We Are Great

We Are Great

great

Every time I write one of these pieces, a certain number of people freak out, and often quite vocally. But it’s a huge mistake to define ourselves by what we’re against, and darkness is not all that exists in the world.

And we are magnificent creatures. I want my writing to help humans realize that this is true, and to start acting on it. Decrying what is wrong has a place, but a limited place: that of warning good people to avoid it.

The focus on evil is massively overdone. We are inundated with all that is bad in the world: News broadcasts are fully dedicated to nothing else, politicians are dedicated to nothing else, and the very existence of contemporary governance is predicated on “keeping fear alive.”

But all of that is degrading, distracting, and devolutionary. Sure, evil exists, but the truth about evil is that it’s small and weak (stay tuned next week). It’s time to stop devoting the whole of our lives to it.

Who Is “We”?

Since I’m saying, “We are great,” and since I’m expecting a lot of instinctive objections to the concept, I should define the term.

“We” refers to productive humans. And there are billions of us. We are the majority. Our big problem is we’ve been conditioned to think that darkness and destruction lurk for us on every corner and that nonproductive people are our natural superiors. But those are lies. We are superior to the willfully unproductive.

And yes, in this article, I’m completely ignoring murderers, criminals, and the various dependent classes. They don’t define me, and they shouldn’t determine the shape of your mind either.

Celebrating Our Greatness

The Romans used to celebrate themselves: their arches and domes, their aqueducts and fountains, their roads and farms, their prosperity. On the other hand, we’ve accomplished far, far more than the Romans. And yet, we are fully convinced that we suck. There’s a problem here.

The past few centuries have seen the most productive generations ever to inhabit the Earth. Never before, in our long history, have humans accomplished anything remotely close to what we have. And we’re poised to jump much farther… except that we’ve been convinced – irrationally and maliciously – that we deserve no credit for anything, that we’re vile and filthy and caustic.

Entire academic disciplines are devoted to convincing us – against any and every objective fact – that we can’t know anything, that thinking we do know sets us at the lowest depths of self-delusion, and that our only rational role in the universe is to hate ourselves and to obey our betters (aka, authority).

It’s all bullshit, my friends. All lies. All manipulation. It was all a coordinated attack on our minds.

With no historical precedent, productive people just like you and me have created these things (and many more) over the past few centuries:

  • The telescope.
  • The microscope.
  • Calculus.
  • The law of gravity.
  • The laws of mechanics.
  • The binary system.
  • The barometer.
  • Logarithms.
  • The slide rule.
  • Electronic calculators.
  • The blast furnace.
  • Practical steam engines.
  • Rifles.
  • Hand guns.
  • Eyeglasses.
  • Electrical generators.
  • Electrical transmission.
  • Ice cream.
  • The laws of electromagnetism.
  • Artificially produced ice.
  • Statistics.
  • The telegraph.
  • The telephone.
  • The electric light.
  • The electric motor.
  • The assembly line.
  • Automobiles.
  • Railroads.
  • Hot air balloons.
  • Airplanes.
  • Space travel.
  • Radar.
  • Photography.
  • Sound recording.
  • Video recording.
  • The fax machine.
  • The computer.
  • Radio.
  • Television.
  • The Internet.
  • The cell phone.
  • Refrigeration.
  • Air conditioning.
  • Mechanized farming.
  • The vaccine.

So… we suck?

The fact that we are great is obvious. The problem is our conditioning.

“Bow Down to Fear and Self-Condemnation”

Please understand that the dominating systems of this world need you to feel like garbage. They couldn’t survive a situation where productive people believed in themselves, trusted themselves, and were proud of themselves. The hierarchies of this world require that you cower before every imagined fear and never dare think your own mind is trustworthy.

Look and see: Who among this world’s sacrifice-collectors delivers your groceries? Which of them fixes your hot water lines? Which of the televised suits changes your tires or hangs a door or rewires your lights?

It is productive men and women who make your life better, not the mighty; they merely extort your wages.

You, my productive friend, are better. I don’t care what you were taught in school about ‘great men’ and their necessity. That was misguided at best. Much of it was purposely destructive.

Please consider this passage from Buckminster Fuller:

If you take all the machinery in the world and dump it in the ocean, within months more than half of all humanity will die and within another six months they’d almost all be gone; if you took all the politicians in the world, put them in a rocket, and sent them to the moon, everyone would get along fine.

These are true words. And if they are true about machines, how much more do they apply to the people who create those machines?

The progress of the world waits for the productive man and woman to stop flagellating themselves. It’s waiting for them to stand up and act like what they are.

* * * * *

If you’ve enjoyed Free-Man’s Perspective or A Lodging of Wayfaring Men, you’re going to love Paul Rosenberg’s new novel, The Breaking Dawn.

It begins with an attack that crashes the investment markets, brings down economic systems, and divides the world. One part is dominated by mass surveillance and massive data systems: clean cities and empty minds… where everything is assured and everything is ordered. The other part is abandoned, without services, with limited communications, and shoved 50 years behind the times… but where human minds are left to find their own bearings.

You may never look at life the same way again.

Get it now at Amazon ($18.95) or on Kindle: ($5.99)

* * * * *

TheBreakingDawn

Paul Rosenberg

[Editor’s Note: Paul Rosenberg is the outside-the-Matrix author of FreemansPerspective.com, a site dedicated to economic freedom, personal independence and privacy. He is also the author of The Great Calendar, a report that breaks down our complex world into an easy-to-understand model. Click here to get your free copy.]

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9 Comments
Ed
Ed
May 1, 2016 8:43 am

“The progress of the world waits for the productive man and woman to stop flagellating themselves.”

Hey, Stucky. That fuggiin Rosenberg is fuggin witchoo about jaggin off again.

DDearborn
DDearborn
May 1, 2016 8:57 am

Hmmm

While I agree in principle with much of the article. However, I wish to raise an important point regarding this issue in the context of the Presidential race. Specifically, it is the constant drum beat of those opposed to Donald Trump conflating the issues raised in this article with Trump’s call to put America and Americans first. This is of course a completely separate issue. And the media has been a willing participant in the efforts to confuse the voters.

Rob
Rob
May 1, 2016 9:24 am

As I point out in my book, There’s Ants in My House, the global insurrection against banker occupation…no wait, that’s not what my book is about. Oh never mind.

susanna
susanna
May 1, 2016 10:19 am

Fully criminal institutions/approved by the gov
do not support confidence in our collective future.

The self-image of a productive American citizen may be intact
and robust at that. Nonetheless, we are having to walk over mine-fields,
virtually literally on a daily basis. It makes us nervous. It worries us.
Those that read and listen to the smarties know there may be wars
and theft of our property at the drop of a hat. One needn’t wallow
in it, and hard work is a wonderful distraction. Yet, the monsters are
out there, and we know it. And the growing police state and PC warriors
aren’t merely annoying…they are a real threat.

Gayle
Gayle
May 1, 2016 10:54 am

At present, we aren’t great. Great people rise up against evil and tyranny. Presently and ironically, there is an example of greatness for us in that backwater Iraq.

KaD
KaD
May 1, 2016 11:11 am

I see a lot of this self loathing in the vegan/ voluntary human extinction movement. http://www.molonlabemedia.com/2016/04/29/vegetarians-unhealthy-mentally-disturbed/

Dunner
Dunner
May 1, 2016 5:07 pm

Everything you list as our achievements to prove our greatness are decades old,
with a few of them being at least over a century old and some older than that.
The best example I like to give is the “smart phones” that you carry in your pockets are
basically utilize three major key technology components.
Wireless communication, computer and internet, each is over 70 years old.
Then I always get back in response, well look at the advancements in medicine.
Seriously
We pump people full of poisons and irradiate them because this is the best we
have to offer. We were still bleeding people into the 20th century.
If we were truly progressing as a species we would have colonized the Moon a long
time ago and would already have had boots on the ground as far as Mars goes.
Instead we’re doing elementary school science projects on a floating tin can in space
and the only way we can get there is to hitch a ride on a rocket in another country that’s
is decades old in itself.
The technologies that we see, hear and feel are all over a half a century old.
As for the personal enlightment, growth and coming together as a society here in the USSA.
Anyone who still possesses the ability of independent rationalized thought, (common sense)
can see we have gone off the rails a long time ago.
Don’t kid yourself Snowflake; we are digressing as a species not progressing and our
epitaph will read, What were they thinking, (addendum, they weren’t).

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
May 2, 2016 12:42 am

Dunner said:
“Don’t kid yourself Snowflake; we are digressing as a species not progressing and our
epitaph will read, What were they thinking, (addendum, they weren’t).”

That’s funny because just a month or so back I posted a comment that our epitaph should read “We stupided ourselves to death.”

TBP generally attracts the right sort of people. We’re just outnumbered!

Bob
Bob
May 2, 2016 11:56 am

Dunner, many disciplines and sciences are still in early, almost primitive stages of development. The real race for humans is whether we can achieve enough progress to overcome our flaws and limitations before we collapse and self-destruct. It is the enduring human drama.

We are facing a particularly gripping chapter of our history right now. Let’s hope we have a decent crop of descendants left to study and learn from it…