The premonition of waning prestige

In history we can observe an aspect that heralds a change: the progressive loss of prestige of the ruling class. The mentality that previously imposed in various ways, even with its system of political correctness, labeling, mockery, debasement and even slander and persecution, gradually comes to manifest its aspects of tragicomedy of the parties, of farce.

Today the perception of an asphyxiating uniformity is spreading, where entire periodicals, television programs, hammer the same refrains with no room for different nuances if not, if anything, a black and white that support each other in emptying people and manipulating them, leading them to fanaticism.

The oligarchy increasingly feels the ground under its feet and tries the most sophisticated magic tricks (precisely) to prolong its power. But that only further exasperates the emerging class by preparing it for the handover. We want to make the subjects mere individual consumers lost in an anonymous mass but in reality we end up creating not a more or less adequate interchange but a total dependence on their emptying. There is a risk of reaching the total annihilation of the people. Society is heading towards collapse and in the midst of suffering and danger, the farce cannot last forever.

The globalized technical society is controlled remotely by a few powerful people but in this very way it can create the unwitting premises for a leap in quality: perhaps it is no longer the time for new revolutionary avant-gardes, bearers of new ideologies but for a more widespread awareness of the need for a free, authentic, self-discovery, of free training and information, the foundations of a wider, more heartfelt, varied, participation. In fact, it seems to reach more and more the extreme limits of a dilemma: either empty technology subordinates man in everything, finally disintegrating society itself, or man finds the ways of an authentic maturation that places technology with balance at his service.