Pre-Emptive Counter-Revolution

Charlie Stross on what’s going on in the world today:

The over-arching reason for the clamp-down on dissent, migration, and freedom of expression, and the concurrent emphasis on security in the developed world, constitutes the visible expression of a pre-emptive counter-revolution. […]

I believe what we’re seeing is a move towards the global imposition of a police state in the developed world, leveraging the xenophobia that naturally emerges during insecure times, by a ruling elite who are themselves feeling threatened by a spectre. Controls on movement, freedom of association, and speech are all key tools in the classic police state’s arsenal. What’s new about this cycle is that the police state machinery is imposed locally, within national boundaries, but applies everywhere: the economic system it is intended to protect is transnational and unconstrained. Which is why even places that were largely exempt during the cold war are having a common police state agenda quietly imposed. There is to be no refuge, other than destabilized “failed states” where the conditions of life make a police state look utopian in comparison.

This system has emerged organically, from the bottom up, and is not the result of any conspiracy; it’s just individuals and groups moving to protect their shareholdings in the Martian invaders, by creating an environment that is safe for the hive intelligences to operate in.

Full Story: Charlie Stross: Who ordered *that*?

1 Comment

  1. Another way to look at this: pre-emptive counter revolution is an elite panic response to feared public backlash due to eco-shocks:

    http://technoccult.net/archives/2013/04/15/elite-panic-why-rich-people-think-all-people-are-monsters/

    http://technoccult.net/archives/2013/07/13/pentagon-bracing-for-public-dissent-over-climate-and-energy-shocks/

    It fits nicely with law enforcement’s “green scare” agenda, which also happens to fit nicely with various corporate agendas.

Comments are closed.

© 2024 Technoccult

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑