[14 / 9 / ?]
Quoted By:
The time of villages and small settlements is long past. Humanity has spread like a cancer all over this earth. Flesh consuming flesh and plant matter to create more of itself and populate even the most remote corners of this globe. First I hated muslims, then I hated niggers but now... It's simply a function of masses I fear. Any negative action will have an outsized effect over any positive action.
Where we used to build gates to keep nature out we now build pens to keep her in. There is no more room for glorious conquests over mortality, the cancer has sustained itself and is no longer even capable of dying without taking the globe with it. Piles of flesh consuming organic matter and reshaping it into itself and proginy, this is fucking madness.
First I thought we could save ourself by destroying the internet as it gives too much power to any authoritarian regime. However based they are, corruption and cancer will seap in and turn it to shit. But this is no longer possible. People who were born in the 50's have seen the world population double twice in their lifetimes. We are the generation who will see the flesh pile up to it's peak numbers untill it cannot be sustained anymore. God help us.
Where we used to build gates to keep nature out we now build pens to keep her in. There is no more room for glorious conquests over mortality, the cancer has sustained itself and is no longer even capable of dying without taking the globe with it. Piles of flesh consuming organic matter and reshaping it into itself and proginy, this is fucking madness.
First I thought we could save ourself by destroying the internet as it gives too much power to any authoritarian regime. However based they are, corruption and cancer will seap in and turn it to shit. But this is no longer possible. People who were born in the 50's have seen the world population double twice in their lifetimes. We are the generation who will see the flesh pile up to it's peak numbers untill it cannot be sustained anymore. God help us.
