The Eternal War as individual, community and society level Psychological Warfare employs ridicule, shame and scorn against understanding, forgiveness and redemption.
The Eternal War | Doctrine | Society
All along the drive from Marin back across the Golden Gate Bridge, along Lombard through the Marina, returning once more to the secure site on the peak of Russian Hill. Early had been disquieted. Something more than physical exhaustion, which was to be expected. No, this went deeper, deep into his very sense of the world, of the possible paths before humanity. This was of course what the Lord Commander had intended, to break the Earl of his hard-earned computational model of reality.
Pulling into the heavily guarded and totally monitored parking structure beneath the site. After having looked for all the little signs of anything out of place as they passed through the layers of security near invisibly placed and active in tiers out and around the site. Exiting the vehicle, ensuring his ward and no one from the outside can see anyone in the vehicles nor even after exiting the vehicles. Early can’t stop his mind from pondering that there’s a theme, a thread, in all of this, something Harrison requires he acquire the first part of all on his own.
“I reject the artificial worlds of words to secure that which cannot be defined, life. Words are but a symbolic language devoid of reality. Words are lies that allow only illusion…” Early begins the Vow to Life, silently to himself, to calm his exhausted and intentionally decohered mind.
There can be little doubt whatsoever that the old world is now irretrievably gone. There’s sadness in him at this, a sense of great and immense loss. Though this feeling and the thoughts driving it, are not what the aging Lord Commander had intended his Senior Knight Commander, lead of The Order’s continuity team, to find. No, but the sadness at the loss does point to the beginning of the thread. The world of our youth is gone, with no going back.
Bobby is the first to exit the private elevator into the parking structure, to greet the Lord Commander and his team. The three almost imperceptible finger movements as he exits the elevator the signal to the Earl that their ward is yet safe and secure. Bobby and Bertrand, almost as if choreographed, close the distance between them. The similarities are striking, quite despite the midnight black skin of Prince Dlamini and the pale skinned Belgium nobleman. It’s something in the build of their frames, in the way they move, something uncanny, if one can ignore the marked surface differences. These men were born to lead, despite being born in two very different parts of the world of two very different ethnic and cultural backgrounds they are both nobility, and it’s obvious.
Carl, having exited the elevator just behind Bobby, crosses to the Early who’s still standing between the lead vehicle and the elevator. Not knowing what might have transpired in his absence. Everything being in flux and uncertain as it is. The outer layers could still hold, while the inner could have be taken from within. Far too many defensive positions, castles, states, had been taken in this manner. “We’ve delayed him by only minutes, but Bronson’s on his way down now. None too pleased.” Carl quietly imparts to the Earl.
Almost as if exactly on que, Bronson and his assistant appear as the doors to the elevator open once more. There’s a look on his face of, not anger, but actual rage, as he looks at the Lord Commander still slightly behind the Earl and Carl. Glee upon the face of his assistant. Glee strangely placed, given the situation, those present. The feel of it all is just wrong, dropping Early instantly into kill mode. A posture only barely perceptible but which Carl picks up on and also instantly drops into ready to react posture. Both by nature prepared to secure the Lord Commander against any and all threats, even against their fellow knights.
“Bronson, you’re looking quite well, despite the strains of your assignment.” The Lord Commander from just slightly behind Early, placing his hand upon the Earl’s shoulder firmly as he passes around and to the front of, moving towards where Bronson is crossing to him. Letting Early know all is okay. There’s to be no violence here, unless at the utmost. The message in the grip being, “we’ve not fallen so far, yet. Soon perhaps, but not yet.”
“What is it we can do for you, Lord Commander?” Bronson, the rage gone, respect returning. Though there are still signs of anger upon the aged Commander.
“I will require a private place to speak with Prince Dlamini. Somewhere we can see but not be seen by your ward.” The Lord Commander responds as he and Bobby move towards the elevator doors, Bronson and his aide making room for before turning to move with them to the elevator. Early motioning with his eyes alone, that Carl is to go with them, the Lord Commander’s security his responsibility.
“You can use my office, Lord Commander.”
“That won’t be necessary. I shouldn’t care to disrupt your efforts here.” Harrison states, looking to Bronson, as the Commander closes the distance to him. “I shan’t be staying long. Far too much to be done.” Harrison, looking beyond Bronson to where Early still stands, this message far more for the Earl than the Commander.
“Lord Commander, I will have a word with the Earl, if you don’t mind.” Bertrand to Harrison, turning away from Bobby who moves to go with Harrison. Early had seen them communicate upon exiting the vehicle and can’t help but believe this has all been prearranged. All of this, since SoCal, a pretext to provide Early and Bertrand a chance to speak uninterrupted and undisturbed. Harrison only nods as he turns to enter the now open elevator, making room for those others, to include Carl, going up into the building with him. Others having to wait for the next trip of the up-down box.
“I’ve a room we can use for complete privacy.” Early offers to Bertrand, who nods his affirmation with a smile. “We’ll need take the service elevator. Please follow me.”
Upon exiting the service elevator and going up one flight of staff stairs cleverly hidden in the back of the building, they arrive at the office Early had established for himself and his people. Physically, digitally and in every other way a secure room for conversations and holding out if required. One of Carl’s men, prepared for whatever came out of the elevator, calms at the finger signal his Lord gives him. The most subtle of signals letting him know all secure and well. Followed immediately by the finger signal for privacy. They wouldn’t be disturbed in any way now. Bodies would be stacked before they could be.
“Restoration Protocol. It’s mine. I wrote it.” Bertrand states, once they’re fully within the room, door closed. A statement which doesn’t surprise Early. He can see the old nobility in Bertrand, the old bloodlines of more than one great house. While they’ve never met, he has known of this von Mises for some time now. A man who’d been a mover and a force in The Order for more than a decade now.
“So, I’m to know it all then.” Bertrand only nods in response to Early’s question. A question not really a question, more a verbalization of an internal summation on a computation had been running since the notice first went out of the abduction. So, conditions have been met, and now we shift phase.
“I’m to prepare for war, is it?” Early, sitting himself in the warn stuffed leather seat behind the old yet simple wooden desk he’d had brought here. The chair and desk being the only personal touches he’d added to this bunker of a room, since arriving with Annabelle and his team. As he sits exhaustedly, he motions for Bertrand to take whichever of the two more modern chairs are set casually on the opposite side of the flat maple colored desk from himself.
“All which comes before in our lives is merely preparation for those tasks yet ahead of us.” Bertrand states, looking down and repositioning one of the seats so as to not have his back fully to the thick, heavy secured door. Habits are habits. Even when seated across from the man who’s task it was across the entire breadth and scope of The Order, to ensure security.
Early has not been able to shake the sense, since it first came to him early on their flight back, that all of this, including the abduction. All of it’s of a piece set in motion by the Lord Commander to break Early of his normal patterns, shake him from the day to day, setting him adrift in an unformed computational space within. And this Belgian nobleman, author of the Restoration Protocol. Was he an orchestrator of this as well, a co-conspirator of Harrison’s? Most certainly. But to what purpose and end?
“I knew your sister Elizabeth quite well.” Bertrand looking Early directly in the eyes, ensuring the Earl is snapped out of the inner space he’d been in since early on the flight back. Letting him know it’s now time to begin forming up the computation. “My entire life, actually. That is, until she passed. My condolences. She was quite a force of nature; your elder sister was.”
At the expressionless look upon the Earl’s face, Bertrand continues. “My grandfather and your father the duke were lifelong friends, in fact.” This isn’t stated as a means by which to establish a human connection. It’s a statement of both fact and required information. There’s something in this which the Earl needs hear and know. Old yet still valid data and algorithms to add to his inner computations.
Bertrand continues, seeing the Earl has heard and is waiting for additional information, values in the matrices, the Belgian lord was tasked by the Lord Commander to provide. “Both were in fact knights and in their own times, Knight Commanders in The Order.”
Early sits back heavily into the embracing leather of his chair, the old leather and wood deep within creaking and adjusting to his weight. Betrand, watching closely, recognizes these are not data the Earl had previously possessed. These are things he did not know about his own biological father and family. There’s value in growing up on the outside. There’s also gaps and weaknesses derived mostly from a lack of truly knowing one’s actual family. All the subtle things growing up on the inside provide. All those things hidden from the world outside. Things hidden even across centuries and millennia if need be.
Now it begins to show itself. The purpose of all of this movement, this sequence of events initiated specifically to make this very conversation happen. To ensure he was in the proper inner state to fully hear the message, to be primed exactly just so for what comes after. This von Mises and his family are not merely European nobles with empty titles and comfortable lives, living museum pieces maintained in order to provide the bureaucratic feudalists both validation and a scapegoat to point to when the slavery of the state became too obvious. This one’s both one of them and one of us. This is but part of the message.
“Now the wealth of five generations is stolen and moved into structures which cannot be physically or legally undone…?” Bertrand posits as an open question. So, the conversation now begins in earnest!
“I should think you mean the nearly two hundred trillion in wealth has moved offshore into the Spider’s Web over the course of the past twenty plus years.” Early, his eyes closed, leaning back in his chair, his mind now primed and open to take in data and information provided, to compute it in his unique way.
“Yes. Just such.” Bertrand, recognizing the Earl, this once unrecognized but not unknown nor unobserved bastard child, is now in the exact state Harrison had cautioned him to watch for.
“The Westphalian World is unwound over a stretch of time, either abrupt or drawn out. Perhaps at different pace in different parts of the world. Regardless, base reality brutally reasserts itself once more in the process.” This is an easy first order computation. Not of course what all of this had been set up and put in motion for the Earl to process. The great plundering of two centuries was now complete. The real question was not even what comes next, that is the old pattern, but rather how what comes next comes.
“The analysts I’m certain have come to all of this quite some time ago.” Early states, as goad for Bertrand to get on with it, the data and information dump, the prompting.
“L'ancien empire tient-il?”
“This is not a question can be answered at this point.” Bertrand only nods briefly at the Earl’s response. This matches the analysis.
“Should the ancient empire be sustained?” Now this seems to be closer to the heresy Bronson and his faction within The Order are so set against even asking.
“If the future is to continue as slave-based empire. Yes. If it’s to be an empire of responsible individual sovereignty. No.” Now Early looks to Bertrand, to assess if this pulls the thread he believes he’s found. The thread Harrison needs him to find.
“Have the bureaucratic feudalists and their pet oligarchs already achieved the update of their artificial reality tunnel? Is it inescapable at this point? Have they irrevocably embedded their war into the framework of what is emerging as next?” There’s a genuine interest in the answer to this question, plain to see on Bertrand’s face. So, this is not some mere nobleman, but an actual Lord quite concerned with the well-being of his people. Early realizes now why Harrison has put them together, has tasked von Mises with being the author of the Restoration Protocol seeded about so very cleverly.
“I should think not just yet, though very much a possibility, given the lack of a capable and strong nobility and related knighthood.” The thought of it all strikes Early with a powerful blow. Almost enough to knock the wind out of him. If he’s right, then the Lord Commander, Harrison, his former mentor and guide into and through The Order, has set The Order on the path to open war. A thing had never happened in the entire eight hundred years of its existence. Not even in the time of its founder and the matriarchs who chartered and funded him to establish The Order to protect them and their female descendants.
Bertrand merely looks on, not a single expression on his face, utterly neutral. Having been instructed by Harrison to watch for specific queues which demonstrate Early’s in deep awareness, the knowledge in his ancient genes as honed by a lifetime of hardship out among the people, assembling itself into useful algorithms. Instruction which explicitly stated Bertrand was to remain completely neutral and silent as the Earl worked through the immensely complex computations within. He’ll sum the computations as he speaks.
“They must fully control the wealthiest and most powerful state and economy to use as a weapon against other states, with the sole purpose of breaking all, including in the end, the powerful state itself. Burning to the ground the Westphalian World and the remaining few remnants of the world before in the process. Which of course would need be the United States, the remaining remnants of the British Empire, and the Commonwealth as a whole.” After a brief pause. “The English-speaking world must be used in one last final explosion, before itself imploding.”
“From the ashes an updated Empire of Constantine – artificial reality tunnel – will emerge, ruled by Resentfuls alone, an empire of slaves, inescapable slavery once more restored as the base of the economy. All of it made possible through technology, communications and computational capital and finance. The new productivity of the slave being misery, constrained consumption and voting the right way.”
“Can they actually bring this about?” Bertrand asks, having spent many months working with the analysts of The Order and others – the old bankers to the old empires – going over this very question. The answer most come to by all being a fifty-fifty probability at this point.
“They believe they can and they’re acting from this assumption.” Early pauses, looking down and away, pulling the threads of his default mode network together into an attention network assembled deep within his brain to sum and compute this question. “If Responsibles’ oligarchs and Adoptables’ peoples continue to believe the old system is functional and recoverable, then quite possibly Resentfuls can restore slavery. All of the pieces and players are in place to do just so. Far too many are now fully dependent on the tax slavery already well-established and accepted as requirements for polite society.”
“So, impolite society is the only counter?” Bertrand, the old noble and legitimate warrior smiles. Not a smile out of joy at the thought of a return to société impolie, but rather a rueful smile of understanding of what must follow.
“Polite society is slavery. Slavers and slave systems cannot be denied through civility. This was the great awareness of von Clausewitz. Westphalia forced civility specifically to ensure the reemergence of slavery, an unaccountable slavery to the state and the then emerging industrialists.”
“Any monarch or aristocrat which pushed back against this was to have their people turned against them before being destroyed. It’s what Charles and Louis learned at the cost of their heads. It’s what Napolean, that Celtic Corsican, discovered along his rise to power. It’s what Nicholas learned a century later at the cost of his own head and that of his entire immediate family. It’s what keeps a true king from rising again to wear the crown.” Early looks to Bertrand. “I suspect it’s what killed Mountbatten there in Ireland.”
“Yes. It’s why the entire Westphalian World rose against Napolean.” Early again, exhausted, leans back in his chair, looking to the ceiling with his eyes closed. “He hurt them though. A hurt they have yet to recover from. He changed the Western world in ways they’ve still not been able to address. He staved off total slavery for another two centuries, but what he released cannot sustain to prevent just such anymore.”
“The counter?” Now Bertrand can get to the question Harrison had sent him here to find. Yes, he’d been the witting and knowing author of the Restoration Protocol. But he, Bertrand von Mises, son of a Belgian noble and prior Germanic Princely great house, going back to the days of his Teutonic ancestors, had never been an outsider. Not for a moment in his entire life. This man, this strange American of direct British heritage, this bastard child raised completely on the outside without a shred of support. This man who had been elevated as a peer of the realm, as an Earl no less, all on his own merits. He saw nobility as a very different thing, approaching it all, millennia of history, in a very different way than those raised in comfort in the castle.
“The matriarchs of the great houses must seek out highly capable men, bind these men to their houses through marriages and the multigenerational distribution of assets and relationships come with these marriages. Preference of course being on us bastards, both those who know they are and those who do not. The bastards providing the numbers of both the men to bind and the women to bind them.”
“Yes, time to bring home one and all.” Bertrand can’t help but think of how many of these bastards The Order had brought in from the wild in its long history. This bringing home of large numbers of the distant family members of the matriarchies an essential task if the Restoration is to have any hope of success. This Earl, elevated from nothing by the fruits of his own efforts, never a climber nor ever having sought out elevation, is critical to this. That he’s a natural leader, all the more so his value. But he’s to come to it himself. Must choose to be the example for all the others to follow. Even if it means he must lead them to their deaths. More so he must come to it all of his own accord, if he is to lead the bastards to both kill and die.
“But will the matriarchs welcome home the lesser daughters? This is the great challenge given the genetic warfare at the root of all things.” Early states with a strained smile on his face. A wry smile of direct personal experience of pain, suffering and very real deprivations, from the years of his youth spent on the outside, in abject poverty, because his own noble born mother had been just so cast out by the matriarch of her clan. “Rather, can they contain the genetic warfare of these lesser daughters once brought in?”
This very thing, this need to contain and productively harness the sheer force of female versus female competition, is the core of the Restoration Protocol. A partial reversion to much older models of incentives, compensation, asset distributions and access. A reversion greatly updated with all the immense knowledge had been gained in the hard sciences, conflict, genetics, medicine, finance and economics as relates to the human species. All the many hard truths Resentfuls are about to burn the world to the ground to deny and prevent from undoing the artificial realities they require to so parasitically live and thrive.
“Real hardship, base reality reasserting itself brutally, will perhaps address some of the need. Forcing many women to realize how vulnerable they are, just how artificial is the world the unhealthy matriarchy has established over the course of the past two centuries.” Early posits, looking Bertrand in the eyes.
“Yes, organic status hierarchies emerging once more, old patterns reemerging.”
“Seek out and preserve what and who can be. Let hardship do much of the rest.” Early nods at the truth of it. “Are the matriarchs ready?” To this question Bertrand can merely shrug and smile. “Is the world of man prepared for the change it must go through? Shift from wealth and fame as status, back to strength, ruthlessness and sheer capacity to lead and rule.” Early looks to von Mises and shrugs.
“Those who are, will sustain. Those who are not, will not. Has it not always been thus?” A statement of fact garners only a further nod from Early. Any further discussion interrupted by a knock on the heavy door.
Bertrand holds up his hand as Early begins to rise. Early, sinks back into his seat.
“When it will occur, what the specific circumstances are which will lead to it, I cannot say. But there will come a time, soon, when you’ll have to make a choice for us all. A decision only you can make.” Bertrand neither smiles nor shows any sign of emotion, neutral once more. As instructed by the Lord Commander. You must prime him, but with zero valence being placed from the words you use nor how you deliver them. This had been the admonition and final instruction.
A second knock at the door sees Bertrand rise, once more with his hand, motioning the Earl need not attend the door. Turning and crossing to the heavy and thick door, he opens it to be confronted by the Lord Commander.
Harrison can see from the stern yet relaxed look on the aging face, the face of his one-time mentee now a Senior Knight Commander, that the message has been delivered. This strange, unique and quite capable man is now primed. May all the old gods save him from what comes now. This last, this sentiment, Harrison extends to his friend and commander of The Order’s continuity team, in the form of a brief smile and nod, their eyes locked.
“Gentlemen, I must get back to Gibraltar, soonest, to meet the Aquitaine.” Harrison now motioning for Early to remain seated. Stopping him mid-rise from his seat. “Prince Robert will see me out and I’ve taken the liberty of imposing upon Carl to provide two of your people. I knew you would insist. They will be returned to you within three days.”
The Earl only nods, sinking back once more into the one comfort he’s allowed himself here in this place, this safe site in San Francisco. As Early sits back, the Lord Commander turns to Bertrand, extending his hand.
“Well, My Lord, I should think it is time you make your way to Singapore.” The Lord Commander states, shaking the hand of Count Bertrand von Mises. “I believe Carl has already arranged for your travel.”
“And so, things are afoot, once more!” Bertrand states, smilingly. Turning to bow a nod of recognition to the Earl, before turning with the Lord Commander to return up the hall to where Carl and the two men assigned to the Lord Commander’s close in security are awaiting.
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