34 Silenced

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Meet USMC Sergeant Jack Lewis Raper:

US Marine Corps Sergeant Jack Lewis Raper was a 1962 graduate of Cedartown High School, Cedartown, Georgia, and lived most of his life in Polk County where he was a member of the First Baptist Church of Cedartown. He is survived by his wife, the former Miss Sue Carter of Fitzgerald; by his daughter Trishia; two brothers, Don and Jimmy Raper of Cedartown; a sister, Judy, of Cedartown; and grandparents.

He and 33 other men were murdered 57 years ago on June 8, 1967 when the zionist occupiers of Palestine wantonly attacked the USS Liberty. I’m sure FOX and NewsMax will tell you all about it today.

COLUMN: Families, Children, And Legitimate Higher Education

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Families, Children, And Legitimate Higher Education

 

In the fading remains of the United States, there really are dark forces at work against the American people. A new study from Illinois uncovered mixed benefits and drawbacks associated with men becoming fathers. However, the popular US media spin was: “Having kids may shorten a man’s life, groundbreaking study reveals.” In other words, “Kids are messy, you can’t afford them, and they’ll just kill you anyway”. That might as well be America’s family planning mantra. Societies do not survive this way. Populations like America’s, that do not exceed two children per family, do not last. 

Elsewhere, more decent and intelligent people understand the importance of forming, promoting, and protecting families. Some countries are encouraging men to become fathers and women mothers. Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin recently stated that families with three or more children should become the norm. He also reassured families that the Russian government would be there to assist them as they perpetuate the existence of Russia. “Families with children” is the mantra of Russia. 

Part of assisting families and their children is maintaining excellent education at all levels. As for elementary and lower schools in Russia, I am not as familiar with the processes as I’d like. The consensus of those I’ve asked or read is that the learning afforded is good and better than the equivalent in America. At the college and university level, I trust things are also better in Russia. That’s because I trust the people in charge, from President Putin right down the line. I also know there is a necessary movement to separate Russian education from Western standards, a part of the larger bifurcation and liberation associated with Russia’s multipolar quest. 

Another man I trust, Leonid Savin, wrote a heckuva good article on intellectual standards and the need for Russian sovereign refinement. He noted that 1990s Western interference “led both to the meaninglessness of deep meanings and their replacement with surrogate terms, which began to be used at the reflex level, and to a constant movement to Western theories and concepts, instead of developing our own.” This is exactly what happened to American schools over the past century and a half. Whatever lingered from the Soviet system, even if deficient in some areas, was better than and preferable to the foisted alternative. The movement to reflexive surrogacy would have quickly given way to the total abandonment of literacy, numeracy, and public morality. The fact this progression was stopped or is being stopped is a miracle in and of itself.

Savin goes on to discuss the pro-Russian transformation of college social sciences by keeping cherished traditions alive though updated to reflect the complexities of the evolving world. Call it “whole process” social science education, something in scholastic keeping, on Russian terms, with Professor Alexander Dugin’s Fourth Political Theory. Savin mentions Dugin’s work as the leader of the new Political Training and Scientific Center at Moscow’s Russian State University for the Humanities (RSUH). The Center’s purpose is “the development and implementation of a new approach (a new socio-humanitarian paradigm) to the domestic teaching of humanitarian and social disciplines, aimed at the formation of the worldview of students based on the Russian civilizational identity and traditional Russian spiritual and moral values.”

In January, Dugin said at RSUH’s Transformation of Humanitarian Education seminar, “There has been a catastrophic degradation in Western historical science. …. This is evidenced by gender problems, postmodernism, and ultra-liberalism. We can study the West, but not as the ultimate universal truth. We need to focus on our own Russian development model.” Dugin’s program leadership earned the ire of the CIA Washington Post and some CIA pro-Western Telegram bots, so he must be off to a good start. (I suppose they were taken aback, like vampires offered Holy Water, by mention of spiritual and moral values.) I’m unsure when Dugin last visited an American university, but his first observation of catastrophe is an understatement. About the only courses of study in America that retain any semblance of excellence are those in mathematics and the hard science programs at certain elite engineering schools—and they are under heavy attack. However, he is correct that Western schools should be studied. They should be studied in two ways. First, they should be scanned for any useful remnants from the time when the West represented an actual Christian civilization. Second, they can be forensically studied like a cadaver in a postmortem examination in an attempt to find out what killed them. 

As part of its Western and non-Western integration, RSUH’s website asserts: “International cooperation is an important part of the internationalization strategy at RSUH. It is aimed at strengthening the university’s competitive ability in Russia and abroad and its integration into the global education and research space.” This is, as stated, very important, yet the manner of execution might be even more important. My advice, should anyone want it, is to keep studying the cadavers while also selectively affiliating with the wider world. This could and probably will mean making adjustments to things like Russian participation in the Bologna Process and looking deeper into connections with BRICS+ countries and the Global South in general. Without my advice, they appear to be doing fine as-is, with RSUH being one of four Russian universities in a pilot program to monitor international cooperation.

Russia’s societal heritage is the envy of much of the world because it has survived and built upon its ancient traditions. Those traditions, having yielded beauty, strength, and prosperity, obviously work. So does Russian innovation, in technology, economics, and other facets of (post)modern existence. Russians must continue to cling affectionately to the positive, purposefully abandon the negative, and embrace any helpful new processes or ideas in keeping with Russian customs regarding what is good, true, and beautiful. And, of course, it all starts with the Russian people themselves, with strong families and many wonderful children.

Deo vindice.

To The Moon, Alice!

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CNSA’s probe has reportedly been busy digging, reportedly on the Moon.

Carrying valuable rocks and dust collected from the far side of the moon, the ascender of China’s Chang’e-6 lunar probe officially embarked on its journey back to Earth, moving toward the goal of returning precious rock and soil from this region to Earth for the first time in history.

I trust all the science lovers and trusters are waiting anxiously to see how these rocks compare to NASA’s petrified wood and impossible plutonium isotopes.

Burning It Down To The Ground

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Ahead of SPIEF 24, President Putin again emphasized nothing will change, politically, between the Russian Federation and the GAE regardless of this fall’s “election”.

Putin spoke with heads of international news agencies on Wednesday, on the sidelines of the St Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF).

“We believe no serious changes will happen after the elections,” the Russian leader explained, in response to a question from Reuters.

I think he’s being a little optimistic in thinking there will be an election, but time will tell. He’s dead right about the decline and the burning.

 

Edgar Allan Poe in Türkiye

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My Poe essay is now available in English, Portuguese, and, now, Turkish.

Geçtiğimiz günlerde Daria Platonova Dugina’nın Eskatolojik İyimserlik adlı kitabını okumak benim için bir zevkti. Bu şaşırtıcı kitapta aklıma takılan pek çok nokta arasında, en sevdiğim edebi figürlerden biri olan Amerikalı yazar ve şair Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) ile ilgili bir soru vardı. Her ne sebeple olursa olsun, konunun daha derinlemesine araştırılmaya değer olduğunu düşündüm.

Many thanks … Çeviri için Adnan Demir’e çok teşekkürler!

North Korea Does Freedom of Expression

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The Un family is starting to deeply endear themselves, even as they “embrace” Enlightenment values.

The full suspension of the agreement comes as relations further deteriorate amid a series of tit-for-tat balloon “attacks” across the heavily fortified border.

Since last week, North Korea has been sending hundreds of balloons carrying trash and animal faeces – branded as “gifts of sincerity” – to its southern neighbour.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, who has emerged as a key spokesperson for Pyongyang, mocked South Korea for complaining about the balloons this week. North Koreans were simply exercising their freedom of expression, she declared.

If square, unhip South Koreans don’t like these balloons, they can simply avert their eyes. Remember that? Free trash and animal shit is just another form of free speech. They’re putting the “Un” back in fun!

They’re Lowering The Iron Curtain

…on Americans. Citizens of the free and democratic free democracy of the GAE are no longer free to travel.

The US State Department has seized the passport of former Marine and UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, he told RT on Monday.

Ritter was on his way to Russia for the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) when he was pulled off the plane and had his documents confiscated.

“I was boarding the flight. Three [police] officers pulled me aside. They took my passport. When asked why, they said ‘orders of the State Department’. They had no further information for me,” Ritter told RT. “They pulled my bags off the plane, then escorted me out of the airport. They kept my passport.”

While he did not explain, other than to say it wasn’t personal, Judge Napolitano was also unable to travel to Saint Petersburg.

Congratulations! They, indeed, built the wall – around Americans. Welcome to the Fourth Reich.

UPDATE: Posted something similar on SG and I had the realization that the “Iron” curtain is too masculine for ‘Murica. Welcome behind the Lavender Curtain??

Creating New Growth Centers

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The better parts of the world will keep moving forward this week at SPIEF 2024:

Medzinárodné ekonomické fórum sa bude konať v Petrohrade od 5. do 8. júna. Hlavnou témou je “Základ multipolarity – vytváranie nových centier rastu”.

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The International Economic Forum will be act in St. Petersburg from 5 to 8 June. The main theme is “The basis of multipolarity – creating new growth centers”.

While the mere theme absolutely excludes the presence of those who still think it’s 1607, and the circumstances exclude most of the dead faux West, more than a few good unofficial Western representatives will be present. I will not be one of them. This year. It is my understanding Scott Ritter and Andrew Napolitano, among others, will be there, so here’s looking forward to their reports along with all the great news we’ll be getting from local sources. Party on!

Vivida Vis Animi

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A few days ago, I emailed one of the subject authors from my recent triple Palestinian book review. Among other things, I apologized for such a combined review; my feeling, and maybe it’s just me, is that in covering two or more books at once, I give short shrift to each. In my defense, time is somewhat limited and sometimes these things just flow together. Of course, with such matters, it’s not about me; rather, it’s about getting messages across. So it was that I was very happy to learn that the review, short or otherwise, received a rather positive international reception with thousands of views. Many thanks to various friends for promoting it! I’ve recently learned, perhaps without much surprise, that I am considerably more popular without the CWA than within it. Go figure.

Today, I am pleased to announce that my review of Dr. Blake Alcott’s titanic book, The Rape Of Palestine, debuted at the Postil magazine, home of “Uniting Wisdom With The Soul“. Thank you, to the excellent editorial staff, and welcome, to any Postil readers who may have drifted here from there. (As always, quality will improve … tomorrow!)

Also, happy International Day of the Child. June is here, and, a little later this month, this little blog, growing like a child, turns twelve years old. Thank you, all, and stay tuned.