Apparently not, writes Andrew Montford here.
Category Archives: Culture
The Unholy Essence of Qu**r
Jordan Peterson speaks with Logan Lancing.
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with author, speaker, and founder of ItsNotinSchools.com, Logan Lancing. They discuss the deceptive terminology of the postmodern Left and how the linguistic game hides a severe lack of substance, the true heart of Marxism as a theology, the indoctrination of our children at the institutional level, and the sacrifices it will take to truly right the ship.
Logan Lancing is an author, speaker, and the founder of ItsNotinSchools dot com. He is best known for his public lectures on critical race theory, culturally relevant pedagogy, and queer theory. Lancing’s website explains what these “woke” theories are, identifies where they come from, and exposes how they show up in children’s classrooms nationwide.
This episode was recorded on July 30th, 2024
Snippets:
The Left have the social and emotional levers. We have kittle defence against these, and they are rusty and dusty.
Resentful, hedonistic and power-mad against everyone else.
“Good People Must Not Be Silenced!”: Jordan Peterson’s Call to Leaders at ARC Forum
26-minute video.
Peterson bases his talk on the story of Jonah. He essentially says: “If you think the cost of speaking up when you know you should speak up is too high, and you remain silent, just wait till you see, and feel, the cost of not speaking up when you could have.”
What Ludwig von Mises Meant by “Democracy”
Article by Ryan McMaken.
Excerpt:
“Democracy” is one of those terms that is essentially useless unless the one using the word first defines his terms. After all, the term “democratic” can mean anything from small-scale direct democracy to the mega-elections we see in today’s huge constitutional states. Among the modern social-democratic Left, the term often just means “something I like.”
The meaning of the term can also vary significantly from time to time and from place to place. During the Jacksonian period, the Democratic party—which at the time was the decentralist, free-market, Jeffersonian party—was called “the Democracy.” By the mid twentieth century, the term meant something else entirely. In Europe, the term came to take on a variety of different meanings from place to place.
For our purposes here, I want to focus on how one particular European—Ludwig von Mises—used the term.
Although many modern students of Mises are often highly skeptical of democracy of various types, it is clear that Mises himself used the term with approval. But, Mises used the word in a way that was quite different from how most use it today. The Misesian view contrasts with modern conceptions of a “democracy” in which majority rule is forcibly imposed upon the whole population. Because modern democratic states exercise monopolistic power over their populations, there is then no escape from this “will of the majority.”
Misesian democracy is something else altogether.
Mises’s vision of democracy must be understood in light of his support for unlimited secession as a tool against majoritarian rule. For Mises, “democracy” means the free exercise of a right of exit, by which the alleged “will of the majority” is rendered unenforceable against those who seek to leave.
Continue reading here.
PsyWar: Enforcing the New World Order | Dr. Robert Malone
Malone gives a talk to the Mises institute, in the course of which he introduces his new book with the same title.
Prelude to ‘Lohengrin’
One of my favourite music pieces
This (mostly) serene yet powerful and profound piece of music was composed by Richard Wagner sometime between 1845 and 1848.
Here it is, with an orchestra conducted by Simon Rattle (9 minutes).
Here‘s the Wikipedia entry on the whole opera.
Here‘s the synopsis on the same page.
Summary of the synopsis:
The people of the Brabant are divided by quarrels and political infighting; also, a devious hostile power left over from the region’s pagan past is seeking to subvert the prevailing monotheistic government and to return Brabant to pagan rule. A mysterious knight, sent by God and possessing superhuman charisma and fighting ability, arrives to unite and strengthen the people, and to defend the innocent noblewoman Elsa from a false accusation of murder, but he imposes a condition: the people must follow him without knowing his identity. Elsa in particular must never ask his name, or his heritage, or his origin. The conspirators attempt to undermine her faith in her rescuer, to create doubt among the people, and to force him to leave.
How the Bible Explains Modern American Politics
And modern European politics.
Article, by David Deming, here. Basically, it’s about Cain and Able.
Lessons from Watership Down: What Rabbits Can Teach the Church
Article by Christian Leithart.
From the conclusion:
The way to keep our senses sharp, says Hauerwas, is to constantly remind ourselves of danger through telling true stories. For the church, these true stories are about suffering, death, and resurrection. This is the good news with which we transform culture and bring life to the cities of men. A Christian—or a rabbit—can never be complacent. As the agents of God in the world, we too are called to take up the cross.
Reappropriating Feminism, Maternity, and the Woman’s Role
In this video, “Dr. Jordan Peterson sits down with author and columnist Mary Harrington. They discuss how women contributed to civil society before joining the workforce, the fatal flaw of a male-dominated system, the two fundamental reproductive strategies, the commodification of female sexuality, and the utility of radical loyalty and solidarity between partners.
Mary Harrington is an editor for UnHerd and the author of “Feminism Against Progress.” Harrington also runs a weekly Substack, “Reactionary Feminist.”
This episode was recorded on July 3rd, 2024.”
Jordan Peterson: “The West Was Built On The Idea Of Sacrifice”
And not on “power”, as the postmodernists insist. Speech on Youtube here.