Wednesday 4 September 2013

The Centralization Of Identity

Throughout history people have identified with their neighbours, the people with whom they have formed a community. These clusters of families, these villages and tribes shared a linguistic and cultural heritage that they themselves had created.
Yet over the last couple of hundred years in particular, we have seen these autonomous communities dismantled, the people who formed a part of these groups detached and isolated, and the values they adhere to, handed down by hierarchs.
Through mass schooling, the media and the imposition of centralised language the military bureaucratic gang imposes its values.
We are made to identify with the State, an entity that gathers taxes and wages war.
Through the sop of democracy we are led to identify with the War State. Despite our lack of power we encouraged to see the State as 'We'.
Around here we are told that we are 'British'. Britain may be a geographical area, an island, or a state, but it is not a country. It is not a people. It is not a religion. It is not a culture.
Only, the overseer class, rootless nobodies from nowhere, identify with a state. Their identity has been expropriated by the Hierarchy.
The overseer class like to travel, to seek out a little difference, floating above the little people who they might meet in the capacity of servants. If they are lucky they might meet foreign overseers who eat different shaped bread.
The Poor still cling onto their culture, but the Overseers have surrendered completely to received culture. They no longer belong to their families, nor their tribes, nor their villages. Yet, for all their sacrifice they do not have the rewards of the elite. All they have is their pride in the power they have over the Poor. And they have their morality.
It is Morality that is the identity of the Overseer.
Be it the submission of Islam or the prison of the Politically Correct, the Overseers are united in hate and self-righteousness and condemnation of the Poor.

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