Real versus Surreal
Watch the nation’s news. Watch how every person who elevates pronouns, who thinks in the abstract, who believes in every societal failure, who is driven by identity, and who appears incessantly to provide lectures and give us lessons.
Watch as the big city politicians using their politically correct orations and euphemisms tell us just how concerned they are with the environment and how it deceitfully and unfairly fails our minority communities.
Watch as societal theoreticians conceptualize that humanity continues to be driven by racism, discrimination, and intolerance. To whom you may ask? Well, the group du jour - wherever virtue signaling is deemed to be a requirement they instantly get on television and become our indispensable instructors of absolute righteousness.
It is their need to tell us how to think, how to judge, and who to judge. These connoisseurs of pretentious concern and consideration with their magnificent introspection consider the world in theory, hypotheses, models, and dubious supposition. They are the self-assessed superior theorists who command attention, yet deserve none of it. These are the projectionists, those that constantly hurl their own faults, failures, and lack of purpose onto others.
Then there are the authentic, genuine people, those that drive the economy of the nation – those that are rarely in the nation’s news. These are the farmers, the miners, the oil riggers, the fisherman, loggers, truckers, and mill workers. They don’t conceptualize; they don’t have time to participate in ivory tower think tanks. Instead, they give all of the living, life.
Yet, these are the people that are persistently hurt by the academics, alarmists, and self-professed intelligentsia - the philosophers who command we live without the ones we and they cannot live without.
The news thrives on the pointless dreams of idealist intellectuals rather than the daily struggles of those that truly matter – the sheep should never follow, but they so often do.
In the battle against the deception of human-induced climate change, the minority communities are the farmers, ranchers, loggers, miners, oil riggers, mill workers, and fishermen. They are the ones underserved over-regulated, and inordinately restricted by foolish and unwarranted climate policies; however, as soon as these industries begin to markedly suffer and their products and services are in short supply, or no longer available to the masses, there will assuredly be widespread, far-reaching civil chaos.
This, no matter what the climate change surrealists and hucksters tell us.