OP-ED A Popular Uprising Against the Elites Has Gone Global | Opinion

jward

passin' thru
A Popular Uprising Against the Elites Has Gone Global | Opinion

A popular uprising of working-class people against the elites and their values is underway—and it's crossing the globe. There is a growing resistance by the middle and lower classes against what Rob Henderson has coined the "luxury beliefs" of the elites, as everyday folks realize the harm it causes them and their communities.

There were early glimmerings last February, when the Canadian Trucker Convoy pitched working class truck drivers against a "laptop class" demanding ever more restrictive COVID-19 policies. You saw it as well in the victory of Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, who ran on parents' rights in education and went on to win both suburbs and rural areas. You can see it in the growing support of Hispanic voters for a Republican Party, which increasingly identifies as anti-woke, and pro-working class. And now we're seeing the latest iteration in the Netherlands in the form of a farmer's protest against new environmental rulings that will ruin them.

But the effects will be global. The Netherlands is the world's second largest agricultural exporter after the United States, making the country of barely 17 million inhabitants a food superpower. Given global food shortages and rising prices, the role of Dutch farmers in the global food chain has never been more important. But if you thought the Dutch government was going to take that into account and ensure that people can put food on the table, you would be wrong; when offered the choice between food security and acting against "climate change," the Dutch government decided to pursue the latter.

What is particularly frustrating is that the government is fully aware that what it is asking farmers to do will drive many of them out of existence. In fact, the government originally planned to move at a slower pace—until a lawsuit brought by environmental groups in 2019 forced an acceleration of the timetable.

The reaction by members of the agricultural sector has been massive and ongoing since 2019, but the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic allowed the government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte to ban protests in 2020 and 2021. With the reignited demonstrations this year, the authorities have also switched to a more aggressive approach. There have been arrests and even warning shots fired by police at farmers, one almost killing a 16-year-old protestor.

Yet the sympathies of the Dutch are not with their government; they are solidly with their farmers. Current polls indicate that the Farmers Political Party, formed just three years ago in response to the new regulations, would gain a whopping 11 seats in Parliament if elections were held today (it currently holds just one seat). Moreover, the Dutch Fishermen's Union has publicly joined the protests, blocking harbors with fishing crews holding signs that read "Eendracht maakt Kracht": Unity Creates Strength.

But while the Dutch people are on the side of the farmers, their elites are behaving much as they did in Canada and the U.S., and not just those in government. Media outlets are refusing to even report the protests, and when they do, they cast the farmers as extremists.

Why the disconnect? Every reliable poll of European newsrooms from Germany to the Netherlands show that climate change is a much more important topic for journalists than it is for ordinary people. It's not that average citizens don't care about climate change, but that they have the common sense to know that destroying their farm so the government's emission goals can be met in 2030 instead of 2035 will not change the planet's climate.

After all, the Netherlands accounts for just 0.46 percent of the world's CO2 emissions, and while a further reduction might be desirable, it will not be decisive in combating climate change over the next eight years. It may make the country's elite to feel good about themselves, but it will also result in large parts of the population seeing their living standards decline and their economic existence targeted by the state for ideological reasons.

There is a malaise in the West currently, where ideological goals are pursued at the expense of the lower middle and working classes. Whether it's truckers in Canada, farmers in the Netherlands, oil and gas companies in the United States, ideology, not science or hard evidence, is dominating the agenda, gratifying the elites while immiserating the working class.

Ultimately, there is a risk that climate policies will do to Europe what Marxism did to Latin America. A continent with all the conditions for widespread prosperity and a healthy environment will impoverish and ruin itself for ideological reasons.

In the end, both the people and the climate will be worse off.

Posted For Fair Use
 

jward

passin' thru

LoupGarou

Ancient Fuzzball
Bill Gates for the win, Alex....

Now ask yourselves, how many (soviet era) apartments would fit "nicely" on all of that land that BGates has purchased?
Soviet_Aparts1.jpg
Soviet_Aparts3.jpg

Now ask yourself, with all of those apartments, and all of those rooms, how many illegal invaders could they pack in to work in the nearby fields once they were all "appropriated for the cause" (Eminent Domain meets Quitclaim)? Then they pack everybody else in a few cities and then double down on the "herd thinning process".
 

20Gauge

TB Fanatic
A Popular Uprising Against the Elites Has Gone Global | Opinion

A popular uprising of working-class people against the elites and their values is underway—and it's crossing the globe. There is a growing resistance by the middle and lower classes against what Rob Henderson has coined the "luxury beliefs" of the elites, as everyday folks realize the harm it causes them and their communities.

There were early glimmerings last February, when the Canadian Trucker Convoy pitched working class truck drivers against a "laptop class" demanding ever more restrictive COVID-19 policies. You saw it as well in the victory of Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, who ran on parents' rights in education and went on to win both suburbs and rural areas. You can see it in the growing support of Hispanic voters for a Republican Party, which increasingly identifies as anti-woke, and pro-working class. And now we're seeing the latest iteration in the Netherlands in the form of a farmer's protest against new environmental rulings that will ruin them.

But the effects will be global. The Netherlands is the world's second largest agricultural exporter after the United States, making the country of barely 17 million inhabitants a food superpower. Given global food shortages and rising prices, the role of Dutch farmers in the global food chain has never been more important. But if you thought the Dutch government was going to take that into account and ensure that people can put food on the table, you would be wrong; when offered the choice between food security and acting against "climate change," the Dutch government decided to pursue the latter.

What is particularly frustrating is that the government is fully aware that what it is asking farmers to do will drive many of them out of existence. In fact, the government originally planned to move at a slower pace—until a lawsuit brought by environmental groups in 2019 forced an acceleration of the timetable.

The reaction by members of the agricultural sector has been massive and ongoing since 2019, but the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic allowed the government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte to ban protests in 2020 and 2021. With the reignited demonstrations this year, the authorities have also switched to a more aggressive approach. There have been arrests and even warning shots fired by police at farmers, one almost killing a 16-year-old protestor.

Yet the sympathies of the Dutch are not with their government; they are solidly with their farmers. Current polls indicate that the Farmers Political Party, formed just three years ago in response to the new regulations, would gain a whopping 11 seats in Parliament if elections were held today (it currently holds just one seat). Moreover, the Dutch Fishermen's Union has publicly joined the protests, blocking harbors with fishing crews holding signs that read "Eendracht maakt Kracht": Unity Creates Strength.

But while the Dutch people are on the side of the farmers, their elites are behaving much as they did in Canada and the U.S., and not just those in government. Media outlets are refusing to even report the protests, and when they do, they cast the farmers as extremists.

Why the disconnect? Every reliable poll of European newsrooms from Germany to the Netherlands show that climate change is a much more important topic for journalists than it is for ordinary people. It's not that average citizens don't care about climate change, but that they have the common sense to know that destroying their farm so the government's emission goals can be met in 2030 instead of 2035 will not change the planet's climate.

After all, the Netherlands accounts for just 0.46 percent of the world's CO2 emissions, and while a further reduction might be desirable, it will not be decisive in combating climate change over the next eight years. It may make the country's elite to feel good about themselves, but it will also result in large parts of the population seeing their living standards decline and their economic existence targeted by the state for ideological reasons.

There is a malaise in the West currently, where ideological goals are pursued at the expense of the lower middle and working classes. Whether it's truckers in Canada, farmers in the Netherlands, oil and gas companies in the United States, ideology, not science or hard evidence, is dominating the agenda, gratifying the elites while immiserating the working class.

Ultimately, there is a risk that climate policies will do to Europe what Marxism did to Latin America. A continent with all the conditions for widespread prosperity and a healthy environment will impoverish and ruin itself for ideological reasons.

In the end, both the people and the climate will be worse off.

Posted For Fair Use
I bet the Dutch government would change their minds if they were fed oatmeal 3 times per day in order to meet the CO2 emission standards. Nothing but oatmeal.
 

20Gauge

TB Fanatic
The farmers' strike that started in the Netherlands is turning into something global.
German farmers are also joining the Dutch!
In Poland, protests against the sharp rise in prices of fertilisers also broke out,also protests in Italy... Europeans raising their voice
View: https://twitter.com/AZmilitary1/status/1545495299157901313?s=20&t=XyRGqBUbCX5mqG6gbDXJhg
I understand prices going up and going down. This is what makes us stronger as a people and as a business. If you can not adapt, then you will fail when things change. The prices for fertilizer are temporary and you can not fix them by setting a price. You must get creative. Too many people are not that creative.
 

coalcracker

Veteran Member
I don’t know much about the Dutch farmers, but I can confirm that out here in rural Central PA the elites, much to their chagrin, will find a firearm-wielding redneck behind every stalk of corn.

“Yo, Leroy, I told you we don’t need no beer cans and milk jugs for shootin practice. We got those pretty little insignia to aim at over there on that Lexus.”

“Come on now, Bubba. That there is a Prius, so tell your woman to put that 50 cal down, will ya?”
 

jward

passin' thru
To be fair, we did watch some small segments of the American Public come from behind their screens and pointless complaining and cursing, and go to those school board meetings, and refuse those jabs at great personal cost to themselves.


Well, we can’t exactly call the resistance global.....

There is that one waning country.....used to be like, the global superpower....who wouldn’t resist their way out a wet and ripped open paper bag full of hornets.
 

ghost

Veteran Member
A Popular Uprising Against the Elites Has Gone Global | Opinion

A popular uprising of working-class people against the elites and their values is underway—and it's crossing the globe. There is a growing resistance by the middle and lower classes against what Rob Henderson has coined the "luxury beliefs" of the elites, as everyday folks realize the harm it causes them and their communities.

There were early glimmerings last February, when the Canadian Trucker Convoy pitched working class truck drivers against a "laptop class" demanding ever more restrictive COVID-19 policies. You saw it as well in the victory of Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, who ran on parents' rights in education and went on to win both suburbs and rural areas. You can see it in the growing support of Hispanic voters for a Republican Party, which increasingly identifies as anti-woke, and pro-working class. And now we're seeing the latest iteration in the Netherlands in the form of a farmer's protest against new environmental rulings that will ruin them.

But the effects will be global. The Netherlands is the world's second largest agricultural exporter after the United States, making the country of barely 17 million inhabitants a food superpower. Given global food shortages and rising prices, the role of Dutch farmers in the global food chain has never been more important. But if you thought the Dutch government was going to take that into account and ensure that people can put food on the table, you would be wrong; when offered the choice between food security and acting against "climate change," the Dutch government decided to pursue the latter.

What is particularly frustrating is that the government is fully aware that what it is asking farmers to do will drive many of them out of existence. In fact, the government originally planned to move at a slower pace—until a lawsuit brought by environmental groups in 2019 forced an acceleration of the timetable.

The reaction by members of the agricultural sector has been massive and ongoing since 2019, but the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic allowed the government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte to ban protests in 2020 and 2021. With the reignited demonstrations this year, the authorities have also switched to a more aggressive approach. There have been arrests and even warning shots fired by police at farmers, one almost killing a 16-year-old protestor.

Yet the sympathies of the Dutch are not with their government; they are solidly with their farmers. Current polls indicate that the Farmers Political Party, formed just three years ago in response to the new regulations, would gain a whopping 11 seats in Parliament if elections were held today (it currently holds just one seat). Moreover, the Dutch Fishermen's Union has publicly joined the protests, blocking harbors with fishing crews holding signs that read "Eendracht maakt Kracht": Unity Creates Strength.

But while the Dutch people are on the side of the farmers, their elites are behaving much as they did in Canada and the U.S., and not just those in government. Media outlets are refusing to even report the protests, and when they do, they cast the farmers as extremists.

Why the disconnect? Every reliable poll of European newsrooms from Germany to the Netherlands show that climate change is a much more important topic for journalists than it is for ordinary people. It's not that average citizens don't care about climate change, but that they have the common sense to know that destroying their farm so the government's emission goals can be met in 2030 instead of 2035 will not change the planet's climate.

After all, the Netherlands accounts for just 0.46 percent of the world's CO2 emissions, and while a further reduction might be desirable, it will not be decisive in combating climate change over the next eight years. It may make the country's elite to feel good about themselves, but it will also result in large parts of the population seeing their living standards decline and their economic existence targeted by the state for ideological reasons.

There is a malaise in the West currently, where ideological goals are pursued at the expense of the lower middle and working classes. Whether it's truckers in Canada, farmers in the Netherlands, oil and gas companies in the United States, ideology, not science or hard evidence, is dominating the agenda, gratifying the elites while immiserating the working class.

Ultimately, there is a risk that climate policies will do to Europe what Marxism did to Latin America. A continent with all the conditions for widespread prosperity and a healthy environment will impoverish and ruin itself for ideological reasons.

In the end, both the people and the climate will be worse off.

Posted For Fair Use
What took the men and women, so long to take a stand ?
Also, GOD hates the elites too .
 

Samuel Adams

Has No Life - Lives on TB
To be fair, we did watch some small segments of the American Public come from behind their screens and pointless complaining and cursing, and go to those school board meetings, and refuse those jabs at great personal cost to themselves.

That is fair.

Now for the follow-through.....at likely far greater cost.
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Let's say I keep a bunch parakeets. I feed them and I like to hear them sing.
What if my parakeets revolt? I could either just kill them or stop giving them food and water.
I would be fine without the parakeets.

Can the poor revolt and win against the elites? I really have my doubts. Especially in other countries where the poor have few guns.
The elites control the electric power and the fuel. If they remove those two things, how long will the poor revolt?
Yes to a small extent the poor control the food but that is easily stored by the elites.
Look at this country. If those in power now slowly squeeze the fuel down tighter and tighter with first some shortages and then more and more shortages. Then maybe ration fuel. Right now today any of us can get in our trucks and drive across the nation. What if you had some fuel saved but knew you could not buy any more? Any vehicles on the roads would stick out like a sore thumb if there was almost no travel anymore. Any vehicle on the road could be stopped by the elites or just destroyed. How would your revolt work?
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Seems to me something like that has happened more than once. Starting with 1776 and going right up through the Communist takeover in China and even in Viet Nam.
That is very true but we live in a different world now. You just think about the elites shutting off the fuel and the electric and think how the peons will then revolt. They can revolt in their home towns but without fuel they could never reach the elites. I can jump up and down and scream at my place but the elites don't hear and don't care.
 

Samuel Adams

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I can jump up and down and scream at my place but the elites don't hear and don't care.

Just curious if you might have a personal plan that goes beyond surrender and subsequent eternal boot-licking of those not deserving of such in the big scheme of things.....

Or are you just in a particularly whiny mood, today ?

No need for an answer....consider them rhetorical.
 

jward

passin' thru
I dunno. Have we ever had such a power mis-match between we pawns and our betters? Not only, as the pResident points out, does his side have the NUKES, but they also are virtually automated- they have 'bots to fill their armies, their fields, their beds. . . We may be, in fact, those parakeets who best hope they sing pretty enough to be given a guilded cage for as long as the whims o' our betters allow it...granted there are a 100 ways to monkey wrench things and spread the sunshine around, but. . .

..and yes, yes I am whiny today, it's barely noon, I barely sleep, and I've already put in a full days work, and I'm tired and sore
: )
Just curious if you might have a personal plan that goes beyond surrender and subsequent eternal boot-licking of those not deserving of such in the big scheme of things.....

Or are you just in a particularly whiny mood, today ?

No need for an answer....consider them rhetorical.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Let's say I keep a bunch parakeets. I feed them and I like to hear them sing.
What if my parakeets revolt? I could either just kill them or stop giving them food and water.
I would be fine without the parakeets.

Can the poor revolt and win against the elites? I really have my doubts. Especially in other countries where the poor have few guns.
The elites control the electric power and the fuel. If they remove those two things, how long will the poor revolt?
Yes to a small extent the poor control the food but that is easily stored by the elites.
Look at this country. If those in power now slowly squeeze the fuel down tighter and tighter with first some shortages and then more and more shortages. Then maybe ration fuel. Right now today any of us can get in our trucks and drive across the nation. What if you had some fuel saved but knew you could not buy any more? Any vehicles on the roads would stick out like a sore thumb if there was almost no travel anymore. Any vehicle on the road could be stopped by the elites or just destroyed. How would your revolt work?
Under your scenario, how are "the elites" going to eat, heat their homes, fill their vehicles, etc? Believe me, they are NOT going to be satisfied with "stored food"!! When I was laid up, I watched shows like Restaurant Impossible... one absolute basic every chef insists on is NO FROZEN FOOD! They want fresh steaks, seafood, veggies and fruit.

If the highest level "elites" (Bill Gates, Soros, various WEF morons) really did push this, the 'semi elites" (millionaires) would join the reviolt... because their standard of living would crash to unacceptable levels (to them).

Summerthyme
 

Chance

Veteran Member
The WEF revamping the food systems...The Netherlands has a food hub there...brought to them by their PM and lower parliament.

You will own nothing....
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I am just trying to be realistic. What I am really saying is that the elites are insulated from the peons. You don't live next door to the elites. Almost anything that the peons might ever do, mostly would negatively effect the peons, not the elites.
Its like when people riot and wreck their own city.
There are maybe things regular people could do as a last resort that would negatively effect the elites. I just hope it doesn't ever come to that.
 
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