Replying to Avatar SovereigntyQuest

Is a collapse in such infrastructure a necessary precondition for communities to take responsibility away from the state? I've been listening and reading about some of the issues in South Africa at the moment and how some argue that the current load shedding(🥁), while massively disruptive and unpopular, is not enough to wake communities up to the reality of the socialist induced collapse underway in the nation. The argument is that people get used to the smaller disruptions and corruption and find ways to live and put up with it, which means the government is able to continue their nonsense, it's only a complete breakdown in that infrastructure that would force the population to finally reject the NDR (National Democratic Revolution) and take back control of their own system.

c1
LuisSP 2y ago

it is not enough. there were places in middle east and africa where a generator was a basic requirement for any shop.

but a complete breackdown would be a 'walking dead' scenario.

do you know USA studied 'how many people could we feed without eletricity' and the answer was 10%.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.