Stormin Norman
3rd November 2002, 13:20
What is a dangerous idea?
It depends on your motive. If the objective is to maintain a servile state through people’s complacency or ignorance, then you may fear ideas that provoke revolutionary thought or question the State’s authority or competence. Throughout history these are the ideas most commonly considered criminal and punished as sedition. When the churches used their creed to suppress ideas and exploit people, it was the opposition to the majority religion that were persecuted and destroyed. When a new world was found to be rich in resources and promised unlimited profits it was the ‘savages’ who rightfully owned the land and held a different world view than western Europeans that were considered dangerous and were eventually eradicated. Today, there are rumors that men have found new forms of generating power at cheaper costs. Some of these men are also rumored to have been eliminated by the oil barons or who ever might loose from their discoveries. It seems that for generations it has been dangerous to oppose the majority, question the state, or threaten powerful men’s profits with competitive ideas.
The most dangerous ideas, in truth, are those that promote injustice and extinguish the lives of others. The
brand of thinking that allows other men to reap the rewards of other men’s labor through unfair taxation. Ideas that threaten to eradicate freedom from the planet, and allow for a mechanism of a totalitarian government with the power to eliminate those opposed to there scheme. Men that hate themselves and everyone’s existence seem to be the most dangerous and have caused the most destruction in the world, but they would have never been possible without men who refused to think and allowed others to do there thinking for them. By far the most dangerous idea is the non-idea. People who do not think present the gravest danger for humanity, for they appear to represent a large body, easily manipulated by the self-hating murderers.
(Edited by Stormin Norman at 12:45 pm on Nov. 4, 2002)
It depends on your motive. If the objective is to maintain a servile state through people’s complacency or ignorance, then you may fear ideas that provoke revolutionary thought or question the State’s authority or competence. Throughout history these are the ideas most commonly considered criminal and punished as sedition. When the churches used their creed to suppress ideas and exploit people, it was the opposition to the majority religion that were persecuted and destroyed. When a new world was found to be rich in resources and promised unlimited profits it was the ‘savages’ who rightfully owned the land and held a different world view than western Europeans that were considered dangerous and were eventually eradicated. Today, there are rumors that men have found new forms of generating power at cheaper costs. Some of these men are also rumored to have been eliminated by the oil barons or who ever might loose from their discoveries. It seems that for generations it has been dangerous to oppose the majority, question the state, or threaten powerful men’s profits with competitive ideas.
The most dangerous ideas, in truth, are those that promote injustice and extinguish the lives of others. The
brand of thinking that allows other men to reap the rewards of other men’s labor through unfair taxation. Ideas that threaten to eradicate freedom from the planet, and allow for a mechanism of a totalitarian government with the power to eliminate those opposed to there scheme. Men that hate themselves and everyone’s existence seem to be the most dangerous and have caused the most destruction in the world, but they would have never been possible without men who refused to think and allowed others to do there thinking for them. By far the most dangerous idea is the non-idea. People who do not think present the gravest danger for humanity, for they appear to represent a large body, easily manipulated by the self-hating murderers.
(Edited by Stormin Norman at 12:45 pm on Nov. 4, 2002)