Nettimers:

"Cultural Marxism" is, of course, a canard -- primarily because it never really 
had any impact.  Adorno did manage to write "The Authoritarian Personality" (a 
favorite of Breivik) but he was tossed out of the Rockefeller Radio Research 
Project and few (at that level) ever paid much attention to him.  The 
"Frankfurt School" (and Marcuse in particular) were considered "passe" by the 
New Left, typically viewed as "CIA types," leaving it to Paul Piccione and his 
TELOS to try to get some attention for them (without much success.)


"Globalism" is closer to the real story and, indeed, it is now dead.  However, 
the impetus for such institutions as the UN, World Bank/IMF, WTO &c -- all of 
which have largely been rendered irrelevant by China (and the BRICs more 
widely) -- didn't come from "cultural marxism" at all.  Margaret Mead and Larry 
K. Frank, yes.  "Critical" anything, no.

In "power" terms -- taken using Michael Mann's "Sources of Social Power" 
framework -- globalism had ideological, economic, political and military 
sources that all aligned post-WW II around the theme of preventing WW III 
(while substituting psychological warfare for "kinetics") and generating a "new 
world order" that would force "nation states" to join in a common effort.  This 
is the framework that has now collapsed and will never be revived.  Humpty 
Dumpty has actually fallen off the wall . . . <g>

Henry Kissinger was at the center of all this, so tracing his career tells much 
of the story.  From his unpublished 380+ page undergraduate Harvard thesis, 
"The Meaning of History," to his crucial role in the very important Special 
Studies Project, Henry was a Rockefeller protege -- in particular of Nelson, 
who was slated to become President in 1964.  Instead, his girlfriend "Happy" 
got pregnant, refused an abortion, forcing "Rocky" to divorce and Goldwater 
became the candidate. By the 1970s much of this was already unraveling and now 
we are finally noticing it.

Henry's the last chapter of his last book, "World Order," and his subsequent 
interviews all reflect the same conclusion: digital technology has irrevocably 
ended the old "new world order."  And, as a result, Henry no longer knows what 
to do.  Given that his advisers include those like Eric Schmidt, this 
intellectual cul-de-sac should come as no surprise.  In fact, no one from 
Henry's (or Eric's) world know's what to do.

We are heading into a political-economy completely unimagined by "cultural 
marxism" or any other ideological construct from the 20th (or previous) 
century.  "Libertarian Marxism" is just a reflection of how confused we have 
become.  My attendance at the "2nd World Congress on Marxism" in Beijing (last 
May) points to a vibrant effort on the part of the Chinese to sort all this -- 
to the utter confusion of the Western "Marxists" invited to speak.  Yes, China 
is way ahead of the West in thinking all this through (and few in the West 
understand this.)

Toto, I don't believe we are in Kansas anymore . . . -- Dorothy (1939, speaking 
about the *radio* world, then being studied by the Rockefellers)

Mark (Jersey City Heights)


-----Original Message-----
From: I M <ico.m...@gmail.com>
To: orsan1234 <orsan1...@gmail.com>
Cc: nettime-l <nettim...@kein.org>
Sent: Fri, Nov 16, 2018 7:43 am
Subject: Re: <nettime> Was cultural Marxism the leading force behind the new 
world order



Dear Orsan (and all)


We recently, published this article on Cultural Marxism, it can probably help: 
why-has-cultural-marxism-become-enemy


kind regards





Op vr 16 nov. 2018 om 13:38 schreef Örsan Şenalp <orsan1...@gmail.com>:


Dear list members,  



I really wonder what would you make of this article by Antony Meuller of Mises 
Institute? Is he implying the role really played by, at least, the certain 
liberal post-Marxist Left in building up Neoliberlism, or is it just a reaction 
against the growing power of the left? 



https://fee.org/articles/cultural-marxism-is-the-main-source-of-modern-confusion-and-its-spreading/?utm_content=79412082&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwAR0PonQZ5UQP4iGvZfSFJE3p8jecBefhyHwupA4ZTa-__n01010J9X305Q8


best, 

Orsan
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-- 







Ico Maly
Tilburg University
Editor-in-chief diggit magazine
diggitmagazine.com
facebook.com/diggitmagazine/

twitter.com/diggitmagazine





Nieuw

Maly, I. (2018). De Hedendaagse antiverlichting (Berchem, Epo)
Maly, I. (2018). Algorithmic populism and algorithmic activism. Diggit Magazine.
Maly, I. (2018). Populism as a mediatized communicative relation: The birth of 
algorithmic populism. TPCS working paper 213
Maly, I. (2018). Welkom in het tijdperk van het globale nationalisme. Sampol.
Maly, I. (2018). Nieuw Rechts. Berchem: EPO. 
Maly, I. (2017). New media, new resistance and mass media : A digital 
ethnographic analysis of the Hart – Boven – Hard movement in Belgium. in 
Papaioannou, T. & Gupta, S. Media representations of ant-austerity protests in 
the EU. Routledge.  









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