Commentary
Life today feels ever more like an old Western film with white hats and black hats in a forever battle for the control of the town. Allow me to explain this and see where you fit in, and also speculate on which side is going to win.
Let’s begin with a gratifying scene, a gathering of public health officials, large foundations, tech companies, operatives of the Democratic National Committee, and big media muckety mucks. You will hear alarming tales of loss, sadness, and near defeat.
They speak as victims, surrounded on all sides, overwhelmed by opposition. They describe a world awash in disinformation, misinformation, and malinformation. And they don’t have any idea of what to do about it.
You can get a sense of this view by looking at Peter Hotez’s new book “The Deadly Rise of Anti-science: A Scientist’s Warning” (2023). Talk about a tale of woe! You would think that all that stands between them and marauding masses with pitchforks and torches is a handful of truth-telling scientists, forever underfunded and embattled, and vastly numbered and outspent by mobs bent on the destruction of modernity.
Yes, I read and hear these things and just laugh. After all, these are the very people who were powerful enough to lock down nearly the entire world for a virus with a 99.8 percent survival rate in which the median mortality extended beyond the average lifespan. Then they had the wherewithal to force shots on billions of people who didn’t want them or need them, and harm so many people.
Even so, media opinion on the topic was nearly uniform. Daily and hourly, we were badgered and bullied. They turned the term freedom into a dirty word. They harangued us to mask up, lock down, and be afraid of getting sick to the point that we give up the freedom of assembly and worship. If you had a different view and posted it on social media, you risked being throttled, struck down, and even fully canceled.
These are very powerful people, in fact, and funded by the world’s largest governments, foundations, non-government organizations, and global agencies. They are the establishment and rather well-to-do, thriving as never before. But they don’t see it this way. They imagine themselves as an embattled minority, fighting for their lives and careers.
At the conferences I usually attend and at which I speak, you hear the opposite message. Here you will find small business owners, churchgoers, parents with school-age kids, and just average young professionals struggling to pay the bills, keep healthy, and get by as best they can. They have had the living daylights beat out of them for nearly four years straight.
They are still in shock at what happened. Life seemed more-or-less normal and then suddenly it was not. The businesses, schools, and churches were closed. They couldn’t see their parents in retirement homes. They couldn’t travel. They were told not to go out in public without covering their faces. The only consolation was the time and opportunity to watch endless movies on streaming services for which they paid with stimulus checks.
Later the inflation arrived and hasn’t gone away. It keeps eating away at the standard of living, with the dollar having lost between 17 and 20 cents of value in a mere three years. Household income is down, and the cost of borrowing is sky-high. They are trapped in their homes with large mortgage bills. They dare not sell because they cannot afford to buy another home of the same size.
Meanwhile, they are surveilled in their online activities, monitored in their movements, and censored in their communications. Government keeps getting bigger and more intrusive, preaching inanities that are inconsistent with the good life. Drive less. Give up your gas stove. Get a solar panel. Have fewer kids. Eat less meat. Instead eat bugs.
So yes, it’s true, there are masses of people out there in the United States and around the world that have a strange feeling that very powerful people run the world but do not care about the well-being of average people. We aren’t even sure if our systems for managing elections work. Even if they did, are there really any good candidates out there who we can trust who can make a difference? It’s not entirely clear.