Our Identity
Our identities confine us. They label us and dictate our behaviors, preferences, and decisions. Controlling the construction of identity is controlling us.
By focusing on identity debates without real foundation, such as identity based on race or sexuality, we weaken the identity construction of the population.
Indeed, identity is traditionally built on belonging to one's family, social milieu, city/region/state, and religion.
This slow process of identity construction, developed throughout life, freezes our way of seeing the world. While it has certainly justified many deadly conflicts, it has also allowed for social stability that has supported the construction of our civilization.
When we disrupt identity construction, we are attacking the very foundation of society. Even more serious is that by opening the question of sexuality to the most fanciful orientations, denying biological reality, and abusing young people's uncontrolled exposure to the media, we create a deeply disturbed generation, incapable of identifying with anything other than vague sexual or racial concepts.
Not only does this expose them individually to serious abuses, but it also creates a critical collective situation:
- A psychologically fragile younger generation. Their identity is built on shifting sands and they will realize it sooner or later. For those who have suffered physical mutilations, there is no other prospect than a life of suffering.
- A younger generation raised in a collective lie; how will they distinguish between truth and falsehood?
- And above all, a fundamentally unidentified younger generation, even opposed to that of their parents and grandparents, who will reject the contributions of their civilization in a block. This generation will be so without bearings that it will cling to whatever the new world order wants to give them: some of this generation will be (already are!) the armed wing of the war against peoples.