Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Are Americans too political?

[i]“Most Americans do not live in ideological bubbles, because they take little interest in politics at all. According to polling by the Pew Research Center, only about 13 percent of Americans say they talk about politics daily, making me and most people reading this column a minority smaller (much smaller) than gun owners.”[/i] [b]~ Michael Gerson[/b], in[i] “How can our political bubbles be popped?”[/i] [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2pbMi0F [/c]

There is a myth, close to universally believed (although self-evidently false) that there is some kind of natural force or will of the people that brings inevitable “progressive” change as humanity marches ever forward toward the light, despite the attempts of reactionaries from the right to stop it.

This is an artificial construction which comes from the Enlightenment and the French Revolution – where the idea of ideologies was born . All of these ideologies have actually been instigated by a small minority, including the French Revolution as [b]Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn[/b] explains in his essay [i]“Operation Parricide: De Sade, Robespierre and the French Revolution” [/i] [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/29G4Bnj[/c]

All of these modern secular ideologies are just Christian heresies instigated and pushed by an elite: [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2bc8H7p [/c]
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
Cierzo · M
I agree that the French revolution, and the age of reason,science, and materialism that follows it is the origen of the false idea of progress. Numbers rule. The numbers of life years and national wealth are larger. Therefore, we live in progress, the shallow spirit of modern times says.

The fact that our lives are devoid of transcendence is irrelevant.
This message was deleted by its author.