A Saturday Night at Starbucks

Starbucks

An unusual set of family events found me sitting in a Starbucks last Saturday night. It had been a reasonably decent day, but there are, as we all know, plenty of things in this world to be depressed about. And those things, as we also know, are massively amplified by the attention-seeking class. (Bad news sells.) Somehow, the parade of negativity had its effect on me.

Sitting in the Starbucks cured me.

What I Saw

It was a very average Starbucks in a very average location. And the very average people sitting with me were a near-perfect cross-section of the American demographic.

To my left was a middle-aged black man, doing something on his laptop. Just past him was a middle-aged white woman doing the same. Past her, in the corner, were three teenage girls – one black, one white, one Latin – studying something together.

Behind me was another black man with a laptop and piles of papers, and past him was a young couple falling in love over lattes.

At the big center table was a 25ish woman, with multiple piles of paper upon which she was working very hard. After a while, her boyfriend showed up. She hugged him, laid her head on his shoulder, and they kissed. It was sweet. Then he got to work with her.

There were also people coming and going. They were more of the same: A cross-sectional American parade of people behaving quietly and well.

This is the larger part of human life – the life that you don’t see on the news. And they reminded me that all is not dark, no matter how much darkness we see on television and streaming across the Internet.

This is the part of human life that we should be giving our attention to. Watching them, I decided that it would be far better to spend time helping these people than to obsess on all the bad things in the world. These people deserve our efforts.

What Would Help the Bright Side of Humanity?

That, of course, brought me to the question of how to help the bright side of humanity, and I decided that a great start would be to make one point very clearly:

Fear is a brain hack, a malicious and effective brain hack.

When people want to get their hands on your time and money – and don’t want to be bothered with that pesky ‘reason’ thing – fear is how they do it… over and over and over. Fear works.

So, if we want to move the brighter side of humanity forward, the first thing we need to do is to inform them that fear is their greatest enemy. They need to understand – and remember – that when someone tries to make them afraid, they are being hacked.

Second, we need to assure the brighter side of humanity that their way is right… that they have every right to live their way and not abandon their values to screaming political hucksters.

Power-seekers have always been with us, and they can succeed only by getting frightened people to line up behind them. But in order to line up with the fright-sellers, you have to absorb their slogans, respond to their fears, and take their rationalizations into your mind. And that is a mistake.

The problem is that the fright-seller’s ideas are nearly all inferior ideas. They serve dominance, power, and the inertia of archaic models of lordship. They do not serve human advancement.

The people I saw in the Starbucks held a different and better set of ideals. They believed that all people should be treated with respect and politeness; that coercion, theft, and fraud are wrong; and that everyone should be left alone to do what they want, so long as they don’t intrude upon others.

This decent side of humanity needs to know that their ideals should never be pushed aside for the sake of some political cause, no matter how Earth-shakingly urgent it is made to seem.

Let me make this very, very clear:

The people I saw in the Starbucks were morally superior to the powerful and the fear-peddlers.

Such people should understand that they are right to hold to their own values, to hold to their own lines of reason, to believe in their own virtues.

And Once They Do?

Once people of the type I saw in the Starbucks start believing in themselves, the world changes, and massively.

These people, you see – and there are untold millions of them – are productive and cooperative. Their problem is that they’ve been laying aside their virtues at the insistence of a fear-peddling overlord class. We are, as I seem to be saying frequently, living under bronze-age rulership. It no longer suits us, if indeed it ever did. And it is holding us back.

The people in the Starbucks don’t need edicts from an emperor or a priest-king… and they don’t need politicians doing the same thing under the guise of “the will of the people.”

Once the millions of “Starbucks people” decide that all the fear and overlordship were contrary to life itself, they will move into a better age. Any such transition is difficult, of course, but once these people truly believe in their own ways, the ways of the fear-peddlers will pass away.

May it be soon.

Paul Rosenberg

[Editor’s Note: Paul Rosenberg is the outside-the-Matrix author of FreemansPerspective.com, a site dedicated to economic freedom, personal independence and privacy. He is also the author of The Great Calendar, a report that breaks down our complex world into an easy-to-understand model. Click here to get your free copy.]

      
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watcher
watcher
9 years ago

Um. Is there a problem here? So, if I don’t go sit in the midst of a crowd of strangers in a Starbucks and pay 7.00 for an expresso, and bring my laptop, and wallow away in a stuperous time waste, then I am not in a representative “cross section” of America???
No Patriot I know considers this their “cross section” of representative social demographics.

I may bump into my cross section brothers at the local feed store, or maybe at the gun store, or even refilling diesel cans for the tractors at the petro source pump.

Is this Reality??? because it surely is not mine.
And we’re too busy to get depressed. There’s no time for that.

John K.
John K.
9 years ago

Friends don’t let friends drink Starbucks!

Phil
Phil
9 years ago

I wouldn’t step foot in a starbucks even if my life depended on it, Starbucks has become just another mouthpiece for the degenerate pervert slobs who are sodomites, lesbos and now filthy transgenders freaks masquerading as what ever they believe they are. as far as I am concerned they should all die drinking there expensive coffee. there corporate office is full of heathens, pagans, and every unclean spirit that walks the earth. it is a den of pigs and slobs.

J Dubya
J Dubya
9 years ago

More to the point of the article (Starbucks doesn’t live in my head and I don’t care about them one way or the other -- it’s a non-factor to me), I think what David (the author) witnessed was a wonderfully-functioning example of the thin veneer of civility/civilization and what a pleasant experience it can be when it is intact.

I suspect the “fear” programming is still there in most of their minds, they’re just pleasantly distracted enough at the moment to not be thinking about it. Between the myriad sources of media drum-beating “the fear” into people’s heads, I don’t see how it *couldn’t* be there under the surface (subconscious). And that’s where the “thin veneer of civility” comes into play.

An event significant enough to smash through that fragile veneer would undoubtedly release all of those present to tap directly into that mind-poisoning fear they’ve been so thoroughly and subliminally programmed with over time. That’s when things get tribal (people grouping with “their own kind”) and ugly real fast. That’s when we can ALSO see some of the BEST examples of humanity come to bear as there are *still* a few selfless, good people out there -- but I think they’re horribly outnumbered. Still, I appreciate David’s optimism and hope that those good people would some day NOT be outnumbered.

It’s something to keep in mind when we’re enjoying pleasant moments in populated places; it’s always a good idea to have a plan.

J Dubya
J Dubya
9 years ago
Reply to  DRenegade

Woops, I missed that part. Thanks.

I like your summary; we have to enjoy all the good times when they happen. =^)