Dawkins being a "progressive" of his day used to fairly uncharitably attack and criticize low-status Christian conservatives both from the standpoint of their being Christian and being conservative. They resisted the movement of the progressive Zeitgeist. Now the Zeitgeist has moved on as Dawkins put it, and he has not chosen to move with it and as such has condemned himself:
Thomas Henry Huxley, by the standards of his times, was an enlightened and liberal progressive. But his times were not ours, and in 1871 he wrote the following:
No rational man, cognizant of the facts, believes that the average negro is the equal, still less the superior, of the white man. And if this be true, it is simply incredible that, when all his disabilities are removed, and our prognathous relative has a fair field and no favor, as well as no oppressor, he will be able to compete successfully with his bigger-brained and smaller-jawed rival, in a contest which is to be carried out by thoughts and not by bites. The highest places in the hierarchy of civilization will assuredly not be within the reach of our dusky cousins.
It is a commonplace that good historians don’t judge statements from past times by the standards of their own… Had Huxley… been born and educated in our time, he would have been the first to cringe with us at his Victorian sentiments and unctuous tone. I quote them only to illustrate how the Zeitgeist moves on.
Were he dead he probably would have received the benefit of the doubt as he gave Huxley: "of course such a dedicated progressive, were he alive, would believe the things we dedicated progressives believe today". But since he isn't, he can freely be judged according to the standards of modern progressives: "a dedicated progressive ought to see things as we do now, and if you don't you are no dedicated progressive". Too bad, so sad.
He's been on the right side of many issues, including Islam.
People are complicated.
I have great Strange New Respect for Glenn Greenwald, because of his fearless fight against censorship and totalitarian control, even though I used to despise him for what I still think was his inexcusable response to Charlie Hebdo.
For me at least Greenwald is a bit of a special case, because living in Brazil (and I believe being a Brazilian citizen) he doesn't participate in Western politics and therefore is a more "purist" commentator on them.
My view of him would be quite different if he said all of what he says but then tweeted out "but I'm still 'Ridin' with Biden' because we gotta get the Orange Man out of office" like others who I have no respect for.
Separately, but simultaneously, we can also enjoy the irony of his being a leftist yet still being caught up in the blender of Cultural Revolution insanity.
It is all exactly as predicted in Red Symphony - in particular as in the third quoted paragraph below when the bourgeois realizes that the Revolution will also consume HIM!
Again he writes, “we shall create and multiply free Masonic lodges… absorb into them all who may become or who are prominent in public activity, for in these lodges we shall find our principle intelligence office and means of influence…. The most secret political plots will be known to us and will fall under our guiding hands…We know the final goal…whereas the goyim have knowledge of nothing…” (Protocol 15) In his interrogation, Rakovsky says that millions flock to Freemasonry to gain an advantage. “The rulers of all the Allied nations were Freemasons, with very few exceptions.”
However, the real aim is “create all the required prerequisites for the triumph of the Communist revolution; this is the obvious aim of Freemasonry; it is clear that all this is done under various pretexts; but they always conceal themselves behind their well known treble slogan [Liberty, Equality, Fraternity]. You understand?” (254) Masons should recall the lesson of the French Revolution. Although “they played a colossal revolutionary role; it consumed the majority of Masons…” Since the revolution requires the extermination of the bourgeoisie as a class, [so all wealth will be held by the Illuminati in the guise of the State] it follows that Freemasons must be liquidated.
When this secret is revealed, Rakovsky imagines “the expression of stupidity on the face of some Freemason when he realizes that he must die at the hands of the revolutionaries. How he screams and wants that one should value his services to the revolution! It is a sight at which one can die…but of laughter!” (254)
What specifically makes this schadenfreude?
Dawkins being a "progressive" of his day used to fairly uncharitably attack and criticize low-status Christian conservatives both from the standpoint of their being Christian and being conservative. They resisted the movement of the progressive Zeitgeist. Now the Zeitgeist has moved on as Dawkins put it, and he has not chosen to move with it and as such has condemned himself:
Were he dead he probably would have received the benefit of the doubt as he gave Huxley: "of course such a dedicated progressive, were he alive, would believe the things we dedicated progressives believe today". But since he isn't, he can freely be judged according to the standards of modern progressives: "a dedicated progressive ought to see things as we do now, and if you don't you are no dedicated progressive". Too bad, so sad.
Moldbug wrote a monograph about this subject back in 2007, if you can stand his somewhat long-winded and meandering writing style.
He was on the right side of Elevatorgate so he'll always have my respect.
He's been on the right side of many issues, including Islam.
People are complicated.
I have great Strange New Respect for Glenn Greenwald, because of his fearless fight against censorship and totalitarian control, even though I used to despise him for what I still think was his inexcusable response to Charlie Hebdo.
For me at least Greenwald is a bit of a special case, because living in Brazil (and I believe being a Brazilian citizen) he doesn't participate in Western politics and therefore is a more "purist" commentator on them.
My view of him would be quite different if he said all of what he says but then tweeted out "but I'm still 'Ridin' with Biden' because we gotta get the Orange Man out of office" like others who I have no respect for.
We enjoy his discomfort. Thus schadenfreude.
Separately, but simultaneously, we can also enjoy the irony of his being a leftist yet still being caught up in the blender of Cultural Revolution insanity.
It is all exactly as predicted in Red Symphony - in particular as in the third quoted paragraph below when the bourgeois realizes that the Revolution will also consume HIM!
http://www.rexdeus.com/wp/secret-societies/freemasons-must-die-red-symphony/