This analysis provides a sharp psychological critique of how internalized powerlessness turns individuals into resentful enforcers of the very rules that constrain them. It effectively exposes the "sheepdog" mentality as a tragic attempt to validate one's own lack of freedom by policing others.
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Why do people become RULE-FOLLOWERS?Hinzugefügt:
All right, so for this video, I am going to be talking about how people become rule followers because it really does seem to be that there is this really there's this really sizable group in society that thinks that your morality and how good of a person you are is contingent on how well you can follow the rules. Your ability to follow the rules, your ability to obey the rules is what determines whether or not you're a good person in the minds of these people. And then there's also the permission slip aspect of this as well where, you know, they don't understand it whenever people do things out of free will. They don't understand when people do things because they choose to from inside. Um and they basically have this idea in their mind that you need a permission slip for everything. And if you don't ask for a permit or a permission slip, then that means that you're essentially a criminal. Even if you're not breaking the law, even if you're not harming anyone, it's something that they don't really understand. And these two sort of aspects of, you know, like a like the personality of these people or like the personality of it's either number one, these are like the backdrop NPC people or number two, these are people who have simply been deeply programmed and they've essentially been buck broken uh by the system into becoming sort of a sheepdog. If you if think about like the sheep being the sheepdogs, if you think about the the sheep sort of policing themselves. Uh you know, it manifests in those two primary attributes. Number one, whether or not you're a good person depends on following the rules. It's not an actual sense of good and evil that comes from within. It's it's just whether or not you break the rules determines what's good and what's a good and bad. And number two is that you need a permission slip for everything. And a a lot of this programming, you know, it starts in school. Okay, a a lot of the programming that people sort of have in society so sort of starts with school because that is one of the things that school is designed to do. It's it's it's designed to, you know, browbeat the free will and the spirit out of you and to basically turn you into uh you know one of these type one of these types of people one of these types of people that you know just follows that like the teacher's pet. I would say I would say that the teacher's pet is the biggest sort of example of like what a model citizen is in the in the eyes of like the New World Order in the eyes of the people that you know are controlling society. They want everyone to be a teacher's pet because what what is a teacher's pet do? A teacher's pet they follow the rules they ask permission for everything and they what what they do is they police the other students and they tell other students what they can and can't do.
So so basically they're essentially helping the teachers. They're helping the people in positions of power and so you have you have a lot of people you know who are adult teachers pets.
And you know even though that the teacher might be invisible the teacher might be you know like an institution.
It might be you know just general you know rules that are you know written down by a bunch of people that you'll never shake hands with.
You know we do have a lot of teachers pets you know in society and that that is the main goal of the program of gift school is is they want you to do things because authority tells you to do them and they want you to ask permission for everything. You need if you don't have a hall pass for whatever it is that you're doing then that is something that that will sort of make the normies sneer right because any any time you do something that is you know it might be a whimsical it might be something that is out of the ordinary. You might be taking an unconventional you know sort of path in life and what what will happen is that you know people will sort of ask you like oh who told you to do it? Do you have a license? Do you have a permit?
Right or like what are the things that other other people will say and this is where you get into like a sort of you know middle school high school tier you know normie bullying is is just like the the whole who asked? Right like oh you need to ask first before speaking. Right and so there is also that element of it as well but whatever you talk about like the the whole sheep becoming the sheepdog sort of mentality I notice that a lot of times you you you you have a lot of people who, you know, that they feel resentful of people who, you know, decide to use their free will. They feel resentful of, you know, people who, you know, break out of the system. People who find ways around the system. People who find ways to cheat the system. Like the the people who cheat the system, the people who are find creative ways to escape the the rat race. They find creative ways to escape the hamster wheel uh that the system tries to put you into. Well, one of the things that that happen is that that these people will become envious. It's almost like that they become jealous of your freedom. They become jealous of your ability to do things. And because of the fact that they feel powerless, they feel like they have to follow the rules. And so what what they do is that they essentially project that envy onto you in the form of social shaming, in the form of criticism, in the form of, you know, tattletaling, in the form of punishments.
Right? Because what they what what happens is like that the system forces you in a position or it tries to force you in a position where you feel powerless. You feel like you have to follow the rules. You're you're essentially scared into rule following.
And so anytime you see somebody else breaking the rules, you you essentially become envious, right? And this is something that I've noticed in myself.
Like like whenever I look back in some of my uh like some of my school memories, uh I realize that this is a a mentality that has sort of crept in uh a lot of times because, you know, I I I was like in I was intimidated by like the teachers and by my parents in order in order to like not get into trouble and things of that nature, right? And so any any time that I would see, you know, other students, you know, wearing hoodies, for example.
If you look at like you know, like the like the dress code, for example. I'd be following the dress code and sometimes I'd I'd be like cold or, you know, maybe it's like I secretly wanted to wear a hoodie as well. But because of the fact because of the fact that I felt like I didn't have that, you know, ability to do it. Anytime I would see other students, you know, like breaking the dress code it's almost like I would become resentful of it because of the fact that um you you so I felt like I couldn't do it. So why why why like why do they get to do it but I don't, right? And this is what the thing about like the way that school works like the people who are like the bullies, the people who are the rule the rule breakers or whatever, they if you're if they're like a repeated rule breaker, like usually the teachers don't go after them because they know that they won't listen. And so it's usually the good students that get, you know, targeted and it's it's almost like the bullies don't get targeted, but as soon as you defend as soon as you defend yourself, as soon as you do some your stuff, uh in order to stand up for yourself, that's when you get in trouble, right? So so there was also that aspect of it as well, right? But that is a mentality that can sort of creep into you, which is like if you're placed in a position where you feel powerless, where you feel like you have to follow the rules, and you see other people doing things in an alternative way, it's very easy to get envious and then and that enviousness turns into the policing. It turns into you becoming a sheepdog. You become like an Agent Smith that that becomes that sort of polices other people, um you know, and and so so that that mentality, it's very important to be aware of that mentality, to not become a sheepdog, because that is one of the things that I've noticed. And even if you're someone who like you know if you work a wagie job, this is also something that I've noticed you within myself, you know, before I became, you know, a NEET, before I became unemployed and, you know, started doing other things to make money, one of the things that I sort of had the mentality of was anytime I would see somebody who was, you know, unemployed or anytime and this is this is what applied to my co-workers as well. Sometimes I would do this kind of I would have this kind of behavior with my co-workers as well. You know, anytime you see someone who works less hours or whatever, even if they're like in high school or whatever, they might be like high school kids, you know, who you know, they can only work a certain amount of hours in order to do, you know, homework back at home or whatever. And, you know, we'd be like, "Oh, we work more hours than they do.
We're the real hard workers." and stuff like that, which is like looking back on it that that that of like a cringe mentality to be in. And so, you know, like that kind of mentality of, you know, just you you being envious of other people's freedom be and that that that that's one of the things that they want you they want to do is that they want you to be resentful of freedom.
They want you to resent freedom. They want you you to resent expressions of free will so that you become the sheepdog. You become someone who polices what other people can and can't do because what they do is is they do this sort of hazing ritual where they put you in a position to powerlessness. And it's it's almost like you're in hell looking at heaven. This is the psychology behind, you know, HOA Karens. This is the psychology behind, you know, people who they they just have this sort of need to police what you can and can't do and then and they give you all this [ __ ] for breaking, you know, whatever rule it is. It doesn't matter how stupid the rule is. It doesn't matter how stupid the law is. You know, they just go after you because they just resent expressions of free will because it's almost like, you know, if they had to suffer, now you have to suffer. And this is why you like a lot of times you have like a boomers and like older people. It's It's not every older person, but it's usually older people you know, that they have this sort of mentality of like, well, if I had to do it, now you have to do it as well, which that that is a huge part of the boomer mindset, but it is also a huge part of like the sheepdogs. It's a huge part of like the people who have been so shafted, you know, by the system that they feel like they they need to project that onto other people. And this is where you get into like the this is where you get into like the boomer mentality or like the like the the people who are older people that they they might have realized the scam too late. And so, what what happens is like you you might have people who it's like they they have this sort of sunk cost fallacy whenever it comes to like the system, whenever it comes to doing things the the system's way of that they have this sort of sunk cost fallacy where it's like the it's like they realized the scam way too late and then they feel like okay, well, and so what they do is they cope with it. They cope with the fact that they've wasted so many years doing stuff, you know, by the rules, doing stuff by the book. Right?
And so what they do is that is they cope by essentially saying, "Well, if I had to do it now, everyone else has to do it as well." And so anytime they see, you know, younger people dropping out of society, right? Like Gen Z, millennials, right? Anytime they see, you know, Gen Z and and um millennials sort of dropping out of society and, you know, doing things in an alternative way, not not feeding the system, not feeding, you know, like not feeding the machine, um they get resentful and they say like, "Oh, you're lazy. You You got soft hands. You're You're You have limp wrists and stuff like that because that that's the mentality. It's like, "Well, if I had to do it now, you have to do it as well." And that that is how people become sheepdogs. That that is how people become, you know, rule followers.
And it And it makes me think of that there's this funny clip that I watched of this guy There's this guy on like a mini bike and he's running away from like this this cop inside of this park and like the There's another cop car that shows up later on in that clip. And then And then there's also like a There's like a chopper or like a helicopter trying to chase this guy on a [ __ ] mini bike. And that that that is the perfect representation of like the sheepdog mentality. It's like It's like the There's no whimsy, there's no free will, there's no, you know, doing things just doing things, you know, exercising your free will. It's just you you have all these people who like they have this and that they've been essentially buckbroken. They've been essentially, you know, mind control. Like they've fallen under the spell of mind control by the system. And now that is what their you know, their their mentality is is anytime they they see somebody expressing their free will, anytime they see somebody, you know, having any sort of freedom whatsoever, it's It's like they can't stand it. And so And it doesn't matter how stupid it is, it doesn't matter how small or harmless it is. If it If it breaks the rules, they just feel the need to go after it with all their resources. Like it's It's like sending a [ __ ] helicopter to try to catch a mini bike.
It's It's such a hilarious scenario, but it really is sort of representative of like the HOA Karen of like the boomer sort of mentality of like oh you can't do it this way, you can't do it that way, who gave you permission, right who asked, right? Do you have a license? Do you have a permit? And you have people who like they live their entire lives, you know, waiting for a hall pass. You like and and that that's one of the things that you know like that's one of the ways that the that the system, you know, keeps you in one place. It keeps you complacent. Is that you know you sit there and you wait for a hall pass that never comes. You wait for a permission slip that never comes. And so and so what happens is like you have all these people who like their entire life is just a manifestation of, you know, things that other people told them to do or other people said that they had permission to do. And so so if you if you ask people, you know, okay like why did you go to this college? Because my parents told me to. Well why why did you get this degree? Because somebody told me to or like the news said this or my parents said this. Like this would be a good career path. Like why why did you get this job? Why did why did you go down this career path? Because somebody told me to. And if you really ask the majority of people, it's it's not it's not everyone I I think it's a mixed bag when it comes to people. Right? But if you ask the majority of people like like the majority of of a lot of people's life decisions is essentially an accumulation of permission slips. If you say okay, why did you do this? Why did you do that? Is it because you decided to do it or is it because somebody else told you you had permission to do it? And that permission slip mentality of needing to ask permission to do anything, needing to ask permission or waiting for somebody to to tell you that it's okay to do it before making decisions and you sort of putting your hands on the steering wheel, you know, of your own life.
That's what the system wants you to wait for a for a permission slip so that you don't do anything from inside because they they want to to control you from the outside. Right? But if you if you want to go back to like the sheepdog mentality, that this is one of the things that it really applies to, you know, like wagie jobs. It really it really does apply to, you know, if if you're working like a miserable job or if you're if you're in a miserable situation where you're sort of, you know, tethered to the system or you're you're tied up in all these things that you have to do and you see somebody else trying to break out of it. There is this sort of crab bucket mentality that can manifest and I I I don't think anyone's immune to it. I think that we've all fallen you know victim to this mentality you know before especially it's like oh okay well I'm following all the rules and this person's breaking all the rules and yet I'm the one that gets punished even if I slightly step out of line and yet they're the ones that don't get any punishment at all you know at all. Right and so so that that that sense of and that that's something that they create on on purpose is that they create that sense of unfairness so that you become a sheep dog so that resentment and that envy turns into you sort of policing other people for the system and so you become a part of the matrix. You become an Agent Smith.
Right so so that that mentality it applies to like wagie job wagie jobs especially because you know if you're if you're working a miserable job that you don't like then of course you're going to hate whenever people you know find a way out or you're going to have that sort of you know resentment. That you know if if other if I have to do it then other people have to do it too and so you turn into this sort of you know blue collar SpongeBob. Okay that's one of the things that they want you to do is a lot of these people that have this sort of mentality of you know you're not as miserable as I am. You're not you're not you know a harvest you're not getting your time harvested by Saturn like I am.
This is like one of the biggest copes is like the one of the biggest wagie copes is you know like whenever you're in that miserable situation what what you do is you sort of cope with the situation. Uh you know by saying well okay my value as a human being is how much time can be harvested from me and and if you if you set if you stay in that situation for long enough then you you do sort of start to develop that mentality in a sort of copium basically because in reality you don't you don't really like the situation. You don't really like the place that you're in but in order to cope with it you essentially say you pretend that it's good. You pretend like um you know, that that is the true metric of you know, the value of a human being is like, oh, okay, like, well, you see, I'm actually being valuable by, you know, having my time harvested, by being a cog in the machine. And so, that that is one of the ways that, you know, like, the system creates rule followers. It creates sheepdogs by essentially putting you into a situation where you're powerless. And this is one of the, um, you know, keys of like mind control.
Is that is that, you know, putting you into this Stockholm syndrome where, because of the fact that you feel powerless, you project that powerlessness onto other people. And they teach you to resent a freedom. They teach you to resent free will. But don't fall for the trick. Don't fall for the dark magic that they try to cast onto you. You know, do things because you want to. Exercise your free will. Do things that like do random things because you decide to do them. And don't be a sheepdog, right? But, uh, yeah, that's the video.
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