The Left Has Plenty Of Plans For This Crisis

“Welcome to my world crisis, Mr. Bond!” – Tomorrow Never Dies

That door handle looks like it’s from an 80’s Fiat©, which means it isn’t driving anywhere until it’s dropped all its oil on the garage floor.

This post is originally from April, 2021.  I would normally be having a new post, but I feel just awful tonight.  Tired.  The Mrs. had Influenza A, and now I have it, I think.  Or something.  Unlike when AIDS, the flu, and COVID walked into a bar, this isn’t some sort of sick joke.  See?  I’ve still got it.

I anticipate new content on Friday, and no matter how I feel I should be ready to go for tomorrow’s podcast at 9pm Eastern.  I’m skipping my normal run ’round the ‘net tonight, so I can get some sleep.  I would make another sleep joke, but those are so tiring.  Take care, all!

-JW

The last year has seen more change than the last twenty years, combined. This is to be expected, especially if you give Strauss and Howe’s The Fourth Turning idea any credence. A short version of The Fourth Turning (also known as Kondratieff Wave Theory) is that there is a roughly 80-year cycle of human affairs. Let me use the life of my Dad, Pa Wilder, to describe it:

When Pa Wilder was young he spent most of his childhood in Winter, the first defining experience of his life was the Great Depression. Back then, they had printed versions of the Internet that they would get delivered to their house every day, called newspapers. They also had cell phones that never needed charging, and that you could never lose because they were in the living room and conveniently connected by a cord to the wall.

I’m sure all of the kids on the playground talked with Pa about how obvious it was that the Federal Reserve’s® monetary policy, combined with bankers lending to anyone with a pulse led to near financial collapse. Oh, and how their parents couldn’t afford shoes. Thankfully, Pa lived in a farming community, and every little house in town had a very large garden out back. Food from the grocery store?

Why would you spend money on food when you had to pay for the mortgage?

Al Capone set up this particular location during the Depression. Pa Wilder said I should never go camping with a gangster: he didn’t want me to have a criminal intent.

That’s the sort of lesson that bored itself into Pa Wilder’s mind. As a kid, he saw people lose houses, he saw people lose fortunes. He saw a nation nearing collapse.

Economic collapse led to the second thing that defined Pa Wilder’s youth: World War II. Not long after Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor he was in boot camp in Ft. Sill and before long was a 2nd lieutenant in the Army. The next four years he spent on an all-expenses-paid European vacation

The end of the war was the end of Kondratieff Winter. What followed was Spring.

In post-war United States, growth and unrivaled prosperity followed from 1945-1965. Pa Wilder, like the rest of the G.I. generation, came back and built families and factories and farms. They looked out at a world that was shattered, and they made fortunes rebuilding it. They even found Dean Martin’s favorite eel. Don’t remember that? It’s a moray.

Spring was characterized by extreme faith in government institutions – sure the government had fumbled the ball in the Great Depression, but it had unified the country for World War II. It stayed back enough to allow growth, and Eisenhower’s America got out of North Korea and planted the seeds for the Super Science® projects that would provide unmatched weapons systems and the seeds of space exploration.

I wanted to have another space pun, but I didn’t have time to planet.

Spring gives over to Summer. Around 1965, the spiritual awakening was followed in 1975 by the “Me” decade. In Summer, the economy is humming along, the weather is great, and the first questioning of the previous ideas that led to the success of the country begins. It’s probably no coincidence that the disastrous Immigration Act of 1965, the arguably unconstitutional Civil Rights Act of 1964, and Lyndon Johnson’s voter-plantation Great Society acts (1964 and 1965) took place at the start of Summer when Americans were questioning their values, questioning the things that made America great.

Pa Wilder was an established businessman, working as the president of a very conservative farm bank. You could get a loan, but only if you had collateral and a good income stream. Pa Wilder told more people “no” than “yes” for loans. That bothered him, with the exception of the fact that he told me, “I’ve never had to foreclose on a house, son.” To him, it was a moral duty. Thankfully Pa never served in the paratroopers, otherwise, they would have called him “debt from above.”

In society, however, the big splits had started in 1965. The subversion of colleges started and would be nearly complete by the 1980s. Religious decline started, and Nixon got tired of hiding the fiscal shenanigans of the country that gold was exposing. His solution? Get rid of gold.

But Summer was still a good time. Autumn, however, is harvest. Pa Wilder was pretty close to retirement at this point, and the real economic power had moved to the Boomers. Pa’s natural fiscal conservatism led to a strong and stable business. The people that took over from him, however, would “give a loan to anyone with a pickup and a backhoe.” They even loaned out money on haunted houses, places they were sure were going to be repossessed.

An ultra-long radio wave walked into the bar. The bartender said, “Why the long phase?”

Inertia is important in an economic system. But in 1985 the financial systems of the United States began to be harvested. “Greed is good” became the motto, and systems were run entirely for near-term economic benefit. Everyone from Pa Wilder’s generation was dead or retired – the new people in charge had no living memory of the national crisis brought on by The Great Depression.

The end of Autumn is the first chill of Winter, and the end result was the Great Recession (right on time!) in 2007-2008.

In the Winter, things fall apart. I’ve been really quite amazed that things have held together so well since that first cold snap. Obama was, well, a disappointment. Trump seemed (in many ways) overwhelmed by the system and couldn’t figure out how to move the levers of power in any significant and lasting ways – which makes sense on a failing system.

That was the starter’s gun on the crisis, the date Winter began. We should have been a long way through it by now, but this Winter is different:

  • The United States had a uniquely dominant position at the start of Winter, having both complete military dominance as well as a strong economic dominance of the world.
  • The Federal Reserve© decided to just print all the money that it could to spend its way into continued prosperity.

Sure, sometimes government wants to stop a crisis so that the citizens can have a stable country. Sometimes.

But other times, governments are waiting for the crisis, looking forward to it. Planning on it. In one article titled Sometimes the world needs a crisis: Turning challenges into opportunities(LINK), the Brookings Institute lists the things they love about crises. I admit that some of them are positive, but here are a few that I think are a bit more ominous – these descriptions are directly from Brookings:

  • Systemic Change: Global crises that crush existing orders and overturn long-held norms, especially extended, large-scale wars, can pave the way for new systems, structures, and values to emerge and take hold. Without such devastation to existing systems and practices, leaders and populations are generally resistant to major changes and to giving up some of their sovereignty to new organizations or rules.
  • Dramatic Policy Shifts: Sometimes the fear generated from a crisis and corresponding public outcry enables and even forces leaders to make bold and often difficult policy moves, even in countries not involved in or affected by the crisis.

COVID-19 was the big crisis they were waiting for this Winter. As the economic systems unwind under the unsustainable debt the ‘Rona is the perfect opportunity. Imagine the tapestry of that you see was planned. What end is being sought?

What The Mrs. would have said in the same situation: “It’s over, John, I have the high ground.”

Well, they told us already. Systemic Change. Changes to virtually every system in the United States. Want to have a nice, neat, prosperous, and orderly community? Too bad. That’s not a thing that’s going to happen. The police will be neutered. How badly will communities suffer? Here’s how bad it is now:

  • Leftist controlled Chicago: arrests/stops are down 53 percent, murders are up 65 percent.
  • Leftist controlled New York City: arrests/stops are down 38 percent, murders are up 58 percent.
  • Leftist controlled Louisville: arrests/stops are down 35 percent, murders are up 87 (not a typo) percent.
  • Leftist controlled Minneapolis: arrests/stops are down 42 percent, murders are up 64 percent.
  • Leftist controlled Los Angeles: arrests/stops are down 33 percent, murders are up 51 percent.
  • Leftist controlled St. Louis: in 2020, the murder rate hit “a 50-year high, with 87 out of every 100,000 residents being murdered.”

When there is murder and mayhem there is control. This is their plan. This is the crisis. Remove police – replace with ideological commissars that aren’t bound by law. Now, if they see a “crime” that they feel is wrong, they can punish it however they see fit. Most commonly, this will just be by removing the protection of the law and letting the mob do the rest.

The biggest crimes? The crimes against the Left.

That’s just the first of the planned Systemic Changes. There are more planned.

  • Universal basic income.
  • Boards to approve hiring at private companies.
  • Equity everywhere.
  • More rules than you can imagine. All of them will be based on some fear – guns in rural areas will be restricted because people in the city can’t stop killing each other.
  • Climate change lunacy: to meet Joe Biden’s climate goals, Americans would be restricted to four pounds (344 milliliters) of meat a year. This will be walked back.
  • And your ideas: they probably won’t be as bad as the real plans.

Why do organizations hire female Chief Equity Officers? Because they’re cheaper.

To be clear: Winter is here. The Left has an endless list of Leftist goals to accomplish during the crisis to come. The Winter will be dark.

Where are our goals? The Right cannot just have the goals of “what the Left wants, but less,” or, “the opposite of what those guys want.”

After that? Organization. And leadership.

And longjohns. Winter is here.

Problem-Reaction-Solution: Coming Soon To A Country Near You

“Kent Brockman here reporting on a crisis so serious it has its own name and theme music.” – The Simpsons Movie

If a Higgs boson kills someone, does that make it a mass murderer?

Problem-Reaction-Solution has been the playbook of the Left for a long time.  What’s that?  First, there’s a problem.  It may be a real problem, or it may be entirely invented, like my résumé.

Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Israel Emanuel, was famous for saying “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”  In his own words, Rahm explained, “ . . . what I said was, never allow a good crisis to go to waste when it’s an opportunity to do things that you had never considered, or that you didn’t think were possible.”

Yes.  He said that.  It is probably not true that he stood next to a South American quadruped and a doorbell for his senior picture, because that would leave us with Rahm, a llama, ding-dong.

Rahm’s crisis is really just a way to restate the Problem-Reaction-Solution paradigm.  It’s a way to make people do things that were otherwise unthinkable.  Why?

Because some leaders want their people to accept what would otherwise be unthinkable.  This has long been the playbook of the Left.

It has been used by the Left since, well, forever.  The problem-reaction-solution is often called a Hegelian Dialectic, but that has too many syllables for 1:43AM.  And Hegel died in 1831, so I’ll just leave it that this sort of crisis-seeking isn’t a new thing.

Apparently, Hegel didn’t have a side that flattered him.

The Left turns out to be pretty good at this stuff.  Examples?  Well, in Australia, all it took was one mass shooting and the politicians convinced the Aussies to turn in their guns.  The problem was that single shooting.  The reaction?  A well-formed media manufactured panic.  The solution was to turn in all the guns.  The Australian Leftists certainly didn’t let that problem go to waste.

The end result?  Australia had some of the most oppressive COVID-19 restrictions on the planet including concentration camps.  Which is just what government wanted – to turn citizens into subjects.  Taking guns away is a good way to do just that.  The joke is that everything in Australia can kill you easily.  Now that includes the police.

The same attempts were made in the 1990s with the assault weapons ban in the United States.  It went into effect.  Without the Internet, I imagine it would still be in place.  But, luckily, there was a way to bypass the media, and people got together to push back.  I’m not sure that George W. Bush was in favor of rolling it back, but every Republican that had a job and wanted to keep it knew that making it go away in the next election was in their best interest.

People say that Democrats and Republicans can’t work together to accomplish anything, but I’ll remind you, Jeffrey Epstein is dead.

So the problem wasn’t big enough, and (at least so far) hasn’t been big enough because events like Uvalde proved one thing:  waiting for the police to come and save you isn’t a good strategy.  In a way, using the Australia example just isn’t going to work in America.

But what about other things, like money?

It has worked before.  One of the first things that Franklin Roosevelt did after becoming president was to confiscate almost all the gold of American citizens and then make the dollar worth less.  It was the same formula.  The problem was the economy had cratered.  The reaction was that people were panicking.  The solution?  Almost anything Roosevelt wanted to try, he could try, up to and including taking the country (eventually) into a World War.

Whereas Americans seem to have a strong distrust of government taking their guns, the distrust with politicians destroying our money doesn’t seem nearly so strong.  Which brings us right back to today.

The economy has been a mess, for quite a long time.  I could delve back into history even more than I’ve done so far, but I don’t want to write a 20,000 word post.

Moses went to Mount Olive.  Popeye was furious.

But where we are today is precarious.  It is certainly the problem unfolding.  In 2008, when inflation was “tolerably” low, the Federal Reserve® could print money at will.  This allowed bankers to keep the profits that they had made, while the financial system used the Bounty™ Currency Quicker Printer Upper® to socialize the losses.

This wasn’t without creating ripple issues, but it kicked the can down the road for more than a decade.  Then, COVID.  Same playbook:  print all the cash!!!

This time, however, the cash didn’t just go to cover paper losses at banks.  People got the cash, and did what people do:  they spent it.  Another part of the idea was to inject as much money as is possible into infrastructure projects.

Now, I like roads and bridges as much as the next guy, but when all that money chases concrete, it pushes the price of concrete up – that’s supply and demand.  And whatever the government was buying went up in price.  Now, decent cigars haven’t gone up much in price, but eggs, bacon, and gasoline certainly have.

If I want to light a cigar but don’t have matches, I just cut the end off.  Then it’s a little lighter.

So the Fed© can’t print itself out of this one.  Heck, every time the Fed® tries to stop, the economy lurches like a Pelosi getting out of a Porsche™.

So, the problem is here.  The reaction is going to be significant as the economy continues to wobble and waver, and I believe is headed for even darker days.  Forget Netflix™ and avocado toast:  people get grumpy when they can’t afford to eat or buy gas.  The normal solution (printing cash and making it rain) can’t be used.

That leaves us with a crisis that would make Rahm Emanuel drool.  The idea from the government will be to create a solution that, right now, we’d consider unthinkable.

I hear that atheists own more cats than Christians.  Apparently, owning Christians is illegal.

Just like our pushback on the unthinkable banning of guns, it’s our job to push back on whatever nonsense is coming, because I can assure you that it will leave most of us poorer and with less freedom.

Why most of us?  Remember, there’s a reason why people like Rahm Emanuel look forward to things like this.  And it’s not because they lose power or money.

Memefest, 2022

“Remember that time you tried to drill a hole in your head?” – Ghostbusters

Someone called me lazy today. I almost replied.

A quick peak behind the curtain – I normally try to get some rest, since I’m only mostly superhuman. I’m trying to evolve to the point where I don’t need sleep, and can subsist on a diet of nothing but memes, PEZ®, coffee, and fahrvergnügen, but tonight things went a little sideways.

First, I’ve been trying to salvage an hour or two a week by doing blog-related correspondence and making my rounds on the ‘net at lunch. I normally only get on for blogging-related three times a week, and if I can do it during a time I’m normally goofing off, so much the better. It’s still goofing off, but it’s blog-related. Result: two hours of extra weeknight sleep each week. I call that a win. Or, I would if I were conscious.

Whelp. Today I got sucked into listening to the vortex of oddity and Clown World™ that is the Darrell Brooks trial (Waukesha “alleged” murderer) with The Mrs. at lunch. The trial is so absurd that we couldn’t look away. Well, I thought, that’s fine. I’ll skip an hour’s worth of sleep tonight and do correspondence and blogging rounds then.

I got home about usual, but The Mrs. had some ideas on dinner that pushed it starting a bit late. That’s no biggie, either, and it was some extra fun with the family. Another hour? What’s living without two hours of sleep, anyway? I’ve done it before.

So, now it’s after dinner, and I discover a problem outside. It’s an utterly first-world problem (I’ll spare you the details) but working it out took about four hours to make sure everything was fine because it was gonna freeze tonight, and I wanted to make sure that I didn’t end up doing a few thousand bucks worth of damage. I couldn’t really blog at that time, but I did have a nice cigar.

Crisis averted – everything is (fingers crossed) functional. Mainly, the fixing didn’t take too long, the rest was testing, making sure electric doo-dads were all working, and waiting to make sure that it was reliably working under all circumstances for a few hours. I was satisfied.

So, I sat down at my keyboard, and, lo and behold, it was midnight.

Ugh. I suppose that I could have done another Lame Repost from the past, but decided not to – I try to limit those to once a month or less. I had notes on several posts that would fit the bill tonight, but writing them and editing them takes time. So, I decided to clean out some proverbial closets and share some as-found memes. I make most (not all, but most) of my own memes from scratch using only the finest quality keks and chortles, but I also collect memes that others baked.

Why? They make me laugh, think, or, best of all, both. So, here’s a collection of more-or-less random memetic soup that I saved and probably won’t use in any future posts. I’ll be back on correspondence and web-rounds no later than Thursday/Friday.

I hope you enjoy!

Hint: it’s all better with a hot cup of fahrvergnügen.

Success, Fight Club, Strippers and Socialists

“We have just lost cabin pressure.” – Fight Club

The second rule of Wilder Club is if this is your first visit, you have to comment.  Oh, and this is a repost since I have to get up pretty early tomorrow.

I had a conversation with a friend today.  Oh, sure, I hear you say, what would an iconoclastic iron-jawed individualist with a body odor redolent of medium rare ribeye (with just a hint of pepper) like John Wilder need with a friend?  I guess we all have our little weaknesses.  And dogs follow me.  Because I smell like steak.

In this particular case as with most of my friends, I’ve known this friend for years.  I’ve known most of my close friends longer than The Boy has been alive, and he’s in college now.  It’s nice.  If a day, a week, a month or a year goes by, so what?  We can still restart the conversation where we left off.  It’s as comfortable as watching a movie you’ve seen a dozen times.

I’ll make the observation that the only place where the character of people change is in a movie – almost all of my close friends have the same sense of humor and the same sense of values that they had when our friendships were forming.  Absent a significant emotional event, people are a constant.

And I like that.

There is a corresponding trust that comes with being a close friend – honesty.  That’s why when talking with my friend, I really enjoyed the chance to be honest.  Honesty is difficult because it requires that trust, because really honest criticism is hard to take, even when it comes from a friend.  Or a co-worker.  Or a relative.  Or someone you just met.  Or your UPS® delivery guy.  Oh, wait.  Most people don’t like honest.  But my friends do.

This particular friend is really in a good position in life, which seems to be a common pattern with my friends.  He has a spouse that makes more money than he does, and, in general, the household probably brings in enough cash each month so that Nigerian princes send emails to them asking for money.  They’re wealthy enough that they donate to the homeless.  This appears to be a more socially acceptable donation strategy than my “donation to the topless,” scheme.

strip.jpg

Yes, this is the only joke that I’ve ever seen that involves both the Greco-Roman philosophy of stoicism and stripping.  I’m sure that Seneca would be proud.

But lest ye want to class my friend as the evil, selfish, wealthy type, he’s not.  The family has a huge number of kids, and it’s a close family.  My friend is constantly taking time off to go to athletic events, and when we catch up, I can sense that the relationship he has with his kids isn’t a surface relationship – it’s genuine and deep.  I can tell, because I know people who understand genuine relationships, who listen to both sides of a family argument – my neighbors.

And yet . . . despite the wealth, despite the great family, my friend feels that there’s something missing.  He is as high as he wants to go in the company he works at – any higher and the travel demands would pull him away from family.  He’s long since mastered his job – there is little that can be thrown at him that he hasn’t seen in the last fifteen or so years.  So, his condition is one of high pay, mastery of work, and, improbably, discontent.

John Wilder:  “You realize you have an advantage that 99% of people would die for.  You’re financially secure.  You can quit your job anytime.  Literally, you could walk in to your boss this afternoon and quit.  Your lifestyle wouldn’t change a bit.”

Not Elon Musk:  “Yes.”

Unlikely Voice of Wisdom John Wilder:  “So, what is it you want to do?”

Really, I Promise It Isn’t Elon Musk:  “I need to think about it.”

Channeling Tyler Durden From Fight Club® John Wilder:  “No.  If you think about it, you’ll end up doing nothing but thinking about it.  You have to do something.  Physically start it.  This weekend.  I’ll check back on Monday to see how you did.”

There is a scene in the movie Fight Club™ where Tyler Durden holds a gun to the head of a liquor store clerk.  If you haven’t seen the movie, I strongly suggest it.  I probably watch it once a month while I write – I think there are few movies that communicate the human condition in modern life so well.

Pugsley doesn’t miss many school days.

JACK, in voiceover:  On a long enough time line, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.

CLERK:  Please… don’t…

TYLER DURDEN: Give me your wallet.

Tyler pulls out the driver’s license.

TYLER:  Raymond K. Hessel. 1320 SE Benning, apartment A.  A small, cramped basement apartment.

RAYMOND:  How’d you know?

TYLER:  They give basement apartments letters instead of numbers.  Raymond, you’re going to die.  Is this a picture of Mom and Dad?

RAYMOND:  Yes.

TYLER:  Your mom and dad will have to call kindly doctor so-and-so to dig up your dental records, because there won’t be much left of your face.

RAYMOND:  Please, God, no!                            

JACK: Tyler…

TYLER:  An expired community college student ID card.  What did you used to study, Raymond K. Hessel?

RAYMOND:  S-S-Stuff.

TYLER:  “Stuff.”  Were the mid-terms hard?  I asked you what you studied.

JACK:  Tell him!

RAYMOND:  Biology, mostly.

TYLER:  Why?

RAYMOND:  I… I don’t know…

TYLER:  What did you want to be, Raymond K. Hessel?

Tyler cocks the .357 magnum Colt© Python™ pointed at Raymond’s head.

TYLER:  The question, Raymond, was “what did you want to be?”

JACK:  Answer him!

RAYMOND:  A veterinarian!

TYLER:  Animals.

RAYMOND:  Yeah … animals and s-s-s —

TYLER:  Stuff.  That means you have to get more schooling.

RAYMOND:  Too much school.

TYLER:  Would you rather be dead?

RAYMOND:  No, please, no, God, no!

Tyler uncocks the gun, lowers it.

TYLER:  I’m keeping your license.  I know where you live.  I’m going to check on you.  If you aren’t back in school and on your way to being a veterinarian in six weeks, you will be dead.  Get the hell out of here.

JACK:  I feel sick.

TYLER:  Imagine how he feels.

Tyler brings the gun to his own head, pulls the trigger — click.  It’s empty.

JACK:  I don’t care, that was horrible.

TYLER:  Tomorrow will be the most beautiful day of Raymond K. Hessell’s life.  His breakfast will taste better than any meal he has ever eaten.

greta.jpg

How dare you . . . make Greta uncomfortable.

And it’s true.  I tend to think that everyone’s life would be a little better if they had Tyler Durden to be a life coach, to ever so gently coax them to be the best they can be while holding a .357 magnum Colt® Python™ to their head.  That seems to be a bit frowned upon, so that leaves my friends with me.  See how lucky you are?

In my role as Dr. Durden, I’ve noticed that there’s a problem some people have.  It’s being too clever.  It’s thinking.  How do I know?  It’s my problem that I try to compensate for by writing and doing.  If I think about doing something, it will never get done.  I keep thinking about fixing the banister that broke when we moved into the house a decade ago.  It’s never been high on my list, since people falling down stairs is funny, with extra points if they are really old.  But thinking about doing something never accomplishes anything.

If I plan to do it, it will get done.  Half of my time driving to and from work on a day I’m going to write a post, I’m writing it in my head, selecting jokes, thinking of themes.  It’s also spent thinking of how I’m going to connect the idea I want to share with students who might be forced to read this post when Mrs. Grundy tells them to compare and contrast my work with that poseur, Mark Twain, in high school in the year 2248 (that’s when Kirk will be a sophomore).

driver.jpg

Okay, generally on my drive to work I have about five or ten minutes between cars, so it would take several hours to get a group of cars behind me like that.  But a man has to have goals!

It may look like I’m driving to work, but I’m really plotting out what I’m going to write about.  To be honest, it sometimes takes both lanes to do that.  I wish the State Patrol® would be a little more understanding to artists like me.

Thankfully, The Mrs. is.

The Mrs. and I had a conversation the other night.  It may or may not have involved wine – I’m not telling unless I’ve been subpoenaed and am under oath to a House subcommittee.  Actually, it wasn’t so much a conversation as The Mrs. describing to me how she felt about this little project I publish three times a week.

I don’t make any money on this blog, though I’ve made clear since day one that can change at any time.  I have plans for several (eventual) ways to do that including adding subliminal messages causing you to want to pay for my health insurance.  It looks like it’s already worked for Bernie Sanders.

bernie.jpg

In a socialist paradise all bloggers make $450,000 a year, right?  But I worry that for this Christmas we won’t have an Elf on a Shelf, we’ll have a Bernie on a Gurney.

No, at this point, writing is a hobby.  But it’s a hobby that takes over 20 hours a week, sometimes closer to 30 hours.  I still have a job, and I won’t stop interacting my family, so most nights I won’t even start writing before 9pm.  A lot of that time comes from time I’d normally be selfishly engaged in what you mortals call “sleep”, but a chunk of that time comes directly from time I’d be spending with The Mrs.

When I’m writing, I’m simply not available.  I’m writing.

The Mrs.:  “You know, I would certainly have an issue with the time that you spend writing, if it weren’t important.”  There was more to this, where she detailed the number of hours I spend.  But I keyed in on the word “Important.”

I was a little surprised by that.  “Important?”

The Mrs.:  “Yes.  I can see that what you’re writing about is important.  People need to hear it.  So keep doing it.”

Okay, that proves she never reads this stuff.

But as I talked more with my friend, the concept of “meaning” came up.

My Friend Who is Really Most Certainly Not Elon Musk:  “So, it’s about meaning?”

Suddenly as Wise as the Roman Philosopher Seneca John Wilder:  “That’s silly.  You don’t go off chasing ‘meaning’ in your life.  Pick out something you like to do, and do it.  But figure out how to make it important to other people.  You like to woodwork, right?  You say you never have time to do it.  Do it this weekend.  Film it.  Put it up on YouTube®.  I’ll be checking up with you on Monday.”

I asked myself, why is my friend working at all?  I think because he feels he’s supposed to work.  That having a job is a rule, it’s what he’s always done.  The problem that many of us have is that we tend to create rules where there aren’t any rules.  I’m not sure why.  Perhaps we need to justify what we do.  Perhaps it’s like my two important rules for life:

  1. Don’t tell everything you know.

Success?  My friend is already successful in most ways a person can be successful.  Their life is really good.  I told them, directly, “You’ve been given so many gifts.  If you don’t make something special of your life, you’re wasting it.”

Interestingly, this applies to you, too.

And me.

How will your breakfast taste tomorrow?

Civil War 2.0 Weather Report: Misery Index Edition

“False Narrative!” – The Death of Stalin

Not all fairy tales start with “Once upon a time” – some start with “If Joe Biden is elected . . . . “

  1. Common violence. Organized violence is occurring monthly.
  2. Opposing sides develop governing/war structures. Just in case.
  3. Common violence that is generally deemed by governmental authorities as justified based on ideology.
  4. Open War.

I’ve notched the Clock O’Doom up by one.  Tensions have increased, significantly.  The advice remains.  Avoid crowds.  Get out of cities.  Now.  A year too soon is better than one day too late.

In this issue:  Front Matter – The Narrative Collapses – Violence And Censorship Update – New Feature, Biden’s Misery Index – Updated Civil War 2.0 Index – January 6 Goes Full Jussie – Links

Front Matter

Welcome to the latest issue of the Civil War II Weather Report.  These posts are different than the other posts at Wilder Wealthy and Wise and consist of smaller segments covering multiple topics around the single focus of Civil War 2.0, on the first or second Monday of every month.  I’ve created a page (LINK) for links to all of the past issues.  Also, subscribe because you’ll join nearly 700 other people and get every single Wilder post delivered to your inbox, M-W-F at 7:30AM Eastern, free of charge.

https://wilderwealthywise.com/civil-war-weather-report-previous-posts/

The Narrative Collapses

Part of the requirements for Leftism to work is The Narrative.  The Narrative is their story, told in their way.  It is propaganda, and the object is to lead the public opinion ever Leftward, but just a smidge at a time.  The problem, of course is that they lose patience.

I hope everyone had a great Juneteenth!  I’m so glad it’s finally accepted as a holiday!

The Left has managed to use sympathy to convince the public of concepts that are ever more divergent from reality.  Given time, it’s easy enough for people skilled in propaganda to twist public perception 180 degrees.  A similar effort has gone on for decades in the Supreme Court to create new text where none existed, and essentially backstop authoritarianism.

Probably not the point George wanted to make.  Oh, my!

The push too far this time was the kids.  There was a time when teacher contracts included morals clauses, and they could be fired for being immoral.  I recall reading a story of a teacher whose car was vandalized (by other teachers) because their license plate had the (state-issued) GAY three letter combination.  Being gay and being a teacher wasn’t allowed.  Period.

But in the 20’s America, teachers feel it’s necessary to become advocates for their LGBTP lifestyle.  Oddly, parents have an issue with this, because 99%+ of parents aren’t LGBTP, and you have to be an extremely dedicated little Leftist to agree to let your kids be groomed.

Most people aren’t.

It’s amazing how the number of “trans” kids has gone from essentially zero to whole percentage points.  Wonder why?

This is one area of narrative collapse – the economy (see Biden’s Misery Index, below) has proven the old statement correct – when the tide goes out, you can see who isn’t wearing a swimsuit, and Biden is naked.  Ugh.  Sorry.  Bad metaphor, but it doesn’t get any better using Kamala or Nancy Pelosi or Chuck Schumer.

We now see how things are done when the Supreme Court can’t understand what a woman is. . .

This leads us towards Civil War – the Left becomes increasingly upset as their ideology is rejected – note the calls for leaving the Union on the Left since the latest abortion and gun rulings.  If they can’t have it all, and if they can’t control everyone, they aren’t happy.  The mere idea that someone might be free in Oklahoma or Wyoming or Indiana drives them crazy.

And you wonder why propaganda is against homeschooling?

And one last collapse of the narrative

I’m not sure I trust the SPLC to tell me if it’s day or night out . . .

The news continues – though this isn’t violence or censorship, it does show that the idea is growing monthly that people are ready to break up.

It’s weird that celebrities who are protected by people they hired to carry guns don’t want anyone else to have them.

Violence And Censorship Update

You may not have noticed it, since hardly anyone mentions it, but June was Pride Month.  I’m expecting that July is Gluttony or Sloth month?  Regardless, even Elon Musk noted that it was Pride Month:

Only one icon on my phone went all rainbow this year. 

But that’s not violence or censorship.  The biggest story this month was actually a positive against censorship (I think):  Elon Musk has passed the latest test in his bid to take over Twitter®.  This is notionally good.  Musk has made noises in the past that would indicate that he would cease the blanket banning of Right opinions on the platform.

And, Twitter® matters.  While there might be only tens of millions of active users, how often do you see a Tweet© discussed in a news story?  It has amazing reach.

Yeah, that’s pretty much the sound I heard when Elon put out the bid for Twitter®.

New Feature – Biden’s Misery Index

Joe Biden has been the single largest Oval Office failure in my lifetime.  Easily.  How bad is he?

Well, Paul Krugman, the “economist”, predicted the “Biden Boom” – I have proof.

Think he’d like to walk that back?

That’s how it started.  How’s it going?

Yes.  The single worst economic performance of a President in my lifetime easily belongs to Jimmy Carter.  That, for Joe Biden is a “hold my beer” moment.  He can be bad at economics as well as international and social issues.  Heck, under Biden and Carter Afghanistan was lost.  At least Carter could use the bathroom outside of his Depends®.

But it’s not like his problems aren’t self-inflicted.  They absolutely are:

It’s so bad, that even the Normies have it figured out:

Well, maybe not all the Normies.

So, the result is that we have the worst economy since the Great Depression.  I even have the receipts.  I made up a scale that combines gas prices, inflation, interest rates, and unemployment rates to quantify just how bad it is.

It’s horrible.

It’s set up so that if Joe Biden had just not screwed it up since January, 2020, he’d be at a score of zero.  So, lower is better.  You’ll note that it’s not at zero, but rather it’s at 14.  Since it’s dimensionless (it’s based on how much the situation has deteriorated, so the interest rate has more than doubled) the scale on the side doesn’t have a unit.  So we’ll call it a Kamala.

Joe is 14 Kamalas bad.  Which is pretty bad.

Updated Civil War II Index

The Civil War II graphs are an attempt to measure four factors that might make Civil War II more likely, in real-time.  They are broken up into Violence, Political Instability, Economic Outlook, and Illegal Alien Crossings.  As each of these is difficult to measure, I’ve created for three of the four metrics some leading indicators that combine to become the index.  On illegal aliens, I’m just using government figures.

Violence:

Violence ticked downward this month.  I think it has been muted because the Left has kept their dogs on a leash.

Political Instability:

Up is more unstable, and it went up more in June.  I expect that to continue in July.

Economic:

Economic indicators keep falling . . . .

Illegal Aliens:

It set a new record.  Again.  An all-time record.  Again.  The border is, for all intents and purposes, wide open.

January 6th Committee Goes Full Jussie

The January 6th Committee is a joke.  As it can clearly be seen, there was actually no attempt to take over the Capitol.  How can I make that statement?  They didn’t take over.  If there was any actual desire to take over the Capitol, it would have been taken over, and would have been occupied to this day.

The fiction that the Committee has tried to create is a simple one:  that Donald Trump was looking to take over the government through non-Constitutional means.  This was, obviously, not true.  Why?  It would have been the simplest thing for him to do that and cross the Rubicon.  He didn’t.  Trump likes to make deals, and I’ve seen no evidence that he did anything different than, well, be Trump on January 6.

Regardless, it looks like the Committee has nothing.  And never will.

LINKS

As usual, links this month are courtesy of Ricky.  Thanks so much, Ricky!!

BAD GUYS

https://twitter.com/Robertopedia/status/1535383099147689984

https://twitter.com/i/status/1534491331313250304

https://twitter.com/i/status/1537919366737539072

https://twitter.com/i/status/1538697774979481600

https://twitter.com/i/status/1534652069071790085

https://twitter.com/i/status/1533654704529588229

https://twitter.com/PrivilegeMaster/status/1534667795065085952

https://twitter.com/Geoffrey_Ford14/status/1533440144124137473

https://twitter.com/Geoffrey_Ford14/status/1533441413010038785

https://youtu.be/Fepz9VOKodw

https://twitter.com/i/status/1531651546735329280

https://twitter.com/i/status/1535957203902816256

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10890763/Moment-man-hurls-expensive-watch-fence-robbery-gang-leaps-car-LA-suburb.html

https://twitter.com/i/status/1535360238043406338

https://citizenfreepress.com/breaking/hunter-used-money-from-dad-to-pay-russian-prostitute/

https://twitter.com/AutonomyCola/status/1540422582352183298

https://twitter.com/crabcrawler1/status/1537809777526509569

 

GOOD GUYS

https://www.newsweek.com/prosecutors-make-first-move-break-antifa-cell-11-activists-charged-violence-1658008

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10953387/Burger-King-worker-says-hell-pay-grandkids-college-GoFundMe-soars-past-120-000.html

https://youtu.be/U6xlvHM6jYY

https://twitter.com/i/status/1540486945981227009

https://twitter.com/i/status/1531745842079711232

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/kyle-rittenhouses-lawyer-plans-target-042552489.html

https://amgreatness.com/2022/06/07/because-the-ar-15-can-deter-a-mob/

And finally (!?!) : https://twitter.com/i/status/1537307558704300032

 

ONE GUY

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1537173291781312518.html

 

BODY COUNT

https://www.newsweek.com/yulin-dog-meat-festival-thousands-dogs-slaughtered-china-1713970

https://www.dtnpf.com/agriculture/web/ag/news/article/2022/06/14/heat-stress-kills-estimated-10-000

http://endoftheamericandream.com/more-major-disasters-hit-u-s-food-production-are-you-prepared-for-what-comes-next/

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10938929/U-S-say-intends-issue-rule-reduction-nicotine-levels-cigarettes-WaPo.html

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2022/06/09/zmgp-j09.html

https://www.dailywire.com/news/u-s-army-drops-high-school-diploma-requirement-as-it-struggles-to-find-new-recruits

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/military/every-branch-us-military-struggling-meet-2022-recruiting-goals-officia-rcna35078

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/cp/charted-the-global-decline-of-fertility-rates/

https://crossroadsreport.substack.com/p/breaking-fifth-largest-life-insurance

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10895067/Doctors-trying-determine-young-people-suddenly-dying.html

https://www.lifesitenews.com/blogs/doctors-baffled-by-a-mysterious-new-sudden-death-syndrome-killing-healthy-young-people/

https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/young-people-dying-in-their-sleep

https://vdare.com/posts/homicide-and-motor-vehicle-accident-death-rates-through-2021

https://www.danielgreenfield.org/2022/06/in-blm-year-52-of-black-teens-who-died.html

https://twitter.com/PrivilegeMaster/status/1534667795065085952

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-10941707/Powerful-new-campaign-shares-photos-taken-people-took-lives.html

https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#trends_dailydeaths

https://twitter.com/alabeaty/status/1534778472354177025

https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/reports-deaths-covid-vaccines-cdc-vaers-data/

https://summit.news/2022/06/13/new-study-concludes-lockdowns-caused-at-least-170000-excess-deaths-in-u-s/

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/1287595-injuries-reported-after-covid-shots-vaccine-injury-compensation-programs-overwhelmed/

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/scottmorefield/2022/06/05/new-study-mask-mandates-associated-with-increased-covid-death-rate-n2608241

https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2022/06/03/iso-drug-similar-to-fentanyl-but-20x-more-potent-finds-way-into-florida/

https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2022/06/14/18/59067297-10916371-image-m-12_1655228811361.jpg

 

VOTE COUNT

https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/public_surveys/2000_mules_documentary_s_message_resonates_with_voters

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/washington-secrets/convincing-77-believe-2000-mules-20m-have-seen-it

https://www.theepochtimes.com/facts-matter-may-16-2nd-state-featured-in-2000-mules-issues-subpoenas-for-the-names-of-ballots-mules-and-funding-ngos_4470123.html

ttps://emeralddb3.substack.com/p/bombshell-ex-dominion-employee-has?s=r

https://uncoverdc.com/2022/06/06/cisa-advisory-report-admits-voting-machine-vulnerabilities-denies-exploitation/

https://apnews.com/article/2022-midterm-elections-technology-georgia-election-2020-a746b253f3404dbf794349df498c9542

https://emeralddb3.substack.com/p/something-stinks-in-colorado

https://uncoverdc.com/2022/06/29/predetermined-algorithms-source-of-widespread-election-fraud-in-arizona/

https://emeralddb3.substack.com/p/exclusive-fulton-county-gets-busted

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/former-house-rep-pleads-guilty-ballot-stuffing-dems-five-elections

https://www.delanceyplace.com/view-archives.php?p=4611

https://thefederalist.com/2022/06/23/yes-biden-is-hiding-his-plan-to-rig-the-2022-midterm-elections/

https://www.scribd.com/document/577278421/Justice-for-Sale-LELDF-Report#download&from_embed

 

CIVIL WAR

https://twitter.com/williams_paige/status/1541434138011570183

https://brownstone.org/articles/the-astonishing-implications-of-schedule-f/

https://www.newsweek.com/white-supremacists-convicted-training-civil-war-michigan-1708056

https://www.foxnews.com/media/media-targeting-trump-aides-testimony-civil-war

https://nypost.com/2022/06/14/squad-rep-bowman-warns-of-civil-war-if-gop-takes-midterms/

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/spencerbrown/2022/06/14/rep-bowman-warns-of-civil-war-if-gop-wins-in-november-n2608677

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/30/poll-americans-guns-against-government

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10876733/More-HALF-Republicans-believe-U-S-heading-civil-war.html

https://www.yahoo.com/news/poll-half-of-americans-now-predict-us-may-cease-to-be-a-democracy-someday-090028564.html

https://www.theepochtimes.com/is-the-united-states-headed-to-another-civil-war-or-another-great-awakening_4524035.html

https://andrewmtanner.medium.com/the-capitol-riot-doesnt-matter-f0b232d00a30

https://andrewmtanner.medium.com/the-american-divorce-is-an-unstoppable-force-b981edacb6f2

https://wagingnonviolence.org/2022/05/when-should-we-be-worried-about-civil-war-barbara-f-walter/

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10934819/Texas-Republicans-push-referendum-secedng-U-S.html

https://www.mediaite.com/politics/group-declares-open-season-on-pro-lifers-gives-ultimatum-now-the-leash-is-off/

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/20-pregnancy-centers-in-the-us-have-faced-pro-abortion-attacks-since-leaked-roe-opinion/

https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2022/06/15/beyond_the_kavanaugh_scare_dozens_of_incidents_targeting_pro-lifers_nationwide_837247.html

https://www.milwaukeeindependent.com/syndicated/two-versions-america-efforts-reverse-roe-v-wade-proves-second-civil-war-already-underway/

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/06/14/supreme-court-civil-war-00039543

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jun/26/second-civil-war-us-abortion

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/another-war-states-coming-abortion-rcna35566

https://amgreatness.com/2022/06/26/america-is-more-fragile-than-the-left-understands/

 

ENJOY IT WHILE IT LASTS

https://www.youngmoney.co/p/time-alive

target-042552489.html