News & Views

Protests and Posting Will Not Stop the Digital Tsunami Coming, Because Unfortunately None of Us Are Willing to Give Up Convenience

We talk about freedom, but live in a world built on convenience. The truth is, resistance means more than words — it means walking away from the systems that make life easy.

BY GRANT BROWNING

I was in a conversation with friends yesterday — one of those afternoon talks that start with politics and end up somewhere between philosophy and survival. We were talking about where society’s heading — digital IDs, cashless banking, constant tracking — all packaged as “progress.” One person said, “If people really wanted to stop this, they’d go back to cash.” Another added, “Our phones are the real problem. They’ve become toxic.”

And they were both right. We already know what’s happening, and deep down, we know what needs to be done. But the truth is — no one’s willing to do it.

We’ve built our lives around convenience, not conviction. Tap-to-pay, online shopping, instant transfers, live feeds — it’s all designed to make life easier while quietly stripping away our independence one tap at a time. The system doesn’t need to force control anymore; we’ve surrendered it willingly because it’s smooth, fast, and comfortable.

We complain about digital IDs and government overreach on the very devices that make it possible. We’re fighting the system from inside the system — feeding the same machine we say we want to stop. Every scroll, every like, every online purchase tightens the chain just a little more.

The Real Way to Resist

Protesting won’t stop what’s coming. Posting won’t either. The real act of resistance is non-participation.
Take your money out of the banks. Use cash. Support your local farms and small businesses. Trade, barter, connect in person. Grow food, learn old skills, fix things, and rely on people instead of platforms. That’s how real freedom starts — not by shouting at the system, but by no longer needing it.

“Until we’re willing to trade convenience for conscience, we’ll keep calling our cage progress.”

And just as important — businesses need to start accepting cash only. That single act would send shockwaves through the system. When local communities refuse to depend on digital transactions, they take back power. The moment cash disappears, so does your freedom to buy or sell without permission. Every business that chooses to deal in real money helps preserve independence. If enough of them drew a line and said, “We accept cash — period,” the digital control grid would collapse faster than any protest could make it happen.

The Trap of Convenience

But here’s the catch: most people won’t. They’ll talk about freedom, but not if it means losing comfort. They’ll fight for independence with a debit tap, or debate digital IDs from a smartphone that tracks them every second.

And here’s the honest part — heck, even I’m using the convenience of AI right now to make sure my grammar and spelling are correct in this very article. That’s how deep the trap runs. It’s not hypocrisy; it’s reality. We’re all tangled in a web that’s too easy to use and too hard to walk away from.

We all want change, but unless we’re willing to stand together — and I mean truly together — to give up the cell phones, the live feeds, the posting, the access to Facebook, and the tap payments, we’re not stopping anything. We’re just documenting our own surrender, one upload at a time.

Food and Freedom Go Hand in Hand

The digital system doesn’t stop with money or ID. It’s wrapped around the global food chain too — from patented seeds to corporate supply lines that can be shut off with a keystroke. Real resistance means homesteading, buying local, and encouraging small-scale farming. Every backyard garden, every local trade, every community market chips away at the machine. Supporting local food isn’t just healthy — it’s revolutionary.

When you grow your own food or support a neighbour’s farm, you’re not just feeding yourself — you’re starving the system that thrives on dependency. Food and freedom are connected. Always have been.

The Digital Prison

They call it evolution. They call it innovation. But it’s really a digital prison — one we’re decorating ourselves. A world where your money is programmable, your food is traceable, your opinions are monitored, and your freedom is conditional.

We all say we want change, but it won’t come until we’re ready to unplug — not just talk about it. Until we’re willing to trade convenience for conscience, we’ll keep calling our cage “progress.”

Because the truth is, they don’t have to lock us up.
We’ve already built the walls — one download, one click, one tap at a time.

Trending

Exit mobile version