End Results From Winning World War 2
A good tree bears good fruit. A bad tree bears bad fruit. What was the fruit of our supposed victory in World War 2?
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World War 2: A Victory Or Deferred Defeat?
Sometimes it is useful to look at the ramifications—the actual, tangible end results—from any event to determine if it was actually a net positive.
The West supposedly “won” World War 2. So what were the fruits of that victory?
Don’t forget to add:
- Increasing hatred of the races/nations that actually “won” the war
- Complete loss of kin/community because of individualism
- Proliferation of soyboy and industrialized foods
- Widespread demoralization
- State-enforced laws against whites
- Complete loss of true religious faith in the mainstream
- And plenty of others.
Sounds kind of like a bad tree bearing bad fruits, doesn’t it?
We sure acquired material abundance here in the States from that war. But given the spiritual decay and massive cultural degeneration that the abundance came wrapped in, I think I would have preferred poverty, truthfully. At least then we’d still have our national soul.
Matthew 16:26:
For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
Just replace “man” with “civilization”. The West (The United States specifically) certainly won the whole world from that war.
As Christ asked, what was the profit? Sixty-ish years of prosperity and abundance?
Maybe I’m radical, but the prosperity we had for those sixty-some years does not quite seem worth the above degeneration list.
And the most hilarious part? That prosperity always was fleeting. It never was going to stay. It was nothing but a short-term abudance that lead to permanent degeneration. Which will lead us into full collapse.
We made that Faustian trade. Looking back, it sure does not seem worth it. These end results are worse than anyone that actually fought that war back then could have ever imagined.
Read Next: Meek Is Not Weak: To Be Meek, You Must First Be Strong
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Quite right. And that short-term abundance was procured under a noose of credit-indebtedness that’s coming due with a terrible vengeance. As Talleyrand said: “The Financier supports the state in the same way as the rope supports the man who is hanged!”
Great article, and great comment here too! Our so-named “abundance” was always a lie!
World War 1 wasn’t much better. I think if most of the participants knew what the aftermath of that war would be, they would have been incentivized to attempt a peaceful resolution of their disputes. Even most of the winners, especially in Europe, after that war felt they paid too high a price for their victory.
Dead on. Thanks for the comment, Steven.