The Unz Review • An Alternative Media Selection$
A Collection of Interesting, Important, and Controversial Perspectives Largely Excluded from the American Mainstream Media
 BlogviewAndrew Anglin Archive
None of This Even Matters
Search Text Case Sensitive  Exact Words  Include Comments

Bookmark Toggle AllToCAdd to LibraryRemove from Library • B
Show CommentNext New CommentNext New ReplyRead More
ReplyAgree/Disagree/Etc. More... This Commenter This Thread Hide Thread Display All Comments
AgreeDisagreeThanksLOLTroll
These buttons register your public Agreement, Disagreement, Thanks, LOL, or Troll with the selected comment. They are ONLY available to recent, frequent commenters who have saved their Name+Email using the 'Remember My Information' checkbox, and may also ONLY be used three times during any eight hour period.
Ignore Commenter Follow Commenter
List of Bookmarks

It should be obvious though apparently it isn’t: none of the things that are happening actually even matter to the individual, because the future is already written, at least in the ways that will have any significant impact on the individual.

It’s possible that there are various alternative outcomes. I don’t really believe it, but I acknowledge the possibility. The future has yet to occur and that means anything is possible. But even if something miraculous (that is to say, viciously improbable) were to occur, and to affect the status of the individual, it would simply be a random event, the result of unknown and presumably unknowable factors, as no one has the ability to influence it.

This Donald Trump situation is as gay and retarded as I had predicted. I said that there was no reason for me to write about his presidency because I wrote it all before he was elected, and this has proved cartoonishly accurate. The peasants can all feel very joyful because trannies are finally getting what for, and the young men can go off and join the military because it is no longer a gay orgy (at least not publicly, it of course remains a gay orgy in private, and an especially sick one, if one may quantify the depravity of gay orgies). “America is back,” they will say, as they say “gay” and “retard” while odious Jews dance around in their strange hats and torture helpless poultry.

There is little reason to pay attention to any of it, unless you are making money from paying attention. I hope you are making money. If you’re not making money, you need to ask yourself what it is you are doing. Assuming you are not crawling around in the forest making a real man of yourself, and/or studying philosophy and building a true empire of the spirit within your internal chambers, if you are not making money, you are wasting your life. One minute at a time.

The Americans, and by that I mean the Jews, will either triumph or they will not, and nothing you or I can alter this outcome. This makes thinking too much about the issue a waste of your vital lifeforce. For what good can come of pondering something upon which you can have no impact? You can pray they lose. But that is all. Considering the details is foolish now. I do not wish to go on and on about the Trump situation. It is boring and what will it get me? Most support the man because he is a very large man and they do not think beyond that. Even I am not against the man. How could I be? He is very large, after all. But he is a pawn in this tedious game, which I find so silly and childish.

The tariffs are not real in the sense he presented them. There has never been an iPhone made in the United States, nor any other high tech gadget. In the 1990s, when the manufacturing was moved to China, TVs looked like this:

Most of them were already made in Japan.

Moving the factories for consumer electronics to the United States would be completely impossible in a democracy, where nothing of consequence ever gets done unless the politicians are making money from it. Even in a dictatorship or an autocracy or whatever it is they are calling rationally managed governments these days, it would take many years to move these kinds of factories back to the United States. The supply chains alone would take many years to establish, and that would be in a dictatorship. In a democracy, you could try for ten thousands of years and it wouldn’t get any further than a rail line from Los Angeles to the bay. It is a baby’s dream to imagine that iPhone and microprocessor factories are going to start springing up in America in the spring. Who is taking this seriously? Babies are not following the news, so who are these people who think this is serious?

It’s a “negotiating tactic,” I’m sure. But nothing is going to get negotiated other than some symbolic nonsense, maybe a Toyota assembly plant in Arizona and a worthless Intel assembly station in Ohio. The goal is a “decoupling” from China, because the plan, the underlying and ultimate plan, is some sort of lunatic war with the Chinese in order to destroy or cripple the competition to the Jewish empire.

Of course everyone figured out that no one of any competence is going to fight for trannies and niggers, so they dropped the tranny and nigger obsession. They will of course enlist all of these immigrants. Why did they bring all of these animals into our countries? To hurt us, of course, but what will they do with them? They will line them up for their wars.

That is where it is all going. It is going towards a big war, because Jews cannot tolerate anything other than complete and total domination of everything in the universe. Our hope is that it never happens, because the machinery to accomplish such a feat is too unwieldy and too broken by decades of corruption, perversion, and the inefficiency that accompanies corruption and perversion. The Chinese have already won every battle but the military one, and even if it was possible to stop them from getting AI chips, and it isn’t possible, they will still win that fight. The hopes and dreams of the kikes and faggots and all who oppose the new Sino Global Order are all riding on the idea that a military battle can be arranged and that the Chinese are not capable of prevailing due to their own internal discord. Of course, a war would likely solve whatever discord exists within China, but this is not beneficial to the Americans, so they simply ignore it.

I am bored with all of it. It’s all so very obvious that it cannot possibly be interesting, and the inane gibbering of the masses of media buffoons with their insincere or at best moronic hot takes inspires nothing but loathing. Why should I add to this noise? Of what benefit is it to me, or to you, dear reader? If there was a financial incentive for me, that would be an answer, and perhaps a satisfactory one, but no such incentive exists. The collective reader made the decision to leave me destitute and alone and I don’t blame him. I wouldn’t have done that, I tend to protect the things I care about, but who am I to judge? I am nothing and no one.

I would simply advise you all to focus on the things you enjoy, the things that bring meaning to your life. There is nothing of meaning and very little enjoyment to pretending that this global charade is in any way serious. I hope there are pogroms, I hope a dictator rises up and defeats the Jews, but that is more than unlikely (though not impossible). If it happens, I will praise him and do whatever in my ability to support him. But I will not hope for it. I will, instead, try to enjoy myself as best I can, try to find some meaning in this hellish existence.

It’s not all bad. It is probably all going to end very badly, but what of it? That has nothing to do with today and probably nothing to do with tomorrow either. None of us lives forever, and therefore the future is always going to eventually be tragic and final, so why think too much of it?

Saint Peter asked to be crucified upside down. Nero’s goons obliged him. If I think about it for long enough, I will cry. It’s happened several times. I will ask that I be crucified while being beamed through the Large Hadron Collider. There are no honorable Romans to oblige me this modest request. But there is no benefit to thinking much about it.

(Republished from The Daily Stormer by permission of author or representative)
 
• Category: Economics, Ideology • Tags: Donald Trump, Jews, Tariff 
Hide 18 CommentsLeave a Comment
Commenters to Ignore...to FollowEndorsed Only
Trim Comments?
    []
  1. Real Rig says:

    You say do what you want. I say you can’t do anything now because you can’t think in this timeline anymore. You are all already free. Kill or die or On Sight are the new “ do what thou whilst so might it be. Lulz

  2. Ffil says:

    Its nice to have you writing again.

    • Disagree: Protogonus
  3. Anonymous[350] • Disclaimer says:

    If you’re not making money, you need to ask yourself what it is you are doing.

    Just what people did before the sickness of pecuniary culture took over.

    If you really think having more money than necessary will buy happiness or something, like a jew, well have fun laboring under that delusion.

  4. Moving the factories for consumer electronics to the United States would be completely impossible in a democracy, where nothing of consequence ever gets done unless the politicians are making money from it. Even in a dictatorship or an autocracy or whatever it is they are calling rationally managed governments these days, it would take many years to move these kinds of factories back to the United States. The supply chains alone would take many years to establish, and that would be in a dictatorship.

    America was industrially self-sufficient up until it became the global hegemonic power.
    It wouldn’t hurt to at least try to correct the humongous errors made by massively offshoring anything of industrial relevance in the last few decades.
    …but what does Andrew Anglin know about industrial planning policy anyway?

    In a democracy, you could try for ten thousands of years and it wouldn’t get any further than a rail line from Los Angeles to the bay. It is a baby’s dream to imagine that iPhone and microprocessor factories are going to start springing up in America in the spring. Who is taking this seriously?

    Well it’s worked fine under “democracy” up until the globalisation process of the second half of the 20th century.
    This kind of emotional defeatism smells almost like oriental spy-op

    • Replies: @John Johnson
  5. You’re spiraling into solipsism now. Christianity is so lulz.

    • Troll: Tallest Skil
  6. Tab says:

    Why mention gay stuff? Compared to the Zionists gays have no real influence.

  7. QCIC says:

    Fasting really does bring clarity!

  8. @Lackadaisical Reader

    t wouldn’t hurt to at least try to correct the humongous errors made by massively offshoring anything of industrial relevance in the last few decades.
    …but what does Andrew Anglin know about industrial planning policy anyway?

    Andrew is correct.

    It would cost billions to move Chinese factories back to the US. And why would they? Makes more sense for them to find a different low wage country like Vietnam. This plan of his never made any sense and our cowardly GOP reps need to find their balls and question him.

    Manufacturing companies also have the option of shuttering production until Trump does another “pause” of the tariffs. Or wait a few years for elections and see if Trump loses his bullshit “emergency powers” that he is using to undermine the constitution.

    Trump expected China to beg and that didn’t happen. China is playing hardball like many of us expected. There were already tariffs on China and jacking them past 100% is retarded.

    Too many of you *want to believe* in Trump out of spite for the status quo.

    You’re not judging his actions critically and instead are holding out for an orange messiah to fix everything. Well that isn’t happening. Trump is a waste of time. False hope. Move on.

    This kind of emotional defeatism smells almost like oriental spy-op

    Yea that must be it. It must be defeatism because everything Trump is doing is super fucking awesome.

    Trump clearly knows what he is doing. Everything is going bigley. Wiped a year off the markets and dockworkers on the West coast are about to be unemployed. SUPER DUPER JOB!!!

    Trump running for president:

    “I will end the war in 24 hours”

    “I will reduce inflation on day one”

    Trump in office:

    “take your medicine”

    • Replies: @Lackadaisical Reader
  9. @John Johnson

    It’s not about companies losing their margins because the cost of labor is much higher in the US than in Vietnam (or China). It’s about putting a stop to the globalized labor market, if it goes so markedly against the capability for the US to wage modern warfare, because of its having stripped the US of its once powerful industrial base.

    Money, private profits, a few unionized jobs are the least of concerns here.

    The concept of a worldwide free labor market, allowing companies to scour the planet for the cheapest workers competent enough to do the job, is propped up by globalization, which in turn is maintained by keeping international sea trade routes devoid of danger.
    This precondition has been guaranteed since the fall of the USSR by the US Navy policing of the seven seas.
    But if the US navy is found incapable to deter local powers from preying on ship convoys, then nothing would stop India, say, for instance, from blocking oil tankers going from the Persian gulf to China in order to exact a further right of passage. China would then have to either acquiesce or intervene, and you can see where this is headed: that’s the end of globalization, free trade and all that is foundational to the structure of contemporary economy, and to our current way of life as a consequence.

    I cannot believe people think about capitalism (profits for private companies as the most important mover of geopolitical events) and free markets theory, as they would think about the perennial and unchangeable laws of physics, governing Nature.
    The current world order – and, as a consequence, your worldview of private companies seeking larger margins by offshoring labor abroad as something inexorable and unavoidable – are merely founded on the illusion of strength projected by the US Navy. If the latter reveals itself to be a paper tiger, then it’s the end of globalisation, except if the Chinks or BRICS, or whoever, can come up with a deterrent of their own to keep the “international law-based order” together, which I highly doubt is in their power, or inclination.

    Hence, the tariff regime introduced by Trump can be seen as an unavoidable course correction, by anyone who understands the long game of global power and international politics.

    • Replies: @John Johnson
  10. meamjojo says:

    This is a book you should read Andy. You’ll enjoy it.

    The Prince of Milk
    by Exurb1a (Author)
    4.6 out of 5 stars (2,501)

    All of time is simultaneous. Matter tends towards perfection. Cats can be dicks sometimes. The Prince of Milk is a leisurely stroll from prehistory to the distant future, stopping for tea in the 21st century English countryside.

    Before the time machine, before the undead mannequins, before the cat with the universe eye, there were the arbiters. They regulated the world and kept reality from banging into itself. All was well in paradise. But even the gods end up in love triangles from time to time.

    Several galaxies and a dimension away, Wilthail is a small English village alternating between flower shows and the occasional divorce. Life ambles. Old men and women make peace with their gods. Little do they know three deities walk among them already, biding their time before an ancient grudge rears its head.

    The world is a garden. The world is a gutter. Which is it?

    • Replies: @mulga mumblebrain
  11. The purpose of life is to recognize yourself as soul.

  12. FTB says:

    No lies detected

  13. jimbee4 says:

    Great to see you here again at TUR, Mr. Anglin. Really made my day!

  14. @Lackadaisical Reader

    It’s not about companies losing their margins because the cost of labor is much higher in the US than in Vietnam (or China). It’s about putting a stop to the globalized labor market, if it goes so markedly against the capability for the US to wage modern warfare, because of its having stripped the US of its once powerful industrial base.

    That isn’t what he is doing. You are trying to idealize his actions.

    He isn’t imposing high tariffs on all countries to stop a globalized labor market. Countries like Singapore have a 10% tariff.

    So why would Chinese manufacturing move to New Jersey instead of Singapore? How does that improve US manufacturing capability by forcing them to another Asian country?

    You are also watching too much television if you think the US has been stripped of its industrial base.

    The US is still the world’s second largest manufacturer. If anything our miliary manufacturing should be reduced. Military spending is drowning us in debt.

    I cannot believe people think about capitalism (profits for private companies as the most important mover of geopolitical events) and free markets theory, as they would think about the perennial and unchangeable laws of physics, governing Nature.

    I’ve never seen anyone compare the field of economics to the laws of physics.

    But so far economists have been right and Trump has been wrong on tariffs. In fact he caused an economic contraction which means there will be less revenue for the government. His misuse of emergency powers is showing that tariffs should go through Congress and not the whims of a real estate felon who has declared bankruptcy 5 times.

    • Agree: meamjojo
    • Replies: @Lackadaisical Reader
  15. ‘Internal discord’ in China??!! The deluded ravings of the Western ubermenschen guarantee war, as do several other factors. Where the Chinese leadership is meritocratic and talented, Western politicians must pass through the Jewintern filter, and prove themselves unquestioning sycophants of the Divine Ones, or be destroyed. The same applies to the MSM, where the cowardly indifference is no longer tolerated, and all must kneel and grovel, too. The result is Government by deranged boot-lickers.

    • Agree: Pat Kittle
  16. @meamjojo

    Wherever you are is a sewer, with no sight of any stars.

  17. @John Johnson

    I concur in not knowing how much Trump effectively understands of his own tariff policy, and it’s true it’s causing mayhem in the short term and he’s been chaotic implementing it with all his backtracking in the past weeks, but I have faith in Stephen Miran, the economist currently in a bigwig position at the Treasure department – I take my interpretation of Trump’s policies in my previous comment verbatim from Miran’s papers.

    Regarding the US still being relatively important manufacturing wise, what interests us is indicators like steel production… you can see in the chart the US is the fourth producer worldwide, but in absolute terms it produces a paltry 4% of the global output… while 53% of the global steel production is produced in China.
    Russia interestingly has similar steel production numbers to the US, and we can see it is conducting a war very limited in scope in the Ukraine, the Russian economy being still fully peace-time civilian.

    In order for the US economy to get back to being healthy again, the Rust Belt should not exist, that is the key.

  18. I like how he said “bored with” instead of “bored of.” It raises him in my estimation. Only dumbbells say “bored of.”

Current Commenter
says:

Leave a Reply - Comments on articles more than two weeks old will be judged much more strictly on quality and tone


 Remember My InformationWhy?
 Email Replies to my Comment
$
Submitted comments have been licensed to The Unz Review and may be republished elsewhere at the sole discretion of the latter
Commenting Disabled While in Translation Mode
Subscribe to This Comment Thread via RSS Subscribe to All Andrew Anglin Comments via RSS