There's a section of my book that I'm writing that deals with this, and through logic, combined with human motivations, I accurately predicted the simulations in this video. I noticed the failings of altruism in my own life as I grew older, because when I was younger I was much nicer/altruistic, but almost never gained from it because I was constantly taken advantage of (mostly by women and lazy people at work), and through figuring out why it started to make sense why certain things were and are happening in the world. Still, it's nice to be vindicated by experimentation.
If I remember when I get home from work I'll post the text from my book dealing with these topics: selfishness, altruism, evil, strong knit communities, weak communities, and how it affects government, countries, open borders, taxes, and welfare.
Altruism, selfishness (both kinds), and evil can be plotted on a line by their definitions. In order, it goes:
***self destructive altruism: Helping others even when it/they hurt you. Examples: paying taxes when they're used to fund programs, institutions, and groups that hurt you, like welfare abuse, LEOs who enforce edicts to restrict the people's liberty, science that pushes only the mainstream narrative, government prioritizing which businesses succeed and which don't, removing choices from the people, general government bloat and corruption, over taxation, remaining in any toxic relationship, men required to still fulfill their traditional obligations (protector and provider) while women aren't (mothers, taking care of the home, cooking, raising the children), voting for politicians and policies to win woke points but they enact polices like open borders and mass immigration that hurts you, the divorce courts fucking over men with ridiculous alimony and child support payments, jumping on a grenade to save your friends, trying to save others by stopping a terrorist/criminal/any violent force but get hurt in the process, giving others your last bit of food when you're starving to death, the last stand of the Greeks at Thermopylae (could be construed as self destructive evil in the eyes of the Persians), any soldier that covers a retreat of his friends but gets hurt or killed, etc.
***altruism: Helping others regardless of how it affects you. Examples (add "regardless of ____" at the end of each example): being nice to strangers, acting in accordance with a healthy society to maintain it, paying taxes in general, following the rules and laws, doing favors for others, helping people with homework (I only include it because it happened to me a lot in school and got nothing for it from everyone I helped, and many dropped out of college), doing most of the work in a group project, doing most of the work at your job, all forms of charity, etc.
***constructive selfishness: Helping others so they in turn help you, or helping yourself so you can in turn help others, where a constant (but not always equal) exchange of favors occurs. Examples: the basis of free trade in capitalism (both sides gain from the exchange), your taxes are collected which are used to directly help you (mutual defense, a welfare program that is used but not abused, honest collective science endeavors which produce tangible immediate technological benefits, etc.), a job (exchange of work for pay, but workers can often be taken advantage of), random favors with your neighbors, a healthy marriage, raising healthy kids that in turn take care of you in your old age, rotations of overwatch so your fellow soldiers can get some sleep, neighbors helping each other clean up after a natural disaster, getting enough to eat, sleep, and drink to remain healthy so you can help others, owning a good home to put you in a good position to help others, having a good amount of wealth/things that were honestly earned in society to make your life easier to in turn give you more time to help others, etc.
***neutrality: A near impossible position to take and hold relative to these definitions. Do you think pure blind justice would fit here, or perhaps a tertiary category?
***destructive selfishness: Hurting others which in turn helps you, or helping yourself so you can in turn hurt others. Examples: lying, cheating, stealing, rape to experience pleasure, a criminal murdering a cop so they can escape capture, a politician lying to get elected to serve their own interests at the detriment of the people, politician(s) funneling taxpayer money to themselves or their friends, politician(s) funding stuff that hurts the people, weakening them so they are easier to control, generally being a hypocrite by expecting others to act better than you do to maintain a healthy society while you take advantage of it, mainstream media censoring certain subjects to control information for the cabal's benefit, dumbing down education to weaken people and make them easier to control, poising the food and water supply to make the people weaker and easier to control, the CIA running drugs into the U.S. to fund their black programs, false flag attacks against the people to push support for a war or more authoritarianism, needless wars that gets people in the military killed for the benefit of the cabal, the U.S. funding, training, and arming "rebels" in Syria to oust Assad so they can run an oil pipeline through and the Rothschilds can steal oil from Syria's southern border, buying something that enables you to break the law more easily (a gun, lockpicks, a fast getaway car, killdozer, etc.), getting training that enables you to break the law more easily (lock picking, studying a neighborhood to pick the best houses to steal from, etc.), etc.
***evil: Hurting others regardless of how it affects you. Examples: random murder with no motive, destroying property, lying for no benefit, many comic book villains, etc.
***self destructive evil: Hurting others even when it/they hurt you. Examples: terrorist suicide bombers (could be construed as self destructive altruism in the eyes of their religion/society combating degeneracy), Japanese kamikaze pilots (again, could be construed as self destructive altruism in the eyes of the Japanese trying to defend their homeland), cutting someone off to get ahead in traffic (presumably because you're in a hurry) but then brake check them because they honked at you, attacking someone but getting your ass kicked, committing a crime and being punished, etc.
A few extra thoughts:
While evil is separated from destructive selfishness for the purposes of this discussion, many of the examples of destructive selfishness can be described as evil, and most of the evil people in the world fall under this category. Also, keep in mind some of the things listed don't align with the other examples around them, so there are some outliers that defeat the attempt at claiming "all of this is good" and "all of this is bad". This is also affected by point of view (even though absolutism and object morality exist). The examples for altruism and evil can be somewhat vague and nebulous compared to the other categories, because they can easily jump to other categories depending on the circumstances.
Part 2: Analysis, what works, what fails, and why. The important part.
Constructive selfishness is the only inherently stable position to hold, as an individual or a group of people, regardless of size. To understand why, I'll explain why altruism fails, why it destroys communities and people who practice it, and go from there.
What happens when you're altruistic? First those you help are thankful, then they get used to it, then they demand it, and if you take away the help they get angry, and can often force it back upon you (becoming a soft slave). This is exactly why democracy is so dangerous, because people can and do vote to take from others (the altruists) and give to themselves (the destructively selfish). As a side note, this is also inherently dysgenic, which will collapse the society over time without other inputs or forces. Depending on the situation and help provided, this process can happen quickly or over a long period of time. It also occurs over the large scale in communities, regardless of size. When a community/society/country enacts altruism, and the people lose the bonds that brought them together, or masses of differing people immigrate into it, reducing social cohesion and trust, a group of people crop up that take advantage of the altruism but provide none in return, becoming hypocrites. As the leeches grow and strain the system, and as the altruists see that they're being taken advantage of, or see they can take advantage of the system too, the number of leeches grows and the number of altruists shrinks. This is a positive feedback loop which leads to the destruction of the community, when there aren't enough altruists left to maintain the system.
The bigger a community gets (in terms of population and geographical size), the more difficult it becomes to maintain community wide altruism. It requires society to not change at all (no catastrophes, wars, technological advancement, change in traditions, etc.), everyone to remain roughly the same amount of altruistic, to have nearly impenetrable borders, to be almost completely homogeneous, and have strong in group preference. Any substantial disruption of the norm creates differing levels of altruism, which has a habit of growing, leading to the positive feedback loop of inevitable destruction that altruism causes. The bigger a country/society gets, the more heterogeneous the people get, the more difficult it is to protect the border, the more disparity there is among the population, etc., and thus it becomes almost impossible to maintain altruism. Even if a homogeneous group of people established a geographically large country, over time differences would form and escalate, creating disparate groups, which would naturally splinter and secede from each other, forming their own communities/countries. A similar process happens in a homogeneous country that opens its borders and enables mass immigration of differing people (which is stupid, but it's happening in most Western countries so I'll continue with the example), because it would lead to parallel societies of differing groups coexisting in the same spaces that will inevitably and naturally splinter, which has a high likelihood of leading to violence because they will compete for land and resources, until one side is deported, enslaved, or genocided, or an amicable reformation of borders emerges (balkanization).
People naturally form tribes/communities with similar like minded people. It promotes survival and success. Your fellow tribesmen look like you, think like you, speak like you, believe mostly the same things, live in the same place, know mostly the same things, and act like you. This provides numerous benefits: you're more likely to sympathize with each other, more likely to help each other, you have more common ground, the friendship and bonds you form are stronger, the marriages are more successful, there are more children per couple, the children are more likely to survive, everyone is more likely to survive and thrive, it's easier to communicate, it's easier to organize and assign/volunteer for roles and responsibilities, you're more likely to protect each other, you're more likely to defend the tribe, the tribe is more resistant and resilient to outside pressures and conflict, there are fewer disagreements, there's less strife, it's easier to predict what each other will do, the individuals are stronger and better able to improve themselves, average wealth increases, what is produced is of better quality, crime is reduced, and you're more likely to trust each other. All of this is weakened, degraded and worsened in a tribe of differing people, making survival and success more difficult and less likely. Homogeneous tribes/communities/societies/countries will almost universally be better, more stable, and more successful than heterogeneous ones, in every conceivable metric.
However, why does altruism fail on the individual level? Well, what does an altruist do? They offer their time and resources to others, without recompense. Loss of time and resources hurts the altruist, putting them into an inferior position, less likely to improve or survive. Giving that time and resources to others helps them, putting them into a better position, more likely to initially improve and survive. It suggests that the altruist is unworthy, and those they give to are, that they are unequal, which is a lie. However, there are counter forces at play. Struggle breeds self improvement, and since the altruist is exerting more energy and work they improve themselves over time. Lack of struggle hurts and weakens those the altruist helps, preventing them from overcoming obstacles and hardships on their own, often making them lazy. Depending on the dynamics and forces at play, altruism can destroy both the altruist and those they help. The altruist is in an inferior position, suggesting that they are less deserving, unworthy, unequal, inferior to those they help, and if it continues this view will compound over time, and if forced back into the altruistic position they abandoned, it creates a permanent servant/slave/under class. As an example, this is happening through taxation and welfare in the U.S. The altruists are the producers and tax payers. The takers/leeches/destructively selfish are the takers and welfare recipients. Notice how there are fewer and fewer producers and taxpayers, and more and more leeches over time?
This should explain why constructive selfishness is the most stable form, individually and communally. It posits that everyone is equal and worthy of time and resources, and everyone benefits from every exchange, either immediately or inevitably, so the exchanges continue. It also enables both sides to improve themselves, and receive help when they need it. At a certain point, a healthy society based on constructive selfishness is almost identical to a healthy society based on altruism.
Why do communities built upon destructive selfishness, evil, and self destructive evil not work? Kant's categorical imperative says that you should act such that you wish that action to become universal law, meaning everyone acted that way. When this is applied to community wide, you can determine what would happen if everyone acted a certain way. Would it get better or worse? What would happen if everyone lied, or stole, or raped, or murdered? Society would collapse almost over night. It becomes apparent that the destructively selfish, the evil, and the self destructively evil are hypocrites and idiots. They expect others to treat them better than they treat them in return. These kinds of people can only exist as leeches upon a relatively healthy community of altruists or constructively selfish, because a community of people just like them destroys itself. However, a community based on constructive selfishness also inhibits such leeches, because they can't game the system. They theoretically can only gain through interaction where the other side gains as well. However, reality can be different, but it is still an opposing force to the leeches.
There's another necessary question to answer: why do communities/tribes form in the first place? As you can probably glean from the benefits of homogeneous communities, it has to do with survival and common goals. In a SHTF scenario, or collapse of society, or a natural disaster, or long ago when we were closer to nature and survival wasn't guaranteed, we were forced to form tribes of similar like minded people to increase our chances of survival. This strong need creates strong bonds. Any group of close knit people, when tested in hot fires, will become closer (i.e. soldiers that see deadly combat together). The hotter the fires, the greater the need, the stronger the bonds. Not only does struggle bring similar like minded people together, it molds them to become even more alike over time, to increase the benefits a homogeneous community provides. Contrarily, the less strife and hardship that is experienced, the less people need each other, and the weaker the bonds are. This is why most societies collapse if they become too successful, because through wealth, relative peace, protection, technological advancement, etc. people need each other less, the bonds are weakened, and society degrades to the point of balkanization or total collapse. It seems to be a naturally repeating process with few ways to slow or stop it. Communities also form around other mutual goals and hobbies. Again, the stronger the commonality and need, the stronger the community that forms around it. Needing other people's help is the impetus for why every community forms. People care about one another in a strong community. People only care about themselves in a weak community.
Interestingly, in a strong close knit community altruism will naturally occur. As bonds are formed you're more likely to help people, even if they don't equally return the favor, if at all. However, an interesting dynamic is formed and highlighted. As a strong community arises and bonds are formed, the needs of the tribe begin to take precedence over the needs of the individual, depending on the situation. This occurs naturally, because sometimes the people of the tribe will have to sacrifice of themselves to keep the tribe healthy, to in turn keep themselves, or their family, or anyone they care about healthy and safe. In some ways this is constructively selfish, and in other ways it's altruistic or even self destructively altruistic. Sometimes this prioritization of the tribe over the individual can even lead to sacrificing their own life to save the tribe, or members of the tribe (i.e. a soldier throwing themselves on a grenade to save their brothers), but in a healthy community, as far as I can tell, it's a good thing, and on average helps the individuals of the tribe. It presents an interesting idea, that strong healthy communities naturally bring out altruism as a way to preserve the tribe, to in turn keep the individuals of the tribe strong and healthy. It's the age old question of what gets priority, the needs of the many, or the needs of the few, the collective good, or the individual good? Well, it's clearly somewhere in between. The discussion then becomes: where is that line? What circumstances change it? Why?
Anyway, this hopefully explains a great deal of what is happening in the western world, what's going to happen, what we can do to fix it, or prevent it from happening in the future.
My plan is to get the book mostly finished and organized, and finalize each section and release it by chapter in order, posting them on here in text form and (just to reach more people) release videos on Youtube (which unfortunately is still the best platform to do it) and other video streaming platforms, releasing a chapter or two per week. I also imagine after I get toward the middle chapters of the book I'll start to get censored from any mainstream platforms I'm using because it will shit all over everything globohomo is pushing. There's going to be a set release order to it, because it has to start at the foundations and basics, and build up from there to explain the current clown world, and how much we're being fucked over. Even though there's going to be quite a few chapters and topics to go over, releasing it this way will be easier for most people to digest nowadays than just publishing a book or two and calling it a day. It will lead to positive change, because I'm going to show people what's happening in the world, why it's happening, how badly they're being fucked over, how to fix it, how to correct their own lives, how to not fall for the lies and deceptions used against them, and when it's done it's going to become active, which is really vague, but I don't wish to say more than that right now.
There's a section of my book that I'm writing that deals with this, and through logic, combined with human motivations, I accurately predicted the simulations in this video. I noticed the failings of altruism in my own life as I grew older, because when I was younger I was much nicer/altruistic, but almost never gained from it because I was constantly taken advantage of (mostly by women and lazy people at work), and through figuring out why it started to make sense why certain things were and are happening in the world. Still, it's nice to be vindicated by experimentation.
If I remember when I get home from work I'll post the text from my book dealing with these topics: selfishness, altruism, evil, strong knit communities, weak communities, and how it affects government, countries, open borders, taxes, and welfare.
Part 1: Definitions and setting things up.
Altruism, selfishness (both kinds), and evil can be plotted on a line by their definitions. In order, it goes:
***self destructive altruism: Helping others even when it/they hurt you. Examples: paying taxes when they're used to fund programs, institutions, and groups that hurt you, like welfare abuse, LEOs who enforce edicts to restrict the people's liberty, science that pushes only the mainstream narrative, government prioritizing which businesses succeed and which don't, removing choices from the people, general government bloat and corruption, over taxation, remaining in any toxic relationship, men required to still fulfill their traditional obligations (protector and provider) while women aren't (mothers, taking care of the home, cooking, raising the children), voting for politicians and policies to win woke points but they enact polices like open borders and mass immigration that hurts you, the divorce courts fucking over men with ridiculous alimony and child support payments, jumping on a grenade to save your friends, trying to save others by stopping a terrorist/criminal/any violent force but get hurt in the process, giving others your last bit of food when you're starving to death, the last stand of the Greeks at Thermopylae (could be construed as self destructive evil in the eyes of the Persians), any soldier that covers a retreat of his friends but gets hurt or killed, etc.
***altruism: Helping others regardless of how it affects you. Examples (add "regardless of ____" at the end of each example): being nice to strangers, acting in accordance with a healthy society to maintain it, paying taxes in general, following the rules and laws, doing favors for others, helping people with homework (I only include it because it happened to me a lot in school and got nothing for it from everyone I helped, and many dropped out of college), doing most of the work in a group project, doing most of the work at your job, all forms of charity, etc.
***constructive selfishness: Helping others so they in turn help you, or helping yourself so you can in turn help others, where a constant (but not always equal) exchange of favors occurs. Examples: the basis of free trade in capitalism (both sides gain from the exchange), your taxes are collected which are used to directly help you (mutual defense, a welfare program that is used but not abused, honest collective science endeavors which produce tangible immediate technological benefits, etc.), a job (exchange of work for pay, but workers can often be taken advantage of), random favors with your neighbors, a healthy marriage, raising healthy kids that in turn take care of you in your old age, rotations of overwatch so your fellow soldiers can get some sleep, neighbors helping each other clean up after a natural disaster, getting enough to eat, sleep, and drink to remain healthy so you can help others, owning a good home to put you in a good position to help others, having a good amount of wealth/things that were honestly earned in society to make your life easier to in turn give you more time to help others, etc.
***neutrality: A near impossible position to take and hold relative to these definitions. Do you think pure blind justice would fit here, or perhaps a tertiary category?
***destructive selfishness: Hurting others which in turn helps you, or helping yourself so you can in turn hurt others. Examples: lying, cheating, stealing, rape to experience pleasure, a criminal murdering a cop so they can escape capture, a politician lying to get elected to serve their own interests at the detriment of the people, politician(s) funneling taxpayer money to themselves or their friends, politician(s) funding stuff that hurts the people, weakening them so they are easier to control, generally being a hypocrite by expecting others to act better than you do to maintain a healthy society while you take advantage of it, mainstream media censoring certain subjects to control information for the cabal's benefit, dumbing down education to weaken people and make them easier to control, poising the food and water supply to make the people weaker and easier to control, the CIA running drugs into the U.S. to fund their black programs, false flag attacks against the people to push support for a war or more authoritarianism, needless wars that gets people in the military killed for the benefit of the cabal, the U.S. funding, training, and arming "rebels" in Syria to oust Assad so they can run an oil pipeline through and the Rothschilds can steal oil from Syria's southern border, buying something that enables you to break the law more easily (a gun, lockpicks, a fast getaway car, killdozer, etc.), getting training that enables you to break the law more easily (lock picking, studying a neighborhood to pick the best houses to steal from, etc.), etc.
***evil: Hurting others regardless of how it affects you. Examples: random murder with no motive, destroying property, lying for no benefit, many comic book villains, etc.
***self destructive evil: Hurting others even when it/they hurt you. Examples: terrorist suicide bombers (could be construed as self destructive altruism in the eyes of their religion/society combating degeneracy), Japanese kamikaze pilots (again, could be construed as self destructive altruism in the eyes of the Japanese trying to defend their homeland), cutting someone off to get ahead in traffic (presumably because you're in a hurry) but then brake check them because they honked at you, attacking someone but getting your ass kicked, committing a crime and being punished, etc.
A few extra thoughts: While evil is separated from destructive selfishness for the purposes of this discussion, many of the examples of destructive selfishness can be described as evil, and most of the evil people in the world fall under this category. Also, keep in mind some of the things listed don't align with the other examples around them, so there are some outliers that defeat the attempt at claiming "all of this is good" and "all of this is bad". This is also affected by point of view (even though absolutism and object morality exist). The examples for altruism and evil can be somewhat vague and nebulous compared to the other categories, because they can easily jump to other categories depending on the circumstances.
Part 2: Analysis, what works, what fails, and why. The important part.
Constructive selfishness is the only inherently stable position to hold, as an individual or a group of people, regardless of size. To understand why, I'll explain why altruism fails, why it destroys communities and people who practice it, and go from there.
What happens when you're altruistic? First those you help are thankful, then they get used to it, then they demand it, and if you take away the help they get angry, and can often force it back upon you (becoming a soft slave). This is exactly why democracy is so dangerous, because people can and do vote to take from others (the altruists) and give to themselves (the destructively selfish). As a side note, this is also inherently dysgenic, which will collapse the society over time without other inputs or forces. Depending on the situation and help provided, this process can happen quickly or over a long period of time. It also occurs over the large scale in communities, regardless of size. When a community/society/country enacts altruism, and the people lose the bonds that brought them together, or masses of differing people immigrate into it, reducing social cohesion and trust, a group of people crop up that take advantage of the altruism but provide none in return, becoming hypocrites. As the leeches grow and strain the system, and as the altruists see that they're being taken advantage of, or see they can take advantage of the system too, the number of leeches grows and the number of altruists shrinks. This is a positive feedback loop which leads to the destruction of the community, when there aren't enough altruists left to maintain the system.
The bigger a community gets (in terms of population and geographical size), the more difficult it becomes to maintain community wide altruism. It requires society to not change at all (no catastrophes, wars, technological advancement, change in traditions, etc.), everyone to remain roughly the same amount of altruistic, to have nearly impenetrable borders, to be almost completely homogeneous, and have strong in group preference. Any substantial disruption of the norm creates differing levels of altruism, which has a habit of growing, leading to the positive feedback loop of inevitable destruction that altruism causes. The bigger a country/society gets, the more heterogeneous the people get, the more difficult it is to protect the border, the more disparity there is among the population, etc., and thus it becomes almost impossible to maintain altruism. Even if a homogeneous group of people established a geographically large country, over time differences would form and escalate, creating disparate groups, which would naturally splinter and secede from each other, forming their own communities/countries. A similar process happens in a homogeneous country that opens its borders and enables mass immigration of differing people (which is stupid, but it's happening in most Western countries so I'll continue with the example), because it would lead to parallel societies of differing groups coexisting in the same spaces that will inevitably and naturally splinter, which has a high likelihood of leading to violence because they will compete for land and resources, until one side is deported, enslaved, or genocided, or an amicable reformation of borders emerges (balkanization).
People naturally form tribes/communities with similar like minded people. It promotes survival and success. Your fellow tribesmen look like you, think like you, speak like you, believe mostly the same things, live in the same place, know mostly the same things, and act like you. This provides numerous benefits: you're more likely to sympathize with each other, more likely to help each other, you have more common ground, the friendship and bonds you form are stronger, the marriages are more successful, there are more children per couple, the children are more likely to survive, everyone is more likely to survive and thrive, it's easier to communicate, it's easier to organize and assign/volunteer for roles and responsibilities, you're more likely to protect each other, you're more likely to defend the tribe, the tribe is more resistant and resilient to outside pressures and conflict, there are fewer disagreements, there's less strife, it's easier to predict what each other will do, the individuals are stronger and better able to improve themselves, average wealth increases, what is produced is of better quality, crime is reduced, and you're more likely to trust each other. All of this is weakened, degraded and worsened in a tribe of differing people, making survival and success more difficult and less likely. Homogeneous tribes/communities/societies/countries will almost universally be better, more stable, and more successful than heterogeneous ones, in every conceivable metric.
However, why does altruism fail on the individual level? Well, what does an altruist do? They offer their time and resources to others, without recompense. Loss of time and resources hurts the altruist, putting them into an inferior position, less likely to improve or survive. Giving that time and resources to others helps them, putting them into a better position, more likely to initially improve and survive. It suggests that the altruist is unworthy, and those they give to are, that they are unequal, which is a lie. However, there are counter forces at play. Struggle breeds self improvement, and since the altruist is exerting more energy and work they improve themselves over time. Lack of struggle hurts and weakens those the altruist helps, preventing them from overcoming obstacles and hardships on their own, often making them lazy. Depending on the dynamics and forces at play, altruism can destroy both the altruist and those they help. The altruist is in an inferior position, suggesting that they are less deserving, unworthy, unequal, inferior to those they help, and if it continues this view will compound over time, and if forced back into the altruistic position they abandoned, it creates a permanent servant/slave/under class. As an example, this is happening through taxation and welfare in the U.S. The altruists are the producers and tax payers. The takers/leeches/destructively selfish are the takers and welfare recipients. Notice how there are fewer and fewer producers and taxpayers, and more and more leeches over time?
This should explain why constructive selfishness is the most stable form, individually and communally. It posits that everyone is equal and worthy of time and resources, and everyone benefits from every exchange, either immediately or inevitably, so the exchanges continue. It also enables both sides to improve themselves, and receive help when they need it. At a certain point, a healthy society based on constructive selfishness is almost identical to a healthy society based on altruism.
Why do communities built upon destructive selfishness, evil, and self destructive evil not work? Kant's categorical imperative says that you should act such that you wish that action to become universal law, meaning everyone acted that way. When this is applied to community wide, you can determine what would happen if everyone acted a certain way. Would it get better or worse? What would happen if everyone lied, or stole, or raped, or murdered? Society would collapse almost over night. It becomes apparent that the destructively selfish, the evil, and the self destructively evil are hypocrites and idiots. They expect others to treat them better than they treat them in return. These kinds of people can only exist as leeches upon a relatively healthy community of altruists or constructively selfish, because a community of people just like them destroys itself. However, a community based on constructive selfishness also inhibits such leeches, because they can't game the system. They theoretically can only gain through interaction where the other side gains as well. However, reality can be different, but it is still an opposing force to the leeches.
There's another necessary question to answer: why do communities/tribes form in the first place? As you can probably glean from the benefits of homogeneous communities, it has to do with survival and common goals. In a SHTF scenario, or collapse of society, or a natural disaster, or long ago when we were closer to nature and survival wasn't guaranteed, we were forced to form tribes of similar like minded people to increase our chances of survival. This strong need creates strong bonds. Any group of close knit people, when tested in hot fires, will become closer (i.e. soldiers that see deadly combat together). The hotter the fires, the greater the need, the stronger the bonds. Not only does struggle bring similar like minded people together, it molds them to become even more alike over time, to increase the benefits a homogeneous community provides. Contrarily, the less strife and hardship that is experienced, the less people need each other, and the weaker the bonds are. This is why most societies collapse if they become too successful, because through wealth, relative peace, protection, technological advancement, etc. people need each other less, the bonds are weakened, and society degrades to the point of balkanization or total collapse. It seems to be a naturally repeating process with few ways to slow or stop it. Communities also form around other mutual goals and hobbies. Again, the stronger the commonality and need, the stronger the community that forms around it. Needing other people's help is the impetus for why every community forms. People care about one another in a strong community. People only care about themselves in a weak community.
Interestingly, in a strong close knit community altruism will naturally occur. As bonds are formed you're more likely to help people, even if they don't equally return the favor, if at all. However, an interesting dynamic is formed and highlighted. As a strong community arises and bonds are formed, the needs of the tribe begin to take precedence over the needs of the individual, depending on the situation. This occurs naturally, because sometimes the people of the tribe will have to sacrifice of themselves to keep the tribe healthy, to in turn keep themselves, or their family, or anyone they care about healthy and safe. In some ways this is constructively selfish, and in other ways it's altruistic or even self destructively altruistic. Sometimes this prioritization of the tribe over the individual can even lead to sacrificing their own life to save the tribe, or members of the tribe (i.e. a soldier throwing themselves on a grenade to save their brothers), but in a healthy community, as far as I can tell, it's a good thing, and on average helps the individuals of the tribe. It presents an interesting idea, that strong healthy communities naturally bring out altruism as a way to preserve the tribe, to in turn keep the individuals of the tribe strong and healthy. It's the age old question of what gets priority, the needs of the many, or the needs of the few, the collective good, or the individual good? Well, it's clearly somewhere in between. The discussion then becomes: where is that line? What circumstances change it? Why?
Anyway, this hopefully explains a great deal of what is happening in the western world, what's going to happen, what we can do to fix it, or prevent it from happening in the future.
Will do bud.
My plan is to get the book mostly finished and organized, and finalize each section and release it by chapter in order, posting them on here in text form and (just to reach more people) release videos on Youtube (which unfortunately is still the best platform to do it) and other video streaming platforms, releasing a chapter or two per week. I also imagine after I get toward the middle chapters of the book I'll start to get censored from any mainstream platforms I'm using because it will shit all over everything globohomo is pushing. There's going to be a set release order to it, because it has to start at the foundations and basics, and build up from there to explain the current clown world, and how much we're being fucked over. Even though there's going to be quite a few chapters and topics to go over, releasing it this way will be easier for most people to digest nowadays than just publishing a book or two and calling it a day. It will lead to positive change, because I'm going to show people what's happening in the world, why it's happening, how badly they're being fucked over, how to fix it, how to correct their own lives, how to not fall for the lies and deceptions used against them, and when it's done it's going to become active, which is really vague, but I don't wish to say more than that right now.
I hope you have a good weekend.
Will do, I won't only have them on Youtube.