Anti-Imperialism/Foreign Policy

Escaping the Clutches of the System

TO emphasise why we should never take sides in disputes involving two or more parties that continue to support usury, taxation, centralised government and the ballot box, particularly if – as in the case of Putin, Assad, Jong-un and Khamenei – one side presents itself as a bastion of sovereignty and non-alignment in relation to the other, let me provide a brief example from the last century.

In the early-1930s, when a Red State was declared in southern and eastern China, the communists were being attacked by the ‘nationalist’ forces of Chiang Kai-Shek (1887-1975). As the civil war raged on, Japan had invaded China’s northern territories and established itself in both Manchuria and Peking. Not only had the communist state been wholly facilitated by the Soviet Union, which was secretly backing the likes of Mao Zedong (1893-1976) and other leading CCP officials, but they were also pretending to support their ‘nationalist’ opponents in a more overt fashion – simply as a means of getting their agents into Chiang’s ranks as a way of obtaining sensitive information that they could pass on to the communists themselves. Meanwhile, once the Japanese had arrived on the scene the Soviet Union (along with El Salvador and the Vatican) became one of just three countries which officially recognised their new puppet-state of Manchukuo in the north-east. Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) did this for one very simple reason: he was concerned that the Japanese would push west into Mongolia and Russia. In effect, therefore, the Soviet Union was backing all three sides.

In the twenty-first century, when the ties between Zionist-occupied Europe and North America are far more incestuous than the volatile Eastern Bloc ever was, the notion that a region such as Catalonia can ever be ‘independent’ and yet continue to retain the vestiges of Western democracy and trade within the internationalist system is purely hypothetical. Our enemies hold all the cards and unless we dispense with existing forms of political and economic authority it will be impossible to secure regions that are truly autonomous in any meaningful sense. Without unplugging ourselves from the Matrix altogether, therefore, freedom will remain nothing but an illusion.

Leave a Reply