Inconceivable

Joe Doakes, formerly from Como Park, emails:

The most common rejoinder to my concern the 2020 election was stolen is: “It’s not possible.  The conspiracy would have to be too large.  Someone would talk.”  What if it’s not a conspiracy? What if it’s a shift in attitude?  What a significant portion of the public believes crime is no longer wrong?

Have you noticed the way people drive?  Stores closing because of rampant shoplifting?  Carjacking rates through the roof?  Why now?  Why are all the rules being ignored?  What changed? I posit a general attitude shift.  The rules don’t apply to me.  I can speed, shoplift, rob people at gunpoint, and you know why? Because F-U, that’s why.

It’s even more pronounced in the “legal” system.  The New York judge with his bullshit $350 million fine.  The defamation jury with its $83 million verdict.  The Hawaiian judge who decided the Aloha spirit is superior to the Second Amendment.  These are examples of the same attitude that makes ordinary people think it’s okay to commit crimes.  I suggest that same attitude made election workers think it was okay to help steal the election. They didn’t need a centralized bureaucracy giving orders to minions.  Everybody just did a little extra by themselves, ran a few ballots through twice, disqualified a few Trump ballots or shifted them to Biden.  Why not?  Who’s going to stop them?  Keep counting until we have enough – it’s the Al Franken model (and the basis for the recent joke that the 49er’s found 3 mail-in touchdowns so they actually won).

The lawless attitude is getting worse and more focused.  Donald Trump is the new Emmanuel Goldstein from the book “1984.”  He’s the designated enemy.  He’s the one person it’s okay to hate. There is no punishment, no insult, no disgrace too vile for him and it’s okay for anybody and everybody to play the game, even using taxpayer money to hire your lover to bring baseless charges against him.

RINOs say “you better not change the rules, you won’t like living under the new rules” but that’s a bluff and Liberals know it. Trump didn’t prosecute Hillary because our side is ‘better than that,’ we don’t ‘stoop to their level.’  Yeah, but that also means there’s no penalty for cheating, lying, stealing, rigging, perjuring . . . so why not do whatever it takes to win?

That judge who imposed the $350 million fine and banned Trump from owning any business for three years, feels safe.  He knows he won’t get overturned and even if he does, he’s still the hero of the courthouse back corridor and the bar association luncheon. He’s not afraid of being impeached, his house won’t get burned down, he won’t lose his pension, he’s safe, same as the cheating election officials and crooked businesses paying off Hunter. Hillary and Biden won’t even be charged, must less railroaded, the way Trump has been.  And they know it.  And we know it too, which may be part of the reason people feel like the rules don’t apply anymore.  Certainly they don’t apply to the big-shots.  Why should they apply to me?

There is no remedy for a pervasive lawless attitude within the Constitutional system.  The Executive Branch, the Legislative Branch, the Judicial Branch, they’re all in on it.  The Administrative Deep State, they are, too.  The Fourth Estate – the legacy media – up to their eyeballs.  Running for school board, voting harder, boycotting Budweiser – none of that can overcome the pervasive bias in the system.

The only way to shift the attitude back is to go outside the Constitutional framework of government to restore respect for law and order.  That’s the destination too many Conservatives are afraid to reach.  Because once we conclude the system is broken and cannot be fixed from within, the only conclusion is we must throw out the system and replace it.  That’s insurrection.  That’s a revolution.  That’s a civil war.  It’s the end of the nation as we know it and it would throw the entire world into an economic depression if not a literal Dark Age.

I’m terrified there’s no other way to stop the slow-motion train wreck, because I can safely predict I’ll be one of the first people rounded up and shot for my opinions.   The only questions are which of my “conservative” friends will rat me out, and which of my liberal friends will be helping load me into the cattle car?

Joe Doakes, no longer in Como Park

The US – especially the rural US, but even the bigger cities – used to be a relatively high trust society. It’s not anymore. I’d say “the consequences will be dire”, but they pretty much already are.

9 thoughts on “Inconceivable

  1. Regarding the driving bit, there are times when I drive around Rochester, and it’s getting so bad that I pinch myself and ask “did I fall asleep and wake up in Chicago or LA?” Yes, it’s going to leave a mark.

  2. Boss,
    Apparently that town is in danger of having their new police cruisers (plural) repossessed by the bank for failure to make a $76K loan payment last year. The Town Board approved the payments and is throwing the blame squarely back on the Mayor, who coincidentally took an expensive Vegas trip the same month the loan payment was due.

  3. “It’s not possible. The conspiracy would have to be too large. Someone would talk.” What if it’s not a conspiracy? What if it’s a shift in attitude? What a significant portion of the public believes crime is no longer wrong?

    As Gore Vidal explained on the tonight show decades ago “Johnny its not a conspiracy if everyone thinks the same”

    When true believers are certain they are doing god’s work you don’t need to organize a conspiracy (utilizing the normal conspiracy tools: conscription, coercion, bribery,etc) from the top down, the mere suggestion of a colleague is enough i.e. “Hey help me with this box”. And why would they talk about it? You don’t discuss god’s work with infidels.

  4. Wait, with all the abuse police cruisers take, Ford is selling them….on credit? Seriously? And towns are buying them on credit….when they can pay cash by issuing low interest muni bonds?

    OK, we have a moral crisis, and as Dave Ramsey would tell you, we’ve got a financial literacy crisis. Yikes.

  5. Have you noticed the way people drive? Stores closing because of rampant shoplifting? Carjacking rates through the roof? Why now? Why are all the rules being ignored? What changed? I posit a general attitude shift.

    Only with regards to how a certain portion of the population (about 13%) behaves and is treated. For all those items as well as a certain DA in Georgia, shooters in KC, a judge in PA, a mayor in IL, and, last but not least, a murderous thug in a relatively nice neighborhood in Burnsville.

    And lets not forget a certain president of Harvard who ruined the career of tenured professor because he published a study that found no evidence of racial bias in police shootings. The professor, like Thomas Sowell, is also a member of that certain portion of the population but they seem to be useful and productive.

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