Thoughts

On Weakness

A hierarchy (by this I mean a "placing above" of others) is necessarily borne of weakness rather than power. A monarch surrounds themselves with knights like an infant covers themselves with a blanket. Those who place themselves further up the hierarchy are akin to chimps who cowardly rush towards the heights of the trees, unable to live within the chaos and beauty of the ground.

This weakness is borne relative to their ability, and many disabled people display greater strengths compared to the abled. Humanity had defined itself by its disavowment of safety, jumping into the land of risk and energy. Those regressives who looked on from the branches are now what we call "respectable" people, those who sit in the heights of the hierarchy, a pronounced incapability relative to their physical ability. What more shame is there than to be cared for, when one is capable of caring for themselves? And how much more shameful that the able-bodied king charles has his teeth brushed for him like an infant, all the while removing any semblance of care for the disabled?

The monarchs, the generals, governments and capitalists, they are all akin to the infant. They demand all, and do nothing for themselves. They cry and whine as loud as they might, and ceaselessly attempt to convince rational people of their make-believe delusions. I tell you that these supposedly "powerful" peoples are the weakest of all, and their pristine suits are only so valuable to vomit upon, and why not? They walk in public with the symbol of a baby's bib, a useless sapien who ought better to have starved in their mansions than to dirty the streets with their presence.

Remember the hands of each in these hierarchies, where upon the further up one goes, the softer these hands become. One only climbs a hierarchy when they are not only useless to themselves, but useless to society, nay, humanity as a whole. They are the most wasteful of all our resources. Of these apes there is no such thing as "theft", only repurposing. A neoliberal society inherently favors the worthless. When a monarch surrounds itself with knights, it is because the power lay in the knights themselves and not the monarch. The monarch delegates everything precisely because they are incapable of everything. They are, in essence, weak.