chrisrossini on Nostr: This policy goes in the right direction, but it's not a permanent fix. One of the ...
This policy goes in the right direction, but it's not a permanent fix.
One of the primary enemies of the state is the family. We've seen a huge destruction of family units (in general) and the swelling of the state.
Civilization demands the opposite. A minimal state and cohesive families.
But over the last 100 years, the state demands all loyalty. Families stand in the way as the primary loyalty. The state wants atomized individuals that take orders...don't question.
The side effect of the statist world that we live in, is that without families, people lose the will to reproduce. The loving unit is missing.
And now we see states "creating policy" for reproduction. The state puts creating a family "on sale" with tax breaks.
As if having a family is an economic transaction.
While the policy goes in the right direction, the deeper issue (and cause) is not addressed. The state still wants to dominate all of society.
One of the primary enemies of the state is the family. We've seen a huge destruction of family units (in general) and the swelling of the state.
Civilization demands the opposite. A minimal state and cohesive families.
But over the last 100 years, the state demands all loyalty. Families stand in the way as the primary loyalty. The state wants atomized individuals that take orders...don't question.
The side effect of the statist world that we live in, is that without families, people lose the will to reproduce. The loving unit is missing.
And now we see states "creating policy" for reproduction. The state puts creating a family "on sale" with tax breaks.
As if having a family is an economic transaction.
While the policy goes in the right direction, the deeper issue (and cause) is not addressed. The state still wants to dominate all of society.
