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A crucial question, that speaks to the broader frustration many people feel toward the ongoing crises—political, environmental, social—that is not only the failure of the center but also the collapse of the system itself. The center, sees itself as a space of compromise and stability, has been propped up for decades by a neoliberal ideology that promised endless growth, market solutions, and moderation, yet we are witnessing the disintegration of that stability.

Recognizing the Failure of the Center:

  • Erosion of Trust: People are aware that the centre—the moderate, mainstream establishment—has failed to deliver on its promises. Political polarization, the rise of populism, and a loss of faith in democratic institutions signal that the so-called center is unable to address the mess people face. Economic inequality, climate breakdown, and social injustice are not marginal concerns but #mainstreaming crises.
  • The System is Not Working: The underlying system—whether it’s neoliberal capitalism, representative democracy, or technocratic governance—are visibly incapable of dealing with the crises they have created and exacerbated. The #climatecrisis is intensifying, the wealth gap continues to widen, and the erosion of civil liberties in the name of security shows that the system prioritizes control and profit over human well-being. Some are starting to admit that the system itself is fundamentally broken.
  • Center Did Not Hold: The system was built on assumptions that endless growth, individualism, and market-driven solutions would bring prosperity for all, the reality is starkly different. The collapse of consensus politics, the weakening of institutions, and the rise of extreme right-wing movements are native to this center path, that could not hold because it was never stable to begin with.

Why Haven’t We Admitted It?

  • Denial of Alternatives: For the last 40 years, the mantra of #neoliberalism has been “there is no alternative” (#TINA), so as the system crumbles, people and institutions cling to the belief that it’s the only path. This ideological blindness has so far prevented the meaningful change we need from taking root, as alternatives are either dismissed as utopian or subverted into market-friendly forms.
  • Fear of Uncertainty: The collapse of the system brings with it the fear of uncertainty. People, even those disillusioned with the status quo, fear what might come next when the system fails. This fear manifests as apathy, #blocking or retreat into isolation, due to the scale of the problems seems overwhelming.
  • Perpetuation by the few greedy and nasty people who “benefit”: The #deathcult worship still works—though only for a small, powerful few who benefit from the status quo. As long as they control much of the media, politics, and economy, the narrative of the center and the system’s viability will continue to be pushed. This gatekeeping prevents #KISS acknowledgment of systemic failure.

What Happens Next?

  • Collapse of “Legitimacy”: We are already witnessing a growing collapse of the priests of the deathcult and their “legitimacy” in institutions across the globe, from governments to corporations. We are also seeing the rise of decentralized movements, from the #Fediverse to local grassroots activism, which shows that people are looking for alternative ways to organize outside the path that has failed them.
  • Emergence of New Storys: One of the tasks ahead is to create new narratives that challenge the current system, offering visions of sustainable, cooperative, and inclusive futures. Where grassroots movements, technology, and environmental justice play a key role in this shift, offering both practical solutions and different ideological frameworks that current counter the fear-driven status quo.
  • Radical Imagination: Admitting the system didn’t work requires embracing a radical imagination, to think beyond the limitations of the normal political and economic paths. This means reconnecting with hope, while recognizing the balance of collective action over individualism.

In so many ways, people are already admitting the failure of the center and the system that supports this, though often not explicitly. The challenge is how to move from recognition to practical DIY grassroots action, from seeing the collapse to building what comes next. That requires tapping into the potential in grassroots networks, tech communities, and activist spaces to foster a viable path. You can see a part of this path in the work done on the #OMN for the last ten years.

When do you think we reach a critical mass where this failure is acknowledged widely, and what role do you see for grassroots #DIY movements in driving that change?

https://hamishcampbell.com/recognizing-the-failure-of-the-center/

@info No, neoliberalism didn't say there was no alternative. It said there were certainly alternatives, but you won't like the result.

And now we see people going down the alternatives on the left and right ends, and they don't like the results.

No uncertainty there. Just conformation that the results would indeed be pretty negative.

One really annoying thing in all these discussions is that the thing is not the thing. Neoliberalism isn't actually neoliberalism. It isn't reducing government in order to let the market decide things, it is growing the government while removing anything that might actually help the common Man.

It's like you're getting hit on by someone that you don't like, and they keep on saying that they're going to leave you alone but then they just keep on escalating. It happened so long that you start using the phrase "leaving me alone" to refer to getting hit on even harder. And it becomes really tough to talk about because people here you complaining about this guy leaving you alone, when in reality you're really talking about the fact his hands are already down your pants.
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Yep it is a mess.