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SocialismJuly 22, 2022
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Exclusive With Anti-Woke Scholar James Lindsay (Part 2): 'Marxists Think They're Building Heaven on Earth'
Ladies and gentlemen, as promised, here is the second and final part of my tremendous interview with Dr. James Lindsay. In the first part, we talked primarily about domestic issues in education--the wokifying of academia. However, in the second part, we branched out, looking beyond the academy and discussing the intricate and insidious plot to bring down the Western world on behalf of a Marxist Utopian vision of a future that lives happily in the demented minds of a few very powerful, quite sadistic people. Enjoy.
"Nikola Tesla said, 'You will live to see man-made horrors beyond your comprehension.' We are at that point in history."
~Dr. James Lindsay
So, you do believe the DEI, CRT, and queering of the children are all being orchestrated by a particular group or a complicated web of people without a designated leader?
Yes. I think itβs probably closer to the second of those things, but I donβt think that the number of heads is as many as people fear. And certainly, for example, if Blackrock alone lost the ability to do proxy voting or something like that with their stocks, or if ESG was found to violateβas attorneys general are starting to give guidanceβfiduciary trust itβs easy for a corporation to turn around a sue over being forced into ESG compliance, all of a sudden, a lot of this stuff is going to start to collapse very, very quickly. So, you have a relatively small group of people who have that much power, that much of a hand on the wheel. Schwab and whoever the top brass over at the World Economic Forum, thatβs one. The leaders of the World Bank, thatβs another. The UN is a weird entity. How itβs binding to anything is not at all clear to me, so I canβt answer about that. Bill Gates has his hands somewhere up there. Some of these other foundations are big enough to where you have to start asking questions: Rockefeller Foundation, Tides Foundationβthese huge Big Money interests, and Iβm just naming two, not to leave any of the others out. There are plenty. We can name the Open Society Foundation [β¦], so Soros has hands on the wheel, as well, although his hands are different. Heβs kind of frenemies with these people. [β¦] But yeah, thereβs a relatively small number of peopleβLarry Fink, of course, I shouldnβt have left him out. Whoever it is on the board at Vanguard because nobody knows who that is, which is its own huge mystery.
What about the numerous individuals who we know are linked to these organizations and are serving in government? Should they be targeted, too?
Yes, but much less, but still yes is the answer. So, knocking out Trudeau doesnβt achieve very much because theyβre going to stick another one of their puppets in there. But flipping Trudeauβbecause he thinks heβs a rat whoβs going to go to prisonβto betray them, in other words, to spill his guts about all of it because, hey, you know what, Justin, weβll give you amnesty, weβll fly you home to Cuba or whatever, weβll give you all the protection you need for the rest of your life, all you have to do is tell us whatβs really going on here, and youβre out scot-free. That comes when the conditions are such that it looks like this thing might toppleβthey say thatβs when the rats start to jump shipβso targeting them and making the pressure be on them so that decision weighs more and more heavily on their mind all the time.
Big corporate leaders are going to be in that listβthese kinds of weird people who are deep into it like John Kerry and Al Gore. Probably, theyβre never going to give up any information whatsoever, but keeping the pressure on, especially, the weaker of the puppetsβbecause this is how you knock down a cartel. This is what weβre dealing with. This is how RICO works. You start with lower-level guys, you bring them in, you make a deal, you get them to talk, you go for a higher-level guy, you bring him in, you make a deal, you get him to talkβlike the dominos until you get the head. This is how you knock down a cartel.
There are, actually, legislative maneuvers, though, right here that could severely curtail this cartelβs ability to do the damage that itβs doing, which would be [β¦] more transparency in proxy voting, rethinking everything about how we do passive investment index funds, putting ESG on blast. [β¦] So, there are things we can do outside of just going after the beast itself to limit its range and reach: breaking up these huge investment firms through anti-trust, investigating the criminal conspiracy between them that the World Economic Forum is facilitating. These are all different strategic things that could take place.
Making it so that the federal government or the United Nations has little or nothing to say about how any given local municipality is going to run its school. Just a very simple thing as far as the federal Department of Education, which is a huge problem because it largely takes dictation from the United Nations, especially when there are Democrats in charge of it. A very simple thing would be to pass a law through Congress that there will be some apportioning of federal education dollars, weβll keep the whole federal education dollar thing going, but the federal education dollars will go directly to the state Departments of Education [β¦] under some apportioning mechanism that weβll assume can be designed in some relatively fair way, and via tenth amendment, it can dictate nothing to the states in terms of how they use that money. Itβs up to the states to determine. That would cut so much head of the dragonβthatβs like, not a head, itβs like lopping an entire arm off the frigginβ dragon. It can still fly and breathe fire and do other things, but thatβs literally lopping off an arm. [β¦] Now, of course, they could capture state governments, tooβitβs not a perfect solutionβbut at that point, youβve now severed the line going to the United Nations. California has to go cut a deal directly with the UN to adopt its policies. Whereas thirty other states might say, βYou know what, weβre not doing UN crap.β All the comprehensive sex ed stuff is a direct UN program, by the way, that was finalized in 2004. Thatβs where itβs all come in. Thatβs where all that guidance comes from. So, these accountability lines can actually be severed in various ways that actually does a massive amount of damage without necessarily killing the beast.
You spoke on a separate occasion about the creation of the useless class, but if the goal is the Marxist Utopia, how will production occur if the lower classes are made literally useless?
There will be lots of production: robots. Robots will do the production for the vast majority of people. This is actually the vision that they have that theyβre afraid of. It is that automation is reaching a point using AI and some other technology that they to power it to where 80% of the population will not be employable because itβs not only cheaper and easier but safer and less, in a sense, dehumanizing to have robots do everything.
So, [β¦] you should look up, when you get the chance, the Qingdao Port in China. [β¦] Qingdao Port is the most efficient port on earth, and it has zero employees, and it can unload container ships and get all of the pieces either to rail or to truck with zero employees, zero people, four times more efficiently than the next most efficient port on the planet. And so, this is a place where previously maybe 10,000 Chinese would have been employedβzero. Not twoβzero. Somewhere in an office somewhere they have somebody overseeing and watching in case something happens. [β¦] So, the production is going to be done by machines in the Marxist Utopia. Now, this actually kind of goes back even to Marx. He thought we were going to get to the point where technology would be sufficient where all the hard work is being done by machines, for him, now itβs AI-infused robots.
And the big issue, if you actually listen to, say, Yuval Noah Harari from the World Economic Forum or you listen to even Klaus Schwab or you read Klaus Schwabβs books, what do they say? The term βuseless classβ is not my invention. Thatβs Yuval Noah Harariβs word actually for them. As much as 75-80% of the worldβs population will be unemployable because there will be no labor jobs left. Even agriculture will be done by robots and machines with a very small number, maybe, of overseers, but when AI is sufficient, you wonβt need that anyway. All basic production and all basic manufacturing and all basic distribution will be done by AI. And so that creates a vast class, as Yuval Noah Harari also called them, of so-called βuseless eaters.β
And so, what do you do with the βuseless eatersβ? Well, you rig up an entirely new system that generates enough profit to justify basically paying them to subsist in some kind of minimalistic way where theyβre going to be moderately happy but maybe try not to produce more babies. And then, through something like a universal basic income program that gives you the sense that youβre buying and selling things, but itβs all sort of fake.
This is part of why theyβre so bent on the idea of sustainability. They actually want to get people to think about having, consuming, and doing less because the belief within late Marxismβso, Marxism in the second half of the 20th century going forwardβhas been that theβand Marx actually talked about this, but itβs really become prominent to their theory after they accepted in the 20th century, 1940 to 1970ish, Marxists bit the bitter pill and accepted βcapitalism delivers the goods.β Thatβs a direct quote. Thatβs a phrase they used. It allows people to build a good like, a better life. It delivers the goods.
But what they said is that one of the reasons this is bad, and they had a number of reasons, is that it does so in a way that is not sustainable. If, say, the machines are taking care of all your basic needsβso nobody has to do basic-needs stuffβwell, not everybody can be a βcreative.β So, people have to make up goods and services that nobody actually needs. They have to knit little, fancy can koozies and things that actually peopleβnobody needs thisβdog beds. Like, your dog doesnβt need a bed, right? All these little things, and people are going to make it, and itβs all personalized. So, youβre spending lots of energy to make useless products, and when that whole economy fills out, then you have to make another layer of even faker economy that produces stuff that even fewer people need for even less stuff, and eventually, their incorrect belief is that this is an inherently unsustainable project that will collapse under its own weight because it gets faker and faker and faker and heavier and heavier as you go. And so, when you now have a large number of people displaced from work, in a very short time through automation, you have a lot of displaced people, but then the thing theyβre worried about is [β¦], they frame in terms of: when the basic needs are met, other needs will seem as though they are basic needs, and then those will have to be met, and nobody can live without them. And then other needs above those will seem like theyβre basic needs, and those will have to be met, and nobody can live without them. And eventually, itβs just too much to keep going, and youβre going to drain all of the material resources of the planet trying to satisfy peopleβs needs for bobbles, gadgets, plasticβthatβs the words that they useβthat nobody actually needs. And so, itβs an inherently unsustainable program.
So, what they want to make you do, in the words of Marcuse, is make you comfortable with less. And thatβs the sustainable thing. βYou donβt have to go on vacation. We can just put your VR goggles on, and it looks like youβre in Athens.β They call it virtual travel or digital travel. The whole travel industry is going freakinβ whole-hog into this, right now, to create fake travel through virtual reality. You can have mostly the experience. If you extrapolate that, thoughβand I donβt know if neural link is a real thing or notβbut if you extrapolate it into the kind of techno-futurist mindset, well, if there is a chip in your brain that actually does that, you donβt have to go to Athens at all. You just download the script of the Athens experience into your head, and you remember it. You experience it. You lay down in your bed, close your eyes, and your brain tells you youβre in Athens walking around in the sun, just like a dream, but way more real, way more crisp, way more clear. And so nobody has to go to Athens. No fuel has to be expended.
So, these kind of techno-futurist guys, like Yuval Noah Harari, project into 2045, picturing that being the future of humanity. So, what do you do with these people? What do you do with all these people? Well, you get them content with this virtual life with very little, get them comfortable living that way, and slowly make sure there are fewer of them.
Should we be more skeptical then about the technological advances taking place?
I think we should be skeptical of these idiotsβ ability to pull off what they want to pull off with it. Theyβre visionary, and thereβs a place for being visionary, but theyβve just proven with a gigantic global experiment and an mRNA technology that theyβre not quite as smooth as they thought they were. Theyβre not nearly as good as they think they are.
Regardless of whether or not the vaccine was necessary, whether it couldβve helped in principle, whether the science behind developing it was actually goodβwhich it may have beenβthe thing was a freakinβ catastrophe in rollout. Everything that could possibly have not been right about this thing was not right.
I just saw something the other dayβand with COVID you have to be so careful because what in the hellβs true and whatβs not? Itβs been so heavily censored that youβre reading snippets of this and reading snippets of that, nothing authoritative. If the CDC says something, you canβt trust it. So, youβre like, βI donβt know whatβs true or not.β But I just saw this thing the other day that said as much as 50% of the batches, by the time they were delivered in needle, into peopleβs arms, were degraded, and so the mRNA inside of them had changed genetically into something else that does something different because it had sat too long in the freakinβ sun or just sat too long in the warehouse before it went from manufacture to delivery. As much as 50% of the samples they checked were degraded in terms of literally changing the genetic code that they were injecting into you. Thatβs an alarming failure if thatβs true, just as an indicator.
There are other huge reasons. First of all, what are we dealing with: Fauci has four vaccines in his body right now, got COVID, took the pill that they spent $11B of taxpayer money developing, and immediately relapses into COVID again. Great job with the R&D, guys.
So, what this tells you is, regardless of anything else, they think the technology is at one place, and itβs not there. Or the technology, in theory, is there, but in practice, is not there and is probably not going to get there. And so, whether itβs the technology itself, I donβt know. But when it comes to their ability to implement it: laughably worse. Which means, though, itβs going to be a humanitarian catastrophe everywhere they try. I mean, weβre talking absolute catastrophes. [β¦] Nikola Tesla said, βYou will live to see man-made horrors beyond your comprehension.β We are at that point in history.
If βcapitalism delivers the goodsβ and has provided abundance and delivered countless people out of poverty, and if the world suffers whether these people succeed or notβeither they fail and entire countries and economies are destroyed, or they succeed and weβre living under a Marxist dystopiaβwhat is the point outside of pure malevolence?
There are two reasons if we take pure malevolence off the table, and one of those was already discussed. The religion of communism sees capitalism as an inherently unstable program. The religion of communism, [β¦] they think that this is the destined trajectory of history; it is where history must necessarily go. This is the religion of communism: it is human beingsβ jobs to work out the details to make it get there. Where Christians might say that βGod used me x, y, z,β in various ways or βhe called me to do x, y, z, and I had to do it within the best of my capacity,β communists believe that human beings exist in order to move the dialectic, and the dialectical process has a trajectory toward global communism which is a stateless, classless utopia where nobody has to work except at the minimum level necessary to do production or through their creative aspects. This is what Marx said, βThe only true work is the work that you donβt have to do.β No other work is true work. He actually says that in the economic and philosophical manuscripts from 1844. He says that if itβs beholden to somebody else or even your own belly, itβs not true work because youβre doing it because something made you do it rather than because you just wanted to create something in the world. You have to be an idle creator in order to be doing true work.
So, their religion demands it, but part of that is they donβt believe in sustainability. They think that the system that we have right now is destined to collapse into either fascism or calamity, mass starvationβthe whole thing is going to eventually fall apart, and everybody is going to lose out so much worse, and we could have avoided it. So, thatβs the sustainability aspect. Like I said, the guys in the 40s through the 70s identified really two reasons why βcapitalism delivers the goodsβ is bad. One is, it creates an unsustainable system.
The other, as another article of communist faith, is that by having a good life, we lose any interest in having an ideal life. We lose our utopian drive completely if weβre satisfied. So, Herbert Marcuse explains in the Essay on Liberation, that, yeah, we have a good life and weβre happy with it, but in so being, we become content and ignore completely that we could be having a better life, which would be the communist ideal where nobody has to work, thereβs no suffering, weβve transcended all private property and all diseases and all issues, and we live in a high-elven far-west of Tolkien blessed realm of communism.
The Marxist religion inherently rejects the hereafterβif all we have is, say, 80 years of life, then itβs overβwhat is the point of working toward utopia if it all essentially means nothing in the end?
Unfortunately, there are two answers to this. One is that Marxist philosophy, and thus the religion, is based off Hegelβs philosophy, and those are fundamentally anti-human. You can call it nihilistic, but itβs not. Itβs this weird redirection of purpose: There are going to be other people later, and so, you are working in their benefit. Youβre trying to build the kingdom for those who come after. This is one of the two answers. So, why should we condemn future generations to have to suffer in the only-good life if we could do what we have to doβour share of itβto bring them to the better life. So, for Hegel, and thus Marx, itβs not man himself that matters, itβs history itself, and history takes on the quality of the transcendent being. Itβs not man that matters in, say, Christianity, itβs God and the worship of God. So, the intention is to create Godβs kingdom here on earth for those people, whether itβs 80 years at a clip or whatever.
Just really quick, while you were asking the question, I looked this up because I just read this yesterday in a Marxist education book, and it says, right hereβthis is a foreword written by Henry Giroux, a Marxist educator,
βThe utopian character of our analysis is concrete in its nature and appeal, and takes as its starting point collective actors in their various historical settings and the particularity of their problems and forms of oppression. It is utopian only in the sense that it refuses to surrender to the risks and dangers that face all challenges to dominant power structures. It is prophetic in that is views the kingdom of God as something to be created on earth but only through a faith in both other human beings and the necessity of our permanent struggle.β
So, they really do, they think theyβre building Heaven on earth and that it takes us to do it. And that is the fundamental duty of conscience of the Marxists which is to create the ideal, explicitly, the kingdom of God here on earth. Herbert Marcuse, in Eros and Civilization, phrases it in terms of building and readmitting ourselves to the Garden of Eden, and he says thatβs achieved by taking a second bite from the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. So, theyβre not lost on what they think theyβre achieving theologically.
Now, thereβs a second reason. Many of these techno-futuristsβYuval Noah Harari among them, probably Klaus Schwab among themβfirmly believe that if you are at an age right now where youβre going to live fifteen more years, youβre going to live 500 more years because weβre going to get aging medical technology to a placeβand Iβve heard people say that it already is, but I donβt see any evidence of this except that Klaus Schwab and George Soros are still alive (maybe) and that Hillary Clinton thinks sheβs going to run for president againβbut they think that weβre actually going to get to a place where weβre going to be able to outrun aging. Youβll be able to get a treatment in, say, five years that makes you live fifteen years longer, but before those fifteen years are up, youβll be able to get another treatment that makes you live 30 years longer, and before those 30 years are up, youβll be able to get another treatment that makes you live 100 years longer. And so, this isβIβm not kidding, some of these people who are leading this push believe that certain among us are going to get to live, essentially, forever. Whereas, because of these advances in anti-aging technology, which then creates a massive population problem on the planet, which is another reason why you have to separate into two classes: the anointed who get to live basically forever in the utopian world, and then the useless people who kind of operate in their 80 years at a clip, if theyβre not anointed and not given access to the treatments.
Thereβs actually a dystopian novel called This Perfect Day by Ira Levin that explores this idea, where thereβs this perfect society, but everybody has to take these medical treatments, these injections, every year. Everybody goes off to βretirementβ around 60 and vanishes except the people who set up the society they all live inβthis perfect society they live inβ300 years ago, are all 300 years old. The reason they set it all up this way is they figured out the elixir of life or whatever.
Or if we get back into the Garden of Edenβgo back to the theological languageβwhy do you do that? Because itβs not the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge youβre interested in or even the perfect garden. The fruit of the Tree of Life is there, as well, and then you live forever, and you truly become as gods. And so, this is the vision that they have: That theyβre going to be able to master nature to the point where certain among them donβt die. And so, itβs not about 80 years. Itβs about these people get to enjoy the planet as their personal Garden of Eden forever, and they only allow other people to exist so far as it benefits them.
So, this is the true vision. I donβt think Marx had that vision. I donβt think he could envision it, but Marcuse was already talking kind of in that direction 70 years ago, and certainly, the people today, you can actually read Yuval Noah Harari talking about us being on the precipice of this technology, so you know theyβre salivating for it. TIME Magazine put out an issue a couple of years ago that shows a mannequin like itβs getting plugged into the matrix on the cover, and of course, Marc Benioff runs the great reset magβI mean, TIME Magazine. Heβs on the World Economic Forum board of trustees. The issue shows a mannequin with a wire, just like The Matrix, like a green light, getting plugged into the back of its head, and it says, β2045 The Year Man Becomes Immortal.β This is the vision that they have: is that certain small elect among them are going to be able to be immortal, and so itβs not β80 years at a clip, why bother.β They are building our eternal home for themselves through this massively advancing medical technology, even to the point to where if you died in some sort of accidentβwhich they would think technology would basically minimizeβthat they could resuscitate the body. Theyβre doing experiments of this kind now. They brought some animal back from the dead a few weeks ago. I saw the headline.
These people are not normal. You actually mentioned and we took off the table malevolence. Itβs difficult to appreciate the degree of psychopathy that comes attendant with these people. You probably heard, what do you call a guy who goes around and murders one woman after another after another after another? He lures them inβa Jack the Ripper kind of character, right. We have a word for that, right? βSerial Killer.β That, it turns out, is a very unsuccessful, low-level, pathetic serial killer because he might kill twelve people. What do you call a highly successful serial killer? The CEO of Pfizer? I donβt know, something like that.
If you had a penchant to kill 100 million people to see if you could do it as a psychopath, as a personal challenge, youβre going to not go one by one, youβre not going to buy an AR-15 or a knife, youβre going to figure out how to get yourself in a position of political or corporate power where you have that sway to be able to pull it off and then laugh as you get away with it. And the people who orchestrate these kinds of things tend to be those people, so I think that the absolute malevolence is actually an ingredient to this. We are being ruled by psychopaths.
What can the layperson do other than get informed to combat this large, complicated plan?
Becoming informed is not that useful on its own. You have to become informed and then share the information. [β¦] Mattias Desmet has a point that these totalitarian regimes start the killing at the same point in every single case in all of history. Every mass formation psychosis, the killing starts at a certain point, and thatβs when people stop speaking out. When the silence happens is when the killing starts. They donβt kill people to silence them. They wait until theyβre silenced, then they start killing them. Of course, disarming them comes before silencing them, and then they kill them. [β¦]
It turns out, this is a huge, vast, intricate machine, and obviously, nobody can understand it, and it seems like, βWhat am I going to do against the World Economic Forum,β but we just talking about a number of different things.
So, the right person being informed, and it can be your average layperson, saying something to the right other person. That sounds like some butterfly effect bull crap, but itβs not because Iβve seen it actually happen: Where I mention something to somebody about one of these things, so I was informed and I told them about it, just in a personal conversation, and they were like, βYou know what, I know somebody.β And they gave a callβyou donβt know who anybody knowsβthey gave a call, and with two calls later, we had a state attorney general cracking down on ESG.
And so, when you look at this thing has a giant machine, if you knock out one of their gears in that machine, it doesnβt work until they figure out how to replace the gear. So, breaking it is actually less hard than it sounds. And what youβre doing, if you say, βWell, thatβs not going to stop the machine.β No, it slows the machine down until we can possibly create a situation where the people can be put in positionsβwhether itβs Nuremberg trials or itβs in Congress or whatever it isβthat then weβll start to hold this whole thing to account and pull it back. In other words, taking the operators of the machine and getting their hands right off the levers. [β¦]
Exposing ESG for what it is has actually proven to be very fruitful. I have a strategy guy I speak to sometimes, who said explicitly that we are now bombing the foundation. They cannot pull off what theyβre doing through the kind of bottom-up, demand-driven side that they need so it looks organic without the social-emotional learning component in schools. So, if you crack the education game, youβve knocked a big, giant wheel off of their machine. You basically took off the fly wheel; the thing that gives it the energy to wind up and goβyouβve basically taken that out.
So, there are pieces that are within peopleβs grasps to be able to make changes on. How? Your average person joins a groupβit doesnβt have to be Moms for Liberty, but letβs say Moms for Libertyβthatβs tackling some of these issues in education. Theyβre building momentum. Theyβre getting the attention of politiciansβpeople like Ron DeSantis canβt ignore, people like legislators. I mention DeSantis, but theyβve got chapters in close to 40 states now. They get attention, and these issues get in the hands of people who do have what access to power is necessary to take decision-making in the right direction.
Normally, we would depend on the media to do that. [β¦]
So, these are realistic things. So, getting informed and then sharing the information. There is a movement that is trying to get these things done. One of the drags on the movement is skepticism thatβs misguided skepticism. If I told you all this crap, you shouldnβt just say, βOh, James Lindsay saidβ¦ Okay.β Thatβs ridiculous. You should be skeptical. You should go check it out. You should go read maybe some of Klaus Schwab or Yuval Noah Harari. Check it out for yourself.
But what happens isβlike today, I posted something about pilots, about flights, on Twitter. This huge backlog, they have a pilot shortage; they have a crew shortage. How did we get to that? I wonder. And itβs causing, to the point where the trend on Twitter was that Delta was canceling flights for the fourth of July weekβhundreds of themβbecause they canβt fulfill them because thereβs too much demand and thereβs not enough pilots, and one canceled flight causes a cascade where they canβt fix anything now. And everyoneβs catching either their new round of COVID, like Fauci, or theyβre catching some other [cold]. Everybodyβs catching stuff. Thereβs a lot of dipping out of work. Thereβs a shortage. They canβt fill up the gaps. Thereβs a few other FAA policy, idiotic things that all have to do with COVID and vaccines and so on. Theyβve created this mess.
And so, I said, βTheyβre actually damaging the travel industry on purpose, and here are some consequencesββI did a thread. And this guy replies to me, βActually, pilots are just getting sick.β And that kind of idiotic skepticism just drains energy. And so, when you run into these people who are just draining the energyβthere is a movement that is growing out of the ground to fight against this stuff, and anything that drains its energy is justβand this is Twitter, so itβs not indicative of much, but you run into it in real life, tooβitβs just a waste of time and energy.
And so, when you get more people informed, that lubricates the movement rather than being sand all up in the movementβs gears, if you will. You want the sand to be in their gears, not your gears. You want your gears well-lubricated.
So, the getting informed and sharing information thing facilitates that. It also facilitates movement-building, which is: get together, get informed, get organized, take action. What is a movement in a box? What does it look like? The most general thing you can say: start getting people together, get them informed on whatever the issue or topic is, start to organize around what you see as a direction to do something with that, and then take the action that you see fit, and then kind of keep the peddle to the metal or whatever. Thatβs a movement in a box.
Up until the last few months, at least, or maybe the past year, nobody in the world had the slightest clue what was going on. I still talk to government leadersβI have a call with a congressional office next week because theyβre like, βWhatβs ESG?β They donβt even know what this stuff is.
Weβre not feminists. Itβs not βconsciousness raising,β but we are actually, in a sense, behind that eight ball. SoβI donβt know if the metaphor works for it butβwe gotta slide the ball out from behind the eight ball a little bit. Weβre in the get-informed stage of the movement-in-a-box. Then the organization is going to come out in a smarter way.
We just learned with COVID: Never attempt to cure something you donβt understand. What will you do? Youβll start jabbing people with all these things or give them Paxlovid, which apparently gives them COVID againβbecause you donβt understand what youβre trying to cure. So, if you have uniformed action, say, with this congressional office, it could come out and do some totally ham-fisted thing that works backward, in terms of the goals, unless they get informed. Itβs just a stage of the process that weβre in.
So, the average personβs most valuable contributions right now are to get informed or to share the information or to support people, one way or anotherβit could be money, it could be moral support, it could be showing up to events, it could be getting butts in seats for other people who might be interested in events, whatever it is that facilitates that process. Thatβs one of the most valuable things. I met a guy at one of these organizational talk things that I went to, where I talked to the guy, and he was like, βDude, I donβt know what youβre talking about.β And I was like, βOh, I saw you wearing this shirt. You work here? I thought you were here for [the event].β He said, βNope. Iβm basically dumb, but they need somebody who runs errands, so I take people back and forth to the airport. I run down to Staples when they need some stuff. Whatever their little errands are, whatever it is. Maybe they need a cooler full of Coca-Colas for the event later this afternoon, Iβm going to Walmart. Iβm that guy because when I do that, these smarter guys, none of them have to do it.β And I think this guy was smart enough on his own to understand this, but there are a lot of ways you can contribute without just doing the information thing.
But if you look at the four-stage process: get people together, well, weβre doing that; get informed, weβre doing that, but still, weβre not done there; get organized, thatβs coming into play where thereβs a very organized push against CRT nowβthere are lawsuits, there are legal foundations, thereβs all kinds of stuff thatβs in motion with CRT and coming into the sexuality stuff now. Iβve written an affidavit, for example, for a lawsuit, and Iβm just breaking open the nature of the Marxist education theory thatβs at the heart of it. And they were like, βWow. This actually sheds a lot of light on things. Very Helpful. It sounded like it was abstract and not useful, but it turns out to be really helpful to generalize.β And then, people can start taking that action.
If you join in the CRT fight, youβre probably not just going to be informing at this point. That oneβs mature. So, now youβre figuring out what to join and to take action and what kind of action to take, and youβre going to work in the organizational phase. If itβs something like this queer theory stuff, everybodyβs still like, βWhy are there drag queens?β So, weβre still informing. If itβs something like critical education theory or itβs ESG or any of that, weβre very early in the informing phase, but I can tell weβre far ahead of where the regime thought we would be because Klaus Schwab, in his interviews, look like heβs about to give live birth to a baby elephant. In virtually every one, heβs very agitated: βZiss is vy ve must take immediate action!β Usually, heβs sitting back, and heβs all calm. And now, heβs really stressing out.
ESG just had a catastrophic return. All the articles are looking at the catastrophe in Sri Lanka, and theyβre saying, βWell, it was ESG that did that.β So, all of a sudden, these things are getting hit. My strategic friend said, βThe foundations are getting hit.β And if thatβs true, itβs only a matter of time, but that requires as many people to basically pick up a piece of information artilleryβor maybe all they do is carry the shell to the guy, Senator Tom Cotton, to put the shell in the artillery gun. Heβs got the gun. βWell, look, Iβve got this incendiary bomb you didnβt think of.β βWell, okay, letβs fire it.β
Thatβs the kind of stuff that needs to be happening right now.
To conclude this incredible conversation, what is the path forward for New Discourses?
Right now, Iβm still in this emergency, letβs explain whatβs going on in these very big trends of theory, kind of mode. Weβve got Critical Race Theory, I feel like Iβve nailed down. Critical Education Theory, Iβm maybe a third of the way through what I need to do. Queer Theory, I donβt know how much I need to do. Itβs weird enough on its own, but people need to know some to get a little grounding on it. So, Iβm going to continue as-is for the moment, but the goal really is, I said from the beginning, I want it to be DARPA for the culture war. I want it to be where you go outβ letβs say, if youβre not a super expert in these issues, but youβre concerned, and youβre informed, and you want to do somethingβI want it to be the thing people can point at and say, βThatβs there, so I know what Iβm talking about.β And you can go engage with that, and then youβll know what youβre talking about.
So, itβs still building out in that regard, as far as where it goes. Iβve tossed around ideas. Do I partner with somebody? Iβm not closed to that, entirely. Iβve tossed around ideas like, do I try to start building out like a Turning Point USA-style chapter model? And itβs obviously got its uses, like study groups in every city or college or whatever elseβbut at the same time, I donβt really want to have to manage that. I donβt need a kegger taking place at a New Discourses chapter at LSU, and somebody gets killed, and itβs my fault somehow. I know there are ways to deal with that, but scaling, in that regard, I donβt know if itβs something I want to do. I may or may not. I see that value.
Right now, Iβm trying to shift into doing a lot more proactive workshops to get people together, to where some of itβs me teaching, and some of itβs people spending time networking and building out battle plans or whatever, and then they can choose to use those networks however they want. So, Iβm about to do my third such workshop this year, before too long, in DC. I had two last year. Iβve got at least another one after this planned for this year, probably late in September in Idaho. So, Iβm trying to get around and do that sort of thing, and my goal is to get people equipped with the information to have the vocabulary necessary to take this on.
Now, should that vocabulary become sufficiently clear for most people, then Iβll probably end up shifting into a consulting and advisory role. I donβt actually want to build a TPUSA chapter thing, but I can see where there might be enough value for me to bite that bullet and do it, I just kind of donβt want to do that.
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