Autonomy, Diversity, Society

The history of humanity is a history of our struggle to maintain a balance between autonomy, diversity and society. As we have moved from isolated but networked tribes to today’s fully integrated global communities, we have developed rigid hierarchical systems of control favouring either autonomy or society, a perpetual pendulum between the politics of the left and the right. Instead of achieving the balance we need, we now live in a state of no society and oppressive sameness under the all-encompassing control of a global empire. This book will discuss how shunning and inclusion have been used to create today’s global empire and how the people of the world can reclaim these methods to regain the societies and autonomy we have lost.

Autonomy, Diversity, Society

The fourth age of nations
The supranational empire
The profiteers of division
The lazy man’s empire
There are no nation states
Thought terrorism

The destruction of society
People are means of production
People are means of destruction
Witches and how they are silenced
People are commodity
The perils of diversity

Science, isolation and control
Objective cruelty
Radical science
The Intelligentsia
A societal singularity
People weighed and measured
The Revolutionaries

Architecture of dissociation

Rethinking the moats and mountains

Glossary (Kind people have stigmergically translated this article into French, and Spanish.).

Dearest reader,

The history of human society is a large topic. Attempting to write a book about such a topic is like taking a close up-picture of an elephant through a tiny lens. You may reveal valuable insight into one part of a foot, but you can never include the entire foot and the ears are left out entirely. This book, like everything in life, provides no absolute truths or any idea that is not up for debate or could not benefit from more nuance. It is simply a particular perspective, one which I use to develop ideas written in books past and future.

We invented words to help us understand each other but sometimes they trigger very different thoughts in different people. To ensure my words do not trigger the wrong thoughts, I have included a glossary at the end to explain what I mean by some of them. Please let me know what is missing.

H.

….

Earlier

Autonomy, Diversity, Society
The average tyrant
Free will and seductive coercion
Commoners and how they are coerced
Great Men and how they are upheld
Witches and how they are silenced
This is what my revolution looked like
New Orwellian Dictionary (NOD)
Equality and the fraternity