Alrighty folxxx, you asked for it. Here’s my thread on @Hpluckrose’s instant classic, “How French ‘Intellectuals’ Ruined the West: Postmodernism & Its Impact.” Originally published at Areo, lucky enough to get the coveted @NewDiscourses placement. [1/n]
Right off the bat, opening paragraph suggests any worldview “which denies a stable reality or reliable knowledge to exist” is thereby inconsistent. Why? No explanation. Moving on! [2/n]
Postmodernism involves a “rejection of the concept of the unified and coherent individual” as well as “philosophy which valued ethics, reason and clarity”—these are parochial (western, middle-class, male). How does one do philosophy without reason? No answer, no citations. [3/n]
Postmodernists, Pluckrose tells us, “attacked science and its goal of attaining objective knowledge” of a mind-independent reality; science = “merely another form of constructed ideology dominated by bourgeois, western assumptions.” This postmodernism is... neo-Marxist? [4/n]
Again, postmodernism targets science, reason, liberalism & humanism; it has always been essentially political and revolutionary, Pluckrose says: contradicts earlier claim that it was first nihilistic, eventually growing into its “revolutionary ‘identity politics’ phase.” [5/n]
Introducing Lyotard (citations, yay!): this paragraph is incredibly vague, esp. at the end. Given what is said in her book, we can safely assume Pluckrose means Lyotard sees science, in addition to Marxism and Christianity, as a metanarrative.
This is simply not the case. [6/n]
Here is what Lyotard says: that modern science—which, he clarifies throughout the book, is a *narrative* (not a metanarrative!)—legitimates itself by positing a (modern) metanarrative, such as Hegelianism, dialectical materialism, or appeal to the Enlightenment. [7/n]
Then we get this paragraph--last sentence is beyond petty.
First: As I read Lyotard, the point about the relationship between language of science and ethics=both are fundamentally structured according to requirement of legitimation. No rejection of science’s objectivity. [8/n]
Second: Though this “erosion” Lyotard speaks of may sound ominous, it is only bc the traditional mode of legitimation (metanarrative) has died out that Lyotard finds a plausible solution: each discrete (postmodern) scientific discipline is a self-legitimating language game. [9/n]
Here’s how Pluckrose tricks the reader. Having given a few cherry-picked quotes, she’s created an illusion of expertise, after which she can produce a paragraph like this, which is just one giant “CITATION FUCKING NEEDED!!!!!”
Literally all of these claims are false. [10/n]
Moving on to Foucault, whom Pluckrose calls a relativist. In a sense, he is a relativist. But *not* the sophomoric and sophistical kind who says that any view is as good as any other. Pluckrose paints postmodernism this way every chance she gets, with zero justification. [11/n]
Oy vey. First: the essay Pluckrose lists as the source in endnote 2 is wrong; the correct source is the book Power/Knowledge (1980). And Foucault is *deeply* invested in the individual. See this excerpt from the essay Pluckrose mistakenly lists in n. 2 (lmfao irony on 100) [12/n]
I have no idea wtf Christopher Butler is talking about & no idea where Pluckrose got the idea that Foucault “presents medieval feudalism and modern liberal democracy as equally oppressive.” I checked the Chomsky - Foucault debate (endnote 4), couldn’t find any such claim. [13/n]
Next, we are told Foucault is an extreme cultural relativist, and also that he thinks people are socialized into one of two social classes: oppressor or oppressed. No citations for that--big surprise! For good measure, here are two that suggest otherwise. [14/n]
Next up, Derrida.
We really need to teach critical thinking in public schools. It just does not follow from the fact that “the author of a text is not the authority on its meaning” that “[t]he reader or listener makes their own equally valid meaning.” & D never says this [15/n]
Here Pluckrose is importing the distinctions man/woman & Occident/Orient. The quote about “violent hierarchy” she cherry-picks is taken out of context from a passage where Derrida is explaining the relationship between his notion of deconstruction and Hegelian idealism. 🤦♀️ [15/n]
And once again, immediately after she has had her fill of cosplaying as a scholar of postmodern philosophy, Pluckrose launches into wildly unsubstantiated claims. No citations necessary, she thinks; she clearly knows what she's talking about! [16/n]
This goes on and on... “Morality is culturally relative, as is reality itself,” there is a “moral necessity to smash” Enlightenment values and foreground “lived experience” of marginalized groups. Pluckrose has cited precisely ZERO sources that support any of these claims. [17/n]
I’m only like halfway through the piece, but I truly don't have the patience to go on. It’s just too much. Hope you enjoyed this thread about bunny rabbits. [fin]
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This is a thread on the 2022 right-wing documentary UNCLE TOM II, a film based entirely on the worldview and source material of the John Birch Society.
It has been promoted by Charlie Kirk & Jack Posobiec as proof that MLK & the civil rights movement were secretly Communist. 🧵
1. Leading up to MLK Day this year, Kirk & Posobiec decided they were going to abandon the standard Republican ritual (quoting King out of context, depicting the civil rights hero as a colorblind conservative).
Instead, they wanted to vilify MLK and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
2. On the eve of MLK Day, Posobiec was promoting UNCLE TOM II and its narrator Chad O. Jackson as authoritative sources on King's connections to "Communists."
Kirk had already promoted UNCLE TOM II on Real America's Voice in 2022 after the film was released.
Because everyone is talking about Ibram Kendi: it is so deeply upsetting to me that when reading groups and book lists were popping up after George Floyd was murdered it was always the work of people like Kendi & DiAngelo. Imagine if everybody read Charles Mills instead 🥲
Robin DiAngelo made a shit ton of money telling other white people that white people are basically incurably racist and Ibram Kendi made a shit ton of money basically claiming to be the sole arbiter of what racism truly is and refused to acknowledge any critiques of his views
I get a bit more detailed with my critiques here, but I ultimately do have a lot more to say, been wanting to write something about this and maybe I will soon (if any media sites/mags are interested, DM me!)
Chris Rufo took a break from suing college students for "political violence" (read: getting spit on his shoes) to argue that conservatives should turn to Nixon "as our guide" in mobilizing a "counterrevolution" against things like CRT and DEI.
A quick thread on Nixon & Rufo 🧵
It is interesting that Rufo venerates Nixon, because Rufo likes to talk about how he is deeply opposed to racism, often pointing to the fact that he is in an interracial marriage and has biracial children.
Nixon was deeply racist. Ex 1: Nixon & Reagan discuss African diplomats
Being charitable, you might think that the Reagan phone call is not enough to call Nixon racist.
Ex 2: Nixon explains that, while he is against abortion in some cases, he thinks it is necessary to prevent the birth of interracial ("a black and a white") children.
The YouTube channel for Larry Elder’s documentary films uploaded the John Birch Society propaganda film ANARCHY USA, which claims the civil rights movement “is simply part of a worldwide movement, organized and directed by Communists, to enslave all mankind”
A thread, w/ clips🧵
ANARCHY USA was written & directed in 1966 by JBS member G. Edward Griffin, a prolific propagandist & first-rate quack. Griffin believes that HIV “doesn’t even exist” & that cancer is a dietary deficiency that can be cured with “an essential food compound” mediamatters.org/glenn-beck/who…
This upload of ANARCHY USA has become one of the most popular videos on the Uncle Tom YouTube channel. It has been viewed over 200k times in just eight months, whereas the film has been viewed fewer than 40k times in seven years on the official John Birch Society YouTube channel.
"Cultural Marxism" has entered mainstream political discourse, appearing in recent speeches by DeSantis and Hawley, Fox News broadcasts, and right-wing media from Breitbart to Ben Shapiro.
This is a thread, with clips, on the 25-year history of "Cultural Marxism" on the Right 🧵
1. We begin with the arch-conservative activist and TV host, Bill Lind.
He began his 1998 talk "The Origins of Political Correctness" by saying college campuses have become so authoritarian that he'd be put "literally on trial" for joking about women and shopping carts
2. Lind says political correctness is seen as something to laugh at, but in fact "it's deadly serious. It is the great disease of our century, the disease that has left tens of millions of people dead... the disease of ideology."