The Bus is Coming for Everybody

Here’s a helpful analogy that might be useful in explaining our current predicament to somebody who realizes things are going wrong, but doesn’t have a clear picture yet. Concise analogies are helpful because the average person doesn’t have the aptitude or appetite for lengthy historical and intellectual diatribes. This should be less than one beer long:

Think of America as a bus. This bus is steered according to the antipathies and objectives of the people who control it. If you understand what they are, it’s easy to anticipate the broad strokes of what will transpire next. Perpetual conflict in the Middle East, for example.

Our Christianity and cultural values, and the coherence offered by understanding and respecting our heritage, make us a threat to the unwarranted position of power they hold over us. An ingrained belief in fairness and objectivity constitutes an existential affront to a people to whom existence is entirely subjective.

In order to make sure nobody else can ever get in the driver’s seat again, we must be crushed under the bus. Most of us tend to see a statue as an issue, for example, when actually what the statue represents is an obstacle to hitting us directly with the bus.

Our crisis isn’t actually these people who hate us, because much of our problems could be ameliorated through honest discourse and having the collective will to reject their agenda. The U.S. Constitution gives us the rights and the mechanisms to do both in a completely legal and peaceful manner.

Our existential threat is ourselves. We’re all too willing to throw each other under the bus on their behalf. Meanwhile, the bus will eventually circle back around to flatten the futures of the people doing the tossing. As rightwing dissidents, we’ve even seen close friends and family members engage in this sickening and short-sighted behavior. If this could change, so could everything else.

The case against three (3) innocent men in the justified shooting of a violent burglar in Georgia is a good opportunity to deploy this rhetorical tactic (only if somebody in an appropriate social situation expresses discontent over the matter).

The law enforcement personnel persecuting them know what they’re doing is illegal and morally appalling. They’re still going ahead with it because that’s what’s expedient for themselves right now. But, when their time comes somebody else will toss them beneath the wheels with no compunction. It’s a vicious cycle that must come to an end.

3 comments

  1. Well that bus is definitely coming quickly right now. Ever since that Arberry kid was shot there’s been unlimited anti white propaganda all over the place an in the news with things like “we were never great” as a reply to make whites great again. Policemen’s entire reputations across the country are being ruined once again, because they actually work to keep our communities safe from criminals. The pusedo intellectual elites are making it very clear they don’t actually want “equality”, because if they genuinely wanted equality they would actually treat everyone the same an not use identity politics for every situation to justify free stuff an pity while whites are shamed an insulted.

    They may be Pusedo intellectuals, but they know what they’re doing. Let’s face the reality here, as much as some would like to think they’re just pushing “ utopian socialist equality” where everyone’s equal an loves each other regardless of culture, race, religion no matter how naturally incompatible they are an never have to take responsibility for anything because they supposedly have 10 mental illnesses. Multiculturalism has been a failure all over the West, and they know that an that’s what they want. The reality is that minorities an illegal immigrants are being propped up by the elites are because most of them are easier to control than whites, and the state loves people who solely depend on them because they won’t fight back. I’m not saying this out of “hatred”, I’m saying it cause it’s the reality we’re facing regardless of how mean it sounds.

    We should all show respect to one another no matter who they are as long as they show respect to us an our boundaries instead of respecting them solely because of their race or whatever else they identify as but because we’re good civilized Christian men who follow the Bible an have good manners regardless if we agree with them or their lifestyle choices. However this does not mean that we’ll take whatever they throw at us an be your doormat, the sermon on the mount is often distorted by modern churches as a reason to be a doormat an always turn the other cheek for everything when this is not the case. Remember people who are “to nice” usually are an will take advantage of you, be a kind man but not a nice guy. The “nice guy” is the same one who will throw you under the bus if he’s on the line. Nice guys are the people who led us to this crisis, and until men take over these “nice guys” in events like Charlottesville this cycle will continue until everyone surrenders their dignity in exchange of being somewhat left alone.

    1. It’s interesting to watch 2016 start to repeat. These people we’ve watched get their lives ruined this week got that bus circled back around on them. Sad, and so predictable.

      1. It’s definitely a worse repeat of 2016, because of coronavirus. People’s lives are still being ruined over stuff they shouldn’t be, an who knows how it’ll end this time. They’re even attacking their own now it’s ruthless.

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