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Cultural Marxism is everywhere. (Read 37805 times)
Dnarever
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #810 - Jan 1st, 2024 at 8:02pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 8:00pm:
Dnarever wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 7:27pm:
A list of all the best right wing nutter groups.

The exact people who make up this garbage.



OK - shoot the messenger -
don't try to refute his intellectual writings.     Roll Eyes



If their best method is to falsely redefine those they disagree with they don't have much.

It isn't shooting the messenger it is who he is. This crap is all made up BS.
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Bobby.
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #811 - Jan 1st, 2024 at 8:09pm
 
Dnarever wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 8:02pm:
Bobby. wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 8:00pm:
Dnarever wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 7:27pm:
A list of all the best right wing nutter groups.

The exact people who make up this garbage.



OK - shoot the messenger -
don't try to refute his intellectual writings.     Roll Eyes



If their best method is to falsely redefine those they disagree with they don't have much.

It isn't shooting the messenger it is who he is. This crap is all made up BS.



So you're saying we're supposed to believe you rather
than a professor from a university who
has degrees coming out of his ears?    Undecided

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thegreatdivide
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #812 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 9:31am
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 7:07pm:
Allen Mendenhall...... an associated scholar at the Ludwig von Mises Institute......



'nuff said:  von Mises was a Libertarian  free marketeer.

"Ludwig Heinrich Edler von Mises was a Ukraine-born Austrian–American Austrian School economist, historian, logician, and sociologist. Mises wrote and lectured extensively on the societal contributions of classical liberalism and the power of consumers

Classical liberalism ("individual natural rights")  is delusional  - and is the cause of the political chaos in world affairs; and  consumers without money don't have any power...talk about having things back to front. Sad


Of course Mendenhall and his ilk will try to discredit collectivist (Marxist) well-being, by blaming "cultural" Marxism, rather than blaming the individualist culture which is responsible for the war and poverty in the world.
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Frank
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #813 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 9:44am
 
Dnarever wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 6:58pm:
Bobby. wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 1:42pm:
This article will be too intellectual for some of the posters here
but I post a small excerpt of it:


https://www.jamesgmartin.center/2019/01/cultural-marxism-is-real/



Cultural Marxism Is Real



Jan 4, 2019

Allen Mendenhall


Feminism, gender studies, critical race theory, post-colonialism, disability studies—these and other disciplines routinely get pulled through one or more of the theoretical paradigms I’ve outlined. The fact that they’re guided by Marxism or adopt Marxist terms and concepts, however, does not make them off-limits or unworthy of attention.

Which brings me to a warning: Condemning these ideas as forbidden, as dangers that corrupt young minds, might have unintended consequences. Marxist spinoffs must be studied to be comprehensively understood. Don’t remove them from the curriculum: contextualize them, challenge them, and question them. Don’t reify their power by ignoring or neglecting them.

Popular iterations of cultural Marxism reveal themselves in the casual use of terms like “privilege,” “alienation,” “commodification,” “fetishism,” “materialism,” “hegemony,” or “superstructure.” As Zubatov wrote for Tablet, “It is a short step from Gramsci’s ‘hegemony’ to the now-ubiquitous toxic memes of ‘patriarchy,’ ‘heteronormativity,’ ‘white supremacy,’ ‘white privilege,’ ‘white fragility,’ ‘and whiteness.’” He adds, “It is a short step from the Marxist and cultural Marxist premise that ideas are, at their core, expressions of power to rampant, divisive identity politics and the routine judging of people and their cultural contributions based on their race, gender, sexuality and religion.”



Just another federalist society nutter playing with unfounded cultural political nonsense.




Can you explain why you think the Federalist Society is a bunch of nutters playing with UNFOUNDED - why do you say it's unfounded? - cultural political nonsense.
What is the cultural nonsense they are playing with?
What is the political nonsense?



You are scattering peas mindlessly and eagerly in the yard, ducky, are you, pooping all over the place in short bursts.


You simply do not understand either Marxism and its concepts and vocabulary, nor the concepts and vocabulary of its critics. You only understand how to gobble peas, then poop and ... er... that's it.

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thegreatdivide
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #814 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 6:00pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 5:02pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 1st, 2024 at 12:27pm:
Where's the boundary between economic policy and culture?


One is concerned with production, consumption/allocation of resources, the other is all encompassing and concerns itself with social norms, religion, gender roles, rule of law, as well as economic ideology.  So Marxism is a subset of culture, with a definite economic foundation. 

Which is why Marx's concern to improve the lot of workers attracts my interest; the aspects of culture mentioned above have scant interest for Marxists, other than by observing  how the common man is enslaved by cultural norms

Interestingly though, consider abortion: if the state looked after unwanted babies, abortion would be 'unethical'......an example of where culture and economics meet. 

Quote:
Marxism is a set of ideas, a way of seeing and anlysing the world, so it is entirely a set of cultural phenomena.


See above. What is analyzed in Marxism is the system of allocation of  resources, a restricted subset of culture.   Which is why the phony subject of "cultural Marxism" is invented by the Right, as cover for their 'survival of the fittest' impulses. 

Quote:
"In the transition from Marx to Marxism, and in the development of mainstream Marxism itself, ......


Demonstrating the process of obfuscation - on the postulated path from Marx to "Marxism" - as cover for survival of the fittest/ natural individual rights Libertarian delusions. 

Quote:
"...the proposition of the determining base and the determined superstructure has been commonly held to be the key to Marxist cultural analysis."


Waffle; the result of trying to work out why men consciously (against natural survival of the organism instincts) want economic justice, even though Western "freedom values" ideologues  insist on every man for himself... aka neoliberal free markets, with a poverty-level 'safety net' (dole) to prevent social revolution. 



You are talking about cultural values: justice, common prosperity, etc in Marxist terms.


Well, yes,  ie, from an economic perspective.

Quote:
Cultural Marxist terms.  Marx had absolutely nothing to say about 21st century economics. Or even 20th century economics.


Of course, Marx was analyzing the political economy of his own time, ie during the onslaught of the industrial revolution in Europe.  He had to contend with the dominant economic ideology of Adam Smith's invisible hand/efficient market delusions.   

How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   

Quote:
What he was writing about was political economy with a dialectical materialist methodology -


In plain English: examining the causes of inequality and injustice in the work-place.

Quote:
.... all cultural. Economics is cultural. Values are cultural. 


Can you see your error now? Your conclusion doesn't follow from your premise, as shown above.

Your Western 'individualist' (non Marxist/collectivist) values are deluding you.





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Frank
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #815 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from? Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?

None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #816 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:06am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from?


For Marx, from his observations of the lives of the children of the poor, who were forced to worked in coal mines to support their families, rather than getting an education.

ie, forced by economic realities of the time, based on "invisible hand" market ideology.

Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time.

Quote:
None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.


The apparent contradiction explained to you, above; WHY did economic injustice and inequality exist? Certainly the 'culture' of production driven by self-interest was a factor.

Quote:
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.


So Engels supported Marx; I saw the film 'Made in Dagenham' last night; even the male unionists voted for equal pay for women in the end - and thereby changed the law of the land; they weren't hypocrites....
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« Last Edit: Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:13am by thegreatdivide »  
 
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Frank
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #817 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:18am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:06am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from?


For Marx, from his observations of the lives of the children of the poor, who were forced to worked in coal mines to support their families, rather than getting an education.

ie, forced by economic realities of the time, based on "invisible hand" market ideology.

Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time.

Quote:
None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.


The apparent contradiction explained to you, above; WHY did economic injustice and inequality exist? Certainly the 'culture' of production driven by self-interest was a factor.

Quote:
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.


So Engels supported Marx; I saw the film 'Made in Dagenham' last night; even the male unionists voted for equal pay for women in the end - and thereby changed the law of the land; they weren't hypocrites....



Cheesy Cheesy Grin Grin

That you, ducky??!!
Peas and poop.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #818 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:32am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:18am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:06am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from?


For Marx, from his observations of the lives of the children of the poor, who were forced to worked in coal mines to support their families, rather than getting an education.

ie, forced by economic realities of the time, based on "invisible hand" market ideology.

Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time.

Quote:
None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.


The apparent contradiction explained to you, above; WHY did economic injustice and inequality exist? Certainly the 'culture' of production driven by self-interest was a factor.

Quote:
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.


So Engels supported Marx; I saw the film 'Made in Dagenham' last night; even the male unionists voted for equal pay for women in the end - and thereby changed the law of the land; they weren't hypocrites....
Cheesy Cheesy Grin Grin

That you, ducky??!!
Peas and poop.


I must say I was going  to commend you - at the end of my reply to your post  (but I forgot)  -  for your attempt to debate the issues.....but I see you have now reverted to form....

I accept your concession.
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Frank
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #819 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:43am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:32am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:18am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:06am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from?


For Marx, from his observations of the lives of the children of the poor, who were forced to worked in coal mines to support their families, rather than getting an education.

ie, forced by economic realities of the time, based on "invisible hand" market ideology.

Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time.

Quote:
None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.


The apparent contradiction explained to you, above; WHY did economic injustice and inequality exist? Certainly the 'culture' of production driven by self-interest was a factor.

Quote:
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.


So Engels supported Marx; I saw the film 'Made in Dagenham' last night; even the male unionists voted for equal pay for women in the end - and thereby changed the law of the land; they weren't hypocrites....
Cheesy Cheesy Grin Grin

That you, ducky??!!
Peas and poop.


I must say I was going  to commend you - at the end of my reply to your post  (but I forgot)  -  for your attempt to debate the issues.....but I see you have now reverted to form....

I accept your concession.

You understand nothing, not even basic questions, concepts, words, history, logic.
You simply parrot the same idiocy, no matter what question you are asked.  Like a stupid bird that can only feed and poop and quack.
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Bobby.
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #820 - Jan 2nd, 2024 at 6:32pm
 
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Cultural%20Marxism

Cultural Marxism

Cultural Marxism is sometimes labeled as a conspiracy theory by people on the far left, but this definition explains how most people use the term in political conversation:

Marxism can be summed up as the interpretation that the world is best understood as a power struggle between different wealth groups (poor, middleclass, rich, bourgeoisie, proletariot, etc). Cultural Marxism is a term used to describe the idea that our society is best interpreted as being a power struggle between different identity groups or cultures(women, men, gay, straight, black, white).

Cultural Marxism is used by most people refers to a kind of behavior that looks for power imbalances in everyday culture (like asking a person where they are from, or complementing a black persons hair) and problematizing those interactions, causing people to resent others for innocuous little social misdemeanors.

Cultural Marxism assumes the worst of the actions of a supposedly powerful group by saying that their little faux-pas are really egregious examples of latent prejudice, and excuses the hatred and rudeness of the supposedly weaker group by saying that their behavior is an expression of resisting power or "asserting their personhood".

Cultural Marxists hunt relentlessly to find things to be offended about, and claim to speak on behalf of all oppressed groups, though most of the time cultural marxists are rich, priviledged, upper and middle class white college women with multicolored hair.
"Like every moral busybody across history, Cultural Marxists always come at you with this famous glint in their eye that suggests that they know better than you how you should live your life and they will make you if they get the chance."

"Cultural Marxism is the practice of interpreting what people say in the most uncharitable way."
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #821 - Jan 3rd, 2024 at 10:22am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:43am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:32am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:18am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 11:06am:
Frank wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:14am:
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 10:00am:
How else do you expose economic injustice and inequality, except by defining those terms?   




So he started with cultural, value assumptions.

Where do the 19th century concepts of justice and equality come from?


For Marx, from his observations of the lives of the children of the poor, who were forced to worked in coal mines to support their families, rather than getting an education.

ie, forced by economic realities of the time, based on "invisible hand" market ideology.

Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time.

Quote:
None of these are economic terms yet they are the foundations of Marxist economic, social, cultural analysis and programs.


The apparent contradiction explained to you, above; WHY did economic injustice and inequality exist? Certainly the 'culture' of production driven by self-interest was a factor.

Quote:
Engels was a cotton mill owner and supported Marx with the profits he made from exploiting the working class. A bunch of stupid hypocrites.


So Engels supported Marx; I saw the film 'Made in Dagenham' last night; even the male unionists voted for equal pay for women in the end - and thereby changed the law of the land; they weren't hypocrites....
Cheesy Cheesy Grin Grin

That you, ducky??!!
Peas and poop.


I must say I was going  to commend you - at the end of my reply to your post  (but I forgot)  -  for your attempt to debate the issues.....but I see you have now reverted to form....

I accept your concession.

You understand nothing, not even basic questions, concepts, words, history, logic.
You simply parrot the same idiocy, no matter what question you are asked.  Like a stupid bird that can only feed and poop and quack.


Still exposing your inability to deal with reality.

You asked: Quote:
Where does his method of dialectical materialism come from? And his theory of historical materialism?


I answered:"From Marx's own attempt to understand the economic injustice and inequality which he observed in his time."

In the face of this, you can only begin frothing at the mouth, as usual, because you don't even accept the reality of the economic injustice of children forced to work in coal mines (or people forced to live in tents, today).

'Deplorable'. 
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #822 - Jan 3rd, 2024 at 11:06am
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 2nd, 2024 at 6:32pm:


Since Frank is still frothing at the mouth (in lieu of debate),  let's see if Bobby has anything useful to contribute.

Quote:
Cultural Marxism is sometimes labeled as a conspiracy theory by people on the far left, but this definition explains how most people use the term in political conversation:


Ok, let's look at what "Cultural Marxism" means for "most  people" in "political conversation" - but we already have a problem, namely, what does the term "Marxism" (without the "Cultural" appendage) mean for most people?

Quote:
Marxism...


Ah - a definition of "Marxism" without the "cultural" appendage? 

Quote:
....can be summed up as the interpretation that the world is best understood as a power struggle between different wealth groups (poor, middleclass, rich, bourgeoisie, proletariot, etc).


That's what I explained to Frank, which resulted in his frothing at the mouth; the struggle for economic justice against injustice , eg children forced to work in coal mines during the European industrial revolution , or people forced to live in tents, in wealthy nations,  today. 

Quote:
Cultural Marxism is a term used to describe the idea that our society is best interpreted as being a power struggle between different identity groups or cultures(women, men, gay, straight, black, white).


Which is an inadequate interpretation of reality; poor whites are forced to live in tents alongside poor blacks in the US.

Quote:
Cultural Marxism is used by most people refers to a kind of behavior that looks for power imbalances in everyday culture (like asking a person where they are from, or complementing a black persons hair) and problematizing those interactions, causing people to resent others for innocuous little social misdemeanors.


Blimey - keep digging Bobby, you are indeed doing a good job of exposing the idiocies of "cultural Marxism". 

Quote:
Cultural Marxism assumes the worst of the actions of a supposedly powerful group by saying that their little faux-pas are really egregious examples of latent prejudice, and excuses the hatred and rudeness of the supposedly weaker group by saying that their behavior is an expression of resisting power or "asserting their personhood".


Note: resisting injustice IS asserting personhood.

Quote:
Cultural Marxists hunt relentlessly to find things to be offended about,


Yes, they are fools (whether LW or RW) ; true Marxists are concerned with economic injustice , while cultural Marxists fail to understand that the economic/political  system is the problem, not peoples' identities and perceived  put-downs of particular groups.

Quote:
and claim to speak on behalf of all oppressed groups, though most of the time cultural marxists are rich, priviledged, upper and middle class white college women with multicolored hair.


So they do have an awareness of oppression and injustice, but don't understand the system is at fault, as explained above. So they blame the "oppressors" rather than the system which requires the "oppressors" to maintain control of the system on behalf of the elites.   

Quote:
"Like every moral busybody across history, Cultural Marxists always come at you with this famous glint in their eye that suggests that they know better than you how you should live your life and they will make you if they get the chance."


You mean, eg, 'SJW's'  are "moral busybodies"?

Quote:
"Cultural Marxism is the practice of interpreting what people say in the most uncharitable way."


See above...thanks Bobby for making the case for us: "cultural Marxism", whether in its real or imagined manifestations, is BS.
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Bobby.
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #823 - Jan 3rd, 2024 at 2:54pm
 
Thanks Mr Divide,
you understand that cultural Marxism is real and it's not a positive concept or ideology.
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Re: Cultural Marxism is everywhere.
Reply #824 - Jan 3rd, 2024 at 3:58pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 3rd, 2024 at 2:54pm:
Thanks Mr Divide,
you understand that cultural Marxism is real and it's not a positive concept or ideology.


I understand that it has both real manifestations, eg caused by denying the egregious effects of systemic economic dysfunction (such as neoliberal markets forcing people onto the dole);  and imagined manifestations (eg blaming disadvantage on gender politics).

Like I said, cultural Marxism in all it manifestation is BS, and attempts to blame Marxism for all the ills it erroneously sheets home to Marxism.


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