- Joined
- Feb 19, 2017
You assume we even will be able to look at things in retrospect instead of just hear the endless parroting of the narrative for all eternity. See, so much of society is digital these days and as we move to the cloud, the ability to destroy or otherwise seal information for good becomes easier and easier. A lot of the shit in this thread would exist as diary entries in the pre-digital, diaries that would survive in their descendant's attic for many, many years to come and later become invaluable resources to historians. Not anymore. Once they scrub the servers or the servers become irrepairable, good luck finding the information again. Maybe it's on a hard drive somewhere, better hope the information from that can be recovered.
Maybe there will be servers on the dark web somewhere which will store this information and let it be accessible to those who know it exists, but I bet they'll go for that too. I wouldn't be surprised if it's easier to download TBs of child porn decades from now than it will be to read through archives of 21st century history (assuming child porn isn't legalized thanks to the pedosexual rights movement of course).
And you better hope it even can be read to begin with. Say the United Globohomo Nations of Earth collapses in the year 3021 and a century later people want to research it's formation during the Great Reset. Well, there's no compatible technology to read 21st century hard drives and the schematics for compatible tech simply don't exist anymore.
Given the challenges of digital preservation and how we can digitally preserve things, history and historiography is easier to manipulate than ever before. It's very possible that selective purges of information combined with the natural breakdown and decay of storage media means that researching the 21st century AD will be as challenging as researching the 21st century BC. All records that state false narratives will not exist, it will simply be reduced to "grumbling by far-right conspiracy theories afraid to enter the Superior Future."
Stories, oral records? You better hope your family passes them down and don't just say "grandpa was a Nazi conspiracy theorist, thank Science his kind died out." Historians can just say "oh, well this is a guy who believed the misinformation and conspiracy theories, look how ridiculous he sounds to us enlightened people who actually know what happened in the COVID-19 pandemic." You will be potrayed in the same category as all of history's crazy religious freaks and conspiracy nuts and pseudoscientists, a record of how ridiculous the people who opposed the Great Reset were.
Now I do think that if such a future doesn't come to pass or if the world order of Great Reset crew collapses it will be possible to reconstruct the history they tried to erase, but it would be very challenging. It's like how the only records we have of so many groups of people or religions are the records written by their opponents. This radical revisionist history would probably be impossible to prove with the records that we'll have left even if they'd consider it a compelling theory.
I think the very fact that the history we are living through can be destroyed with no trace it ever existed among the most terrifying thoughts. It's the destruction of truth itself.
Honestly, that's why it's important to transfer as much of this information to hard copies and physical copies as you can while you still can.
Even if it's just printing screenshots and photos. Preserve physical media and use it as much as possible. Transfer as much digital info to physical as reasonably possible and do your best to ensure it's preserved.