Posted on 10/26/2018 6:35:24 AM PDT by Rummyfan
The eternal returnFriedrich Nietzsche thought the idea was horrifying. Life as an endless merry-go-round in which the same things keep recurring, forever. That prospect, Nietzsche thought, was the hardest, weightiest, most depressing idea mankind could ever confront. It was part of Nietzsches blustering nihilism that he should first conjure the most unpleasant idea he could think of and then announce that true heroism lay in embracing it.
The rest of us may be less enthusiastic about the prospect of ceaseless repetition. After all, weve all had a foretaste of what it entails in the remarkable career of socialism. Like the fabled hydra, socialism is an evil that suffers decapitation after decapitation only to spring back to life, its bloodor, rather, the blood of its victimssomehow sprouting ever new heads of credulousness.
The Soviet Union was really existing communism, under whose aegis millions were impoverished, tortured, and murdered (but, according to the New York Times, the sex was great). Western intellectuals, gullible creatures that they are, adulated that steaming tyranny. Eventually morons like Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Pope John Paul II brought to an end that horrible experiment in living.
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Excellent
It’s the eternal story of the Little Red Hen. No one wants to help sow the grain or bake the bread, but everyone feels entitled to eat it. That is the lure of socialism. Apparently this heretical little children’s story has been expunged from childhood literature for the past few generations.
Given a choice between eternal return and the extinction of consciousness forever, I’d take the former.
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