Conservative News Daily

Tucker’s Speech: Strong Case Against Urban Living

Watch: Tucker Makes Best Argument⁣ Against American City Life During Powerful Speech

People⁤ often wonder about the direction of the country.

You hear it all the time, and recently polls have shown that people are not happy with this direction in the slightest. According to a ⁤ recent NBC poll, which made headlines with its startling results, only 23 percent of Americans believe the U.S. is headed‌ in the right directions while 71 percent believe ⁣the country has gone off-track.

Interestingly,⁣ there does seem ‌to exist a correlation between‌ certain negative ‍trends, such as the declining birth-rate, the decline in religion, and deaths of despair (depression-caused-suicide and drug overdose). There is⁢ another negative trend which is under reported: the century long trend of urbanism — the increase in Americans living in cities.

In a recent speech given in Hungary, a nation moving in a strongly conservative and Christian direction, Tucker Carlson made the case against living in ⁤a bustling American city.

In a portion of his speech, the conservative superstar discussed the enslaving character of urban living in contrast with that of⁢ living in a rural area.

Let the impact of Carlson’s words⁣ from the ⁤video on X sink in: “You are enslaved, and you can’t think‌ clearly. And your reference points are gone. And you can’t see ⁣the stars, and you can’t ⁢see the trees. You cannot see God’s creation.”

What a powerful contrast between city and country ‍life!

Now, some might find the characterization of the urban versus rural strange or ‍out-of-place, but this contrast is a historic one, with deep roots in both the American and Christian tradition, and is politically relevant.

Thomas Jefferson, in contrast to Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists, argued that America should⁣ have ‌very independent, self-governing states with very little federal power at ⁣all and that America’s policies should promote self-sufficiency, rural-living, and agriculture.

Now let us compare this vision to that of the World Economic Forum as argued by the forum’s frequent contributor and member of the Danish parliament Ida Auken who wrote⁣ the following in her article, titled “Welcome to 2030: I Own Nothing, Have No Privacy, and Life Has Never Been Better.”

“Welcome to the year 2030.‍ Welcome to my city — or should I say, ‘our city.’ I ⁣don’t own anything. I don’t own a car. I don’t own a house. I don’t own ⁣any appliances or any clothes.”

“Once in awhile I get annoyed about the fact that I have no real privacy. No where ⁢I can go and⁢ not be registered. I know that, somewhere, everything I do, think‍ and dream of is recorded. I just hope⁢ that nobody will use it against me.”

“All in all, it is a good life. Much better than the path we were on, where it became so clear that we could ⁣not continue with the same model of growth. We had all ‌these terrible things happening: lifestyle diseases, climate change, the refugee crisis, ‍environmental degradation, completely congested cities, water pollution, air pollution, social unrest and unemployment. We lost way too many people before we realized that we could do things differently.”

You cannot ⁢get much more‍ dystopian than ⁢this, and it matches perfectly with the aspirations of the⁣ Democrats​ and establishment voter base as described by Carlson in his speech.

“The ruling‍ party is the party of the childless, the ​unmarried,​ the people who are working for low wages⁤ for large corporations and living in tiny apartments in overcrowded cities that are rife with crime.”

By contrast, Thomas Jefferson envisioned America as a country landscape with free and virtuous landowners attending their own affairs.

“Cultivators of the earth are the⁤ most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country‌ and wedded to its liberty and interests by the most lasting bands,” Jefferson once wrote.

Do you agree with Tucker Carlson?

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Tucker Carlson stands on the shoulders ‌of giants in the American tradition when he makes the case against urbanism in favor for a more rural America. He is right to point out⁢ that the reality of urban living, as well as the future vision of the global elite, is nothing short⁤ of prison-like in not only its appearance, but in its level of control. We were once a nation of farmers founded by farmers, and we ⁢must make the choice between a return to the land ‌as envisioned by Thomas ⁣Jefferson or into ‍the rented pods of urban enslavement as envisioned by Ida Auken and the World Economic Forum.

For those of you who are⁢ hesitant at the idea of being “reactionary” and think that we “can’t go back in time” ‍and must continue the march of “progress,” I leave you with the wise advice of the great⁢ Christian apologist and author C.S. Lewis:

“There is nothing progressive about being pig-headed and refusing to admit a mistake. ‍And I think if you look at the present⁤ state of‍ the world it’s pretty plain that humanity has been ‍making some big mistakes. We’re on the wrong road. And if that is ​so we must go back. Going⁤ back is ⁢the quickest ​way on.”

The post Watch: Tucker Makes Best Argument Against American City Life During Powerful Speech appeared ‍first ⁣on The Western Journal.



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