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To: betty boop
I did a SEARCH using 'Stalin Semantics' which resulted in scads of articles. I've selected a few for your perusal and maybe someone will come up with that other posted article I thought was posted on FR awhile back. The closest I can come to the content of the original article can be found here:

http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1950/jun/20.htm

http://www.general-semantics.org/Advanced/AK_role.shtml
and from the same site on a lighter note!
http://www/general-semantics.org/Basics/RPP-jots.shtml

http://www.geocities.com/redcomrades/chap16.html

http://www.geocities.com/livefreecritique/semanoppress.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org/oagrw002.html

I also found this article, betty boop, which has something to say about the nature of terrorism:

http://www.newint.org/issue161/symbolic.htm

NOTE: While doing this search, it became obvious to me where Clinton "went to school" and where his use of semantics came from. In open Russian literature on semantics, the phrase "it depends on what the meaning of 'is' is" can be found, so Clinton doesn't 'own' the phrase, and is a dead give-away of what, IMHO, he's been influenced by viz Russian communist leaders' written works. There's got to be some truth in the rumors that Hillary Rot-Ham is a marxist along with those in whom she keeps company, maybe. We really need to keep tabs on those 50+ Democratic Socialists in Congress as far as what they're trying to push through legislatively.

Oh, and for something TOTALLY different coming from the Fringe Element(?), I also stumbled upon this while surfing, however, I have to WARN you this site is pretty freaky -oo-

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/SAMUEL_HILL/bloodyja.htm
92 posted on 12/16/2002 9:32:50 PM PST by JusticeLives
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To: JusticeLives; madfly; betty boop
Postmodern Jihad: What Osama bin Laden learned from the Left.

MUCH HAS BEEN WRITTEN about Osama bin Laden's Islamic fundamentalism; less about the contribution of European Marxist postmodernism to bin Laden's thinking.

...A key figure here is the German philosopher Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), who not only helped shape several generations of European leftists and founded postmodernism, but also was a leading supporter of the Nazis. Heidegger argued for the primacy of "peoples" in contrast with the alienating individualism of "modernity." In order to escape the yoke of Western capitalism and the "idle chatter" of constitutional democracy, the "people" would have to return to its primordial destiny through an act of violent revolutionary "resolve."

...This vision of the postmodernist revolution went straight from Heidegger into the French postwar Left, especially the works of Jean-Paul Sartre, eager apologist for Stalinism and the Cultural Revolution in China. Sartre's prot g , the Algerian writer Frantz Fanon, crystallized the Third World variant of postmodernist revolution in "The Wretched of the Earth" (1961). From there, it entered the world of Middle Eastern radicals. Many of the leaders of the Shiite revolution in Iran that deposed the modernizing shah and brought the Ayatollah Khomeini to power in 1979 had studied Fanon's brand of Marxism. Ali Shari'at, the Sorbonne-educated Iranian sociologist of religion considered by many the intellectual father of the Shiite revolution, translated "The Wretched of the Earth" and Sartre's "Being and Nothingness into Persian." The Iranian revolution was a synthesis of Islamic fundamentalism and European Third World socialism.

...According to Cairo journalist Issandr Elamsani, Arab leftist intellectuals still see the world very much in 1960s terms. "They are all ex-Sorbonne, old Marxists," he says, "who look at everything through a postcolonial prism."

According to journalist Robert Worth, writing in the New York Times on the intellectual roots of Islamic terror, bin Laden is poorly educated in Islamic theology. A wealthy playboy in his youth, he fell under the influence of radical Arab intellectuals of the 1960s who blended calls for Marxist revolution with calls for a pure Islamic state.

...Wrote Fathi Yakan, "The groundwork for the French Revolution was laid by Rousseau, Voltaire and Montesquieu; the Communist Revolution realized plans set by Marx, Engels and Lenin....The same holds true for us as well."

While Al Fatah occasionally still used the old-fashioned Leninist language of class struggle, the increasingly radical groups that succeeded it perfected the melding of Islamism and Third World socialism.

THE RELATIONSHIP between postmodernist European leftism and Islamic radicalism is a two-way street: Not only have Islamists drawn on the legacy of the European Left, but European Marxists have taken heart from Islamic terrorists who seemed close to achieving the longed-for revolution against American hegemony. Consider Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida, two leading avatars of postmodernism. Foucault was sent by the Italian daily Corriere della Sera to observe the Iranian revolution and the rise of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Like Sartre, who had rhapsodized over the Algerian revolution, Foucault was enthralled, pronouncing Khomeini "a kind of mystic saint." The Frenchman welcomed "Islamic government" as a new form of "political spirituality" that could inspire Western radicals to combat capitalist hegemony.

Derrida, meanwhile, reacted to the collapse of the Soviet Union by calling for a "new international." Whereas the old international was made up of the economically oppressed, the new one would be a grab bag of the culturally alienated, "the dispossessed and the marginalized": students, feminists, environmentalists, gays, aboriginals, all uniting to combat American-led globalization. Islamic fundamentalists were obvious candidates for inclusion.

... In professorial hands, postmodernism is reduced to a parlor game in which we "deconstruct" great works of the past and impose our own meaning on them without regard for the authors' intentions or the truth or falsity of our interpretations. This has damaged liberal education in America. Still, it doesn't kill people--unlike the deadly postmodernism out there in the world. Heirs to Heidegger and his leftist devotees, the terrorists don't limit themselves to deconstructing texts. They want to deconstruct the West, through acts like those we witnessed on September 11.

What the terrorists have in common with our armchair nihilists is a belief in the primacy of the radical will, unrestrained by traditional moral teachings such as the requirements of prudence, fairness, and reason. The terrorists seek to put this belief into action, shattering tradition through acts of violent revolutionary resolve. That is how al Qaeda can ignore mainstream Islam, which prohibits the deliberate killing of noncombatants, and slaughter innocents in the name of creating a new world, the latest in a long line of grimly punitive collectivist utopias.

93 posted on 12/17/2002 6:35:06 AM PST by Remedy
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To: JusticeLives
Thank you so much for the links on "Stalin-speak," etc., JusticeLives. They're destined for my "case book." Lots of catching up to do here.... Thanks again!!!
99 posted on 12/18/2002 10:05:38 AM PST by betty boop
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