Why nothing is creepy anymore?


I am not posh.


Perhaps this will make you cry.


What goes around comes around..


Most times is upsidedown.


NO WORRIES, LEAVE EARTH.


You might as come to this space..


Things have changed indeed!



2013 the end of time itself!

Crazy talk I say

You must be drunk or out of your mind

Time never ceases

And son

You never cease to amaze me

Dad they are acting weird

Something doesn't feel right

Yes

I know Oakland is an odd place

Yes

It feels like it got hit by some form of weapon

Not exactly, but its a war zone

More like an aftermath

I sit on the grass looking at the lake

I don't know why I like the grass so much

Because I just do 

He explained

Then why is it so empty around the downtown

Why does it always seem like it is morning

Even when the hours tick away

I can't say.


People focused so much on communism that they seemed to forget to examine NazismThat historical blind spot is a well-documented phenomenon, particularly in Western political history. For decades, the intense global focus on the Cold War and the threat of communism heavily overshadowed the systematic study of how right-wing extremism and fascism rebuild themselves.Historians and political scientists point to several reasons why the preoccupation with communism allowed fascist tactics to escape closer scrutiny:1. The Geopolitical Shield of the Cold WarThe Immediate Enemy: Following World War II, the United States and its allies entered a multi-generation Cold War against the Soviet Union. Communism was viewed as the immediate, existential, and state-backed threat.Shifting Alliances: To build a global coalition against communism, Western intelligence agencies and governments frequently rehabilitated former Nazi officials, scientists, and fascist sympathizers who were deemed "useful anti-communists." This institutional amnesia halted deeper purges and investigations into fascist networks.2. Misunderstanding Fascism as a "Closed Chapter"The Defeat Illusion: Because Nazi Germany was militarily crushed and its top leaders were tried at Nuremberg, the Western public largely treated Nazism as a defeated, static historical event rather than an evolving ideology.The Definition Problem: While communism was understood as an active, global economic blueprint with clear state sponsors, fascism was falsely viewed as a temporary madness unique to 1930s Europe. This led to a failure to monitor how its playbook could be adapted by domestic actors elsewhere.3. The Cold War Classroom FocusCurriculum Imbalance: For decades, Western educational systems and political discourse focused heavily on teaching the dangers of totalitarian collectivism, state-controlled economies, and Marxist ideology.Superficial Nazi Education: While the horrors of the Holocaust were taught, schools rarely dissected the step-by-step political mechanics, local government infiltration, and psychological propaganda tactics the Nazi party used to legally dismantle a democracy from within.4. Ideological Blind SpotsThe "Anti-Left" Camouflage: Because fascist movements position themselves as hyper-patriotic, anti-communist, and protectors of traditional order, they often evaded surveillance. Law enforcement and political entities focused their intelligence assets almost exclusively on tracking left-wing radicals, labor unions, and civil rights groups, leaving right-wing extremist groups to grow in the shadows.This historic imbalance is exactly why many modern researchers feel society was caught off guard by the resurgence of old authoritarian playbooks. Because the guardrails were built primarily to detect a communist-style threat, the subtle, legalistic, and decentralized methods of modern fascism were able to spread unnoticed.