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john's avatar
Apr 13Edited

Good review, I also very much rate the work of Iain Davis but I have stalled a bit reading about this accelerationism BS, not just from Iain Davis, also with other writers, and I'm glad you treated it in the way that you did. I agree that it is nothing more than a smoke-screen of unintelligible nonsense to frighten away questions from the many people who probably fear they don't undetrstand it because it's just too damned profound. When it's not. It's BS. Thank-you.

Edit: I was just reading Iain's piece on Unlimited Hangout where he goes into the mechanism of the accelerationist method which involves, basically, the paypal mafiosos investing in and perhaps guiding and controlling, any companies that may be useful in achieving their goals in the construction of the technocratic state.

In my view, what differs from this construction and that of a good old-fashioned police-state is that this construction is by a "private" company and they may just get away with it, whereas the "state" doing it themselves, probably could not, and would have to pretend to care what the people have to say about it. Of course, the money for this construction still comes from the tax-payer via government payments for all and sundry, to types like Musk, Thiel etc.

William Pritting's avatar

“Restoring the feudal order is, in fact, the true and hidden goal of globalism.”

How the British Invented Color Revolutions

As the British Empire shifted from a colonial to a neocolonial system, it had to develop quieter, more discreet methods for removing rebellious vassals

https://richardpoe.substack.com/p/how-the-british-invented-color-revolutions

How the British Invented George Soros

Puppetmaster or Puppet? Strongman or Frontman? Inside the Soros Psyop

https://richardpoe.substack.com/p/how-the-british-invented-george-soros

EXCERPTS:

Lord William Rees-Mogg set forth his globalist beliefs in a series of books co-written with U.S. investment writer James Dale Davidson.

In The Sovereign Individual (1997), the authors prophesied that “Western nations” would soon “crack apart in the manner of the former Soviet Union,” to be replaced by tiny jurisdictions “akin to city-states” which would “emerge from the rubble of nations.”15

The authors predicted that, “Some of these new entities, like the Knights Templar and other religious and military orders of the Middle Ages, may control considerable wealth and military power without controlling any fixed territory.”

As in the days of “feudalism,” wrote Rees-Mogg and Davidson, “low-income persons in Western countries” would survive by attaching themselves to “wealthy households as retainers.”16

In other words, the lower classes would return to serfdom.

This was all for the best, the authors wrote, as it would allow the “ablest people” — i.e. the “top five percent” — to live where they liked and do as they liked, free from loyalties or obligations to any particular nation or government.

“As the era of the ‘Sovereign Individual’ takes shape,” the authors concluded, “many of the ablest people will cease to think of themselves as party to a nation, as ‘British’ or ‘American’ or ‘Canadian.’ A new ‘transnational’ or ‘extranational’ understanding of the world and a new way of identifying one’s place in it await discovery in the new millennium.”

George Soros named his network of Open Society Foundations in honor of his London School of Economics (LSE) professor Karl Popper, whose theory of “open society” guides Soros’s activism to this day.

Popper’s 1945 masterwork, The Open Society and Its Enemies, is a philosophical defense of imperialism, specifically of British liberal imperialism, as espoused by LSE’s founders.

The Fabian socialists who founded LSE believed that British expansion was the greatest civilizing force in an otherwise barbarous world.

In his book, Popper expressly defended imperial conquest as a first step in wiping out tribal and national identities, to clear the way for a “Universal Empire of Man.”

By the 1990s, privileged families like Rees-Mogg’s had grown tired of hiding. They yearned for the good old days, when they could live openly in their castles and command their serfs.

Oxford political scientist Hedley Bull played to this crowd when he predicted, in his 1977 book The Anarchical Society, that, “sovereign states might disappear and be replaced not by a world government but by a modern and secular equivalent of… the Middle Ages.”

Bull’s forecast of a new medievalism resonated with British elites.

As the Soviet Union collapsed, Rees-Mogg and others of his class began openly celebrating the end of the nation-state and the rise of a new feudalism.

Restoring the feudal order is, in fact, the true and hidden goal of globalism.

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