I recently read a statement that a dictatorship needs ignorant masses (unthinking, uneducated) in order to exist. Education does not equate to intelligence, first of all, and looking at today’s society, one could say that it actually works the other way around. The more schools there are, the more vaccines are accepted. Of course, there are exceptions, but they only confirm the rule. In Scotland, there are even those who complain that the healthcare system didn’t send them an SMS reminder that the next dose was available… It’s truly a scandal—that a healthy person cannot peacefully get cancer or suffer a heart attack just because the healthcare system is so disorganized. For all opponents of such state institutions, this is yet another undeniable proof that the healthcare system saves lives… But that’s just bitter laughter.
Back to the topic. A dictatorship does not need uneducated masses, only those who are between “yes” and “no.” That’s about 90% of every society. Optimists estimate that “only” 70% are lost, passive masses susceptible to propaganda. I don’t know, maybe they’re right, but I have accepted as true the information that about 10% of people reject today’s “synagogue of Satan” and rely on traditional Catholic teaching; about 10% are in favor of a total abortion ban. That matches up. And on top of that, the people drawing from traditional Catholic teaching seem to have been the ones who most strongly rejected the deadly vaccines and the false pandemic.
It is important to understand that when I talk about people relying on traditional Catholic teachings, I mostly mean ordinary, simple Catholics—not those who have been arguing for 60 years about whether we have a pope or not; whether he is legitimate or illegitimate; whether we should listen to him or not. During this time, modernists have practically dismantled the entire Catholic Church—its administration and teachings—while these people continue to argue and debate. So, I am not referring to those engaged in these disputes, but rather to those who base their lives on traditional Catholic teachings.
Our Lord Jesus Christ clearly defined the division of people in society by saying:
“Yes, yes; no, no. Anything beyond this comes from the Evil One.”
This simple division remains relevant today. We have people who say “yes” to truth; on the other side, those who say “no” to truth—and in the middle, there is a mass of people who mix some truth, some lies, and mostly their own ego.
Jesus Christ, by saying “Yes, yes; no, no,” pointed out the necessity of clarity and consistency—yes to truth, no to lies. However, it is worth noting a certain paradox: even those who consistently say “no” to the truth are, in a way, better than those who constantly hesitate—this gray mass, making up 90% of society, who one moment say “yes” and the next “no.”
They resemble the crowd that, on Palm Sunday, welcomed Jesus as the Messiah, praising and glorifying Him, but just a week later shouted, “Crucify Him! His blood be on us and on our children!” It is precisely these undecided, fickle, and easily influenced people who are the most dangerous.
Meanwhile, those who openly and firmly say “no” to the truth are our enemies, but at least they are open enemies. You can recognize them, look them in the eye, and know who they are. They don’t pretend, they don’t mask their intentions—they are who they are. An example is Francis—the man called the Pope—who openly rejects Catholic teaching and is a communist, as he himself admits. Anyone thinking logically can see this.
Such an attitude, though false, is still less dangerous than the hidden enemy—the one who publicly says “yes” to the truth but secretly works against it, plotting behind the scenes.
This is confirmed in the history of the Church when we look at the people who best understand and convert to the teachings of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The fact is that they usually fall into two groups—the simple and the intelligent. The second group consists of the truly intelligent. A simple person is often associated with someone uneducated, from a remote village, for example, a farmer. But that’s not true. A simple person is someone who thinks in very clear terms—yes or no; without hesitation. They see and use what is called iron logic. If someone has killed, they state the fact: he has killed. They don’t immediately assess whether he did it in a fit of passion, in self-defense, or for other reasons. They simply say: he killed. The same goes for abortion. For them, abortion is not “abortion”—it is the killing of one’s own child. If we were talking about animals, for example, monkeys, killing their offspring in the womb, we would call it murder. In the case of humans, we call it “abortion”—I don’t know if this word sounds nicer, but it certainly doesn’t clearly express what it really means. A simple person would call it murder. That is the simplicity of thinking.
And the intelligent? At some point, they, too, reach the same simple way of thinking because intelligence is about finding the straight path to Truth—meaning God—amidst the twisted roads the world leads us down. Everything in the Gospel is based on simplicity. It is so simple and logical, yet, as always, only a few find the Truth.
So, who does a dictatorship need, whether it is a communist regime or a modern globalist dictatorship? It needs the gray masses—those who do not take a stand either for or against, those who remain in the “neutral” zone. They are the ones who are ruled. Just as the Pharisees manipulated the crowd that first welcomed Jesus and then condemned Him to death, so too do modern regimes need this gray mass that they can manipulate. A crowd that can be turned against a certain group of people, an ideology, or in favor of one.
They can be freely controlled, and they are the foundation of every dictatorship. In fact, the same thing happens in so-called democracy because everything that happens before elections is just manipulation of human emotions. Simple people and the more intelligent ones are less likely to fall for this, but the rest of society—the larger part—unconsciously falls into this trap, voting one time for one side, then for the other. The key is to always have two opposing sides, with a third option in between as a safety valve, so that those who try to break out of this vicious cycle feel like they have a choice. It has always been this way: two main parties and a third to keep the resistant ones from escaping the system’s framework.
Politics is like Russian roulette—except that all the chambers are loaded, so every move you make leads to your defeat.
There’s no need to be alarmed that only 10% have a chance at Salvation. That’s how it was, is, and will be. Only a few—as it was said. This is a natural consequence of the unchanging nature of human behavior. For the majority, lies are always worth more than Truth. Always lust instead of virtue.
Where there is truth and simplicity, there is no room for lies and complexity—and thus, no room for dictatorship.
Arkadiusz Niewolski



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