When the world became unrecognizable in less than a decade

Guest Post by Simon Black

In the year 1520, exactly 500 years ago, a German scholar named Johan Schoner completed a map of the world that was widely considered to be humanity’s most advanced understanding of geography at that time.

To us, Schoner’s map is pretty amusing.

There’s scarcely any American continent. Instead he drew some amorphous blobs to mark Brazil and the ‘West Indies’. And there’s a very narrow body of water where the Pacific Ocean is supposed to be, separating Brazil and India.

Obviously we know this is totally wrong. But it was science’s best understanding of the world in 1520.

Then, in 1529, a Venetian named Giovanni Ramusio created an updated map based on the various explorations and discoveries throughout the 1520s.

Ramusio’s map shows the eastern coastline of North and South America, from Newfoundland to the tip of Argentina, and the west coast from Peru through Mexico, with incredible precision and accuracy.

Even by today’s standards, Ramusio’s map looks right. You can see the outline of Florida and North Carolina, the prominence of Brazil, the Gulf of Mexico, etc. almost to the same standard as a modern day map in 2020.

The difference between the two maps is extraordinary. In less than a decade, humanity’s knowledge of the world grew from an almost ‘Dark Ages’ mentality, to that of our modern world.

Their world literally became unrecognizable in less than a decade.

And this newfound scientific understanding ushered in a new era of commerce and wealth that had never been seen before.

It’s amazing when you think about it– how quickly the world can radically change… sometimes for better, sometimes for worse. We’ve seen plenty of examples in our own lifetimes.

In 1995 hardly anyone had even heard of the Internet. By 2005 it became so ubiquitous that we couldn’t imagine our lives without it.

In 2000 hardly anyone had a mobile phone. By 2010 nearly everyone had one.

At the start of 2007, no one had ever seen a touch-screen smart phone– Steve Jobs would unveil the first ever iPhone in January of that year.

And in less than a decade, our entire species has become completely zombified, swiping and scrolling our lives away while we walk, eat, and drive without ever looking up.

Just like the world maps in the 1520s, each of these trends represents a radical shift in the way we live, work, and engage with one another.

We’re living through another one right now… a powerful, dangerous social trend that’s being driven by anger and ignorance.

Think about it: 5 years ago around this time, things still felt pretty normal.

There was always political bickering and ideological conflict… but discourse was pretty civil. No one advocated for violence or called someone else a racist simply for having a different opinion.

Then all of a sudden, in late 2015, people started becoming completely unglued.

At first the madness was isolated– ultra-liberal universities, pockets of social media. We saw crybully students in California and on the east coast physically blocking certain speakers from setting foot on campus– anyone whose opinions they found ‘offensive’.

Like most movements, this one started slowly… but quickly gathered momentum.

Suddenly it became acceptable to expect everyone else to conform to your whiny sensitivities.

Terms like “safe space” entered the lexicon, and ‘social justice warriors’’ started demanding that we avoid using certain everyday words and pronouns to ensure that no one would be offended.

At the same time, socialists came out of hiding and quickly became mainstream. Some of the most popular politicians in the world now are card-carrying socialists.

Bernie Sanders is now the leading contender of a major party to become President of the United States. And a number of recent polls (CBS/YouGov) show Sanders winning the national election in November.

These people despise wealth. They hate profit. They’re mistrustful of private property. They believe that many private industries should be owned and controlled by the government.

Five years after it all started, these movements– social, economic, etc. have all merged together… and become violent.

Thugs now roam the streets of major cities, physically assaulting anyone they deem an enemy of their movement.

It’s ironic that these criminals call themselves ‘anti-fascists’ or ‘antifa’ given how similar their tactics are to Hitler’s ‘Brownshirts’ in 1920s Germany.

At one recent protest in California, a conservative politician was threatened by an antifa thug who said, “I just want you dead,” and “You’re racist… I can tell by looking at you.”

Protestors, meanwhile, held up signs like “Can’t have capitalism without racism!”

This is now considered acceptable, mainstream thinking– and not just in the Land of the Free. It’s all over the world.

This trend is a major force, like a runaway freight train. And every day they’re more emboldened, so it’s picking up speed.

One might simply hope that it all goes away… that, someday soon, people come to their senses and sanity is restored.

But as we used to say in the military, hope is not a course of action. And given a broader view of history, it’s unlikely that this trend goes gentle into that good night. In fact it’s far more likely to accelerate.

And just like other major trends, this one also stands to fundamentally transform the way we live, work, and do business.

Think about it– this movement, which grows stronger by the day, wants to seize private property, nationalize entire industries, raise taxes to sky-high levels, bankrupt the Treasury with unaffordable entitlements, label all white males as ‘racist,’ and physically assault intellectual dissenters.

It’s fair to say this -might- have a bit of an impact.

Never forget that we’re talking about people who are irrational and prone to violence.

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19 Comments
Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
February 24, 2020 4:35 pm

He says: “There was always political bickering and ideological conflict… but discourse was pretty civil. No one advocated for violence or called someone else a racist simply for having a different opinion.” And “Socialists are coming out of hiding.”

Did he not live through the ’60s? We’ve been through this before, just without phones and the Internet.

Hyperborean
Hyperborean
  Vixen Vic
February 24, 2020 4:46 pm

I seem to remember learning in school about some uncivil discourse between 1861-65.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  Hyperborean
February 24, 2020 8:11 pm

12Apr1861 to present because Reconstruction (ref The 1964 Civil Riots Act and Affirmative Discrimination) still exists.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
  Vixen Vic
February 25, 2020 1:53 am

So true VV and I agree entirely. There have always been activists and discontents – history is cyclical IMO and the Fourth Turning is upon us once again. Let’s hope that drugs, sex and rock & roll come back just like in my days of yore – wow we did have a great time!

And I was very aggressive in my youth – very anti-communist and ready to kill them all – ‘better dead than Red’. I didn’t get to Nam (thank God) but would have done given the chance.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Austrian Peter
February 25, 2020 2:42 am

Yes, apparently people forget what was going on in the ’60s: the bombings, the race riots, the Weather Underground (Communists), the protests, the Black Panthers, the violence at the 1968 Democratic convention, the high-profile assassinations. And we had the kidnapping of Patty Hearst by the Symbionese Liberation army, but that was the early ’70s. But there were other groups out there like them.

And Hyperborean has a point about the “uncivil discourse between 1861-’65.” The cycles are repeating over and over again.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
  Vixen Vic
February 25, 2020 3:53 am

🙂 Let’s eat, drink and be merry – for tomorrow we die!

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Austrian Peter
February 25, 2020 4:01 am

I’m drinking a Guinness to it right now. Cheers.

Hyperborean
Hyperborean
February 24, 2020 4:36 pm

Piri Reis map had the North / South American and African Atlantic coastlines relatively correct back in 1513, and it was a copy of a much older map. Not only that, it included Antarctica.

Also, one of the forgotten bits of history that led to the rise of the Nazis was their week in, week out street battles with Antifa and the Communists. Antifa and the Communists had become an organized gang shaking down shop keepers, vandalizing businesses of those who wouldn’t pay, regular beatings of people going about their daily business, etc. The Brown Shirts began to turn the tide against Antifa and “clean up” the cities and that gained them great respect in the eyes of everyday Germans prior to the Nazis being elected to government.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Hyperborean
February 24, 2020 11:15 pm

hyperborean
i’ve never heard that about the german situation,links please?

Hyperborean
Hyperborean
  TampaRed
February 25, 2020 9:27 am

You can start with “The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich” by William L. Shirer. Hitler was sentenced to prison for one these street brawls during a failed coup (more like publicity stunt given small number of participants) where a gunfight erupted and there were casualties.

Here’s a link – there are many.

The Brownshirts: The Role of the Sturmabteilung (SA) in Nazi Germany

Kevin
Kevin
  Hyperborean
February 25, 2020 10:33 am

During the prison stint is when he wrote Mien Kamph. This period is well documented.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Hyperborean
February 25, 2020 12:48 pm

thanks,i knew about the brown shirts but had always heard that they were simply thugs,never heard about the fighting the commies–

ZeroZee0
ZeroZee0
February 24, 2020 4:51 pm

“Thugs now roam the streets of major cities, physically assaulting anyone they deem an enemy of their movement.”

First one that tries this on me in Seattle will wind up with a couple of .45″ holes that The Almighty or his “Piercer” didn’t give him……

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  ZeroZee0
February 24, 2020 8:15 pm

44 Mag ULs make huge permanent holes in liberals…they can’t outrun, dodge or even stop one. PS: Antifa cut lose in Spain in 1936 murdering Clergy, Landlords, Loyalist, Nationalist, Military etc but by 1939, Antifa was AOL (Spanish History).

ZeroZee0
ZeroZee0
  robert h siddell jr
February 24, 2020 11:09 pm

Gotta give props to Franco….. He knew what to do with ’em……. As did Pinochet…… Helicopter Rides anyone?

Spud
Spud
February 24, 2020 5:21 pm

It’s coming. The waiting is the worst…for now.

gman
gman
  Spud
February 25, 2020 11:28 am

“The waiting is the worst”

oh nonsense, when it gets here THAT will be the worst. and the aftermath will be worse than that. these are the good old days, bask in them while you can.

gman
gman
February 24, 2020 6:08 pm

“5 years ago around this time, things still felt pretty normal”

? are you kidding? the right was pissed.

“There was always political bickering and ideological conflict… but discourse was pretty civil. No one advocated for violence or called someone else a racist simply for having a different opinion.”

? yeah they did.

BB
BB
  gman
February 24, 2020 6:17 pm

It is a different world .Not my world or my America anymore. They want violence well they will get violence coming back at them like a ” bullet “.At 58 years of age I’m not going to waste my time trying to fight anybody.