Post-American America
In normal times we reflect upon the splendid gluttony of the American Thanksgiving we just experienced, the fellowship of family and friends, with gratitude and remembrance of overcoming ordeals past.
This year, though, we were a bit preoccupied with ordeals to come, and that nip in the November air conjures rumors of approaching hardship and cruelties we have no idea how we might overcome.
These are not normal times.
What was normal, anyway? The second half of the 20th century in Western Civ, the cornucopia of postwar America, paychecks that covered the house, the car, assured square meals, and quite a bit left over for Disney World, a place at the lake with a speedboat and four seats at the ballpark.
Normal was keeping a lid on discontent in foreign lands and containing our wicked obverse enemy, the Soviet communists. Normal was Mom and Dad together under one roof, expecting strangers to behave decently, order outside the home. Normal was thinking all that would last forever.
I idealize a bit. But many of you will recognize at least some of that being present in your lives for a while, at least. And you might agree that it all started breaking badly in the new century, clearly marked by the attacks of 9/11.
It All Started Going Downhill
What followed that wondrous enormity was the amazing and nauseating transfiguration of our country into the opposite of the old normal.
We’re talking about broad financial desperation, broken families, strangers bent on homicide and mayhem, official tyranny of all kinds, immersive lying, failed institutions, foolish wars, nothing and no one to believe in and the creeping suspicion that mysterious evil forces are running it all, whether they are or not.
Somehow, in some ways we’ve managed to become our old enemy, the Soviets. The sprawling bureaucracy I call the blob has a blank check to control everything we do, to usurp our individual economic decisions, intrude on our very bodies, snatch us from our homes or lock us up in them and force us to shut up about all that.
Unlike the Soviets, though, our blob is unable to suppress vile civil misbehavior, murder, rape, looting, carjacking, robbery at the bottom and fraud, bribery, money laundering, insider trading, cyber-Ponzis and racketeering at the top.
The law is a new wilderness of iniquity. Show me the man and I’ll find a crime to pin on him, Stalin’s KGB chief liked to say. Merrick Garland seems to like that method, too.
Our Food Is Poison
The people of our land look like they are being systematically poisoned (because they are). Our food is poisoned. Our daily bread contains engineered toxic proteins, glyphosate and heavy metals.
All those things will kill you before your time.
Our supermarkets are stuffed overwhelmingly with addictive snacks made of corn syrup that turns people into oxen. Americans live on pizza, chips and soda. These things are in their faces at every turn, all day long, hard to resist, especially if your existence is horribly lonely and purposeless.
The oddest feature of this upheaval is that the revolutionary youth in the streets and on the campuses are on the side of tyranny — as long as they are allowed to do some of the tyrannizing.
The mobs and the blob officials mutually reinforce each other.
Two Different Sets of Rules
The governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, did everything possible to protect antifa while they destroyed the city of Portland. Mayor Muriel Bowser had Washington D.C.’s streets painted boldly to celebrate Black Lives Matter, after they torched the church across the street from the White House, occupied by the wicked Trump.
Lately, the Ivy Leaguers stupidly shout for intifada and the allahu akbar of beheading — the innate sadism of Wokery on display for all to see. These mobs got tacit official permission to do their mob thing — except for the crowd that FBI blob agents turned into a mob on Jan. 6, 2021. Permission denied!
Instead, the people who “paraded” in the U.S. Capitol got systematically hunted down by Christopher Wray. We’re not talking about those who engaged in actual violence that day. They need to face the consequences for their actions, even if they might have been egged on by undercover feds.
I’m talking about those harmless people who just walked around, took selfies and left. Can those luckless souls now serving years-long jail sentences possibly feel thankful for being born in the USA?
Anxious Gloom
Perhaps the anxious gloom pervading this year’s Thanksgiving is due to the dread of what comes next.
No one in the public arena says that 2024 will be anything but much worse than what we’ve already lived through in this ongoing crackup of our country, and their expressed utterances are probably not as dark as their private, inner thoughts.
The gang behind “Joe Biden” has successfully jacked our country into chaos. Something similar has got Europe and the rest of the Anglosphere in its thrall.
Half of the public is grossly misinformed by The News, and swallows every proffered lie. The other half can’t get traction to storm this slippery slope of blob despotism.
Broken Chains
Anyway, we prepared for Thanksgiving. We started with the cranberries first, since the condiment has only two ingredients and would store well for four days. It came out badly. There was some rot in the berries that we couldn’t detect just by looking and sorting out some obviously bad ones.
I hear a lot of chatter that the fresh food supply chain in America is broken. The bad link in the chain is apparently the trucking system. The truck lines can’t get enough workers to load the refrigerator trailers, so the fruits and vegetables spend too much time sitting on the loading dock, where they start to… turn.
You have to wonder if this is a harbinger of greater disruptions to come, maybe widespread hunger, and you know what that leads to.
“It Feels Like the Edge of Something Because It Is the Edge of Something”
Anyway, we went all out for the Thanksgiving feast here, a big fresh turkey, of course, and way more side dishes than necessary for a dozen friends at the table.
I live in a relatively poor county in deep upstate New York and I have to wonder how many people around here went without a Thanksgiving feast this year, how many are suddenly mired in misfortune, default on a home mortgage, car sliding into the repo zone, no job, no prospects, in despair, hungry. Perhaps they were drawn to the church basements in town.
That might be us next year, who knows?
Those of us outside the blob and their mobs know that our country has to be rebuilt somehow, and that rebuilding it must include assurances of personal liberty. I’m grateful and thankful this year that there are enough of us who understand what’s at stake and are prepared to fight against slithering tyranny.
Do you see where things stand this Thanksgiving weekend?
It feels like the edge of something because it is the edge of something.
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