Anonymous ID: a0fb48 June 13, 2020, 12:33 p.m. No.9599804   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9599509

In governance, every decision made may result in the death of ones people. Do you fund police or Healthcare? Do you send troops overseas or allow your allies to be attacked? How do we apply moral idealism when we can guarantee that the decisions we make will statistically result in death and suffering either way? Understanding the pragmatic reality of governance and how leaders must be prepared to act, is necessary for contextualizing the tactics and positioning we see playing out in geopolitics.

As individuals, we often see things in black & white, as a zero sum game. We think people and actions are either good or evil, right or wrong. Matters of state require a more nuanced appreciation for the reality of any given situation.

Plato believed a Philosopher-King was the best person to steer the ship of state, one who understood the philosophical ideals, but who also had the grit and fortitude to take action and implement policy. Plato also described the concept of the 'noble lie'. In this mentality, leaders don't just have the right to lie to their people to steer them in the best possible direction, they have a Duty to lie to ensure they stay on course.

 

To understand the scale of the machinations involved in directing a group of people towards a desired goal, understand the vision of early Zionists like Herzl who understood that the Jews of Europe must be made to suffer before they would clamor to take refuge in their own sovereign state.

 

Unfortunately, what we anons are privy to is watching the script play out that is inflicting mass trauma and suffering on the unwitting masses. We know there are evil forces at work, using deception to steer the ship of humanity towards their desired ends, while there are others factions using necessarily similar tactics of deception to correct the course and deliver us from that evil.