Americans’ biggest fear heading into 2025 speaks volumes
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — The issue that most kept Americans awake at night over the past year
wasn’t health or work issues, or even relationship troubles. It was the corrupt
establishment.
A whopping 65 percent of Americans say that they’re more worried about “corrupt
government officials” than even loved ones getting seriously sick or dying or
not being able to afford life, according to the 2024 edition of Chapman
University’s Survey of American Fears.
And that figure hasn’t changed much from 2019, perennially topping the list.
Even amid the nonstop Covid “disastertainment” of 2020/2021, the survey placed
the fear of dodgy government leaders ahead of dying relatives by 20 percent.
Maybe authorities tackling and apprehending joggers on empty beaches for
“health” reasons has something to do with that lack of trust?
And people wonder why there’s such hysteria when seemingly benign drones
suddenly appear in the sky in New Jersey, as was the case in December. Or why a
non-negligible chunk of the population hunkers down in online silos that peddle
alternative or creative theories to official narratives. Or why felony
convictions have now become a selling point for a presidential candidate — or at
least not making enough of a dent to cause a loss. There’s a sense that if the
system hates you, then you must be a hero. And even more so if you vow to oppose
it.
And lumped in with that establishment is also anything that it enables against
the interests of the little guy. It would explain why even the recent brazen
murder of a health care insurance company CEO in New York City, which appears to
have been politically motivated by anger toward the system, is seen as more
acceptable than not in a survey of voters under the age of 30 by Emerson
College.
This lack of trust in the establishment is why, more than three decades after
being imprisoned for murdering their own parents at their home near Los Angeles,
Lyle and Erik Menendez are now enjoying a wave of popular support for their
release, driven by a hit Netflix docufiction series highlighting alleged sexual
abuse by their parents. There’s now renewed focus on the suggestion that the
system swept it under the rug to land a dart on the board after an initial
mistrial, as the district attorney sought to save face in the wake of OJ
Simpson’s acquittal.
It’s why despite nonstop bombardment across the conventional and digital media
landscapes of the Biden administration’s “whatever it takes” message in support
of funneling more cash into the pockets of US weapons makers “for Ukraine” —
most of Americans now oppose it, according to a CBS/YouGov poll published oar
the end of November.
It’s why many Americans see Washington’s invisible hand everywhere, from Syria
and Moscow to the 2022 Nord Stream pipeline explosion in the Baltic Sea.
Other fears on the list seem to support the top one of government corruption,
since the government has done such a great job of tackling them that they’ve
become permanent.
Cyberterrorism ranks right behind government corruption, with 58 of Americans
worried about it. Sure, it sounds scary, but do most people even know what it
means? If they do, it’s only because the government won’t shut up about it.
Cyber has been the new focus for the military industrial complex for the past
several years. So has terrorism, although that has been dying down. But hey, if
you can jam both of those things together into a single term, then you’ve got a
real taxpayer extortion tool. Please, take all my money if it means saving me
from the ghosts in the machines!
Except that the government has been fear-mongering long enough about both cyber
and terrorism that they really should have a strong grip on it by now. Instead,
they’re starting to sound like the left does when they’re trying to drum up cash
for their never-ending war on poverty. Or their war on women, which has
apparently been resolved to the point that the fight for feminism has now
morphed into a defense of men who wish to self-identify as women. Both cyber and
terrorism problems should be well under control for the amount of tax cash
invested. The two terms shouldn’t now be joining forces like Batman and Superman
in a comic book movie crossover.
A similar argument can be made for other list-topping worries like Iran, Russia
or North Korea using nuclear weapons. Whatever happened to all those sanctions
that government said would keep Americans safe? Sanctions restrictions are meant
“to accomplish foreign policy and national security goals,” according to the US
Office of Foreign Assets Control administering them.
Doesn’t look like Americans feel any more safe as a result of those efforts.
Perhaps they’re mostly just a way to tilt the global economic playing field by
scaring the competition away from doing business, lest they face US sanctions
for doing so, all while the Treasury Department issues exemptions for select
American companies?
Climate change is still a concern for 48 percent of Americans surveyed. Guess
that Biden administration increase in climate financing from $1.5 billion in
2021 to $5.8 billion the following year, and to $9.5 billion last year didn’t
get the job done, huh?
Maybe that’s because it’s all a big scam, funding pet "climate justice" projects
instead of the construction of a giant tarp for the planet to protect it from
the main climate culprit: the sun. Maybe try taxing cow farts, like Denmark is
planning to do starting in 2030?
The good news is that even horror movies can be viewed through a comedic lens.
The "Scary Movie" film series is even based on the concept. So here’s another
year of giggling through this giant demented clown show. If only because it sure
beats the alternative.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN