Liberal democracy has given us pointless wind turbines on every horizon, mass immigration, the World Economic Forum, femael suffrage, Corona lockdowns, and the EU. Herewith, a thread on why liberal democracy is so bad.
Political power has a will of its own. It wants a single locus. Liberal democracy is premised on the idea that you can divide power among the people, place it in different regime silos (the judiciary, the parliament), and keep it fragmented.
In practice this just means that power in liberal democratic systems accrues over time to suboptimal, dysfunctional, illegible, unknown organisations and systems - the bureaucratic institutions.
It is diffused among the members of these institutions, but united and centralised in the bureaucratic system as a whole, which over time displaces the political leadership as the entity steering society.
Cartoon villain elites like the ones we have have learned how to benefit from the bureaucratisation of political power. These systems are easy to buy off in small ways, and with enough time and money and persuasion, they can in time even be guided in one direction or another.
Nobody else, not even elected politicians, not even those of us on Thiel’s payroll, can do very much about the bureaucracy. They could - and some day, probably will - drive entire nations off a cliff, and nobody will be able to stop them. They have held us all hostage for 2 years
Like Communist regimes, liberal democracies are also universalising. They see themselves not as a rooted, national political entity, but as the one correct form of government that must be imposed across the whole world …
Ideally, there would even be one single world liberal democratic government. And so the universalising tendency is to erect broad international agencies like the EU.
They also want to include every last human within their jurisdiction, and also too (of necessity, probably) every last human concern. Automobile safety, the weather, dental hygiene, education, pets — all end up being matters of concern in liberal democratic systems.
A constant objection I hear, is that liberal democracy has lost its way. These are autocratic, anti-liberal institutions, policies, initiatives! We need to get back to the liberal nation state, everything will be fine.
This is like saying that jumping off a cliff is totally fine, it’s just hitting the ground that’s the problem. This is how liberal democratic systems, with their carelessness about political power and its nature, tend to evolve.
Power will end up united and centralised somewhere whatever you do. Better to start out with it all in one place from the beginning - in a place everyone can agree on. You want a government with command discipline, a clear hierarchy, and identifiable people in charge.
You want a government rooted in a people, a place, and a tradition. You can conquer and colonise, but the provinces get their own semi-autonomous local governments according to local tradition. Absorbing the world means you are absorbed.

Fin.

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More from @eugyppius1

25 Dec
Will probably regret this thred later, but mainly I tweet about things I am thinking about. I am sincerely grateful for all of my Substack readers, and yet the phenomenon of angry unsubscribers has since November become a source of amusement to me.
There are first of all those I am least patient with, namely the lot who accuse me of being a grifter. I don’t know what to say here: It takes a lot of time and effort to write these pieces, and most are free anyway.
Then there are the lot who say I write too much. That was mainly in November, when I had a lot of momentum and I resolved to poast nearly every day, and with a few early mornings/ late nights almost managed it.
Read 6 tweets
24 Dec
Bad metaphor. A better one: in an effort to stop all football fouls, players are screened prior to matches for biomarkers predictive of red cards, and preemptively excluded on that basis. The system excludes so many players, matches become mostly impossible. …
Those few that still go ahead see just as many red cards as before. Defenders of the system respond to their failure by asserting that there would be *even more* red cards without their dumb screening system.
Then they switch tactics and say players can be exempt from screening if they just take foul-preventing injections prior to matches. These injure an unknown number of players but also don’t have any measurable effect on fouls.
Read 5 tweets
20 Dec
rare strategy poast:

1) Critical (& investigative) journalism is dead. Everything put out by major broadcast & print media is low-effort narcicissm poasting masterminded by uni interns & racially/ sexually obsessed lunatics. Stop being mad about this. It is opportunity.
2) Longer form journalism is a field almost entirely open to us. There is no competition, people want to know what is happening, they want to have comment sections where they can discuss this insanity, and their heretofore trusted newspapers feed them nothing but agitprop garbage
3) I think Substack is interesting platform we should explore & consider colonising. The email subscriber lists make our accounts resilient to banning. Look at successful Substack authors: Many of them are writing precisely in areas ignored or sidelined by our broken press.
Read 5 tweets
19 Dec
Since nationwide house arrests were introduced, we've seen pervasive manipulation of scientific & media information, to create support for & encourage compliance with containment. This has in turn corrupted and hystericised the information available even to policymakers.
The people steering containment very obviously have only the most tenuous understanding of what is happening and what their policies can achieve, since they have repurposed most of their information sources to churn out constant streams of panic propaganda.
This is by the way one of the most important reasons, why technocratic fantasies of ScIENcE or FaCT BaSEd PoliCIeS are stupid. Scientific inquiry is, always will be, subordinate to political power. As soon as you set about trying to base something on ScIENcE ...
Read 5 tweets
18 Dec
This is the right idea. 1/4
2/4
3/4
Read 4 tweets
16 Dec
UKHSA Vaccine Efficacy Statistics: Week 50

The 18–29 age bracket goes negative, as we knew it would.

eugyppius.substack.com/p/ukhsa-vaccin…
Comparing to the week 49 report, we see that the 30-49 year-olds are also falling deeper into negative efficacy, while things are improving for 60 year-olds, as they continue to boost. Image
While the booster campaign was still ongoing, we saw that vaccinated people in their 80s had about the same risk of death as that of unvaccinated people in their 70s. The boosters have improved things for them a little bit. Image
Read 5 tweets

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