1) Get old. For rational people at least, one of the few advantages of getting old is that fear melts away. If you’ve already accepted your mortality, one naturally fears less as more and more of your life is in your past, not your future. "Beware the man who has nothing to lose," and someone nearing death does not have a heck of a lot to lose.
I understand there are some people who actually get more fearful, the older they get. I cannot understand this, but can only assume it means they have not accepted their own mortality.
Of course, there is nothing that we can intentionally do in this respect. It happens automatically. But it still needs to be recognized. Age does bring a certain perspective that can reduce fear. The world will go on in its own way without me, when my time is up. For some reason--I’m not sure why--I find that a calming thought.
2) Get poor. Again, having nothing to lose is the factor here. You can’t be threatened with having something taken from you if you don’t have much in the first place, or if it has already been stolen from you. But again, this is usually not intentionally done; more like it is done to us. One hopes for better ways to eliminate fear! But the "living frugal" movement is definitely a step in the right direction, where fear is concerned. We are owned by our possessions, in more ways than we might think.
3) Ridicule. When DHS came out with their color-coded security alerts, did anyone actually become more fearful when the alert status was high (whatever color that was)? I’m guessing that was the intention of these alerts, making us fearful; but I don’t think it worked very well. TSA is there to make us fearful and accepting of indignities; to the extent we ridicule them as child molesters and perverts, we defeat this tactic. Ridicule is one of our most important countermeasures because virtually everyone is open to hearing a good joke. I still treasure the Clinton administration, which provided a hell of a lot of material for comics to work with.
4) Arm yourself. I have mentioned this previously here and here. It’s interesting to go over this from a fear-based perspective.
One little anecdote I ran into, on a gun forum, went like this: A gun-prohibitionist lady walks up to a gun nut (maybe someone carrying openly) and says to him, "What do you need the gun for? What are you afraid of?" He replies, with a mixture of innocence and confusion, "Why should I be afraid? I have a gun!"
Probably apocryphal, but it makes a point. Guns are not primarily for killing people, as prohibitionists claim, because very few of them (except those issued to armies) have been used to kill people. Likewise, guns are not primarily for self-defense, as gun rights advocates claim, because very few of them have actually been used to defend anyone’s life. Their main function, in my opinion, is to control or remove fear. Every day I put on a gun, I feel better, more confident, more calm, less fearful. Happiness is indeed a warm gun. Likewise, I have a battle rifle not for killing deer, but because it makes me less fearful of tyrannical government action. "If they want war, they will have war!"
Fear is a double-edged sword. It cuts both ways. I think it is a good thing that Americans buy battle rifles and lots of ammo. It not only decreases their fear, but increases that of the parasites, which in turn restrains them somewhat. So, arm yourself.
5) Communicate. This is a huge one. The deterioration of the parasites’ gateways to information, with the rise of the Internet and technologies like social networking, is a tremendous factor. Any time some state-manufactured fear is brought up by someone, it can immediately be countered with reasoned argument. Over time, the overall level of fear is reduced; how much are people really worried about terrorism (outside that by the federal government) these days? Network with good folks, everyone!
6) Get busy. "Idle minds are the devil’s playground," and are also fertile grounds for the growth of fear. The more involved you are with some project or another, the less time you have to worry about something.
7) Homeschool. Get your kids out of fear-indoctrination. Enough said.
8) Break a law every day. Exercise your freedom muscles. Of course, law-breaking happens whether we intend it or not, as the laws have become innumerable. But intentionally breaking yet another petty mandate, without guilt, is a good exercise.
9) Avoid politics. Politics is based more on fear than on any other factor. I used to hold my nose and vote for one bastard because I feared the other bastard a bit more (a lot of self-deception was involved in this process). No more. They are all rotten to the core.