Cactus
Active member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2022
- Messages
- 311
- Reaction score
- 43
- Points
- 28
In this thread I would like to put up certain statements made in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Starting with a notion about life without a solid jackboot would be like :
From 1.13 - " The crowd is a barbarian, and acts as such on every occasion. As soon as the mob has secured freedom it speedily turns into anarchy, which in itself is the height of barbarism. " - The Jewish Peril, published by The Britons, London, fifth edition, 1921
Here is a definition of anarchy :
"Anarchy comes from the Medieval Latin anarchia and from the Greek anarchos ("having no ruler"), with a- + archos ("ruler") literally meaning "without ruler". The circle-A anarchist symbol is a monogram that consists of the capital letter A surrounded by the capital letter O. The letter A is derived from the first letter of anarchy or anarchism in most European languages and is the same in both Latin and Cyrillic scripts. The O stands for order and together they stand for "society seeks order in anarchy" (French: la société cherche l'ordre dans l'anarchie), a phrase written by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in his 1840 book What Is Property?
I think what the authors of those protocols could not stomach is an orderly societal climat that requires no rulers. I estimate that if man in his history had known great centuries of peace and harmony in anarchistic societies those records would be hidden out of sight and replaced with forged histories of strife and barbarism.
We must be taught that we need our rulers to hold the fabric of our societies together. As I review the statements and find instances like these I will put them up to have a closer look. Just in this instance we see that illusion is their most powerful weapon.
From 1.13 - " The crowd is a barbarian, and acts as such on every occasion. As soon as the mob has secured freedom it speedily turns into anarchy, which in itself is the height of barbarism. " - The Jewish Peril, published by The Britons, London, fifth edition, 1921
Here is a definition of anarchy :
"Anarchy comes from the Medieval Latin anarchia and from the Greek anarchos ("having no ruler"), with a- + archos ("ruler") literally meaning "without ruler". The circle-A anarchist symbol is a monogram that consists of the capital letter A surrounded by the capital letter O. The letter A is derived from the first letter of anarchy or anarchism in most European languages and is the same in both Latin and Cyrillic scripts. The O stands for order and together they stand for "society seeks order in anarchy" (French: la société cherche l'ordre dans l'anarchie), a phrase written by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in his 1840 book What Is Property?
I think what the authors of those protocols could not stomach is an orderly societal climat that requires no rulers. I estimate that if man in his history had known great centuries of peace and harmony in anarchistic societies those records would be hidden out of sight and replaced with forged histories of strife and barbarism.
We must be taught that we need our rulers to hold the fabric of our societies together. As I review the statements and find instances like these I will put them up to have a closer look. Just in this instance we see that illusion is their most powerful weapon.