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Sep 11 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
In 1965, a German philosopher wrote an essay that would reshape American universities.

His name was Herbert Marcuse. His essay was called "Repressive Tolerance."

And yesterday, his ideas pulled the trigger. 🧵Image
Marcuse had a simple argument: Traditional tolerance is actually oppression in disguise.

When you let "oppressors" speak freely, you're just helping them maintain power.

Real tolerance, he claimed, means being intolerant of the right and tolerant of the left.Image
Here's Marcuse in his own words:

"Liberating tolerance would mean intolerance against movements from the Right, and toleration of movements from the Left."

Notice what he's doing. He's not arguing for equality. He's arguing for a power reversal. Image
Marcuse went further.

He believed that true liberation requires "the withdrawal of toleration of speech and assembly from groups and movements which promote aggressive policies, armament, chauvinism, discrimination."

Translation: Silence your political enemies. Take away their platforms.Image
Who decides who's "oppressive"? For Marcuse, it was simple: The right represents business, military, and "vested interests."

The left represents students, intellectuals, and minorities.

This framework is intersectionality's grandfather - dividing the world into oppressor vs. oppressed.Image
Marcuse openly admitted his approach might seem "apparently undemocratic" but justified using "repression and indoctrination" to advance the agenda of a "subversive majority."

He literally advocated for authoritarian tactics in the name of fighting authoritarianism.Image
Where did these ideas take root? Universities.
The same institutions that now teach students Israel is "settler colonial."

That hard work is "white supremacy." That standardized tests are racist.

Universities became idea factories. And the product they're making is dangerous. Image
@feeonline traces a direct line from Marcuse's philosophy to modern Antifa tactics:

"If one is an adherent of Marcusean philosophy, then one could easily justify using fascist tactics in the name of fighting fascism." Image
This isn't theory anymore. Look at campus reactions to October 7th:

Students celebrated "exhilarating" terrorism. Professors called murder "energizing."

When you teach that victimhood equals virtue, you create a culture that celebrates destruction. Image
Yesterday's shooter wasn't mentally ill. Reports suggest they were college-aged, with ideological messaging on the weapon.

This is what happens when institutions teach that some voices fundamentally don't deserve to be heard.Image
The pattern is always the same:

→ Critical theory divides world into oppressor/oppressed
→ Students learn violence against "oppressors" can be justified
→ Campus culture normalizes seeing opponents as enemies, not citizens
→ Someone acts on what they've been taught Image
Marcuse's "repressive tolerance" has become America's operating system:

→ Cancel culture silences conservatives
→ "Hate speech" laws target the right
→ Social media bans "misinformation" (conservative / libertarian views)
→ Universities fire professors for wrongthink Image
And when the system fails to silence someone completely?

When Charlie Kirk keeps traveling to campuses, keeps speaking truth, keeps refusing to be intimidated?

Then Marcuse's logic reaches its inevitable conclusion: "withdrawal of toleration."Image
Charlie Kirk's death represents the tragic endpoint of 60 years of campus ideology that frames political disagreement as moral warfare.

You cannot teach that some people are inherently oppressive and be surprised when someone takes that teaching literally. Image
The cycle never ends. As the FEE article notes: "Restoring power means that the oppressed become the oppressor and that leads to nothing but an infinite power struggle."

Violence begets violence. Oppression begets oppression. Ideas have consequences.Image
The only way to break this cycle is to reject the entire framework.

Good and evil exist objectively - they don't change based on your identity group. Individuals should be judged by actions, not demographics. Success should be celebrated, not condemned. Image
The battle against these ideas must be fought with better ideas.

As Ayn Rand wrote: "Ideas cannot be fought except by means of better ideas. The battle consists, not of opposing, but of exposing; not of denouncing, but of disproving."Image
Don't let them silence the next truth-teller through intimidation or worse.

Because as Ayn Rand warned: "The uncontested absurdities of today are the accepted slogans of tomorrow."

Herbert Marcuse's absurdity became Charlie Kirk's death sentence.Image

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More from @sfliberty

Sep 5
In 1991, Milton Friedman made predictions about the War on Drugs that sounded completely insane at the time.

33 years later, every single one came true with terrifying precision.

Here's how a Nobel laureate saw what nobody else could: 🧵 Image
Politicians called him a radical. The DEA dismissed his warnings. Mainstream economists said he was out of touch with reality.

But Friedman understood something they didn't: economics doesn't care about good intentions. Image
Friedman's first prediction was the most counterintuitive: "The government is basically protecting the drug cartels."

Wait, what? How does fighting drugs help the bad guys?

His economic logic was devastating... Image
Read 16 tweets
Sep 4
Karl Marx spent his life attacking capitalism and the "exploitation" of workers.

Your leftist colleague loves this story. Socialists worship him. But there's one problem: Marx never worked a day in his life and lived off capitalist profits for decades. 🧵 Image
Marx rails against the bourgeoisie while his best friend Friedrich Engels literally owns factories employing 800 workers in Manchester.

Marx didn't just tolerate this. He lived off those "exploitative" profits for most of his adult life. Image
Marx called profit "theft" from workers.

Yet when Engels complained about having to be at his factory office by 10 AM (calling it "forced labor"), Marx happily accepted the money that came from exploiting workers.

The contradiction is staggering. Image
Read 17 tweets
Sep 4
Your leftist campus colleague with a "Tax the Rich" sticker on his MacBook says he's a socialist because he cares about minorities and fighting inequality.

But here's what they won't tell you: the ideology of "caring about people" has the worst human rights record in history. 🧵 Image
Picture this: You care about equality, minority rights, individual freedom, and human dignity.

You should be the first person to reject socialism completely.

Because no political system in history has been worse for the exact things you claim to care about. Image
Want to see real inequality?

In China, while people ate tree bark to avoid starving, the high Chinese bureaucracy lived in luxury and Mao Tse-Tung maintained a harem.

In Cuba, the Castro family and party leaders live luxurious lives on the same island where people have rationed food for over 5 decades, and whose average salary is $22 monthly.

In Venezuela today, while people eat dogs and search garbage for food, government members feast at champagne parties with abundant fancy food.Image
Read 17 tweets
Aug 27
This book written by Ludwig von Mises in 1944 may be the most important thing to understand the threat we are facing in 2025.

"Omnipotent Government" predicted our current crisis 🧵Image
In the 1800s, the world experienced unprecedented peace and prosperity under classical liberalism.

Free trade connected nations. People moved freely across borders.

Then something shifted in the realm of ideas, and within decades, two world wars consumed civilization.Image
Mises wrote "Omnipotent Government" to answer a haunting question: How did the world go from the liberal 19th century to the totalitarian nightmare of the 20th?

His conclusion was radical: the path to Hitler began not with violence, but with ideas about the role of government.Image
Read 15 tweets
Aug 24
Trump imposed sweeping tariffs to "protect" American industry.

Meanwhile, 40 years ago, a small island nation did the exact opposite and became an economic powerhouse.

This is the story of New Zealand's farming revolution, and why protection breeds weakness. 🧵Image
In 1984, New Zealand faced a crisis.

The government was broke, spending more than it could afford, and agriculture—their economic backbone—was heavily subsidized.

Farmers received roughly one-third of their income from taxpayers. Sound familiar?Image
Unlike today's politicians who promise gradual reform "with transition periods," New Zealand went cold turkey.

They eliminated virtually all farm subsidies overnight. The agricultural lobby was furious.

Thousands of farmers protested in Wellington, literally releasing sheep on government property.Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 23
Stop taking Karl Marx seriously.

He was completely refuted over a century ago by Austrian economists who dismantled every pillar of his theory.

Yet somehow, his ideas still haunt lecture halls and political debates like intellectual zombies.

Here's how four economists buried Marxism forever. 🧵Image
The destruction began in 1871 with Carl Menger and a simple question: where does value really come from?

Marx said labor creates value. Eight hours of work equals eight hours of worth.

Menger said: wrong. Value lives in human minds, not in objects or hours worked.Image
Think about it this way. Your first slice of pizza when you're starving? Priceless. Your fifth slice when you're stuffed? You'd pay someone to take it away.

Same labor went into both slices. Completely different value to you.

This is marginal utility—and it shattered Marx's foundation.Image
Read 10 tweets

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