RefoundingFathers
407 posts

RefoundingFathers
@RefoundFathers
Basically, I’m just not going to opt-in (Biodigital Surveillance). Ugh, I know, I’m sorry! I’m just not going to comply.

Scientists measured AC magnetic fields inside children’s homes for 24 hours. When the average exposure hit 0.4 microtesla Brain tumor risk was 2.4× higher. Where does that field come from? The grid running through your house. Wires in the walls. Transformers outside. Then there’s tablets. Kids using them heavily showed 2.5–3.5× higher tumor odds. Now imagine both exposures happening together. That combination isn’t even being measured yet. The ironic part? The fixes already exist. Ethernet adapters exist for iPads. Airplane mode exists. Wired headphones exist. Use them.













I know very few people around my age and younger (I’m 37) who feel they can go to their parents for genuine wisdom (or for that mater, other older adults). I’m not talking about “woke” or hyper-politicized young people. I’m talking orthodox, conservative, sometimes even “traditional” young people. It’s not even that they feel they can’t go to them for wisdom—it’s that they sense they are genuinely immature and under-developed (to speak frankly, but with zero desire to injure; simply relaying a very common perception). I mentioned this phenomenon to my priest recently, who is a very good and holy man, and he completely agreed. I told him I thought it was one of the great sources of loneliness and alienation among younger people, given that those who are so much their senior so often have so little to offer them by way of wisdom. It sort of defeats the purpose of having “elders” (at least chronologically), leaving whatever measure of the weight of the world that is on their shoulders feeling heavier. He completely agreed, and said he sees it everywhere (and the fact that he exemplifies the opposite is one of the reasons we love and cherish him so much). As someone who is very “old fashioned,” I very much believe in deference to elders as the default. I have cultivated many mentors in my life since I was in high school, so I know for a fact there are wise and capable elders out there. I have encouraged young people to seek them out basically my entire life. But unfortunately, they are rare, and the older I get, the more I understand why they are so hard for so many people to find. We live in a culture in which moral standards have atomized to such a degree that most are simply floating around with mere opinions, not a firm standard of virtue to which they can point, or even hold themselves accountable to (let alone teach to others). Developing wisdom in such a milieu is impossible. Amidst this atomization of morality from “catholic” unity into “heretical” disunity, many adults have fallen for the siren song of worshipping youth itself. So it is now no wonder that so many “youth” (i.e. young adults)—who are experiencing the end stages of this infantilism—find so little worth emulating or hearing from now multiple generations of “elders” who did not believe being an “elder” was an important thing, and indeed were told and believed that there was really no objective standard by which to define what was wise and virtuous.




Blackwater mercenary Erik Prince implicated in Ecuadorian president Daniel Noboa's declaration of an 'internal war’ on Ecuadorians: theprisma.co.uk/2025/03/24/mor…






Do it now, thank me later. I don't block many accounts on here, but appealing to AI as an authority is antithetical to everything I stand for. Always do your own research, reference and cite real people, Elon's Saturnist bot is the definition of compromised. The only thing it's teaching you is how to stop thinking for yourself.









