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Brian Niemeier #wingnut #mammon kairospublications.com

When an elite feels threatened, it promotes order. When it feels secure, it can afford to promote disorder. A class that believes its position unassailable no longer needs art to uphold its authority; it uses art to erase the notion of authority. That’s why the postwar West abandoned beauty in favor of irony, worship in favor of mockery, and heroism in favor of cynicism. Cultural Ground Zero wasn’t an accident; it was the victory lap of a ruling class that had consolidated total control over politics and culture.

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Always remember that we are going to win. And when we do, leaders who actually share our values will, at long last, not just level the cultural playing field, but tip it decisively in our favor. So keep creating. Don’t wait for permission from institutions that no longer believe in their own mission. Because when this decrepit cultural order finally collapses, we’ll need new books, new songs, and new stories ready to take its place. Empires may commission art, but art outlasts all empires. And when this one falls, the creators who kept their craft alive will inherit the ground on which the next civilization will be built.

For action-adventure that defies genre labels to bring you a thrilling vision of the post future, read my military SF epic Combat Frame XSeed!

Brian Niemeier #fundie kairospublications.com

There’s a deeper reason why these stories resonate with Postmodern Hollywood: They dramatize the Devil’s fantasy. What is [Harlan] Ellison’s computer if not a stand-in for the Adversary—a mind bent on tormenting men forever; not because it has to, but because it hates the God who made them? Black Mirror is a hall of mirrors, yes, but what if in it man sees not only his own corruption, but diabolical hubris, reflected back? Lucifer cannot create. He can only parody and gloat. His dream is not annihilation but endless desecration; souls kept in perpetual torment, not for justice but for mockery.

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The real problem with dystopia porn is that it boxes the viewer into a lie: that hopelessness is the truest picture of reality.

But despair is not realism. It’s propaganda. Worse, it’s Lucifer’s propaganda. Writers who want to make a lasting mark on the culture should take [Sam] Hyde’s advice. Stop fetishizing man’s weakness. Stop pretending that watching ugly people in ugly situations is “brave.” And stop serving up Hell’s fantasy as entertainment. If you must write about horror, write it honestly; never as a pornographic thrill, but as a backdrop against which light shines brighter.