- Registrado
- 6 de Feb, 2018
I don't really disagree with you, and I think we can both agree that the root cause of the problem is the proliferation of Marxism in academia, which would very likely coincide with your dates if not even earlier. I'm not going to argue that Jewish academics of that period weren't particularly susceptible to Marxism, because they were, but that's mostly because Marxism offers such a tantalizing solution to people who are oppressed or at the bottom of social hierarchies, despite the fact that Marxism creating serious problems of its own.If you read 'School of Darkness', by Bella V. Dodd, you will see that indoctrination started early on in the Western countries around the 1910's, with a gradual takeover of all universities. This isn't a Jewish problem, this is a manufactured consent problem.
Ultimately, one that is enabled by Jews that coincidentally hits at Israelis as well. Nothing against people who just want to live their own lives, but the fact that talking about the Great Replacement is forbidden and is considered right-wing extremism is part of the problem.
The complete silencing of dissident or non-orthodox thought has always been a problem in Western societies, but it has become the worst it has been in probably an entire century and needs to be fought against. Thinking about it now, I imagine this must have been how the followers of the Greco-Roman philosophies must have felt by the late 4th Century. Their ancestors had allowed a previously reviled and heavily persecuted group become the dominant force in society, and were fighting desperately to keep what little of their institutions they had left until their eventual destruction and banning by the new faith in the Sixth Century. It's a harrowing thought, but the Great Replacement might not just be of European cultures but of European civilization itself, and I really hope it doesn't follow along the lines of the destruction of Greco-Roman civilization.