The Jan 6th attack on the capitol preceeded by half a year of attacks.
But we won't talk about all those.
But we won't talk about all those.
I'd call it prescient but it probably never changes.
It's really funny that these people use the same psychological impulse as 1938 germany while pretending they're so much better as human beings.
It's really funny that these people use the same psychological impulse as 1938 germany while pretending they're so much better as human beings.
It's interesting that in an era where everything is psychologized to the degree that solely psychological arguments are made for major swaths of civilization, we are living in an era of the highest mental illness recorded history.
As an observation based on the data, it would definitely suggest that either the psychological way of looking at the world is not actually true and so actions taken upon that foundation don't have the effect that we expect, or something else is so bad in the world that in spite of being overdosed on treatment we are still worse than that we've ever been.
Some people think it's because we are poorer than we've been, but humans have been in desperate grinding poverty for most of their existence as a species and weren't this bad. You can go to places where people still live in desperate grinding poverty but they aren't mentally ill the way that Western Civilization is.
I tried to avoid the use of the word modern because the modern period was actually a very long time ago now. The modern period was the era of heavy industrialization and the massive increase in quality of life leading up to the world wars. That was our. Of high social cohesion, where people really felt like their civilizations had a powerful future. The combination of world war 1, the great depression, and world war II and all of the horrors that came with all three of those ended up sort of becoming a repudiation for western civilization of the modernist mindset, and so the postmodernist period began, and whereas the modernist worldview was practical and masculine and scientific, the postmodernist world was in many ways a rejection of these things -- one of the core philosophies of postmodernism is that nothing is real, and that many ways the world is made up of social constructions that may have at some point been based on reality but that reality is long gone, just like a save icon being made up of floppy disk that generations of kids have never seen. The modernist period had a respect for the wisdom of our ancestors, and everyone became well versed in the classics such as the works of the Greeks. The postmodernist period tried to reject that ancient wisdom as well as all common sense.
Men do not like being compared to dogs, but in the grand scheme of life on Earth the two have a lot more in common than they have different. A large dog with lots of energy needs to be given some kind of labor. If you don't walk your dog and run out their energy, they will make tasks for themselves, and without leadership to tell them what to do, the tasks would be things that are unproductive or anti productive such as digging up the yard, tearing up the furniture, barking at people passing in the street and trying to bite the mailman. In the same way, lacking meaning because it has been systematically eliminated by the ideology of the era takes all of the reasons to live away from humans, and then in the in the same way that the dog goes crazy so does the man.
I've noticed that ever since my son was born, and I made the decision that my goal was to try to raise him to be as great as possible, my mental health has never been more solid. I have a mission now, and one of the things that I had to do very early on was reject postmodernism -- within the first week of my son being alive I realize that I had a little voice in the back of my head telling me to stop saying heartfelt things because they could be taken as double or triple entendres. Shutting down that valueless but hyperanalytical part of my brain (or at least not allowing it to dominate every thought that pops into my head) ended up being a huge weight off. We can laugh when someone says something that is a double entendre, but our entire society has become based upon it and based upon analyzing things from six different angles in a heartbeat, all supervised by a moralism process that Warren does not to make judgments about anyone or anything.
Tl;Dr bro it's just a meme don't overthink it.
As an observation based on the data, it would definitely suggest that either the psychological way of looking at the world is not actually true and so actions taken upon that foundation don't have the effect that we expect, or something else is so bad in the world that in spite of being overdosed on treatment we are still worse than that we've ever been.
Some people think it's because we are poorer than we've been, but humans have been in desperate grinding poverty for most of their existence as a species and weren't this bad. You can go to places where people still live in desperate grinding poverty but they aren't mentally ill the way that Western Civilization is.
I tried to avoid the use of the word modern because the modern period was actually a very long time ago now. The modern period was the era of heavy industrialization and the massive increase in quality of life leading up to the world wars. That was our. Of high social cohesion, where people really felt like their civilizations had a powerful future. The combination of world war 1, the great depression, and world war II and all of the horrors that came with all three of those ended up sort of becoming a repudiation for western civilization of the modernist mindset, and so the postmodernist period began, and whereas the modernist worldview was practical and masculine and scientific, the postmodernist world was in many ways a rejection of these things -- one of the core philosophies of postmodernism is that nothing is real, and that many ways the world is made up of social constructions that may have at some point been based on reality but that reality is long gone, just like a save icon being made up of floppy disk that generations of kids have never seen. The modernist period had a respect for the wisdom of our ancestors, and everyone became well versed in the classics such as the works of the Greeks. The postmodernist period tried to reject that ancient wisdom as well as all common sense.
Men do not like being compared to dogs, but in the grand scheme of life on Earth the two have a lot more in common than they have different. A large dog with lots of energy needs to be given some kind of labor. If you don't walk your dog and run out their energy, they will make tasks for themselves, and without leadership to tell them what to do, the tasks would be things that are unproductive or anti productive such as digging up the yard, tearing up the furniture, barking at people passing in the street and trying to bite the mailman. In the same way, lacking meaning because it has been systematically eliminated by the ideology of the era takes all of the reasons to live away from humans, and then in the in the same way that the dog goes crazy so does the man.
I've noticed that ever since my son was born, and I made the decision that my goal was to try to raise him to be as great as possible, my mental health has never been more solid. I have a mission now, and one of the things that I had to do very early on was reject postmodernism -- within the first week of my son being alive I realize that I had a little voice in the back of my head telling me to stop saying heartfelt things because they could be taken as double or triple entendres. Shutting down that valueless but hyperanalytical part of my brain (or at least not allowing it to dominate every thought that pops into my head) ended up being a huge weight off. We can laugh when someone says something that is a double entendre, but our entire society has become based upon it and based upon analyzing things from six different angles in a heartbeat, all supervised by a moralism process that Warren does not to make judgments about anyone or anything.
Tl;Dr bro it's just a meme don't overthink it.
One thing about many conspiracy theories is that we find out that nothing really needs to be a hidden conspiracy anymore.
Its like they'll just come straight out and say "yeah we've actually been using contrails to spread mind control chemicals for like 60 years. What are you gonna do about it, bitch?" And apparently there's no negative consequences except for the journalist who first breaks the story who has to live in a bunker on the moon for the rest of his life to avoid stray sniper fire.
Its like they'll just come straight out and say "yeah we've actually been using contrails to spread mind control chemicals for like 60 years. What are you gonna do about it, bitch?" And apparently there's no negative consequences except for the journalist who first breaks the story who has to live in a bunker on the moon for the rest of his life to avoid stray sniper fire.
I'm seeking truth so I don't know if I'm right either. It's just a journey, but I like putting thoughts like this down so I have to articulate them fully and usually from there I can also start to research my assumptions.
Certain political philosophies claim that the West is a patriarchy, and when you compare the way that the West works to true patriarchies historically and in the present day, you can see that that's just not the case.
So let's start off with what a patriarchy would look like. Under a true patriarchy, the father, the head of the family, at the head of the entire family, would have immense political power over the entire family and would essentially be the dictator of their family. Ancient Rome was a patriarchy. The head of the household could straight up murder his wife, and it really wasn't a big deal. The head of the household controlled all the slaves, and was the one who made all the decisions about how resources were to be divvied out amongst family members.
This concept of a nuclear family relatively speaking derives from the UK and the US as well as commonwealth nations, but tends to exist in some form throughout Europe. In addition to pure structure, there's a question of inheritance. In the nuclear family, whoever gets the inheritance is essentially arbitrary. It might be the firstborn son, the favorite daughter, it might be everyone, it might be nobody. By contrast, in other societies the firstborn son inherits everything, the secondborn son might be allowed to stay and help, maybe the third, but generally there's nothing left for sons past that, and there was never anything for the daughters. Such rules of inheritance also cast long shadows on history and a country's economic distribution, as power can accumulate in firstborn sons, or it can disperse amongst many descendants.
It's something that seems alien when you look at media from other cultures, the level of power the father or the grandfather has over the family. In the west, if your father disagrees with your marriage it's unfortunate but largely meaningless. In much of the east, if your father disagrees with your marriage you may have your whole life stripped from you. As a westerner you look at that media and it just looks odd, like nothing similar to your own life.
By contrast, Western Civilization is not a patriarchy at all, it is a nuclear family. Instead of the head of the family having overwhelming power over the entire bloodline, each individual goes out into the world on their own to make their own fortune and find their own power. As a result, rather than the patriarch being the head of the family, the family as a unit is a thing unto itself. In some families the man may be dominant, but another family is the female might be dominant, and another family still there might be a very reasonable balance of power.
Now I'm not talking at all about whether men have many positions of power in society, because in the grand scheme of things I don't think that that's really patriarchy per se. Patriarchy is rule by patriarchs, rule by the male heads of families. Under such a system, there is no place for matriarchs in positions of power, and there's also no place for men who are not patriarchs.
Indeed, it is I think no mistake, no accident that feminism only came from Western civilization and to an extent doesn't exist in many other civilizations today. That family structure which is so different from patriarchy ends up being the impetus for women to gain equal political power and equal treatment under the law because governments often end up taking the form of the family.
There can be imbalances and imperfections in a system without that system being those imbalances and imperfections. I think that's one of the places where academia ends up really broken -- they see that problems exist and then attribute those problems to the entire foundation of the society when they don't realize they're a part of that society and that society they hate so much is the foundation that has them asking the questions. In western societies, the imbalances and imperfections (at least the ones that can be solved)
A society with universal suffrage is one that by definition isn't a patriarchy in government, either. It would be easy to give voting rights only to the heads of families -- imagine the mafia, where the male heads of each family get together to make decisions. Now *there's* a patriarchy.
I think it presents a major strategic blunder among feminists to constantly attack western society when it is the one society on earth that consistently sees women as equals. Once western culture collapses (and arguably it is in the process right now), if virtually any other region's culture takes over it's a near total certainty that feminism will be destroyed.
Some people advocate for the destruction of the family as a unit altogether, insisting that such a structure is oppressive towards women. There are places that exists today, but they're not good. Fact is, the data shows definitively that our lives are better with at least 2 parents who are with you throughout your entire childhood. If you consider the outcomes for women, women should practically speaking want men raised with fathers, because men who grow up without fathers make up a disproportionate number of violent criminals at an overwhelming rate, and also make up a disproportionate number of sexual offenders. Far from making life better for women, such a society would be markedly worse.
I think in part it's from living in a society that's so good that women don't realize how bad things could be. They don't realize in other societies how unsafe women are, how much like chattel they're treated, how little agency they have, and that it's not because they don't have feminism, it's baked right into those cultures in the same way that feminism is baked into the concept of a nuclear family where a man and a woman court each other and get married largely independently of their families.
This goes back to a core point: The right won't like it, the left won't like it, but western civilization is unique in how it is structured, and so if one wants to conserve western civlization then progressivism and social justice are in a sense baked in and you can't fully remove it without having something new that isn't western civilization anymore, and also western civilization is unique in how it is structured, and the only reason anything resembling "progress" is possible is because the fundamental ideas of the west are compatible with and in fact became the garden from which these ideas sprouted and grew, and any other civilization would not have (and did not) come up with these ideas and without western influence would not continue to accept them.
Something the left won't like, but the right will is that there's no guarantee that progress is social justice and what today is called progressivism. It's entirely possible that having gone further than anyone else, progress ends up being a more explicit acceptance of objective reality and a push to achieve balance between many different ideas that are all valid but don't exist in a vacuum, rather than a continued push towards only one or two ideas.
So let's start off with what a patriarchy would look like. Under a true patriarchy, the father, the head of the family, at the head of the entire family, would have immense political power over the entire family and would essentially be the dictator of their family. Ancient Rome was a patriarchy. The head of the household could straight up murder his wife, and it really wasn't a big deal. The head of the household controlled all the slaves, and was the one who made all the decisions about how resources were to be divvied out amongst family members.
This concept of a nuclear family relatively speaking derives from the UK and the US as well as commonwealth nations, but tends to exist in some form throughout Europe. In addition to pure structure, there's a question of inheritance. In the nuclear family, whoever gets the inheritance is essentially arbitrary. It might be the firstborn son, the favorite daughter, it might be everyone, it might be nobody. By contrast, in other societies the firstborn son inherits everything, the secondborn son might be allowed to stay and help, maybe the third, but generally there's nothing left for sons past that, and there was never anything for the daughters. Such rules of inheritance also cast long shadows on history and a country's economic distribution, as power can accumulate in firstborn sons, or it can disperse amongst many descendants.
It's something that seems alien when you look at media from other cultures, the level of power the father or the grandfather has over the family. In the west, if your father disagrees with your marriage it's unfortunate but largely meaningless. In much of the east, if your father disagrees with your marriage you may have your whole life stripped from you. As a westerner you look at that media and it just looks odd, like nothing similar to your own life.
By contrast, Western Civilization is not a patriarchy at all, it is a nuclear family. Instead of the head of the family having overwhelming power over the entire bloodline, each individual goes out into the world on their own to make their own fortune and find their own power. As a result, rather than the patriarch being the head of the family, the family as a unit is a thing unto itself. In some families the man may be dominant, but another family is the female might be dominant, and another family still there might be a very reasonable balance of power.
Now I'm not talking at all about whether men have many positions of power in society, because in the grand scheme of things I don't think that that's really patriarchy per se. Patriarchy is rule by patriarchs, rule by the male heads of families. Under such a system, there is no place for matriarchs in positions of power, and there's also no place for men who are not patriarchs.
Indeed, it is I think no mistake, no accident that feminism only came from Western civilization and to an extent doesn't exist in many other civilizations today. That family structure which is so different from patriarchy ends up being the impetus for women to gain equal political power and equal treatment under the law because governments often end up taking the form of the family.
There can be imbalances and imperfections in a system without that system being those imbalances and imperfections. I think that's one of the places where academia ends up really broken -- they see that problems exist and then attribute those problems to the entire foundation of the society when they don't realize they're a part of that society and that society they hate so much is the foundation that has them asking the questions. In western societies, the imbalances and imperfections (at least the ones that can be solved)
A society with universal suffrage is one that by definition isn't a patriarchy in government, either. It would be easy to give voting rights only to the heads of families -- imagine the mafia, where the male heads of each family get together to make decisions. Now *there's* a patriarchy.
I think it presents a major strategic blunder among feminists to constantly attack western society when it is the one society on earth that consistently sees women as equals. Once western culture collapses (and arguably it is in the process right now), if virtually any other region's culture takes over it's a near total certainty that feminism will be destroyed.
Some people advocate for the destruction of the family as a unit altogether, insisting that such a structure is oppressive towards women. There are places that exists today, but they're not good. Fact is, the data shows definitively that our lives are better with at least 2 parents who are with you throughout your entire childhood. If you consider the outcomes for women, women should practically speaking want men raised with fathers, because men who grow up without fathers make up a disproportionate number of violent criminals at an overwhelming rate, and also make up a disproportionate number of sexual offenders. Far from making life better for women, such a society would be markedly worse.
I think in part it's from living in a society that's so good that women don't realize how bad things could be. They don't realize in other societies how unsafe women are, how much like chattel they're treated, how little agency they have, and that it's not because they don't have feminism, it's baked right into those cultures in the same way that feminism is baked into the concept of a nuclear family where a man and a woman court each other and get married largely independently of their families.
This goes back to a core point: The right won't like it, the left won't like it, but western civilization is unique in how it is structured, and so if one wants to conserve western civlization then progressivism and social justice are in a sense baked in and you can't fully remove it without having something new that isn't western civilization anymore, and also western civilization is unique in how it is structured, and the only reason anything resembling "progress" is possible is because the fundamental ideas of the west are compatible with and in fact became the garden from which these ideas sprouted and grew, and any other civilization would not have (and did not) come up with these ideas and without western influence would not continue to accept them.
Something the left won't like, but the right will is that there's no guarantee that progress is social justice and what today is called progressivism. It's entirely possible that having gone further than anyone else, progress ends up being a more explicit acceptance of objective reality and a push to achieve balance between many different ideas that are all valid but don't exist in a vacuum, rather than a continued push towards only one or two ideas.
The meaning of life is to grow and become someone worthy of raising a child who will become much like you, and then help that child (or those children if you have many) achieve their potential so they can eventually become someone worthy of raising a child and start the cycle again.
I sorta feel like if you can be "gatekept" from a hobby where you don't need to ask permission to start, to engage, or to continue to engage, then you should be because you're clearly not in it for the right reasons.
"I wanted to participate in a hobby where I sit alone and do a thing I like intently for hours at a time, but someone in another state told me I couldn't so I'm thinking about quitting" Oh yah? That's terrible! You should quit immediately.
"I wanted to participate in a hobby where I sit alone and do a thing I like intently for hours at a time, but someone in another state told me I couldn't so I'm thinking about quitting" Oh yah? That's terrible! You should quit immediately.
Ironically, KOTOR 2 basically was what the new trilogy desperately wanted to be, but unlike the new trilogy people really like KOTOR 2 (in spite of it only being half done) because it's made with love and ambition to make a great star wars thing.
If you want to fulfil a dream of beating women, not only is it acceptable, you'll be treated like an American hero!
They might make statues of you for your sacrifice!
They might make statues of you for your sacrifice!

"no you're supposed to pay overpriced crap remakes that include all the current things! You're not supposed to just port it yourself and enjoy it for years on end!!!!"
It's been a good year for open source gaming for me. Not only did I find out a bunch of new games had open source ports (ReVolt was an RC racer back in the day I just found out has an open source port! https://rvgl.org/ ) but my new handheld game consoles play a lot of open source games out of the box.
It's surprising how much opening the code can keep a game alive looong past its best before date.
It's surprising how much opening the code can keep a game alive looong past its best before date.
Every time I see Doom 3 I think the same thing:
"But damn System Shock 2 is a good game. I should go play it."
"But damn System Shock 2 is a good game. I should go play it."