@ArthurMacwaters We are far more enslaved to the bottom 1% than the top1%.
In fact, most of your real world problems in life can be attributed to societies repercussions with dealing with the bottom 1% of society.
Almost everything good in your life has come from the top 1%
Let me break it down in a simple way that I’ve been reporting from the beginning.
To invent a vaccine for a disease that didn’t exist, our scientific Einsteins used taxpayer money to partner with communist China to create the dangerous virus in a lab—So that they could create a vaccine for it.
Covid was a result of primarily US funded vaccine research, and that’s the thing they could not let you know.
They stopped at nothing to obfuscate, misdirect, cover their tracks, protect themselves, and controversialize anyone telling the truth.
The scientific establishment and media aided and abetted.
I can think of no more impactful, crimes and violations that have occurred in our lifetime.
Naturally, it's an Indian who decides to ensloppify gaming by turning it into SaaS.
It's not often discussed that SaaS, payment plans for Chipotle, renting clothes, all this "IT'S MY MONEY AND I WANT IT NOW" nonsense is a byproduct of the browning of America. Your average Mexican, Filipino, Indian, Thai etc. is a debt slave on the level that makes your average Kool-Aid pineapple enjoyer look like Dave Ramsey.
Ever wonder how and why the turd world adopted smartphones? They came to them relatively late; as recently as 2014, the average Filipino owned a flip phone. They buy poverty phones on payment plans that basically amount to renting them, since by the time they pay off the loan, the phone is so old they have to replace it.
Turd world countries use debt in place of taxation, because it's impossible to tax low-IQ, dishonest people who work for cash payments and in many cases don't even have bank accounts. Debt appeals to the 80-IQ mind because they don't understand the consequences of a 36 percent interest rate. In Thailand, government employees get massive loans that they're require to pay off as a condition of quitting their jobs. Government salaries (both civil service and military) are pathetically low, which means that this is basically indentured servitude. Basic functions that operate on trust do not work correctly in these countries. In Mexico, in order to rent an apartment, you need a "fiador," a cosigner who also owns property in the state you're renting in. Many of these places still have debtors' prisons, which were abolished in the Anglo world centuries ago.
This model of entrenched debt in software was facilitated by the transition from physical to digital media; can't charge me a monthly subscription for my Office 2000 CD-ROM. But the brownification of America is what is cementing it. I used to work for a company that sold an expensive product via an Affirm-esque payment plan. We got constant complaints about their 40 percent interest rate, as it was somehow under our control. They charge 40 percent interest because morons like you PAY IT, because you're too high time preference to understand that you can skip buying a 12-pack of Busch Light for the next month and buy our product upfront.
Payment plans used to be a fixture of American life but were gradually phased out as Americans became wealthier, exercised more financial prudence, and got access to better-quality credit as a result. Remember "layaway?" Called that because you'd make payments on a purchase and the staff would "lay it away" until you paid in full. Most retailers got rid of layaway in the 80s because the economy was booming and Americans had easier access to credit cards. It made a brief comeback during the Great Recession but under more restrictive terms (e.g. Walmart only offered it during the Christmas shopping season).
Now the entire economy is layaway. Pay for your McDouble in four easy installments. Rent your Xbox for $100 a month. It's degenerate, it's brownoid, it's debt slavery.
What I struggle with most is the suspension of the inevitable.
For the first forty years of my life, if you told me millions of men had crossed the English Channel and raped 250,000 girls, I would have said war is inevitable.
An alternative wouldn’t even be conceivable to me.
The sky is blue. The sun is hot. Ice is cold. Water is wet. Night follows day. The rape of 250,000 English girls precedes war.
And by war I mean death. The kind of death that came to most Japanese soldiers who took part in the Rape of Nanking.
Maybe it wouldn’t end with a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima, but it would burn hotter than the war that raged in Belfast when I was a kid.
And I don’t understand how the inevitable got suspended.
Many say cultural programming. But screenwriters still use rape to move a plot from tranquility to war.
This isn’t a post about morality or politics. I want to know the mechanism.
Whether or not you think war is the best response to the rape of five baseball stadiums full of girls, it would be the most likely outcome.
So how did that change?
How did we go, in the span of ten years, from the inevitability of war to the inevitability of the government doing nothing?
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