Make Like Sarah Connor at the Ending of The Terminator

Is it Time to Make Like Sarah Connor at the Ending of The Terminator, and Head South?

James Smith
James SmithPublisher and Editor-in-Chief

One of the underrated lines from Terminator 2--the greatest sci-fi action sequel ever made--is when an institutionalized Sarah Connor tells her antagonist shrink Dr. Peter Silberman about the coming nuclear fire called Judgment Day, "Anybody not wearing two-million sunblock is gonna have a bad day. Get it?"


With the alt-media and X full of #WW3 talk, is 2024 the year people start stocking up on type 2 million sunblock? Or maybe a nice used Jeep to pack up with a big German Shepherd for the drive south to Mexico and Central America to avoid the coming Russian ICBM target package?


Our answer is still no: there is not going to be a post-Western GAE mass nuclear suicide by Russia-China cop. And thankfully even the 'smartest' AI is too dumb to date to be handed the keys to nuclear arsenals and Terminator factories. No matter how powerful the globalist elites' death instinct and drive to inflict social despair on us all seems...the vast majority of the people who pull the strings, particularly their billionaire element, still very much want to live. And we don't mean living out their days in some converted ICBM silo bunker in Kansas. Especially when a few are intelligent enough to realize survivors coming back from Mexico across the radioactive Great Plains with little to live for other than revenge will be hunting for their hidey holes. With similar retribution likely meted out across the Southern Hemisphere cubbyholes from New Zealand to Chile. What, you think that the Russians advertising their new Sarmat ICBMs' capability to go sub-orbital and circle over the South Pole to strike targets anywhere on Earth a few years back was a coincidence?


No, the main reason gringos especially GenZ and more Millennials will start heading South of the Border and looking even further abroad for more affordable home and lifestyle solutions won't be due to preparing like Sarah Connor for a nuclear Judgement Day, but far more mundane s--t like this:


Recent analysis by Investopedia revealed that you now need a whopping $3.4 million to cover the costs of traditional American dream milestones such as marriage, raising children and owning a home. But most Americans fall short of that target by over a million dollars. The average lifetime earnings of Americans across all education levels is closer to $2.3 million, according to Investopedia, leaving a big financial gap that’s forcing people to reassess their life goals.


One look at the attainability of a basic element of the traditional American dream — homeownership — is telling.



According to real estate brokerage Redfin, 2023 was the least affordable year for home buying on record. To buy a median-priced home, worth $408,806, with the median U.S. income $78,642, you would’ve had to spend a record 41.4% of your earnings on housing costs, up from 38.7% in 2022 and 31.0% in 2021. To buy that same home without spending more than 30% of your income — a popular rule of thumb among personal finance experts — you would need an annual salary of $109,868, according to Redfin, which is $31,226 more than the typical household makes in a year.


Or this:


Recent surveys suggest that many Americans are losing faith in the future of the nation. A 2023 survey by the Pew Research Center found at least two-thirds of Americans believe that by 2050, America will become economically weaker, less important in the world, and more politically divided.


A 2023 Wall Street Journal-NORC survey found that nearly 80% of Americans do not expect life for their children’s generation to be better than it has been for their own generation.


We'll keep the American Dream alive in the Americas. Until the freedom lovers who left for El Salvador and other places where ordered liberty is thriving return to El Gran Norte--to reclaim their birthright.