Kurt Schlichter is the author of four books about life after the split of the U.S., People's Republic, Indian Country, Wildfire and Collapse. He envisions life in the United States as an area from Texas north to Canada, the South and some of the Midwest.
The People's Republic would include California up to Washington plus Nevada, and the Northeast and upper Midwest. And after the split is formalized, those states rapidly turn into leftist shitholes. Defund the police. Let loose the criminals. Let the criminals be the police.
The Pelosis, de Blasios and Garcettis, meanwhile, settle in behind secure walls and let in a select few workers to make their beds, cook their food and take care of their yards. Others work in restaurants or shops, but if they aren't among the elite they are banished outside the walls after dark.
What seemed implausible when I read the books just a few months ago now seems almost likely today.
"There is no natural place where one can logically stop with the collective culpability racket. If I as a 'white' American of multi-European ethnicities have 'benefitted' from the political and economic systems in the United States, one could just as plausibly argue that I benefitted from the Irish Potato Famine, the Inquisition, the Thirty Years' War, the bubonic plague, the sacking of the library at Alexandria and every other historical event that somehow made it possible for me to be who and what and where I am at this moment. ... History has proven — amply — that a political system founded upon class resentment, blame, hatred and violence destroys everything and helps no one." — Laura Hollis
The People's Republic would include California up to Washington plus Nevada, and the Northeast and upper Midwest. And after the split is formalized, those states rapidly turn into leftist shitholes. Defund the police. Let loose the criminals. Let the criminals be the police.
The Pelosis, de Blasios and Garcettis, meanwhile, settle in behind secure walls and let in a select few workers to make their beds, cook their food and take care of their yards. Others work in restaurants or shops, but if they aren't among the elite they are banished outside the walls after dark.
What seemed implausible when I read the books just a few months ago now seems almost likely today.
"There is no natural place where one can logically stop with the collective culpability racket. If I as a 'white' American of multi-European ethnicities have 'benefitted' from the political and economic systems in the United States, one could just as plausibly argue that I benefitted from the Irish Potato Famine, the Inquisition, the Thirty Years' War, the bubonic plague, the sacking of the library at Alexandria and every other historical event that somehow made it possible for me to be who and what and where I am at this moment. ... History has proven — amply — that a political system founded upon class resentment, blame, hatred and violence destroys everything and helps no one." — Laura Hollis