherited a country that was extremely backwards and poor. Sure, they crushed the small but burgeoning kulak class (which existed thanks to the efforts of Pyotr Stolypin) and murdered millions of middle class, small, independent farmers in what is the current Ukraine, but generally speaking the quality of life of the peasants overall did not get that much worse. Furthermore, the peasants were generally very religious and remained so in spite of the Bolshevik’s militant atheism.
America, on the other hand, is rich. Really rich. Richer than any nation in history as it gallops to a permanent Bioleninistone party state. But average wages peaked in 1971 and have been slowly crushed under the central bank’s unbacked fiat system, unlimited immigration and the forced exportation of manufacturing jobs abroad, a process of neoliberal feudalism which is intensifying. You can see a whole bunch of charts here to see the shocking changes.
America was able to hide these problems with a 40-year declining interest rate environment, from the early 1980s until 2022, which raised asset prices (for homes, education, business equipment, the stock market, etc.) and made borrowing easier for the length of this “golden” period, with some blips along the way.
There is a simple formula for this: lowering interest rates = more borrowing power = higher asset prices, and the opposite is also true (higher interest rates = decreased borrowing power = decreasing asset prices).
Here is the result in the stock market:
Globohomo bailed out the big banks in 2008, then dropped rates to 0% for many years in order to create the biggest asset and debt bubble of all time.
But the party is over: The Fed Funds rate suddenly spiked in 2022-2023 and is now over 5%, signaling the end of the 40 year falling rate/rising asset prices dynamic. Jamie Dimon recently warned that rates may likely rise further to 7% (or higher).
As the 40 declining rate period occurred, people were forced to take out more and more debt to afford ever-appreciating assets. I discussed previously how the money lending process worked to steal the assets of the general population, where I wrote:
Any industry that received expansion of credit…resulted in major price appreciation, so individuals were forced to take out debt at whatever rate was demanded or get priced out of their industries. For example, money lenders first arrived in England in 1066 in the wake of William I’s defeat of King Harold II at Hastings. They had financed the war and, in return for their support, William I richly awarded the money lenders by allowing them to practice usury under royal protection. By charging rates of interest of 33% per annum on lands mortgaged by nobles and 300% per annum on tools of trade or chattels pledged by workmen, within two generations 1/4 of all English lands were in the hands of usurers. At his death in 1186, the English financier Aaron of Lincoln’s wealth exceeded that of King Henry II. The famous economist Dr. William Cunningham compares “the activity of the money-lenders in England from the eleventh century onward to a sponge, which sucks up all the wealth of the land and thereby hinders all economic development.”
This process has played out in America now as well. People took out more and more debt in order to survive as interest rates dropped in this unusual environment. Per Wikipedia, “In 1978, the financial sector comprised 3.5% of the American economy (that is, it made up 3.5% of U.S. GDP), but by 2007 it had reached 5.9%.Profits in the American financial sector in 2009 were six times higher on average than in 1980, compared with non-financial sector profits, which on average were just over twice what they were in 1980. Financial sector profits grew by 800%, adjusted for inflation, from 1980 to 2005. In comparison with the rest of the economy, U.S. nonfinancial sector profits grew by 250% during the same period. For context, financial sector profits from the 1930s until 1980 grew at the same rate as the rest of the American economy.” The financialization of the American economy is significantly worse now compared to 2009; in 2020 the financial sector comprised 8% of the American economy; finance now makes up 25% of corporate profits while it employs only 4% of the work force. This trend is only intensifying.
Look at consumer and government/welfare debt since 1980:
Here is another visualization showing the issue is endemic and well above the level of whichever party controls the presidency:
Due to the $11 trillion+ printed during “COVID” the above charts would look much worse today.
Because the total amount of debt is so massive, increases in rates will have a much greater and negative impact than in prior periods. Raising rates further will crash the real economy because of extremely high valuations and unprecedented debt levels — simply put, if the interest expense of running one’s business doubles or triples from lower rate environments, then the profits drops and hence the value of the business declines. This process is playing out slowly over a multi-year process, not weekly or monthly; it’s a slow grind and bleed-out. One can assume globohomo will then gobble up the shrinking middle class’s assets for pennies on the dollar to help bring about the Great Reset. They have used this yo-yo high/low interest rate strategy many times historically.
Let’s look at housing as an example. People are already either priced out of home ownership or otherwise locked into their existing homes, unable to sell and buy another because their mortgage expense (acquired when rates were low, for many – but not all – on a 30 year fixed term) would triple. If you can’t move because of your living situation, how are you different from a serf?1
Housing affordability in the US is near all-time-lows, per Goldman Sachs
Compounding this issue, the resilience of the average American via their skillsets and health has collapsed. Here is a chart showing the changes in American jobs per sector over time, gutting us from a productive manufacturing to a useless service based economy, from Grundvilk:
Agriculture and manufacturing, traditionally understood “real” jobs that led to self-sufficiency and a middle class lifestyle, have been replaced with “education”, “health care”, and “trade (retail and wholesale)”, which are useless paper shuffling, indoctrination and “service economy” slave jobs. That’s if there are any jobs to be had – John Carter explains in his latest post that whites, and especially white men, are basically banned from corporate jobs today. Wonderful.
So let’s sum this up. The 40 years of secular materialist “good times” are over, brought to an end by the beginning of a rising interest rate environment after the accumulation of unprecedented amounts of personal and governmental debt. The “good times” were declining for a long time before that but were peppered over with increasing debt which made it easy to ignore. Now it will be declining faster and more intensely. This isn’t a prediction that will play out over a day or a week or a month or a year or multiple years, but more long-term. And it has nothing to do with stock market performance, which globohomo can keep inflated by printing infinite Federal Reserve loldollars and shoving it into the market at their discretion (or crash it by withholding future funds). This is a magic trick, by the way, as people will look at a stock market chart going constantly up which short-circuits their brains into somehow believing the collapse isn’t already here – but it is here, now, and it’s to your quality of life.
This prescient 4chan post from 2013 accurately sums up the state of affairs, previously discussed here:
America has no social capital remaining to weather the intensifying storm
All that America has anymore is consumerism. Worship at the idol of eating, Tinder, drinking, travel-shrewing, fancy cars and big houses. Due to the death of God as foretold by Nietzsche, we live in a world that is unsustainably materialist and nihilist, regardless of one’s religious beliefs. We exist to consume on a giant ball in space in a hostile, unforgiving universe and with a God that, if he exists, does not interfere in human affairs, and therefore we need to be managed by caring technocratic experts (this isn’t my argument, this is just a description of the baseline understanding for current Western society).
Because of this process social capital — community trust, community vitality and spirit — has been obliterated. Everyone is atomized both on a friend, family and dating level, gatherings of like minded people are forbidden by government, there is mass censorship, a stifling political correctness, zero ability to petition government for redress, feminization and digitization of society and there is a rapidly declining quality of life. See here for the grim details.
Suicides in America are at an all-time high, per 2nd Smartest Guy in the World here:
Additionally, it’s not just raising interest rates and the end of social capital that mean the party is over. Here are twenty common functions of American life the government wants to regulate or ban. The below is globohomo’s gameplan for the upcoming restrictions on basic living as explained by UKFires, which has a lot of establishment credibility, even attracting a full debate in the House of Lords in February 2020:
The Net Zero zealots have forced the closure of [Britain’s] last remaining fertiliser plant and they also want to close the available routes to import ammonia. Not only that, but no shipping and no aviation will also impede our ability to import food.
The “experts” on the Climate Change Committee want to “release” 11% of our agricultural land by 2035 and up to a quarter by 2050. By “release” they mean turn over to tree-planting or energy crops. One has to ask, without fertiliser or imported food and much less agricultural land, how are we going to feed ourselves?
It is plain to see that we are heading towards economic disaster, social catastrophe and potentially famine.
Grim stuff.
Work toward self sufficiency, decreased spending and find God or suffer
Regardless of what globohomo has planned for us down the road, because of the prevalence of nihilism, without a spiritual foundation to provide meaning to man’s actions in this world the environment already currently feels choking, oppressive, stifling; like the whole country has become an open air prison.
It feels like a pressure cooker, and I’m seeing people become more frayed, more stressed, acting out in strange and unusual ways, turning to drugs and other reckless behaviors or worse. And this trend is markedly increasing. As I argue here, those who are going to best be able to manage the shift are going to have to consciously choose a path away from materialism and back toward idealism/God because materialism and spirituality have a direct inverse correlation. In an environment where one’s materialist consumption is going to become more and more limited, one is going to have to rediscover a firm belief in God in order to manage their stresses and outlooks properly. Those that fail to make this difficult transition will see their stressors continue to increase until they suffer breakdown.
American Psycho, both the movie and the book, were very rare classics of the modern era, because they demonstrated the principal that materialism and spirituality are direct opposites
The Orthodox Russians under the Soviets managed to bear their hardship well – even though they faced massive discrimination and brutalization – in no small part because they lived in poverty to begin with. I suspect the western transition to dramatically lower standards of living and quality of life is going to be much harder, much more chaotic and much worse overall, because the consumption patterns, mental outlooks, personal health and most importantly the baseline expectations are so much worse. Americans expect to consume a tremendous amount, and not being able to do so anymore — oh boy, it’s going to be a very rocky road…
For those secular materialists (and this to an extent is all of us) who make the transition to an element of belief, because this involves changes to our core views, it is likely to have an extremely jarring ripple effect on every area of our lives. As Brett Andersen explained before his recent schizophrenic breakdown, our beliefs are structured in a hierarchical pyramid structure with core beliefs at the top (comprising the Big Questions; religious/metaphysical beliefs, beliefs about the self, self-narratives, etc.), mid-level goals/beliefs (e.g. career goals, political beliefs), low level goals/beliefs (e.g. the goal of passing a test, belief in a scientific hypothesis), and sub-routines (e.g. solving an equation, brushing your teeth). It is easy to change lower-level beliefs which do not impact higher layers, but changes to the higher layers have a rippling effect on the layers below, so such fundamental changes will likely be very painful and disruptive.
The above images are clickable to the relevant Youtube moment.
The mind is arranged in this kind of hierarchy of abstraction and the worldview questions are at the top. And so all of our subsidiary goals and beliefs are nested inside of our answers to the big questions. Now for most people the answers to the big questions are not really explicit, right? For most people, most people are not philosophers, right? And that’s totally fine. Most people don’t have an elaborated philosophy of epistemology. They have implicit assumptions about how they know what is true and they don’t have an elaborated ontology. They have implicit assumptions about what is real and unreal. But nevertheless, those implicit assumptions are still of vital importance because your assumptions about what is real and unreal constrains what you can possibly believe in because something that presents itself to your sensory experience that you have a priori deemed as being impossible, it’s very likely that you’ll deny that or find some explanation for it that deems it unreal in some important sense.So disruptions to our answers to the big questions, if we allow those to be disrupted, that will generate a lot more psychological entropy than other kinds of disruptions because everything that was nested inside of them also becomes disrupted.
As an aside, Andersen believes (as does Ma Mu) that it becomes more easier to disrupt one’s highest order beliefs with psychedelic therapies. These therapies have been demonstrated in clinical trials to have strong and prolonged impacts on those with PTSD and other difficult-to-cure disorders.
Anyway, lower your debt levels, lower your consumption patterns to live well below your means, try to develop an element of self-sufficiency, and try to find a relationship with God. Upcoming years and decades will be a “batten down the hatches” situation – I suspect we will not see such easy, “good times” again for the rest of our lives, and probably not for a long time thereafter. There are simply too few natural resources left and the world population is too large, and there is way too much debt and decadence, necessitating some future extreme population die-off on a globohomo pretext because our overlords were too evil or stupid to set population levels at or below a neo-Malthusian sustainable level generations ago.
Hopefully this post provides some perspective to navigate the trials and tribulations ahead.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 Additionally, I expect air travel to be curtailed for the peasants down the road. The perks that belonged to the masses in prior generations will be increasingly phased out but be retained by the globalist class. People will be increasingly landlocked, chained in place. Massive cost of living increases will eat away what meager savings proles have and the travel-shrew phenomenon will no longer be necessary to help suppress birthrates.
Furthermore, the societal decline of IQ and the rise of generalized incompetence makes air travel tenuous longterm on its own. We have incompetents (labeled as “clowns” in internal emails) designing new planes that can’t fly, and white men engineers who keep the whole thing together with regular maintenance are generally reaching retirement age. Remember just a generation ago we had supersonic commercial aircraft. What will happen to air travel when planes start crashing on a regular basis?
This is a post about the trends toward meaning or decadence throughout the history of western civilization.
In this context, meaning means western civilization offering a worldview to the people within it that provides a satisfactory explanation for man’s place in the world, a reason for his suffering (man can bear almost any suffering so long as it is perceived as meaningful) and a guide for living a fulfilling life.
Decadence means that society has lost discipline to achieve its values or has lost interest in the values themselves. Laws are not enforced, standards are lowered, difficult things are not attempted. There is a perceived decay in standards, morals, dignity, religious faith, honor, discipline, or skill at governing among the members of the elite of a very large social structure. More importantly, decadence relates to the inability of a society to maintain a worldview which provides meaning which people need to function cohesively in the world. Decadence signifies a loss of faith in the existing paradigm. The most serious form of societal decadence is nihilism, where decay reaches a point that society believes that nothing has any inherent importance and that life lacks purpose. Decadence goes hand in hand with material success; the richer and more powerful a culture is, the more decadence follows.
I recently read Richard Tarnas’s 1991 book “The Passion of the Western Mind” which investigated these trends. Passion became a bestseller, increased Tarnas’s stature and, according to Christopher Bache, it is “[w]idely regarded as one of the most discerning overviews of Western philosophy from the ancient Greeks to postmodern thought.” Joseph Campbell called it “the most lucid and concise presentation of Western thought. The writing is elegant and carries the reader with the momentum of a novel… A noble performance.”
Tarnas looks quite a bit like Jordan Peterson, unfortunately
This post will look at the fluctuations between meaning and decadence historically using Tarnas’s book as a guide.
Tarnas traces the development of philosophy from ancient Greece through the modern era, summarizing how man’s ideas about the world evolved over time. Philosophers built on the work of those who came before them in an ongoing dialectical process, whereby competing ideas and internal contradictions within an era ultimately resulted in the production of a synthesis, a Kuhnianparadigm shift and a new perspective, which in turn resulted in new contradictions or “anomalies” of its own. Knowingly or unknowingly, directly or circuitously, the impact of philosophers was to either reinforce the existing meaning paradigm, to weaken it leading to increased decadence, or, in rare situations, to push for new sources of meaning.
Since the complete victory of Catholicism by the 10th century AD, there has been an ever-increasing trend toward shedding its faith-based worldview in favor of reason — first with Scholasticism, then via the reintroduction of Aristotlean reason, followed by the increasing dominance of that reason over faith, then from attacks on the hierarchical structure of Catholicism via the Protestant Reformation, then from the supreme ascendancy of reason crystallized in the Scientific and Industrial Revolutions, followed by philosophical attacks on the reliability and objectivity of our senses and our reasoning abilities (most notably by Kant) and to what extent we can even know anything real about the world. All of this has led to a ubiquitous nihilism after the “death of God” as prophesied by Nietzsche. There is only one thing we have held onto throughout these changes, gripped white knuckled for dear life: our belief in the egalitarian core values that permeate every aspect of society which intensify over time via the egalitarian ratchet effect. This is the final hurdle, the last thing that must be overcome, before society can be reborn…if it can be at such a late stage as civilization hurtles into the abyss.
With that said, let’s begin.
Meaning at the beginning
Religion originally arose among hunter gatherers as a form of ancestor worship. Gods were a part of everyday life and they were just like humans, only more powerful, with their own personalities and whims. These religions were shamanistic in character in that they involved intense ceremonies led by charismatic, right-brain-dominant, chaotic practitioners who attempted to unite small groups of people in focused, high-energy, altered consciousness rites.
Hunter gatherer mythological narratives involved stories where everything has meaning, which served as a forum for action for how everyone should act in their own lives. Humans were generally well integrated between their thoughts and their instincts because they had naturally selected for this nomadic lifestyle for millions of years. Life was meaningful, and there was not an excess of food production that arose during the neolithic agricultural revolution which created the opportunity for inegalitarianism, the rise of non-productive elites who ruled with an iron fist, and ultimately decadence.
Peasant farmers in a neolithic grain field
In Greece in the eighth century BC spectacular myths arose:
The values expressed in the Homeric epics, composed around the eighth century B.C., continued to inspire successive generations of Greeks throughout antiquity, and the many figures of the Olympian pantheon, systematically delineated somewhat later in Hesiod’s Theogony, informed and pervaded the Greek cultural vision. In the various divinities and their powers lay a sense of the universe as an ordered whole, a cosmos rather than a chaos. The natural world and the human world were not distinguishable domains in the archaic Greek universe, for a single fundamental order structured both nature and society, and embodied the divine justice that empowered Zeus, the ruler of the gods. Although the universal order was especially represented in Zeus, even he was ultimately bound by an impersonal fate (moira) that governed all and that maintained a certain equilibrium of forces. The gods were indeed often capricious in their actions, with human destinies in the balance. Yet the whole cohered, and the forces of order prevailed over those of chaos—just as the Olympians led by Zeus had defeated the Giants in the primeval struggle for rulership of the world, and just as Odysseus after his long and perilous wanderings at last triumphantly achieved home….
For both archaic poet and classical tragedian, the world of myth endowed human experience with an ennobling clarity of vision, a higher order that redeemed the wayward pathos of life. The universal gave comprehensibility to the concrete. If, in the tragic vision, character determined fate, yet both were mythically perceived. Compared with the Homeric epics, Athenian tragedy reflected a more conscious sense of the gods’ metaphorical significance and a more poignant appreciation of human self-awareness and suffering. Yet through profound suffering came profound learning, and the history and drama of human existence, for all its harsh conflict and wrenching contradiction, still held overarching purpose and meaning. The myths were the living body of that meaning, constituting a language that both reflected and illuminated the essential processes of life.1
What followed these ancient myths included Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Heraclitus, Pythagoras and other Greek philosophers who deepened the Hellenic understanding of the world. Plato came up with the idea of idealistic dualism which later so heavily influenced Christianity, while Aristotle’s dealt more with a scientific, materialistic understanding of the world which would later inform the scientific method. But both still saw the world in a classical framework.
The School of Athens with Plato and Aristotle represented in the center, by Raphael
When Rome conquered Greece it absorbed its culture. However, it could be argued that Greece actually conquered Rome because the Romans continued to operate within the Greek intellectual framework. The Romans copied the Greek masterpieces and brought them into the Latin language with Cicero, Virgil, Horace, and Livy, and the Greeks remained the leaders in philosophy, literature, science, art, and education. But Roman military expansion came at a cost to society:
Although nobility of character often evidenced itself in the turmoil of political life, the Roman ethos gradually lost its vitality. The very success of the empire’s inordinate military and commercial activity, divorced from deeper motivations, was weakening the fiber of the Roman citizenry. Most scientific activity, let alone genius, radically diminished in the empire soon after Galen and Ptolemy in the second century, and the excellence of Latin literature began to wane in the same period. Faith in human progress, so broadly visible in the cultural florescence of fifth-century B.C. Greece, and sporadically expressed, usually by scientists and technologists, in the Hellenistic age, virtually disappeared in the final centuries of the Roman Empire. Classical civilization’s finest hours were by then all in the past, and the various factors that brought on Rome’s fall—oppressive and rapacious government, overambitious generals, constant barbarian incursions, an aristocracy grown decadent and effete, religious crosscurrents undermining the imperial authority and military ethos, drastic sustained inflation, pestilential diseases, a dwindling population without resilience or focus—all contributed further to the apparent death of the Greek-inspired world.2
In other words, Roman success – its wealth and the pacifying luxury it afforded – led to decadence (especially for the upper class) and loss of meaning, reminiscent of the G. Michael Hopf quote, “Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times.” Decline began in the first and second centuries BC, was interrupted by the short-lived ‘Restoration’ under the emperor Augustus (reign 27 BC – AD 14), then it resumed. In the process of decline, the Roman religion embraced emperor worship, the ‘oriental cults’ and Christianity as symptoms of that decline.
The famed historian Edward Gibbon argued, “…The decline of Rome was the natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness. Prosperity ripened the principle of decay; the causes of destruction multiplied with the extent of conquest; and as soon as time or accident had removed the artificial supports, the stupendous fabric yielded to the pressure of its own weight.” Gibbon thought that, in its quest for world dominion, Rome had created a situation that intensified despotism, loss of public freedom, and allowed the universal dominion of their Pax Romana to cause the deterioration of virtue.The Roman Empire included many different nations and cultures, and Rome assimilated them recklessly. The citizens of the world-empire “received the name without adopting the spirit of Romans”. This led to what Gibbon saw as an obliteration of what it meant to be Roman.”
The success of Christianity, regardless of the questionable motivations of Paul of Tarsus, transformed society on a fundamental level. Instead of polytheistic Hellenic Gods who provided templates for how people could act in the world, themselves subject to a more unknowable Unmoved Mover, Christians inverted the Roman warrior values into priestly values valuing the ascetic ideal, an all-knowing God spying and judging your every move, turning believers against their baser instincts, providing incentives of Heaven/Hell, and demonstrating extreme intolerance of all other religions (as well as other Christian sects) except to an extent for Judaism.
Even though Gibbon believes that Christianity weakened and had a major role in destroying Rome by sapping its fighting spirit and esprit de corps, there is no doubt that the ascetic ideal prepared believers for hard living during the decline of Rome. It offered a comprehensive worldview which placed man at the center of the universe and gave him a reason for his suffering, removing the decadence felt from the height of Roman materialist success.
Tarnas explains Christianity’s turn inwards toward the ascetic ideal:
With the rise of Christianity, the already decadent state of science in the late Roman era received little encouragement for new developments….The world as a whole was understood simply and preeminently as God’s creation, and thus efforts at scientifically penetrating nature’s inherent logic no longer seemed necessary or appropriate. Its true logic was known to God, and what man could know of that logic was revealed in the Bible.…
The scriptural testaments were thus the final and unchanging repository of universal truth, and no subsequent human efforts were going to enhance or modify, let alone revolutionize, that absolute statement….Truth was therefore approached primarily not through self- determined intellectual inquiry, but through Scripture and prayer, and faith in the teachings of the Church, and only the hope of recovering that lost spiritual light motivated the Christian soul while detained in this body and this world. Only when man awakened from the present life would he attain true happiness. Death, as a spiritual liberation, was more highly valued than mundane existence. At best the concrete natural world was an imperfect reflection of and preparation for the higher spiritual kingdom to come. But more likely the mundane world, with its deceptive attractions, its spurious pleasures and debasing arousal of the passions, would pervert the soul and deprive it of its celestial reward. Hence all human intellectual and moral effort was properly directed toward the spiritual and the afterlife, away from the physical and this life. In all these ways, Platonism gave an emphatic philosophical justification to the potential spirit-matter dualism in Christianity.
Monks living the ascetic ideal
Christianity went from strength to strength against its Hellenic opposition and competing heresies such as the Arians and the various gnostic sects: from surviving the various Roman crackdowns, to growing the religion’s following, to the conversion of Constantine, to the Edict of Milan, the Council of Nicaea, the establishment of Constantinople, the conversion of Augustine and his Confessions and City of God, through the Frankish conversion under Clovis to Christianity, through the outlawing of Hellenism and the gradual disappearance of “pagans” until they were forgotten (along with their philosophy, engineering, architecture and and science), toward the end of the 1st millennium Catholicism stood alone, more or less unopposed throughout Europe. It’s paradigm was the paradigm of the West, and the prior Hellenist, polytheistic, tolerant warrior beliefs were nothing but a memory.
Visualization of the spread of Christianity.
Christianity provided meaning to man’s life regardless of its actual metaphysical validity:
Viewing now in retrospect the Roman Catholic Church at the height of its glory in the high Middle Ages—with virtually all of Europe Catholic, with the entire calendar of human history now numerically centered on the birth of Christ, with the Roman pontiff regnant over the spiritual and often the temporal as well, with the masses of the faithful permeated with Christian piety, with the magnificent Gothic cathedrals, the monasteries and abbeys, the scribes and scholars, the thousands of priests, monks, and nuns, the widespread care for the sick and poor, the sacramental rituals, the great feast days with their processions and festivals, the glorious religious art and Gregorian chant, the morality and miracle plays, the universality of the Latin language in liturgy and scholarship, the omnipresence of the Church and Christian religiosity in every sphere of human activity—all this can hardly fail to elicit a certain admiration for the magnitude of the Church’s success in establishing a universal Christian cultural matrix and fulfilling its earthly mission. And whatever Christianity’s actual metaphysical validity, the living continuity of Western civilized culture itself owed its existence to the vitality and pervasiveness of the Christian Church throughout medieval Europe.3
St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City
Just like other religions and ideologies throughout history, having opposition to fear (the Arians, the Hellenists, the gnostics) had kept Christianity energized and invigorated, just like the omnipresent specter of white nationalism (no matter how silly the perceived threat) keeps liberals vigorous in stamping out heresy in the modern era. Threats and heresies that could undermine the nascent order might be anywhere. But by the end of the 1st millennium there was no opposition to be seen: Catholicism had conquered everything and there were no credible threats (other than the Muslims) to stand against them. Without such threats Christianity descended into complacency. And it is that complacency which led, in turn, starting with the Scholastics and then with the fortuitous reintroduction of Aristotle’s works by the Muslims (given the Christians had burned or lost almost all of it over the centuries) which began the assault on the Christian worldview.
The slow-moving assault on the Christian belief system
The rediscovery of Aristotle was probably the most impactful find in post-Roman Western history. It massively influenced the Church’s approach toward reason which had already begun shifting under the Scholastics:
In this unprecedented context of Church-sponsored learning, and under the impact of the larger forces invigorating the cultural emergence of the West, the stage was set for a radical shift in the philosophical underpinnings of the Christian outlook: Within the womb of the medieval Church, the world-denying Christian philosophy forged by Augustine and based on Plato began giving way to a fundamentally different approach to existence, as the Scholastics in effect recapitulated the movement from Plato to Aristotle in their own intellectual evolution.
That shift was sparked in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries with the West’s rediscovery of a large corpus of Aristotle’s writings, preserved by the Moslems and Byzantines and now translated into Latin. With these texts, which included the Metaphysics, the Physics, and De Anima (On the Soul), came not only learned Arabic commentaries, but also other works of Greek science, notably those of Ptolemy. Medieval Europe’s sudden encounter with a sophisticated scientific cosmology, encyclopedic in breadth and intricately coherent, was dazzling to a culture that had been largely ignorant of these writings and ideas for centuries. Yet Aristotle had such extraordinary impact precisely because that culture was so well prepared to recognize the quality of his achievement. His masterly summation of scientific knowledge, his codification of the rules for logical discourse, and his confidence in the power of the human intelligence were all exactly concordant with the new tendencies of rationalism and naturalism growing in the medieval West….
Islamic portrayal of Aristotle, c. 1220
The use of reason to examine and defend articles of faith, already exploited in the eleventh century by Anselm, archbishop of Canterbury, and the discipline of logic in particular, championed by the fiery twelfth-century dialectician Abelard, now rapidly ascended in both educational popularity and theological importance…medieval thinkers became increasingly preoccupied with the possible plurality of truth, with debate between competing arguments, and with the growing power of human reason for discerning correct doctrine. It is not that Christian truths were called into question; rather, they were now subject to analysis. As Anselm stated, “It seems to me a case of negligence if, after becoming firm in our faith, we do not strive to understand what we believe.”4
Thomas Aquinas furthered the influence of Aristotlean reason on Catholic thinking:
The extraordinary impact Aquinas had on Western thought lay especially in his conviction that the judicious exercise of man’s empirical and rational intelligence, which had been developed and empowered by the Greeks, could now marvelously serve the Christian cause….Faith transcended reason, but was not opposed by it; indeed, they enriched each other.Rather than view the workings of secular reason as a threatening antithesis to the truths of religious faith, Aquinas was convinced that ultimately the two could not be in conflict and that their plurality would therefore serve a deeper unity. Aquinas thereby fulfilled the challenge of dialectic posed by the earlier Scholastic Abelard, and in so doing opened himself to the influx of the Hellenic intellect.5
But was this a good thing? Secularism and materialism arising within the Catholic church led to increasing decadence and disillusionment:
In the high Middle Ages, the Christian world view was still beyond question. The status of the institutional Church, however, had become considerably more controversial. Having consolidated its authority in Europe after the tenth century, the Roman papacy had gradually assumed a role of immense political influence in the affairs of Christian nations. By the thirteenth century, the Church’s powers were extraordinary, with the papacy actively intervening in matters of state throughout Europe, and with enormous revenues being reaped from the faithful to support the growing magnificence of the papal court and its huge bureaucracy. By the early fourteenth century the results of such worldy success were both clear and unsettling. Christianity had become powerful but compromised.
The Church hierarchy was visibly prone to financial and political motivation. The pope’s temporal sovereignty over the Papal States in Italy involved it in political and military maneuverings that repeatedly complicated the Church’s spiritual self-understanding. Moreover, the Church’s extravagant financial needs were placing constantly augmented demands on the masses of devout Christians. Perhaps worst of all, the secularism and evident corruption of the papacy were causing it to lose, in the eyes of the faithful, its spiritual integrity…The very success of the Church’s striving for cultural hegemony, at first spiritually motivated, was now undermining its religious foundations.6
Pandora’s box had been opened:
On the one hand, the Church was supporting the whole academic enterprise in the universities, where Christian doctrine was explicated with unprecedentedly rigorous logical method and increasingly greater scope. On the other hand, it attempted to keep that enterprise under control, either by condemnation and suppression, or by giving doctrinal status to certain innovations such as those of Aquinas—as if to say, “This far and no further.” But within this ambivalent atmosphere, the Scholastic inquiry went on, with increasingly weighty implications.
The Church had largely accepted Aristotle. But the culture’s new interest in Aristotle did not stop with the study of his writings, for that interest signified a broader, and ever-broadening, interest in the natural world and a growing confidence in the power of human reason….This new focus on direct experience and reasoning was beginning to undermine the Church’s exclusive investment in the authoritativeness of the ancient texts—now Aristotelian as well as biblical and patristic. Aristotle was being questioned on his own terms, in specifics if not in overall authority. Some of his principles were compared with experience and found lacking, logical fallacies in his proofs were pinpointed, and the corpus of his works was subjected to minute examination.7
Technological innovation during the Renaissance undermined role of Catholic church further:
As with the medieval cultural revolution several centuries earlier, technical inventions played a pivotal role in the making of the new era. Four in particular (all with Oriental precursors) had been brought into widespread use in the West by this time, with immense cultural ramifications: the magnetic compass, which permitted the navigational feats that opened the globe to European exploration; gunpowder, which contributed to the demise of the old feudal order and the ascent of nationalism; the mechanical clock, which brought about a decisive change in the human relationship to time, nature, and work, separating and freeing the structure of human activities from the dominance of nature’s rhythms; and the printing press, which produced a tremendous increase in learning, made available both ancient classics and modern works to an ever-broadening public, and eroded the monopoly on learning long held by the clergy.
All of these inventions were powerfully modernizing and ultimately secularizing in their effects. The artillery-supported rise of separate but internally cohesive nation-states signified not only the overthrow of the medieval feudal structures but also the empowerment of secular forces against the Catholic Church. With parallel effect in the realm of thought, the printing press allowed the rapid dissemination of new and often revolutionary ideas throughout Europe. Without it, the Reformation would have been limited to a relatively minor theological dispute in a remote German province, and the Scientific Revolution, with its dependence on international communication among many scientists, would have been altogether impossible. Moreover, the spread of the printed word and growing literacy contributed to a new cultural ethos marked by increasingly individual and private, noncommunal forms of communication and experience, thereby encouraging the growth of individualism. Silent reading and solitary reflection helped free the individual from traditional ways of thinking, and from collective control of thinking, with individual readers now having private access to a multiplicity of other perspectives and forms of experience.8
The widespread sale of indulgences was one of the causes of the Reformation
The Protestant Reformation led to more secularism, even though it was a reaction against the decadence of the Catholic Church:
Here we encounter the other extraordinary paradox of the Reformation. For while its essential character was so intensely and unambiguously religious, its ultimate effects on Western culture were profoundly secularizing, and in multiple, mutually reinforcing ways. By overthrowing the theological authority of the Catholic Church, the internationally recognized supreme court of religious dogma, the Reformation opened the way in the West for religious pluralism, then religious skepticism, and finally a complete breakdown in the until then relatively homogeneous Christian world view….The immediate consequence of the liberation from the old matrix was a manifest liberation of fervent Christian religiosity, permeating the lives of the new Protestant congregations with fresh spiritual meaning and charismatic power. Yet as time passed, the average Protestant, no longer enclosed by the Catholic womb of grand ceremony, historical tradition, and sacramental authority, was left somewhat less protected against the vagaries of private doubt and secular thinking. From Luther on, each believer’s belief was increasingly self-supported; and the Western intellect’s critical faculties were becoming ever more acute….
By disenchanting the world of immanent divinity, completing the process initiated by Christianity’s destruction of pagan animism, the Reformation better allowed for its radical revision by modern science. The way was then clear for an increasingly naturalistic view of the cosmos, moving first to the remote rationalist Creator of Deism, and finally to secular agnosticism’s elimination of any supernatural reality.9
Even as the West became secular, though, its ethics and metaphysics remained thoroughly Christian:
The West had “lost its faith”—and found a new one, in science and in man. But paradoxically, much of the Christian world view found continued life, albeit in often unrecognized forms, in the West’s new secular outlook. Just as the evolving Christian understanding did not fully divorce itself from its Hellenic predecessor but, on the contrary, employed and integrated many of the latter’s essential elements, so too did the modern secular world view— often less consciously—retain essential elements from Christianity. The Christian ethical values and the Scholastic-developed faith in human reason and in the intelligibility of the empirical universe were conspicuous among these, but even as fundamentalist a Judaeo-Christian doctrine as the command in Genesis that man exercise dominion over nature found modern affirmation, often explicit as in Bacon and Descartes, in the advances of science and technology. So too did the Judaeo-Christian high regard for the individual soul, endowed with “sacred” inalienable rights and intrinsic dignity, continue in the secular humanist ideals of modern liberalism—as did other themes such as the moral self-responsibility of the individual, the tension between the ethical and the political, the imperative to care for the helpless and less fortunate, and the ultimate unity of mankind. The West’s belief in itself as the most historically significant and favored culture echoed the Judaeo-Christian theme of the Chosen People. The global expansion of Western culture as the best and most appropriate for all mankind represented a secular continuation of the Roman Catholic Church’s self-concept as the one universal Church for all humanity. Modern civilization now replaced Christianity as the cultural norm and ideal with which all other societies were to be compared, and to which they were to be converted. Just as Christianity had, in the process of overcoming and succeeding the Roman Empire, become Roman itself in the centralized, hierarchical, and politically motivated Roman Catholic Church, so too did the modern secular West, in the process of overcoming and succeeding Christianity and the Catholic Church, incorporate and unconsciously continue many of the latter’s characteristic approaches to the world.
But perhaps the most pervasive and specifically Judaeo-Christian component tacitly retained in the modern world view was the belief in man’s linear historical progress toward ultimate fulfillment. Modern man’s self-understanding was emphatically teleological, with humanity seen as moving in a historical development out of a darker past characterized by ignorance, primitiveness, poverty, suffering, and oppression, and toward a brighter ideal future characterized by intelligence, sophistication, prosperity, happiness, and freedom. The faith in that movement was based largely on an underlying trust in the salvational effect of expanding human knowledge: Humanity’s future fulfillment would be achieved in a world reconstructed by science. The original Judaeo-Christian eschatological expectation had here been transformed into a secular faith. The religious faith in God’s eventual salvation of mankind—whether Israel’s arrival in the Promised Land, the Church’s arrival at the millennium, the Holy Spirit’s progressive perfecting of humanity, or the Second Coming of Christ—now became an evolutionary confidence, or revolutionary belief, in an eventual this-worldly utopia whose realization would be expedited by the expert application of human reason to nature and society.10
That secular western society retained the underlying values of Christianity even as it discarded the religion itself is exactly the point that Tom Holland made in Dominion, where he argues that no philosopher until Nietzsche understood the assumptions that went into choosing society’s core values, and that the French Revolution, the communist revolution, secular liberalism, and atheism are all mere continuations and amplifications of the underlying Christian principles. Only the Nazis tried, but failed, to transvalue the West’s core priestly egalitarianism back into inegalitarian warrior values.
Tom Holland explaining that all the major secular revolutions within the west prior to Nazism were merely extensions of underlying Christians values and metaphysics.
The descent into nihilism
In the modern era idealist metaphysics no longer commanded widespread acceptance because its ideas were not empirically testable, and therefore society focused on materialism. This intense focus on materialism has led to widespread environmental destruction and an unsustainable quality of life:
But compounding these humanistic critiques were more disturbingly concrete signs of science’s untoward consequences. The critical contamination of the planet’s water, air, and soil, the manifold harmful effects on animal and plant life, the extinction of innumerable species, the deforestation of the globe, the erosion of topsoil, the depletion of groundwater, the vast accumulation of toxic wastes, the apparent exacerbation of the greenhouse effect, the breakdown of the ozone layer in the atmosphere, the radical disruption of the entire planetary ecosystem— all these emerged as direly serious problems with increasing force and complexity. From even a short-term human perspective, the accelerating depletion of irreplaceable natural resources had become an alarming phenomenon. Dependence on foreign supplies of vital resources brought a new precariousness into global political and economic life. New banes and stresses to the social fabric continued to appear, directly or indirectly tied to the advance of a scientific civilization—urban overdevelopment and overcrowding, cultural and social rootlessness, numbingly mechanical labor, increasingly disastrous industrial accidents, automobile and air travel fatalities, cancer and heart disease, alcoholism and drug addiction, mind- dulling and culture-impoverishing television, growing levels of crime, violence, and psychopathology. Even science’s most cherished successes paradoxically entailed new and pressing problems, as when the medical relief of human illness and lowering of mortality rates, combined with technological strides in food production and transportation, in turn exacerbated the threat of global overpopulation. In other cases, the advance of science presented new Faustian dilemmas, as in those surrounding the unforeseeable future uses of genetic engineering. More generally, the scientifically unfathomed complexity of all relevant variables—whether in global or local environments, in social systems, or in the human body— made the consequences of technological manipulation of those variables unpredictable and often pernicious.11
An increasing world of trash and junk, leaving the world a ruin for future generations
So what we have seen is the faith of the Christian worldview slowly giving way to a scientific materialism that accelerated into both decadence and nihilism. Tarnas comments on the rise of the impersonal technocratic society:
As the twentieth century advanced, modern consciousness found itself caught up in an intensely contradictory process of simultaneous expansion and contraction. Extraordinary intellectual and psychological sophistication was accompanied by a debilitating sense of anomie and malaise. An unprecedented broadening of horizons and exposure to the experience of others coincided with a private alienation of no less extreme proportions. A stupendous quantity of information had become available about all aspects of life – the contemporary world, the historical past, other cultures, other forms of life, the subatomic world, the macrocosm, the human mind and psyche – yet there was also less ordering vision, less coherence and comprehension, less certainty. The great overriding impulse defining Western man since the Renaissance – the quest for independence, self-determination, and individualism – had indeed brought those ideals to reality in many lives; yet it had also been eventuated in a world where individual spontaneity and freedom were increasingly smothered, not just in theory by a reductionist scientism, but in practice by the ubiquitous collectivity and conformism of mass societies. The great revolutionary political projects of the modern era, heralding personal and social liberation, had gradually led to conditions in which the modern individual’s fate was ever more dominated by bureaucratic commercial and political superstructures. Just as man had become a meaningless speck in the modern universe, so had individual persons become insignificant ciphers in modern states, to be manipulated or coerced by the millions.
The quality of modern life seemed ever equivocal. Spectacular empowerment was countered by a widespread sense of anxious helplessness. Profound moral and aesthetic sensitivity confronted horrific cruelty and waste. The price of technology’s accelerating advance grew ever higher. And in the background of every pleasure and every achievement loomed humanity’s unprecedented vulnerability. Under the West’s direction and impetus, modern man had burst forward and outward, with tremendous centrifugal force, complexity, variety, and speed. And yet it appeared he had driven himself into a terrestrial nightmare and a spiritual wasteland, a fierce constriction, a seemingly irresolvable predicament…
The anguish and alienation of twentieth-century life were brought to full articulation as the existentialist addressed the most fundamental, naked concerns of human existence—suffering and death, loneliness and dread, guilt, conflict, spiritual emptiness and ontological insecurity, the void of absolute values or universal contexts, the sense of cosmic absurdity, the frailty of human reason, the tragic impasse of the human condition. Man was condemned to be free. He faced the necessity of choice and thus knew the continual burden of error. He lived in constant ignorance of his future, thrown into a finite existence bounded at each end by nothingness. The infinity of human aspiration was defeated before the finitude of human possibility. Man possessed no determining essence: only his existence was given, an existence engulfed by mortality, risk, fear, ennui, contradiction, uncertainty. No transcendent Absolute guaranteed the fulfillment of human life or history. There was no eternal design or providential purpose. Things existed simply because they existed, and not for some “higher” or “deeper” reason. God was dead, and the universe was blind to human concerns, devoid of meaning or purpose. Man was abandoned, on his own. All was contingent. To be authentic one had to admit, and choose freely to encounter, the stark reality of life’s meaninglessness. Struggle alone gave meaning.12
The comparison of the human impulse to live a life of meaning with modern society’s explanation of the universe as a cold, impersonal force devoid of meaning, ultimately creates spiritual conditions akin to schizophrenia in the modern man:
We have the post-Copernican dilemma of being a peripheral and insignificant inhabitant of a vast cosmos, and the post-Cartesian dilemma of being a conscious, purposeful, and personal subject confronting an unconscious, purposeless, and impersonal universe, with these compounded by the post-Kantian dilemma of there being no possible means by which the human subject can know the universe in its essence. We are evolved from, embedded in, and defined by a reality that is radically alien to our own, and moreover cannot ever be directly contacted in cognition.
This double bind of modern consciousness has been recognized in one form or another since at least Pascal: “I am terrified by the eternal silence of these infinite spaces.” Our psychological and spiritual predispositions are absurdly at variance with the world revealed by our scientific method. We seem to receive two messages from our existential situation: on the one hand, strive, give oneself to the quest for meaning and spiritual fulfillment; but on the other hand, know that the universe, of whose substance we are derived, is entirely indifferent to that quest, soulless in character, and nullifying in its effects. We are at once aroused and crushed. For inexplicably, absurdly, the cosmos is inhuman, yet we are not. The situation is profoundly unintelligible.13
Concluding thoughts
We currently live in an era of ubiquitous nihilism; no meaning at all, an all-encompassing decadence everywhere one looks. Meanwhile, via the egalitarian ratchet effect, the parabolic rush toward enforcing total equality of outcome via white erasure continues apace. Natural resources are being vigorously consumed as the worldwide population gallops toward an unsustainable 10+ billion population, while the world also drowns in Rothschild created central bank debt slavery. Oligarchy rules everything, populist leaders have elections stolen from them and then thrown into prison on nonsensical charges, there is no freedom of speech and no freedom of association, spying on everyone is ubiquitous, mainstream media lies are unrelenting and nonstop, and everything careens down to the lowest common denominator. According to 2nd Smartest Guy in the World American suicides are at an all-time high. The lack of meaning provided by this era is Hell, despite its unprecedented levels of material prosperity.
One can argue that that the doctrine of materialism is using idealism itself as fuel for its continued propagation, turning humanity into unthinking automatons without any dignity, independence, creativity or uniqueness to benefit the Machine. But this materialist philosophy undermines itself as it consumes and destroys the world’s limited natural resources; how can materialism continue long-term without the cheap propagation of goods? After all the joy and spontaneity is sucked out of life, perhaps the whole enterprise just collapses, either from the central banker’s depopulation agenda, from a natural resource crisis, or otherwise. Perhaps humanity goes extinct. Or perhaps, like Rome when it was subsumed by decadence and lack of meaning before the rise a new Christian paradigm, there is an opportunity for a new paradigm shift toward a transvaluation of values away from egalitarianism into something different…
Here’s a crude chart, “Meaning Through the Ages”, documenting the story told in this post:
Any worldview that successfully combats nihilism will likely have a very different expression with very different values from the ubiquitous secular egalitarianism we all experience, in whatever form it ultimately manifests.
Let us hope that we can develop the wisdom, experience, and luck to discover and birth a worldview which brings forth a perspective full of meaning and hope for mankind, of life-enhancement and soul complexity, and leave this nihilist, materialist, soul-deadening world of short-sighted death, trash and blind, one-track money-chasing behind.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 Richard Tarnas, The Passion of the Western Mind, 17.
This post offers a typology of globohomo-initiated wars. An understanding of how the central bank owners own and control Western civilization is helpful background knowledge to appreciate the arguments advanced within.
Is globohomo invincible?
What a loaded question. It’s an emotionally charged question, too: a dissident with an optimistic, hopeful streak will likely instinctively react “Hell no!” and “This question is inherently demoralizing and shouldn’t even be considered – of course they’re beatable! Focus on the bright side of things, God is on our side!”
Okay, great. I am comforted, thanks for that. But it wouldn’t hurt to consider the question and then reject it after some analysis, right? Let’s give it a try.
First let’s define “globohomo” and “invincible” in the context of the question presented. We can avoid defining what “is” means, sorry Bill Clinton.
Globohomo is a portmanteau of “globalization” plus either “homogenization” or “homosexuality”. Globalism really kicked into gear with the founding of the United Nations in 1945 (after the League of Nations failed), but movement toward it has been ongoing since either:
The privately owned Bank of England was established in 1694, allowing the printing of fiat out of thin air with such funds lent to the British government at interest for the Bank owner’s benefit, or
From a wider perspective, since the neolithic agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago where history has been trending, with some hiccups, toward ever-increasing power centralization into larger and larger blocs controlled by fewer and fewer people with ever-increasing micro-managed control of governments over their populations.
The homosexual component of globohomo is a fairly recent phenomenon, gaining steam since the 1980s along with a corresponding war on masculinity.
The hyper masculinity of the 1980s is missed. Ah-nuld and Carl Weathers in Predator. Ah-nuld later became a globohomo shill and said “Screw your freedoms” during COVID.
For purposes of framing this argument, globohomo means the historical, worldwide centralization trends that the central bank owners have piggybacked off of (not created) and supercharged via their methods of control.
The question of invincibility depends on setting the framing, which requires an investigation into the goals and motivations of the central bank owners. From their world-spanning perspective, nation states are mere provinces that can be used to fight each other to achieve overarching goals. This is why Alex Soros, who is taking over Daddy’s empire, casually brags about hoping America is destroyed:
If Alex Soros thought America’s success was somehow important to the overarching goals, he wouldn’t be publicly bragging about hoping it fails.
To the ruling class, having a mere nation-state province fail can be either a good or a bad thing, depending on the context of whether it increases or decreases their control over the worldwide masses. For the purposes of defining the question, invincibility means whether globohomo, despite occasional hiccups, can be stopped from its continued power centralization along with increased control over the population over which it rules. The framing of this post does not speak to a spiritual perspective involving God’s judgment in the afterlife or whether it is all part of His plan ending in the Second Coming, Judgment Day, the Rapture, etc; it is about control on the material plane in the here and now.
The types of globohomo control
Globohomo ensures compliance through a combination of soft and hard power.
Use of power always has a cost associated with it. Soft power is less costly to use than hard power in terms of money, the impact on perceived legitimacy, the ability for the puppeteers’ to stay in the shadows, and the ability to control outcomes. Soft power includes economic pressure (sanctions, tariffs, utilizing World Bank loans enforcing the Washington Consensus), media and corporate influence, NGO support, control over interest rates and lending through the “independent” central banks, CIA sponsored activities such as color revolutions, overthrow attempts, spying, bribery, etc. The best soft power, though, was the image of America as a bastion of “freedom” and “democracy” worldwide, an image that is rapidly fading, or has already faded. Anyway, western control has metastasized worldwide — its economic system, its push for secularization and increased degeneracy, its media narratives, its fast food and big box stores, its “democracy” (aka oligarchy) are now ubiquitous. It consumes everything in its wake and leaves a gray financialized blob in its wake.1
There is very little competition for the west’s empty materialist mass consumption at this time. China’s belt and road initiative is a purely economic offering and they have no cultural soft power. The alternative media is quick to hype that Brazil, Russia, India and China are forming a currency to counteract U.S. dollar hegemony. But this is merely an illusion: the central bank owners control all of these country’s central banks. Here are just a few examples: The pro-West head of the Russian central bank, Elvira Nabiullina, was renominated to her position by Putin after sending $400 billion of Russian funds to get seized by the West at the start of the Not-War. One of the first things the president of Brazil, “Lula”, did after globohomo rigged the election in his favor was call for de-dollarization. Why would Lula do this unless it’s what they wanted? China has been controlled by the central bankers since at least World War 2, or likely after the Opium Wars. Alex Soros, as noted above, is perfectly happy with the U.S. collapsing. Edward Slavsquat regularly covers the details of the BRICS scam, which you can read about here and here. It’s not a pretty picture.
What about hard power? Globohomo as represented by America has lost numerous wars in the recent past, right? If some Afghan goat herders can beat them, can’t others as well?
This line of reasoning is the cause of much confusion, because people look at the victory conditions of wars as merely being military victory by the aggressor country, ignoring all sorts of alternative victory conditions or what motivations might inspire them. These unconventional victory conditions are not publicly broadcast because such conditions would be wildly unpopular.
There are three types of wars that globohomo engages in. Each type has its own particular objectives (which are always different than what is announced to the public) and therefore victory or failure must be assessed in terms of those unstated objectives. The strategies employed are different, the propaganda they use in support of the war at home and internationally is different, their rules of engagement are different, and the intensity of the effort as well as the length of time involved in each war is different.
The three types of wars are as follows:
Forever-wars, which are long, drawn out affairs, with no desire for outright military victory, designed both to enrich the military industrial complex as well as to bleed right-wing patriotism/enthusiasm to soften them up for the next phase of the globalist agenda. Examples of this type include Vietnam, Afghanistan, and the ongoing Russia/Ukraine war (previously covered here);
Wars to maintain the dollar’s hegemony as the world currency worldwide, as seen in wars in Libya, both Iraq wars, and ongoing tension with Iran; and
Wars against white Christian countries or communities as part of the overarching white and Christian erasure in the West. Examples include Clinton’s war on Serbia, the Syrian war against Alewite/Christian Assad, the so-called “Arab Spring”, World War 1, World War 2, the Boer Wars, ongoing racial conflicts in South Africa and Zimbabwe, and Russia/Ukraine.
Sometimes a war is a hybrid of two objectives. For example, the Russia/Ukraine war is a blend of a forever-war and a war against white Christian Russia, while the second Iraq war was conducted primarily to maintain the dollar’s hegemony, but it had the added benefit for globohomo of destroying an ancient Christianity community whose Christian population is down 90% from pre-war numbers.
There are usually other strategic considerations involved in all three types of war, such as America’s access to the victim nation’s natural resources (especially oil and gas, but also rare earth minerals, gold and silver and others), oil pipeline routes, location for future American military bases, etc., but those are usually secondary considerations.
The Rothschilds control the Federal Reserve (among other central banks); the Federal Reserve controls America; America has conquered the world
In addition to these three types of war there are also other minor types of conflicts, such as the CIA and military’s support for regular coups in Latin America, or the 1980s “War on Crime”, and other CIA-sponsored shenanigans which they conduct to increase their budgets (i.e. creating more problems to “solve” provides justification for increased spending to Congress) but those interventions are usually short, cheap (comparatively) both in money and lives killed or lost, and quickly forgotten.
Let’s go through the three types of wars.
Forever wars
Forever-wars are long, drawn out affairs, with no desire for outright military victory. They are designed both to enrich the military industrial complex on a perpetual basis as well as to bleed right-wing patriotism/enthusiasm to soften them up for the next phase of the globalist agenda. Let’s go through a couple examples.
Vietnam war
Establishment narrative: The United States fought against the North Vietnamese, who were in turn backed by the Soviet Union, to prevent communism from spreading worldwide based on domino theory. The U.S.’s total engagement lasted roughly 20 years (1955-1973), but it’s direct, heavy involvement started after the false flag Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1965 and lasted 8 years. Due to the unfavorable, difficult jungle fighting, the intransigence of the North Vietnamese, and a burgeoning anti-war movement at home, despite military and technological superiority the United States eventually lost the war.
The reality: The Vietnam war, chosen as far away as physically possible from America (halfway around the world) and utilizing extraordinarily restrictive rules of engagement (seriously, read this link if you want to understand how this war was fought), along with controlling both sides of the debate (including the hard-right nationalist John Birch society, according to co-founder Revilo P. Oliver, despite their above complaints about the war) was a major victory for globohomo, achieving the following objectives: (1) America’s loss put a major dent in the right-wing, hotblooded American populist anti-communist movement, both ideologically and in costing 58,000 lower and middle class lives, paving the way for further global integration; and (2) it cost a trillion dollars (adjusted for inflation), increasing the deficit and therefore interest that would be paid to the Federal Reserve owners.
The Afghanistan war
Establishment narrative: Due to 9/11 the Taliban were sympathetic to the attackers and sheltered Osama Bin Laden, therefore the Taliban had to be overthrown. However, given the Taliban retreated into the mountains bordering Pakistan which was a radical wild-card country full of extremists, it was impossible to fully root them out, and that is why America had to stay there for 20 years, only withdrawing in 2021, six months before the start of the next forever-war, the Russia/Ukraine war. Ultimately, the cavemen goat-herders won out against the strongest country in the world (well, twice).https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/F0necNQSj-8?rel=0&autoplay=0&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=0The Taliban fighters riding bumper cars in Kabul after taking the city. They also tried working out in the Presidential Palace. Wheee!
The reality: The central bank owner goals were to massively drive up U.S. debt and bleed right wing populism again, same goals as in Vietnam. It was a massively successful operation for them, costing $2 trillion and thousands of American lives. The military industrial complex carried out these orders because they got to participate in the graft of the U.S. taxpayer; they wanted a forever war as Julian Assange, who is a hero, eloquently explained in this 30 second clip:https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/_IGU_7alJ80?rel=0&autoplay=0&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=0Additionally, globohomo’s control over Pakistan is and was much greater than commonly perceived. It forced out popular Imran Khan from office and then imprisoned him because he was insufficiently pro-Ukraine war (confirmed by leaked diplomatic cables). They just didn’t want to use Pakistan to rein in the Taliban.
Ukraine war
Establishment perspective: NATO is defending poor Ukrainian democracy against the ultra-aggressive Russian behemoth dictatorship led by Putin, who is almost akin to a Nazi war criminal. Alternatively, to many on the religious right Putin is standing up for white Christian values against expansionist U.S./UK/NATO forces.
The reality: The war is controlled on both sides by globohomo. The war is being conducted for many reasons, but especially as a tool for continued white genocide and trillion dollar/year funding laundered back to the military/industrial complex and paid for via the taxpayer and from U.S. debt servitude. Win/win/win. Here is a deep-dive on the topic.
On the basis of globohomo’s objectives for these forever wars, they were resounding successes even if the military outcomes of one of their subjugated national provinces “lost” or was “stalemated” in the war against another one of their subjugated national provinces. These wars resoundingly successes for globohomo’s long-term plans for worldwide centralization, consolidation, and control.
Wars to maintain the dollar’s hegemony as the world currency worldwide
Essentially, the U.S. agreed to provide a security guarantee to Saudi and other middle east nations in return for them accepting only dollars for their oil, and then the U.S. would accept those middle eastern dollars back into the U.S. as foreign investments. As part of this arrangement, other nations that threatened Saudi would have to be dealt with, militarily if necessarily (Saudi got scared by Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait in the Gulf War). Additionally, any oil-producing nation that tried to get off the petrodollar system was a threat to the U.S. dollar as world reserve currency and therefore had to be brutally crushed. Any leader that attempts to get off the petrodollar system must be overthrown and brutally murdered or executed as a warning to other leaders not to try the same thing. The objective is not the pacification of a nation’s people per se but regime overthrow plus leadership execution, and globohomo pursues it with a singular focus. With this in mind:
The Second Iraq war
Establishment perspective: Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction, Sunnis oppressing the Shiites, Saddam’s a dictator, some nonsense around those lines.
The reality: The war was primarily about destroying Saddam for threatening to get off the U.S. petrodollar system. In November 2000 Saddam Hussein decreed that all oil payments would be made in euros, as he did not wish to deal “in the currency of the enemy”, which is what cost him his life. Secondarily, the war continued globohomo’s goal of destroying Christianity worldwide; Iraq’s Christian population has declined 90% from 2003. The U.S. also continues to steal Iraqi oil, stealing $150 billion worth since the U.S.-led invasion.
Libya war
Establishment perspective: Something about Qaddafi terrorizing his population and a “civil war” breaking out during the so-called (fake, CIA backed) “Arab Spring”.
The reality: Libya had the only central bank in the world run on genuine state banking lines which exhibited the classic symptoms of full employment, zero inflation and excellent worker’s rights, and in 2010 Qaddafi announced the creation of the gold dinar as a replacement for the settlement of all foreign transactions in a proposed region of over 200 million people; this is why he was murdered.
Ongoing tensions with Iran
Establishment perspective: Iran is a rogue nation sponsoring radical Islamic extremism in the region, developing nuclear weapons and threatening Israel.
The reality: Iran ended oil transactions in U.S. dollars in 2008 and therefore provides a weakening element toward the petrodollar system; as such, it is a major factor in globohomo’s continued aggression against it, and it explains why the CIA regularly sponsors protests in Iran to try to overthrow the political system.
The establishment has done an excellent job maintaining the petrodollar system, even though Iran has successfully gotten off of it, which is a point against globohomo invincibility. That being said, Iran continues to pursue CBDCs along with the rest of the world, they fully went along with the COVID and COVID vaccine narrative, and their banking system, which supposedly is run along Islamic lines, charges interest like every other bank on earth. Therefore it is unclear how independent they actually are from the central bank owners, even though they hate two of globohomo’s national provinces (U.S. and Israel).
Wars against white Christian countries or communities, as part of the overarching white erasure in the West
These are wars that globohomo fights as part of its long-term goal of white erasure. You can see the 3-part post on the goals and motivations of the central bank owners here, but basically they believe that whites and, to an extent, Christians2 are too resistant to the horrendous, Beast-tier technological neoliberal feudalism system they are bringing into place which is based in the most abject, horrible materialism one can imagine with no freedoms, the most oppressive system in human history, and because of this globohomo wants to wipe them out.
Unlike forever wars which are deliberately fought to stalemate, and unlike wars to maintain U.S. dollar hegemony to overthrow and execute recalcitrant leaders, the wars against whites and Christians are fought on the basis of group erasure, and so they are fundamentally a different class than the other types of wars. It doesn’t mean that any particular war against whites ramps up to total genocide; it doesn’t, but these wars are fought with a very long-term view with this objective in mind, and the wars always further those ends. In such a conflict globohomo fights no holds-barred; they unleash the highest degree of propaganda, they fight the most ruthlessly and underhandedly, with a clever, creative, extreme bloodlust, more heartlessly than normal people could ever imagine – “Imperium super omnia” – “control above all” – whatever it takes for them to win, regardless of the ethical red-lines crossed or the zero rules of engagement, and regardless of the exceptions to society’s rules they need to distort (per Schmitt). This type of war cannot be compared to U.S. forever-wars or wars to punish a country’s leadership, and those that try are conducting an analysis that wildly misses the mark.
The Second Boer War
Let’s explore the Second Boer War as a prime example of the way in which globohomo fights these types of wars. The Boers had won the First Boer War in 1880-1881, which was a disaster for globohomo which had not lost a war since the American revolution a hundred years earlier, and South Africa gained its independence. But globohomo doesn’t take losses on the chin (see how it subverted America with the first two national banks before finally achieving victory with the Federal Reserve), and it came back with a vengeance in the Second Boer War of 1899-1902, which was supercharged because of vast amounts of gold found in the Transvaal. The Rothschilds initiated the war under flimsy pretexts (much like the Opium Wars) as they wanted total control over the newly found gold reserves.
But they found the Boers to be a surprisingly difficult enemy. Even though the British forces wildly outnumbered and out-equipped the Boers, the Boers conducted guerilla warfare and gradually wore down the British numbers. In response, the British burned down all the Boer houses, farms, and animals in a scorched earth policy, stuck the Boer women and children in concentration camps and deliberately starved them to death until the Boers gave up, which they eventually did, giving the British control over the region and it’s natural resources. Imperium super omnia.
If you want to read a good and brief summary of the Rothschild tactics in this war (which were led by their puppet Alfred Milner) check out this 26 page book “Genocide of the Boers” (it’s free online, click the link) by Stephen Mitford Goodson, a well credentialed South African central banker who turned on his masters.
155,000 women and children were imprisoned in the concentration camps, which was almost 2/3 of the entire Boer population. They were kept on starvation rations, and as a result about 34,000 or 22% of the inmates of the concentration camps died, of whom 27,540 or 81% were under the age of 16. According to Goodson, “The bankers achieved their principal aim of obtaining full control of the gold and other mineral resources of South Africa. They had financed the war in the amount of 222 million British pounds and thereby added a further 132 million to Britain’s national debt. For the Rothschilds the Second Anglo-Boer War was a consummate victory.”
Does anyone today know about what the British did here? Have they ever had to account for it in the modern era? No one knows about it, no one talks about it, no one justifies it, it’s as if it never happened. The media simply dictates what is reality for most people. But it’s an easy parallel to draw this to the hypocrisy of globohomo’s singular, loud focus on the Holocaust when they perpetrated actions like this.
Conclusions
“Imperium super omnia” – “control above all” – is the unstated motto of the world’s central bank owners. Their strategies and objectives are pursued across a multi-decade or longer horizon, and their goals are to create a worldwide population that they control to a level never seen before in human history. They occasionally suffer real setbacks that delay their plans for years – Trump’s 2016 win was not something they planned for, their defeat in the First Boer War, Hitler dramatically outperformed globohomo’s expectations for Germany during World War 2 which scared them, Andrew Jackson dismantled the Rothschild second National Bank – but they have bounced back from each of these setbacks stronger than ever because of their long-term planning and perspective, their ruthlessness and their patience.
If one looks at their actions since taking over the Bank of England if not much earlier, they have gone from victory to victory, with ever increasing power centralization, and appear, especially now when right-wing populism has been smashed and whites are 6.5% of the worldwide population, with an ultra-woke AI and freedom-denying CBDCs about to be (or already being) unleashed onto the public, that things are grimmer than ever. From this perspective they do appear to be close to invincible, at least in the material realm, unless God decides to come down and change the fundamental situation somehow. Perhaps this is a Tower of Babel scenario where humanity’s integration and consolidation happens inexorably — until it is struck down and humanity cast to the winds, shattered and confused. And who knows what such an event would look like?3
Illustration of the Tower of Babel
I will be doing a post analyzing the possibilities of a “redneck rebellion” in a future post, but for those looking at history, the three types of globohomo wars absolutely need to be taken into consideration. “Oh, the U.S. failed against a bunch of goat herders in Afghanistan, therefore a heavily armed white Christian population would have no trouble wiping the floor with a decadent, homosexual/transsexual, corrupt ruling oligarchy” is absolutely the wrong analysis and those that push this line of thinking (and there are many of them) are completely and utterly wrong. A victory or defeat can only be ascertained in the context of the pursued reasons for the war by globohomo, and Afghanistan as a “forever war” was an unmitigated success for them. In a redneck rebellion scenario those very naive men on the right would be shocked at globohomo’s extreme aggression with no rules of engagement, extreme and unrelenting propaganda and an unrelenting bloodthirstiness that would make their heads spin.
Hopefully this post provides a better context for analyzing wars in the context of globohomo’s goals, motivations and abilities.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 From Profiles in courage #2: Julian Assange, “America learned over a long trial-and-error process that direct military occupation and colonialism of nations around the world was not a very efficient process. It was expensive, unwieldily, had a negative impact on world opinion, led to charges of imperialism and racism and other things. Rather, indirect control was a much cheaper and sophisticated process without many of the other drawbacks that came with the former process. Indirect control came from the Washington consensus, where a country could be controlled via foreign loans, which would put pressure on the nation for deregulation, foreign investment, decreased minimum wage, i.e. strip-mining the country to benefit globohomo overlords. If a country was deemed too immature to advance the Washington consensus via democracy, it would support a strong-man in power to achieve these goals. Once the country was deemed mature enough, they would seek to cast aside the strong-man in order to institute “fake” democracy, which was seen as easier to control than the strong-man past a certain point of development. Populist movements which sought actual nationalism and self-sufficiency, i.e. to nationalize industries and plants owned by foreign powers, to default on its foreign debt obligations, were deemed anathema to foreign investment and therefore had to be rigorously stamped out using as much brutality as necessary.”
2 Despite secular egalitarianism being directly traceable to Christianity via Unitarianism and mainline Protestantism, true-believing Christians still believe in God and the imperfectability of this world, that people possess souls and are due inherent dignity. This makes them more resistant to this stage of globohomo reducing everyone to a mere widget and digits on screens. Therefore they, to an extent, serve as both an impediment and a facilitator of the globohomo vision.
This is part 2 of a reoccurring series highlighting specific individuals who have displayed true, unquestionable courage standing up to the globohomo1 behemoth against unrelenting pressures, serving as a bit of a counter to the typical grim perspective pushed on this Substack. These individuals pay a price, often a big price, for their courage, and for standing up anyway they deserve to be applauded. Part 1 covers Ian Smith, who stood up to global hysteria around the COVID narrative at its peak.
“Who am I? I fought for liberty and was deprived of all liberty. I fought for freedom of speech and was denied all speech. I fought for the truth and became the subject of a thousand lies.” – tweet by Julian Assange, April 10, 2019, the day before he was hauled out of the Ecuadorian embassy
Julian Assange is a controversial and complicated character. The globalist establishment has a special hatred for the man, which in turn makes him interesting. Given how blackly evil globohomo is, what about the man makes him dangerous to their agenda?
An interesting and idealistic but somewhat unsettling physiognomy, reflecting certain philosophical issues I have with him which will be discussed herein
I had vaguely heard about Assange as he became famous in the 2010s, and the broad strokes of his story are known by many. Originally an Australian hacker, he founded Wikileaks in order to serve as a repository for government and corporate leaks provided by whistleblowers, and then to publish them online as a journalist in the vein of Daniel Ellsberg with the Pentagon Papers. Assange and his team would verify each leak — not the contents of the material, just whether they were official documents, a hard enough task — before releasing them to the public, with limited temporary redactions to protect life where necessary. Assange was always proud that his verification rate was 100% accurate and he never published fake documents in all the years that he published leaks, despite some sophisticated fakes being offered along the way. He offered leakers the very best in privacy protection, both via state of the art cryptography as well as rigid source protection protocols within Wikileaks, and he also promised to take whatever steps he could to maximize the impact of the leaks to balance the risk involved. Such impact maximization strategies required a careful understanding of the countermeasures that governments and corporations would use, and a considered approach toward pre-empting those countermeasures.
Assange’s approach was effective and he released a tremendous amount of material to the public, organized and systematized in a way that made searching it easy. The publications include revelations about drone strikes in Yemen, corruption across the Arab world,extrajudicial executions by Kenyan police,2008 Tibetan unrest in China,and the “Petrogate” oil scandal in Peru. Assange’s profile rose further when Wikileaks published Bradley/Chelsea Manning leak’s, which included the Collateral murder video (April 2010), the Iraqi war logs (October 2010), and a quarter of a million diplomatic U.S. cables in what was known as Cablegate (November 2010). Later leaks included the Guantanamo Bay files leak,the Syria Files, the Kissinger cables, and the Saudi cables. By mid 2015 Assange had published more than ten million files and corresponding analysis.
As a result of his early Wikileaks activities, globohomo targeted him with false rape allegations in Sweden in 2010 in order to tie him up in legal defense, drain his limited funds, curtail his activities, and serve as a dampener on both his reputation and his work. He eventually sought refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in 2012 to avoid extradition on the false rape charges.
An interesting 3-hour meeting between Assange and Google head Eric Schmidt in 2011 became the subject of an Assange book called “When Google Met Wikileaks”, which includes a transcript of their meeting. It was published in 2014, and Assange by that time had come to believe that Schmidt did not visit him as a friendly tech compatriot as research for Schmidt’s upcoming book, but rather to spy on Assange and Wikileaks on behalf of the State department and other government organizations. It’s an interesting read to see what two titans in their respective specialties discussed. One interesting point is that Assange recommended Bitcoin in this 2011 interview, because globohomo had cut Assange off from all traditional banking and financial services, creating an Schmittian exception to the rule of law2 (Assange was the canary in the coal mine for this treatment that would later spread and be applied to many more dissidents; recently Nigel Farage and Joseph Mercola experienced the same treatment, and other more controversial figures like Alex Jones and Andrew Anglin have experienced it as well). After Schmidt released his book, Assange, who had since woken up to his ulterior motivations, savaged it in a New York Times review. He also later wrote, “But in a wider sense, I think it is misguided to be looking to Google to help get us out of this mess. In large part, Google has us in this mess. The company’s business model is based on sucking private data out of parts of human community that have never before been subject to monitoring, and turning that into a profit. I do not think it is wise to try to “reform” something which, from first premises, is beyond reform.”
Eric Schmidt: lizard-like, squinting, heartless nerd physiognomy. Google retained a crushing monopoly for more than two decades before being subject to a current anti-trust action over its search monopoly. Assange: “Eric Schmidt is personably likeable in the sense that most billionaires are. You can’t get there without making friends. Obama’s also likable, but runs an extrajudicial kill list each Tuesday and has prosecuted more whistleblowers than all previous presidents combined. The problem with Google, as in the US administration is not the personalities. It is the structure, the business model and social and ideological matrix in which its decision makers are embedded.”
In July 2016 Wikileaks published leaks from the Democratic National Committee (likely from Seth Rich, who was quickly murdered by globohomo for it) and in October emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign chair John Podesta, which were bizarre and sinister. Wikileaks released these utilizing a smart, sophisticated publishing strategy to maximize impact.
These leaks had a big role in Trump’s extremely surprising election win. To be fair, Assange did state he would release leaks on any candidate, but he received no leaks on Trump.
Then in 2017 Wikileaks published the Vault 7 leaks which detailed the CIA’s capabilities and activities with respect to cyber warfare. The CIA then considered kidnapping or assassinating Assange in response. Hillary Clinton famously inquired about whether they could “drone strike” him. Instead, they kept up the legal pressure as Assange remained in the Ecuadorian embassy with a constant police presence outside, ready to nab him if he ever stepped out. His internet was cut off and he was subject to all sorts of mental and physical pressures.
Finally in 2019 a superseding indictment was filed by the United States with charges of Conspiracy to Receive National Defense Information, Obtaining National Defense Information, Disclosure of National Defense Information, and Conspiracy to Commit Computer Intrusion and the British government dragged him out in 2019 (after globohomo overthrew the rule of his benefactor in Ecuador), where he has been held in a British prison awaiting his various appeals to the United States’s extradition efforts since. The process is the punishment, though, and Assange’s conditions in prison are quite poor and akin to torture.34
Assange dragged out of the embassy. Note the smug, arrogant smile of the secret police agent who occupies central frame. What a disgusting globohomo cretin.
Trump considered pardoning Assange on his way out of office, but he ultimately did not pardon him or Snowden due to political pressure: Tucker Carlson claimed that he had heard Assange’s pardon was being blocked by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who sent word to the White House informing Trump that if he pardoned Assange Republicans will be “much more likely to convict you in an impeachment trial.” Snowden correctly reacted to the development by tweeting that he was “not at all disappointed to go unpardoned by a man who has never known a love he had not paid for. But what supporters of his remain must never forgive that this simpering creature failed to pardon truth-tellers in far more desperate circumstances.” While Trump serves as a Schelling point for the frustrations of white Middle America, I agree with Snowden’s criticisms here and believe that he should have pardoned Assange.5 Although it’s likely globohomo would then have just killed Assange.
Anyway, there have not been very notable Wikileaks releases since Assange’s arrest. While the organization had a lot of grassroot support worldwide and many people who helped review and verify the leaks, Assange was the head of the organization and it didn’t run very effectively without him.
Assange’s beliefs
Assange acted as an idealist whose goal was and is to seek radical transparency from government and corporations worldwide, who he believed generally sought to entrench themselves in positions of power and corruption at the expense of the masses.6 In December 2006, the same month WikiLeaks posted its first leak, he outlined the organization’s strategy: use leaks to force organizations to reduce levels of abuse and dishonesty, or pay a ‘secrecy tax’ to be secret but inefficient. As he explained,
“The more secretive or unjust an organization is, the more leaks induce fear and paranoia in its leadership and planning coterie. This must result in minimization of efficient internal communications mechanisms (an increase in cognitive ‘secrecy tax’) and consequent system-wide cognitive decline resulting in decreased ability to hold onto power as the environment demands adaptation.”
A spokesperson for WikiLeaks says Assange’s essay was a “thought experiment” that the organization still believes to be true. “Organizations have two choices (1) reduce their levels of abuse or dishonesty or (2) pay a heavy ‘secrecy tax’ in order to engage in inefficient but secretive processes,” the spokesperson writes. “As organizations are usually in some form of competitive equilibrium this means that, in the face of WikiLeaks, organizations that are honest will, on average, grow, while those that are dishonest and unjust will decline.”
This was a meta-philosophy that Assange had above the level of politics: transparency was good for its own sake, regardless of its ramifications and regardless of whether it applied to a democracy or a dictatorship, whether it was pro-West or anti-West. He states:
Confidential government documents we have published disclose evidence of war crimes, criminal back-room dealings and sundry abuses. That alone legitimates our publications, and that principally motivates our work. Secrecy was never intended to enable criminality in the highest offices of state. Secrecy is, yes, sometimes necessary, but healthy democracies understand that secrecy is the exception, not the rule. “National security” pretexts for secrecy are routinely used by powerful officials, but seldom justified. If we accept these terms of propaganda, strong national security journalism becomes impossible. Our publications have never jeopardized the “national security” of any nation. When secrecy is a cover-all for endemic official criminality, I suggest to you, it bespeaks a strange set of priorities to ask journalists to justify their own existence.
Why was Assange interested in reducing these abuses? As he explains to Google head Eric Schmidt:
Let me first frame this. I looked at something that I had seen going on with the world, which is that I thought there were too many unjust acts. And I wanted there to be more just acts, and fewer unjust acts. And one can ask, “What are your philosophical axioms for this?” And I say, “I do not need to consider them. This is simply my temperament. And it is an axiom because it is that way.” That avoids getting into further unhelpful philosophical discussion about why I want to do something. It is enough that I do.
In considering how unjust acts are caused, and what tends to promote them, and what promotes just acts, I saw that human beings are basically invariant. That is, their inclinations and biological temperament haven’t changed much over thousands of years. Therefore the only playing field left is: what do they have and what do they know? What they have—that is, what resources they have at their disposal, how much energy they can harness, what food supplies they have and so on—is something that is fairly hard to influence. But what they know can be affected in a nonlinear way because when one person conveys information to another they can convey it on to another, and another, in a way that is nonlinear. So you can affect a lot of people with a small amount of information. Therefore, you can change the behavior of many people with a small amount of information. The question then arises as to what kinds of information will produce behavior which is just and disincentivize behavior which is unjust?
In an interview with Spiegal International, he made a similar statement regarding his motivations: “We all only live once. So we are obligated to make good use of the time that we have and to do something that is meaningful and satisfying. This is something that I find meaningful and satisfying. That is my temperament. I enjoy creating systems on a grand scale, and I enjoy helping people who are vulnerable. And I enjoy crushing bastards. So it is enjoyable work.”
According to Assange, we aren’t able to sit out of this fight. Either we are a participant of history or a victim of it: “I think first it’s necessary to have an understanding that one is either a participant in history or a victim of it, and that there is no other option. It is actually not possible to remove oneself from history, because of the nature of economic…and intellectual interaction. Hence, it is not possible to break oneself off….Because no one wants to be a victim, one must therefore be a participant, and in being a participant, the most important thing to understand is that your behavior affects other people’s behavior, and your courage will inspire actions. On the other hand, a lack of courage will suppress them.” And: “Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence and thereby eventually lose all ability to defend ourselves and those we love. In a modern economy it is impossible to seal oneself off from injustice. If we have brains or courage, then we are blessed and called on not to frit these qualities away, standing agape at the ideas of others, winning pissing contests, improving the efficiencies of the neocorporate state, or immersing ourselves in obscuranta, but rather to prove the vigor of our talents against the strongest opponents of love we can find.”
The first thing they can do is place a moratorium on mass surveillance. The mass surveillance of significant portions of the world’s population is an ongoing violation of rights on a mass scale. Putting an end to it – pending a full investigation into who was responsible, and who gave the orders – would be a good first step. Official channels for releasing documents exist: FOI laws, for instance, and declassification laws. I would support making these stronger and more transparent, of course. But they cannot supplant the function that a free press plays: the safety valve of secret institutions.
The key actors in society who influence its political process: publishers, journalists, dissidents, MPs, civil society foundations, if they can’t operate then you have an increasingly authoritarian and conformist society. Do not think that this will not affect you. Even if you think that you are of absolutely no interest, the result this attitude is that you have to suffer the consequences of the society your apathetic conformism helps to produce.
You’re not an island. When you don’t protect your own communications, it’s not just about you. You’re not communicating with yourself, you’re communicating with other people. You’re exposing all of those other people. If you assess that they’re not at risk, are you sure your assessment is correct? Are you sure they’re not at risk going into the future? Perhaps the biggest problem with mass surveillance is that the knowledge of mass surveillance. Fear about it produces intense conformity, so people start censoring their own conversations and eventually they start censoring their own thoughts.
It’s not enough to create fears about mass surveillance. At the same time, one has to create an understanding of how to avoid mass surveillance or an understanding that at the moment, most of the mass surveillance authorities, like the NSA and the organs it feeds are pretty incompetent. But that will change as artificial intelligence merges with mass surveillance, when the data streams from the NSA and PRISM program are fed into artificial intelligence.
He further added ominously: “Mass surveillance is a mass structural change. When society goes goes bad, its going to take you with it, even if you are the blandest person on earth.” This was nine years ago, and his prediction was powerfully correct. And it’s only getting worse…
Assange in relation to neoliberal feudalism
Reading “The Wikileaks Files: The World According to U.S. Empire”, which provides an overview of the hundreds of thousands of State department cable leaks around the world, Assange and the various contributors to the book note a general pattern. Essentially, America learned over a long trial-and-error process that direct military occupation and colonialism of nations around the world was not a very efficient process. It was expensive, unwieldily, had a negative impact on world opinion, led to charges of imperialism and racism and other things. Rather, indirect control was a much cheaper and sophisticated process without many of the other drawbacks that came with the former process. Indirect control came from the Washington consensus, where a country could be controlled via foreign loans, which would put pressure on the nation for deregulation, foreign investment, decreased minimum wage, i.e. strip-mining the country to benefit globohomo overlords. If a country was deemed too immature to advance the Washington consensus via democracy, it would support a strong-man in power to achieve these goals. Once the country was deemed mature enough, they would seek to cast aside the strong-man in order to institute fake “democracy”, which was seen as easier to control than the strong-man past a certain point of development. Populist movements which sought actual nationalism and self-sufficiency, i.e. to nationalize industries and plants owned by foreign powers, to default on its foreign debt obligations, were deemed anathema to foreign investment and therefore had to be rigorously stamped out using as much brutality as necessary.
One of the reoccurring, ongoing tensions within the Western political establishment are the various factions arguing how far along the process a particular country is – is the country underdeveloped enough where it still needs a strongman to implement neoliberal policies? Or has it progressed enough to the point where they can transition to an easier to control fake democracy type? Generally speaking the Pentagon prefers the former type and the State Department prefers the latter type, but that is just a general rule of thumb.
One of the last things that Assange tweeted out before he was taken offline was the following, which shows the structure for how the higher layers of globohomo coordinate worldwide:
In addition, Assange had a very clear understanding of the financial incentives behind many of these wars. He succinctly explained the rationale behind the 20 year Afghanistan war in this 30 second clip, which I have posted a number of times:
Now, Assange is and was a brilliant man. His insights across a whole range of issues are incredible, and he reached these conclusions long before they became apparent to more of the world when the deep state revealed itself in its opposition to Orange Man. He was an early programmer with a brilliant systems-oriented mind. My issues with his approach to the neoliberal feudalism framework are three-fold:
Either he didn’t understand or for strategic reasons he didn’t speak publicly about the level of ownership above the CFR/Trilateral Commission/WEF, which is the small number of families that own the central banks of the world, which is a critically important point in order to understand their overarching plans and motivations — how could he fight back against enemies at a top level he possibly knew nothing about?,
I think Assange generally agrees with worldwide integration and intervention where necessary, so long as globalists abide by their own stated standards of egalitarianism without hypocrisy, while my impulses are much more isolationist and toward autarky, seeking an end to private ownership of the central banks of the world; and
I have a sense of ambivalence regarding his meta-strategy of transparency at all cost.
An artist protesting the Federal Reserve by painting it on fire
With respect to #3, perhaps transparency at all costs will lead to a better future for all down the road, but a non-productive elite using guile and military might to secure the excess production of farmers has existed universally since the neolithic agricultural revolution. It is simply human nature. There isn’t going to be a kumbaya moment where the masses are smart and dedicated enough to prevent this kind of elite grifting from occurring; rather, the important thing to me seems to be supporting an elite that have noblesse oblige to the masses instead of noblesse malice, that promotes values of greatness, honor, nobility, and strength of purpose instead of pandering to the lowest common denominator, and ties responsibility to power, which is only possible with a king or dictator versus an oligarchy. An oligarchy will stick figureheads in power while they operate behind the scenes to crush the population in order to suck it dry; but a king or dictator knows that ultimately they will be held responsible to the public, and therefore they will try to deliver better results to the masses than an oligarchy. By Assange pushing for transparency at all costs, I think he may have gone up against too fundamental of a drive of human nature. His naive libertarian beliefs contributed to the ruination of Libya by promoting the overthrow of Qaddafi and led to the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt which would have, over time, destroyed the Coptic Christian community. What good is radical transparency if those are the kind of expected results?7 Instead of transparency at all costs as a Schelling point for the world, I think demanding public ownership of the world central banks along with strictly enforced audits would be popular with all but the small number of central banking owning families and their vassals.
Conclusions
Regardless of these criticisms, it’s undeniable that Assange possesses great courage to stand against the endless and horrific onslaught of globohomo. Assange said, “People often say, ‘You are tremendously courageous in doing what you are doing.’ And I say, ‘No, you misunderstand what courage is. Courage is not the absence of fear. Only fools have no fear. Rather, courage is the intellectual mastery of fear by understanding the true risks and opportunities of the situation and keeping those things in balance.”8
Edward Snowden argued, “[Wikileaks is] absolutely fearless in putting principles above politics…Their mere existence has stiffened the spines of institutions in many countries, because editors know if they shy away from an important but controversial story, they could be scooped by the global alternative to the national press. Our politics may be different, but their efforts to build a transnational culture of transparency and source protection are extraordinary – they run towards the risks everyone else runs away from – and in a time when government control of information can be ruthless, I think that represents a vital example of how to preserve old freedoms in a new age”.
Assange was careful about not trying to hype globohomo’s power levels to Olympian heights, because he thought that would give them more power than they deserved: “All the talk of mass surveillance is very dangerous if it doesn’t come with some hope of a solution because it grants more perceptual power to a system that already has a radical, extreme and destabalising amount of it. All that is necessary to control others is the projected perception of power. That’s why we have worked hard to break that perception, for example in the race to spirit Edward Snowden to asylum vs. Washington DC’s race to arrest him, we won, demonstrating that with a few good ideas and some determination it is possible to beat this power cluster in a well defined head on contest. Solutions are going to come form the demand that organisations, governments and individuals have for protection. Don’t be dispirited; a lot of people are now working rapidly on tools and standards to counter the mass surveillance attack. There’s a great flowering in that field.”
When asked on Reddit nine years ago (2014) if Wikileaks was likely to succeed against globohomo, though, he answered, “These are cascading effects with geometric amplifiers in both directions. It’s hard to say, but at least we can say we fought and gave people a choice to know themselves and their civilization.”
And Assange has fought. Substack writers are doing what they can to make an impression, too, but Assange even back then was pessimistic about that approach: “Public commentators are obsessed with influencing the public, but the reality is the US public isn’t going to solve this. A powerful, invisible, intangible, complex, global system, with a scale only the deeply numerate can appreciate has been erected. Until we see the bulk release of individual’s emails or SMS messages, the average person isn’t going to believe its real. Until then, the pushback is going to come from technical organisations and other state’s counter intelligence units.”
We see what has happened since then. Censorship has exploded through the roof in every direction, show trials of political enemies are happening every day, NSA spying has been standardized and is used by 10,000 federal contractors to spy on white Middle Americans (which is only growing)9, Assange has been silenced and Wikileaks rendered into irrelevance. The censoring of Assange and Wikileaks closes a small but important ability to speak truth to power, and it is greatly missed as globohomo solidifies its hold on power and sticks its tyrannical boot in everyone’s face.
What’s the pessimistic scenario? Per Assange: “The negative trajectory [is] a transnational surveillance state, drone-riddled, the networked neo-feudalism of the transnational elite…How can a normal person be free within that system? They simply cannot, it’s impossible. Not that anyone can ever be completely free, within any system, but the freedoms that we have biologically evolved for, and the freedoms that we have become culturally accustomed to, will be almost entirely eliminated. So I think the only people who will be able to keep the freedom that we had, say twenty years ago – because the surveillance state has already eliminated quite a lot of that, we just don’t realize it yet. -are those who are highly educated in the internals of this system. So it will only be a high-tech rebel elite that is free.”
But perhaps there is a silver lining to this. According to Assange, “[Censorship] is always an opportunity, because it reveals a fear of reform. And if an organization is expressing a fear or reform, it is also expressing the fact that it can be reformed.” And “When organizations or governments of various kinds attempt to contain knowledge and suppress it, they are giving you the most important information you need to know: that there is something worth looking at to see if it should be exposed and the censorship expresses weakness, not strength.”
Regardless, Assange’s actions transcend the traditional right/left dynamic and in his attempt to hold truth to power and to fight back against mass surveillance and the corruption of Western elites, he deserves to be applauded. Assange’s rejection of America’s empire resonates with me, as it is founded and propagated on death, destruction, and the skulls of millions, all out of an insatiable greed. More money, more power, more control, more domination, more death and destruction and Mcdonalds on every corner and iPhones and propaganda pumped into everyone’s heads, and for what ultimate purpose? So the ultra rich in D.C. can live in giant McMansions, have vacation homes, yachts and planes, have sex with underage sex slaves, feel like lords and masters of the world and consume consume consume to their heart’s content, with no longterm planning for sustainability or a better world for the future, all while larping about racial, gender, and sexual orientation inequalities so the masses are too busy infighting to focus on their theft? What kind of garbage vision is this? It is gross and decadent and awful, some macabre nightmare from the fires of Hell.
For Assange’s attempts to make the world a better place, even with his faults, he deserves to be highlighted as a Profile in Courage.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 For new readers, globohomo is a portmanteau of either “globalization plus homosexuality” or “globalization plus homogenization”. It is the latter interpretation that makes the term superior to “global American empire” (“GAE”), because it references a technical, technological process that is turning the world into a kind of gray, androgynous, secular nihilistic sludge, reducing the world’s populations to hollowed-out, atomized digits with no group culture and a McDonalds and Starbucks on every corner. It is a process larger than empire.
2 “In Conversation with Julian Assange, Part II”, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Journal #26, e-flux, June 2011: “I think the attacks on us by Visa, PayPal, Mastercard, Bank of America, PostFinance, Moneybookers, and other U.S. companies – predominantly banks and financial intermediaries – is the most interesting revelation that has come out of what we’ve been doing. Like the Pentagon Papers case, the reaction and overreaction of the state and other groups involved in it will be seen to be one of the most important outcomes of the revelation itself. What we see is that the United States, in its reaction to us, behaved no differently than the Soviet Union in the 1960s toward Solzhenitsyn, and in the 1970s toward Sakharov, just in. amore modern way. Previous censorship actions in the West have been more subtle, more nuanced, and harder to see, but here we have a case of absolutely naked, flagrant, extrajudicial state censorship working through the private sector.”
3 Julian Assange in His Own Words, footnote 4, p. 8-9: “In a letter published in the British medical journal the Lancet on June 26, 2020, 200 eminent doctors around the world, representing 216 colleagues from 33 countries, decried yet again the ongoing mistreatment of Julian that they first wrote about on February 17, when they condemned the “torture and medical neglect” that since then, with the coronavirus pandemic, had exacerbated the seriousness of his situation….When United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer, along with two medical doctors, visited Julian in prison in May of 2019, they recognized clear signs of psychological torture and they called for an immediate end to such treatment. “The evidence is overwhelming and clear,” Melzer said. “Mr. Assange has been deliberately exposed for a period of several years, to progressively severe forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, the cumulative effects of which can only be described as psychological torture….In 20 years of work with victims of war, violence and political persecution I have never seen a group of democratic States ganging up to deliberately isolate, demonise and abuse a single individual for such a long time and with so little regard for human dignity and the rule of law….The collective persecution of Julian Assange must end here and now!”
4 Julian Assange in his Own Words, 102: “The Obama administration, supported by varying degrees by its Western allies, in the last eight years has prosecuted and investigated more publishers and journalists under the Espionage Act than all previous presidencies combined…What a number of these cases have in common is not simply that they are recent, or that they are conducted sometimes without any charge, or that there are abuses in the formal process, it is that a technique has been developed in the West where the process was clearly the punishment.”
5 Vivek Ramaswamy, a character I am ambivalent about due to the fraudulent way he made his high net-worth and for multiple other reasons, although I think he is smarter than the non-Trump Republican candidates especially including Ron “Meatball” DeSantis, has said that he would pardon Snowden, Assange and Ross Ulbricht if he is elected.
6 As Caitlin Johnstone explains, “Whoever controls the narrative controls the world. Understand this key point and you’ll understand why plutocrat-controlled media outlets are constantly smearing Julian Assange, why they never fail to fall in line to support a US-led military agenda, why they pay massive amounts of attention to some political candidates while completely ignoring others, and why they put so much energy into keeping everyone arguing over the details of how the status quo should be maintained instead of debating whether it should exist at all. The unelected power establishment uses its control over politics and media to determine what the public believes about what’s going on in their world in order to keep them from rebelling against a status quo which does not serve them; without the ability to effectively propagandise the masses in this way, they cannot rule.”
7 Julian Assange in His Own Words, p. 115: “I do have a political temperament, which is a combination of libertarianism and the importance of understanding. And what emerges from this temperament is holding power to account through action driven by understanding. So, if you have a libertarian temperament, then you’re temperamentally opposed to authoritarian power. And if you have a temperament that is inclined to understanding, then you want to know what power is about. These two things combined drive forth a position, an intellectual and political position, that is about understanding power to such a degree that power is not able to express its more abusive aspects.”
9 A declassified FISA report stated that the FBI ran 3.1 million illegal FISA searches on American citizens in 2017 alone, compared to 7,500 combined searches by the NSA and CIA in the same year. It later came out that the law firm Perkins Coie had its own NSA search terminal set up in its D.C. offices to spy on domestic opposition; it was placed there to provide the perpetrators protection. In 2023 the DOJ Inspector General revealed that more than 10,000 federal employees have access to the NSA database for surveillance inquiries (which show everything you have ever typed electronically on your computer or used on your phone), more than 3.4 million search queries were ran between 12/1/2020 and 11/30/2021, and approximately 30% were outside the rules and regulations that govern warrantless search, showing the pattern of illegal governmental behavior is extreme and only expanding. See here, here and here.
Many years ago I had a jarring aha moment regarding the friend-enemy distinction in a trivial interaction with someone who was at the time a close liberal friend.
The friend-enemy distinction is a concept created by German political theorist Carl Schmitt, elaborated on in his famous 1932 book “The Concept of the Political.” According to Schmitt, the political is simply the distinguishing between one’s friends and one’s enemies. Groups of like-minded people naturally form and coalesce over time, and given this world is a world of opposites, groups of people who share antithetical views to such group tends to form as well. Viewing the solidification over time of an enemy collective into an identifiable, solid mass, an individual sees a force that is diametrically opposed to him regarding an issue, dogma, or affiliation. Only by the destruction of the enemy collective is an individual guaranteed the enactment of his collective’s will and/or the preemption of the enemy’s will, and this guarantee along with the intensity of division enables the extreme possibility of physical conflict.
N.S. Lyons has an illuminating post on Schmitt’s conception of the friend/enemy distinction. With respect to the modern era, Lyons discusses how white middle America has been defined as the “enemy” of society, and how this in turn is slowly mirroring and shaping a reaction toward viewing the modern liberal technocratic state as their enemy in turn. He states:
If portions of the American right have today turned to Schmitt as a guide, it may be because they now have plenty of reason to believe the purported procedural neutrality of the liberal technocratic state is nothing but the thinnest of veils covering an existential antagonism; that in truth the crucial political distinction has now already been made for them: they have been identified, in concrete clarity, as the enemies of the state.
It happens that Schmitt in fact voiced particular unease about how he expected liberalism would tend to define its enemies. By insisting on having transcended the political through its commitment to pluralism and enlightened universal values, and therefore incapable of ever acknowledging the possibility of sinking to the level of identifying a human enemy, liberalism would, he predicted, “confiscate the word humanity,” thus “denying the enemy the quality of being human.” In such a case, for the liberal, any resulting war “is then considered to constitute the absolute last war of humanity.” And, ultimately, “Such a war is necessarily unusually intense and inhuman because, by transcending the limits of the political framework, it simultaneously degrades the enemy into moral and other categories and is forced to make him a monster that must not only be defeated but also utterly annihilated.”
In a similar vein, Substack author Sanfedisti had an interesting post recently about his limits on his willingness to debate with liberals, who he believes wants to murder and destroy him. He writes:
I have never been interested in speaking to people who do not already agree with me, or at least who do not share a similar perspective. What I do not do, ever, is speak to leftists.
The left exists as an anti-civilizational force whose goal is no less than the total obliteration of your life, family, nation, history, religion, ethnos, people, and the permanent erasure of all that ever came from any of it. And you want me to talk?…
The answer cannot be to give these diabolical plots the legitimacy of civil discourse. The answer is to reject entirely the premise and the person whole-cloth.
Sanfedisti is correct in the sense that the liberal point of view, the way they see the world, is fundamentally different from the outlook of those on the right. Anonymous Conservative likens these differences to evolutionary r/k selection theory, which posits two opposing procreation strategies reflecting environmental extremes: one is better adapted to environments where resources are freely available (having lots of kids with little investment in each child) and the other better adapted to environments where resources are scarce (having fewer children with more investments in each child). These differences are hardwired biologically for most and not changeable regardless of environmental changes. For example, wonderful Lee Kuan Yew stated no matter how much richer and more successful Singapore became through his methods, about 30% of the population stubbornly remained diehard communists or communist supporters. If they aren’t even convinced by their own dramatically improving quality of life, what hope would you have to convince them of anything?
Now, I would caution Sanfedisti that liberals control every institution of power (including the military and police forces), and that pushing this talk too far could eventually lead to violent conflict — conflict I am convinced the right has very little chance of winning at this time, because success requires either institutional or foreign support, which the right has none of. When you’re around an aggressive and spiteful bully who can beat you up, tread carefully. I will delve into the potential odds of success for a “redneck rebellion” in a future post.
The “aha” moment
There was a small, inconsequential moment where I realized liberals had a completely alien perspective from my own. I didn’t really appreciate the impact of the moment at the time – I noted it with a kind of “huh” – but it increasingly reverberated with me as time went on.
The moment occurred in 2015 and was over an insignificant political matter. An unknown figure, Corey Lewandowski, was running Trump’s upstart campaign in the Republican primaries and doing a surprisingly great job, keeping the campaign focused, limber, and with limited overhead. In a crowded room at one of Trump’s press conferences Lewandowski brushed through the crowd to keep up with his boss. Michelle Fields, a reporter for Breitbart at the time, claimed that Lewandowski viciously grabbed her as he passed by. She decided to press charges. Ben Shapiro jumped in and demanded Lewandowski be fired:
“Corey Lewandowski is a thug, and Donald Trump is a thug for backing him,” Shapiro said Thursday night during an appearance on Fox News’s The Kelly File.
Unlike Breitbart management, which today shifted blame for the attack from the Trump campaign manager to the Secret Service, Shapiro is vocally backing Fields’ account.
“The fact that the Trump campaign continues to play this game, where they put out not just violent rhetoric but in this case a campaign manager engaging in violent action— and they won’t step down to apologize — is beyond disgusting, it really is,” Shapiro said. ”It’s gross.”
This was a big deal in the moment because if Lewandowski was fired it could have had a material impact on Trump’s burgeoning campaign. It felt like an attempt from some on the right (who worked for Breitbart of all places, which was the champion of Trump!) to undermine and hurt his movement. Now, nothing ultimately happened from this minor incident and Lewandowski continued in his role through the primaries. Later Trump replaced him with Paul Manafort and then Steve Bannon to navigate the Republican convention and the general election, respectively.
So why was this minor incident so clarifying? Well, the whole thing was caught on video and released to the public by the police. Let’s see what the stop-motion video shows with how it comports to Field’s and Shapiro’s takes, which took place over maybe a second:
You can see Trump starting in the center and walking toward the bottom right. Lewandowski is right behind him. Michelle Fields approaches Trump to ask a question, and Lewandowski brushes past her to keep up with Trump. It was a half second interaction, maybe a frame or two of the stop-motion video, and it looks like he didn’t even see her. You may have to watch it a couple of times to see it fully.
How was this a national incident? Why did this get blown up? Am I in crazy land here? What the hell did I just watch compared to media reports on it?
Now, at the time I was a relative political neophyte. I had always followed politics and news, but this was at the end of an era when the personal and the political were sort of distinct entities, and I didn’t really understand the process by which they were increasingly blending. During the Trump era and especially the COVID era the personal and the political blended, and now they cannot be separated. Julian Assange relates this process in 2016 to the changing nature of the internet itself:
“I see that there is now a militarization of cyberspace, in the sense of a military occupation. When you communicate over the internet, when you communicate using mobile phones, which are now meshed to the internet, your communications are being intercepted by military intelligence organizations. It’s like having a tank in your bedroom. It’s a soldier between you and your wife as you’re SMSing. We’re all living under martial law as far as our communications are concerned, we just can’t see the tanks – but they are there. To that degree, the internet, which was supposed to be a civilian space, has become a militarized space. But the internet is our space, because we all use it to communicate with each other and with the members of our family. The communications at the inner core of our private lives now move over the internet. So in fact our private lives have entered into a militarized zone. It is like having a soldier under the bed. This is a militarization of civilian life.”
The personal has become the political.
Anyway, I had a number of liberal friends at the time, which have since dwindled in number (not to zero, though), and one of them was really into politics, a very smart guy and one who had some idiosyncratic views that did not match lockstep with the liberal establishment. He was also more willing than most liberals to consider alternative views, even if he didn’t agree. I showed him this video at the time (as he had heard of the story and was enjoying the right-on-right squabble), expecting him to fully agree that the story was blown up out of nothing, but after watching the video, he said he agreed with Shapiro and Fields that Lewandowski should be fired! What!!!
I was flabbergasted. Here was a video showing frame-by-frame the interaction, and it was as one-sided and obvious as can be, and yet there was a fundamental disagreement over interpretation. If two people of different political persuasions cannot agree on the interpretation of frame-by-frame video evidence, what hope is there of achieving consensus on any matter of which there is not such evidence?
There is a fundamental difference of perception, rooted in underlying differing value and judgment systems that are irreconcilable.
Sanfedisti shares the same sentiment in this post, where he argues interpretations of direct video evidence can be narratively spun by our elites to mean anything, and that this is unnerving. The elite sentiment seems to be, not entirely without merit, “Who are you going to believe, you peasant, you plebian, you prole, you worm, the always objective media or your own lying eyes? We are the masters of all reality, we decide what is real and what is false, and who are you? A gnat, meaningless, who we grind beneath our feet, forgotten by historical records, swept away by the sands of time. We are Gods and you are nothing.”
How does one differentiate friend from foe?
Schmitt argued that the friend-enemy distinction is the most important political distinction one can make. Liberals are much better at identifying friends and enemies than conservatives are, who are much more independently minded than liberals and easily distracted/blinded by appeals to ideals and equality. In the example above, my friend correctly identified that Lewandowski represented Trump, he represented competence (given he was doing a good job), therefore he was a threat who should be destroyed. Who cares what the video evidence showed? Say whatever it takes, get rid of him. And it’s not like he thought this consciously — he was an NPC liberal, not a sociopathic liberal — but still, it was an unconscious process where he identified who his enemy was and then consciously sought to justify his underlying unconscious beliefs.
Telling friend from enemy can be difficult, though, without a proper framework (and sometimes even with one). Are anti-abortion Christians allies or enemies of the eugenic racialist right? Are corporatist leftists friends or enemies of the environmentalist left? Is the establishment right exemplified by Rupert Murdoch, Fox News, the Club for Growth, Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan friends or enemies of those further to their right? What about alt-light gatekeepers like Ben Shapiro, Mike Cernovich, Ben Chowder, Charlie Kirk, Jordan Peterson, Andrew Tate, Candace Owens – are they all in the same category and should be treated the same? Where does Jeff Sessions fall, who was one of the earliest and most vocal Trump supporters yet viciously betrayed him and helped institute the Russiagate fraud?
Or what about the concepts of doomerism and demoralization generally, where those on the right who are black-pilled without offering actionable solutions may be considered just as bad as liberals? Kulak makes the argument for this here.
What, ultimately, separates friend from enemy?
Ultimately I think the distinction is a relative one and context dependent, depending on the objectives of the person making the distinction. Is the objective of the person making the determination to win an election? Then the goal should be to create as big a political tent as possible. Is the objective to monetize one’s follower base and not run afoul of the authorities, like much of the alt-light gatekeepers above? Then one should figure out an angle that will maximize that revenue stream from existing followers and generate new ones while staying away from no-go topics.
If the goal, though, is to broaden human knowledge, to push back against the egalitarian ratchet effect that is destroying western civilization and perhaps all of humanity, then the only people worth discussing things with are other dissidents, and only from a perspective of the pursuit of truth.
I offered a comment in Kulak’s post above about demoralization which is as follows:
“Where or how do you draw the line between demoralization and truth? For example, if you told Trump supporters in 2017: “Hey guys, by 2023 Trump will have re-election stolen from him with permanently instituted vote-by-mail fraud, he will have accomplished nothing meaningful, over a thousand of his most dedicated followers will be in prison, and Trump will be facing over 90 criminal charges that could easily put him away for life” everyone would have looked at you as an insane demoralization agent — yet all of this is true. How do you separate the two?”
Now, Kulak didn’t respond to this question, but I’ll give my answer to it here. It depends on the objectives being pursued. If one is trying to build a political coalition, then this truthful statement would be harmful to the objective. Therefore ignore or squash truth, build political coalition. But if one is pursuing truth for its own sake, wherever it leads, which is a layer much deeper and with much more potential for radical long-term change than merely pursuing political solutions, then this truthful statement would be helpful to the objective. This is why there is tension between the so-called doomer camp (such as Rurik Skywalker and Igor Strelkov) with that of the so-called patriotic or populist camp; the latter see the former as undermining them, while the former believe the latter cannot succeed without deeper and more fundamental spiritual and philosophical changes. (There’s also a separate type of doomerism which is essentially generalized nihilistic pessimistic passivity which I think is rightly condemned, as seen here by Asha Logos and here by Kenaz Filan). Identify the objective you are pursuing and build your community on that basis.
If pursuing truth, only engage with ideological dissidents
I previously offered a taxonomy of personality types: these classifications are based on ones physiognomy and are mostly immutable. The taxonomy offered was as follows:
Liberals, comprised of non-playable characters (the vast majority) and sociopathic types (few in number but many of the leaders). Sociopathic liberals are immutably ideologically opposed to dissidents and cannot change. NPCs unquestioningly imbibe establishment propaganda and do what they are told as herd-creatures, but if dissidents ever came to power then they would follow them just as easily;
Corporatists, who focus on making money as their top priority but who always bend to liberal pressure tactics in the hope of going back to making money;
Dissidents, comprised of non-ideological and ideological types. Non-ideological dissidents are emotionally opposed to egalitarianism, but they are not intellectual enough to eloquently verbalize their objections — they feel their opposition instead of thinking it. They are basically Fox News watchers. Ideological types are opposed to globohomo on philosophical grounds (such as opposing central bank usury), and/or religious or race based. Ideological dissidents are drawn exclusively from the Loser clique.
There are also the lumpenproletariat who are apolitical, low IQ and just focus on their job, paying bills, entertainment and sex.
If the hope is to build a new system based on a partial transvaluation of values, only ideological dissidents are worth spending one’s energies on. If such dissidents build an energetic and self-sustaining parallel system or an integrated community with a compelling, competing vision of the future, then non-ideological dissidents and system NPCs will eventually join, but they will be hanger-ons to the movement instead of forming the backbone of it. This is why globohomo crushed the alt-right movement in 2017, because they were starting to have a significant impact on the wider public’s thought processes. For those who are currently trying to build a parallel, physical economy in the real world, I am skeptical it can work given globohomo’s control over the money supply and the taxation of bartering by the IRS, which requires bartering be treated as taxable and payable in dollars, but the attempt is interesting regardless.
If one panders to non-ideological dissidents or to corporatists for popularity, then one will have to compromise one’s values. Those who are popular are the ones who tell others what they want to hear. Pandering in turn dilutes the message being conveyed and serves as a corrupting influence. Nietzsche, for example, who legitimately spoke truth to the power of the whole society in which he lived, was not popular during the active part of his writing career. Trailblazers often end up with arrows in their backs, paving the way for others to follow. Popularity will slowly and inevitably come if the conveyed message is true and solves a major problem plaguing society, but truth should be pursued for its own sake; let others if they want take up the mantle of using that truth for convincing others and for the power process.
Alexander und Diogenes by Lovis Corinth, 1894, at the Graphische Sammlung Albertina, representing the pursuit of truth versus the pursuit of power
This sense of community is what Substack currently provides given it allows free speech, for now, during their growth stage, at least.
The discernment of values
What are the values that ideological dissidents should look for in each other? Here are a couple of heuristics:
Transparency and accountability. Q-anon was the worst kind of movement because it was built on peddling trust without accountability or verification. The result of such misplaced trust was to encourage (mostly non-ideological) dissidents to sit passively as the “good guys” behind the scenes were “fighting” for them. This was Operation Trust 2.0. A well-intentioned author should give his step-by-step process in the chain of reasoning behind his argument, linking to evidence at every step, and leave it up to the reader to make up their own determination. This is what I attempted to do in my long-form Neoliberal Feudalism essay with well over 1,000 cites documenting my chain of reasoning regarding the structure of modern society. Appeals to authority are weak in an era of decentralized knowledge; state your reasoning, give the underlying information being relied upon to reach those conclusions, and let people make up their own minds. Julian Assange has and had a similar philosophy; provide the underlying primary source materials and let the reader decide.1
An acknowledgment of subjectivity. Ben Shapiro has an infamous quote, “Facts don’t care about your feelings.” In this quote he claims to be a unique possessor of “facts” that give him the “insight” to tell you what do think and how to act. It reminds me of the famous Ralph Waldo Emerson quote, “The louder he talked of his honor, the faster we counted our spoons.”Compare Shapiro’s position with that of Nietzsche: “There are no facts, only interpretations”. Also “Thoughts are the shadows of our feelings – always darker, emptier and simpler.” Under Nietzsche’s formulation, what matters is who is offering the interpretation and from what motivation? What are the speaker’s underlying moral beliefs motivating their statements and conduct?You are aware of my demand upon philosophers, that they should take up a stand Beyond Good and Evil … This demand is the result of a point of view which I was the first to formulate: that there are no such things as moral facts. Moral judgment has this in common with the religious one, that it believes in realities which are not real. Morality is only an interpretation of certain phenomena: or, more strictly speaking, a misinterpretation of them.… [M]oral judgment must never be taken quite literally: as such is sheer nonsense. As a sign code, however, it is invaluable: to him at least who knows, it reveals the most valuable facts concerning cultures…This is such a more honest and direct approach than Shapiro’s, whose unstated objective is simply to support Israel. And his sneering “I’m the decider of the facts, listen to me” has led to him being duplicitously pro-COVID vaccine, a vocal never-Trumper, pro-censorship, and more.Always ask, cui bono? If you don’t know what your own interests are and how to advance them, how can you expect not to be fooled when someone underhandedly pushes their own interests to sucker you?
Nietzsche and Shapiro have opposite understandings of what “facts” constitute. Compare their physiognomies; intensity, directness at the seriousness of life on the left, smug arrogance and dissembly on the right.
Character of both others and yourself revealed during times of stress. The height of COVID hysteria was a great way to see the true values of people, for it revealed character during times of stress. Did someone get an untested mRNA vaccine because society pressured them to? (i.e. Jordan Peterson, who then pathetically tried to backtrack about the booster, compromising himself by agreeing to contract terms with Shapiro’s Daily Wire that muzzle the voices of their contributors, and later cried while calling Israel a moral city on a hill). What about Arnold Schwarzenegger, who famously said “screw your freedoms” when calling for you to be force-jabbed? Was someone silent about election fraud due to employer pressure? (Tucker Carlson). So many false idols were smashed under the pressures of COVID…Or how about on the other side — if you want to see a real hero, look at Ian Smith who heroically fought against COVID tyranny in New Jersey and suffered over a million dollars in fines, in addition to many other punitive measures:Ian Smith, COVID heroJordan Peterson, COVID failureIf you want to see others acting heroically under pressure and paying a large price for it, see Louis Uridel, Shelley Luther, Greg Anderson, Danny Presti, Julian Assange and Edward Snowden.Seeing someone’s behavior under pressure isn’t a perfect heuristic – there are no guarantees heroic action on one issue translates to similar heroism on another – but it’s as close as one can get.
Building cooperatively instead of instigating right-on-right drama. It’s a good idea to be weary of those characters who spend an inordinate amount of time infighting in petty squabbles, regardless of their other qualities. Milo Yiannopoulos comes to mind.
The corrupting influences of money, power and influence. Writing for money serves as a potentially corrupting influence. This is because money starts bending one’s incentive structure; are you writing for yourself, or are you writing to please your audience to tell them what they want to hear so they maintain their subscription? Then you also have to become worried about how often you write. Without knowing it you may slowly become a slave instead of the master of your writing. If you are worried about the extent of your influence, are you willing to write hard truths or does the pull of pretty lies become more important? Small bloggers writing for free and documenting the full chain of their reasoning are, I think, the best spot to be in. (Of course, psychologically speaking people assign more value for what they pay for and the more they pay the more they value it (i.e. setting a higher price point for an item can often result in more demand), and there’s nothing intrinsically wrong with wanting or needing to be paid for one’s work, but still, the corrupting danger of chasing money is ever-present…)
Anyway, these are some hopefully useful heuristics, but there are no guarantees. As mentioned above, Jeff Sessions was Trump’s earliest Senate supporter, he brought on Stephen Miller who loyally served Trump, but then Sessions displayed extreme moral weakness against a globohomo coup attempt against Trump which led directly to the two year fake Mueller investigation nightmare. There was no signs of this character defect in Sessions ahead of time, and even though many of Trump’s personnel decisions were quite poor, the results of this key appointment was something that no one could have seen coming. One may use their best discernment and judgment on assessing others, but ultimately the soul of others (and to a large extent, our own) remain a mystery, and the results are known only to God.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 Julian Assange, When Google Met WikiLeaks, p. 126: “I have been pushing this idea of scientific journalism – that things must be precisely cited with the original source, and as much of the information as possible should be put in the public domain so that people can look at it, just like in science so that you can test to see whether the conclusion follows from the experimental data. Otherwise the journalist probably just made it up. In fact, that is what happens all the time: people just make it up. They make it up to such a degree that we are led to war.”
“Every human face is a hieroglyphic, and a hieroglyphic, too, which admits of being deciphered, the alphabet of which we carry about with us already perfected. As a matter of fact, the face of a man gives us a fuller and more interesting information than his tongue; for his face is the compendium of all he will ever say, as it is the one record of all his thoughts and endeavors.” – Arthur Schopenhauer, On Physiognomy
Physiognomy (from the Greek φύσις, ‘physis’, meaning “nature”, and ‘gnomon’, meaning “judge” or “interpreter”) is the practice of assessing a person’s character or personality from their outer appearance—especially the face.
Blogger Rolo Slavsky recently made a throwaway reference to professor Edward Dutton’s book “How to Judge People by What They Look Like”, which inspired this post. Rolo was making a point regarding Russian nationalist and Donbass hero Alexander Zacharchenko, who looked like this:
Zacharchenko was assassinated on the orders of Russian oligarch Serhiy Kurchenko, who looks like this:
The assassination was part of Russia’s oligarch’s goal to keep Russian nationalists and populists under heel so they could continue their unlimited graft and rape of the country.
The photo of each of these individuals says it all, doesn’t it? You can see the directness, seriousness, honesty and integrity and the serious burden of command in the photo of Zacharchenko, or in any photo of him; you can use a search engine for more. See this composite of Julius Caesar for a similar look:
And you can see the crookedness, nastiness, lack of morals and abject, scary insanity in a glance at the photo of Kurchenko; mostly in the extremely weird mouth expression along with the eyes (with apparently no eyelids) staring unfocused and blankly in two different directions. Insane congressman Adam Schiff has a similar stare:
Horrible New Jersey Governor Murphy, previously covered in this post which contrasted Ian Smith’s courage against Murphy’s craven advancement of the globohomo agenda, isn’t too far off either:
Murphy has horrendous physiognomy, a mix of a weasel with a pimple
Anyway, physiognomy is a subject that I’ve referenced in passing many times. But I havn’t delved into the topic itself yet, so now is a good opportunity.
Whether you want to acknowledge it or not, we all come to immediate judgments about other people when meeting or observing them. Are they friendly or serious looking? Do they present themselves well or look slovenly? Do they look dangerous, do they look like a criminal, are they beautiful or ugly, are they tall or short, fat or skinny, strong or weak, do they appear fat or stupid, rich or poor, healthy or sick, are they well coordinated or clumsy, are their faces and bodies symmetrical or asymmetrical? Each of these traits says something about the character of the person being judged. Someone fat, for example, would generally be presumed to have less impulse control, shorter future time-orientation, is less healthy, worse genetics, at risk of other diseases such as diabetes and heart disease, probably eats unhealthily, etc. You can make all sorts of judgments at a glance about a person, to which wonderful poet Ezra Pound agrees.1 One study shows that it only takes a tenth of a second for a person to make a judgment of another person’s personality (Willis et al., 2006). Clique theory makes the same argument where one can tell instantaneously whether a person falls within Jock, Prep, Nerd, Scumbag or Loser clique.
Now, sometimes one’s judgments are wrong; we aren’t perfect and it’s good to get to know someone before basing decisions off of gut instincts. Perhaps we were wrong in our impressions and we can grow and update our own internal models. But often times we are in situations where we do have to make a snap decision; is the person approaching us on the street in the middle of the night dangerous or not? And even though not perfect, making those instantaneous judgment calls in such situations can mean the difference between an ugly incident or avoiding trouble.
Background
Acknowledging that everyone makes instantaneous judgments of others is declasse in the modern era; it smacks of recklessly rushing to judgment, or if in a racial context it smacks of racism. So the entire study of physiognomy has been mothballed, deemed low class pseudoscience and with low or no funding directed to the study of it, at least until the modern era (which we will get into). Per Dutton:
Unfortunately, physiognomy became associated – and, perhaps, remains associated – with phrenology, [which] was the belief that the nature of a person’s character can be discerned by small differences in the shape of their skull. As the brain is an organ, and different parts of the brain have different functions, it seemed to follow that bumps or indentations in the skull would reflect similar properties in the brain. As such, people could ‘have their lumps felt’ and it would reveal a great deal about the nature of their personality; albeit based on the very limited nineteenth century knowledge of brain modules. Phrenology became hugely popular in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, with the establishment of learned phrenology societies [and as popularly mocked in Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained]….Unsurprisingly, phrenology was debunked. Physiognomy found itself (intellectually) guilty by association.
It fell further out of favor after the Nazis applied the practice on a racial basis:
“The other problem physiognomy has to deal with is the obvious unpleasant consequences judging people by their appearance has when it comes to the issue of ‘race.’….The Nazis measured facial features in order to determine the archetypal ‘Jew’ and the archetypal ‘Aryan,’ giving the measurement of facial features for any broader purpose a bad name. But the actions of the Nazis are entirely irrelevant. As we will see shortly, physiognomy works, in most cases, within races.”
As the egalitarian ratchet effect continues its parabolic ascent, it has increasingly become more and more outside the bounds of discussion that people are inherently different. How mean of you to not just point out but consider in the first place that a person is short, or ugly, or dresses poorly, or seems dangerous or dumb! You should feel guilty for any judgments you make of others unless officially approved experts tell you it is okay to do so. How dare you. We are all interchangeable widgets with the exact same abilities and outlooks except for societal racisms holding back the downtrodden, okay?
Modern science
Scientific research into physiognomy has undergone a bit of a revival in the late 20th/early 21st century, according to Scientific American in an article called “How your looks betray your personality.” It states: “The field is undergoing something of a revival. Researchers around the world are re-evaluating what we see in a face, investigating whether it can give us a glimpse of someone’s personality or even help to shape their destiny. What is emerging is a “new physiognomy” which is more subtle but no less fascinating than its old incarnation.” The article continues: “First impressions are highly influential, despite the well-worn admonition not to judge a book by its cover. Within a tenth of a second of seeing an unfamiliar face we have already made a judgement about its owner’s character – caring, trustworthy, aggressive, extrovert, competent and so on (Psychological Science, vol 17, p 592). Once that snap judgement has formed, it is surprisingly hard to budge. What’s more, different people come to strikingly similar conclusions about a particular face – as shown in our own experiment (see “The New Scientist face experiment”).”
Per Schopehauer, “The study of physiognomy is one of the chief means of a knowledge of mankind, because the cast of a man’s face is the only sphere in which his arts of dissimulation are of no avail, since these arts extended only to that play of feature which is akin to mimicry.” Let’s tabulate some of the recent science of physiognomy, some of which is from the Wiki entry:
Facial features impact on power, warmth, honesty, intelligence. Per The Psychology of Personnel Selection, research in the 1990s indicated that three elements of personality in particular – power, warmth and honesty – can be reliably inferred by looking at facial features: “More recent research suggests that face-based impressions may sometimes be valid (Berry, 1991; Zebrowitz, Voinescu & Collins, 1996). Berry (1990) asked students to report their impressions of their classmates (after one, five and nine weeks of the semester had elapsed), and used these impressions as the criterion with which she compared independent evaluations of the classmates’ photographs. She found significant correlations between peer and photographs on three dimensions: power, warmth and honesty.”Other studies have used AI and machine learning techniques to identify facial characteristics that predict honesty, personality,and intelligence. In a 2006 study published in the peer-reviewed journal, Social Cognition, Ian Penton-Voak and colleagues utilized both individual and composite facial images. The composites were generated by computer software that combines multiple faces into one; you might think of it as a sort of “average” of the images. More specifically, the composites incorporated facial images of those scoring in the top ten percent for each of the Big Five personality domains. Based on their findings, the researchers concluded that there is at least “a kernel of truth” to be found in the practice of face reading. In a 2014 research article “Interpretation of Appearance: The Effect of Facial Features on First Impressions and Personality”, the authors generated artificial, extreme faces visualising the characteristics having an effect on first impressions for several traits. Conclusively, they found a relationship between first impressions, some personality traits and facial features and conclude that people on average assess a given face in a highly similar manner. The following image for each personality trait show a composite with a very low score for that trait on the left, and a very high score on the right:“For each face pair the left extreme face is predicted as being judged very low for a given trait and the right face as very high. Each face is based on the β-coefficients from the best linear regression model for that given Rating and gender. We generated the faces by multiplying each β-coefficient to either +4 standard deviations or -4 standard deviations of the matching facial component.
Bodily asymmetry affect on health and IQ. Per The Psychology of Personnel Selection, p. 16: “That said, there is currently a good deal of interest in related topics like fluctuating asymmetry and digit ratio. Fluctuating asymmetry consists of within individual differences in left- vs right-side body features (length of ears, fingers, volume of wrists, etc.). Asymmetry is associated with both ill health and lower IQ. In a recent study, Luxen and Buunk (2006) found 20 per cent of the variance in intelligence was explained by a combined measure of fluctuating asymmetry.”
Digit ratio impact on aggression. P. 16: “The 2D:4D digit ratio has been known for some 100 years and has recently attracted a great deal of attention. The idea is that a person’s hand shape – particularly the length of these two digits – is determined by physiological processes in the womb which influence the sex-linked factors (Brosnan, 2006). In line with this view, a seminal study by Lippa (2003) showed that 2D:4D determined sexual orientation (though only for men). Subsequent studies in this area have attempted to link 2D:4D to individual differences in established personality traits, notably those related to aggression or masculine behaviours. Although evidence has been somewhat inconsistent, a number of meaningful connections have indeed been found. In a large-scale study, Lippa (2006) found positive, albeit weak, associations between 2D:4D and Extraversion, as well as a negative, albeit weak, link between 2D:4D and Openness to Experience. Overall, however, associations between finger-length measures and personality were modest and variable.”
Extraversion, conscientiousness and openness via facial analysis. Per the New Scientist article, “There is, however, some tantalising evidence that our faces can betray something about our character. In 1966, psychologists at the University of Michigan asked 84 undergraduates who had never met before to rate each other on five personality traits, based entirely on appearance, as they sat for 15 minutes in silence (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol 4, p 44). For three traits – extroversion, conscientiousness and openness – the observers’ rapid judgements matched real personality scores significantly more often than chance….when Little and Perrett re-ran the experiment using mugshots rather than live subjects, they also found a link between facial appearance and personality – though only for extroversion and conscientiousness (British Journal of Psychology, vol 98, p 111).”
Tendency to violence based on wider faces. “Support for this, and the kernel of truth idea, has come from a study of 90 ice-hockey players published late last year by Justin Carré and Cheryl McCormick of Brock University in Ontario, Canada. They found that a wider face in which the cheekbone-to-cheekbone distance was unusually large relative to the distance between brow and upper lip was linked in a statistically significant way with the number of penalty minutes a player was given for violent acts including slashing, elbowing, checking from behind and fighting (Proceedings of the Royal Society B, vol 275, p 2651).” Per Slate, researchers have claimed that it is possible to predict upper body strength and some personality traits (propensity to aggression) only by looking at the width of the face. University of California-Santa Barbara psychologist Aaron Sell reported that college students could accurately estimate the upper body strength of unfamiliar men after viewing their faces alone. Sell suspects the brow ridge and jaw, two structures that are shaped by testosterone in puberty. (High testosterone has been linked with masculine looks as well as with aggression.)
Political orientation based on one’s face can be reliably predicted. In a study that used facial recognition technology by analyzing the faces of over one million individuals, political orientation was predicted correctly 74% of the time; considerably better than chance (50%), human ability (55%) or even personality questionnaires (68%).
Sexual orientation based on one’s face. In 2017, a study claimed that an AI algorithm could detect sexual orientation more accurately than humans (in 81% of the tested cases for men and 71% for women).
Eye width and perceived intelligence. Eyes are the “windows to the soul” and are often one of the first facial features people notice. For instance, there is a significant relationship between interpupillary distance (wide-set eyes) and perceived intelligence (Lee et al., 2017).
Mouth width and leadership abilities. One study noticed that the mouth width impacts people’s choice in leaders (Re et al., 2016). The study applied their findings to real leaders. The study found that mouth width correlates to the CEO’s leadership abilities and their actual leadership success. Additionally, the same study notes that people with wider mouths were more likely to win U.S. Senate elections.
Tattoos suggest sexual promiscuity. One study gathered data on 450 college students and found that tattooed respondents were more likely to be sexually active than those without tattoos (Koch et al., 2006). Another study found that people who got body modifications (tattoos, piercings, etc.) were more likely to engage in intercourse earlier in life and be sexually active (Nowosielski et al., 2012). According to the study, adults who got body modification are four times less likely to engage in religious practices.
Potential explanations
Per Kosinski (2023), the potential explanations for people’s personality traits being reflected in their physiognomy are (1) self-fulfilling prophecies, where people’s judgments on other’s looks eventually turn the subjects from repeated social interactions into what others are perceiving; (2) psychological traits may modify physical characteristics; and (3) there may be genetic correlations between certain traits being expressed, such as twin studies which have found that genes are responsible for over 50% of the variation in both facial featuresand political orientation.
With respect to the self-fulfilling prophecy possibility, it brings to mind the “Millimeters of Bone” incel meme, which argued that the difference between Chad and Melvin was only a few millimeters of bone:
It can be argued that repeated positive social interactions for the version on the right compared to the version on the left would result in much higher extraversion for the Chad, for example, because of the more positive results from such interactions. The closer one’s face is to the golden ratio, generally the more positive interpersonal connections will be. This relates to the expression, “Physiognomy is destiny”…
It is an open question the impact to which a conscious decision to think or act in new ways has on one’s physiognomy; exercise more and you’ll be in better shape, have a calmer disposition, stand straighter, weigh less etc. which will impact the way others see you. Plastic surgery may hide one’s physical attributes, while also revealing to the world via a changed physiognomy one’s underlying narcissism, shallowness, and emotional instability.
With respect to the second and third possible explanations, as covered previously, using artificial selection to select for specific traits in animals results in very specific physiognomy changes, such as domestication syndrome. Domesticated animals tend to be smaller and less aggressive than their wild counterparts, they may also have floppy ears, variations to coat color, a smaller brain, and a shorter muzzle.When Dmitry Belyayev domesticated a fox within a human lifetime via a rigorous artificial selection program, even though he only selected for one trait – tameness – selection for that trait affected other traits such as coat color, skulls shape, and ear floppiness. Given this, it makes sense that there would be a similar interplay between personality traits and physical traits in humans.
Conclusion
The point of this article is it’s perfectly natural to make snap judgments of others; we all do it unconsciously and instantaneously, and all one does by trying to deny it is create some sort of hypocritical split within us, a denial of self (which always manifests one way or another). There are circumstances in which acting on our snap judgments is perfectly legitimate and applicable, especially when in a situation where we have to make such judgments quickly; for others where we don’t have to rush to judgment, it is better to reserve judgment, talk to the person and see if one’s intuition and immediate judgments were accurate or false. In my articles you’ll often see me describe a situation and point to a person’s physiognomy as evidence in favor of the point being made, and hopefully this post does a decent job of describing why.
A .gif of deranged anti-Trump former FBI agent Peter Strzok, who spied on and tried to undermine the Trump administration. Brief movements of the man reveal him instantaneously to be a deviant, smug sociopathCompare the physiognomies of Carl Weiss, left, who assassinated populist leader Huey Long, with that of arch-criminal Andrew Weissman, who is a leader behind the scenes of overthrowing and prosecuting Trump. They look like the same person
I love the physiognomy of the represented Overman engineer in the movie Prometheus. The above scene is a deleted extended scene that should have been included in the theatrical version, and it’s an abomination that it wasn’t. For a fascinating look at how the design of the engineer was developed, which was intended to be a blend of Michelangelo’s statue of David, da Vinci’s work, the Statue of Liberty, and Elvis (lol), see this great behind-the-scenes clip here.
My favorite still from the deleted scene, where the creator Engineer judges his creationA behind the scenes still reflecting The Creation of AdamA close-up of the Engineer; what an amazing design
More fundamentally, there is an extremely deep-seated element in the nihilistic West that it is improper to follow one’s senses and gut judgments, that we must discount what we see with our own eyes in favor of believing officially designated “experts” and whatever nonsense they push. As argued previously, science has been replaced with policitized and corrupted Scientism, and one should make a conscious effort to resist this trend and to return to putting a much greater emphasis on one’s own thoughts, feelings, and worldview. The “experts” by and large do not have your best interests at heart, and you do a disservice to yourself by discarding your judgments and listening to experts at your own peril.
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
1 According to Eustace Mullins, “During the 1956 elections, [Pound] called to my attention the commisar or foetus type of public official that seems to have been produced by the modern state. It is characterized by a round head, usually bald, a petulant mouth, and the formless features of a newly-born baby. In July 1959 he wrote to me, “look up Lavater, 1741-1801, ‘inventor of physiognomic studies,’ esp. criminal TYPES.””My impression that he had set almost at lowest level the foetus type…”
I promptly did some research and found, to my surprise, that a number of great leaders in recent years could be classified as the foetus type, or those who have not been fully formed in the womb. Such people seem capable, indeed fated, to cause great harm to others. These atavistic types are characterized by slight development of the pilar system, low cranial capacity, great frequency of wormian bones, early closing of the cranial sutures, and a lemurine appendix. The type is round-faced, with slight protruding eyes and a vacant grin.”
This is a post about Brett Andersen’s evolutionary psychology Youtube series, which attempts to provide an answer to the nihilism pervading society since Nietzsche’s proclamation of the “death of God”. Andersen possesses an impressive understanding of the science of evolutionary psychology and he attempts to derive objective meaning on that basis. His recent unfortunate personal developments are touched on in addendums at the end. I suspect this post will be a niche one, but it touches on many of the themes discussed on this Substack and is worth a write-up on that basis. The next published post will be more “mainstream”.
Introduction
Nietzsche famously wrote in The Gay Science (1882) that God is dead and that we have killed him:
God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?
What does Nietzsche mean that we have killed God? Essentially, advancements in science and technology during the Renaissance and Industrial Revolution increasingly disproved a literal interpretation of the Bible, offering an alternative hypothesis for man’s origins via Darwinian natural selection. For example, biblical cosmology believed the Heavens were fixed past the firmament and belong to the domain of God, yet it turns out they are planets and star systems subject to the same gravitational and other forces that Earth is. How does one square that knowledge with a literal interpretation of the Bible?
If the Bible isn’t literally true, then, what is true? If the Bible is only metaphorically true, which metaphorical interpretations are correct and on what basis should they be concluded? Would not the basis for such interpretive choices be open for endless debate? One can see the shakiness of faith arise…
A belief in God had sustained man for thousands of years and calmed his most basic fears of his own mortality. Every aspect of society had reinforced man’s place in the world amidst a religious construct that gave meaning to man’s suffering, and man can bear most any suffering so long as he believes there is meaning to it. The death of God equates to the death of a world with intrinsic meaning, where our actions had spiritual consequences and mattered; we became unmoored from belief as the cult of reason advanced without understanding the consequences of what we were doing. This unmooring process inevitably led to nihilism:
Nietzsche discusses Christianity, one of the major topics in his work, at length in the context of the problem of nihilism in his notebooks, in a chapter entitled “European Nihilism.” Here he states that the Christian moral doctrine provides people with intrinsic value, belief in God (which justifies the evil in the world) and a basis for objective knowledge. In this sense, in constructing a world where objective knowledge is possible, Christianity is an antidote against a primal form of nihilism, against the despair of meaninglessness. However, it is exactly the element of truthfulness in Christian doctrine that is its undoing: in its drive towards truth, Christianity eventually finds itself to be a construct, which leads to its own dissolution. It is therefore that Nietzsche states that we have outgrown Christianity “not because we lived too far from it, rather because we lived too close.”As such, the self-dissolution of Christianity constitutes yet another form of nihilism. Because Christianity was an interpretation that posited itself as the interpretation, Nietzsche states that this dissolution leads beyond skepticism to a distrust of all meaning.
Nietzsche keenly felt the onrush of nihilism in the mid-to-late 1800s; so did others like Tolstoy. These trends have only spread, deepened, and metastasized since then. Anyone reading this has been born and raised in an era steeped in a ubiquitous, pervasive nihilism touching every facet of society. But for those with a sense of history it is this era that is abnormal, untethered from the underlying anchoring religious beliefs that sustained man for thousands of years. We don’t know what such normalcy feels like, to feel like we belong in an ordered universe infused with cosmic meaning.
Nietzsche believed that nihilism was a period that western man must pass through in order to hopefully emerge on the other side, after much pain and suffering, with a revaluation of its own core values. But it was by no means certain; just as possible was a descent into permanent nihilism followed by mankind’s destruction. Nietzsche went insane before he was able to construct what such a revaluation of its core values could really look like.1
The core point of this Substack (rooted in the philosophy expressed in the companion Neoliberal Feudalism Substack) is that, after the death of God and the descent into nihilism, western civilization has retained the morals and ethics of Christianity but without the underlying belief structure. Due to the egalitarian ratchet effect, combined with this underlying nihilism and will to nothingness2, western civilization is rapidly sliding into a suicidal abyss. This makes for a very destabilizing situation. There needs to be a change; is it time to emerge from the nihilistic phase that Nietzsche predicted? If so, what should such revalued or transvalued values look like?
I have previously argued that what is needed is a partial transvaluation of values so that the warrior Roman values and the transvalued priestly Christian values would result in a balance. Whether that would come from a new religion as Spandrell argues for, or a reinvigoration of Christianity perhaps via Orthodoxy as Roosh wants, or a John Carter Christian ghost dance as Rolo Slavsky also calls for, or something else, remains up in the air. Others have tried solving this riddle as well, such as Curtis Yarvin with his vision of a techno-corporatist-dictatorship, but I think it’s a mess, divorced from reality.3 My lack of a specific positive forward vision is a weakness to my argument, because it’s far more persuasive to offer someone both a carrot and a stick (i.e. promotion of new vision simultaneously with the criticism of the old) than just the stick. But I didn’t really have a fully formed, fleshed out vision of what such a partial transvaluation of values would look like, other than it must involve a movement away from pure materialism back toward an element of idealism; it’s a process of education and learning, and the research involved in the posts for Substack, as well as feedback from readers, helps further my own process and understanding as well.
Andersen’s Substack
An off-hand comment a couple of months ago by Substack user Paul McNamara on Helen Dale’s Substack led me first to the Substack of, and then the Youtube channel of Brett Andersen, a PhD candidate in evolutionary psychology at the University of New Mexico, which then led to a deep-dive of his work and listening to his 22+ hour Youtube series. This speaks to the quality of his ideas generally, especially because I prefer to intake information via writing and not via audio or visual sources, but I oddly preferred his Youtube videos to his written work. Synthesizing his series into its core arguments and the various takeaways that resonated with me, as well as offering some points of constructive criticism, has been fun and challenging to write.
Andersen pictured in his Youtube series. He has a somewhat unusual physiognomy, although his left arm sleeve tattoo may be seen as either a sign of the decadence of this age, or alternatively as a feature of his self-described shamanistic, right-brain impulses
Andersen wrestles with the same issues I highlight, i.e. the attempt to derive objective meaning in an era of ubiquitous nihilism.4 But Andersen approaches the problems from an evolutionary psychology perspective and not an autistic A-to-Z, step-by-step rendering of the gradual introduction of a globohomo worldwide slave control grid and why the world has allowed this system to be put into place as I have done. His approach addresses the problem from a very different angle, but an important one that is helpful to flesh out a fuller perspective and argument.5
Andersen starts his series by discussing his personal background. He suffered a series of psychotic breaks earlier in his life, resulting in part from drug use, which had destroyed his life in multiple ways. He eventually had epiphanies while reading Jordan Peterson’s book “Maps of Meaning” (or listening to his lecture series) at 24 years old which led to his recovery, having a profound impact which set him on a journey of self-discovery.6 He has been singularly obsessed with trying to understand the meaning of life for the past seven years since then. From the moment he wakes up to when he goes to bed, he says, this is basically all he thinks about.
These routes to generalized dissent [examples including problems with dating, problems with health/nutrition, and problems with political understandings] involve an individual experiencing cognitive dissonance in their lives resulting in a prolonged period of emotional or psychological pain, followed by the desire to find an explanation to alleviate their pain, which mainstream society cannot provide given their narrative falsehoods are the primary cause of it. The lower status an individual is in the eyes of society, the more likely that person is likely to experience such psychological pain leading to cognitive dissonance. Currently white males, the most disfavored group in the United States, have much higher levels of disillusionment toward the establishment than women and minorities, because the latter are much greater beneficiaries of the system.
While Andersen would like to become an academic after finishing his PhD and would make an excellent one, he has been precluded from doing so because of the extreme anti-white wokeness pervading academia, which he has been very justifiably frustrated by and which he says he will not pay lip-service to. I suspect he will become a psychiatrist or psychologist instead, perhaps working with psilocybin therapies where legal or via clinical trials (MDMA therapy would also be worth exploring), but that is just a guess.
Andersen’s perspective
Andersen’s arguments delve into the changing environmental and cultural selection pressures that have shaped religion, morality, culture and evolutionary psychology throughout human history. His Youtube series discusses this history, offering a wide range of scientific studies and theories in support of his points which will be touched on briefly here. Other than Nietzsche and Jordan Peterson as primary influences, Andersen quotes extensively from John Vervaeke’s work.
According to Andersen, religion originally arose among hunter gatherers as a form of ancestor worship. Gods were a part of everyday life and they were just like humans, only more powerful, with their own personalities and whims. These religions were shamanistic in character in that they involved intense ceremonies led by charismatic, right-brain-dominant7, chaotic practitioners who attempted to unite small groups of people in focused, high-energy, altered consciousness rites.
Hunter gatherer mythological origin narratives involved stories where everything has meaning, which served as an inspiration for action for how people should act in their own lives. Humans were generally well integrated between their thoughts and their instincts because they had naturally selected for this nomadic lifestyle for millions of years. Tribal morality had evolved to be black-and-white, in-group vs. out-group, as a way for hunter gatherer societies to unite against their enemies, and anyone who went against the group’s morality would be cast out, which was akin to death. Counter-intuitively, according to research we feel our moral beliefs and then rationalize them, even though we all falsely believe that we arrive at our morality based on logic and reasoning.
Culture evolved as a cultural ratchet effect where humans copied each other’s behaviors, but then evolved those behaviors during times of crisis to adapt to changing environments. Tensions arose from society’s demands to conform to the group (the herd instinct) against an occasional individual’s belief in the necessity of change, which inevitably resulted in society seeing that individual as “crazy” and evoking significant pushback and hostility if or until the change was ultimately accepted. Dreams served as a way for individuals to avoid over-fitting their limited models of the world for current circumstances, giving them a creative way to see problems in a new, flexible, fluid light.
During the Axial Age between the 8th and 3rd century BC, humans transitioned from hunter gatherer societies to agrarian societies brought on by the neolithic agricultural revolution. New selection pressures resulted in a movement away from these shamanistic, high-intensity religious ceremonies and polytheistic Gods and toward left-brain, low-intensity, formalized religions based on written texts and featuring distant, inaccessible God(s). Andersen gives Jews in Israel followed by Christianity as examples. These pressures occurred because shamanistic religions were not scalable in the way that written doctrinal religions were, and doctrinal priests were focused on uniting their people to strengthen themselves against their neighbors and enemies. While shamanistic practices were decentralized and based on a leader’s charisma, priests who could read and write their religious doctrines formed hierarchical organizations that functioned like guilds. As such, wherever doctrinal religions arose their priests brutally crushed their shamanic competition, much as guilds always attempt to crush their independent competition.
Humans had great difficulty adapting to an agricultural lifestyle, where their long-honed instincts as hunter gatherers clashed with the reality of living in closer quarters in urban environments and with a much more sedentary lifestyle, and this caused a lot of problems. Doctrinal religions tried to address these conflicts with commandments by God on how one should act, although this didn’t fully solve the issue; the underlying tension with humanity’s out-of-kilter instincts regarding sex, food, war, and other basic drives remained, and remains to this day.
As part of this transition to urban environments, the meaning of God(s) evolved. God changed from serving as a forum for action based on mythological ancestor worship to a Plato-inspired material/spiritual dualism, where the material world was severed from the spiritual world. The material world served as a place of imperfect objects, merely shadows of the world of forms, and the spiritual world was the “real” world which was perfect and static.
What Nietzsche defined as the ascetic ideal came to dominate. This ideal involved values that advocated withdrawing, abstaining, or rejecting bodily, emotional, and material aspects of everyday life. In other words, they were a “will to nothingness.” Nietzsche saw the Christian motto of “poverty, chastity, humility” as an ascetic ideal because it suggests that people need to abstain from material wealth, sensual urges, and emotional or egotistical feelings. Nietzsche also thinks that many nonreligious people practice the ascetic ideal such as Schopenhauer, who he came to see as decadent.
Contrast the ascetic ideal with that of Heraclitus, who was Nietzsche’s favorite philosopher. Heraclitus believed that everything was change, nothing was static, and that the only thing that could be taken as static was the nature of change itself. He expressed this in sayings like panta rhei (“Everything flows”) and “No man ever steps in the same river twice.” Nietzsche, per Twilight of the Idols, “Reason in Philosophy”, §2: “But Heraclitus will remain eternally right with his assertion that Being [as opposed to Becoming] is an empty fiction.” And in The Pre-Platonic Philosophers, “Heraclitus”, p.62-63: “Well, this is the intuitive perception of Heraclitus; there is no thing of which we may say, “it is.” He rejects Being. He knows only Becoming, the flowing. He considers belief in something persistent as error and foolishness. To this he adds this thought: that which becomes is one thing in eternal transformation, and the law of this eternal transformation, the Logos in all things, is precisely this One, fire. Thus, the one overall Becoming is itself law; that it becomes and how it becomes is its work.”
If life is indeed change, and it is only the nature of change itself that is static, then the process of change, of syncretization and of growth and unity should be embraced instead of resisted. Andersen believes that the existing concepts of God cannot be resurrected by existing dualist, doctrinal religions, which have bled their meaning over the centuries in an environment that no longer favors that particular mode of thinking. Instead, there is an opportunity for the return of right-brain, shamanistic chaos energies and thinking styles which have been on the losing side for millennia. Nietzsche’s concept of the will to power provides such potential basis for objective meaning which can bridge the gap between our reason and our instinct, based on a scientific understanding of human nature without reliance on two-worlds mythology.
Under this conception, will to power does not mean “will to dominate” or Schopenhauer’s “will to life”. Rather, Nietzsche’s notes indicate it is a broader term reflecting a sort of meta-drive of all of our various instinctual drives (for sex, eating, health, safety, control), the manifestation of which arises out of the position one finds oneself in society:
The will to power appears:
a. among the oppressed, among slaves of all kinds, as will to “freedom”: merely getting free seems to be the goal…
b. among a stronger kind of man, getting ready for power, as will to overpower; if it is at first unsuccessful, then it limits itself to the will to “justice,” i.e., to the same measure of rights as the ruling type possesses;
c. among the strongest, richest, most independent, most courageous, as “love of mankind,” of “the people”, of the gospel of truth, God; as sympathy, “self-sacrifice,” etc…as instinctive self-involvement with a great quantum of power to which one is able to give direction: the hero, the prophet, the Caesar, the savior , the shepherd…”
Andersen believes that the will to power manifests psychologically as relevance realization, which is the process by which we process extreme amounts of data inputs to determine what we believe to be relevant to achieve our will to power, and therefore what we focus on instead of discard, and/or self-actualization. It is a metaphysical thesis which posits a universal process of complexification.
Under this approach, the process of complexification is defined as something increasing its differentiation into constituent parts while simultaneously increasing its integration as a whole. Complexification occurs where there are competing drives or interactions, which leads to a breaking of frame called self-organized criticality, followed by a descent into chaos, leading eventually to, if the entity doesn’t collapse or die, a higher baseline level of complexity:
How higher complexity is established, from Andersen’s Substack article here
For example, Andersen had a normal-ish upbringing, then he descended into chaos caused by his psychotic breaks, then he was able to work his way out of them to achieve a more complex and thereby more powerful understanding of himself and the world.
Andersen sees this process mirrored throughout nature (where both the world and the universe is constantly complexifying), throughout mythology as discussed in Maps of Meaning, and even in the rise of consciousness itself.8 He believes that life being rooted in the will to power solves the meaning crisis, because by understanding and acting in accordance with nature we can bridge the gap between our instincts and our thoughts and become self-actualizing. We can integrate the opinions of all those around us to help us become more complex individuals, we can integrate master and slave morality and our own competing drives to try to become the Overman, and we can help the world complexify in this non-zero sum process as well.
Under this perspective it is not a static end result that can be reached using a “good vs. bad” or “good vs. evil” moral judgments, or the will to nothingness hoping for a better world after death, but rather an understanding and embracing of the process of complexification itself that is the end goal; an acceptance of Heraclitus’s perspective of the only static thing is the nature of change itself. His is not a moral judgment per se but an objective argument for optimality – “This is the process that you participate in and the perspective you should have if you want to be psychologically healthy.” As Andersen argues:
We must come to view morality not as a static set of principles, facts, or objective truths, but rather as an ongoing process. The particular moral values adhered to by a group of people are highly dependent on the history and context of that people. Moral values evolve. This process is akin to the cultural ratcheting process that Michael Tomasello described in his (1999) book The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition. Tomasello argued that cultural evolution requires both the conservative impulse to imitate and the progressive impulse to tinker. As I suggested in my Intimations essay, this cultural ratcheting process is only one example of a process of complexification that plays out at all levels of analysis (see also Azarian, 2022; Wolf et al., 2018). It is our participation in this process, rather than any of its particular outcomes, that ought to be understood as sacred and objectively valuable….
Morality as process means that there are no timeless rules or principles that constitute “moral facts”. Morality evolves and must continue to evolve. This isn’t to say that every change in morality is good (the conservative impulse is just as important as the progressive impulse), but it is to say that the norms governing human behavior must continually overcome themselves as the problems facing humanity and civilization change.
Andersen isn’t arguing that all values are subjective, because a replacement for nihilism must have a basis in objectivity. But he is arguing that the process of change, descent, and rising into a more complex entity (if the entity survives the descent) is the universal, objective process that ties everything and everyone in life together, and therefore what is “good” (not from a moral perspective) is what optimizes that process and what is “bad” is what downgrades the optimization of that process.
Analysis of his argument (pros and cons)
Andersen’s ability to absorb, process, and synthesize a huge amount of information speaks to both his intelligence, drive, and how obsessed he has been with this topic for the past seven years. His Youtube series has been an impressive attempt to synthesize the latest scientific research and theories along with philosophy and history, and it has impacted my views on a variety of topics, the extent of which will be felt and absorbed over time. I can only assume he wrote the series as a way of helping others on their own complexification journeys, as well as his own.
To believe [as pantheism does] that everything is perfect, divine, eternal, also forces one to believe in eternal recurrence. Question: now that we have made ethics impossible, is such a pantheistic affirmation of all things also made impossible? No: in principle only an ethical god is overthrown. Is there any sense in imagining a god beyond good and evil? Would a pantheism of this kind be possible? Can we remove the idea of purpose from the process, and yet still affirm the process? That would be the case, if something were achieved within that process and at every moment of it – and always the same … Every basic trait underlying each and every event, expressing itself in every event – if it were experienced by an individual as his own basic trait – would force that person triumphally to endorse every instant of everyday existence.
With that said, the positives of Andersen’s approach appear to me to be as follows. An adaption of his perspective would lead to
living life much more in the moment, to appreciate life for what it is, and not just wait for justice or a better life after we die;
a Buddhist or Stoic-like appreciation for pain and suffering through valuing and respecting the complexificaton fall-and-rise process itself, in the hope that it would lead to greater complexification and more power once one arises out of it;
a greater willingness to consider other sides and perspectives in the hopes of absorbing them to become a more complex and powerful person;
a greater intention of pursuing non-zero sum games to try to make the world a better place for all; and
an appreciation of the will to power underlying all things that removes a dualist perspective and ties humanity back firmly into our role within the world and not separate and apart of it.9 This in turn gives us a greater appreciation for the inter-connectedness of all things and elevates the importance of sustainability of nature, animals, and universal brotherhood.
These are all admirable traits that focus on what we can do as individuals that provide a clear route toward offering a solution toward the meaning crisis/nihilism that our society is in. It is indeed a viable and very different worldview than the nihilist perspective we are all deeply immersed in, whether we are religious or secular.
There are a couple of significant criticisms of this approach, though:
The material world seems fundamentally imbued with metaphysical evil, in the sense that every living creature can only survive by consuming other living things. Even plants have a will to power and seek to grow and expand and have defense mechanisms against predation. Andersen tries to hand-wave this away by arguing that our cognition is too limited to make moral judgments about reality, that we can either accept it as it is or not, therefore Shopenhauer’s philosophical pessimism is wrong because it presumes to know more about the universe than our limited cognition allows, but I find that to be a weak argument. We can assign moral judgment on things while at the same time recognize our limitations as finite beings and that we can be wrong, so long as we retain the willingness to grow beyond our limited judgments when confronted with evidence to the contrary;
As a corollary to #1, Andersen argues that the increasing scope of non-zero sum games provides us an opportunity to work together in this process of complexification for the benefit of all, but a naturalist or pantheist perspective in relation to the Darwinian struggle for survival just as likely leads to increased conflict as increased cooperation, because there is no reason to accept losing other than fear of punishment from the winning side.10 In other words, a dualist perspective may provide incentives for losers to accept their current arrangements in the hope of justice in the afterlife; such a slave morality may increase societal stability;
The dualist perspective offers hope of justice and fulfillment in the afterlife. Philosophical naturalism or pantheism is good so long as your complexification process is working, but plenty of times the complexification process fails or you suffer life circumstances that seem too terrible to bear. If your mind or body give out, or you are thrown in prison for life, or cherished family members die, or you suffer any of innumerable tragedies, philosophical naturalism or pantheism offers no solace or hope from this – in other words, slave morality is an objectively more functional belief system if one finds oneself in a position of permanent weakness, which could happen to anyone. It’s a cold, cruel world and universe out there, subject to blind laws and an underlying current of unifying will to power; it offers no solace to those trampled under its feet. Keep in mind that Nietzsche went insane after seeing the suffering of a horse and spent his last decade of life bedridden, whether from his beliefs or otherwise. And another proponent of pantheism, Baruch Spinoza, inhaled microscopic particles of glass through his mouth and died young and in agony. What use were his beliefs to him then? Andersen self-describes as a complete agnostic, believing that all behavior and motivations have origins that can be described from an evolutionary psychology perspective, and that he has absolutely zero knowledge or intuition about a next world and that he is fully comfortable in this perspective — I would say this makes him unusual, and that such a perspective will not be so easy to convince others of. But pantheism or philosophical naturalism only works with an assumption that material reality is metaphysically neutral; if material reality is infused with metaphysical evil (point 1), though, then the tension between base reality and this perspective will inevitably result in mental or physical breakdown.
Andersen has a view of the history of humanity, the planet and the universe as ever-increasing complexity that isn’t really proven. He mentions at one point that increasing complexification happens until there is a descent or collapse of the entity, but if his argument rests on increasing complexification as an objectively good thing in an of itself, he should explore the process of collapse better — why it happens and what the implications of collapse are to his theory, and why he thinks the overall trend is toward this progressive complexity even in light of local or regional collapses. Why does he assume that universal complexity will expand forever? With respect to humanity, there may be a total collapse due to nuclear weapons use or consuming the world’s natural resources or for other reasons, and Andersen responds by saying well we then need to take care of each other in a non-zero sum competition, but what solace does that give us if collapse happens anyway?
The world is subject to ever-increasing levels of centralization and control, and for individuals, declining freedom of movement, freedom of thought, and freedom of expression, which I would like to see emphasized in his argument. One can look at history and politics to get a better sense of this, which I try to provide in my Neoliberal Feudalism Substack, but this centralization process is forever ongoing based on the frenetic chase for increasing levels of technological innovation. Central bank digital currencies are just the latest, but very major, step for ever-increasing centralization/control worldwide which will be used to micro-manage individual behavior on a scale never seen before in human history; Russia is the first to roll it out and formally legalize it. If ever increasing levels of centralization and control occurs in the complexification process he references, does that necessarily mean it will increase human happiness or fulfillment? If not, why should we embrace it?
Tied to point 5, Andersen’s approach is very individualist focused, but if one believes that the egalitarian ratchet effect rooted in Pauline Christianity is destroying western civilization, it is questionable whether his non-dualist approach has the motivational “juice” behind it to incentivize group action to stop this destruction. The prior attempt to transvalue egalitarian values was a failed German race-based attempt at a full transvaluation back into full warrior values, promising Germans unlimitedly high status if they won; on what basis would his approach incentivize group action, if at all? [To be clear, my approach is seeking a partial transvaluation of values so that warrior and priestly energies are in balance, not to seek a return to full warrior values]. Other than the German example, though, power politics seems to revolve around doubling down on the ressentiment of egalitarianism as a weapon for a new elite to take power. Is Andersen’s objective merely to give people a scientific basis for individual stoicism against life’s troubles, or is there room in this perspective for group action and if so, under what basis? Because as much as Andersen bitterly complains in his own life about the extreme levels of anti-white wokeness in the university system, it is hard to imagine this specific phenomenon if the United States was 90% instead of 60% white like it was merely a generation or two ago. Andersen would love to expand non-zero sum games to cover all of humanity so we can all work together to address humanity’s problems, but waving away the intense drive for tribal based identity is not so easily accomplished — and it may not be possible to accomplish at all.
This is a minor comment, but Andersen focuses a lot on right-brain chaos shamanic impulses, which he sees as associated with schizotypy personalities, versus left-brain order doctrinal impulses, which he sees as associated with autism-spectrum personalities. However, from personal experience I wonder to what extent people with lopsided energies one way or the other consciously or unconsciously understand the lopsidedness of their energies and seek out ways to balance them out.An autistic personality may find itself attracted to shamanic rites as a compensatory measure. Or Andersen, who self-identifies as a chaotic shamanistic type, has spent a tremendous amount of time and energy synthesizing his beliefs into an autistic, organized, systematized argument. In a political context there is a lot of overlap in the ideas and impulses of the far-left and the far-right, to the extent that Francis Parker Yockey thought that a far-left/far-right alliance was necessary to oppose globohomo. I think it would be helpful for Andersen to address compensatory measures for those with lopsided energies, one way or the other.
Conclusions
Andersen offers a thought provoking theory into what a transvaluation of values in an age of nihilism could look like. I think his argument should incorporate and try to respond to the criticisms listed above (which are meant as constructive criticism to help steel man his arguments), to the extent I am not misunderstanding or misrepresenting his arguments (which is possible). But he does an admirable job of synthesizing a great deal of information, gleaned through painstaking effort over many years, in a way aimed at trying to offer a specific path forward for humanity. What a revaluation of values should look like, overturning the nihilism brought about by 2,000 years of priestly egalitarianism, is an enormous, complicated, extremely difficult question, one that potentially drove Nietzsche to insanity before he could synthesize an answer, but it is the most important question one can ask if western civilization is to have any hope of a successful future at all, which looks increasingly unlikely. Hopefully we can all work toward trying to find a solution out of this mess together.11
Subscribe: Email delivery remains on Substack for now.
Addendum: Andersen released four posts at once on August 24 after a long publishing pause, three of which seem significantly off-tone from the rest of his sober, reasoned, scientifically minded content over the past months and years – those three posts are here, here and here, followed by 5-10 posts a day (!) in the days since. It seems like he suddenly adopted and is trying to mimic the strident, hyperbolic tone of Nietzsche, posting a bunch of Youtube links to various songs to get the reader into his frame of mind. In a footnote to one of the posts he admitted to recently starting smoking marijuana heavily after being cold-turkey for years; given his three prior mental breakdowns, this seems quite ill-advised. Marijuana induced psychosis is a very real thing, and I know otherwise high functioning, successful men who have experienced it. Brett, if you are reading this I highly recommend you cut out all marijuana use immediately. There has been a major change in tone, style, and content in these latest posts, and not to your benefit. I understand you currently think you are a misunderstood genius straddling the line between chaos and order, meant to be fought and rejected until your genius is accepted by the masses, and that you don’t care if others are concerned for you, but I hope you give these words serious consideration.
Addendum #2: And now Andersen is out with a wildly vituperative anti-Trump rant. Poor guy, he bitterly complains about not being able to find a job in academia because he’s a straight, white, non-woke male, but he can’t do a simple A + B = C in that Blormf was elected as a protest vote against this white erasure process, in spite of his personal failings and not because of them. The middle-America masses chose him because he was seen as the only option that hadn’t been co-opted by a system that hated them, not because he fooled them as a paragon of virtue (generally speaking; there is a contingent of braindead Trump worshippers who worship him as a cult of personality, and they deserve scorn like blind followers of any cult of personality. But these are a fairly small minority in my opinion). Andersen focuses his complaints on Blormf being a “cad” and not a “dad” in terms of his three wives and endless cheating, arguing he himself is so ethical and would never behave in such a deplorable way, bringing to mind Elliot Rogers (who Andersen discusses elsewhere) and how he was a “supreme gentleman”. I get a strong feeling that Andersen is currently experiencing difficulties with women.
It’s also ironic that Andersen stresses the blending of different ideas in order to achieve a higher-plane synthesis, yet rejects out of hand the feelings of half of the American population, and seems to fetishicize what he considers to be his greatly superior IQ. This is a major blind spot of his. It also brings to mind the Maurice Samuel quote about the nature of experts in his book “You Gentiles”, where he states:
There is no test or guarantee of a man’s wisdom or his reliability beyond what he says about life itself. Life is the touchstone: books must be read and understood in order that we may compare our experience in life with the sincere report of the experience of others. But such a one, who has read all the books extant on history and art, is of no consequence unless they are an indirect commentary on what he feels around him.
Hence, if I have drawn chiefly on experience and contemplation and little on books – which others will discover without my admission – this does not affect my competency, which must be judged by standards infinitely more difficult of application. Life is not so simple that you can test a man’s nearness to truth by giving him a college examination. Such examinations are mere games – they have no relation to reality. You may desire some such easy standard by which you can judge whether or not a man is reliable: Does he know much history? Much biology? Much psychology? If not, he is not worth listening to. But it is part of the frivolity of our outlook to reduce life to a set of rules, and thus save ourselves the agony of constant references to first principles. No: standardized knowledge is no guarantee of truth. Put down a simple question – a living question, like this: “Should A. have killed B.?” Ask it of ten fools: five will say “Yes”, five will say “No.” Ask it of ten intelligent men: five will say “Yes,” five will say “No.” Ask it of ten scholars: five will say “Yes,” five will say “No.” The fools will have no reasons for their decisions: the intelligent men will have a few reasons for and as many against; the scholars will have more reasons for and against. But where does the truth lie?
What, then, should be the criterion of a man’s reliability?
There is none. You cannot evade your responsibility thus by entrusting your salvation into the hands of a priest-specialist. A simpleton may bring you salvation and a great philosopher may confound you.
And so to life, as I have seen it working in others and felt it within myself, I refer the truth of what I say. And to books I refer only in so far as they are manifestations of life.”
1Per Wiki, Nietzsche had in 1886 announced (at the end of On the Genealogy of Morals) a new work with the title, The Will to Power: An Attempt at a Revaluation of All Values, the project under this title was set aside and some of its draft materials used to compose The Twilight of the Idols and The Antichrist (both written in 1888); the latter was for a time represented as the first part of a new four-part magnum opus, which inherited the subtitle Revaluation of All Values from the earlier project as its new title.
2On the The Genealogy of Morals III. 28: “Man, the bravest of animals and the one most accustomed to suffering, does not repudiate suffering as such; he desires it, he even seeks it out, provided he is shown a meaning for it, a purpose of suffering. The meaninglessness of suffering, not suffering itself, was the curse that lay over mankind so far – and the ascetic ideal offered man meaning! It was the only meaning offered so far; any meaning is better than none at all … man was saved thereby, he possessed a meaning, he was no longer like a leaf in the wind…he could now will something; no matter at first to what end, why, with what he willed: the will itself was saved.
We can no longer conceal from ourselves what is expressed by all that willing which has taken its direction from the ascetic ideal: this hatred of the human, and even more of the animal, and more still of the material, this horror of the senses, of reason itself, this fear of happiness and beauty, this longing to get away from all appearance, change, becoming, death, wishing, from longing itself – all this means – let us dare to grasp it – a will to nothingness, an aversion to life, a rebellion against the most fundamental presuppositions of life; but it is and remains a will! … And, to repeat in conclusion what I said at the beginning: man would rather will nothingness than not will.”
3 Curtis, if you ever read this, simplify your argument and make it clearer for non-tech nerds, but even then, color me extremely skeptical of a dictatorship with biometric-access guns that the dictator turns on and off with the push of a button answering to a governmental corporate board of directors and pursuing NOI at all costs somehow resulting in utopia.
4 Andersen quotes Tsarina Doyle’s work “Nietzsche’s Metaphysics of the Will to Power” at around 42 minutes: “…If we are to be motivated to act according to values […] then they must be deemed to be objective in some other way that connects and subjects them to constraint by the empirical world. This alternative account of the objectivity of our values must, therefore, be a metaphysically laden one and must reflect the fundamental relationship between mind and the empirical world….Nietzsche allows for the objectivity of value by holding that values are metaphysically continuous with the dispositional fabric of reality….without this metaphysical claim, ‘Nietzsche is guilty of perpetuating the will to nothingness that informs nihilism rather than adequately responding to it.’”
6 Andersen comments at one point early in the series on Peterson’s descent into political obsession, his seeking of the media spotlight and other embarrassing decisions, which he has been very disappointed by. I have also been extremely turned off by Peterson, especially that he got the COVID vaccine which he stated was solely due to societal pressure (!), his regular public crying breakdowns, and his other moral failures. I have not read Maps of Meaning and it’s entirely possible that Peterson’s early work was much stronger than his current public persona, but I neither have much interest in mythology nor do I like Peterson’s excessively flowery writing style, so I do not plan to read his work.
7 Andersen posits that highly right-brain dominance is associated with schizophrenia, chaos, and shaman/prophet types, while highly left-brain dominance is associated with autism, order, and priest types.
8 According to Andersen consciousness arises from the complexification process and is defined as the difference in power between the output of the brain as a whole (where all the constituent parts work together as part of a non-zero sum game) versus the output of the brain broken down into its constituent parts.
And do you know what “the world” is to me? Shall I show it to you in my mirror? This world: a monster of energy, without beginning, without end; a firm, iron magnitude of force that does not grow bigger or smaller, that does not expend itself but only transforms itself […] This world is the will to power—and nothing besides! And you yourselves are also this will to power—and nothing besides!
10 Tree of Woe seems to agree in a post about the errors of Ayn Rand Objectivism, where he argues: “Interactions between human beings are sometimes positive sum, but sometimes they are zero sum, and the line between them is not always clear cut. A Randian society cannot endure in the face of zero-sum behavior, but the human species cannot reproduce without such behavior. The zero-sum competition for status and reproductive success is both necessary and meaningful to our lives. Take it away and the result is not Randian man, but the hikikomori of Japan.”
11 On that note, check out ’s John Carter’s weekly compendium of Substack posts across the spectrum of the dissident right, which offers a lot of thought provoking content and provides a point of unity across a fractured space.