DisillusionedCitizen
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- Joined
- Apr 28, 2022
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- 454
The Irony of Altruism
Yesterday, as I went grocery shopping with my brother, I surfed the as web as usual as we headed home and the word altruism came into my head, a word filled with positive connotations. For the uninitiated, Altruism is helping and showing concern and worry for others, possibly even at the expense of oneself, describing a person who's of high moral character with a choir of praises sung about its success stories. I got here into stumbling upon a movement called Effective Altruism, a movement in which people use evidence and reason to help other people worse off than them. Then I went here to search up the word altruism and found pathological altruism (an extreme of altruism in which a person will help strangers to even when it harms them, or alternatively, well-meaning attempts to help others end up deterring them and others more than it benefits.) Having done all the above lead me to discover a piece of irony surrounding such a word, one that contains horrific implications: Altruists (especially those that are ignorant and naive and tend to resort to escapism) make pawns for a con man/political tyrant; Altruists mainly focus on having their beliefs validated, even it has a chance of backfiring in the long run, and since altruists love to help other people in society for validation, they may not realize that they're helping duplicitous tyrants and oligarchs who are all too ready to take away people's rights, possibly rendering all of their efforts and accomplishments meaningless. When I looked up pathological altruism, it led me to wonder “can altruism backfire even when it's grounded?”
Thinking about this, I wonder, “has altruism been invoked more often than it has been preached?” The reason I asked myself is because of the Yehudim (BKA the Jews); I suspect the Yehudim invoke altruism as a means to lure in actual altruists and possibly scam them out of their money and waste time. Using this logic, I can safely assess that the Jews wear what I would like to call a 'Mask of altruism.' I say 'Mask of Altruism' for the Jews have a tendency to present themselves as philanthropists, investors, champions of charity, truth, Justice, and positive change, etc. to set up the above tactics, but up close, they're the absolute opposite of that. As of this morning, today, I've come to the realization that end up being an excellent to lure in unsuspecting victims in white collar crimes. Alternatively, the Yehudim could pull off a False Flag operation, like pretending to have a virus and have people wear masks, like Convid. Or plan an attack on the Twin Towers and then frame Iraqi soldiers for attacking the US. I suspect this isn't the first time the Yehudim have pulled duplicitous schemes like this. Having written all of this, I can conclude that altruism isn't really as useful as its supporters make it out to be.