It’s a puzzle isn’t it? Why? Why try to destroy the best of the Enlightenment?
People like George Soros in the U.S. fund radical DAs around the country who are soft on crime… crime rises… people are upset… crime figures are hidden…people told everything is OK… people relax… people vote back in the radicals who gave them increased crime in the first place.
Rinse and Repeat. And so the destruction continues. And gets worse. And threatens the very foundation of our societies. And hence the puzzle. Why? Why do they want to do this?
The answer is that the Old has to be swept aside before the New can be built. The Old capitalist system has to be destroyed — it’s very durable after all, and people seem to quite like it— and only then can we build the New Utopia of Socialism and Communism.
George Soros even has his own name for this process. He calls it Reflexivity. You have to Destroy, and the Reflex is to the opposite. That’s it at its simplest; though it’s hardly more complex. I sometimes wonder if his time as a Judenrat in the Second World War makes him embarrassed deep down so he wants to expunge it by the destruction of all that remembers it. Maybe. Or maybe he’s just an old style communist.
The video above is not at all about Soros. But about people like him. Socialists in the west.
From the Show Notes:
Prof. Thomas DiLorenzo starts with a quote from the book “Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis” by Ludwig von Mises, first published in German by Gustav Fischer Verlag in Jena in 1922.Thomas James DiLorenzo is an American economics professor at Loyola University Maryland Sellinger School of Business.