Ancient Rome was the world's most powerful empire for 500 years
At its height, Rome boasted of roads, public baths, and much else that was close to miraculous for the rest of the planet
Then came the Great Fall...
What happened has lessons for the world TODAY
A thread👇🏻
1/ In his book The City In History (1961), Lewis Mumford explains how Rome went from "Megalopolis to Necropolis." This great city set up its own demise in two ways: Panem et circenses. That is: "bread and circuses." Mumford: "Success underwrote a sickening parasitic failure."
2/ As Ancient Rome became prosperous, it became an unsustainable welfare state
Mumford writes that "indiscriminate public largesse" became common
A large portion of the population "took on the parasitic role for a whole lifetime"
3/ More than 200,000 citizens of Rome regularly received handouts of bread from "public storehouses"
Lewis Mumford wrote the desire to lead an industrious productive life had severely "weakened"
So what did people spend their time on?
Distractions, which meant circuses
4/ The Roman people, not working for their livelihood but living off of the prosperity of their city, became numb
Mumford: "To recover the bare sensation of being alive, the Roman populace, high and low, governors & governed, flocked to the great arenas" for games & distractions
5/ The entertainment in Rome included "chariot races, spectacular naval battles set in an artificial lake, theatrical pantomimes in which lewder sexual acts were performed"
Out of 365 days, more than 200 were public holidays and 93 were "devoted to games at the public expense"
6/ Consuming entertainment became the primary priority of Roman citizens in Rome's decadent phase
Lewis Mumford: "Not to be present at the show was to be deprived of life, liberty, and happiness"
Concrete concerns of life became "subordinate, accessory, almost meaningless"
7/ Ancient Rome could put half of its total population "in its circuses and theatres" at the same time! A new public holiday was declared to celebrate every military victory. But the number of holidays kept rising even when Rome's military prowess began to fail...
8/ Mumford writes that no empire had such an "abundance of idle time to fill with idiotic occupations"
Even the Roman emperors who privately despised the games had to pretend they enjoyed them for "fear of hostile public response"
9/ Bottom line. The very power and prosperity of Ancient Rome set the stage for its collapse. As welfare states expand around the world today, and entertainment options get ever more immersive, we are forced to ask a question: Is this Post-Industrial Civilization Rome, Part II?
What else is wrong with the modern world—beyond its obsession with endless entertainment?
> When you realize your libtard worldview leads to hellish architecture and if you say anything to defend it, then Tucker will hit you with his loud autist laugh
Ted Kaczynski’s IQ: 167
Harvard admission: At 15
Youngest ever math prof, UCB: At 25
Money spent by FBI to find him: $50+ mil
The manifesto attacks modern civilization like nothing else before or since
13 best insights from a Philosopher-Terrorist👇🏻
1/ Kaczynski lists the 4 big problems with modern civilization:
- “Excessive density of population”
- “Isolation of man from nature”
- “Excessive rapidity of social change”
- “The breakdown of natural small-scale communities such as the extended family, the village, the tribe”
2/ The big difference between the primitive civilization and our contemporary world is that before, individuals had a lot of autonomy while the state was largely powerless to penetrate into the everyday life of people
Kaczynski argues that modern tech suddenly flips this balance
In D.H. Lawrence’s hypnotic and powerful short story SUN (1928), Juliet, a sick woman, is prescribed sun therapy by her doctor. She starts sunbathing naked and magical changes happen in her body, psyche, and being. The “cold dark clots of her thoughts” start dissolving. A thread:
1/ Juliet’s sun-bathing sessions turn her into an aristocrat:
She develops a “contempt for human beings altogether”
Why?
Because they are “un-elemental” and “unsunned”
As if they are “graveyard worms” - always “innerly cowed” and afraid of the “natural blaze of life”
2/ Why was D.H. Lawrence obsessed with the sun? His father was a coal-miner, spending most of his time in the dark underground. Lawrence didn’t want that fate. He wrote: “The sun is to us what we take from it. And if we are puny, it is because we take punily from the superb sun.”
17 of them with impossible odds. Half a dozen EMPIRES had to join hands to stand a chance against him. Yet his wife slept with other men. The tragic love story of one of the greatest men of all time:
1/ Joséphine
An aristocrat’s daughter, a widow, mother of 2. Also 6 years older than Napoleon
On the marriage certificate she increased Napoleon’s age by 1.5 years and decreased hers by 4. Wedding was officiated by an illegitimate priest
Napoleon was just an army officer
2/ Napoleon’s love for her - despite her age, previous children, and his family’s great disapproval - could only be described as wild and profound. From a love letter: “The remembrance of last night’s delirium have robbed my senses of repose. My waking thoughts are all of thee”
In 1908, Marinetti survived a car crash, climbed out of the wreck, and wrote The Futurist Manifesto
116 years later, it's still the WAR-CRY of men willing to "leave good sense behind" and build the future
Here's The Futurist Manifesto on violence, beauty, and speed. A thread:
1/ Futurists are men in revolt against the world, and they are proud to stand alone
Marinetti:
"Our hearts were filled with an immense pride at feeling ourselves standing quite alone, like lighthouses or like the sentinels in an outpost..."
2/ Marinetti notes three essential elements of all futurist art: "courage, audacity and revolt." The futurists are against "all opportunist and utilitarian cowardice." They seek not security but adventure
Reject stoicism. Reject Buddhism. Even the room lizard is "tranquil." Get ATTACHED. Everything great is downstream of (strong) desires. Latin root for desire is "de sidere," which translates to "from the stars." An intense desire is a gift from the Gods above. A gift of direction
Nihilism is the number one psychological sickness of our time. And what is nihilism but the inability to desire anything? The heartbreak of desire unfulfilled is dark and vast, but better a broken heart than a frozen one. Desire is the engine of life. Without it, stagnation
The human fate is not attaining the equanimity of sheep grazing out on a sunny day. We are the "upstart species" (Spengler) and our natural habitat is the edge. Our only habitat. The edge is a hurtful, torturous place but it's the only place we can birth something new