The Absence of Morals
We live in a society that demands order. It requires a framework upon which law reflects morality so that social cohesion can stand. However, the law is relative. Moral absolutism is infiltrated at its very foundation as order becomes an illusion. Individuals gain certain freedoms to do as they please, leading to the social deprivation. Governments use those freedoms to exceed their power and obscure truth, masking it through the lens of social decay. While your distracted with the filth of “free will”, 500 more babies were just murdered by drones in Yemen. This is what you get when morality is abstract: chaos and death.
Moral relativism asserts that ethics are fluid, varying between cultures and individuals without an objective standard. Under this framework, justice ceases to be an absolute virtue and instead becomes a tool wielded by the powerful. It is not a matter of what is right, but rather what is enforced. This reality is not accidental; it is intentional—carefully crafted to bring disorder, permitting authorities to manipulate morality for its own means. Don’t worry, the homosexuals and the pedophiles get to frolic until their usefulness is no longer needed.
What is the result of this morally bankruptcy? A dystopia where elites powerbrokers are above the law, criminals rule the law, and the law-abiding exist in terror—forced into submission under the guise of “law and order” and “protect and serve”. Anarcho-tyranny prevails and “the law” is merely just a phrase of no meaning, twisted to benefit only the few while regular people, whom just want to be left alone, are forced in compliance through tyranny of the fear. This is control.
Statism in Perpetuity of Chaos
Every political system will always face the same dilemma: How long can rulers contain their power before they must reconcile with an increasingly restless populace? The answer is always the same—stability, without absolute moral truth, is fleeting. The longer debauchery is permitted, the sooner a society crumbles and inevitably, an empire.
The monopoly of moral authority—statism—demands that morality be dictated through means of legalism, rather than discovered through means of free will and conscience. It bends ethical principles to suit political necessity, creating laws that shift with the tides of cultural preference and power struggles. It is here that moral relativism thrives, as objective truth is distorted by the law as the State degrees their own truth.
Distortion fuels an inevitable cycle: governments consolidate their authority, resistance rises, and either conflict erupts or control tightens. Some societies might collapse in war; while others suffocate under tyranny. The outcome remains unchanged—no political structure, absent objective morality, results in justice.
The Natural Order of Human Civilization
There is no solution found in government as it will always lead to moral decay and societal trust. The only solution is for humans to divorce and take back their own autonomy through their own means. The general concept of thinking smaller, not bigger. We were never meant for the isolation in large swaths of moral emptiness. It has been known that mankind thrives within small, voluntary tribes—groups bound by mutual values, shared responsibilities, and organic social order.
Tribalism, in its purest form, is not primitive regression but essential human nature. Large-scale urbanization forces unnatural proximity, creating inevitable conflict. Cram diverse cultures into a single system, without a unifying moral code, and watch fragmentation occur due to low trust and fear. The more morality is diluted it becomes harder resist against its corruption when your fighting amongst everyone else. Or worse, hiding in isolation from the outside world for fear of reprisal.
A return to smaller, autonomous communities—decentralized, local, and morally grounded—is the key to both human freedom and ethical stability. It is not governance that sustains a civilization, but truth. Without moral truths, society fractures into societal disputes and moral decay, almost always leading to totalitarianism.
Faith and Reason: The Twin Pillars of Objective Truth
The counter to moral relativism is found in the pursuit of truth—both through divine faith and rational inquiry. These are not opposing forces, but complementary pillars. Faith anchors the soul in divine wisdom, while reason explores and refines human understanding.
Thinkers like Thomas Aquinas recognized that truth is both revealed and discovered. He ascertained that both faith and the sciences could serve each other. Sir Isaac Newton, another fellow Christian, uncovered the making of universal gravity not by rejecting faith, but by embracing it through mere scientific observation and divine order.
Modern civilization has failed separating faith from reason, treating them as adversaries rather than allies. The greatest threat to truth is the artificial divide between spiritual revelation and intellectual rigor. One must seek a balanced evolution—preserving foundational moral order through Christ while continuously investigating the natural world for innovation and growth.
Rejecting Moral Relativity
Politics is a symptom of poor direction, it’s not the real fight. We fight an existential battle within ourselves everyday. A war between objective truth and moral deception. The great lie of Satan is that of moral relativism, claiming within yourself that good and evil, right and wrong are subject to your feelings. Morality has no fluidity, you either choose to do good or you choose to do bad. No one cares about your feelings and that you believe you are doing good, facts outweigh those feelings. Morality will never be determined as relative phenomena—there will always be absolutes.
In the realm of statist apparatus and positive low, societies will always bend toward coercion and violence, because they wave deception as a tool, casting truth aside. The only answer to the tyranny and decadence is a return to objective moral grounding—a foundation rooted not in political decrees, but in universal, divine law. We can only find stability in truth. The truth is in God whom brings us real order through His grace.
It’s often said that moral absolutism leads to authoritarianism. But that argument mistakes conviction for tyranny. The real danger is not found in a people who know right from wrong—it’s in a world convinced there’s no difference. This is why statism is satanism.
Human beings are drawn toward common patterns of virtue and vice. There is a shared whisper in our conscience, pulling us toward something that is good. Civilizations stumble because they only operate in the relative. When truth is revealed, civilization comes crashing down. A divergence of ever changing cultural influences will always be uprooted.
The danger isn’t in absolutes, it’s in denial. When “right” pertains to your feelings, “wrongs” no longer exist and everyone just happens to be right. This can lead to morality becoming a misuse of rhetoric for consolidation of power. A fertile soil for despots (or at the very least retarded Congressmen and their Jewish Mossad handlers). Relativism will never lead you toward peace, it will always ensure your imminent downfall.
Absolutism or Objective Truth, doesn’t demand interpretation. It is simply just your conscience judging for yourself what might be right and what might be wrong. It is a choice, a choice we can share. And when cultures build from shared truths—truths discovered through reflection, reason, and faith—you get stewardship upon God’s Creation not self subjugation. It is a basis of accountability, of responsibility and we have so lost that in today’s world. I believe it is time that individuals start taking this concept back, otherwise you’re in for a long haul of suffering.