Sunday 2 October 2022

Savage Rebellion (7)

 According to Pamela Geller, George Soros is the arch-global parasite of capital that bends people to the corporate will. She quotes this speech by new Italian premiere Georgia Meloni.

It's not in our national interest to sign our borders over to the UN. The Migration Compact is exactly what is needed by those who have used illegal immigration in recent decades to complete the grand plan of financial speculation to deprive nations and people of their identities. 

Because without roots you're a slave, and when you're a slave you serve the interests of Soros.

Geller, for all her faults, is a patriot and the sovereign spirit always has land as a broad concensus, even if several generations removed.

Land is the physical, articulate reality that 'they' (meaning Soros, Musk and cohorts) seek to replace with humanoids and global sameness. Unfortunately, in Britain, Truss adds just another cog (though hopefully the Brazilians willbr rid of ballsy, Bolshie Bolsonaro.)

The similarities that 'they' want neutralise differences, something which Jean-luc Godard likened to the neutral zone in sex (SR5,6). However, this is an illiterate view of reality since large-scale similarities are always seen in the diverse forms of nature - constellations, tree limbs, galloping horses, pansies bending (see passim.)

Large-scale similarities are the result of hierarchical development (or the principle of continuity that implies invariable time, or spin, see P200.) So, one has to differentiate between global capital which denies diverse cultural development (of sovereign states), and simply the capitalist ethic or drive to profit. 

The basic division between the 'good' and 'bad' sides of capital can be seen in a traditional Ranch, and this quote is telling.

We now understand that our soils with grazing animals have the capacity to sequester carbon way more quickly and more efficiently than anything else. So I think keeping grasslands whole and intact is vital, and something that every one of us should care about. (Jeanie Alderson of Bones Bros Ranch - the name originates from cowpoke and B movie actor Floyd Taliaferro Alderson.)

A Ranch has to act as a capitalist enterprise in order to survive, but the a priori aspects of its existence are, according to Jeannie, "grass, water and community."

In other words, capital may have some abstract traits, but the physical reality is dominant. From the physical reality develops the spiritual side and the psyche that relishes the wide open spaces of prairie. 

The physical is the hierarchical reality of antagonistic movement (muscles, galloping), while abstract capital is the mental reality of numbers (algorithms.)

So, American capitalism - because it's American - has always been physical and more or less on the side of the people. Of course, there have been corporate issues, such as Theo Roosevelt's anti-trust laws, which slanted the agenda towards land holders and away from the rail tycoons.

This sort of stuff is a regular plot element in 40s Republic serials, in those cases often dealing with Latin American natives (Tiger Woman) or Africans. In all these cases there are good whites and bad whites, more or less in line with 'good' capitalist and 'bad' capitalist.

The basic problem with the modern scene is that the large-scale similarities (of differences) - health and virtue - are less visible as we approach the neutral zone of sameness - weakness, susceptibility to germs etc. The lab becomes 'real' while reality becomes a fable.

The end result of this is that we are told that beef is 'bad' for a green environment, and probably we'll get exposed to 'clean-meat' (lab bred.) But, actually, soil and livestock, grazing, ranching and activating communities in song and dance and work are what produce green environments. 

This is obviously true worldwide - whether Russia, China, India or Japan - and speaks of the diversity of cultures with active roots on large-scale similarities. 

Of those, India has backtracked from the corporate model (see Modi, prev), while Japan still appears to operate an American-style model. Land-grabbing is another corporate threat that often relates to subsurface fossil fuels. Bones Bros Ranch fended off talk of strip mining and coal bed methane, and Jeannie says,

If you care about your place, if you care about your livelihood, you've got to join with others, and you've got to talk, and you've got to share what you know, and you will get it back a hundredfold... Yeah, it takes some stretching, it takes some courage, but you'll have  community, you'll have a family, you'll have people who will have your back when probably nobody else will.

Land-grabbing and clean-meat are just two aspects of the tendency of a global capital agenda to neutralise differences and instil a humanoid, neutral agenda (of age, sex, race) that is basically infertile and hygiene-compulsive.

Articulate (hierarchical) development and the literate, active people inhabiting wide open prairies are the way out of the conundrum.

LET'S WORK TOGETHERyoutu.be/wGGW4IezbC4