>>10937
Although I'm still on the fence regarding this OP, a lot of what it says should be considered seriously. But this police state owes a lot to its electronic network, its data-centers and the power grid to make the whole of it run. You got to understand that these would be valid targets in the insurgency and they would add a lot of chaos. The more the better. The main issue with our talks is the disparity between one side's forces and the other's. Any case we can think of is always just a bunch of people, very few, against a whole nation's forces (police, surveillance, army, etc.). This begs for being balanced by brute force.
However none of this will happen anytime soon because the democratic model remains well supported by masses of retards. For the US alone when was the last time a candidate, either aiming to become a governor or a president, said that he'd get to the truth regarding 9/11, the War on Terror, the source of immigration, the massive bailouts, the Covid and more? People are rushed from crisis to crisis and they seem to accept it and renew their trust in institutions that they'd rather support as long as possible rather than topple them. They will never be revolutionaries and the only way to entertain a revolution would be to have a powerful network with lots of cash to sustain it. We have none of that. Nothing at all. Not even secret orders that could produce gold out of their magical hands. There are days I wonder if at least we could get some army guys on our side, a few generals. Few being the word. Most of them, active or not, are complete conservative morons who would rather salute the flag and follow orders than take any real risk. We have proto-leaders, truly nothing more than glorified club organizers who seem to be totally ignored by any kind providence, no matter their efforts. If we stick to a logical analysis, we should easily settle on a common conclusion: anything short of a collapse will never grant us any chance of at least making this horrible monster of a system bleed once. Yet this collapse is just wishful thinking. The alternative? Be illogical. Try anything stupid until something works. But how can that even lead to success?
>>11037
>Franco is really the only Fascist to seize power through purely violent means. Ironically, it led to him being the most passive Fascist.
A fascist he wasn't anyway.
>>11061
What do you expect this new Hitler to do? How? Where would he appear and how could he hope get some support? I don't even see a tenth of the preliminary conditions he depended upon being available to us today.
Perhaps if someone had some balls in Eastern Germany, something could happen? Politicians are getting assassinated over there. Some German leader should be forging alliances and already build a paramilitary force of some kind and be ready to face off with Western Germany, the other half that remains largely cucked. Where are the neuSA?
I mean if I were German that's where I would start, even if the country is still full of foreign troops kept there to make use nothing funny and silly were to ever happen again in that country.
If not Germany then where else? Wouldn't it require to happen in a rather powerful enough country, to have enough critical mass to trigger something? I don't buy it.
More importantly, how would that man avoid being caught, arrested or killed? Leftists, MKUltra plants and Mossad have almost free rein to do whatever they want. What do you expect that man to be able to do exactly? Are politics still necessary?
And please don't pull some crazy Serrano rabbit out of your hat, I'm not in the mood for this sort of rubbish.
>>11079
The eternal issue of needing to please the masses to obtain some form of power from them, a legitimacy of sorts so that a good portion of them would be willing to fight and die for you. Lemmings are effectively manipulated through emotions. But here and elsewhere, we use talks, memes, data and statistical and historical documents as the source of our convictions. Yet the lemmings will never care about all of this, it's food for the elite. Whether Pierce liked it or not, we need a decent quantity or people on our side. We need people.
>>11090
The Brigade is far more coherent and believable. It's also damn grim in its own way.