What is the root cause of rebellion and revolution? Is it a belief in oppression? A hatred for the current authority? Bad weather?
a lack of staple goods, usually
>>2695872
In most revolutions in history you can find large numbers of poor, disenfranchised, and angry men who have nothing to lose.
Other wise it's due to upper class citizens or groups who rebel against what they see as overreaching authority.
>>2695888
But masons were on both sides for many revolutions. Especially the American Revolution.
The current structure and order becomes old, out-dated, and willfully blind to prevalent dangers and issues while underestimating them. People see that as an opening to get rid of the current structure. Revolt and rebel to dismantle it, everyone gets thrown into a state of chaos. Someone manages to combine vision with the values of the old structure and resurrect it. Establish a new structure and order to the society.
>>2695894
so pretty much what the little shits antifa is trying to do?(while themselves are fucking upper-middle class & college goers) but it turns out they're all fucking lying sacks of shit.
>>2695872
A paradigm shift in reality
>>2695894
Not true. Revolutions happend often when people are relatively well off (ie = not starving) but when there is a simple idea or ennemy in common, elites being seen as degenerates. Look up the french revolution for exemple.
>>2695872
Depends there are many causes but I will break it down into two broad.
1 Is the Upper Class but not the Strongest political class decide that they want to be the Strongest group.
2 The situation of the lower class shift dramatically for the worse and enough poor people are able to effectively to communicate with others. So they express their anger through violence. This is generally only successful if it can coopted by another more organized upper class group.
>>2695872
Bourgeoisie taking the place of the degenerate nobless with the help of a few plebeians