>>14538711
o7
>>14538724
>What if the precipice is where things get worse?
I ask myself this every day now. So if the plan is actually more grassroots than even we assumed, and requires more direct long-term involvement from civvies, how many more years? Major historical flare-ups seem to last like 10-15 years with some latent period in between when shit was just simmering. Where are we? Do we actually have to go through a genocide? Because that kinda seems like the only thing the normies would be appalled by, save a literal junta by White Hats. Even then…humans have a nasty habit of letting history repeat itself in modified ways.
>>14538726
>Much bigger than any of us could possibly realize
That's what makes this unbearable at times. My life is but a blip in the grand scheme of things, but it's the only one I have (I think). And I don't expect anyone to really care about it but me, so my ego is bruised by the thought that no matter what I personally do to try and change something, I'll be dead before the fruits are borne, or nothing I did do actually mattered. So I can appreciate those that came before us who tried, but either failed or were just alive too soon to enjoy what has been accomplished thus far.