September 16, 2025

Martin Rørbye
Young Clergyman Reading
Tuesday:
What is the European future? | September 16, 2025

Young Clergyman Reading
The European future much like the future of humanity is heading towards one point: the close of the Kali Yuga, but Europe will face its own particular and parochial challenges and in my view both Europe and Asia are dying out, in that they will not have enough people to go around and this the economic and material circumstances of both of those regions will slowly worsen as a function of time. Indeed, I believe that there's a very distinct possibility that artificial intelligence will replace the European populations first, followed by the Asian populations. It's harder for me to describe the Asian future, because Asia is quite frankly and obviously a larger continent in terms of actual size and population, and there is also a much wider population differentiation in Asia: there are for instance many regions that seem quite resistant to large scale population fluctuation; whereas Europe seems doomed to lose most of its population. But I have covered the Asian future in a previous post. I do want to again just try to express my view that the future is something that can be hard to describe as well as the fact that the person attempting to describe the future is more often than not biased in one direction or another. I am surely biased, and I would like to admit that Europe is a continent that I have very strong feelings towards and some of those feelings are positive, while some of them are negative. I also need to clarify that I harbor no ill will towards the populations of Europe or any other part of the world. I simply believe that in the material domain, Europe and the western world at large have made the biggest strides towards the principles of the humanist axiom, or rather they have gone the furthest length in promoting the humanist axiom and imposing on their own population the humanist axiom, as well as promoting it aboard through colonization and imperialism. Of course, the contemporary power base, the nation-state, is a very European construct that has spread across the world like a wildfire, and today there are only very few corners of the world that haven't fallen victim to this modern and diseased construction. So, yes while there are many things I like and appreciate about Europe and European civilization, it stands clear to me and my conscience that Europe is a continent that has brought on the wrath of the creators divine vengeance more so than other parts of the world, and to that extent you must understand that the the wrath is well deserved. What we, most people, refer colloquially to as "civilization" is very much based on Eurocentric notions of civilization and civilized life, and this isn't merely the case with the nation state: this is the case with how cities are constituted, and how buildings are constructed, how governments are constituted and how they reign, and how people relate to each other. I do need to add that The United States of America has been the driving force for change since at least 1945, but also before that. I don't include North America in this section, and that is simply because it is too early to tell about the potential future of the Americas (both North and South America). Of course, Europe wasn't always the mother load of progress, as proponents of the humanist axiom would put it, but I would say that since at least the age of exploration, Europe has been the driver for change, up until 1945, as I previously mentioned. Before the age of exploration, the 14–15th centuries, many Asian civilizations drove the change, but there was no such thing as nation-states at that time, so I will simply refer to them as Sino, Indo, and Arab civilizations. Of course, ancient China does have a certain history, but I don't think it would be quite accurate to refer to pre-1925 China as a "nation-state". Sun Yat Sen was really the father of the modern Chinese nation. Do note that it took until the death of the self-proclaimed emperor of China Yuan Shikai in 1916 for the modern revolution to really create the ripe conditions for a modern nation-state, but Sun Yat Sen had been working on that since at least the 1880's.
What then are the great material challenge's that Europe is facing today? Well, as I've mentioned previously both here and in other posts: the population of Europe is slowly dying out and since the population base is so much smaller in Europe than in say Asia, the material decline will be at the same rate, but it will devastate the economic base faster than the decline in Asia. Well, that's not true either, but a population fall will make Europe rapidly less powerful, but on top of that it is also the case that Europe has been out of power since at least the end of WW2. All in all, I can see no future where the material circumstances should improve in Europe, unless the revolutionary elite allows for large scale immigration into Europe of primarily Africans, but the political base for this remains very weak, and immigrants as a long term solution seems rather unsustainable. Can anything be done to change this? No, in my mind since we are living in the era of the Kali Yuga, there's is no reason to believe that these conditions should come to improve: it is simply ordained by the creator, all of our Jehovah, that Europe and Asia should become depopulated, and even if there are men around at the close of the Kali Yuga, they will only be men of ascendant rank. Of course, in my view most men of ascendant rank are going to be in Africa in the future and that is already the case, but you should read my posts about Africa and Asia if you wish to find out more about my reasons for that statement. There are also of course many political issues facing Europe, such as the inception of the European Union, an organization that can only be thought of as an extra-state, that is to say an organization that acts like a state outside most other states. In reality, the European Union can be labeled a confederation, and it is not entirely unlikely that the European Union at some point becomes an independent state on its own: a United States of Europe, but this is another political move that would simply accelerate the decline and the inevitable outcome that Europe should feel the wrath. Again, I do need to clarify that the wrath upon Europe and other parts of the world is not something that is intended to inspire evil; the wrath is intended to inspire love.
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| Tara (female buddhist deity) – तारा |
Reginald Drax – September 16, 2025.

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