The Daily Meme #962!
This is what resistance to tyranny looks like.™
Maybe you don't have what it takes to get arrested and go through the belly of the beast, but you can make your friends aware of what is happening.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/TmRwY41L8tNY/
Ol' Marvin, he was a character.
https://ok.ru/video/7204497984102
No, not that one,...
This one: https://www.damninteresting.com/the-wrath-of-the-killdozer/
Are you are tired of paying your masters to bomb children in far away places?
Perhaps it is time you pushed back on that.
A simple way that anybody can do that is to hoard your coins.
The fed buys coins at face value from the mint.
A dollar of change in your pocket is a dollar of value out of the banksters' pockets.
Stop playing in their shell game that allows them to play in the amusement parks from hell and shop in the human grocery stores.
Death to Discord!
Long live Hive Messenger!
Billy Jack, the movie.
The Trial of Billy Jack.
Billy Jack goes to Washington.




Humanity is as civilized as the wild man barely out of the forest with a top hat and guns. We still have a long way to go before we can honestly call ourselves civilized.
Many people like to imagine civilization as the absence of violence, but it is often just the organization and monopolization of violence. The threat of force never disappeared; it merely became concentrated into the hands of particular individuals, institutions, and groups.
If everyone possessed an equal capacity to defend themselves, bullies would think much harder before crossing certain lines. It is easy to push others around when the consequences are distant or nonexistent. It becomes much harder when those consequences are immediate and personal.
As I see it, gorilla communities can be more civil than humans in some respects. Wolves at least respect the territorial boundaries of neighboring packs. They understand limits because limits are enforced. Nature may be brutal, but it is often honest about power.
The story of Marvin Heemeyer is not really about a bulldozer. It is about what happens when a person feels cornered, unheard, and powerless for long enough. Everyone has a breaking point. Whether one sees him as a hero, a villain, or a tragic figure depends largely on which part of that story they focus on.
We like to think we're at the top of the food chain, but there will always be something bigger, stronger, and hungrier. If an advanced off-world species exists somewhere out there, they might look at humanity the same way humanity looks at lesser creatures. Suddenly we'd understand what it feels like to be on the receiving end of overwhelming power.
Perhaps then we'd finally learn the lesson we keep refusing to learn: civilization is not measured by who can dominate whom, but by how we choose to treat one another when we have the power to do otherwise.
And if they do exist, they might just look at us and think, "Boy, that would look good with some spinach and tomatoes on the side."
Every little bit counts in pushing back against tyranny.