For the 🐑🐑 Bleating about “The Greater Good”… HERES YOUR SIGN !!!
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I 100% approve this message.
One thing I would say though: The national Hymn says: land of the free. That is Frysland or Frye's land in the old tongue.
It means to embrace and understand that Freedom, meaning the JURISDICTION(!!!!) of the free is you, and you alone. It is Life itself!
It means to not be a slave of anyone else, even IF you owe someone, and not be a slave to your own lust and wants.
Me and my username LOVE your comment! Amen!
Amen to THAT!
Everytime someone wants you to do something for greater good, check if what they really mean isn't their good.
Amen!
Freedom isn’t a virtue.
It’s a means to an end and I know everyone here doesn’t believe in total freedom—unless you’re cool with murder and rape and theft?
Glad to see someone point this out. Usually this goes unsaid and everyone just, sorry to say it, bleats along in agreement at the notion of freedom being the greatest thing to exist.
Also, all laws exist to legislate morality. All of them. So unless anyone here supports total anarchy with zero government of any kind, freedom is not the ultimate goal nor is it "the greater good".
The greater good is a just and righteous society. This necessarily involves hampering freedom, but also protecting freedom.
Those are such broad terms they can be used for everything. Your average covid believer thinks it is just and righteous to vaccinate yourself with hell knows what they designed and produced in one year, as you are righteously protecting others.
If freedom is a means to an end, you basically have social-democratic-whatever hell where stuff is allowed if it makes State/Gov richer or more powerful.
Except objective reality shows us that the COVID vaccine is complete bullshit.
So it doesn't really mesh the way you say. Sure, the COVID crazies can apply the terms to that topic, but they're simply wrong.
Saying something is just and righteous doesn't make it just and righteous. Just like calling something freedom doesn't make it freedom (i.e. freedom to infringe on other people's rights).
And freedom has to be a mean to an end. If it's the end, it will always result in social decay and societal collapse, since society operates on the rule of law, and not freedom.
You know this, I know this. However, unless you go pure math, objective reality can be hard to observe or not even exist. From PoV of your average covidiot, the objective reality was that we are dealing with an ebola level outbreak, as they were told that by the mainstream. So, if it is OK to throw away freedom for noble causes, it is OK to do so now. No higher principle.
Yes, it would be nice to know when you can intervene and when not; however, apart for reasons like stated above you'd need a crystal ball to predict what will the outcome be, was it ever worth the price. Also, do this a few times and nobody will even bother with freedom anymore, as precedent has been set.
Nobody is arguing you should be free to break neighbour's windows because you are free. That's the argument of the left, and why you can do less and less shit, all for noble causes.
I feel that for last couple for decades, freedom didn't have the best press. Actually, people insisted on being the smarter, righteous and other nice sounding adjectives, freedom was for rednecks or other local slur.
How's the social decay going?
But would we need a crystal ball? We all knew COVID was bullshit from the beginning. We were right. It certainly wasn't proven to be oh-so-dangerous like they claim. Obviously, to limit freedom for the greater good would require actual good evidence, not just unsubstantiated claims and mass hysteria like with the coof.
And so in that situation, we correctly predicted the outcome of their and our views. We predicted that ours would lead to a good outcome and theirs to a bad outcome. So it is absolutely possible to predict the outcomes, and if we do fuck up, we change it. This isn't hard in a properly functioning system.
Now, in the case where the government implements intentional tyranny with the support of most people, it doesn't matter what system you have. The fact that people will claim they are doing the righteous and just thing, even when they knowingly or unknowingly aren't, isn't an argument against any specific system. The system has to have integrity, or it doesn't matter.
It is absolutely ok to throw away freedom for noble causes, for two reasons:
Freedom is a means to an end, the end being a good society. If it was the other way around, freedom would include the freedom to infringe on other people's rights. As we both know, it doesn't, and the reason it doesn't is because that doesn't lead to a good society and is unjust.
Any society that allows immorality collapses. It is inevitably overcome by immorality, and that evidently leads to collapse. Just compare historically Muslim countries to historically Christian countries. One religion was created by Satan, and the other one is true and good. If you allow immorality for freedom's sake, collapse will follow.
The issue here isn't throwing away freedom for noble causes. It's throwing away freedom for ignoble causes. To conflate the two is asinine. To reject the idea that we can discern between the two is to accept the modernist leftist ideology that says we can't know objective truth and all the shit that comes along with that, like "men can become women" and "some children actually "want" to be in a sexual relationship with a 40-year-old gay man".
Firstly, yes, that is why I presented that statement as a supporting argument to my other statement that calling something just doesn't make it just, which itself was a supporting argument to my prior claim which is that we can know what is actually just versus unjust despite the covid crazies also thinking they're right.
Secondly, all laws obviously reduce freedom. All laws also legislate morality. The problem isn't reducing freedom, it's reducing freedom in an unjust and immoral manner. And justice and morality don't only cover things that "infringe" upon other people.
And as a bonus, I find these statements to be bullshit. My initial thought is always, "who the fuck are you, and how do you know what anybody other than yourself is arguing?"
Also, it's the same argument lefties use when they try to ban guns.
Also, also, I'm sure I could get plenty of people to argue that, in a hypothetical world where the coof is extremely deadly and masks work perfectly, freedom still means being able to go to the store without a mask and kill grandma.
This argument is one of the best I've seen. It's admittedly hard to make any claims about the effects of the increasing freedom of society after the enlightenment, when in reality we have a facade of freedom at best (it'd be like commies calling free market capitalism bad. We don't have it, so how do they know it's bad).
Still, it's quite evident that many of the problems are the result of the increased "freedom". Sure, it's hard to tell what society would look like under a truly free system, but it's still possible to identify that reduced freedom isn't why so many are obese and addicted, nor is it why virtue is nearly non-existent. People live maybe the most hedonistic and narcissistic lives in human history, and if you asked them why, their answer would most likely be some variant of the word "freedom". e.g. "Because I can", "how does it affect you", etc.
And another thing is, you're using positive words in a negative way. Obviously, you're making it out that the people using these words to justify reducing freedom are full of shit, but if it was indeed the case that reducing freedom would make us smarter, more righteous, and any other nice sounding adjectives, that's 100% what we should do as a society. The alternative is living in a shit, but free, society. That's the result of freedom being the end and not the means.
So I'd argue it is the case that society would be better banning certain things. The goal should be to figure out what those things are. Currently, it seems only one side is trying to do this, and it's the delusional side that contains so little true virtue that all they can do is signal fake virtue. Meanwhile, our side is split seemingly between conservative-leaning and libertarian-leaning types, which means while the left acts as a tyrannical bloc, we can't agree what is actually worth legislating. No wonder we've been failing for so long.
I don't know, take a look around any leftist shithole city where freedom runs rampant. You know, the freedom to piss in the streets, shoot up heroin in the streets, have sex in the streets, live on the streets in a shitty tent, steal anything you want as long as it doesn't cost too much, murder people, show your dick to children as long as you have enough rainbow flags with you, chop off your own genitals, etc.
Freedom is clearly not a virtue. Most of those things don't even infringe on anyone else except for the theft, murder, and child abuse.
If they made all those things illegal, and actually enforced the laws, their cities would improve massively. This would happen because it isn't about freedom, but morality. If all your laws ban everything good and allow everything bad, your society will suck. If all your laws ban everything bad and allow everything good, your society will flourish. And again, this includes banning bad things that don't infringe on anyone else.
The divine masculine archetype is universal rights, and the divine feminine archetype is universal caring. The covidiots believe they are representing the divine feminine by getting inoculated and coercing everyone else into taking the injection "for the greater good."
A just and righteous society needs an integration of masculine and feminine principles. This does involve hampering freedom for the greater good, but absolutely not when the loss of freedom is based on lies.
The truth will determine the proper approach to a just and righteous society. Injecting everyone with poison isn't the right answer even if germ theory was correct. There is no way to protect others from a fake "virus," so it is each individual's responsibility to decide how to protect themselves from that thing on the news.
All covid related policies that restrict freedom are unjust. Since legacy media is perpetuating the false belief that illness is caused by a "virus," in this case, freedom is the greater good.
Certainly, the truth determines the approach.
However, if the truth of covid was exactly as they claimed, it would be immoral to not do what would protect everybody.
In the hypothetical case where the vaccine is 100% safe and effective, and covid is real and highly lethal, claiming "freedom" actually does just mean "freedom to kill grandma".
If abortion is murder, and it 100% is, it should be illegal, because it's wrong. So why should going out with hypothetical super deadly covid while taking zero extra precautions not also be illegal? If someone wants to do nothing and stay in their house or go be in nature, that's one thing, but forcefully exposing others to super deadly covid is more akin to spitting on people, which is illegal, than it is exercising any supposed "rights".
To be clear, I'm not saying in this hypothetical that the government should send the goony squad to force inject anyone or lock people in their houses. If someone wants to go to an abandoned lake and fish, or meet up with other people who are aware of the risk, that's fine. But if someone wants to waltz into the store with a bunch of people who aren't fine with being near someone with super deadly covid, why should that not be disallowed in a moral and just society? There is no "right to go into the local Walmart and buy a can of tuna", nor is there a "right to cough up a massive loogie in the town square".
Now luckily, everything they say about covid is nonsense, so this is nothing more than a thought experiment.
And, to be fair, I'd be hesitant to actually apply this hypothetical in a medical scenario. Big pharma are mass murderers. I very much don't like the idea of the government regulating medical decisions. I simply stuck with the covid example for the consistency of the discussion.
So, I suppose the gist of my argument is this: Even just 100 years ago, "freedom" was not understood as the satanic "do what thou wilt" kind of freedom.
In this case, you'd have people lining up for their mRNA shot absolutely freewillingly, even if the thing would be 100% optional and there was actual scarcity. Hell, if the supply was actually low in this situation, the gov would probably push out some propaganda to make sure some get the shot earlier than others.
It is synonymous though, and honestly, would actually be reasonable in this line of thought: if you enforced a hidden mandate, because you can avoid it only if you go absolutely outcast, vast majority would comply. Next logical step is getting rid of the control system a la China; it does not make sense to keep the expensive and extensive mRNA certificate check infrastructure just for a percent of so purebloods. However, you can't have police check if some anti-vaxxer is going to Walmart constantly - so to save these resources, we go Greater Good and force-vaxx the remaining.
if I understand right, around half your country, and all of blue cities, would gladly feel righteous and just again, drowning in tingles as they are better than those grandma murdering freedom lovers, so this thought experiment may materialize faster than anybody of us would want.
I chose this as covid unfolded right in front of our eyes. Sam stuff can be applied to everything where you have lobby groups, big industry and so on. Freedom as a value creates natural opposition to using emergency laws whenever the current gov feels to.
And what about those who don't? Force them to get it? Force them to social distance? Force them to stay home? Or allow them to kill grandma because "freedom"?
Maybe so. It would be hard to actually know who has it or not, and fuck some kind of gay ass "registry". Privacy is important, and privacy doesn't mesh well with detailed tracking of every citizen, obviously.
Though I'd say, it's absolutely possible to identify people who are going out in public with symptoms and tell them to go home, somewhere alone, somewhere with other sick people, or somewhere with people who don't mind. It'd be no different from the police booting someone out of Walmart for indecent exposure. They address it when they see it, but don't go to nude beaches and start making mass arrests.
There can absolutely be a middle ground between freedom to do what you want during an alleged pandemic and a medical tyranny. It shouldn't be a free-for-all if an actual deadly disease appears, but we don't need to lock down the world and force inject people, either.
The option shouldn't be "let me do whatever I want, or you might as well shoot me". It should be "let me take my unvaxxed grandma who isn't afraid of dying of the coof to the empty beach near my house". That's freedom properly understood.
I think it's less than half. They like to make it seem like it's half or a majority, though.
And the difference would be that, while in my thought experiment the coof was deadly and the vax is safe, in reality, the coof is benign and the vax is deadly, so they can feel how they want, but it's not just and righteous to reimplement their bullshit.
Their feelings don't matter. Just like feelings don't matter in science, feelings don't matter when determining the right course of action in government. It's about what is true, and that CAN be discovered.
This meme comes out as Lifebridge Health is going to institute a mask mandate in Maryland, starting next week, as Covid is supposedly picking up again.