The American Ideology

One of the greatest tricks Americans have ever pulled is convincing themselves and the world that we are not ideologues. At worst, we are the defenders of Western liberalism, which is never described as an ideology. Unlike communism or fascism, it is seen as a set of obvious conclusions arrived at through reason. If anything, the American way is considered a practical antidote to the problems of ideology.

This has always been nonsense, but we have believed it for so long that no one thinks much about it anymore. The closest we get are critiques of liberalism from neo-traditionalists, as if we still live in a liberal age. In reality, America is an ideological state and has been for a long time. The ideology has evolved to suit the times, but the core features have remained unchanged since the 19th century.

This is one reason for the current crisis. The age of ideology is coming to a close, but the United States, especially its ruling class, remains trapped in the age of ideology—like a dinosaur stuck in a tar pit. While other major powers think and talk in practical terms about practical problems, the United States continues to think and talk in explicitly moral terms about abstract concepts.

That is the show this week. It is an exploration of American ideology and the factors that made it possible. This is a topic that could fill up several more shows, so this episode is just a quick summary of the material. I could easily do at least one show on how the two great industrial wars warped the American perspective. The Cold War could be at least one episode, probably two, so this is just a starting point.


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This Week’s Show

Contents

  • Intro
  • American Protestantism
  • Nationalism
  • Progressivism
  • Judeo-Puritanism
  • The End Ideology

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Mycale
Mycale
2 days ago

When did the American ideology become spreading homosexuality and feminism around the globe? I know that this is in part with liberalism, but at some point you had politicians and officials saying explicitly that America was in these countries to turn the women into feminists and the men into homosexuals. At some point we went from Proposition 8 to the State Department flying “pride” flags outside embassies, thus, for all practical purposes, making THAT and not the stars and stripes our official national symbol.

Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

When did the American ideology become spreading homosexuality and feminism around the globe?

When we “won” WWII. USA now stands for ‘Usury, Sodomy and Abortion’. One of the many joys of living under ZOG.

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
2 days ago

No, that is when the seeds were planted, but this idea that we need to occupy Afghanistan forever so girls can go to school, or that the State Department’s primary mission is to support homosexual parades – this is very new.

TenFiftySeven
TenFiftySeven
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

As you say, I think the seeds were planted long ago, and these ideas get doubled down on as time goes on. Seems to be a human tendency to take things to their logical conclusions. Tech, particularly social media, has sped up this doubling down immensely in the past 15 years.

Templar
Templar
Reply to  TenFiftySeven
2 days ago

Seems to be a human tendency to take things to their logical conclusions. 

To absurd conclusions. Reductio ad absurdum.

Jack Dobsen
Jack Dobsen
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

The confluence of post-modernism and radical equalitarianism required a constant search for new causes and ways to destroy the old order. The lunacy of radical feminism and perversion/transgenderism kind of made them the last frontiers and an endpoint. To answer your question, I think these causes, such as they are, probably came into their own with the advent of gay “marriage” in 2015. I also think the embrace of these insane notions has led to a post-ideological moment and things are going in the direction of a naked who/whom (see my earlier comment).

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  Jack Dobsen
2 days ago

It might just be as simple as a naked who/whom. Prop 8 seemed to usher in a type of liberal vengeance where they decided to use the power of the state to impose their values on the proles. Of course that took time to work through the system but when it was done, it was all there and that train has no stops. Telling the proles’ sons that they were actually girls seems more like punishment than anything, in this context. Likewise with immigration, people voted for immigration restriction and the system responded by flooding their towns with Haitians (in… Read more »

Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

Politics may be entirely narcissistic. Say, there’s a kind of person to whom other people’s lives and minds are an affront. That’s the kind of person who rules, seeks rule, accepts or enjoys rule, etc. Or— For whatever reason, there’s someone you want to hurt, vengefully or sadistically or resentfully or [any Nietzschean adverb]. You invent a future in which your violence was just. That invention is “ideology”—or “values” or “principles” or whichever is the shibboleth of your people. The bloodthirstier Marxists are right about one big thing, I think: The premise that ideas motivate doesn’t fit the world. “Ideology”… Read more »

ray
ray
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
2 days ago

Yeah it really ramped up with WW2 because so many women took war jobs, in the absence of men. That got them away from the family hearth and into the expectation of careerism and independence . . . and soon, under preferential conditions.

As for the explicit exportation of feminism and homosexuality to the world, I’d say it became Primary Policy mebbe 30 years ago.

Johnny Ducati
Johnny Ducati
Member
Reply to  ray
2 days ago

The emancipation of women might have been one of our greatest mistakes. We have a mural of a race-swapped Rosie the Riveter in a town near us, when we know the obvious reality.
The gals fell right into the jewish feminist movement and now we have Girl Bosses in positions of power.

ray
ray
Reply to  Johnny Ducati
2 days ago

The Nineteenth doomed you, and the Great Society — ushered-in by that punk LBJ while the body of a masculine president was still warm — drove the coffin nails in.

It was 100 years from Female Enfranchisement to National Lockdown. Because Safety! As night follows day.

Just like us, God tends to work with big, round numbers.

Last edited 2 days ago by ray
Bitter reactionary
Bitter reactionary
Reply to  Johnny Ducati
2 days ago

Indeed it was. Not just politically, but also in terms of plain domestic tranquility. When wives ask “says who” the old answers – husband or father – no longer apply. Now it’s either ‘nobody’ or The State. Hierarchy was destroyed, and with it all female respect for male authority. Thus, in turn, the ability for wives to love their neutered husbands was destroyed. Once “domestic abuse” became a big issue the last terrible resort was banished, and it was over.

ray
ray
Reply to  Bitter reactionary
2 days ago

Exactly. The first practical target of the Sixties Feminists — many of whom were Jewish women btw — was ‘domestic abuse’ which meant anything a husband did to try to constrain his wife. They conquered that hurdle largely via the collusion of the U.S. government and its advertising (propaganda) organs. Soon most jurisdictions simply arrested the male in any domestic complaint or dispute (the Duluth Model). Effectively, the cops and courts became ready weapons of female power. That led directly to the destruction of the American family, as dad no longer had any social or legal power. This happened to… Read more »

Templar
Templar
Reply to  ray
2 days ago

That got them away from the family hearth and into the expectation of careerism and independence . . . and soon, under preferential conditions.

Same thing happened to Rome as a product of the Punic Wars.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Templar
1 day ago

Huh?

NoName
NoName
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
2 days ago

Z: “the United States continues to think and talk in explicitly moral terms about abstract concepts”. I hate to disagree with Z on this point, but what Elon & DOGE are discovering is that Amurrikkkun Leftism was nothing but a very sophisticated money laundering operation designed to suck trillions of fiat shekels out of the United States’ Federal Reserve, and into the grubby little paws of (((Geneva & Zurich & Tel-Aviv))). The leftist-faux-moralism was simply for show. None of it was organic nor sincere. Leftist-faux-moralism was simply the fig leaf necessary to keep the goyim from noticing that their Treasury… Read more »

Ketchup-stained Griller
Ketchup-stained Griller
Reply to  NoName
2 days ago

Uh-oh, I’ve seen people disappeared here for excessive Parenthesis.

Johnny Ducati
Johnny Ducati
Member
Reply to  NoName
2 days ago

They have always been money grubbing parasites. The question is, why are they allowed to get away with it?

NoName
NoName
Reply to  Johnny Ducati
2 days ago

Johnny Ducati: The question is, why are they allowed to get away with it?

Obviously all the DEM politicians are simply thieves.

My suspicion is that all the GOP politicians made the mandatory trip to “The Alibi Club”, and that the Mossad has high quality video & audio of the GOP politicians at play with the Cabana Boys…

[Possibly excepting the two gentlemen from Kentucky; Paul & Massie.]

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
2 days ago

When it won the Cold War. At that point the USA became the Blackberry Fruitcake Empire, a giddy hyperpower that, having defeated global communism could now let its freak flag fly and plant it hard and deep in every nation’s tukhas.

NoName
NoName
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
15 hours ago

I hate to keep beating a dead horse, but none of this nonsense matters whatsoever. Not a whit. For at least the next half-century [if not the next half a millennium], there will be one and only one pertinent issue in the entire world: Were you & your fambly v@xxinated, or did you & your fambly remain Pureb00ded? A Horrifying Breakthrough in the WHITE FIBROUS CLOT Saga https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4307726/posts https://laurakasner.substack.com/p/a-horrifying-breakthrough-in-the Every single article I read now is Worst Case Scenario. Every two weeks or thereabouts; Worst Case Scenario. Imagine if the Medical Industrial Complex were ackshually interested in getting to the… Read more »

Paintersforms
Paintersforms
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

If you ask me, it’s the logical endpoint of liberalism, which I understand to be the idea that everybody has a valid perspective, at least in some sense. Everybody has a piece of the puzzle, so you have to be inclusive to grasp the problem in total. Again, follow that logic, without limits, and eventually you’ll be asking Satan for advice lol.

Last edited 2 days ago by Paintersforms
LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

For whites, the impetus towards liberalism was the belief that a person should never be judged, or suffer consequences, for a trait that one did not choose.

This seems like a humane aspiration until you realize that many immutable traits should limit your options. I hope that even liberals would still agree that blind people shouldn’t be pilots. (Is that hate now?)

Other races do not seem to share this impulse, but are happy to exploit it when arguing with whites. No other race has ever thought that homos should be tolerated or women be soldiers.

Last edited 2 days ago by LineInTheSand
pyrrhus
pyrrhus
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

When Harry Truman, against the unanimous opinion of the State Department and military, recognized the criminal State of Israel…Jews have always been far left….

fakeemail
fakeemail
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

When i was a young blue-pill Normie Republican, I remember there were 3 insane things with the Dubya regime that cracked the matrix for me:

-he justified invading Iraq with the image of iraqi broads holding up there dumb purple fingers after voting
-he boasted about his regime gave the most money to africa (BOTSWANA!)
-post 911, he declared islam a “relgion of peace” but made it our respinsiblity to bring in more muslims than ever

G Lordon Giddy
G Lordon Giddy
Reply to  fakeemail
2 days ago

I left conservatism in 2004 for these exact same reasons. Conservatism under the Bush/Cheney regime gave us bomb them there then bring them here. My eyes were opened and its been a process since 2004 that has led me to this side of the great divide.

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  G Lordon Giddy
2 days ago

I still remember the first time I saw a “Happy Ramadan” sign – it was after 9/11. I don’t even think I knew what Ramadan was when I saw it. Now it is a minor American holiday. I think people today would find it hard to believe, but before 2001, there were for all intents and purposes no Muslims in the USA, and the few who were here were basically culturally assimilated individuals in big cities. It’s almost hard to believe that we fight this GWOT and decades of mass bombing against Muslims and now we also have Muslim cities… Read more »

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

To this day one of the most incomprehensible things about 9/11 (other than WTC #7, LOL) is that we started letting millions of Muslims in after the attack! “Hey, a bunch of Muslims hijacked some airplanes and crashed them into the WTC and the Pentagon, what’ll we do guys?” “Let’s let millions of them emigrate to the U.S.!” I stay out of the city as much as possible, but the last time I drove through what was the historically the “negro ghetto” it looked like fucking Karachi — dudes in man-robes and sandals wearing kufis everywhere, women dressed in black… Read more »

ray
ray
Reply to  Xman
2 days ago

Meaning, the WTC hit involved much more than apparent.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Xman
2 days ago

Back in 2003 or 2004 I drove through New Brunswick, New Jersey and was shocked and appalled by all mysterious brown meat in the streets. Verily, I felt as though I had been apprehended by some malevolent force and deposited in Libya or Azerbaijan or Turkmenistan. Whether all of those aliens flooded into New Brunswick in the aftermath of 9/11, I do not know. All I know is that they were there, and I’m sure there are even more of them there now. **smh**

ray
ray
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
2 days ago

About 15 years ago I lived in a college town in Oregon. Rented an apartment in a complex with many arab young men. They took to standing around, one by one, on all the street corners in the neighborhood, yammering constantly into phones and scouting around. Of course, we didn’t get along. One day when they were hanging out in a group in the parking lot outside my apartment, I took the 12 gauge on a slow walk to my hatchback, right past their group. Put it in the car, took it out of the car, smiled as I walked… Read more »

The Wild Geese Howard
The Wild Geese Howard
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

Ramadan is more accurately called, “Ram-a-scam.”

This is because their idea of, “fasting,” is engorging themselves at all-night parties and sleeping all day.

Ramadan food waste and weight gain are both very real.

I know because I used to read the articles in the French language newspapers of the MENA country I lived and worked in for 5 years.

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  G Lordon Giddy
2 days ago

After 9/11, my two causes were enforcing immigration law and fighting muslims. W lost me when he said that we had to fight them over there to prevent them from coming here.

This was his tacit admission that his admin wanted open borders.

After then came the 2 amnesty attempts. Whenever I get too despairing about our ability to effect change, I remember that we stopped those amnesties.

Last edited 2 days ago by LineInTheSand
Chris
Chris
Reply to  LineInTheSand
2 days ago

As I recall, one of the first things he tried in the spring of ‘01 was amnesty.

Fakeemail
Fakeemail
Reply to  G Lordon Giddy
2 days ago

And don’t forget dubya’s “family values don’t stop at the rio grande” and actively pandering and trying to amnesty more illegal Mexican than ever! Death to the gop

Fakeemail
Fakeemail
Reply to  Fakeemail
2 days ago

And then wanting to give all the minos homeloans that they had no chance of paying back! Of course responsible taxpayers wind up on the hook.What a nightmare and curse are the bushes.

ray
ray
Reply to  Fakeemail
2 days ago

¡Jeb! lol

Lakelander
Lakelander
Reply to  fakeemail
2 days ago

“he declared islam a “relgion of peace” but made it our respinsiblity to bring in more muslims than ever”

…And now Trump is hosting an Iftar dinner at the White House to celebrate Muslims…the same day his Defense Secretary revealed that he branded himself with a tattoo in Arabic ‘kafir’, which means infidel. Make of this what you will.

Maniac
Maniac
Reply to  fakeemail
1 day ago

Not to mention the “Patriot Act.” W. is the reason I went third-party. (Constitution.)

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  Mycale
2 days ago

America has become a revolutionary empire with continuous revolution. That is why in 25 years, this stuff will be conservative values America always stood for and there will be all new evils being promoted. The revolution can never stop and so it is always seeking out new causes.

Lakelander
Lakelander
2 days ago

I’d like to shine some light on another aspect of the Catholic Charities situation from my professional experience. A big focus of this charity is bringing in foreigners, yes, but the other aspect that people probably don’t realize is that the funds the charity raise are in large part transferred to Real Estate companies/investors to house said foreigners. I’m sure you can surmise who owns a bulk of the real estate benefiting from these payments. Really calls in to question who this charity ultimately aims to benefit. Of course they’ll say it’s about helping the poor, downtrodden foreigners but in… Read more »

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
Reply to  Lakelander
2 days ago

See my comment about keeping merchants in their place. Same exclusion must be applied to real estate speculators, land developers, property managers, and so on. This will be virtually impossible to do without a religion which motivates tradesmen, farmers, and laborers to resist the blandishments of the merchants and real estate people.

Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Reply to  Ride-By Shooter
2 days ago

You’ve hit the nail on the head – America was pozzed by AH from the start and turned into a Talmudic Bodega instead of a Blood and Soil nation.

Marko
Marko
2 days ago

Even when I was young and dumb, I couldn’t believe the gall of COH-lin Powell saying in front of the UN that we aren’t an empire wanting to invade other countries. Peak Bush years.

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Marko
2 days ago

And cuckservatards still consider Powell as part of the IKAGO holy trinity (Sowell, Thomas, Powell).

Jack Dobsen
Jack Dobsen
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

Cuckservatards are more annoying than leftists, no small feat. In fact, only they can make me angry.

The Wild Geese Howard
The Wild Geese Howard
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

Our Lady of Basedness ALWAYS delivers!!!

ray
ray
2 days ago

I don’t see the American Ideology of egalite, female supremacism, and homosexuality dying. I see some folks trying to kill it, of which I am one. But it isn’t ‘dying on its own’ that’s for damn sure. The first few months of Orangie Dos have given hope that America’s satanic religion uh I mean ideology somehow is expiring. I see little evidence of that, given that the Regime still controls all the institutions and the deep-state, or bureaucracy. USAID? Drop in the bucket. When one studies the history of the Jews in Scripture, one finds them in constant regression to… Read more »

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  ray
2 days ago

This. Every university and public school and corporation and organization that claims it no longer has DEI or ESG as official goals still has the basic tenets deeply embedded and practiced daily. It’s why White men are at the bottom of the heap in being accepted to college or getting hired for most jobs. All of the ‘middle class’ still remains convinced that anyone can be an “American”and that only color-blind ‘merit’ should matter – deliberately remaining blindly ignorant of sexual differences and ethnic origins and loyalties. The equalitarian lie has a deep hold in AINO, based on various resentments… Read more »

ray
ray
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

‘I don’t see anything breaking through the ‘murican fantasy except civil conflict and lots of death’ Sadly, I agree 3g4me. I believe America to be the nation named in Daniel 12:1 involving a ‘time of trouble’ unlike any in all of humanity’s past . . . and there have been some doozies. Christian pastors translate that ‘trouble’ as a general Tribulation of disasters and horrors. Which, to an extent, is true. But only half-true. Because the primary Hebrew translation of ‘trouble’ is ‘female adversary’ or ‘rival wife’, referring to the spiritual entity behind the feminist movement, and to that movement’s… Read more »

Last edited 2 days ago by ray
RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  3g4me
18 hours ago

In a 15 hour drive every single YT commercial was all black – even the one with the actors speaking the Qeen’s English. In a 95%+ corridor of the country every billboard including the one’s advertising infant health care was black – total white erasure.

The message is clear. We own you and we rule you and you have no future here. The onslaught is only just beginning

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  ray
2 days ago

Good history, Ray, but…

When one studies the history of the Jews in Scripture, one finds them in constant regression to the paleolithic mother/goddess imago, and to matriarchal control.”

How do you square that with the proscription against women being religious leaders and even today only the men get paid to study torah/talmud?

ray
ray
Reply to  LineInTheSand
2 days ago

Most of the political, military and economic leaders of America are men . . . yet women run the show, everybody knows it, nobody will say it. You can have male figureheads in power and still have a gynocentric and gynocratic nation. The U.S. as proof. Men are in leadership positions but overwhelmingly hew to female socio-legal imperatives. As for Jews, amongst the Orthodox you will find a number of male-primary holdovers from ancient Judaism, including male Torah study. Again, Israel has male leadership, yet from a legal and social standpoint — especially in Tel Aviv — it’s a liberal,… Read more »

Last edited 2 days ago by ray
Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

Waay back when, my major professor would often entertain challenges and questions in the classroom. I’ve begun of late to appreciate his wry insight and response to some of the “gotcha” questions posed by students.

One question posed by a budding “feminist” co-ed was regarding his opinion of the “women’s rights movement”. His response was quick and pointed. Something to the effect, “…if you want to fight for “second place” in society, go right ahead…”. 😉

Xman
Xman
2 days ago

The U.S. has been an ideological empire since 1917, when Wilson abandoned the Monroe Doctrine and declared that the U.S. must get involved in a European war against a country that never attacked us to make the entire WORLD “safe for democracy.” FDR’s “Four Freedoms,” announcing the rights to freedom from ‘fear” and “want” “everywhere in the world” were a corollary to the imperial ideology. After the American cultural revolution of the Sixties, that transformed into anal sex, abortion and transgenderism — plus Zionism — “everywhere in the world.” Difficult not to agree with the people who think that the… Read more »

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
Reply to  Xman
2 days ago

“The U.S. has been an ideological empire since 1917…” That’s true as far back as you’ve dared to think, but remember Publius’ Federalist No. 1, esp. the first paragraph. AH very consciously promoted the reorganization of the “empire” (quoting AH) to which some class rebels had given birth only eleven years before by partitioning an empire. The subject speaks its own importance; comprehending in its consequences nothing less than the existence of the union, the safety and welfare of the parts of which it is composed, the fate of an empire in many respects the most interesting in the world.… Read more »

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Xman
2 days ago

Yes, at bare minimum, a proto-ideology has underpinned America for a very long time. Certainly, the US has always been a messianic country, and messianic fervor is the driest tinder for an ideological conflagration. However, while we all wish America would have tended its own knitting rather than crusading for democracy across the globe, at least that earlier proto-ideology was not particularly noisome. Thinking democracy and so-called “human rights” were for everybody was foolish, but not abominable. What we’ve seen since the conclusion of the Cold War is an ideology of Satanic stripe. We may have shaken our heads ruefully… Read more »

Johnny Ducati
Johnny Ducati
Member
2 days ago

When I was a conservative, I bristled at China’s accusation that we were always at war from the beginning. But it was true. We have always been at war, whether on behalf of corporations or ideologies. What Z is telling me is that America has been judaized from the time jews entered the elite, and that our society has been warped by their ideas of social justice. Our wars were noble and just, as told by the greatest liars in all of history. Tikkun olam is good for the jews, especially when they rob us to pay for their generosity… Read more »

Templar
Templar
Reply to  Johnny Ducati
2 days ago

China’s accusation that we were always at war from the beginning.

Talk about the pot calling the kettle black LOL…

Jack Dobsen
Jack Dobsen
2 days ago

The ideology of the United States, radical equalitarianism, is a nutty religion that has become too transparently insane to be sustained. It seems to be holding firmer in the West European and other satrapies, but at some point it will begin to die in those places as well. There likely will be a counter-revolutionary Julian the Apostate arise at some point to try to restore DEI, transgenderism and the other lunacies, but reality probably will win out. Trump arguably is post-ideological, but he also clings to the radical equalitarianism delusion at least in part. What follows him, though, will be… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Jack Dobsen
2 days ago

Trump is an Enlightenment equalitarian, but the tribe of Usury Sodomy Abortion he works for is not. Please remember how this works, as it worked in the ancient past, and in the more recent past once liberated by White technology (deepwater sailing ships, Gutenberg, the British Industrial Revolution and petroleum…) The landed gentry (Aryans long ago, “Puritans” and “Masons” then, Postmodern communalists now) are the majority advancing, but they follow the beliefs of a parasitic minority…that minority leads the way of the advance. (Neocons, tech oligarchs.) Parasites are the software “drivers”. The ant is bigger, but the virus drives it.… Read more »

Last edited 2 days ago by Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Alzaebo
2 days ago

Dammit. Dammit. I have to apologise. None of this is of any practical use to anyone here.

I told myself I wasn’t to comment; the focus needs to be on getting the science up to speed, up to translation, a base others can build on, because going in half-assed was an absolute fucking disaster.

It was like throwing a pebble not into a pond, but into a raging river; it could not possibly have made a difference. Still, some want to try again. I can’t face it, I can’t.

Last edited 2 days ago by Alzaebo
Jack Dobsen
Jack Dobsen
Reply to  Alzaebo
2 days ago

Good comment, though. Restraint is not necessary beyond what is legally required.

Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Reply to  Alzaebo
2 days ago

Just so. Now how do we ‘evolve’ to become Parasite Proof?

Bartleby the Scrivner
Bartleby the Scrivner
Reply to  Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
2 days ago

Trick question?

Lakelander
Lakelander
Reply to  Alzaebo
2 days ago

Alzaebo – Did we both use the term ‘landed gentry’ today independently (in an excellent example of synchronicity) or were you inspired by my comment earlier?

I sense we’re pretty similar so it wouldn’t surprise me (we really like expanding our thoughts in parentheses, probably an autist thing).

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
2 days ago

I hope that the Z Man commentariat can forgive me, but yesterday the temperature got into the low 50s and…

I grilled. For the first time in 2025. I am a griller.

Burgers. Brats. If this is wrong then I don’t want to be right.

Steve W
Steve W
Reply to  LineInTheSand
2 days ago

To be sung to Luther Ingram’s classic: To a Piece of Meat If grillin’ you is wrong, I don’t wanna be right If being right means eating tofu I’d rather live a wrong doing life my wine aunt and health coach say it’s a shame It’s a downright disgrace But long as I got you on my plate I don’t care what the doctors say My friends tell me there’s no future in loving a piece of ham If I can’t eat you when I want, I’ll eat you when I can If grillin’ you is wrong, I don’t wanna… Read more »

Xman
Xman
Reply to  LineInTheSand
2 days ago

Nothing wrong with grilling as long as it’s venison. Ate some venison souvlaki on a pita a couple of days ago, and cut up the leftover meat for venison and eggs this morning. Delicious.

The bastards are out of control around here, we have hit three of them in three separate vehicles in the past year and half. Wife totaled out a car hitting one two weeks ago.

Kill and grill as many of ’em as you can…

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

There’s a griller on the road
His brain is squirmin’ like a toad
Take a long holiday
Let your children play
If you give this man a brat
Sweet family will shat
Griller on the road, yeah

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

You are in the grill but not of it. I’m the same way.

Lavrov
Lavrov
2 days ago

When was the turning point? Several others made excellent suggestions, but I would argue that giving first amendment protection to pornography was an important contributor to the slide. Why didn’t this happen in 1850s or 1900?

https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/352/380/

Bartleby the Scrivner
Bartleby the Scrivner
2 days ago

After reading the first 10 comments posted today, it made me think the following.

In a Darwinian sense,(meaning propagating the species; surviving), how does spreading sodomy, abortion, feminism, and other mental illnesses, aid in the cultures quest to survive?

Bitter reactionary
Bitter reactionary
Reply to  thezman
2 days ago

Well, maybe we just got to the finish line first. The White Man beat nature and all his rivals and maximized his comfort. Game of life won. Playing further is just running up the score. And what prizes are left to win?

If the Others want to keep playing for first runner-up, then so be it. They’re mucking up the world so badly, poisoning it with industrial and biological filth, that it’ll be unlivable in a couple centuries anyway.

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

and what will the secondary effects of the white race receding from the world stage? they are easy to predict.

Ploppy
Ploppy
Reply to  Bartleby the Scrivner
2 days ago

If you can get your competition to embrace the sodomy to a greater extent than your own group then it’s adaptive.

Pozymandias
Reply to  Ploppy
2 days ago

Probably the best way to exterminate any race of humans is to offer their women a way to attain a comfortable but not necessarily lavish lifestyle without needing a man. Just allowing them to compete equally with men won’t do because the men will still come out on top in any job requiring great strength of mind or body. Thus you favor the women in everything and guide them into “work” that is basically just time wasting busy-work – your friendly neighborhood HR dept, for example. This kills their desire for (most) men and thus the birthrate. Sure, they’ll still… Read more »

The Wild Geese Howard
The Wild Geese Howard
Reply to  Pozymandias
2 days ago

Pozy-

For the deviants, recruiting is reproduction.

Always has been.

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Pozymandias
2 days ago

Giving women the vote and a paycheck without doing any actual real work is the equivalent of giving a five-year old a bottle of liquor and a loaded shotgun. It’s not going to end well for anyone.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Ploppy
1 day ago

A huge “if.” And that’s certainly not the BFE’s intent.

ray
ray
Reply to  Bartleby the Scrivner
2 days ago

It doesn’t. What you describe is a cult/ure of Death. Really, a religion of death. And it sure isn’t new in human history, it just went global.

Steve W
Steve W
2 days ago

“American” ideology starts with Woodrow Wilson, plain and simple. He was the prophet of American internationalism, the “spread of democracy”, and America’s role as “world police”. Sure, Ted Roosevelt brought forth the Great White Fleet, announcing that America was now a main player on the world stage, but that was not ideology – that was just dick-slinging. Lincoln’s “ideology” was more in the nature of Stalin’s “socialism in one country”, than a project for re-shaping the world at large. Was he an autocrat? Yes. Was he evil? Probably. Did he have some grand design for demo-forming the world, as Wilson… Read more »

usNthem
usNthem
2 days ago

I certainly hope the American ideology is dying out – it’s represented an awful lot of death and destruction around the world. Further it sounds like there are lots of good reasons to send our greatest ally’s countrymen here all packing back to our greatest ally – sans whatever wealth they’ve accumulated.

Steve
Steve
2 days ago

“Rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated.”

— Ideology, probably.

Ideology cannot die. In a complex world, there is no empirical method of epistemology. And even if there were, the challenge would be why we think empiricism is the key to correct epistemology.

Sure, rationalism has no better groundwork. Faith is all that supports the idea that reason is the path to truth. But reason as Europeans understand the idea is mostly rooted Christian origins, so was never at odds with faith.

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  Steve
2 days ago

Russell Kirk said that the conservative temperament is the negation of ideology. It is a preference that social change always be slow and considered.

Perhaps against Kirk’s wishes, conservatism became an ideology.

As your review of our epistemic limits shows, there is probably no way to demonstrate that you have no ideology. Your opponent will always see you as advancing an ideology.

Last edited 2 days ago by LineInTheSand
Tars Tarkas
Member
2 days ago

About a week or so ago, big soda was paying “maga” influencers to shill for them. Kennedy wants to ban SNAP users from buying soda with the food stamps and the “maga” influencers were crying about it saying they should be able to buy soda with it. Aaron Macintyre did a video about the shilling complaining that conservatives oppose SNAP. When exactly did it become a conservative principle to let your fellow countrymen starve in America? Yes, I know SNAP is not without its problems, but for crying out loud this really shows the emptiness of conservative ideology. These same… Read more »

Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
2 days ago

“My father ran the meat slicer at a deli. That was enough to buy him a nice little house in San Francisco, a Cadillac, a humble cabin on a mountain lake and enough time off to enjoy it. He had three kids and we never wanted for anything. Now I’m a train bridge architect and I can’t afford deli meat. “Also, wages cause inflation—especially the minimum wage. Econ 101.” I don’t know what conservatives really believe. I know they’re very angry when losers get anything. A cripple with a Dr Pepper bothers them more than total civilizational ruin. They have… Read more »

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Hemid
2 days ago

I’m neither a libertardian nor a cuckservative, but I don’t believe someone on food stamps is entitled to buy whatever junk food they want. When our kids were young and we were financially struggling, we didn’t buy soda. Damned if I want to subsidize Juwayne and Pedro getting any. Milk, cheese, eggs, etc. Basics of nutrition. Not via card, but in kind. Actually, I prefer they not get any nutrition at all. And let dey mamas figure out some other grift for soda, weaves, and nails.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

I think limitations on what you can buy is reasonable and would support it. SNAP is funded in the farm bill giving billions of Dollars to big ag. The solution to not funding JaQuarious or Shaniqua is not to say “well, nobody gets nuffin!!” Look, you cannot be all for big bidness outsourcing jobs to anywhere without environmental and worker safety regulations and appalling living conditions (low wages) and then get mad when 10s of millions of the former middle class and their kids needs help. This is just one of the costs everyone just ignores of globalism and free… Read more »

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
2 days ago

As Lothrop Stoddard noted more than 100 years ago, the blacks/browns/yellows cannot ‘outwork’ Whites but they can and do ‘underlive’ Whites. I’m all for assistance to the White working class, but I don’t believe any ‘creative’ bills or nibbling at the edges will suffice to resolve this. Same way I don’t/won’t give to food banks or any charities unless/until I can limit the race of the recipients.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

Given how it is illegal to do that, your best bet is to give to local charities that help out in your neighborhood, where hopefully there is little diversity. I would never design this system. It’s awful. But given it isn’t going to change any time soon, we have to work with what we got. There are so many things that should be WAY higher priority. Even illegals getting state benefits is not nearly as bad as the army of bureaucrats we employ. Not only do we pay their salaries and all associated costs, the very work they do imposes… Read more »

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
2 days ago

” . . . we have to work with what we got.” Best of luck to you. I decline to play by my enemies’ rules.

Xman
Xman
Reply to  3g4me
2 days ago

I think Food Stamps/SNAP or whatever they call it now IS limited to certain “necessary” foodstuffs.

But it’s my understanding that fraud is rampant in the system, i.e. Arab grocers in back neighborhoods accept benefits for Colt 45, Newports, and rolling papers at a rate of fifty cents on the dollar and pocket the difference.

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  Hemid
1 day ago

evidently the soda is an informal currency, and it is sold to shady stores for cash, and that cash is then used for drugs, cigs, etc.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  karl von hungus
16 hours ago

While I have heard of people buying stuff not covered by food stamps and selling food stamps for 50 cents on the Dollar, I’ve never heard of soda being an informal currency. Where I live, there is also a big tax on “soda,” (basically anything you can drink is included, including diet soda, teas, the flavored milk like stuff, orange juice, grapefruit juice and I believe even bottled water) 2 cents an ounce which is 128 on the 2 liter bottles. I’ve heard they are cracking down on the snap corruption in my area, but I’m not a recipient or… Read more »

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
1 day ago

let’s keep in mind the ginormous financial costs to society, to cope with the medical care for all the health damage this pop causes.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  karl von hungus
1 day ago

To be more accurate, without really undermining your point, pop doesn’t cause anything; it’s the irresponsible consumption of it–particularly by the wogs–that harms society.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
2 days ago

There is actually a simple explanation for how we have gotten to where we are. The American system is a combination of state atheism (disguised as tolerance/no preference) and a capitalist system based on usury. This system was originally run by the liberal Protestant elite. They were broadly tolerant of Christianity as long as it did not interfere with their economic interests. In the twentieth century, that system was taken over by Jews. They control the institutions the Z Man noted (media, entertainment, publishing) and thus the culture of the country. The control of culture and the ideology of state… Read more »

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  Dutchboy
2 days ago

Excellent. I appreciate your focus on usury, which is not often discussed on Z Man’s site.

I defended usury when I was a conservative because the lender was taking a risk in lending the money and had a right to be compensated.

True, but just like we put limits on how much a business can pollute, we can put limits on the amount one is able to earn on lending. It’s not a law of nature that lenders must rule us.

Z Man and RamzPaul: Discuss usury and the attempts to constrain it. Also Marbury vs. Madison.

Last edited 2 days ago by LineInTheSand
Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Many, many years ago there was legislation passed to correct the problem of credit card usury. All it did was protect the lender from most bankruptcies. One aspect they discussed, and I even thought passed, was that unsecured loans would have a max of two years payback. In other words, your payment + interest is computed to get you out of the specific debt in two years. No longer do you get to borrow and pay back a “loan” for an indefinite period, which usually means a death spiral wrt finally being free of loan obligations—and of course it would… Read more »

Steve
Steve
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Limits on “usury” are indistinguishable from “redlining” regulation, and end in the same place.

Last edited 1 day ago by Steve
J. R. Chloupek
J. R. Chloupek
1 day ago

Read pages 494-544 of “Leviathan and Its Enemies” by Samuel T. Francis. That concluding chapter explains why the socio/political/economic complex has developed exactly the same way in all modern cumulative economies. The people in command of the commercial, communications, and authoritative apparatuses in those countries believe in playing to win the Game of Life. Strangely enough, their philosophy of “helping” others enriches themselves while immiserating those they help. Thus it has always been. Interestingly, Musa Al’ Gharbi’s book “We have Never been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite” admits as much-the Woke philosophy promises salvation for all but… Read more »

Concerned Bystander
Concerned Bystander
1 day ago

Hyam Salomon did not finance the Revolutionary War. This is a myth promoted by Polish Jews, competing with established German Jews for status when they began to enter this country in numbers after the turn of the 19th century. He was a broker working for Robert Morris – the true Financier of the Revolution. His knowledge of languages made him useful to Morris, but there were many other men doing similar work at that time. For a scholarly discussion of Salomon, see Dr. Beth S. Wenger’s work “History Lessons: The Creation of American Jewish Heritage.” (Princeton University Press) Chapter five,… Read more »

Hi-ya!
Hi-ya!
2 days ago

I I’m really off topic. But points here about academics could be made if conservatives about race: The most dispiriting trait of the professional scholars is not their consensus about Shakespeare’s identify, but their refusal to admit that there can be any room for doubt. Realizing very well how little is known about Mr.Shakspere of Stratford, they should at least allow for an agnostic middle ground. It is one thing to say that the testimony in favor of Mr.Shakspere’s authorship remains, on balance, more satisfying than all the arguments made against it. It’s quite another matter to concede nothing to… Read more »

Ketchup-stained Griller
Ketchup-stained Griller
Reply to  Hi-ya!
2 days ago

Still stuck on Sobran?

james wilson
james wilson
Member
Reply to  Ketchup-stained Griller
2 days ago

Sobran was right, to a point. The 17th Earl of Oxford presented Thomas North’s works, both word for word and slightly altered, as Shakespeare. The queer Earl wrote the sonnets, not the plays. Unz recently compiled it all.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  james wilson
2 days ago

Which is why the sonnets, which describe an older man, homo- or bi-sexual, lame, and in disgrace never was consistent with the actual William Shakespeare. They were describing Oxford to a tee.