Anonymous ID: 2108fc Sept. 5, 2021, 7:52 p.m. No.14528397   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8439

>>14528386

lmao i didn't waste anymore time on it than you did on whatever gif you just posted, aei

doesn't mean shit to me

one side believes one version of the larp and one side believes the other

that's the duality black and white symbolism people can't seem to figure out

Anonymous ID: 2108fc Sept. 5, 2021, 8:45 p.m. No.14528610   🗄️.is đź”—kun

and it was Neoliberal World Order

faggots

 

Neoliberalism’s World Order

 

Since its inception, neoliberalism has sought not to demolish the state, but to create an international order strong enough to override democracy in the service of private property.

Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism

by Quinn Slobodian

Harvard University Press, 2018, 400 pp.

 

Neoliberalism has many histories. Milton Friedman, the Chicago school, Pinochet, Thatcher and Reagan’s market revolution, IMF structural adjustment, and shock-therapy transition programs for the post-Communist states are all fixtures in the narrative of the neoliberal turn. If we wind the clock back to the aftermath of the Second World War, we can see precursors in the ordoliberalism of West Germany and the Mont Pèlerin gathering of 1947. If asked to name a founding moment, one might point to the Colloque Walter Lippmann of August 1938 in Paris. Those with a particular interest in the history of economic thought might go one step further back to the “socialist calculation debate” launched by the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises in 1920, in which he articulated a fundamental critique of the logical possibility of socialist central planning.

https://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/neoliberalism-world-order-review-quinn-slobodian-globalists