Destroying America by Destroying Lives by Destroying Hope

 

When I first started my practice in Tennessee, right out of training, I had no patients — I was starting from zero. Cash flow was a real problem initially. I worked ERs on the weekends to make enough money to pay my employees etc. while I was building up my patient base. Then I found a job opening at the Mountain City prison — 15-20 hours per week, and it paid very good money. Wow! What a deal! Why not, I figured.

Well. Mountain City is a maximum security prison, and I had never worked in an environment like that before. I learned that it took a lifetime of dedication to psychotic destruction to earn a ticket to such a horrible place and that my patients were, in most cases, criminally insane. Very scary place. I lasted less than six weeks and then stepped down. I did not like it in there. But I learned a lot in a very short time.

I once asked one of the guards to show me the living quarters of my patients. I was surprised that these guys serving multiple life sentences with no chance of parole had TVs and other relative luxuries in their cells. I asked the guard why? Why give them anything? I wasn’t being mean, I just didn’t understand the motivation of the prison administrators. Why waste money? The guard said, “If you take everything away from them, then you can’t control their behavior.”

I responded, “You have a stick. Who needs a carrot?”

He said, “You need both.”

His point was that once people have lost absolutely everything, and they have nothing left to lose, then there is no reason for them to moderate their impulses or their behavior. There’s no reason not to stab a guard or something. Why not? People in such situations become unpredictable and dangerous.

But if they worry about losing their TV privileges, then they’ll mop the floor and do as they’re told. And life in the prison becomes more predictable and safe for everyone concerned, including the prisoners.

Addiction treatment is often based on similar principles. Breaking an addiction is extremely difficult. But if you tell the patient that it is not his fault, then it becomes essentially impossible. Only when the patient takes ownership of his problem, takes responsibility for his actions, and resolves to change things, only then is there any hope of recovery.

But as long as he believes that his problems are the fault of somebody else, then he begins to believe in the ultimate lie of victimhood — that his actions really don’t matter. He is a helpless pawn in a big game, and his success or failure depends on the actions of others.

Such people become bitter and angry because they always feel that they are being cheated by the powers that be.

Marxism took this natural human tendency of individuals and applied it to groups, which quickly became mobs. The prison guard I met would have told Marx that mobs that felt they had no control over their own lives would quickly become unpredictable and dangerous.

Supporters of Marx might suggest that he would not believe such a thing. But I suspect that Marx already knew the likely outcome and that that was what he wanted. You can’t destroy society with a revolution of people who believe in personal responsibility. To get real anger, you have to make them feel helpless. Like they have nothing left to lose.

I think that whoever came up with critical race theory knew this as well.

The proponents of CRT want whites to apologize for being privileged. It doesn’t matter if that white person has ever done anything racist — his actions don’t matter.

And they want Blacks to feel oppressed and helpless. It doesn’t matter if that Black person owns her own business and earns a high salary — her hard work and her actions don’t matter.

CRT attempts to convince both whites and Blacks that their actions don’t matter and that they are helpless pawns in a big game beyond their control.

That’s the whole point of CRT. They don’t explain how this will help people improve their lives or how this will help society fix its problems. That’s not the point.

Because that’s not their goal. They have other goals: They want revolution.

And to get a revolution, you take away everybody’s TVs from their cells and convince them that they are helpless pawns and that their actions don’t matter. Which creates a mob that feels that it has nothing else to lose. That mob is unpredictable and dangerous. Which is the whole point.

I don’t think that those who promote CRT are as stupid as they sound. I really believe that they know what they are doing, and they know how it will turn out.

If you wanted to destroy American society (or, as the more deceitful leftists say, “ … fundamentally transform America … ”), you need an unpredictable, dangerous mob. One that cannot be appeased by promises of future improvement because you’ve now convinced it not to trust anyone.

They certainly can’t trust American society. They learned in school that it’s evil from its inception. Many young people today don’t have large, supportive families that they can trust. They often have very few close personal friends — most of their interaction with others takes place on Instagram. Fewer and fewer people attend church or believe in God.

Add all that up, and there is nothing in their lives that they can really trust. No wonder they can be made to feel helpless and desperate.

They don’t trust anybody. And they have been taught — whites and Blacks — that their own actions don’t matter. Which creates an army of destruction that has been built for one purpose. Whether they know it or not. They are members of a mob that has been created for destruction. Such people have no interest in fixing problems. After all, what can helpless pawns do anyway? Why not stab the guard? What do we have to lose?

CRT is not just the silly rantings of fake intellectuals. It’s a tried and true strategy for destroying a society.

Marx understood this strategy. So did Mao, and Castro, and Hitler, and Chavez, and every other revolutionary tyrant in history. So did the prison guard in Mountain City, Tennessee.

The prison guard wanted to avoid violent revolution, so he gave people hope by offering them some degree of control over their lives. The CRT proponents and other would-be tyrants want to encourage violent revolution, so they take all that away. They hope to destroy America by destroying lives by destroying hope.

And then they call Republicans heartless.

CRT is a deliberate effort to destroy America from within. It doesn’t even pretend to be an effort to improve people’s lives or to improve society. It is exactly what it appears to be.

And it should be treated as such.

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There are 34 comments.

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  1. Flicker Coolidge
    Flicker
    @Flicker

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Henry Castaigne (View Comment):

    Zafar (View Comment):

    Dr. Bastiat: The prison guard I met would have told Marx that mobs that felt they had no control over their own lives would quickly become unpredictable and dangerous.

    This sounds like it’s true. I think slaves were perceived as unpredictable and dangerous – hence the constant fear of slave revolts.

    Well look at the Thebeans.

    The beans?

    The Carib beans.

    • #31
  2. Steven Seward Member
    Steven Seward
    @StevenSeward

    Zafar (View Comment):

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    That would be if your only measure of personal power is through how much money you have. Money certainly helps but it is no stand-in for having a supportive family, friends, stable environment, or personal freedoms. Besides, I’m always skeptical of charts that purport to show declining wealth in America.

    It actually shows stagnant wages, which is a different thing. I’d be interested to see a similar graph for personal wealth.

    Maybe so, but wages is not the end of the story.  It all depends on how much stuff you can buy with those wages.  I don’t have the answer on buying power, but most technical devices and appliances have dropped dramatically in price over recent decades.  Cheap imports from China have also flooded the market.  On the other hand medical care and college have gone up dramatically.  Also, until  recently, we had little or no inflation for a long stretch of the last 40 years.

     

    • #32
  3. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    Dr. Bastiat (View Comment):

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Henry Castaigne (View Comment):

    Zafar (View Comment):

    Dr. Bastiat: The prison guard I met would have told Marx that mobs that felt they had no control over their own lives would quickly become unpredictable and dangerous.

    This sounds like it’s true. I think slaves were perceived as unpredictable and dangerous – hence the constant fear of slave revolts.

    Well look at the Thebeans.

    The beans?

    I figured it was supposed to be Tibetans, but who knows?

    Could be Thespians. Alec Baldwin can be unpredictable and dangerous.

    And John Wilkes Booth…

    Well, there’s a certain amount of that to most good leaders. George Washington was said to convey an aura of barely controlled violence.  That makes a person seem unpredictable and dangerous. Of course, in Washington’s case he was actually in pretty good control of his emotions, and some of his displays of rage were probably a good act. He was not in perfect control of himself, but much better than the average guy who conveys an aura of violence.  

    • #33
  4. David B. Sable Inactive
    David B. Sable
    @DavidSable

    You said stated the problem with CRT well.  It is a gospel without redemption.  I can never be redeemed from being a white male oppressor.  Tyrone can never be redeemed from being a black man victem.  We are stuck.

    • #34
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