Posted on 04/02/2021 9:18:09 AM PDT by CharlesOConnell
"All the trouble in the world is caused by the things people know aren't true". I don't know if that's absolute, but it does have a certain staying power, to explain the tsunami of confusion.
There's a very concrete example of this, about the Rockefellers, that can be pithily introduced by an anecdote about an older generation of controllers--the Roth Schild billionaires, who, for better or for worse, had some influence on the Holocaust. The towering figure of the German poet Heinrich Heine, saw on the street, Rotchschild walking hand in hand with the revolutionary philosopher Friedrich Engels.
The best explanation is in Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World". The various classes have Alphas, the Rothschilds and Rockefellers, at the top, served by the Betas, in our time, the Media, Government and University elite. The Betas never really become Alphas, but there is a glass ceiling they push up against. So, Barack Obama came with nothing except some secret P.R. training in posing as a secular messiah (the "black" man black people know wasn't their friend but had to support because he was "black").
The problem with our being the most brainwashed generations in human history, is when the bosses of the brainwashers themselves lose touch with reality.
This was shown in the case of 4 of John D. Rockefeller's 5 sons, who went to John Dewey's Lincoln School, were taught with deliberately-dumbed down "whole word" (vs. phonics) primary reading instruction, and came out, all 4 of them, with dislexia as a result. The story is in "Why Johnny Still Can't Read", the work of Dr. Samuel Blumenfeld (many great video lectures, still allowed on YouTube), and Alex Newman, the latter 2 of "The Crimes of the Educators" (YouTube review available.)
Blumenfeld discovered that in 1931, a Doctor told a conference of educators that "whole word" primary literacy instruction (which Dr. Seuss lamented he'd ever had anything to do with, late in his life), actually causes a form of brain damage, on kids still developing between kindergarten and 1st grade.
It is not good news that the people who imagine that, because they can get unimaginable wealth, they are wise enough to guide the course of human events, the ultra-ultra elite, are deluded by their own lies.
In that never-ending battle to answer the question, “Which Chesterton book should I read first?” one of the easiest and yet most pointed solutions came from that great English Chestertonian, Aidan Mackey, who said read any of Chesterton’s books first. It doesn’t matter as long as you start somewhere. The important thing is to start. You’ve wasted enough time already! And he was right in saying so.
Mr. Mackey, who is more fit than anyone on the planet to write an introduction to any one of Chesterton’s books, has written the introduction to a stunning new IHS Press edition of Chesterton’s Utopia of Usurers. Ironically, in the very first sentence of his introduction, he says this is not a book he would recommend to newcomers. And he’s right again.
“Start anywhere, but start,” is still sound advice. “But don’t start here,” is even sounder. The reason is that this is a book written in a rage, as Chesterton himself admits in his opening paragraph. We like to think of Chesterton as avuncular. We like to see him in his slippers. We want him to look comfortable because we want to be comfortable. But this is not a book that offers a lot of comfort.
Similarly, we may encourage people to read the Bible, but we don’t recommend that they start by opening to the prophet Amos. The comparison is a good one, for in addition to admitting that he is in a rage, Chesterton also admits to being a prophet-probably the only time in his entire literary career where he makes such a statement. That is because there is a direct connection to his writing in a rage and his writing as a prophet. He is not predicting the future, he is warning about an almost certain sort of future unless things change, and his hope, like the hope of the prophets of old, is that his prophecy may not come true.
He warns, among other things, of the runaway growth of a bureaucracy that answers to nobody, of compulsory education that dissatisfies everybody, of prisons that reform nobody, of wage slavery that encompasses almost everybody.
The thesis may be troubling, and disputed by some, but the facts he uses to support his point are indisputable…and even more troubling.
For instance, does anyone dispute that the arts have become degraded? And the most degrading thing is that the once noble use of the arts and the once noble skills of the artists have been co-opted by advertisers. Art – once the handmaiden of religion, that was used to express the inexpressible, to help lift our eyes and our hearts toward heaven – art is now merely a tool of commercial interests, used expressly for the purpose of getting the many to give money to the few. Now, says Chesterton, “the artist will work, not only to please the rich, but to increase their riches; which is a considerable step lower.”
Does anyone doubt that the media is controlled by only a few, and therefore, information is controlled by those same few? Says Chesterton, “Knowledge is now a monopoly, and comes through to the citizens in thin and selected streams, exactly as bread might come through to a besieged city. Men must wish to know what is happening, whoever has the privilege of telling them. They must listen to the messenger, even if he is a liar. They must listen to the liar, even if he is a bore.” A more apt description of the network news you will not find anywhere, even though this passage was written a lifetime before the first television signal beamed its boredom into anyone’s living room.
The modern world suffers horribly, from the physical poverty of the permanently poor, to the moral and spiritual poverty of the ever-shrinking middle class, and G.K. Chesterton lays much of the blame at the feet of the very rich. The rich, he says, are the new rulers, “kings that have taken no oath nor led us into any battle.” They have cast a spell, turning men into sheep. We follow them wherever their advertisements lead us. We believe whatever their headlines tell us. We watch them passively as they transform the world we live in. We think bigness is a guaranty of quality. We shop in their few big stores not because we can get what we want but because we get what we’re told, and we give in to a “queer idolatry of the enormous and the elaborate.” We know very well that we’re frustrated by it, and yet, says Chesterton, “this strange poetry of plutocracy prevails over people against their very senses.”
There is no question that the legitimate fears of the black holes of communism and socialism have served to fuel the sometimes mindless defense of capitalism, but capitalism can be as godless and soulless and evil as its counterpart at the other end of the spectrum, chewing up people and spitting them out. We should know that there is something terribly wrong when we find ourselves defending the unimaginable wealth of a Bill Gates because we feel forced to defend the system that creates such wealth. In Chesterton’s own day, the counterpart to Bill Gates was John D. Rockefeller. What Chesterton says about Rockefeller, and what he says he would say to Rockefeller’s face might surprise you. Until you remember that is the same thing Jesus said to the rich men of his own time. And like Jesus, Chesterton is not without compassion for the rich, who indeed have a heavy burden that is no doubt difficult to unload. He calls them, “these unlucky lucky men.” Those at the top may have created this utopia for themselves, but they are as miserable as everyone else.
Chesterton argues that the capitalist society has lost the meaning of honor, and with it, the meaning of disgrace. It has separated men, body and soul. We have been compartmentalized into wage earners, consumers, and audiences. Religion has been marginalized, and our souls are as bankrupt as our checkbooks. And the middle class, that backbone of society, has become soft and passive and has “lost its old appetite for liberty.” We have been kept in our place with “the encouragement of small virtues supporting capitalism, the discouragement of the huge virtues that defy it.”
The prophet has spoken. And most of his warnings have gone unheeded. And thus, most of his prophecies have been fulfilled. And the road ahead looks rougher than ever. But the prophet is still hoping to be wrong. There is still a way to change the future. The same way it was done in the past: repentance.
There is one final proof that this is a book of prophecy. Aidan Mackey points out in his introduction this is the only book that Chesterton wrote that has never been published in England. As Jesus said, a prophet is without honor in his own country.
The hyper rich suffer from obsessive compulsive dementia, or simply put - hoarder’s syndrome. This is because ALL feudal sadists suffer from 10,000 years of survival insecurity when, thanks to technology, survival is now, for the first time in human history, a piece of cake and any belief structures that play to the fight/flight reflex, i.e., the parasympathetic nervous system, high on adrenaline, are obsolete in the era of technological surplus for everyone. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
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Article could have been much shorter:
“I hate freedom, individual achievement and prosperity.”
Communists, the lazy and reactionaries always blame achievers and pretend the “filthy rich” are what holds everyone else back.
Bill Gates attitude is his problem, not his wealth.
Just like the gun isn’t the problem, the user is.
I have nothing against wealthy people who mind their own business.
When they start to try running mine or telling me what I am supposed to do, then we have a problem...
I was sure this article was going to be about
Harry, Meghan and Oprah.
The never ending battle to find a system that is good and fair.
The rich have leisure time and spend that time trying to think of ways that can help the world, without using the rich’s money.
The socialists/communists try to hide the fact that they want to be rich.
The vast majority are adrift right now.
Do they want to be rich or communist?
They are wandering.
Take your grandchild out for an ice cream and tell her about the story of the cross and the empty grave.
I have never had a problem with rich people. They have helped generously helped me make money for 50 years.
Some people make a life, the rest make excuses.
The rich boogie man story is a convenient excuse for loser-think.
Tytler had it right.
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