>>9675510
The Italian Marxist, Antonio Gramsci, and the Hungarian, Georg Lukacs, argued that the reason Marxist theory failed to occur as predicted, was because the values of Western culture were too deeply ingrained. They concluded that the economic success of capitalism, including opportunity through social mobility, combined with Christianity and individualism, all acted to resist what would occur (if only the correct superstructure were installed) a soil fertile to the ideas. This, they established, had to be achieved in order for economic evolution. The question was whether they could establish a surrogate for the working class, through a combination of other oppressed minorities, to drive momentum in the form of feminists and other racial and religiously persecuted minorities. Under capitalist economics, the working class were repressed, but by applying Freudian psychology to Marxist theory as they attempted, everyone in western culture lives in constant state of psychological repression.
This was a deliberate plot to shield the people from reality by portraying nature as soft like fur, not red in tooth and claw. To see bad results as good intentions and to see oppressive thought control as the act of virtue. The road to hell is paved with good intentions; all with the manipulative intent to break society down into diverse identities, and to frame every issue that emerges as ‘oppressor versus oppressed’ so that the state can impose equality nationalised control under this justification. All of this is done while ignoring the irony of labelling the right as divisive, for being decisive with regard to where the division of obligation can be reasonably drawn.
While continuing the war on the economy they looked to target the very glue that binds western society together, recognising the truth of the ancient proverb, divide and conquer. To attack the value judgments that define Western citizens, the cultural authorities that establish our unique profile and the very practices and institutions that define who we are. The church, accountability and responsibility, the family unit, respect for authority, patriotism, tradition and the concept of truth its self, have all been systematically deconstructed in the press, pop culture and in academic circles under this cynical remit.