A man takes a drink,
The drink takes a drink,
The drink takes the man.
The World is on Fire…
A man takes a drink,
The drink takes a drink,
The drink takes the man.
By: Eric
Depopulation targets the viability and credibility of the most capable and competent people walking this earth. In the sense of the word people, I mean civilizational collectives that densely populate varying geographical areas of the planet. Nations. Races. Faiths.
There is power in the phrase “Blood and Soil”. The notion that one’s identity, one’s blood, is that of others of their own race – and a nation is the continuum of that blood interlaced with an obedience to nature, nature being the land upon which the nation exists. The soil; the settlement area of the nation. The bond between Blood and Soil makes so much sense that it is dangerous. It is dangerous to those who wish to strip you of your identity. And any reference to national identity is tantamount to HATE. They call it HATE. Decades of news media, books, academic coursework materials, movies, TV shows, magazines, comic books, Broadway plays, radio broadcasts, music – all crafted by the like-minded elites, who share an agenda, to call your credibility into question. Slander, smear, obfuscate, conflate, twist and contort YOUR IDENTITY via these communication mediums as one of HATE. This has been underway for at least one hundred years and it has been directed at the same capable and competent people.
This system wants to destroy us. Never forget it.
This article is context denial at its finest. It omits the synthesis of genealogy, history, archeology, geography, race, ethnicity, heritage, culture and Ethos….
“The human drama, whether played out in history books or headlines, is often not just a confusing spectacle but a spectacle about confusion. The big question these days is, which political forces will prevail, those stitching nations together or those tearing them apart?
Here is one optimist’s reason for believing unity will prevail over disunity, integration over disintegration. In fact, I’ll bet that within the next hundred years (I’m giving the world time for setbacks and myself time to be out of the betting game, just in case I lose this one), nationhood as we know it will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global authority. A phrase briefly fashionable in the mid-20th century — “citizen of the world” — will have assumed real meaning by the end of the 21st century.
All countries are basically social arrangements, accommodations to changing circumstances. No matter how permanent and even sacred they may seem at any one time, in fact they are all artificial and temporary. Through the ages, there has been an overall trend toward larger units claiming sovereignty and paradoxically, a gradual diminution of how much true sovereignty any one country actually has.
The forerunner of the nation was a prehistoric band clustered around a fire beside a river in a valley. Its members had a language, a set of supernatural beliefs and a repertoire of legends about their ancestors. Eventually they forged primitive weapons and set off over the mountain, mumbling phrases that could be loosely translated as having something to do with “vital national interests” and a “manifest destiny.” When they reached the next valley, they massacred and enslaved some weaker band of people they found clustered around some smaller fire and thus became the world’s first imperialists.
Empires were a powerful force for obliterating natural and demographic barriers and forging connections among far-flung parts of the world. The British left their system of civil service in India, Kenya and Guyana, while the Spaniards, Portuguese and French spread Roman Catholicism to almost every continent.
Empire eventually yielded to the nation-state, made up primarily of a single tribe. China, France, Germany and Japan are surviving examples. Yet each of them too is the consequence of a centuries-long process of accretion. It took the shedding of much blood in many valleys for Normandy, Brittany and Gascony to become part of France.
Today fewer than 10% of the 186 countries on earth are ethnically homogeneous. The rest are multinational states. Most of them have pushed their boundaries outward, often until they reached the sea. That’s how California became part of the U.S. and the Kamchatka Peninsula part of Russia.
The main goal driving the process of political expansion and consolidation was conquest. The big absorbed the small, the strong the weak. National might made international right. Such a world was in a more or less constant state of war.
From time to time the best minds wondered whether wasn’t a hell of a way to run a planet; perhaps national sovereignty wasn’t such a great idea after all. Dante in the 14th century, Erasmus in the 16th and Grotius in the 17th all envisioned international law as a means of overcoming the natural tendency of states to settle their differences by force.
In the 18th century the Enlightenment — represented by Rousseau in France, Hume in Scotland, Kant in Germany, Paine and Jefferson in the U.S. — gave rise to the idea that all human beings are born equal and should, as citizens, enjoy certain basic liberties and rights, including that of choosing their leaders. Once there was a universal ideology to govern the conduct of nation toward their own people, it was more reasonable to imagine a compact governing nations’ behavior toward one another. In 1795 Kant advocated a “peaceful league of democracies.” But it has taken the events in our own wondrous and terrible century to clinch the case for world government. With the advent of electricity, radio and air travel, the planet has become smaller than ever, its commercial life freer, its nations more interdependent and its conflicts bloodier. The price of settling international disputes by force was rapidly becoming too high for the victors, not to mention the vanquished. That conclusion should have been clear enough at the battle of the Somme in 1916; by the destruction of Hiroshima in 1945, it was unavoidable.
Once again great minds thought alike: Einstein, Ghandi, Toynbee and Camus all favored giving primacy to interests higher than those of the nation. So, finally, did the statesmen. Each world war inspired the creation of an international organization, the League of Nations in the 1920s and the United Nations in the ’40s.
The plot thickened with the heavy-breathing arrival on the scene of a new species of ideology — expansionist totalitarianism – as perpetrated by the Nazis and the Soviets. It threatened the very idea of democracy and divided the world. The advocacy of any kind of world government became highly suspect. By 1950 “one-worlder” was a term of derision for those suspected of being wooly-headed naïfs, if not crypto-communists.
At the same time, however, Stalin’s conquest of Eastern Europe spurred the Western democracies to form NATO, history’s most ambitious, enduring and successful exercise in collective security. The U.S. and the Soviet Union also scared each other into negotiating nuclear-arms-control treaties that set in place two vital principals: adversary states have a mutual interest in eliminating the danger of strategic surprise, and each legitimately has a say in the composition of the other’s arsenal of last resort. The result was further dilution of national sovereignty and a useful precedent for the management of relations between nuclear-armed rivals in the future.
The cold war also saw the European Community pioneer the kind of regional cohesion that may pave the way for globalism. Meanwhile, the free world formed multilateral financial institutions that depend on member states’ willingness to give up a degree of sovereignty. The International Monetary Fund can virtually dictate fiscal policies, even including how much tax a government should levy on its citizens. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade regulates how much a nation can charge on imports. These organizations can be seen as the protoministries of trade, finance and development for a united world.
The internal affairs of a nation used to be off limits to the world community. Now the principal of “humanitarian intervention” is gaining acceptance. A turning point came in April 1991, shortly after Saddam Hussein’s withdrawal from Kuwait, when the U.N. Security Council authorized allied troops to assist starving Kurds in northern Iraq.
Globalization has also contributed to the spread of terrorism, drug trafficking, AIDS and environmental degradation. But because those threats are more than any one nation can cope with on its own, they constitute an incentive for international cooperation.
However limited its accomplishments, last month’s Earth Summit in Rio signified the participants’ acceptance of what Maurice Strong, the main impresario of the event, called “the transcending sovereignty of nature”: since the by-products of industrial civilization cross borders, so must the authority to deal with them.
Collective action on a global scale will be easier to achieve in a world already knit together by cables and air-waves. The fax machine had much to do with the downfall of tyrants in Eastern Europe. Two years ago I was assigned an interpreter in Estonia who spoke with a slight southern accent because she had learned English watching Dallas, courtesy of TV signals beamed over the border from neighboring Finland. The Cosby Show, aired on South African television, has no doubt helped erode apartheid.
The ideological and cultural blending strikes some observers as too much of a good thing. Writing in the Atlantic, Rutgers political scientist Benjamin Barber laments what he calls “McWorld.” He also identifies the countertrend, the re-emergence of nationalism in its ugliest, most divisive and violent form.
Yet Azerbaijan, Moldova, and Czechoslovakia we part of the world’s last, now deceased empire. Their breakup may turn out to be the old business of history, not the wave of the future. National self-assertiveness in the West can be mighty ugly, especially in its more extreme Irish and Basque versions. But when Scots, Quebecois, Catalans and Bretons talk separatism, they are, in the main, actually renegotiating their ties to London, Ottawa, Madrid and Paris.
They are the disputatious representatives of a larger, basically positive phenomenon: a devolution of power not only upward toward supranational bodies and outward toward commonwealths and common markets, but also downward toward freer, more autonomous units of administration that permit distinct societies to preserve their cultural identities and govern themselves as much as possible. That American buzzward empowerment – and the European one, subsidiary – is being defined locally, regionally and globally all at the same time.
Humanity has discovered, through much trial and horrendous error, that differences need not divide. Switzerland is made up of four nationalities crammed into an area considerably smaller than what used to be Yugoslavia. The air in the Alps is no more conducive to comity than the air in the Balkans. Switzerland has thrived, while Yugoslavia has failed because of what Kant realized 200 years ago: to be in peaceful league with one another, people-and peoples — must have the benefits of democracy.
The best mechanism for democracy, whether at the level of the multinational state or that of the planet as a whole, is not an all-powerful Leviathan or centralized superstate, but a federation, a union of separate states that allocate certain powers to a central government while retaining many others for themselves.
Federalism has already proved the most successful of all political experiments, and organizations like the World Federalist Association have for decades advocated it as the basis for global government. Federalism is largely an American invention. For all its troubles, including its own serious bout of secessionism 130 years ago and the persistence of various forms of tribalism today, the U.S. is still the best example of a multinational federal state. If that model does indeed work globally, it would be the logical extension of the Founding Fathers’ wisdom, therefore a special source of pride for a world government’s American constituents.
As for humanity as a whole, if federally united, we won’t really be so very far from those much earlier ancestors, the ones huddled around that primeval fire beside the river; it’s just that by then the whole world will be our valley.”
Strobe Talbott is the President of the Brookings Institution, having previously served as Deputy Secretary of State from 1994 through 2001. He entered government after 21 years as a journalist for Time. His last position there was the magazine’s Editor-at-Large and foreign affairs columnist. Prior to that, he was Washington Bureau Chief for 5 years. His earlier assignments for Time were Diplomatic Correspondent (1977-84), White House correspondent during the Ford Administration (1975-76), State Department correspondent when Henry Kissinger was Secretary of State (1974-75), and Eastern Europe correspondent for 2 years in the early 1970s. In addition to his numerous awards for writing and public service, Mr. Talbott was awarded the Norman Cousins Global Goverance Award in 1993 in part for his publication below
Recent research indicates that the invaders who had the worst impact on England were the Anglo-Saxons, rather than the Vikings, as it is widely thought.
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In this post we present and analyze an excerpt from Euripides the tragic dramatist.
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Has anything changed in the Jewhadist playbook?
Protection not allowed, ✓
No smoking cigarettes, ✓
No food allowed, Syrians must starve ✓
No guns whatsoever (for Syrians, Israelis fire at will) ✓
Shhhh! Whoa, a decade early Censorship premonition ✓
What’s that? No cats? No Sphinx? No animals (ie Syrian resistance) ✓
Thanks Donald Trump for making the Golan Heights Israel again.
P.S. Epstein/Maxwell’s web of espionage was so enormous, that it has to be shutdown …Epstein was ready to give names, he gave four names the day before the security cameras in the jail malfunctioned, both overnight security guards fell asleep on duty and Epstein was murdered likely by Mossad and/or CIA …yeah they got royalty, they got Presidents, prime ministers, judges, professors, governers, Congress, entertainment heads, big business and technology tycoons, they for men of finance, they got scientists …right as the real story begins to materialize – BOOOM –
Doors slam shut for the US. Afghanistan, while being the latest closed chapter of history for them, is in no way the last. But are the Americans capable of recognising those things as meaningful events? Do they even question why such things occur, or do they simply make up their own falsified account of events to justify what they can never admit as being failures?
Some of the things I write about here on this blog are generalised in time, some from the past and others concerning the future. Occasionally I produce a story that relates to a specific moment in time. This is one of those. It is a story on an event timed to perfection. It is a China story. China is very good at presenting such spectacles. Well, they have had thousands of years of developed culture to practice the arts of patience and timing. And they…
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The Four stages of ideological subversion
Yuri Bezmenov: Deception Was My Job
The long march through the institutions
The Frankfurt School and Critical Theory – Cultural Marxism
As I sit here writing this, there looms outside a steel grey clouded sky. That sky sits like an iron blanket upon my vantage of the trees, with their leaf-littered fingers reaching up to Heaven. Below it all likes a fundus made of grass and soil and stone, green, almost vulgar in her beauty. In my head I hear the song of the Golden Dawn, which I myself stole from YouTube because any day now some diaper-stained sissy will decide it is somehow offensive and have it banned. I’m drinking my Cumberland Farms coffee, made the way I like it, like how I like women: full-bodied, pale and sweet. Life is good. This Nature I surround myself with has formed the landscape of my dreams, inspired the measure by which I judge natural beauty. Its climes have shaped my own soul, too. Maine is a rugged State, beautiful in theory…
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That dildo commerical of an American song made me sick to my stomach – literal aural herpes
This is the Juxtaposition of EBT, Jordans, Arethra Franklin (or some other fat black lady), our pozzed flag, our virus, masks, Karen – this has to be a joke – pray tell someone is taking the piss?
This is the worse thing I’ve ever experienced it’s like stapling my cock to a burning building on rolling wheels and someone gave it a push downhill…
Rumour is that this was the beta run…
It’s all there, it’s all waiting. Of course it can be done; it depends upon ourselves.
You say: “But again, we’re scattered individuals. Everything’s against us. Governments, money, press, television – all the new forces are used against us.” All the great forces, all the material powers of the world, you say, are against you. And so they are – you’re quite right to feel that.
And I don’t underrate them, but I don’t despair and you shouldn’t despair. Because you, like I, have read something of history. You know something of the record of the achievement of Europeans. And dark as this hour is, it’s no darker, it’s not as dark as some of the hours you’ve known in European history.
When everything was cowardice, treachery, and betrayal. And when the Saracen hordes from far outside Europe swept right across that continent, and would’ve come on over our own…
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From Wikipedia, so take it with a grain of salt.
Theruling classis thesocial classof a givensocietythat decides upon and sets that society’spolitical agenda. In Marxist terms, the ruling class would be the capitalist class, those who dominate the economy, and by extension also determine the cultural norms and practices of a given society. It has also been argued that, due toglobalization, atransnational capitalist classhas emerged, one which transcends national boundaries.
Analogous to the capitalist class, other modes of production give rise to different ruling classes. Under feudalism it was the feudal lords, while under slavery it was the slave-owners. In modern societies it has been argued that a coherent ruling class cannot exist, due to there being no coherent working class.
Society, in the novel Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley, is eusocial with a…
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We took a cross country, three family trip. That broke some ground. It was Seaxling’s first long haul – first long haul for the other toddler. And holy Wōden knows I haven’t dragged myself out of New England in years.
To that end: it was a fun exercise, other than the gruel of a long, unbroken drive in the camper rented by the Carpool Captain. In crossing State lines, it became eminently clear what I’ve read; that the Tri-State area produces that quintessential New England flavour. Because I can say, passing through the Metro of Boston, there was a cloistered, ominous feeling. The men talked about the tragedy of Boston, and how that culture having been usurped is now a cudgel. Their institutes of higher learning, once a badge of honor, now a weapon of soft power. La-dee-dah. And into Connecticut where the signs of urban sprawl were still seen…
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U-S-A! U-S-A! We’re Number One!
By Paul Edwards
Source: Information Clearing House
It took America 15 years to airlift its whipped, arrogant ass out of Vietnam; in Afghanistan it took 20. All the young men and women our diseased, criminal “leaders” doomed to be killed, mangled, or commit suicide in or after those fake, bullshit “wars” were, in effect, shit-canned by them like rotten meat. Trillions that should have educated, inspired, and nurtured them were wasted and stolen by our rabid, raping Capitalist War Machine.
After 20 years of blustering, pious deception, colluded in by the hillbilly ninnies laughingly referred to as our government, led by four despicable Presidents—as contemptible a set of moral and spiritual monsters as could be dredged up from the foetid latrines of history—this hideous charade can be seen for what it was: a brazen scam to engorge our Death Merchants with blood money.
The…
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These are incredible research projects!
Since the 550s, following the collapse of the Rouran Empire (in Chinese characters 柔然, pronounced róu rán), the Türks (in Chinese characters突厥, pronounced tūjué), a nomadic people, came to prominence (552 AD) to the north of China, then further, after defeating the Hephthalite Empire (in Chinese characters 嚈哒, pronounced yàndā), fast becoming a highly influential military power in the middle section of the Silk Road network.
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This post is a presentation of various recent genetic researches that attempt to answer crucial questions about Human Evolution in Europe.
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(Warning, political opinion follows. Beyond these parentheses lie little in the way of fluff, for those of my readers unsympathetic to far Right of Centre thinking. Persist at your leisure following this caveat.)
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<p
Is that White Boy Summer the kids keep telling about over yet? I don’t know about you, but I didn’t feel a damn thing, other than the lateness of the hour at hand. It was hot, and it feels suspiciously, between bills and the Eternal News Cycle, that my privilege, which is White, was indeed heavy.
A few things have brought me to this crux. The first is YouTube. Of late, I’ve listened to a Lovecraft here, a Howard there. Audiobooks. A good friend turned me their way. In so doing the YouTube Algorithm reminded me of a song I listened to in my teens. “Nobody’s Real,” by Rob Zombie’s brother Powerman 5000. Yes…
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While Africa was being lost, Aetius was busily engaged in defending Gaul against the encroachments of the Salian Franks in the north, and the Visigoths and Burgundians in the south.
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This is great ⚡⚡
By Peter Koenig
Source: Dissident Voice
The Globalists have semi-clandestinely introduced some kind of “covid-Martial Law” that overrules everything that is an otherwise Constitutional Right. We are in most of the western world a direct dictatorship. In most countries the Constitutional Amendment from “Democracy” to Dictatorship has happened clandestinely or at least semi-clandestinely. That’s what dictators do. Most of the people have no idea. Many of those who do know, don’t agree. They launch initiatives for new laws – that fall by the way side, because they have no teeth under a Martial Law-broken Constitution.
In Switzerland, the situation is slightly different, better of sorts. The Confederation Helvetica (CH) has a semi-direct Democracy. With 50,000 signatures, scrupulously verified for their validity, Swiss citizens can launch a referendum against a specific law. The referendum may eventually come to a popular vote, and a government/Parliament let law may be overruled. Though, this…
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#fear
8-24-2021
Pushing and Instigating Fear
General George S. Patton, Jr.
Ahead of his time – yes he was, although he believed that he had been reincarnated many times before. The worlds of George Patton ring as true today as when he said them during World War II. I doubt that many adults even know who he was?
Many of his sayings have been common place over the years and most of us probably never knew their origin.
“Better to fight for something than to live for nothing.” Is another Patton quote.
In our society there are too many people who just exist on the generosity of others until that money tap is turned off, they are takers or arm chair quarterbacks. Patton had something to say about them, “No good decision was ever made in a swivel chair.”
Politicians and world leaders have convinced many people that the COVID-19 virus…
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8-25-2021
America is in a Tight Spot
We have finally come to the point in time where the Democratic leadership of our nation has placed America in a precarious position on the world stage and in history. The hunger for power and more power have sent our nation into crisis mode.
As noted by prominent politicians during the campaigns and after the 2016 presidential election “Elections have Consequences”. Many of those consequences were a spree of hateful and disrespectful actions, words and events that forever changed the climate of American politics. We saw allegation after allegation leading to impeachment after impeachment all because of the threatened loss of power.
The culmination of those events came during the 2020 presidential election where rules were ignored, laws were broken and the system of choosing a president was seriously disrupted. Once again we see that “Elections have Consequences” as a democratically controlled Legislative…
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Another variation of the Political Organization Problem pertains to Technology affecting how various artforms are conducted and how people discuss and critique them. Life imitates art, it is often said, and the type of Total Mobilization being employed affects the artforms in themselves. Total Mobilization of Production for Profit focuses on what sells based on popularity according to the Incentives of Supply and Demand. Total Mobilization of Production for Utility, meanwhile, follows a similar set of parameters beyond yielding various subcultures and fandoms within a prevailing pop culture. Art itself is treated as ways for consumerist curators to comfortably visit museums to see works of art from centuries past and for less-than-voluntary almsgiving to the masses on the other as expressions of the Austrian School’s conception of Marginal Utility. Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich von Hayek really did not care how abstract any work of art looks, preferring to…
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The Introduction of global warming/climate change meme by the UN in 1992, called Agenda 21. The United Nations described Agenda 21 as follows:
“Agenda 21 is a comprehensive plan of action to be taken globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the United Nations System, Governments, and Major Groups in every area in which human impacts on the environment.
Agenda 21, the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, and the Statement of principles for the Sustainable Management of Forests were adopted by more than 178 Governments at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 3 to 14 June 1992.
The Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) was created in December 1992 to ensure effective follow-up of UNCED, to monitor and report on implementation of the agreements at the local, national, regional and international levels. It was agreed that a five year review of…
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BlackRock Lives Matter
In my previous post, I covered the obvious roles of the World Economic Forum and Council on Foreign Relations in the Great Reset/Agenda 2030/17 SDGs, so I want to focus on Larry Fink and BlackRock.
From the website:
BlackRock is one of the world’s leading providers of investment, advisory and risk management solutions.
BlackRock offers a range of solutions — from rigorous fundamental and quantitative active management approaches aimed at maximizing outperformance to highly efficient indexing strategies designed to gain broad exposure to the world’s capital markets. Our clients can access our investment solutions through a variety of product structures, including individual and institutional separate accounts, mutual funds and other pooled investment vehicles, and the industry-leading iShares® ETFs.
The foundation of BlackRock’s business is our belief that our clients’ needs are of…
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Non sono ispirata da questo popolo
demente e incosciente.
Non sono disperata
da questa gente ingrata.
Non sono ingannata
da questo governo scellerato.
Non sono pronta per bloccare la ruota.
Non ho pietà
per questi diavoli quà.
Si farà, quando sarà
per adesso ce tocca d’aspettà!
Natalia Castelluccio
Source – journal-neo.org
Much of the world is shocked by the apparent incompetence…
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By Edward Curtin
Source: Behind the Curtain
History teaches us that eventually the fog of propaganda, no matter how thick and unrelenting, is dissipated by the sun of truth.
Not really: By truthtellers such as Michel Chossudovsky.
It often takes decades or much longer for that to happen and even then it takes openness of mind and spirit to accept it in all its disturbing reality, for propaganda often enters into the deepest recesses of the mind and soul and many find they must forever defend it even when it is patently exposed. Even if the truth is finally accepted, however, the damage has been done.
Presently, we are far along the path to worldwide totalitarianism as a result of the corona crisis, what is euphemistically called the “New Normal.” AsC. J. Hopkins, a wise analyzer of this pathological development, has said:
We have watched as the New…
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The long march through the institutions(German:der lange Marsch durch die Institutionen) is a slogan coined byCommuniststudent activistRudi Dutschkearound 1967to describe his strategy for establishing the conditions for revolution: subverting society by infiltrating institutions such as the professions. The phrase “long march” is a reference to the prolonged struggle of theChinese communists, which included a physicalLong Marchof their army across China.
The main influence on Dutschke’s thinking is commonly thought to be the work of Italian communistAntonio Gramsciwho, while imprisoned byMussolini, wrote aboutcultural hegemonyand the need for a “war of position” to establish the conditions for a revolutionary “war of maneuver.”Degroot also identifiesErnst Blochas a major influence.Bloch met Dutschke atBad Bollin 1968 and admired his integrity and determination, qualities that he had written about in ‘The Principle…
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Submitted by Dan Winchester
Within the last week, Taliban forces have taken advantage of our withdrawal to sweep across the entire country. The New York Times mournfully compares the US leaving Afghanistan to the betrayal at the end of the Vietnam war in 1975. But that claim is misleading. The Taliban do now control most of Afghanistan, but their success doesn’t parallel that of North Vietnam. The fall of Saigon was the culmination of a spring offensive by the North Vietnamese army against that of the South, which had a real army (in spite of our supply embargo). There was no such offensive in Afghanistan. The Afghan army was a fake army that “collapsed under pressure” without a shot being fired. The Taliban didn’t “win” militarily: it was unopposed.
There’ve been several articles in papers of record trying to explain the Taliban’s sudden, unexpected “win.” Most of them…
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Chris MacIntosh has an article at zerohedge Global warming or cooling? Excerpts in italics with my bolds.
Wouldn’t it be ironic that instead of the planet-warming over the next 30 years, it actually went into a cooling phase?
When we first heard of sunspot activity and forecasting climate based on the level of solar spot activity we thought this was pixyland stuff.
However, when we “opened our minds” and started to dig deeper we realized there was something going on here. Make your own minds up. We aren’t trying to change anyone’s view but rather encourage you to open your perspectives.
You might like to read this:
“THE NEXT 30 YEARS WILL BE COLD,” SAYS CLIMATE SCIENTIST DR. WILLIE SOON
And this:
NEW PAPER USES AI TO PREDICT THE SUNSPOT CYCLES: LOW SOLAR ACTIVITY UNTIL 2050
Frankly, I’m no scientist but I ran a VC firm for some years
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‘Pentagon has no idea how much US military equipment seized by Taliban — spokesman’ – TASS
The title of this TASS piece could easily have been shortened to ‘Pentagon simply has no idea’. But Russians might consider that to be undiplomatic. I harbour no such qualms.
A Pentagon to Taliban respectful request – “Please may we have our tanks and trucks back,” just doesn’t seem to work for me.
Anyway, if things turn out as I expect, those weapons will mostly be used by a reformed Afghan army – with Taliban blessing. What would they want with such things anyway? They are mostly rugged mountain people who will want to revert to their natural lifestyle once things settle down and they can leave other matters of national security to a properly (not Western) trained professional and potentially much smaller military that the…
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Thanks to ‘The long march through the institutions‘ everything from nursery to university has been inflitrated and is almost completely controlled by ‘Cultural Marxists‘. The result of this combined with a ‘Cultural Marxists‘ entertainment and news industry is, that most people become something like brainwashed drones (NPCs). People that “mistakenly assessing their ability as much higher than it really is” or in other words, people who think very highly of themselves and their point of views (programming).
This is what the people in power/ruling class want and one of democracy’s biggest weakness! Drones that happeily sells their childrens future for material goods, annual vacations to sh-thole countries and a pat on the back.
The Frankfurt School and Critical Theory–Cultural Marxism
The Four stages of ideological subversion
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