We Shall Overcome

We shall overcome Caliphism and its misogynist agenda.

The United States has rejected the French Revolutionary philosophy (Naturalism or Egalitarianism) that for forty years has been styled post-modernism or deconstructionism. Implicitly it also has rejected the reductionist philosophy of the Jewish Austrian Karl Popper and his Jewish Hungarian disciple George Soros. Popper’s reductionism is an aspect of the basis of deconstructionism.

The thralldom of clergy, professors and journalists has been broken. The Internet has done its job of democratizing truth and truthing democracy.

Certainty of any kind exists above and beyond the dimensions of the organic and the psychic, of body and mind, of culture and society. Man’s fulfillment is the actualization of his essence in the midst of the ambiguities of his existential condition, a fulfillment that occurs through the dimensions of spirit and, par excellence, history.

This fact philosophers like Popper and Derrida and their minions like Soros and clergy, professors and journalists are prevented from seeing by an absence of religious and academic training and a presence of personal weakness, laziness and dishonesty.

Significantly, the Jewish Algerian-born Frenchman Jacques Derrida, founder of deconstructionism, died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 74 on 8 October 2004.

Reuters UK writes:

Derrida, father of deconstructionism, dies
Sat 9 October, 2004 18:29

By Timothy Heritage

PARIS (Reuters) – French philosopher Jacques Derrida, the founder of the school of deconstructionism, has died of cancer at the age of 74, France Info radio has said.

It said Algerian-born Derrida had died on Friday of cancer of the pancreas.

Derrida, who divided his time between France and the United States, argued that the traditional way we read texts makes a number of false assumptions and that they have multiple meanings which even their author may not have understood.

His thinking gave rise to the school of deconstruction, a method of analysis that has been applied to literature, linguistics, philosophy, law and architecture.

It is heralded as showing the multiple layers of meaning at work in language, but was described by critics as nihilistic.

“In him, France gave the world one of the greatest contemporary philosophers, one of the major figures in the intellectual life of our time,” French President Jacques Chirac said in a statement after learning of his death.

“Through his work, he sought to find the free movement which lies at the root of all thinking.”

Born into a Jewish family in El-Biar in Algeria on July 15, 1930, Derrida began studying philosophy at the elite Ecole Normale Superieure in 1952 and taught at Paris’s Sorbonne University from 1960 to 1964.

From the early 1970s, Derrida spent much of his time teaching in the United States, at such universities as Johns Hopkins, Yale and the University of California at Irvine.

His work focused on language. Challenging the idea that a text has an unchangeable meaning, Derrida said the author’s intentions cannot be accepted unconditionally and that this means each text can have multiple meanings.

His ideas were seen as showing unavoidable tensions between the ideals of clarity and coherence that govern philosophy.

He was seen as the inheritor of “anti-philosophy”, the school of thought of predecessors such as Sigmund Freud, Friedrich Nietzsche and Martin Heidegger.

Derrida’s work was at times controversial. Some staff at Cambridge University protested when the university proposed awarding him an honorary degree in 1992, though he did eventually receive it.

In the early 1980s he was detained when he left his Prague hotel room for the airport after displeasing Czechoslovakia’s Communist authorities by giving a lecture on deconstructionist theory.

Derrida was once married to Sylvaine Agacinski, who is now the wife of former Socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin. Derrida and Agacinski had one son.

AMDG

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