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  1. Given the climate destruction we are seeing global neo liberalism is not sustainable. The reason I believe we are seeing the growth of these globalist trade deals is an attempt to secure and hold onto what is, in essence, already lost.

    In the short term nationalism is a predictable response and its not just a European Western phenomenon either. Go to China and you can see from its broadcasts and entertainment just how nationaist that country is becoming too. Nations looking to protect their interests locally and internationally in a world of ever decreasing returns with resource scarcity and competitiion the new norm.

    That said, my guess is over the long term the most likely outcome is a form of collectivist society. That could be Communist, Socialist but its not impossible it could be Fascist too. Or perhaps something completely new that has elements of all of these systems and more?

    Suffice to say a frigtening world we live in nowdays…..

  2. When it comes to mass shooters I think we really need to move away from the left / right dichotomy and start looking at the wider issues at play. It’s easy to call out “far right” ideology as the problem, but I just don’t think it’s that simple.

    Taking the El Paso shooter as an example – he appears to have come from a fairly left wing background. His father, Bryan Crusius, is an aging hippy therapist who helps people with drug addictions and PTSD, who believes in the power of homeopathy and crystals, and writes self-help books. His mother is a nurse. While the shooter was potentially “far right” at the time of the shooting, he appears to have grown up in a fairly liberal household – and so something must have pushed him over to the other side.

    He was a very angsty young man, and, while very rambly, his manifesto contains several things he was concerned about:

    – Hispanic immigration (both legal and illegal) – particularly what he perceives as the erosion of American culture and politics,
    – The unchecked influence and lobbying of corporations over the US government,
    – Automation and the loss of jobs,
    – Potential civil unrest due to joblessness coupled with population pressure due to immigration,
    – Employment stagnation due to increased immigration,
    – Devaluation of education coupled with increased costs to get that education,
    – Ecological collapse from farming, oil drilling, plastics from consumer culture, and urban expansion.

    I think this line from the manifesto is very telling: “My whole life I have been preparing for a future that currently doesn’t exist”.

    I think it was more than just white supremacy. That was perhaps an aspect of it, and was the way he chose to get his message out, but he’s clearly very anxious about the way his nation is going in a much more general sense.

    This is not at all condoning his actions. Murder is NEVER the solution. But I am concerned that people, particularly young males, are starting to get very anxious about the current direction the world is going, feel that they aren’t being listened too, and are relieving that angst though racism and mass shootings.

    As a society we are quick to call people out as “far right”, “alt right”, “racists”, but in doing so I worry that we are covering over much much bigger cultural issues affecting both the left and the right that are just now simmering to the surface…

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