News:

R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk!

The best topic

*

Replies: 16710
Total votes: : 6

Last post: Today at 06:36:34 PM
Re: Forum gossip thread by Reggie Essent

avatar_Brent

Civil War

Started by Brent, Today at 11:37:21 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Brent

Glenn Beck listed the nine steps to civil war.

Step 1: Loss of civic trust
"Every civil conflict begins when people stop believing that the system is fair," says Glenn, calling America "so far past the doorway" on this one.

Recent Gallup and Pew polls reveal that faith in Congress, media, judicial courts, the FBI, and government are "at record lows." The most recent report from the Edelman Trust Barometer classifies the United States as "severely polarized." Republicans at large distrust federal elections, while Democrats at large distrust the Supreme Court.

"Americans are really united on one thing, and that is the other side is corrupt," says Glenn.

Step 2: Polarization hardens into identity
"Political disagreement is normal; identity conflict is fatal. But that's what Marxists push – identity politics," says Glenn. "This is when politics stop being about policy and start being about who you are as a person."

The more people adopt the oppressed vs. oppressor mindset, the more society fragments into "incompatible tribes." Now "opponents aren't wrong anymore; the opponent is dangerous," says Glenn.

Sadly, "We're neck deep in this." The fact that the Public Religion Research Institute found that nearly a quarter of the population believes political violence may be necessary to save the country proves it.

Step 3: Breakdown of the gatekeepers
"The gatekeepers are kind of like the referees of society. It's the media, political parties, churches, civic leaders. When they fail, extremism fills the vacuum," says Glenn.

When you consider how the media has turned into "team coaches," how tech platforms made rage its most lucrative commodity, how universities became Marxist indoctrination mills, and how churches have been utterly "useless," it's clear the nation has moved beyond step three.

Step 4: Parallel information realities
"Civil wars don't require different opinions; they require different realities," says Glenn.

Conservatism and progressivism are undoubtedly rooted in antithetical worldviews. One sees gender as immutable; the other sees it as a social construct. One believes experimenting on children is evil; the other calls it "care." One says crime rates are surging in blue cities; the other blames spikes in violence on poverty, guns, and systemic inequities. One sees secure borders as a critical protection for citizens; the other calls it inhumane and xenophobic.

Then social media platforms capitalize on this divide by curating "customized political universes" that only cement the partisan factions. Dialogue, not to mention resolution, becomes impossible, as the paradigms of each camp are so radically opposed, they can no longer co-exist.

"Step four is complete," says Glenn.

Step 5: Loss of natural rule of law
Glenn calls step five "the pivot point." It's the moment when civil war starts to look not just possible but promising. Once people at large begin believing that "the law is no longer neutral," "the republic stands on borrowed time."

Based on recent polling, America has ticked this box. A YouGov poll found that "67% of Americans believe the judicial system is used for political purposes."

Glenn lists several examples that explain the loss of faith in the country's justice system: "January 6 defendants given years in prison. 2020 rioters were released. High-profile political figures prosecuted or shielded based on party. FBI whistleblowers alleging pressure to inflate domestic extremism numbers. States like Texas directly defying federal directives on border enforcement and now leading the way with the federal government."

Step 6: Normalization of political violence
"This is where violence stops shocking the system," says Glenn. He points to Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones, who was elected after it came out that in 2022, he sent text messages fantasizing about Republican House Speaker Todd Gilbert getting "two bullets to the head" and expressing hope that his wife would have to "watch her own child die in her arms."

Couple that with the dismissal of 2020 BLM rioters and the widespread celebrations of political violence, and it's clear: We're beyond step six.

Step 7: The rise of militias and parallel forces
This happens "when a state loses its monopoly on force" and political factions "start forming their own police forces," says Glenn.

We're seeing the beginnings of this with the organized groups that target ICE, but we haven't moved past step seven quite yet, he says, confirming that Rogan's estimation was dead on.

Step 8: The trigger event
"Civil wars don't begin with a plan; they begin with a spark," says Glenn. "We're not here yet either, but the conditions are right."

A "disputed election," a "political assassination or a major attack," a "Supreme Court decision that ignites mass unrest," a "financial crisis or dollar crisis," or a violent "state federal standoff" are all things that could light the match, he warns.

"Nothing is ignited yet, but the room is soaked in gasoline."

Step 9: The point of no return
Once "police, military, or federal agencies split," the war is on, says Glenn.

While this hasn't happened yet, we can certainly hear foreboding rumblings. In New York City, police officers are leaving the force or relocating after socialist and defund-the-police advocate Zohran Mamdani was elected mayor. Glenn also points to the "tension between the state National Guard and the federal directives."

"States openly defying federal rules on immigration, drug laws, sanctuary policies, whistleblower claims of internal politicization — all of these things are in play," says Glenn.

He pulls it all together with a stark verdict on where America stands: "Steps one through four: completed. Step five: happening. Step six: happening. Step seven: beginning. Step eight: just waiting for it. And step nine: avoidable only if step eight never happens."

"I'm not telling you for doom purposes. This is diagnosis," says Glenn.

"The nation that refuses to look and wake up and stop calling their neighbors enemies is the nation that fails."

Brent

This list is not exclusive to the United States. Although we will put up with more bad governance than Americans we can and will reach our breaking point. The RCMP says anarchy is on the way. It will track Canada's fall from first world status.

Illegal firearms will be a sought after item in Canada's future.

Brent

#2
It is not the working class that wants civil war. It is the rich progtard control freaks.

Hunter Biden emphasized in a recent interview that his allies on the "leaderless" left should not tone down their extreme rhetoric in the wake of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk's assassination — but rather ramp it up against the MAGA movement.

After Biden suggested to "Wide Awake Podcast" host Joshua Rubin that Kirk was a representative of hate and should not be posthumously honored, the former president's son was asked whether it was time for the left and right to tone down their rhetoric.

"I do not believe that we are going to get to the bottom until we get to the bottom," said Biden, whose father smeared his political opponents as "extremists" and dubbed President Donald Trump's supporters "garbage."

Biden — whose father let him off the hook last year for his felony conviction on gun charges, his felony tax offenses, and whatever else he may have been involved in between January 2014 and December 2024 — prefaced his accelerationist proposal with, "I'm going to get myself in trouble for saying this."

Brent

Recent polling suggests the temperature is sufficiently high on the left, where Democrat politicians such as Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett seem to freely recommend and/or downplay violence against their opponents.

A survey conducted by the Network Contagion Research Institute and Rutgers University's Social Perception Lab revealed in April that 55% of respondents who identified as left of center said that assassinating Trump would be at least somewhat justified.

When asked by pollsters about the September 2024 attempt on the president's life at his golf course in Florida, 28% of Democrats told RMG Research it would have been better if Trump had been gunned down.

A recent Marist Poll found that 28% agreed or strongly agreed with the statement "Americans may have to resort to violence in order to get the country back on track."