Let’s imagine a situation that could be somewhat common and use it as an analogy.
A well-behaved child sits at a desk in kindergarten, coloring. As he has been properly raised, he good-manneredly colors and stays inside the lines. Suddenly a bully next to him snatches the coloring book away from him. The bully tears up the book and ruins it.
The good child appeals to the teacher to restore order and to administer justice. The meek child is distraught to learn that the teacher is the child’s parent. He has been raised in a dysfunctional, inner-city home where the conventions of civil living are foreign. The law of the jungle prevail there. The bully and his siblings live an almost feral existence with no moral code being taught. All that is valued is power and the willingness to use force to get his way.
What remedy does the good child have? None. Unless he fights back, he will remain a victim. Does your moral high ground allow you to be a perpetual victim?
The Japanese martial arts are based in the principle of Budo. The principle includes the concept that peace and balance should be maintained. When peace is disturbed, sometimes decisive violence is the quickest, most efficient way to restore balance.
As long as we try to color inside the lines, and we do not impose a cost on aggression toward us, the left will never relent. When we finally stand up for ourselves, then Q’s plan has a chance.
What is the “precipice” that Q mentioned? It is the moment we rise to fight back.
Let’s imagine a situation that could be somewhat common and use it as an analogy.
A well-behaved child sits at a desk in kindergarten, coloring. As he has been properly raised, he good-manneredly colors and stays inside the lines. Suddenly a bully next to him snatches the coloring book away from him. The bully tears up the book and ruins it.
The good child appeals to the teacher to restore order and to administer justice. The meek child is distraught to learn that the teacher is the child’s parent. He has been raised in a dysfunctional, inner-city home where the conventions of civil living are foreign. The law of the jungle prevail there. The bully and his siblings live an almost feral existence with no moral code being taught. All that is valued is power and the willingness to use force to get his way.
What remedy does the good child have? None. Unless he fights back, he will remain a victim. Does your moral high ground allow you to be a perpetual victim?
The Japanese martial arts are based in the principle of Budo. The principle includes the concept that peace and balance should be maintained. When peace is disturbed, sometimes decisive violence is the quickest, most efficient way to restore balance.
As long as we try to color inside the lines, and we do not impose a cost on aggression toward us, the left will never relent. When we finally stand up for ourselves, then Q’s plan has a chance.
What is the “precipice” that Q mentioned? It is the moment we rise to fight back.
I disagree.
And January 6th’s false flag is exactly why I disagree.