Comments by "craxd1" (@craxd1) on "" video.

  1. It occurred in several western nations starting in the thirties, where the supposed anti-Stalinist Trotskyites, who claimed they didn't believe in "Soviet socialism," left the left wing and joined the right. What they believed in was Trotskyism (international socialism). Needless to say, some even joined in the fascist movement, because that was anti-Stalinist and anti-Soviet. In the US, they took up a new name, Neoconservatism and the New Right, and they overtook the old (real) conservative coalition to control the R Party in 1952. The first of them were taught by the Frankfurt School professors that had fled to the US, and were now in a handful of colleges and universities. One college in particular, the City College of New York, became known as the "Harvard of the Proletariat." The grads became known as the "New York Intellectuals," who then founded "new conservatism," which was internationalist socialism. Nixon became one, and the Bush family were his underlings. The New York Intellectuals were seen as a twin to the Bloomsbury Group in the UK, with an affiliation to the Fabian Society. This left the US voter with a choice, the D Party, which had supported Stalin, and was infested with hard line communists, or the R Party that now believed in Trotsky's international socialism. One was as bad as the other, were in cahoots, and it led the US into all its wars after WWII, as these Trotskyites were the war hawks as well. Wolfowitz is an example. It was spreading Trotskyism, hidden as "liberal democracy," in a nation building scheme via the barrel of a gun, and it caused the world to hate the US over its interference. I can back the US' actions in the Caribbean and the Americas to remove Soviet and Chinese influence (in our own backyard), but not in Eurasia nor Africa, and I sure do not back nation building. I don't back Trotskyism either, as I'm one of the few true old conservatives left.
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