
	by Brandon Smith
	
	11 April 2013 
	from 
	Alt-Market Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	Mankind has faced a bewildering multitude of self-made catastrophes and 
	self-made terrors over the past few millennium, most of which stem from a 
	single solitary conflict between two opposing social qualities: 
	
		
		individualism vs. collectivism. 
	
	
	These two forces of organizational mechanics 
	have gone through evolution after evolution over the years, and I believe 
	the long battle is nearing an apex moment; a moment in which one ideology or 
	the other will become dominant around the world for well beyond the 
	foreseeable future. 
	
	The assumption often made amongst academia is that the philosophy that 
	appeals most to our “natural survival imperative” and caters to our desire 
	for innovation will eventually win the day. That there is no “right or 
	wrong” side; only the effective, and the less effective. The advanced and 
	the outmoded. The transcendent, and the archaic. 
	
	It should come as no surprise then that most academics and prominent 
	mainstream talking heads often sing the praises of collectivism as the 
	inevitable champion in the war between cultural engines. 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Collectivism always presents itself with 
	the flair and sexiness of the “new”, or the progressive, while individualism 
	tends to wear the unpleasant battle scars of hard earned principles and 
	heritage. 
	
	 
	
	Collectivism is the hot looking but mentally 
	unstable bombshell blonde making promises of excitement and long term 
	comfort she has no intention of keeping. She is so seductive not because she 
	has any profound inner qualities, but because she has a knack for letting 
	you believe she is exactly what you fantasize her to be. 
	
	 
	
	Only when it’s too late do you realize she’s a 
	psychopathic pill popping man-eater…
	
	Collectivism is, in fact, a bastardization of a more useful human condition; 
	namely community. Inherent in all people is the need for meaningful 
	connection with others, and thus, the world around them, without being 
	forced to sacrifice their own identities and their own souls in the process.
	
	
	 
	
	The best representation of this model is the 
	idea of “voluntary community”, where individuals seek out each other and 
	facilitate their own connections. However, if they can’t find meaningful 
	connection, many people will settle for whatever they can get. 
	
	Collectivist structures thrive by shutting down free cultural avenues, 
	manipulating public media, encouraging fear, repression, and bias, and 
	destroying our ability to relate to others in a natural and voluntary way.
	
	
	 
	
	Collectivism’s first goal is to distract and 
	ISOLATE individuals from one another, so that honest community is difficult 
	to build. Its second goal is to then offer a false community; a cardboard 
	cutout or proxy that entices the public with fabricated and superficial 
	connections that barely satiate our inner hunger for relationship with our 
	fellow man (Facebook, 
	anyone?).
	
	 
	
	It uses our thirst for understanding against us, 
	and lures us into a system of psychological enslavement where no 
	understanding will ever be found. 
	
	Karl Marx is famous for stating that “religion 
	is the opium of the people”, a belief that communists like Mao 
	Zedong adopted. But, Mao was not opposed to “opiates for the masses” per 
	se, only citizen organizations that could not be control. Mao simply 
	replaced the various deities of the Chinese people with the religion of the 
	collectivist state. 
	
	Like any opiate, collectivism instills addiction. 
	
	 
	
	The feeling of belonging to something bigger 
	than oneself (even if it ends up being false) creates ecstatic euphoria, a 
	euphoria that weakens as time passes unless the addict commits himself even 
	deeper into the hive mind. Soon, every original aspect of the person’s 
	character is forgotten and replaced entirely by his hyper-obsession with the 
	collective. 
	
	 
	
	The whole of his identity becomes a shallow 
	product of the state and he may even defend that state, no matter how 
	corrupt, to the death. He now treats any criticism of the system as a 
	personal attack on himself, because everything he is has been given to him 
	by the collective.
	
	 
	
	If the collective is a sham, then so is he. 
	
	Collectivism as a philosophy is a perfect tool for oligarchy. The men who 
	dominate such systems rarely if ever actually believe in the tenets they 
	espouse. They sell the idea of single-minded society as a nurturing light 
	that will create group supremacy, prosperity, and perfect safety. 
	
	 
	
	But the truth is, they couldn’t care less about 
	accomplishing any of these things for the masses. They are only interested 
	in exploiting the promise to galvanize the population into a fraudulent 
	community, a dystopia in which the citizens police each other in the name of 
	the state, giving the elites total dominance. 
	
	The most vital aspect of the collectivist process is convincing the public 
	that the individual citizen is not sovereign, but is actually the property 
	of the group. 
	
	 
	
	Many readers have already witnessed this argument first hand 
	in the statements of MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry, who believes 
	your children are not yours to raise, but products of the collective to be 
	molded:
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	But this is only a taste of collectivist zealotry at work. 
	
	 
	
	Here are just a few of the most prominent 
	disinformation tactics and methodologies used by centralization cultists to 
	twist the fabric of nations and enslave individuals…
 
	
	 
	
		
		1) The Blank Slate
		
		
		Blank slate theory stems from the Freudian model of psychology and has 
		been adopted and refined by modern mainstream clinical psychiatry.
		
		 
		
		The theory contends that all psychological 
		processes and character traits of an individual are merely products of 
		repetition and memory derived through environmental experience. 
		Psychiatry extends the theory into biology in the belief that all human 
		behavior is nothing more than a series of reactionary chemical processes 
		in the brain that determine pre-coded genetic responses built up from 
		the conditioning of one’s environment. 
		 
		
		The foundational assertion of blank slate 
		theory is that human beings are born empty. That we are bio-computers; 
		soft machinery, just waiting to be programmed. 
		
		The blank slate argument is essential to the philosophy of collectivism. 
		If every person is born without inherent characteristics or spirit, and 
		all people are manufactured by environmental conditions alone, then, 
		collectivists contend, there is no such thing as true individualism.
		
		 
		
		Programmed people cannot act, they can only 
		react according to their conditioning. Therefore, they have no inherent 
		ability to choose, or to determine their own destinies. 
		
		If a society can be convinced that this theory is fact, then the inner 
		self (the source of individualism), no longer bears any meaning. The 
		environment is then seen as the only determinant that people should care 
		about. Environment becomes the sole master of their lives, and whoever 
		controls the environment, controls them. 
		
		The problem is, blank slate theory has been proven time and time again 
		to be absolutely false. 
		 
		
		From the work of MIT professor Steven 
		Pinker, to the psychological studies of Carl Jung, to the 
		linguistic studies of Noam Chomsky, as well as numerous studies 
		in mathematics, quantum physics, and anthropology; every field of 
		science has produced more than ample evidence that human beings are
		not born as blank slates. 
		 
		
		Rather, they are born with the very building 
		blocks of thought, language, mathematics, and even predispositions 
		towards certain personality traits.
		
		The most important of all of these discoveries though is attributed to 
		Carl Jung, who found that moral conceptions are in fact inborn. The 
		existence of “psychological dualities” at birth (including an 
		unconscious sense of good and evil) means that all people come into the 
		world with the ability to CHOOSE. 
		 
		
		Environment only determines our lives if we 
		allow it to. 
		 
		
		This is why the worst of men sometimes come 
		from the most sheltered and safe environments, while the best of men 
		often come from broken and terrible homes.
		
		Collectivists have struggled desperately for ages to deny or destroy the 
		concept of inherent individualism. They want us to believe that 
		everything that we have was “given to us” by them. 
		 
		
		As long as we know they have given us 
		nothing, they can never truly win… 
 
		 
		
		
		2) Individualism Is The Same As Selfishness
		
		Collectivists repeat this lie Ad nauseam. 
		 
		
		The suggestion is simple - even the smallest 
		individual actions “affect everyone”, thus, everyone is culpable for the 
		problems of the whole. And, if everyone is responsible for the problems 
		of the whole, then everyone must take responsibility for everyone else.
		
		 
		
		The job of society then, at least in the 
		opinion of collectivists, is to keep every individual member of that 
		society in line. One unruly cog could bring the entire machine to a 
		halt. Anyone who refuses to submit to the directives of the group is 
		bound to hurt the group, and is, therefore, selfish, or even criminal.
		
		The insanity of this way of thinking should be obvious. 
		 
		
		First of all, it assumes that the directives 
		of the group are always logically and morally sound. It assumes that 
		because the majority of people have come to a particular conclusion, 
		that conclusion must, by default, be correct. The fact is, history has 
		shown that at any given moment the majority is wrong about something, if 
		not most things, and these mass trespasses against reason and conscience 
		always end up being stopped by a minority of individualists. 
		 
		
		The greatest social achievements of mankind 
		are the result of the ingenuity and courage of individuals 
		who in turn inspired others. 
		
		Perhaps the best possible thing is for the machine to be sabotaged at 
		times by “selfish individuals’. Perhaps individuals are actually more 
		necessary to the survival of the group than the group is to the survival 
		of individuals…
 
		 
		
		
		3) The Family Unit Cannot Be Trusted To 
		Raise The Next Generation
		
		In the quest for a collectivist system, all competing interests must be 
		debased. 
		 
		
		The individual must have nowhere to turn for 
		guidance or comfort but the system itself. Children become a highly 
		sought after target, because their inborn personalities are easier to 
		oppress, and because they are always dependent on someone for their 
		survival already. 
		 
		
		The collective (usually in the form of 
		government) desires to be that “someone” the child depends on, and so, 
		the role of the parents has to be diminished. 
		
		Collectivists in the U.S. use the “It Takes A Village” approach in order 
		to marginalize the family unit and paint parents as secondary figures in 
		the development of their own offspring. 
		 
		
		Under this philosophy, each subsequent 
		generation is seen as a kind of “commodity”, a resource that belongs to 
		the group and that must be “protected” from the damaging ideologies of 
		the parents. 
		 
		
		One has only to examine the extreme 
		politicization of American public schools today to see this process in 
		action. 
		 
		
		The goal is to push the idea of family into 
		obscurity, while forcing children into indoctrination factories that 
		instill specific behaviors through fear, shame, and propaganda. 
		
		No one, and no entity, however, has the capacity to care for any child 
		more than that child’s own parents. Some parents do fail in their 
		responsibilities, but what kind of role model does government really 
		make in their place? Governments lie, cheat, steal, rape, murder, and 
		mass murder in order to get what they want. 
		 
		
		Government has nothing worthwhile to teach 
		anyone, including our children. 
 
		 
		
		
		4) Global Problems Will Be Solved By 
		Collectivism
		
		I find in my examinations that the opposite is true. 
		 
		
		Most global problems are CAUSED by 
		collectivism, not solved by it. The greater good is always subjective. 
		The group will always be an abstract illusion held together by nothing 
		more than the whims of the individual. And, in the grand scheme of 
		things, only individuals make any difference in the course of human 
		cultural development. 
		 
		
		The collectivist strategy requires the 
		suppression of individualism, otherwise, they cannot obtain power. That 
		means, the very bedrock of their philosophy is a threat to the security 
		of the future. 
		 
		
		In their obscene quest to control tomorrow, 
		they ensure that tomorrow dies. 
		
			
				- 
				
				They promise community, and they 
				give you isolation.  
- 
				
				They promise prosperity, and they 
				give you servitude.  
- 
				
				They promise safety, and they give 
				you a land of perpetual terror.  
- 
				
				They promise purpose, and give you 
				insignificance.  
- 
				
				They promise peace, and they foment 
				war after war after war, reaping turmoil all around us, as well 
				as within us. 
 
 
	
	
	Our only hope is to maintain the integrity of 
	our heart, and our will. 
	 
	
	The proclamation that the individual is subject 
	to the necessities of the collective is a con. There is no such prerogative. 
	In the end, there is no power over us but that which we give away. 
	
	 
	
	The state doesn’t matter. The group doesn’t 
	matter. The “greater good” doesn’t matter. All that matters is the life of 
	the individual. Each individual. 
	 
	
	For when all men rediscover their individualism, 
	only then will we be able to move forward as a whole.