Monday Open Comments

Antonio Francesco Gramsci  1891-1937

The influence of Antonio Francesco Gramsci on the events of the 20th and 21st century belies his modest notoriety outside of college campuses.  The effects have been corrosive and devastating to Western culture and it’s foundational principles.

In 2011 veteran blogger, Eric Raymond, of Armed and Dangerous, wrote an excellent description of the ongoing destruction of the Gramscian strategy and tactics of the Left.  It’s a slow motion revolution.

Americans have never really understood ideological warfare. Our gut-level assumption is that everybody in the world really wants the same comfortable material success we have. We use “extremist” as a negative epithet. Even the few fanatics and revolutionary idealists we have, whatever their political flavor, expect everybody else to behave like a bourgeois.

We don’t expect ideas to matter — or, when they do, we expect them to matter only because people have been flipped into a vulnerable mode by repression or poverty. Thus all our divagation about the “root causes” of Islamic terrorism, as if the terrorists’ very clear and very ideological account of their own theory and motivations is somehow not to be believed.

By contrast, ideological and memetic warfare has been a favored tactic for all of America’s three great adversaries of the last hundred years — Nazis, Communists, and Islamists. All three put substantial effort into cultivating American proxies to influence U.S. domestic policy and foreign policy in favorable directions. Yes, the Nazis did this, through organizations like the “German-American Bund” that was outlawed when World War II went hot. Today, the Islamists are having some success at manipulating our politics through fairly transparent front organizations like the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

RTWDT.

 

 


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