New here?
Create an account to submit posts, participate in discussions and chat with people.
Sign up
58
posted 1 year ago by Delon on scored.co (+0 / -0 / +58Score on mirror )
You are viewing a single comment's thread. View all
LGBTQIAIDS on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
The 'Radical Centre' (i.e. libertarianism) is every bit as bad as the Left.

The main difference between them is that these idiots usually have very little power. However, if they had power, they would be every bit as dangerous and destructive. Unfortunately, the second Trump Administration is essentially theirs, and so we have to deal with idiots like that Twittard—their moronic conceptions of the political spectrum and the self, their extreme philo-semitism, and all the rest of their filth—till the Democrats inevitably deliver the coup de grace to them. Since Argentina's Radical Centre under Milei also looks to have no real staying power, they'll go from controlling two countries to back to zero before long. Some identified South Korea's recently ousted President Yoon as a libertarian—others, however, identify him as a centrist or conservative—in which case they've already lost one country.

Left-Wing bias combined with optimism leads one to believe that the second Trump Administration is the last gasp of the Right in America. In reality, there hasn't been a serious Right in America in centuries: instead, the second Trump Administration represents one of the final, possibly *the* final, gasp of the Radical Centre and its colourblindness, which has no place in a world of growing 'identity politics'. There will simply be Left-Wing identity politics facing off against the possible resurgence of Right-Wing identity politics that hyper-individualist cretins such as Tucker Carlson fear even more than the Left-Wing identity politics that they often rail against. People like this are closer to Antifa than 'Fa', and they will sooner align themselves with Antifa, and Antifa with them, than either will with the dreaded 'Fa'.

At present, I assume that the Republicans will essentially become marginalized post-Trump and thus that the Radical Centre will be out of power in America for a very long time to come. We don't know what the post-Trump Republicans will look like, but they will probably move to the non-radical centre, i.e. away from libertarians like Elon Musk and his Milei-like deregulationism, and trail the Democrats' constant Leftward drift, while ensuring that they don't fully reach the Democrats. As long as they remain somewhere Rightward of the Democrats, they won't lose large numbers of voters or risk a party split.

A few months ago, some talked of the Democrats possibly moving towards the Centre in response to Kamala's defeat. They spoke of three politicians whose names I forget—all of whom were yids—who had 'hijacked' the party. I think one of them might have been Josh Shapiro. However, I don't consider this a serious possibility. There is no real way to take the Democratic Party away from the Left without risking a party split and/or losing millions of younger and/or more degenerative voters.

In conclusion, things do not look good for the future of libertarianism. These people will soon learn what it has been like for centuries on the Right: if they think that they have no 'freedom' and so forth as of now, they'll be reflecting on 2025 fondly come 2028, when Musk comes to realize that he did not 'save the world' after all, with the Democrats likely retaking the executive. (Of course, we do not *know* who will win in 2028, but the mid-terms will give us good indication: if the Democrats do well in the mid-terms, that they will retake the executive in 2028 is practically a fait accompli.)
Toast message