|
The Frankfurt School: Marxist Ideas As Legit
They came from Frankfurt, Germany to
Switzerland, and then to America, after fleeing Hitler in 1933. They came to
create a negative "critical theory" of White society. They came to America to
tell Whites that their culture was sick, backwards and "anti-Semitic." This
Jewish cabal of academics and intellectuals was widely seen as existing solely
to push Marxist/Jewish theories; nonetheless, this School is still
'highly-regarded' in many academic circles, and it had a profound impact on the
West. [1]
The Jews of this idea-school, which was also known by its
earlier name of the Institute of Social Research, included Felix J. Weil
[creator/funder of the School, 1923], Carl Grünberg [its first director],
Theodor Adorno, Erich Fromm, Wilhelm Reich, Max Horkheimer, Walter Benjamin,
Otto Kirchheimer, Friedrich Pollock, Leo Lowenthal, Franz Neumann, Henryk
Grossmann, Karl August Wittfogel, Franz Borkenau, Julian Gumperz, Paul Massing,
Paul Lazarsfeld, Mirra Komarovsky and Herbert Marcuse.
The Frankfurters
set up shop at Columbia University in 1936. They later moved to California, then
back to Germany when the Nazis were stopped by the Allies. Wherever they were
located, the Frankfurters waged social and ethnic war on White culture like so
many other Jews. These Frankfurters influenced scores of Western college
professors and intellectuals. They remade American ideas about race and
gender.
Theodor Adorno was the main author of the book "The Authoritarian
Personality" [1950] a work that featured 'Ethnocentrism' and 'Anti-Semitism'
Scales, which highlights just how Jewish Adorno and Co. were. Adorno also made
the comment that "to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric." Adorno and Max
Horkheimer co-authored "Elements of Anti-Semitism" [1947], long said to be the
foundation for the idea that Christianity, all by itself, is the main engine of
anti-Semitism in the West, as if Jews had nothing to do with
anti-Semitism.
Furthermore, Herbert Marcuse laid the groundwork for the
hippie culture in America with his social ideas. His book "One-Dimensional Man"
[1964] became a bible of the New Left.
[1] sources
for this document include the book "The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary
Analysis of Jewish Involvement In Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political
Movements," by Dr. Kevin MacDonald, 1998
|