Video: Charlottesville Confirmed Agitprop Staged Event (Infowars with Steve Pieczenik)
This brought to my attention the seemingly exponential degeneration of the left’s narrative. The WTO protests were anti-globalist, whether they realized it or not; although they totally misrepresented them as anti-capitalist. The statism of international trade regulated and protected by governments is the opposite of capitalism, which is genuinely free trade.
Likewise, the Occupy movement was in the right neighbourhood (or not; they should have been in D.C. protesting the Fed) but Occupiers are nowhere to be seen now. That’s because they were controlled opposition, manipulated by the same elites who are and who now bankroll the agitation propagandists behind Antifa and Black Lives Matter.
It wasn’t long ago that classical liberals and conservatives could reach out to leftist-liberals, their common enemy having been the bankster class allied with multinational cronyism (i.e. corporate fascism). But the left went full-on regressive, so quickly, in the U.S. at least, that one marvels the ease at which the leftist mindset is to be exploited for the advancement of interests it professes to be against.
It’s all about race now. Liberals are possessed by “white guilt,” and the more regressive among them label anyone with a conflicting viewpoint as a Nazi. Thus instead of arguments to further their objectives they are left with violence, which the mainstream (bought and paid for) media ignores or makes excuses for.
Balkanization trumps class warfare, because racial identity politics are closer to home (and intellectually undemanding) for a social justice warrior outsourcing his thinking to mainstream-media talking heads.
It is leftists who are the ones occupied – psychologically – by the kind of financial power they once despised. The elite of the elite of that “one percent” they thought ran the world. They railed against free-enterprising capitalists, while corporate fascists bought them race-peddling politicians and media.
(Classical Liberalism 2.0, 2017)














