

Our society is already broken, which is why I can’t believe that the media and major global organizations are promoting mediocrity, meaninglessness, and misery as the new standard for a “good” life.
A mediocre, meaningless, miserable life is the new standard. pic.twitter.com/q1Xrcq1hF2
— Natalie Argyle (@NatalieArgyle) June 12, 2022
According to the World Economic Forum, “Psychologists say a good life doesn’t have to be happy, or even meaningful.” Reminds me a bit of the WEF’s declaration that in their new 2030 agenda, “You’ll own nothing and you’ll be happy.” Oh, you thought that was a conspiracy theory? Nope. Forbes told you all about it back in 2016 in their article about the 2030 agenda called, “Welcome To 2030: I Own Nothing, Have No Privacy And Life Has Never Been Better.” I object to both the agenda and the omission of the Oxford comma in this article title.
But honestly, I’m not surprised that the WEF wants people to think that misery and meaninglessness are actually part of a “good” life. They want people to be just fine with the sub-standard life that the 2030 agenda will allow people to have. You’ll be miserable, your life will be meaningless, you’ll be entirely mediocre, and you’ll be happy about it. But just a couple of months ago, New York Magazine also published an article titled, “After a career of making “strategic” moves, I’m embracing mediocrity.” Here’s a terrifying excerpt from this article:
“I have abandoned the notion of ambition to chase the absolute middle of the road: mediocrity… I want to “just be, man,” and won’t let concerns like success or climbing the corporate ladder stand in my way. The new dream is simply no goals, just vibes.”
Yikes! She’s abandoning ambition to literally “chase” mediocrity? Success is just an unnecessary concern for her? And she’s trying to influence others to disregard goals in favor of vibes? How terrifying for a society that is already struggling with incredibly low standards of success. Almost everything in our society is now done to what I like to call the “lowest common denominator.” The very lowest possible acceptable standard. And if we lower the bar much more, we’ll herd ourselves willingly into the social slavery of communism in the hopes that someone (anyone) else will do the hard things so we can be mediocre and enjoy the vibes of our meaningless lives. And that’s exactly what people like the World Economic Forum and their global power-hungry cohorts are hoping we’ll choose. Be a rebel. Work hard.