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The Lockdown Sceptics’ Library

by Toby Young
1 April 2021 6:41 PM

We’re publishing an original piece today by David McGrogan, an Associate Professor of Law at Northumbria Law School, in which he recommends some books that can help us understand how we ended up living under the plimsol of soft totalitarianism. One of his recommendations is The Collapse of Complex Societies by Joseph Tainter:

Tainter’s thesis is relatively straightforward: as societies grow and develop, they become increasingly complex, with new laws and regulations and public services being endlessly created. These increasing layers of complexity cannot be removed once they’ve become entrenched – because we get used to them, and they come to appear essential. This results in a never-ending conglomeration of purportedly necessary government schemes, none of which is ever revoked; in the end, all this stuff becomes a drain, gobbling up resources, until the society is denuded of productivity and becomes brittle, ready to be pushed over as soon as a genuine crisis hits. Some, including Rishi Sunak, entertain the naïve belief that there will be a ‘back to normal’ moment for our economy. Tainter would tell them that the opposite is much more likely: furlough and other forms of government support for businesses, vaccine passports, mass-testing, Covid regulations and ‘guidance’, massive quantitative easing/money printing, quarantine and the like will all become part of the furniture, something we ‘have to do’ indefinitely, draining productivity and constantly increasing public debt, until a real emergency comes along and it all comes falling down like the biggest house of cards in history.

Have a look at David’s piece to discover the other books on his lockdown reading list – and then email us if you can think of books we should add.

Tags: Erich FrommLockdown LibraryMichael OakeshottRobert Caro

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26 Comments
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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
4 years ago

The following should be there too:

  • Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: Showing that this has happened before with the permission of the masses.
  • 1984 by George Orwell: A work of fiction, yes, but oddly similar with present day events.
  • The Righteous Mind by Johnathan Haidt: Explaining how ideology and culture shapes what we find moral, and how we justify immoral acts.
  • American Betrayal by Diana West: Focused more on America, but showing how attempts at destroying Western society have been ongoing for close to a century.
  • Enemy of the State by Tommy Robinson: Just to remind people that state persecution of individuals on ideological grounds is nothing new and has been going on for decades with the people’s blessing.

Many more could be added. Leave your list below.

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karenovirus
karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

1984 certainly but I’ve always thought Brave New World to be closer to our current circumstance.

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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

I think the one element from Brave New World that does transfer over to reality is the use of artificially induced content and happiness to control the population. In the book it’s Soma. In real life it’s media and entertainment.

But it seems to me that 1984 fits a bit better. The way the past is manipulated to control the present. How everyone is an informant. How different factions are supposedly in conflict, but in fact they work together. The need for a boogeyman so the crowds have someone to direct their hatred towards and blame for all their problems, rather than blaming the government. And lastly, the final lesson: “2+2=5”. The demand that we accept lies as reality.

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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
4 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

And one more for the list could be “The Camp of the Saints” by Jean Raspail. I haven’t had a chance to read it yet, but it did a very good job of predicting the European migrant crisis.

In 2001, a boat with around 1500 migrants (one of the first) landed on the French Riviera, merely 50 meters from the house where Jean Raspail wrote “The Camp of the Saints”. An interesting coincidence.

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karenovirus
karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Similar subject matter is ‘A State Of Denmark’, 1970 Derek Raymond.

I tried to share it with my socialist former girlfriend but she dismissed it as racist (actually the opposite, young lefties don’t do irony).

Attached is a surprisingly balanced Guardian part review from 2016.

20210402_005158.jpg
Last edited 4 years ago by karenovirus
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dvdcsmth
dvdcsmth
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

// young lefties don’t do irony //

I’ve noticed. Grim zealots. Both unpleasant and unsettling, since their utopian solutions have become widely popular again.

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WhyNow
WhyNow
4 years ago

Headline article: Collapse of Complex Societies. I’m not sure this is a generic explanation for the collapse of Roman or Ming Dynasty or Spanish or Austro-Hungarian empires. It seems that we are talking about a very specific impending collapse of what we used to call Western democracies.

The reason is that the destructive guardians push ever onwards for more public controls of private actions, at more cost. The media is asymmetric. They create a fuss, and politicians concede. The result is an accumulation of regulation and cost until some future theoretical tipping point when it all comes tumbling down. It is just a more complex variation of socialism.

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Bella Donna
Bella Donna
4 years ago

More doctors should be speaking out about this Crime Against Humanity!

https://thephaser.com/2021/03/talk-about-covid-19-mrna-bioweapon-ivermectin-the-importance-of-vitamin-d-dr-ryan-cole/

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JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

Doctors were by far the biggest supporters and member group of the NSDAP and the SS. Half the doctors were party members, more than any other profession or affiliation.
I for one are not surprised about their endorsement and complicity.
It’s also highly profitable for them and increasing their status, so what’s not to like.
Resisting doctors on the other hand were and are the true heros and the most courageous.

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peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago

Technocracy has replaced democracy. Those in charge of the techno, either IT, AI or Bio think they should call the shots. They are billionaires, they can afford to buy governments and/or international bodies. So they do.
Its not rocket science, its Darwinism.
The rest of us then live in a sham democracy, which is really a totalitarian state fusing corporations with the state, the very definition of fascism. We can do what we want as long as it ultimately serves our masters, which means increasing their wealth and power.
That didn’t need a book!

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JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

There are a billion of helpers of them who quite enjoy the show and their status and power increase within society as well.
My (former) doctor, IT and pharma industry middle managment friends all love lockdowns and vaxx passports.

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gina
gina
4 years ago

Yes! A communal bibliography is a great idea.
I dont have a book to offer on the whys and wherefores of how we got here but I am currently reading How to Resist by Matthew Bolton. I would recommend it based on what I’ve read so far.

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RickH
RickH
4 years ago

I think everyone will have their own list. My immediate addition is Catch-22. You can make your own parallels, with the overall shit-show of the USAF standing in for the western world and Milo Minderbinder being a good stand-in for SAGE and the sociopath scientists – bombing his own side for profit.

And remember where Orr was paddling to??

Last edited 4 years ago by RickH
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peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

Long way from Italy to Sweden by sea!
But yes its the book is a great description of futility and counter-productive ‘rules’. Its also sad that the individualistic characters described are seemingly scarce nowadays.

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RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

“Long way from Italy to Sweden by sea!”

Indeed it is, peyrole :-). I reckon there’s a lesson there, too – as you hint.

On the characters – I agree. We could do with a few more Yossarians (see also Camus’s The Rebel – for which Catch-22 is a fictional gloss) – and fewer Major Majors.

1
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JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago

The Crowd by Gustave Lebon (also my favourite book on financial markets, although they aren’t even mentioned in it…), and The 4th Turning.
The latter even forecasted the exact year of that crisis and shift towards communitarianism from individualism in 1997.
Sadly, it also makes clear that our resistance is doomed and that it will take more than a generation to bring about the start of another turning away from communitarianism.
I always suspected that millennials will be our downfall, but now I know why.

1
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karenovirus
karenovirus
4 years ago

The Drowned And The Saved, Primo Levi except that I won’t be casting a tear for the drowned.

20210401_231512.jpg
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TJN
TJN
4 years ago

I read Tainter’s book many years ago. I’ve used a quote from it in my own work:

The image of lost civilizations is compelling: cities buried by drifting sands or tangled jungle, ruin and desolation where once there were people and abundance. Surely few persons can read such descriptions and not sense awe and mystery. Invariably we are spellbound, and want to know more. Who were these people and, particularly, what happened to them? 

Is this where we are heading?

2
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karenovirus
karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  TJN

‘At one with Ninevah and Tyre’.

1
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TJN
TJN
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Had to look that one up. Frightening, as what we thought only just over a year ago was solid rock beneath our feet has turned out to be shifting sand.

1
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richlyon
richlyon
4 years ago

My areas of expertise are petroleum engineering, and energy economics, in which I have Masters Degrees. My area of focus in the latter case is the implications of the accelerating collapse of unsubstitutable high density primary energy sources (“hydrocarbons”), specifically for the collapse of the global industrial civilisation that depends on it.

Tainter’s analysis is seminal and well worth reading. But John Michael Greer’s “How Civilizations Fall: A Theory of Catabolic Collapse” (https://www.ecoshock.org/transcripts/greer_on_collapse.pdf) updates Tainter, employs ecological theory, and locates the causal mechanisms more explicitly in resource depletion, capital, production, recycling, and waste. This allows theory to move on from explaining historical collapses, to predicting the timescale and available paths that this next collapse is taking.

“How Civilizations Fall” does not consider the political systems that might arise under collapse conditions, but he writes extensively and very accessibly on it in some of his other books. See, for example, “Dark Age America: Climate Change, Cultural Collapse, and the Hard Future Ahead (2016)” and “The Long Descent: A User’s Guide to the End of the Industrial Age (2019)”.

1
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karenovirus
karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  richlyon

See also 1177 BC*, The Year Civilisation Collapsed, E H Cline.
Over a period of 40 or so years all 7 or 8 distinct but interconnected Bronze Age civilisations throughout the Eastern Mediterranean collapsed for all or some of a variety of reasons, from invasion by the Sea Peoples, mutual hostility, internal strife, famine, climate change, environmental degradation, religious turmoil or volcanic destruction.

Their very interconnectiveness led to a domino effect, Mycaenaic Greece suffered hundreds of years of Dark Ages, the Hittites forgotten to history until the last century. Only Egypt survived but as a shadow of its former self never to recover.

Also available on YouTube.

*1177 was the publishers idea they thought it a snappier title than ‘gradually faded away ‘.

20210401_233938.jpg
Last edited 4 years ago by karenovirus
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richlyon
richlyon
4 years ago

Missed one. May I commend Eric Hoffer’s “The True Believer (1951)” He, and it, are hard to characterise. He was a self-educated drifter, rather than a scholar. He was writing shortly after the events of the Second World War gave rise to an attempt to rationalise how otherwise educated and civilised people go insane. His writing is beautiful, pithy, accessible, and absolutely relevant to our times. I usually underline passages of interest when I read. I had to stop in this book because I was underlining every other sentence. Here’s an example, perfectly distilling curtain-twitching, neighbour-shopping life in the New Virocracy:

A man is likely to mind his own business when it is worth minding. When it is not, he takes his mind off his own meaningless affairs by minding other people’s business.

Last edited 4 years ago by richlyon
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JSmith
JSmith
4 years ago

Chesterton’s Eugenics and Other Evils; interesting for both the time in which he wrote it (1922) and the notable lack of resistance among his peers to the rise of eugenics. It is prescient in that he was almost alone opposing something which grew into a monster in Nazi Germany, but most importantly, that he was confronting “Science” as the new state religion. Sadly it appears that, though it has taken a century, we are seeing this come to full fruition.

The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee – I read this in tandem with Chesterton’s book, personally I found the earlier chapters more interesting as they helped put a spotlight on some of the monomaniacs that Chesterton describes amongst these scientists. It was also interesting to read how worryingly cavalier some of the early attempts at splicing genetic code into contagious viruses were. Mukherjee also touches on subjects such as the development of PCR and the future of genetic engineering. Most striking of all is the religion of Science, as the media portrays it, you would be forgiven for believing it settled, yet depicted in this book, the priest class of scientists battle it out, rarely reaching consensus and often driven by overwhelming ego or greed.

Cloud Atlas – specifically the Orison of Sonmi-451; clearly it borrows from dystopian novels that came before it, though being more recent it adds a few ideas. You have the society of two classes, pure bloods and fabricants. The pure bloods have “souls”, microchips implanted in their fingers that allow them to access society, whilst also making them easily tracked and monitored. On face value, this part of the book looks at the fabricants and their role as the slave class, but I found the pure bloods society insightful; they live in a Corpocracy wherein their sole purpose is to consume. They are set an allowance or income that they must always fully spend, their identities are in flux; face-scapers and genetic engineering allow them to change appearance and sex at will. Language has been morphed and trademarks taken the place of common words – a coffee is a Starbuck, a shoe a Nike.
I wish this section of the book had been a standalone, larger story in its own right.

The Silver Chair and The Last Battle, C.S Lewis – I’ve been going through C.S Lewis’ books and these two from the Narnia series struck a chord. The Silver Chair for the depiction of the Prince trapped in the chair which dominates his mind, upon freeing him there is a great bit of dialogue from Puddleglum when they confront the Witch and her worldview.
The Last Battle for the nefarious Ape and his hoodwinking of the Narnian’s by dressing a donkey up in lions skin, quite obvious to draw a parallel in our own times with what appears to be a mass hoodwinking.

1
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Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
4 years ago

Aldous Huxley’s Brave new world revisited is excellent reading.

1
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crosscat
crosscat
4 years ago

https://newdiscourses.com/2020/12/psychopathy-origins-totalitarianism/

this online blogpost is a half hour read, but it explains a lot!

1
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