Welcome To Silent Hill, DC [POST VERSION]

Welcome To Silent Hill, DC

Welcome To Silent Hill, DC [POST VERSION]

by Jeremiah Harding

We’re getting the backlog of episodes that we’ve already recorded up on the site now, and there shouldn’t be any more delays coming up. Especially since we have a significant amount of people interested in coming on and discussing stuff with us, and we got to get on track for that. So expect no more delays, and expect at least two podcast episodes a week on a more normal basis. For now though, this is what we have for you.

This episode started with a discussion about silent Hill, and the town which inspired it. That’s because the area around my city, Spokane, was absolutely choked by smoke at the time of recording. Didn’t stop me from getting in runs though, and didn’t stop me from doing what I had to. We also went over a movie it was in, and trended the discussion toward a discussion of an earthquake I went through as an infant. Was a pretty bad one. I mentioned the fact that the wealthy get priority treatment in terms of disaster and emergency management. They would definitely pick a more wealthy area over where I came from.

And that’s where we picked up steam in the political regard, discussing the fact that planting trees is an imperfect solution to carbon capture, because the next fire is just going to release it. Part of my point was that it is a long process for those trees to grow, and if the trees burn in the meantime because of rising global temperatures anyway, it’s not a real effective solution. We then went over the generally unproductive or counterproductive work of the monopolized fire services in West Coast areas.

We then went over how redirection of water causes desertification, damage to soil, and a large amount of other catastrophic things, basically destroying the environment down river from the areas water is effectively being stolen from. We went over the fact that rich people build completely unnecessary things like golf courses everywhere, including the desert, redirecting the water from places that need it to places it will be wasted, so rich people can have fun and secret meeting locations. And then these rich people and government officials that made it this way complain about climate change when they are actively destroying huge amounts of the environment that could handle more pollutants if they weren’t, you know, destroyed. Fun stuff. The state is a pack of hypocrites, and their megacorporate allies are only too happy to continue destroying this planet, because they have escape pods thanks to people like Elon Musk. And all of this is additionally enabled by the complacency of the common person, who doesn’t care as long as it doesn’t immediately affect their own property. At least not in a way that it already does, because the air quality and life quality in many parts of California is abysmal.

We then discussed how it was for me to grow up in a very rural area, considered unpopulated by the world at large, and how taxing it was to do basic things like pack trash, and get it in a landfill. I went over how having to go to the landfill personally exposed me to a huge amount of unnecessary waste, and started me on my journey to being somebody who hates wasting anything. Then I brought up the Denver International Airport, And the fact that those in charge literally know they’re destroying everything, and that’s part of the point. Which brought us to talking about the Queen, and the fact that her death ultimately doesn’t mean anything, And how she was a terrible person not deserving of any respect from any respectable person.

We then went over the whiskey rebellion, and the founding of the country, and the fact that the US was never really independent, having been dependent on foreign loans and money from the start, which is what resulted in the tax proposal to begin with. The currency wasn’t valuable at all, so people were trading and whiskey, so they tacked the whiskey in order to make the currency valuable. Very freedom. Then they suppressed a rebellion when people decided they didn’t want to do that, and did the exact same things the founders allegedly did. What the common person didn’t know is that the whole system was designed to perpetuate the old ways, and wasn’t that different on its own.

After that, we had a nice brisk conversation about the fact that the reason a lot of wars happen is because the globalist hegemony is testing their weapons, and they need new biomes to test them in, so they have wars in new places, So they can continue to develop that which they can use at home, and eventually oppress the domestic people with. Because part of the point of globalism is to force everybody onto your system, and they need new ways to do that. That’s why it didn’t matter that the US wasn’t independent at the start. Then I rehashed the fact that the US government, and other Western powers previously empowered Nazis, prior to the war, and then after the war, helped a bunch of them escape and get into political power. And the fact that now they’re doing that again. You can read more about that in the last podcast post, or listen here.

Then we had a brief conversation about social media censorship, how the apps are specifically designed to encourage what is tantamount to mind control, and how TikTok is probably the worst of them. After a brief talk about general tyranny, we closed it off, and I’d say it was a good episode.

Tune in next time for even more content from us. And be sure to subscribe to our email newsletter. Lots more coming. Also, feel free to subscribe to our subscribestar, if you have $5 a month. Right now, we’re basically doing this podcast for free, but we would love your support if you appreciate our work.

 

Jeremiah Harding

An angry anarchist bent on black-pilling the universe, he hits hard on everything ranging from taxation to technocracy. Everything is a conspiracy, or at least that's what he wants you to think. He's written for Poliquads, various libertarian sites, and his personal anti-state propaganda site, which launched last year. He has a podcast, called The Weekly Hellscape, where he details the week's news, from the opposite perspective of friendly, and he has a YouTube channel, where he descends into madness. He's coming for all your sacred calves. Stay tuned!