Look to the future by looking to the past

The first fifth of the 21st Century came to a conclusion just two short weeks ago, and as we cross into the greater part of this decade, one may conclude that based on our surroundings, society is failing.

Indeed, liberal democracy has taken its natural course. With the already established steal of the election–admittedly my friends I have never been fond of Donald Trump, I firmly believe however his loss represents something bigger than he could ever be–our nations process of government is now totally in the hands of career politicians, media enterprises, and billionaires. These people do not care about you, they do not care about your voice, and they would rather you silenced or killed for objecting to such! One must wonder when this will be the course of action for dissenters such as ourselves?

The world feels very superficial when under the rule of these people. How could it not? From the time we wake up to when we go to sleep our data is harvested by Zuckerberg and his cartel, advertisements are shoved down our throats and constant stimuli from every possible surrounding penetrates our mind and gives us a state of deliriousness. It is not hard to find it maddening; but it is the truly righteous who can see past this and work towards a better future.

On that better future, it is considered a grave error in today’s popular culture to propose looking to the past for guidance on said future. And to be frank, I’d say that’s a load of shit. Within ten years we went from, “Bake the cake, bigot” to “Let drag queens read Cinderella to your kids, bigot.” Our moral compass as a society is failing, more and more people reject Christ and his gospel by the day, and the younger generations seem all but lost. This is a process we must revert if we are to survive.

My point in all of this, while it may seem rambling at times, is that our culture is dying, and we must preserve it at all costs. I myself am a member of the younger generation, but I have distant, faint memories of my childhood in which there was no degeneracy. The nuclear family was still somewhat in tact (though it has been systematically purged since the 70’s) and religion was still commonplace in the homes of the people.

When you ask who is to blame for this, it is very easy to fall down the typical rabbit holes of radicaliziation. Capitalists, Jews, etc. You’ll hear it all from these internet know-alls who will disguise their bigotry as guidance in an effort to force the blame onto one group of people. While my friends Capitalism has done a sizable damage to our society, we must never forget the names of the Congressmen who sold out our nation, the Supreme Court Justices who rejected our pleas, the Police who we went to bat to defend only for them to put a bullet through Ashli Babbitt’s neck. The media elites who wish to brainwash your children and send them off to “Enlightenment Camps” (never forget the PBS incident) and force degeneracy into their young, impressionable minds. Remember the true enemies, and you’ll go far when the time comes to confront them.

It’s not hard to feel hopeless in all of this, but when your hope is dwindling, look to Christ, look to the culture of the past, and do what you must do. Marry, start a family, go to church, be faithful and true to yourself. And above all, be a Fascist.

While I am, myself, a Catholic, I would like to close with a quote from Martin Luther. Yes, I know many of the Catholics reading this may not entirely agree with the author of this quote, but now more than ever it holds true.

Tomorrow we live, brothers.

AVE!

“Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree…” – Martin Luther

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