Imagine if you will a future in which our descendants still have something like history books. This is not a foregone conclusion, so don’t get over-confident. It’s very plausible, even likely, that those who come after us will not have anything analogous to what we call “history books.” What we mean by that is something like, “An accurate written record of past events that cannot be digitally changed on the sly.”
Look what’s happened already to the concept of the encyclopedia. Thirty years ago, people still bought bound and printed volumes. The printed words on those pages are the same today as the day the books were printed. Not so the online Wikipedia. After the initial infatuation with the gee-whiz technical advancement of an always-updated-online-encyclopedia wore off, we saw what was really going on. Taken over by hard-left ideologues, Wikipedia regularly edits or deletes entries that tell facts about the real world if those facts make the Wikipedia editors and staff have sad feelings.
That’s why we have to imagine a future where some form of un-editable historical record is still available. So let’s assume that it will be. What will people think when they look back on the approximately 10-year period (2015 to 2025) when the West lost its mind and stopped believing in the reality of male and female sex? When formerly normal people believed the claim that there are “transgender children” who were “born in the wrong body” and who “need” mutilating “sex-change” surgeries?
Unless our future selves are too far gone, they’re going to react with horror and laughter. They might react that way to this display, a conversation between conservative commentator Charlie Kirk and a fat, unkempt man in a baby doll costume and a beard telling Charlie that he is a “woman.”
Listen to that man. Look at him, take it in, and then listen to what he says.
He insists to Charlie Kirk that it’s merely “common courtesy” to refer to lunatic, ugly men in female fetishwear as if they were actual, real women. It’s extraordinary. This is the kind of thing no human has ever heard spoken by another outside a mental institution until this current era.
Onlookers frequently say something like “bring back insane asylums” with a slightly humorous air. But there’s nothing to laugh about. This behavior is, quite literally, exactly what lunatic asylums were made for. That is, in actual fact, where people like this belong.
Let’s see how X/Twitter users reacted.
So far there aren’t many takers for the idea of living in permanent Backwards Day.
Oh, dear.