One of my first Sowell books that I read was one that I thought described the woke cancer rather well. I thought it was written the year before, in 2017, or something.
Turns out, it was from 1995. Just how long as has this been going on?
The 60s was just the public test. The decay started as soon as exiled jewish academics (critical theorists) from Europe found homes in radical universities in the US, which happened in the 30s. Following that, the decay occurred quietly in the academic realm. One example being the lawsuit against Harvard for capping jewish admits.
Yes, and there were anti-communist elements fighting it. That effort collapsed once jewish elements in academia, entertainment, business, and politics all began to mobilize in unison.
Yeah, a lot of stuff from Yuri Bezemov sounds fascinating.
That said, I'm a bit skeptical about him because sometimes it sounds as if he's just echoing standard right-wing talking points, at least those of the time. For example, I don't think that Medicare was part of "demoralization", whether or not you think that such government programs are good or bad.
One of my first Sowell books that I read was one that I thought described the woke cancer rather well. I thought it was written the year before, in 2017, or something.
Turns out, it was from 1995. Just how long as has this been going on?
The 60s was just the public test. The decay started as soon as exiled jewish academics (critical theorists) from Europe found homes in radical universities in the US, which happened in the 30s. Following that, the decay occurred quietly in the academic realm. One example being the lawsuit against Harvard for capping jewish admits.
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/3/1/99
Commie ideological poison existed in the US before ww1.
Yes, and there were anti-communist elements fighting it. That effort collapsed once jewish elements in academia, entertainment, business, and politics all began to mobilize in unison.
Yeah, a lot of stuff from Yuri Bezemov sounds fascinating.
That said, I'm a bit skeptical about him because sometimes it sounds as if he's just echoing standard right-wing talking points, at least those of the time. For example, I don't think that Medicare was part of "demoralization", whether or not you think that such government programs are good or bad.
The amount of taxes you have to pay for subpar service is pretty demoralizing. Medicare is all the worse bits of insurance, run by the government.
Right, but that's not the 'demoralization' he talks about.