Last night I was at a gathering of around ten people sitting around a campfire. I had a conversation with an older woman, wherein she stated that war stimulates the economy. I respectfully disagreed and continued the conversation, until she got frustrated and said, "Oh, well you're young and you'll learn this eventually...", completely disregarding everything I had to say as a young person's naive babble. And if that wasn't insulting enough, she continued on the subject of war and defended the people who dropped the bombs on Japan. I was appalled that someone would out-and-out defend genocide with the sickening argument, "Who attacked us first at Pearl Harbor?". What was even worse was that not a single person in the entire group agreed with me, or said out loud that it was correct when I said it was wrong to commit genocide! Then one of the women that works at my chiropractor's office called me over to her, to get me to stop the conversation, and proceeded to tell me that everything is subjective. She has her opinion and I have mine. I just sat there shocked, feeling extremely vulnerable. Eventually she sat somewhere else and I looked around the fire. Everyone had moved away from me, like I had some sort of contagious disease, leaving about ten feet of free space on either side of me. I could not stop tears from falling down my face and I'm pretty sure I reverted back to how I felt when I was younger, when I knew that someone was telling me lies, but not sure how to defeat or expose it. It was then I realized that I could not subject myself to this company any longer. No one wanted the truth. No one was willing to speak up against the most horrible crime humans have committed, and I felt alone and angry about how I was being treated. I left the gathering and realized, seeing it first hand, how explosive these ideas are and wishing that I were better at explaining them. The woman walked back to the house and hugged me on the porch (from which I felt sick to my stomach), telling me that she didn't mean to upset me or argue. I told her, "I just can't agree with or defend genocide." She said, "Me either dear", with a somewhat shocked look on her face, as if she did not know that genocide was what we were talking about. With that she walked in the house to go to bed. I left the place shortly after and went home.
When I arrived home I was very upset because I thought about how much of a "red pill" FDR and these ideas truly are. I can't go back, and I'm scared.
I applaud you all for what you do, say and face here and for damn sure, out in this world. It's huge.
~Crystal
"Reason is the servant neither of tradition nor consensus." - Nathaniel Branden