Deracination ideology by W. Lindsay Wheeler

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"Deracination ideology" by W. Lindsay Wheeler.

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Deracination ideology is about deconstructing race. It is about nullifying the effects of belonging and volkenhass in order to bring about a unification of all mankind. It is about teaching it out of people. Deracination ideology is the major content of Political correctness. Deracination is about making the raceless, cosmopolitan man.[1]

Its methodology is the social re-engineering of mankind by deracinating him. Deracination ideology comes out of International Socialism. The first proponent is Karl Marx who is the pioneer of this movement. Because Culture defines politics (the culture must be changed in order for the politics to be changed), it is about changing the culture to bring about One World Government. By deracinating man, the socialists/humanists are attempting to bring about the socialist goal of perpetual peace.

Deracination means: (1) To pull out by the roots; uproot"; (2) "To displace from one's native or accustomed environment". [2]

The deracination ideology inherent in Communism (International Socialism) led to a backlash and the creation of National Socialism which was a defense of one's race.

Contents

Origin in Communist Ideology

"Nationalism and Marxism are incompatible." [3]

Deracination ideology is a plank of Marxism/communism which seeks to end race and the nation-state. This idea began when Karl Marx published his Communist Manifesto that ended in the words, "All the workers of the world unite". John C. Kiang traces this movement to socialism:

"As far as world unity is concerned, Marx and Engels were the pioneers who expounded that modern industry had furnished a real foundation for a world unity, and declared not only that “working men have no country,..."

but also that

"Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationalities. [4]
"In this declaration Marx and Engels claimed that the struggle of the workers was international in essence. National differences, they pointed out, were being wiped out by the development of free trade, by the growth of a world market, and by the increasing uniformity of industrial and social conditions. The workers in particular were being denationalized by modern industry, and had no fatherland." [4]

"Engels argued explicitly that the atomisation and deracination caused by international capitalism was the necessary precursor to worldwide emancipation: "The disintegration of mankind into a mass of isolated, mutually repelling atoms," he wrote, "means the destruction of all corporate, national and indeed of any particular interests and is the last necessary step towards the free and spontaneous association of men." [5]

Socialism's goal is internationalist.

"Modern Socialism is essentially international".[6]
"The State is not 'abolished'. It dies out". [7]

Socialism/Communism seek the establishment of a One World Government and in order to make this work, the culture must be in place in order for the politics to succeed. Deracination plays an important part in socialist/communist ideology and methodology in order to prepare the people worldwide to adopt a world government.

Furthermore, Socialism/Marxism/Communism seek a classless society. In order to bring that about, races and racial cohesion must be deconstructed. In this vein, the German communist Rosa Luxemburg wrote a famous essay titled "The Nationalities Question in the Russian Revolution" where she excoriates Lenin's encouraging of self-determination amongst the bordering nations of Soviet Russia. She points out that this agenda of Lenin is counterproductive to International Socialism:

"It is obvious that the phrases concerning self-determination and the entire nationalist movement, which at present constitute the greatest danger for international socialism,..."[8]

Nationalism in her regard is considered reactionary.

Stalin allowed for nationalist movements but only as a step that must occur; but then:

"In the next stage of the period of world dictatorship of the pro]etariat -- when the world socialist system of economy becomes suficiently consolidated and socialism becomes part and parcel of the life of the peoples, and when practice convinces the nations of the advantages of a common language over national languages -- national differences and languages will begin to die away and make room for a world language, common to all nations." [9]

The Marxist goal is the deconstruction of differences in order for the establishment of socialism world-wide. Nationalism is seen as a necessary step, a prelude, that precedes the eventual formation of one world, one humanity.

Background

Deracination ideology

Methodology of deracination

(under construction)
(1) Stigmatizing natural patriotism as "racism"
(2) Denying race exists
(3) Denying that there are inherent racial differences
(4) Denying that racialism exists.
(5) Teaching that to have "racial prejudice" is wrong. Criminalizing such behavior.
(6) Classifying racial epithets as "Hate Speech".


Effects of deracination

Psychological

(under construction)
Rootlessness. Stress. sense of belonging gives sense of security and self-assurance.

Sociological

(under construction)
Loss of loyalty. Harm to country where people have no loyalty. Acts of treason become easier. Sense of community suffers. Loss of historical context. Loss of one's place in history. Connection to the past.

Increased miscegenation.

Telos of deracination

(under construction)
Race disappears. Atomization of man. To end the Jewish question.

Deracination impact on politics

The deracination ideology inherent in International Socialism, led to the creation of National Socialism. In a sense, it caused blowback, a reaction against it. People who were attracted to socialism but discouraged by the internationalism, the cosmpolitanism, of socialism, developed a type of socialism that included nationalism.

The international notions of the Social Democrats of Eastern Europe, led some Czechs to break away and establish a new party, the Národné Socialistická Strana Ceská or Czech National Socialist Party. [10]

In France, George Valois, in 1925, founded the first non-Italian fascist movement, Le Faisceau and he defined it as 'Nationalism + socialism = fascism'.

Many socialists and communists rejected this internationalism and went on to form national socialism. An example is Benito Mussolini who was a former communist and became the founder of Italian National Socialism called Fascism.

Philosophy of deracination

(under construction)
Nihilism Deracination is a type of metaphysical genocide. The destruction of boundaries.


Quotes

  • "The Constitution of 1795, just like its predecessors, was made for man. But there is no such thing as man in the world. In the course of my life I have seen Frenchmen, Italians, Russians etc.; I know, too, thanks to Montesquieu, that one can be a Persian. But as for man, I declare that I have never met him in my life; if he exists, he is unknown to me." ~ Joseph de Maistre [11]
  • "I believe a man should live in his own country and I think the deracination of human beings leads to frustration, in one way or another, obstructing the light of the soul. I can live only in my own country. I cannot live without having my feet and my hands on it and my ear against it, without feeling the movement of its waters and its shadows, without feeling my roots read down into its soil for maternal nourishment. ~ Pablo Neruda [12]

List of organizations who carry out this agenda

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Dream of Deracination: The Uses of Cosmopolitanism" Ross Posnock American Literary History - Volume 12, Number 4, Winter 2000, pp. 802-818
  2. ^ From French déraciner, from Old French desraciner : des-, de- + racine, root (from Late Latin rādīcīna, from Latin rādīx, rādīc-; see wrād- in Indo-European roots). American Heritage Dictionary.
  3. ^ Woods, Alan and Grant, Ted, Marxism and the National Question, Part 4, 25 February 2000, posted on "In Defense of Marxism", marxist.com. Retrieved 2008-4-6
  4. ^ a b Kiang, One World. pg 8-9
  5. ^ Laughland, John, "Full Marx for George Bush", LewRockwell.com, November 8, 2005. Retrieved 2008-3-30
  6. ^ Spargo, John, and Arner, George Louis, Elements of Socialism, The MacMillan Co., NY. page 202.
  7. ^ Spargo, John, and Arner, George Louis, Elements of Socialism, The MacMillan Co., NY. page 213
  8. ^ Retrieved on 2008-4-6
  9. ^ Stalin, J. V., The National Question and Leninism", March 18, 1929. Retrieved on 2008-4-6
  10. ^ Liberty or Equality, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Christendom Press, Front Royal, VA, 1953.1993. pg 252
  11. ^ Oeuvres completes de Joseph de Maistre, I, 74. {Quoted in A Dictionary of Philosophical Quotations, Alfred Jules Ayer, Jane O'Grady}
  12. ^ Dhanapala,Jayantha, "The Diplomat as a Creative Writer". Retrieved 2008-3-30.

Bibliography

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