I'm going to teach you how to visualize freedom.
It's something I like to do -- ask people -- visualize freedom.
They say it's too abstract. Not possible. So I tell them, it's not as hard as you think.
Let's imagine the opposite of freedom : a prisoner. This is something very easy to do. From when we are children, we are constantly shown the images of the opposite of freedom. Close your eyes and visualize what it means to be a prisoner.
The first thing you see is his clothing. It is the prime symbol identifying a prisoner. A prisoner without his clothing is almost an ordinary man. Hold on to this observation.
The second thing you see when imagining a prisoner, symbol of unfreedom, is the architecture: the walls, the doors, the brick and metal. When these two technologies are imposed upon an ordinary man, clothing and architecture, the image of enslavement is produced.
So to visualize freedom, do the exact opposite. Imagine an ordinary man, but remove the clothing, remove the architecture. Now you're imagining a naked man in the wilderness. We have another similar image to this taught to us as children: the image of Adam and Eve before the Fall. Modern society, a late capitalism descending into fascism, has trained us to feel terror if we were to encounter a man like Adam was in the garden.
It's this prison society that's destroying the earth and driving us apart. You already know how to visualize liberty and how to visualize tyranny. The first step to overcoming the tyrannical state is to eliminate architecture. Maybe you thought I was going to advocate for the removal of clothing first, because the first thing you imagine when imagining a free or non-free man is the clothing or lack thereof. But we need to work from the outside in. When the buildings have gone, capitalism and fascism go with them, and the clothes naturally come off again.
If the future of mankind concerns you, give some serious thought to considering that returning to monkey may be our only hope. God already showed us the picture of how man is meant to live. And the harder you fight against that image, the more your slack is robbed away. It's time to go back.