...one, two, three what are we fighting for?
What if they are right and modern industrialized society is not sustainable?
I for one am exhausted from fighting in a propaganda war with the powers that own all of the universities, jobs, money, media, and major industries, as well as the world’s political leaders, nations, and our digital twins.
We are slowly being imprisoned by modern technology. We are being threatened that if we do not comply with industrialized farming, digital currency, shots, surveillance… and pledge absolute obedience to the regime, we will lose our access to the industrialized world which now directs all of our resources including our travel/freedom, currency/agency, communication/connection, food, water, and medicine/health, and energy/shelter.
Up until now, our plan has been to awaken enough sheep to shift the power from psychopathic tyrants to regular people so that we could continue on in the lifestyles to which we have become accustomed.
When the winter becomes unsurvivably cold, we want to walk down the hall and turn our thermostats up. When our children are hungry, we want to zip down to the local grocer. When the people that we love are far away at their industrialized jobs, we want to be able to purchase an airline ticket to see them. When we are bored, we don’t want to walk to our neighbor’s house and share a meal, music, or moonshine, we want to switch on Netflix.
None of these things were available to mankind until the last 200 years of our 80,000-year timeline, or even during the last 6,000 years that we have been, “civilized.” (Consequently, has anyone else noticed that we are usually given health, quality of life, and longevity statistics that only cover this 200-year timespan?)
Maybe industrialized life on Earth isn’t “sustainable” for the human primate. Maybe sending and receiving one hundred twenty-one emails a day in an air-conditioned cubicle is the zoo version, not the wild version of humanity.
Maybe the only way to win this war is to walk off of their battlefield and return to our evolutionary foraging hunting farming heritage that kept us alive for the previous 79,800 years. Maybe Robin Dunbar was right and it’s true that human beings do not have the neocortex to connect with more than 150 people. Perhaps our inundation with the intimate details of the lives of THOUSANDS of people is not beneficial but taxing to our mental and physical health.
Maybe we are fighting for a lifestyle that is deadly to us. Maybe we should plant seeds in the ground beneath our feet and find our way back to the animals that we were created to be that had an intimate connection with their food and their tribes and knew very little of the world outside of the 150 people that mattered to them. Is it possible, with all of the lies that we have been told, that life before the Industrial Revolution was not innately perilous as we have been led to believe, apart from the cost of living within the tyrannical slave systems of those times?