What the Reasonable Man Must Do Now

A. Recognition

The first duty is to see clearly. The Whig history that called Charles I a tyrant and James II a fool has become the official narrative of the managerial state. It is taught in every university, repeated in every newspaper, enforced by every social sanction—in London, in Toronto, in Sydney, in Auckland, and everywhere the Anglosphere’s institutions have been captured. To resist it is not “disinformation” but the recovery of truth—truth that has been buried but not destroyed, suppressed but not extinguished. The reasonable man must begin by seeing that the history he was taught is a lie, and that the institutions he was taught to revere are the engines of his enslavement.

B. Refusal

The second duty is to withdraw consent where consent is no longer owed. This is not revolution in the French sense—not the storming of barricades, not the beheading of kings. It is the ancient common law right of salus populi suprema lex: when the state abandons its side of the contract, the subject is released. The withdrawal of consent may be as small as refusing a mandate, as local as withdrawing from the public schools, as quiet as moving one’s savings from a bank that funds destruction. Great revolutions are composed of small refusals, multiplied across a population, sustained over time. This holds true whether the state in question is English, Irish, Canadian, Australian, or New Zealander.

C. Reconstruction

The third duty is to build, even in the midst of collapse. Parallel institutions—common law courts that remember the old procedures, local exchanges that bypass the financial system, family‑based education that passes the tradition to the young, mutual aid that cares for its own without asking leave of the state—these are not fantasies. They are the seeds of a restoration. The reasonable man does not wait for the state to reform itself. He builds, in the spaces that remain, the world he wishes to inhabit. And he does this not only in his own locality but in fellowship with reasonable men across the entire Anglosphere, for the enemy is global and so must be the resistance.

D. Vigilance Without Despair

The reasonable man does not need to win every battle. He does not need to see restoration in his own lifetime. He needs only to ensure that the tradition survives to the next generation—that his sons and daughters know what he knew, remember what he remembered, and are prepared to do what he did when their own crisis comes. Progress is not linear, though the Whig historians pretend it is. It is the rhythm of overreach and self‑correction, of usurpation and restoration, of the parasite’s growth and the organism’s immune response. The present overreach is the greatest yet. So, likely, will be the correction.

E. The Duty to Stand and Fight

There remains a final duty: to stand and fight as our ancestors have stood before us—not in wrath, not in ruin, not in disloyalty, but in full faith and loyalty to our long history, our civilization, and our peoples wherever they dwell in the Anglosphere, and to a good and faithful leader whether he be a president or a king. The reasonable man fights without wrath (that is for revolutionaries), without seeking ruin (he builds, he does not burn), and without breaking faith with the living, the dead, and the yet unborn. When a faithful leader stands, he stands with him; when none stands, he stands with his fellow Englishman. But stand he must. The elites always push. The reasonable man always stands. That is the pattern. That is the duty. That is the inheritance.
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3 responses to “What the Reasonable Man Must Do Now”

  1. It is well said, however I take issue to a degree…. the side pushing, moving, forcing action on/by the reasonable man, are lying and manipulative. They are essentially the embodiment of evil. Personified!
    The righteous man is not in battle with some amorphous entity, it is evil, The Devil, pick whatever name suits your fancy? It is the current iteration, of the age old battle. It didn’t start in the 12th century as suggested in the article. 250 years ago men thought they had slayed the beast, yet here we are…
    It will always be here, it will never go away. It is the yin to the yang, the dark to the light, you can’t have ‘hot’ if you don’t have ‘cold’. Man will always be this way, you can’t change human nature. Man thinking he can change or outsmart Man, is the problem. He must learn to accept who and what he is, or there will be no peace, ever

  2. highmaintenancelowtolerance Avatar
    highmaintenancelowtolerance

    All points agreed upon. But what no one tells us is how do I refuse the Central Bank’s power when my retirement income is digitally deposited (I had no choice at retirement) and from that account is where my mortgage, homeowner’s insurance, and real estate tax is automatically withdrawn? The community garden co-op may trade me a dozen eggs for my tomatoes, but my mortgage is held by a bank 2,000 miles away.

    1. Correct. There is one “ other” solution. It is not pleasant. Citizens will have to act together. The humans running AI will have to be “confronted.”

      Never forget Trump Executive Order 14179 dated January 23, 2025 which Congress or courts did nothing to stop it.

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