Sméagol was not born evil. He was ordinary. Curious. Unremarkable. But the Ring was beautiful—shiny, transcendent, seductive. It offered more than power. It offered meaning. It whispered that he was chosen. That he was special. That he could rise above the dull, the dreary, the forgotten. And so he reached. He murdered. He claimed. And the Ring claimed him.
“It gave him power. Then it took everything else.”
This is the progressive activist who begins with grievance and ends with control. This is the bureaucrat who begins with empathy and ends with enforcement. This is the citizen who trades clarity for comfort, truth for approval, sovereignty for curated identity. The Ring doesn’t scream tyranny. It whispers virtue. And that’s why it wins.
Sméagol didn’t become Gollum overnight. He became Gollum through slow erosion. Through compromise. Through justification. Through the belief that power, when held by the righteous, is not only safe—but sacred. That is the shard. That is the regime. That is the cult of personality.
“We only wants to help, precious… but only if they obeys.”
The Ring doesn’t just corrupt individuals. It builds systems. It creates mobs. It mobilizes the weak through grievance, the bitter through ideology, and the cowardly through euphemism. The mob doesn’t think. It enforces. It doesn’t question. It punishes. It burns cities, loots stores, silences opposition—not as rebellion, but as ritual. It is the Ring’s immune system, attacking anything that threatens the illusion of virtue.
“The mob is not misunderstood. It is dangerous. And it must be named.”
Figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar don’t need to be Sméagol to echo his arc. They channel the same moral absolutism, the same righteous fragility, the same belief that power is sacred when held by the ideologically pure. They don’t steward the republic. They overwrite it. They don’t expand liberty. They curate it. They don’t confront injustice. They redefine it.
“The issue isn’t origin. It’s allegiance—to the shard.”
CRT doesn’t teach history—it rewrites it. DEI doesn’t build bridges—it builds compliance. ESG doesn’t measure ethics—it enforces obedience. These are not tools of justice. They are fragments of the Ring. And those who wield them, no matter their intentions, become its servants.
“The war is still being fought—not with muskets and bayonets, but with mandates and metrics.”
So how does one confront evil?
Not by mimicking its tactics. Not by begging for compromise. Not by hoping it will collapse under its own contradictions. Evil is confronted by refusing its terms. By rejecting its language. By naming the shard. By refusing the Ring.
Restoration begins with clarity. It begins with the citizen—not the curated subject. It begins with consequence—not compliance. It begins with the refusal to be managed, sorted, or silenced. Evil thrives in ambiguity. It thrives in euphemism. It thrives in the polite lie. The restorationist confronts it with unapologetic truth.
“You do not reason with the Ring. You cast it into fire.”
But here’s the deeper truth: restoration may not come gently. The regime is entrenched. The institutions are captured. The culture is curated. And the descent is accelerating. Restoration may require rupture. Not chaos—but consequence. Not destruction—but reordering.
“There may be no restoration without upheaval. No rebuild without demolition.”
And yet, the citizen is not powerless. Restoration is not a dream. It’s a discipline. And it begins with individual action—real, executable, disruptive in the right way.
🔥 1. Name the Lie—Publicly
Stop softening your language. Call DEI what it is: bureaucratic obedience training. Call CRT what it is: historical erasure and ideological grooming. Call ESG what it is: corporate compliance scoring for regime loyalty.
“Post it. Say it. Write it. Speak it. Loudly. Repeatedly. Without apology.”
🧱 2. Build Parallel Systems
Start or support local homeschool co-ops, martial arts academies, civic literacy groups. Buy from businesses that reject ESG. Promote local vendors who refuse ideological capture. Create your own blog, podcast, newsletter. Don’t just consume—counter-program.
“Restoration isn’t about reforming corrupted systems. It’s about replacing them.”
🗣 3. Confront Local Governance
Attend school board meetings. Speak. Record. Publish. Run for local office—or support someone who will confront, not compromise. Demand audits. Demand transparency. Demand consequence.
“The federal rot is too deep. But local confrontation is still possible—and it’s where restoration begins.”
🧠 4. Refuse Newspeak in Daily Life
Don’t use their language. Don’t say “gender-affirming care.” Say chemical castration. Don’t say “anti-racism.” Say racial essentialism. Don’t say “equity.” Say engineered inequality.
“Language is the regime’s first weapon. Refusing it is your first act of rebellion.”
🛡 5. Fortify Yourself and Your Circle
Train. Physically. Mentally. Spiritually. Be ungovernable. Build a trusted network. Not just friends—operatives. People who will act, not just agree. Share resources. Share tactics. Share consequence.
“Restoration is not a solo act. It’s a discipline of aligned individuals.”
⚔️ 6. Publish Relentlessly
Sequence your thoughts. Ledger your confrontations. Archive your refusals. Use Blogger. Use Substack. Use print. Use flyers. Use whatever platform they haven’t yet captured. Don’t just react—architect the counter-narrative.
“The regime thrives on silence. Restoration thrives on sequenced defiance.”
Sméagol was seduced. Gollum was consumed. The citizen must choose a different path. Not just by rejecting the Ring—but by refusing the entire system that forged it. Restoration is not gentle. It is necessary. And it begins with you.
No comments:
Post a Comment