Predictive programming is a technique the anti-Christian power structure uses to condition the masses to accept changes that those twisted people want to introduce into the world. It is often used by them in Hollywood TV and film productions. Star Trek is a frightfully good illustration: AI computer assistants and computer tablet reading devices were featured in this series decades ago, to give only a couple of examples from the long-running series. We have recently watched Back to the Future Part II, which features predictions about the year 2015 (the movie was released in 1989), and found the same process at work. There are hints of things to come, like the use of biometric data (to open locks on doors) and a completely man-controlled ‘weather service’ (likened in the movie to the regularity of the postal service); both biometrics and geoengineering are becoming more accepted and widespread around the world. Featured most prominently in the film are flying cars: the year 2015 was portrayed as being full of them. Well, it’s 2025, and they’re ain’t any flyin’ cars around, so we’re a little behind schedule. But the technocratic elite still want to shove as many of us as possible into flying automobiles. The news about their development is starting to trickle out. Orlando, Florida, home of Disney fantasy land, is living up to its reputation, getting ready to build a ‘vertiport’ for flying cars, which the city wants to have ready by 2028. Alef Aeronautics, which publicly ties itself to Back to the Future Part II and its flying car (predictive programming – mission accomplished!), is taking pre-orders for their own version, but it’ll cost you a few hundred thousand dollars (I think I’ll save my stash for eggs, the way prices are going). Mass production of Alef’s Model A has reportedly begun. Dr. Russell Kirk had a special hatred for the standard automobile that we have all been driving since the early 20th century, calling it a ‘mechanical Jacobin,’ since it broke up the long-established patterns of living that had grown up organically across Christendom and the rest of the world. Dixie’s own Andrew Lytle in ‘The Hind Tit,’ his essay in I’ll Take My Stand, was no better inclined towards them. We covered this matter of the motor car and other related things in an essay written about a dozen years ago. Dr. Robert Peters once referred to it as being somewhat ill-tempered. We agree. And we will now be just as ill-tempered in our response to the appearance of flying cars. Conventional automobiles that roll along the ground at least have the virtue of keeping us connected to that same ground to a small degree, however much of a blur it usually is as we whiz over and by it. But flying cars, these flying Jacobins, will disconnect us from it completely, making the earth and its places even more distant and abstract to us, increasing the likelihood that we will be even less hesitant than we are today to tear it to pieces, to deconstruct and reconstruct it, for the sake of some hair-brained, Gnostic, nihilistic scheme of economic development, scientific advancement, or non-sensical entertainment. As Southerners, we must stand against the rising tide of tech. We have witnessed the deadliness of it for generations now – from women and children being mangled in the early factories to hydrogen bombs incinerating Japanese cities to suicides tied to social media. The prophetic English writer Paul Kingsnorth is helpful at this moment. He points out two paths that traditional Southerners (and other like-minded peoples) can take as it regards technology, which he calls ‘cooked asceticism’ and ‘raw asceticism.’ In his own words (from his essay ‘The Neon God’): The Cooked Ascetic
The Raw Ascetic
In that vein, Southrons should resolve to limit our uptake of new technology. No flying cars, no smart phones, no AI, etc., or at least greatly restrict our use of such things. We should do as much as we can to re-establish the agrarian ethos of our forefathers, difficult though it be in our rushed and tech-obsessed age. A story from the life of St Nikephoros of Chios (reposed in 1821), a saint from among the same Greek people Southerners have often praised over the years, shows how beautiful and beneficial the agrarian life is when practiced:
Like the Saint, let us also here at the South be tree lovers, tree planters, soil-builders, animal keepers, and so on, even to the smallest extent, and encourage our children, grandchildren, neighbors, etc., to do the same. Modern technology is turning the world into hell itself. But by practicing Christian agrarianism, we can help return some small slivers of it to the comely and abundant garden God intended for it to be.
1 Comment
Caryl Johnston
3/3/2025 04:36:55 am
Wonderful article. There needs to be a massive refusal to go along with AI and the satanic dreams of world-engineers .Interesting how the doctrine of "Progress" became a new tyranny.
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AuthorWalt Garlington is a chemical engineer turned writer (and, when able, a planter). He makes his home in Louisiana and is editor of the 'Confiteri: A Southern Perspective' web site. Archives
March 2025
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