I think we’ve had enough of the pandemic charade

To a certain extent, I’ll play along with the coronavirus farce. I’ll keep my distance, stand on the blue dots in a check-out line. But that’s about as far as I’ll go. Using a freshly sanitized cart is ironically disgusting, as they are usually still wet from whatever chemical brew they’ve been dowsed with. I’ll take nature’s pathogens over sterile toxins any day. I still see people wearing the dangerous N95 masks, suffocating on their own carbon dioxide, as well as the middle-aged crowd scared out of their wits, and I think it’s high time we give up this superstitious fear over a phantom illness that poses a risk only to the very old and immunocompromised. Our sanity is at stake. Shutting down society over a mild infection is something only a hypochondriac would think a wise choice. And the news is apparently brainstorming with those rare people for whom the world outside their homes is a waking nightmare of germs. No, we are done with this charade. Those that want to cower in their homes should be allowed to. But they should have no influence over the lives of others. If they want to play Russian roulette with their lives by injecting a dangerous, untested coronavirus vaccine, let them. But don’t force me to do the same. I place my trust in the real miracle of evolution, the process that has gifted us with our miraculous immune system. We have evolved to handle mild infections and to develop and pass on a natural herd immunity to COVID-19, directly contributing to that evolutionary process. I can think of no act more dangerous than tampering with evolutionary forces, which is what is apparently being suggested with the fast-tracking of an RNA vaccine. Let’s ditch the crazy talk, and remove the crazies from power, before they sanitize us right off a cliff.

NYC mayor De Blasio continues to harass Jewish community while giving a pass to mobs of protestors

De Blasio has the gates to a Jewish playground welded shut: This is why libertarians want to reduce government’s power, because you get people like this who wield it like a kid who finds his dad’s gun.

De Blasio asks contact tracers not to ask COVID-positive individuals if they’ve attended BLM protests: And this reveals several things: that it’s offensive to the privacy and dignity of the person being interrogated, and that COVID isn’t dangerous to the non-eldery adults attending these protests. And really, if anything positive does emerge from the protests, it will be the rapidly-attained herd immunity to COVID-19. These mostly under-50 people will develop natural, life-long immunity without the need for any vaccine or treatment.

The post-lockdown political juggernaut has arrived

Here it is, in all its coalescing rage, the progeny of lockdowns, the inevitable outcome of decimating society through mass house arrest: a rapidly-growing socio-political movement that aims to take power. Tucker Carlson recognizes that obvious fact in this segment. While I don’t agree with much of what he says here, he’s one of the only commentators to point out the obviousness of this organization’s power and influence.

The chaos of the mob is distracting from the issue of police privilege

Statues being torn down, mobs of unemployed youth taking over entire city blocks, the looting and burning stores, incoherent demands being made of government and society, all of this has become an enormous distraction from what should be the primary focus of the protests: dismantling the privileges afforded to police. Qualified immunity, unionization, prosecutors unwilling to prosecute bad cops, outrageous cop pensions, military gear, et cetera, these are all things that could be realistically dismantled in the current climate. It’s the perfect moment, when the entire world is giving its undivided attention to this issue. But the chaos of the mob is clouding this momentum.

Of course, the mob riots are an inevitable evolution of naive lock-downs: the older generation, in their fear, demanded the lock-down of society, which spawned massive unemployment and social fracturing. This essentially generated a dense sawdust cloud of unemployed young people, one waiting for a spark. That spark came in the form of the widely-publicized murder of George Floyd. Too many people are surprised by what has happened, but that is merely because they never fully understood the consequences of shutting down a developed, complex economy. The unemployed youth have nowhere to turn for real leadership, not their political leaders, nor their elders, and so they are turning to chaos. It’s a recipe for a revolution of the French variety, not American. It’s a revolution intent on bringing out the guillotine, for erecting a totalitarian State. It’s a revolution of re-barbarization, whether the participants realize it or not.

Rampaging mob takes over 6-block area of Seattle

Police, mayor allow it to happen.

In one sense, it’s like watching a nature documentary, but in this instance we are getting a rare close-up glimpse at the birth of a State in the wild. The mob takes over an area of land, establishes dominance, and then begins constructing a hierarchy among themselves, even if they don’t realize they’re doing it. A primitive form of taxation will follow, as will suppression of dissent. The emergence of this State will follow the time-worn evolutionary course that every other State has, because the seed of the State is inextricably bound up in human nature. Understanding this fact makes it all the more mind-boggling that a State restricted by a constitution has ever existed to any extent.

This will surely rile some libertarian readers of this space: We do not have a choice between a society with a State and one without. The State will always be with us, because it is within us. To prevent the rise of the wild, primitive, totalitarian variety, we purposely create government, imbue it with a monopoly on violence, imprison it, and pray that the bars are strong enough to hold it. It’s the best we can do, and it’s important to realize that that is our only option. That doesn’t mean there’s no room for private security. Most police could easily be replaced by private firms that did nothing other than defend, and who could be more easily held accountable for their actions. The Seattle mob doesn’t want the abolition of police, they want their own gang of armed thugs on patrol, doing their bidding. Just like every State in history.

Rampaging “protesters” destroy 70 coronavirus testing sites

Talk about worlds colliding. Could you imagine if it had been anti-lockdown protesters doing anything remotely close to this?

These mobs are a Frankenstein’s monster created by continuous saturation of one specific narrative by the corporate media. They’ve been conjured into existence out of the toxic brew of a self-inflicted economic apocalypse, but now can’t be controlled.

George Floyd was a thug. So was the cop who murdered him.

One went the private sector route, the other continued his crimes under the guise of “public service”. And now we are learning that these two had a history. They had both previously worked together at a nightclub, and didn’t get along, apparently. Before murdering Floyd, Derek Chauvin had racked up a long list of complaints over misconduct, 16 in fact. This, while hiding behind the badge that shielded his actions. The valorization of either Floyd or Chauvin depends on the side one takes in the manufactured cultural conflict that has arisen around Floyd’s death. But you don’t have to take a side. You can recognize the fact that Floyd had a criminal history, but also that he was clearly murdered by a casual psychopath who believed he was above the law. You can be for reform while also being against the burning of American cities. American cops kill around 1,000 citizens every year, a far higher rate than other Western nations. The United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world. These are outrages, and the outrage should be bipartisan. But more Americans aren’t seeing it that way because they’ve been baited into fighting a race-based culture war rather than joining together to demand meaningful change.

Are the police brutality protests leading to positive change? New York repeals police misconduct secrecy law

Something miraculous has happened in New York state. New York lawmakers have swiftly repealed section 50-a o the civil rights statute, a law that hides police misconduct records from public view. Democrats in the state have been trying for years to make these records public, but cop unions have wielded their enormous power every year, quashing every attempt. This year was different. The law was made short work of, with no lawmakers giving much of an ear to the whining of the police unions. This is amazing, and every state legislature should take advantage of this extraordinary opportunity to implement true police accountability while they have the chance.