Thursday, June 25, 2020

The Heir's increasing Machiavellianism.  He does not regret standing by principle and the need for social discipline in the populace in the past four or five weeks people have been debating what the role of the cops should be, and in fact he's seen ample evidence that supports the notion that most people can't look after themselves.  For example, he was wondering how almost everyone in Bachelor Blue State could be practicing social distancing and wearing masks and staying at home the past three months, since the same exact people had engaged in personal corruption in the 2010s.  Now he has the answer.  The people didn't practice social distancing solely because they thought it was the right thing to do.  They did so out of compliance with demands from the strong leadership demonstrated during the Coronacrisis.  If that leadership didn't exist, Bachelor Blue State would be totally infested like Florida is now, and Texas and Arizona, and at least a dozen other states.  The governments in those states took an Ed Snowden Anything Goes stance, and the Heir sees most residents in those states celebrate that personally corrupt sentiment coming from those governments.  And now they're seeing those cases spike.  Bachelor Blue State, on the other hand, got back onto the righteous path, and got a return on its investment in the form of decreasing infection and transmission rates.  Bachelor Blue State was able to reopen safely, but the other states reopened *un-* safely.  The Heir really isn't into organized religion or anything, but there's no doubt that the lesson to be learned from comparing Bachelor Blue State's righteous path with the other states' personal corruption is that if you go against the grain, you'll get splinters.  That one guy who complained in April about not getting fertilizer, the Heir's hoping he didn't end up in the ICU as a result.  He wishes the best for those whose opinions he disagrees with.  So the Heir says, dude, forget the fertilizer.  This is your *life* we're talking about.  And now, here comes the Heir's takeaway:

"Death is permanent.  Fertilizer you can get next year."

 

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