“ The standard liberal answer collapses under scrutiny, for as the moral order is inverted, we observe that the beneficiaries of this new regime—minorities and women liberated from the yoke of tradition—do not manifest the paternalistic virtues necessary for the maintenance of civilization, choosing instead immediate gratification over the formation of stable families, thus mortgaging the West's darkening horizon.”
Within the chaotic theater of the American right, a great dialectic struggle is currently unfolding, pitting the decaying forces of the obsolete liberal paradigm—a mere strategy of containment—against a radical, youthful faction striving with violent energy to burst through the ideological bonds that have imprisoned it for decades.
This generational collision finds its sharpest relief in the spectacle of the debate between Piers Morgan and Nick Fuentes, a tableau where one witnesses, on one side, the last of the Boomer liberals, a quivering gelatinous mass of moral insecurity, and on the other, an immiserated yet determined cohort of young men, furious to discover that their birthright has been cavalierly squandered by the very fathers who were sworn to guard it.
Digging through the sedimentary layers of this discourse, we unearth the forbidden question that Fuentes and his rough-hewn followers are clumsily articulating: why exactly has the authority of the straight white man been dismantled in favor of an abstract rational equality, bestowing status upon groups who, far from shouldering the civilizational load, merely consume the accumulated social capital without ensuring the propagation of the future?
The standard liberal answer collapses under scrutiny, for as the moral order is inverted, we observe that the beneficiaries of this new regime—minorities and women liberated from the yoke of tradition—do not manifest the paternalistic virtues necessary for the maintenance of civilization, choosing instead immediate gratification over the formation of stable families, thus mortgaging the West's darkening horizon.
In this arena, Piers Morgan performs as a tragic buffoon, whose metaphysically desolate personal life and craven submission to progressive dogmas illustrate the total bankruptcy of his generation; he exhausts himself hurling tired epithets of "racist" or "misogynist," oblivious that these liberal incantations hold no power over young men who view him not as a moral arbiter, but as the gatekeeper of a dying system they intend to raze.
It becomes undeniable that the incandescent fury of the Zoomers is no aberration but the direct consequence of the cowardice of their elders, those men who abandoned their posts and failed to hold the line, thereby forcing their sons to attempt the Herculean task of reconstructing a tradition from scattered fragments in the face of an overwhelming, hostile opposition.
Consequently, a grave conclusion imposes itself upon us: we, the men of the old guard, must not look upon this awkward vanguard with contempt but rather recognize our own responsibility in their plight, for to scapegoat them for the flaws our own abdication created would be to sign the death warrant of the Western man, who would then exit the stage of history not with a bang, but in a pathetic, contemptible sigh of exhaustion.
This paragraph nails it:
“ The standard liberal answer collapses under scrutiny, for as the moral order is inverted, we observe that the beneficiaries of this new regime—minorities and women liberated from the yoke of tradition—do not manifest the paternalistic virtues necessary for the maintenance of civilization, choosing instead immediate gratification over the formation of stable families, thus mortgaging the West's darkening horizon.”
Within the chaotic theater of the American right, a great dialectic struggle is currently unfolding, pitting the decaying forces of the obsolete liberal paradigm—a mere strategy of containment—against a radical, youthful faction striving with violent energy to burst through the ideological bonds that have imprisoned it for decades.
This generational collision finds its sharpest relief in the spectacle of the debate between Piers Morgan and Nick Fuentes, a tableau where one witnesses, on one side, the last of the Boomer liberals, a quivering gelatinous mass of moral insecurity, and on the other, an immiserated yet determined cohort of young men, furious to discover that their birthright has been cavalierly squandered by the very fathers who were sworn to guard it.
Digging through the sedimentary layers of this discourse, we unearth the forbidden question that Fuentes and his rough-hewn followers are clumsily articulating: why exactly has the authority of the straight white man been dismantled in favor of an abstract rational equality, bestowing status upon groups who, far from shouldering the civilizational load, merely consume the accumulated social capital without ensuring the propagation of the future?
The standard liberal answer collapses under scrutiny, for as the moral order is inverted, we observe that the beneficiaries of this new regime—minorities and women liberated from the yoke of tradition—do not manifest the paternalistic virtues necessary for the maintenance of civilization, choosing instead immediate gratification over the formation of stable families, thus mortgaging the West's darkening horizon.
In this arena, Piers Morgan performs as a tragic buffoon, whose metaphysically desolate personal life and craven submission to progressive dogmas illustrate the total bankruptcy of his generation; he exhausts himself hurling tired epithets of "racist" or "misogynist," oblivious that these liberal incantations hold no power over young men who view him not as a moral arbiter, but as the gatekeeper of a dying system they intend to raze.
It becomes undeniable that the incandescent fury of the Zoomers is no aberration but the direct consequence of the cowardice of their elders, those men who abandoned their posts and failed to hold the line, thereby forcing their sons to attempt the Herculean task of reconstructing a tradition from scattered fragments in the face of an overwhelming, hostile opposition.
Consequently, a grave conclusion imposes itself upon us: we, the men of the old guard, must not look upon this awkward vanguard with contempt but rather recognize our own responsibility in their plight, for to scapegoat them for the flaws our own abdication created would be to sign the death warrant of the Western man, who would then exit the stage of history not with a bang, but in a pathetic, contemptible sigh of exhaustion.