One of the most common sentiments you see at many political protests is summed up by this sign. Whether it’s Tea Party types or Occupy Wall Street types, they all believe that they represent “real people” and they express the desire to “take back our country.”
This is the heart of the problem with trying to live in a coercive state based on a majoritarian system. The vast majority live under the delusion that most people are like them, so “our country” means whatever it is that they believe it means.
So when Tea Party types talk about taking the country back for what they believe in, they’re not in the majority. Nowhere close, in fact. But when the Occupy Wall Street types talk about themselves being “the 99 percent,” they’re even worse. They’re just plain delusional.
We’re not one big happy family — and there’s no reason to keep pretending that we have anything other than civic propaganda and a bit of geographic history that keeps us together. Why don’t we let go of the illusion that we all have to live under the same rules? Why don’t we let each other go — and let groups establish their own independent cities or enclaves wherever they can legally and morally acquire the land?
Far-left political idiocy is ruining remake of Disney’s ‘Snow White’
‘What’s the worth of one warm smile? Go and ask the dead man’
Shock of seeing ‘Airplane!’ was realizing that I wasn’t all alone
With each ‘improvement,’ we’re losing family and community
If you can’t change your life story, that narrative will become destiny
Galt’s Gulch? I can live without that, but I need my own ‘Akston’s diner’
Emptiness can bring panic that feels like being stalked by fear
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
My endorsement goes to the man who can make coercive state work