Anonymous
8/7/2025, 3:25:06 PM
No.106174761
>>106157012
Except even the strongest man can't handle 1000 people jumping him at once.
What scares the government the most is people actually rallying under one banner and rebelling.
The internet has ironically made it easier for governments worldwide to stop people from grouping up. The discourse has moved into the digital world, where it's easy to bombard people with irrelevant issues and distract them from important things, and where it's much easier to censor any important things that slip through the cracks. Some people have been so overwhelmed they started campaigning for solving problems in countries where these problems never existed in the first place (e.g. black slavery). It's very difficult to spur people into taking action in the real world amidst all this noise.
One person out for blood in the real world is much scarier to any politician than 100 fags screeching on twitter or signing online petitions. I'm not saying the latter activities are completely worthless, but this shift of discussing everything digitally has undoubtedly weakened the citizen's ability to oppose their government's decisions.
Except even the strongest man can't handle 1000 people jumping him at once.
What scares the government the most is people actually rallying under one banner and rebelling.
The internet has ironically made it easier for governments worldwide to stop people from grouping up. The discourse has moved into the digital world, where it's easy to bombard people with irrelevant issues and distract them from important things, and where it's much easier to censor any important things that slip through the cracks. Some people have been so overwhelmed they started campaigning for solving problems in countries where these problems never existed in the first place (e.g. black slavery). It's very difficult to spur people into taking action in the real world amidst all this noise.
One person out for blood in the real world is much scarier to any politician than 100 fags screeching on twitter or signing online petitions. I'm not saying the latter activities are completely worthless, but this shift of discussing everything digitally has undoubtedly weakened the citizen's ability to oppose their government's decisions.