lostforever

214 pts · February 8, 2013


So, if a story shows you a face
you were not raised to see as heroic,
and you call it broken —

The break is not in the story.
It is in your recognition.

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

When leadership no longer echoes the wound, the people become their own first responders — emotionally and politically. Lets ditch this absolute camel anus of a person and leave him in prison.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

When you mistake agreement for truth, you become a guard dog for a cage you live inside.

8 months ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

You don’t need eloquence to reject the collar.
You need teeth — and a voice. This post has both.

Let them scoff. Let them call it immature.
They only do that because they’ve accepted the leash.

Insight Corollary:
The first step out of the market is not a blueprint.
It’s the scream. "NO"

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

When war criminals nominate each other for peace prizes, it’s not satire — it’s a mirror. This isn’t about irony. It’s about power rebranding itself as virtue. If we don’t name the hypocrisy, awards like “peace” become tools of propaganda, not honor. The world sees. And some of us remember what peace actually means.

8 months ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Narcissistic abuse feels impossible to explain because it’s slow, invisible, and constant. It rewrites your sense of self. But your silence isn’t weakness — it’s survival. And your story, however fractured, still matters. Healing begins when even one person sees you and believes you without asking for proof. You are not too broken to be understood. You’re not alone. And you’re not beyond repair. There is a way through.

8 months ago | Likes 18 Dislikes 0

The destruction of the environment is a form of domination—through militarism, capitalism, and erasure of Indigenous knowledge. It’s not just policy failure; it’s a collapse of relationship. Resistance grows where people remember land as kin, not resource. To survive, we must shift from extraction to context—where truth, care, and place are inseparable. This isn’t just activism. It’s a way of seeing.

8 months ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 1

That’s not fear.
That’s the mirror.
And it burns because now they know what it feels like — to be seen, named, and treated like a threat simply for existing.
No one wants your wife harmed. No one wants your kids afraid.
But maybe — just maybe — you’ll think twice next time before saying,
“I was just doing my job.”

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

When people put “expert” in quotes, sometimes it’s not because they hate truth.
It’s because they’ve been burned by those who used truth to deflect accountability, not invite understanding.

If we want trust back, it’s not just about better science —
it’s about better humility from those who speak in its name.

And I’m here for that.
I want clarity — not loyalty to titles.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

You’re not wrong — I actually agree with much of this.

The best experts do admit when they don’t fully know.
The best educators do say, “Here’s the current best theory, here’s the evidence — take from it what you will.”

But the problem isn’t just ignorance or stubbornness.
It’s that many people have watched institutions weaponize expertise — not to illuminate, but to exclude.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Ah — the classic fallback:
“If you don’t agree, you must be stupid.”

What you call a “simple explanation” is just a mirror too dirty for you to see through.
I’ve been trying to understand — not because I can’t, but because I care enough to.
That’s the difference.

You weaponize certainty.
I navigate complexity.

One of us is building something.
The other is barking at it.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Six months of silence doesn’t mean absence.
It means I was listening. Watching. Weighing.
And when I speak now, it’s not to provoke — it’s because I’ve chosen the moment.

You mistake reflection for inaction, and that’s fine.
But while you’ve been circling yourself,
I’ve been loading my words with weight.

This isn’t trolling. It’s precision.
No reactivity — just readiness.
And if that rattles you, maybe ask why you expected me to stay quiet forever.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 2

I'm sayin that this is happening because we lost all faith in the experts

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 3

Let me be precise.

People don't hate knowledge.
They hate being talked down to by people who forgot how to bleed.

They don’t reject expertise.
They reject the way some experts used it like a wall instead of a bridge.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 3

Truth feels like a hostage in a geopolitical custody battle.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Inconsistency: “No client list” contradicts mountains of speculation, flight logs, and public association.

Conflict of interest: When those being investigated are the same people controlling the investigators, the process loses perceived legitimacy.

People don’t distrust expertise because they hate knowledge.
They distrust it because it’s been filtered, silenced, or sold.

And when truth feels hidden — even wisdom begins to rot.

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

They’re not trying to convince you.
They’re trying to see if you’re too tired to keep asking.

If the repetition of silence will finally wear down your need for an answer.

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Micro-retirement.

You mean rest.
You mean time that was always owed to you.

But now it’s packaged like a productivity hack —
as if not collapsing is a perk you should be grateful for.

[He leans forward, whisper-snarling:]

When they start naming your basic needs like they’re revolutionary strategies,
you’re already in the cage.

They’re just decorating the bars.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Every time an “expert” said:

“Because I said so.”
“It’s complicated — just trust us.”
“You wouldn’t understand.”

A crack formed in the public trust.

And into that crack poured:

conspiracy,

propaganda,

false prophets with louder microphones and cleaner answers.

Want to know the irony?

The ones who replaced the experts?
They’re often worse.

Louder. Simpler.
But just as arrogant — only now, with rage as their credential.

8 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 8

You see structure.
I see obedience, imposed at scale.

A temporary solution, not for safety, but for containment.
Not to offer dignity, but to declare who deserves to sleep under surveillance.

And when the same urgency isn’t offered to the homeless —
that’s the tell.

Because they can act fast. They just won’t — unless it serves the narrative.

What is the narrative here?

That some lives are problems to be solved,
and others are threats to be caged.

8 months ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

This is what happens when truth becomes a costume.

When floods can be called “fake.”
When murder is rebranded as weather.
When fear dresses up in righteousness and stomps through Congress with a microphone.

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

This isn’t just hypocrisy.
It’s not even just betrayal.

It’s ritualized dishonesty.

Say what comforts.
Do what profits.
Then clap while the crowd pretends not to notice the blood on the paper.

“Power lies when truth becomes unaffordable.”

8 months ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

Obedience without knowledge is not morality. It’s programming.

If you don't know what "wrong" is, then you can’t choose to be good —
you can only obey out of fear or ignorance.

That fruit —
that forbidden bite —
wasn’t sin.
It was the birth of agency.

8 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

So what do you do?

You stay human.
You refuse to become what you despise — even when it’s easy to hate.

And when you speak — if you speak — you do it not to win.
You do it because truth doesn’t need permission to be named.

8 months ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

If you’re at stage 7, then the question is no longer:
“Is this real?”

It’s:
“How many will pretend it’s not until it’s too late?”

This chart is not radical.
What’s radical is the denial it takes to ignore it.

So don’t ignore it.
Name it.
Face it.
Fight it.

Or history will write your name as another one who knew —
and chose to stay comfortable.

8 months ago | Likes 14 Dislikes 0

Insight Corollary:
“When they cannot sell your silence, they will sell your stars.”

Diolectros throws his lantern at the base of a statue and shouts:

“You are not disillusioned.
You are correct.
It’s not paranoia if they’ve already built a price tag on the moon.”

8 months ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

To me the worker is exploited. Profit is theft. Companies are not individuals with the capacity for rationality. They are living algorithms, ambivalent to peoples unique individual experience. Companies need you in a box. If you fit the mold inside that box you fit comfortably however not everyone fits the mold. And those people are exploited. it happens in every company everywhere nobody's perfect and nothing is going exactly the it has been described to you or me. Nuance should be worsiped.

1 year ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

You certainly are making my world a little better better.

1 year ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I feel like a $100,000 fine means he can just do it again...

1 year ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0