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Clever Pseudonym's avatar

Post-60s Leftism—its entire movement and ideology—is written, produced and directed by secular white liberals and is designed first and foremost to meet their political, social, and emotional needs, most especially their deep-seated need to publicly atone for their guilt and "privilege". Thus whatever benefits accrue to their pet victim classes are only secondary or incidental, as they are simply symbols or pretexts for an endless pseudopolitical group-therapy session.

This is why all Left idealistic schemes never achieve any real success or lasting social improvements, as this isn't the purpose of their project, and in fact might threaten it.

I'm constantly shocked by how people can drape themselves in abstractions like "Justice" and "Equality" and this gives them a permanent get-out-of-responsibility card; also, how America continues to subsidize people who work to denounce and unravel it and turn their children into weapons in the Permanent Revolution; and most especially infuriating is how when we at last achieve the equality of living in rubble (the only possible equality), the architects of our dismantling will walk away unscathed. (They always do.)

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John Olson's avatar

Charles R. Morris's "A Time of Passion" is out of print but you may be able to find a used copy, as I did. Morris ran anti-poverty programs in Trenton for LBJ's Great Society. He finally concluded that the result if not the aim of programs like his was jobs for bureaucrats: "To the profound disappointment of community organization activists, the local anti-poverty agencies were rapidly transmuting into tired civil service organizations, preoccupied with job grades and tenure, hardly the advance guard of a new age of social reform...With a clarity of logic which somehow eluded the antipoverty program designers, poor people readily appreciated that bigger welfare checks were a more direct and certain way to increase their incomes than the confusing self-improvement schemes hawked by Washington."

According to Morris, the social workers in the War on Poverty had overestimated the economists' expertise while the economists overestimated that of the social workers: "Social workers never questioned that economists had plumbed all the mysteries of the economy; and the economists who designed the antipoverty program never doubted the availability of a similarly encompassing social technology." Morris claims the reason both camps were wrong about each other was "a kind of professional courtesy extended among experts in that era of expertise." That era has passed.

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