​Prof. Jordan Peterson was on the Joe Rogan Experience a few weeks ago
talking about his work.
It's a fascinating interview.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=USg3NR76XpQ

Jordan Peterson Exposes the Postmodernist Agenda
Communist principles in postmodernism were spread under the guise of
identity politics
By Joshua Philipp
<http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/author/joshua-philipp/>, Epoch
Times <http://www.theepochtimes.com/>

[image: Jordan Peterson, Canadian clinical psychologist and professor of
psychology at the University of Toronto, explains the communist roots of
postmodernism during an interview on June 15, 2017. (The Epoch Times)]
<http://img.theepochtimes.com/n3/eet-content/uploads/2017/06/21/JordanPeterson.png>

Jordan Peterson, Canadian clinical psychologist and professor of psychology
at the University of Toronto, explains the communist roots of postmodernism
during an interview on June 15, 2017. (The Epoch Times)

Communism was not popularized in the West under the direct banner of
communism. Instead, it came largely under the banner of postmodernism, and
aimed to transform the values and beliefs of our societies through its
Marxist idea that knowledge and truth are social constructs.

Under it, a new wave of skepticism and distrust was applied to philosophy,
culture, history, and all beliefs and institutions at the foundations of
Western society.

The postmodern philosophy “came into vogue” in the 1970s, according to
Jordan Peterson, Canadian clinical psychologist and professor of psychology
at the University of Toronto, “after classic Marxism, especially of the
economic type, had been so thoroughly discredited that no one but an
absolute reprobate could support it publicly.”

Peterson said it’s not possible to understand our current society without
considering the role postmodernism plays within it, “because postmodernism,
in many ways—especially as it’s played out politically—is the new skin that
the old Marxism now inhabits.”

“Even the French intellectuals had to admit that communism was a bad deal
by the end of the 1960s,” he said. From there, the communists played a
“sleight of hand game, in some sense,” and rebranded their ideology “under
a postmodern guise.”

“That’s where identity politics came from,” he said. And from there, it
“spread like wildfire” from France, to the United States through the
English department at Yale University, “and then everywhere.”Marxism
preached that the natural and economic landscape is a battle between the
so-called proletariat and the bourgeois. It claimed that economic systems
were going to enslave people and keep them down, Peterson said.

In practice, however, communism repeatedly showed it made things worse. It
was put into place in many parts of the world throughout the 20th century
“with absolutely murderous results,” Peterson said. “It was the most
destructive economic and political doctrine I think that has ever been
invented by mankind,” surpassing even the terror seen under Adolf Hitler,
with its system of murder that would kill over 100 million people in less
than a century.

Peterson said the “full breadth of that catastrophe” of communism is
something students rarely learn in school. “The students I teach usually
know nothing at all about what happened in the Soviet Union under Stalin
and Lenin between 1919 and 1959. They have no idea that millions, tens of
millions, of people were killed and far more tortured and brutalized by
that particular regime—to say nothing of Mao.”

By the end of the 1960s, he said, even French intellectuals like Jean-Paul
Sartre had to admit that the communist experiment—whether under Marxism,
Stalinism, Maoism, or any other variant—was “an absolute, catastrophic
failure.”

Rather than do away with the ideology, however, they merely gave it a new
face and a new name. “They were all Marxists. But they couldn’t be Marxists
anymore, because you couldn’t be a Marxist and claim you were a human being
by the end of the 1960s,” said Peterson.

The postmodernists built on the Marxist ideology, Peterson said. “They
started to play a sleight of hand, and instead of pitting the proletariat,
the working class, against the bourgeois, they started to pit the oppressed
against the oppressor. That opened up the avenue to identifying any number
of groups as oppressed and oppressor and to continue the same narrative
under a different name.”

“It was no longer specifically about economics,” he said. “It was about
power. And everything to the postmodernists is about power. And that’s
actually why they’re so dangerous, because if you’re engaged in a
discussion with someone who believes in nothing but power, all they are
motivated to do is to accrue all the power to them, because what else is
there?” he said. “There’s no logic, there’s no investigation, there’s no
negotiation, there’s no dialogue, there’s no discussion, there’s no meeting
of minds and consensus. There’s power.”

“And so since the 1970s, under the guise of postmodernism, we’ve seen the
rapid expansion of identity politics throughout the universities,” he said.
“It’s come to dominate all of the humanities—which are dead as far as I can
tell—and a huge proportion of the social sciences.”
And so since the 1970s, under the guise of postmodernism, we’ve seen the
rapid expansion of identity politics throughout the universities.
— Jordan Peterson, professor of psychology at the University of Toronto

“We’ve been publicly funding extremely radical, postmodern leftist thinkers
who are hellbent on demolishing the fundamental substructure of Western
civilization. And that’s no paranoid delusion. That’s their self-admitted
goal,” he said, noting that their philosophy is heavily based in the ideas
of French philosopher Jacques Derrida, “who, I think, most trenchantly
formulated the anti-Western philosophy that is being pursued so assiduously
by the radical left.”

“The people who hold this doctrine—this radical, postmodern, communitarian
doctrine that makes racial identity or sexual identity or gender identity
or some kind of group identity paramount—they’ve got control over most
low-to-mid level bureaucratic structures, and many governments as well,” he
said. “But even in the United States, where you know a lot of the
governmental institutions have swung back to the Republican side, the
postmodernist types have infiltrated bureaucratic organizations at the
mid-to-upper level.”

“I don’t think its dangers can be overstated,” Peterson said. “And I also
don’t think the degree to which it’s already infiltrated our culture can be
overstated.”

*Communism is estimated to have killed at least 100 million people, yet its
crimes have not been fully compiled and its ideology still persists. The
Epoch Times seeks to expose the history and beliefs of this movement, which
has been a source of tyranny and destruction since it emerged. Read the
whole series at ept.ms/DeadEndCom <http://ept.ms/DeadEndCom>*

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​
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/2259668-jordan-peterson-explains-how-communism-came-under-the-guise-of-identity-politics/

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