Showing posts with label personalia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label personalia. Show all posts

September 3, 2020

but the men didn't know

мужики

а мужеги-то и не знали: такое раз но образие

имхо: 

современный феминизм для того и создан — шоп жанчынки воевали между собой, в принципе любое левое течение — теоретично, а правое, отлично от левого, занимается телом.
К примеру, создание пилюли, или метода ритма. Всё это сделали люди, далёкие от левизны.

April 21, 2020

Gregori Maximoff

Born in Smolensk, he studied at the Vladimir Seminary School of Theology, and later at the St. Petersburg School of Agriculture, where he received an agronomist degree. In 1912 he began to agitate for anarchism under the pseudonym Gr. Lapot ("Гр. Лапоть"). Although opposed to the First World War, in 1915 he joined the army to spread revolutionary propaganda among the soldiers. In 1917, Maximoff met his partner, Olga, in Kharkiv. She had been sentenced by Tsarism to 8 years of forced labor for spreading subversive literature, but her sentence was later commuted to exile in Kansk province (Siberia) due to her young age.

During the October Revolution Maximoff participated in the strike movement and in the fighting in Petrograd and was subsequently elected as provincial deputy of the Petrograd factory soviets. In 1918, along with five other colleagues, he was elected as delegate to the First All Russian Congress of Trade Unions. As a member of an anarcho-syndicalist body of the Nabat Confederation, Maximoff collaborated in the drafting of the newspaper Golos Truda.

Between 1918 and 1921 he was imprisoned at least six times by the Bolsheviks. In 1919, he voluntarily enlisted in the Red Army to combat the counter-revolutionary white army, but he was imprisoned in Kharkiv for refusing to disarm workers and suppress protest. On 8 March 1921, during the Kronstadt uprising, he was arrested in Moscow by the Cheka, along with other members of the Nabat confederation. Maximoff was locked in Taganka prison, where he was sentenced to death for spreading anarcho-syndicalist propaganda. After a hunger strike, on December 1921 he managed to attract the attention of workers visiting the Red Trade Union Congress. As a result of pressure from the international community, he and 10 other anarchists were released from prison and expelled from the country.

As a refugee in Berlin, he founded the headquarters of the Anarcho-Syndicalist Confederation abroad, helping anarchists imprisoned in Russia. But he was expelled from Germany on 5 February 1922, for publishing a newspaper named Rabochi Put. He moved to Paris with Olga, and there they participated in the writing of Dielo Truda. In 1925 the couple emigrated to the United States, where they settled in Chicago. There they published the newspaper Golos Truzhenika. Maximoff wrote several works on his experiences in Soviet Russia and his anarchist theories. He also collaborated with the Yiddish newspaper Fraye Arbeter Shtime, was the editor of the anarcho-syndicalist newspaper Dielo Trouda-Probuzhdenie and wrote the book The Guillotine at Work: Twenty Years of Terror in Russia on the Bolshevik repression of anarchists and labor unionists during the 1917 Russian Revolution. He died of a heart attack in New York on 16 March 1950,.

The Guillotine at Work: Twenty Years of Terror in Russia


This one of Maximoff's best remembered works in which he analysis the consequences of the Bolshevik seizure of power in the October Revolution. Quoting from Lenin's pamphlet The Threatening Catastrophe and How to Fight It (Sept 1917), he argues that Lenin is the "first theoretician of fascism". However, when the actions of the working class in seizing control of both industrial and commercial enterprises make such a course of action, Maximoff argues that Lenin then calls for the establishment of state capitalism, with other elements of fascism being added from time to time. He bases this argument on his reading of The Next Tasks of the Soviet Power

Émile Armand

Important influences in his writing were Leo Tolstoy, Benjamin Tucker, Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Armand was an important propagandist of free love. He advocated free love, naturism and polyamory in what he termed la camaraderie amoureuse. Above all he advocated a pluralism in sex and love matters in which one could find "Here sexual union and family, there freedom or promiscuity". He wrote many propagandist articles on this subject such as "De la liberté sexuelle" (1907) where he advocated not only a vague free love but also multiple partners, which he called "plural love" In the individualist anarchist journal L'EnDehors, he and others continued in this way. Armand seized this opportunity to outline his theses supporting revolutionary sexualism and camaraderie amoureuse that differed from the traditional views of the partisans of free love in several respects.

Later, Armand submitted that from an individualist perspective, nothing was reprehensible about making "love" even if one did not have very strong feelings for one's partner. "The camaraderie amoureuse thesis entails a free contract of association (that may be annulled without notice, following prior agreement) reached between anarchist individualists of different genders, adhering to the necessary standards of sexual hygiene, with a view toward protecting the other parties to the contract from certain risks of the amorous experience, such as rejection, rupture, exclusivism, possessiveness, unicity, coquetry, whims, indifference, flirtatiousness, disregard for others, and prostitution."

He also published Le Combat contre la jalousie et le sexualisme révolutionnaire (1926), followed over the years by Ce que nous entendons par liberté de l'amour (1928), La Camaraderie amoureuse ou “chiennerie sexuelle” (1930), and, finally, La Révolution sexuelle et la camaraderie amoureuse (1934), a book of nearly 350 pages comprising most of his writings on sexuality.

In a text from 1937, he mentioned among the individualist objectives the practice of forming voluntary associations for purely sexual purposes of heterosexual, homosexual, or bisexual nature or of a combination thereof. He also supported the right of individuals to change sex and stated his willingness to rehabilitate forbidden pleasures, non-conformist caresses (he was personally inclined toward voyeurism), as well as sodomy. This led him allocate more and more space to what he called "the sexual non-conformists", while excluding physical violence. His militancy also included translating texts from people such as Alexandra Kollontai and Wilhelm Reich and establishments of free love associations which tried to put into practice la camaraderie amoureuse through actual sexual experiences.

The prestige in the subject of free love of Armand within anarchist circles was such as to motivate the young Argentinian anarchist América Scarfó to ask Armand in a letter on advice as to how to deal with the relationship she had with notorious Italian anarchist Severino Di Giovanni. Di Giovanni was still married when they began the relationship. "The letter was published in L’en dehors" on 20 January 1929 under the title "'An Experience', together with the reply from E. Armand". Armand replied to Scarfó, "Comrade: My opinion matters little in this matter you send me about what you are doing. Are you or are you not intimately in accord with your personal conception of the anarchist life? If you are, then ignore the comments and insults of others and carry on following your own path. No one has the right to judge your way of conducting yourself, even if it were the case that your friend's wife be hostile to these relations. Every woman united to an anarchist (or vice versa), knows very well that she should not exercise on him, or accept from him, domination of any kind."


Émile Armand. Anarchist Individualism and Amorous Comradeship
""Emile Armand and la camaraderie amoureuse – Revolutionary sexualism and the struggle against jealousy." by Francis Rousin" (PDF). iisg.nl. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
http://theanarchistlibrary.org/HTML/America_Scarfo__Emile_Armand__Letter_of_America_Scarfo_to_Emile_Armand.htmlLetter of América Scarfó to Émile Armand

November 2, 2019

Bernard Shaw

Bernard Shaw on Stalin
Одним из первых анти-вакцинных троллей был Бернард Шоу (Bernard Shaw). В 1929 ему было 74 года, и вот что он писал о вакцинации против Оспы (Smallpox):
  • “...И Вы дадите ваше нежное, беззащитное дитя доктору, чтобы он взял эту, соскобленную вместе с грязью, с вымени коровы, дрянь, и втёр в ранку на коже вашего ребенка?” [чистая ложь, в 1929 году вакцина была очищенной и стерильной. Соскобы с вымени коровы делались в 18ом веке и, кстати, сохранили миллионы жизней]
  • Бернард Шоу писал и много другого, интересного. В 1931 году, Шоу, посетил СССР, очень полюбил вождя мирового пролетариата, товарища Сталина, полюбил и Советский Союз – «Я уезжаю из СССР, государства надежды и возвращаюсь в наши западные страны — страны отчаяния…» Писал Шоу. Более того Бернард Шоу открыто и яростно выступал на стороне Трофима Лысенко в кампании против ученых-генетиков всего мира (Письмо в газету Labour Monthly).
  • Хорошо известно, что Тролли, как правило, мужчины, склонные к нарциссизму. Их собственная личность значит для них гораздо больше, чем окружающие люди, они стремятся заполучить внимание других людей, любым способом. Кроме того, тролли часто поразительно безграмотны и тем отличаются от людей, страстных, профессионалов своего дела.

November 8, 2018

hospitality

Первой жертвой карательной психиатрии в СССР стала революционерка-террористка, лидер партии левых эсеров Мария Спиридонова. Американский журналист Джон Рид называл её «самой популярной и влиятельной женщиной в России» в 1917-1918 годах. Арестовывать Спиридонову было рискованно, тогда большевики создали ей репутацию буйной истерички и направили ее на принудительное обследование к известному психиатру профессору П.Б. Ганнушкину, которого предварительно правильно политически мотивировали. Диагноз светило отечественной психиатрии дал следующий: «Истерический психоз, состояние тяжёлое, угрожающее жизни». Под этим предлогом Феликс Дзержинский распорядился в 1921 году поместить Спиридонову в психиатрическую лечебницу. Там её продержали вплоть до 1941 года, когда перед наступлением фашистов под шумок расстреляли.

Источник: Кого в СССР «лечили» галоперидолом© Русская Семерка russian7.ru

October 17, 2018

Putzi Hanfstaengl

He attended Harvard University and became acquainted with Walter Lippmann and John Reed. A gifted pianist, he composed several songs for Harvard's football team. He graduated in 1909.

more here

March 8, 2018

excertpts from Red Emma

вместе с Александром Беркманом
Сильнее прочего меня поражала яростная, слепая борьба женщин из бедноты с частыми беременностями. Большинство из них жили в постоянном страхе перед зачатием; огромное количество замужних женщин беспомощно покорялось натиску мужей, а потом они с прямо противоположной решительностью избавлялись от плода. Каких только фантастических методов не изобретало отчаяние: прыжки со стола, массирование живота, прием тошнотворных смесей, «операции» затупленными инструментами… Обычно это заканчивалось самым плачевным образом. Женщин можно было понять: когда у тебя и без того целый выводок детей — намного больше, чем позволяет прокормить отцовская зарплата, — каждый новый ребенок становится «проклятием Господним»: такие слова мне не раз приходилось слышать от ортодоксальных евреек и католичек из Ирландии. Мужчины обычно воспринимали беременность спокойнее, но женщины вовсю бранили небеса за жестокость. Во время схваток многие предавали анафеме Бога и своих мужей.

November 9, 2012

I love them both

The University of British Columbia recently conducted a poll of liberal Democrat and conservative Republican academics in an effort to find out whether they share any common moral ground.  The study showed participants photographs of influential historical figures of the 20th Century and asked them to rate them. Researchers were trying to determine whether there were deep divides between American liberals and conservatives.  In the main, they found more consensus than they expected.
The study looked for five moral foundations or themes and asked the subjects to rate whether each person embodied the following moral foundations:
  • Care, or “basic concerns for the suffering of others, including virtues of caring and compassion.”
  • Fairness, or “concerns about unfair treatment, inequality, and more abstract notions of justice.”
  • Loyalty, or “concerns related to obligations of group membership, such as loyalty, self-sacrifice and vigilance against betrayal.”
  • Authority, “concerns related to social order and the obligations of hierarchical relationships, such as obedience, respect, and proper role fulfillment.”
  • Purity/sanctity: “concerns about physical and spiritual contagion, including virtues of chastity, wholesomeness and control of desires.”

From the most divisive to those who most agreed upon:
  • Margaret Sanger
  • Ronald Reagan
  • Margaret Thatcher
  • Harvey Milk
  • Ho Chi Minh
  • Che Guevara
  • Eleanor Roosevelt
  • V.I. Lenin
  • Billy Graham
  • Muhammad Ali
  • Robert Kennedy
  • Winston Churchill
  • Pope John Paul II
  • Ayatullah Khomeini
  • Mikhail Gorbachev
  • Charles Lindbergh
  • Mao Zedong
  • Teddy Roosevelt
  • Marilyn Monroe
  • Franklin Roosevelt
  • Martin Luther King
  • Nelson Mandela
  • Princess Diana
  • John F. Kennedy
  • David Ben-Gurion
  • Mohandas Gandhi
  • Rosa Parks
  • Andrei Sakharov
  • Emmeline Pankhurst
  • Mother Teresa
  • Bill Wilson
  • Lech Walesa
  • Helen Keller
  • Anne Frank
  • Tenzing Norgay
  • Bruce Lee
  • Jackie Robinson
  • Edmund Hillary
  • Adolf Hitler
  • Pelé
For more see the UBC press release or the study itself.

source

Kitty Marion

Kitty Marion Selling Birth Control Review
Kitty Marion, sometimes mistaken for Margaret Sanger -- this particular photo, stood on New York street corners for thirteen years (1917-1929), dedicated to selling copies of the Birth Control Review.

By 1929, Marion had become a public figure in New York, just by selling copies of a newspaper.

In a 1936 article in The New Yorker, Marion estimated that she alone sold over 99,000 copies of the Review. (“More Memories,” Birth Control Review [May 1923]; “Biographical Note,” Kitty Marion Papers.)

July 27, 2011

Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female Fertility

Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female FertilityMargaret Sanger, the American birth-control and population-control advocate who founded Planned Parenthood, stands like a giant among her contemporaries. With her dominating yet winning personality, she helped generate shifts of opinion on issues that were not even publicly discussed prior to her activism, while her leadership was arguably the single most important factor in achieving social and legislative victories that set the parameters for today’s political discussion of family-planning funding, population-control aid, and even sex education.

source

January 3, 2011

linx


из ранее цитированного блога (полезные ссылки):
One challenge about teaching my scholarship, though, was that I was often groping in the dark when it came to knowing at what level to pitch lecture notes and discussion questions. On the one hand, I wanted to go over specific terms—”eugenics,” “sexology,” “reproductive justice”—in much more detail than these students (who were often fairly familiar with the concepts) needed. On the other hand, I know I sometimes glossed over definitions of terms and historical context—”pessary,” “Comstock Laws,” “Havelock Ellis”—that I had become so familiar with that I forgot they weren’t common knowledge. I’d like in the future to maybe create a class wiki or a collaborative glossary to house references that are necessary, but not central, to the class.

August 18, 2010

Engineering Oblivion: Eugenics, the Remaking of Man and Unmaking of Morality

Sir Francis GaltonThe year is 1941, and the Nazis are in the midst of their Lebensborn program. Men of pure Aryan stock — especially members of the Waffen-SS, thought the cream of the crop — have a special purpose. In many occupied countries, they are encouraged to mate with blonde-haired, blue-eyed women — those reflecting the very picture of the Aryan ideal themselves. And “mate” is the word; romance is not necessary here, nor marriage, nor moral constraints. For the program is to serve as a baby factory that will produce future Aryan supermen for the Third Reich.


Tuesday, 17 August 2010
Lebensborn grows out of what is central to the Nazi philosophy: eugenics, which is the improvement of the human race through the process of selective breeding. And the Nazis embrace it for a very interesting reason: They have a penchant for indulging ancient myths, and one of these is that they are descended from a race of Aryan supermen who lost their superhuman capabilities because they procreated with inferior races, thus visiting upon themselves a kind of biological devolution. And they aim to reverse the process by jump-starting and accelerating evolution in a sort of hothouse environment.

Of course, talk of breeding supermen based upon an ancient template sounds kooky; speaking of inferior races disgusts the modern palate; and “eugenics,” now joined at the hip with the Nazis, has become a dirty word. Yet it is not at all accurate to say that the Nazis created eugenics. It is more correct to say that eugenics created the Nazis.

Eugenics, at least in a more primitive form, dates back to the time of the Greek philosopher Plato, who, inspired by the Spartans, advocated murdering “weak” children. It wasn’t until 1883 and the theory of evolution’s ascendancy, however, that the word “eugenics” was coined by English scientist Francis Galton, a cousin of Charles Darwin. It was at this time that the field was catching on like wildfire, and it would gain increasing acceptance during the next few decades. For, while it may be hard to believe today, eugenics was considered to be Science with a capital “S,” a “thinking man’s” philosophy, the politically correct theory of the age, only finding opposition from those shackled by faith and fancy. And although German Nazis made it infamous, in the United States in the early 20th century, it was downright popular.

Eugenics Breeding Grounds
Helped by well-heeled benefactors such as the Carnegie Institution, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Harriman railroad fortune, the eugenics movement was already roaring in the Roaring ’20s. And it sometimes manifested itself in relatively innocuous ways. For instance, writes Carol Squiers in Perfecting Mankind: Eugenics and Photography:
“Fitter Families” contests were staged at state agricultural fairs throughout the U.S. in the 1920s. They judged the eugenic worth of local families. Mary T. Watts, the co-organizer of the first contest at the 1920 Kansas Free Fair, explained that when anyone inquired what the contests were, “we say, ‘while the stock judges are testing the Holsteins, Jerseys, and whitefaces in the stock pavilion, we are judging the Joneses, Smiths & the Johns.’” The American Eugenics Society supported the contests, which grew out of a “Better Baby” competition at the 1911 Iowa State Fair. The family contests were featured at seven to ten fairs yearly and were held in the “human stock” sections.
As is always the case when man is reduced to animal, however, the eugenic mindset inspired darker actions as well. Edwin Black treated this subject in The Horrifying American Roots of Nazi Eugenics, writing:
Elements of the [eugenics] philosophy were enshrined as national policy by forced sterilization and segregation laws, as well as marriage restrictions, enacted in twenty-seven states. In 1909, California became the third state to adopt such laws. Ultimately, eugenics practitioners coercively sterilized some 60,000 Americans, barred the marriage of thousands, forcibly segregated thousands in “colonies,” and persecuted untold numbers in ways we are just learning. Before World War II, nearly half of coercive sterilizations were done in California, and even after the war, the state accounted for a third of all such surgeries.

… Much of the spiritual guidance and political agitation for the American eugenics movement came from California’s quasi-autonomous eugenic societies, such as the Pasadena-based Human Betterment Foundation and the California branch of the American Eugenics Society, which coordinated much of their activity with the Eugenics Research Society in Long Island. These organizations — which functioned as part of a closely-knit network — published racist eugenic newsletters and pseudoscientific journals, such as Eugenical News and Eugenics, and propagandized for the Nazis.
Yet it would be a mistake to place the United States in the same league as Nazi Germany; rather, it’s more correct to say that many Germans embraced the same fallacy as most of the secular world. For eugenics’ popularity knew few borders. Sure, while Theodore Roosevelt, Oliver Wendell Holmes, the National Academy of Sciences, and the National Research Council were supporters, eugenic policies were instituted in Australia, Japan, Canada, China, Sweden, France, and many other nations as well. In fact, among its most prominent advocates were two foreigners: famed English writers H.G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw.

For example, we could note that The Time Machine, perhaps Wells’ most famous work, has a eugenicist message. Yet we need not interpret symbolism to understand his position on the matter, as he said quite explicitly, “This thing, this euthanasia of the weak and sensual, is possible. On the principles that will probably animate the predominant classes of the new time, it will be permissible, and I have little or no doubt that in the future it will be planned and achieved.” As for Shaw, he echoed these sentiments, saying, “A part of eugenic politics would finally land us in an extensive use of the lethal chamber. A great many people would have to be put out of existence simply because it wastes other people’s time to look after them.”

Yet, in the early 20th century, the United States was a burgeoning power, and as such, it was often at the forefront of the sciences. And eugenics was no exception. In fact, many German eugenicists looked to America’s policies as a model; Hitler himself said to a fellow Nazi that he had “studied with interest the laws of several American states concerning prevention of reproduction by people whose progeny would, in all probability, be of no value or be injurious to the racial stock.” And, truth be known, the spoiled fruits of eugenics still plague America to this day.

Spoiled Fruits of a Movement
One of these would be the Planned Parenthood organization. While many are unaware of the fact, the organization’s founder, Margaret Sanger, was a eugenicist with some particularly odious views. For example, in her work Women and the New Race, she wrote, “The most merciful thing that a large family does to one of its infant members is to kill it.” And this culture-of-death spirit certainly lives on. Planned Parenthood affiliates perform more than 300,000 abortions a year, turning a profit of more than $100 million and collecting more than $300 million of your tax money in the process. Sanger also expressed Nazi-like views long before the National Socialists took power. For example, in her 1922 book The Pivot of Civilization, she wrote, “Every single case of inherited defect, every malformed child, every congenitally tainted human being brought into this world is of infinite importance to that poor individual; but it is of scarcely less importance to the rest of us and to all of our children who must pay in one way or another for these biological and racial mistakes.” (Emphasis added.)

Perhaps it is passions such as the above that inspired Sanger to create the “Negro Project,” an organized campaign to limit — and some say exterminate — America’s black population. Black author Tanya L. Green sheds some more light on Sanger’s motivations in her piece “The Negro Project: Margaret Sanger’s Eugenic Plan for Black Americans,” writing:
Margaret Sanger aligned herself with the eugenicists whose ideology prevailed in the early 20th century. Eugenicists strongly espoused racial supremacy and “purity,” particularly of the “Aryan” race. Eugenicists hoped to purify the bloodlines and improve the race by encouraging the “fit” to reproduce and the “unfit” to restrict their reproduction. They sought to contain the “inferior” races through segregation, sterilization, birth control and abortion.
It is easy for pro-life people, such as I, to look askance at the Margaret Sangers of the world, just as it is easy for anti-American bigots to place the onus on America, or blacks to place it on whites. While there certainly are villains in this story, however, it is more important to expose destructive ideas than deluded people. After all, ideas live on long after idealists pass on.

Certainly, the desire to have strong, vibrant citizens and children is nothing new. The aforementioned Spartans would kill a male infant if he was perceived to have any defect whatsoever, and parents typically hope and pray for healthy, intelligent, and strong sons and daughters. And, of course, offspring’s characteristics can most assuredly be influenced through selective breeding. For example, consider the dogs we have as pets today. The breeds many of us know and love — the Rottweiler, cocker spaniel, Neapolitan Mastiff, etc. — never existed until they were bred by man. Their unique characteristics are the result of taking a group of canines, breeding the ones that exhibit desired traits, and killing those that do not. And repeating this proc-ess generation after generation yielded unique beasts ideally suited to whatever purpose they were to be used for.

And this is the problem with eugenics. We must not “use” people or view them as objects that serve a “purpose.” Yet why does the science endeavor to create a better human? It is for that very reason: so that they will serve the purpose of being better soldiers, citizens, scientists, producers, etc. But, then, what happens once you’ve reduced people to objects, to cogs in the machinery of the state? Well, when it seems that a baby will be insufficient for his purpose, you give him the Spartan treatment; and when a cog gets too old to serve its purpose, you euthanize it — for the good of society. And you then have embraced the eugenicist position that there are “human beings who never should have been born,” as Sanger said; or that there is “life unworthy of life,” as the Nazis said. The point here is that you don’t value people based on what they can do. You value them based on what they are.

Yet this brings us to a very interesting question: What are they? And is it just a coincidence that eugenics took hold in the wake of evolution’s acceptance? Is it possible that classical evolution’s conception of “what they are” engenders a eugenicist mindset? Let us examine the matter.

Evolution’s Ties to Eugenics
Traditional Christianity and classical evolution involve very different conceptions of man’s nature. Christianity teaches that man is the culmination of God’s creation, His sixth-day triumph. Man is not merely a steppingstone on the way to some superior being but a finished product. Sure, he is fallen as well as finished and needs to be perfected, but this is not a matter of improving the flesh but of transcending it. And this is done with knowledge of what is good and the gift of God’s grace. Moreover, even if the flesh is broken, hampered by crippling limitation, the person’s soul bears the beauty of the Ultimate Beholder. The person is valuable not because of what he can do but because of what he is: a child of God with a soul from Heaven.

In contrast, evolution tells us that we are just one stage in a long line of creatures experiencing change in a process that is often, amusingly, called improvement, even though we’re moving toward we don’t know what without knowing why. But evolutionists take it as doctrine that it is improvement, and all people want to improve the human condition. For Christians, this means spreading the faith; for evolutionists, it means improving the genes. Ergo, eugenics.

Of course, many evolutionists will protest, saying that they find eugenics abhorrent. Yet the link between evolution and eugenics is undeniable, as it was made by none other than Sir Francis Galton himself. Galton only developed his eugenic principles after reading his cousin Charles Darwin’s work The Origin of Species, which inspired him to build on Darwin’s work. And this should surprise no one. Sure, today eugenics is thought ill-considered, but it is not illogical. If evolution is improvement and improvement is good, and if the good of the many outweighs the good of the few, it makes sense to facilitate evolution. And because it is logical, at least on the surface, it is necessary to look a little deeper.

Eugenics is an outgrowth of classical evolution, which presupposes that we are a cosmic accident and thus implies atheism. The problem with this worldview is that it makes many assumptions, fails to ask the most basic questions, and then contradicts itself. For one thing, if there is no God, no Truth — no standard for determining good that transcends man — on what basis can we determine what constitutes improvement? Why is it better for man to survive and “evolve” than to perish? After all, ask some of the nature-worshipping misanthropes amongst us, and they will tell you that the world would be better off if mankind disappeared entirely.

Yet, even if you accept — based on consensus opinion and nothing more — that what evolutionists say is improvement is indeed improvement, what purpose does it serve? To illustrate this point, I’ll use a variation on a criticism G.K. Chesterton made of H.G. Wells when the latter suggested that the purpose of life was to beget children. It is as if you asked, “What is the use of hammers?” and the answer was, “To create better hammers.” And then you asked, “And what is the use of those hammers?” and the answer was “To create better hammers still.” It doesn’t answer the most basic questions: “Why create hammers in the first place” and “What is the good of having hammers?” The eugenicist philosophy not only reduces man to animal, it reduces man’s existence to meaninglessness. The Christian knows that he is trying to improve — which he calls growing in holiness — so he can spend eternity with God. The atheist may try to improve, and he may actually succeed. But if his worldview were correct, it would mean that he would spend eternity as dust, indistinguishable from a “defective” some eugenicist might have wanted to exterminate.

Of course, if atheists were right, dust is essentially all we would be, some pounds of chemicals and water. We would merely be organic robots — tools, much like a hammer. And, then, why trouble over how we manipulate these automatons’ circuitry? And what could be wrong with terminating the function of robots that cannot serve their “purpose”? Besides, without Truth and thus without objective right and wrong, nothing could be “wrong” in any real sense, anyway.

Why does this philosophy matter? It’s not because eugenics will rear its ugly head once again, because eugenics, strictly speaking, will not. But it has not been trumped by morality, only technology. With genetic engineering, we no longer have to select people for breeding; we can now select the genes themselves. This science holds the promise of eliminating birth defects, but it can also be misused. It finally gives modern-day utopians a tool with which they can create supermen, Aryan or otherwise, in a laboratory. And unless we want to end up as test subjects, we had better realize that man’s value lies not in his ability to become or create a superman, but in being born of the supernatural and possessed of the eternal.

July 29, 2010

The drug of choice

SOCIETY: America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation, by Elaine Tyler May, Basic Books, 171pp, $25.95
IT WAS going to cure everything that ailed us – marital strife, unwanted pregnancies, war. By lowering the birth rate in the developing world, it would create healthy markets and decrease poverty, acting as a “magic bullet” against communism. As the first nearly-one-hundred-percent-effective form of birth control that required neither the co-operation nor the knowledge of men, it would enable women to take control of their lives. It was the pill, and it is celebrating its 50th birthday.
In her new book, American historian Elaine Tyler May traces the pill’s development, reception, and social, political and cultural ramifications. The pill was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1960 for use as an oral contraceptive (it first became available in Ireland in 1963 as a “cycle regulator”). It grew out of the combined efforts of several individuals – scientists Carl Djerassi, John Rock and Gregory Pincus, along with feminist activists Margaret Sanger and Katharine Dexter McCormick (McCormick effectively bankrolled the R&D). Highly controversial, it created unlikely bedfellows on both sides of the divide. Would-be social engineers allied both with feminists and with the Playboy brigade, who celebrated the pill because it liberated female sexuality for men.
The Church was against it. But so were male Black Power leaders (claiming it promoted genocide) and certain Beats. Poet Richard Brautigan equated his girlfriend’s use of the pill with the Springhill mine disaster, in which scores of miners died. Many men felt it undermined masculinity, by nullifying their procreative power.
The pill quickly became embroiled in policy debates. US presidents from Kennedy to Carter supported family planning programmes as part of foreign aid. Reagan reversed the position, suspending government support to any agency at home or abroad that used its own funds to support abortion services, counselling or referral. Clinton reversed the ruling five days into office. George W Bush restored it three days into his term. Four days after his swearing in, Obama reversed it again.
The pill’s safety record was initially troubling. As May points out, it was linked in the early years with blood clots – fatal, in some cases. It carried an increased risk of stroke. (While a minority of women today experience negative side-effects, the lower hormone dosages have resulted in decreased risks.) May also looks at efforts, so far unsuccessful, to develop a pill for men, and asks whether the hurdles are physiological or psychological. She notes that Viagra, a drug that enhances the potential for men to impregnate women, was the most successful prescription drug ever launched in the US.
The pill serves throughout the book as a keyhole through which to view history. “Without the political and cultural upheavals of the last 50 years,” May writes, “ . . . the pill would have been just one more contraceptive . . . Instead, it became a flash point for major social transformation.” Debates around its safety contributed to standards of informed consent in medical research and regulations on consumer information. It disrupted power relationships between genders, and – in light of the Church’s continued ban on artificial birth control – it weakened the power of the official Church and turned many Catholics away altogether.
May’s interesting and accessible history also illuminates how the world has changed around the pill. Once, young women had to pretend that they were married in order to obtain it; now they sometimes complain of being pressured into it when other forms of contraception are more suitable. Women use the pill for reasons their foremothers wouldn’t have dreamed of – to arrest menstruation during military service, for instance. And, what once seemed a boon to women – taking full responsibility for their fertility – now seems to many an unfair burden.

Molly McCloskey is a novelist, essayist and short story writer

May 24, 2010

by John Simkin

Не знаю: делать или нет отдельный блог про Стоупс?
отсюда:

I am sorry you did not like my pages on Marie Stopes and Margaret Sanger. It is true that I admire both women. This is because of they spent their life campaigning for equal rights for women. Both are known for their fight to make sure that reliable contraceptive information was available to women. Sanger became involved in the campaign while working as a public health nurse in the slums of New York.

In 1921 Sanger established America's first birth-control clinic. The clinic in Brooklyn was closed by the police and Sanger was imprisoned for 30 days.

Marie Stopes was influenced by Sanger’s work and she also opened the first of her birth-control clinics in Holloway, North London in 1921. Unlike Sanger she was not prosecuted. However, two of her friends, Guy and Rose Aldred, who published a pamphlet written by Margaret Sanger, were found guilty of selling an obscene publication.

I believe both women contributed a great deal to reducing the suffering of women. Although, I admit that did severely damage the credibility of the Roman Catholic Church.

Sanger and Stopes were not single issue political figures. Both were involved in a whole range of campaigns to improve the quality of life of women. They got most of these issues right. However, as you point out they were both involved with the Eugenics movement. You fail to point out what these two women meant by this. At the time Eugenics meant the study of improving hereditary qualities by socially controlling human reproduction. It was something that was believed in by a great number of progressive thinkers during the 1920s and '30s, when treatments for many hereditary and disabling conditions were unknown.

For example, why have you only concentrated on these two women. What about people like H. G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw who were also supporters of this movement? I have not mentioned they supported Eugenics in the 1920s on their web pages. Nor did I mention it on my pages on Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis Brandeis, two great men who supported Eugenics in the 1920s.

It is a common trick of those opposed to birth control and the liberation of women to associate these women with the views of Adolf Hitler. It might interest you to know that Sanger's books were among the very first burned by the Nazis. He was opposed to both her socialism and her belief in birth control.

Hitler’s views on Eugenics was very different from those of Sanger and Stopes. This is what Sanger has to say about this in The Birth Control Review of February 1919:

Eugenists imply or insist that a woman's first duty is to the state; we contend that her duty to herself is her first duty to the state. We maintain that a woman possessing an adequate knowledge of her reproductive functions is the best judge of the time and conditions under which her child should be brought into the world. We further maintain that it is her right, regardless of all other considerations, to determine whether she shall bear children or not, and how many children she shall bear if she chooses to become a mother.

Sanger and Stopes always believed that reproductive decisions should be made on an individual and not a social or cultural basis, and she consistently repudiated any racial application of eugenics principles. For example, Sanger vocally opposed the racial stereotyping that effected passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, on the grounds that intelligence and other inherited traits vary by individual and not by group.
  1. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Wstopes.htm
  2. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jsanger.htm

May 23, 2010

at the request of a woman

I invented the pill at the request of a woman.”‘That woman, it turns out, was birth control pioneer Margaret Sanger, who for decades had been searching for a pregnancy prevention pill. (Pincus)

имхо: так рождаются легенды :)

”Margaret Sanger approached Dr. Pincus at a Manhattan dinner party, and she was very taken with him,” said Thoru Pederson, a University of Massachusetts Medical School professor who headed the Worcester Foundation from 1985 to 1997.

Ms. Sanger convinced the aging mrs. McCormick, who had married into a wealthy Chicago family, to come to Shrewsbury in 1953 to meet with Dr. Pincus and his colleague and foundation co-founder, Hudson Hoagland, whom he met while both were students and researchers at Harvard University. They eventually left Harvard for Clark University in Worcester before starting the foundation.

“Pincus had no interest in contraception prevention. he was studying fertility. but he was convinced by Sanger and McCormick that it was important,” he said.

“It is ironic to me that although the pill was invented in Worcester, and Massachusetts is always thought of as forward thinking, it was the last state to approve the pill for married women (1966) and for unmarried women, in 1972,” she (Dianne Luby, president and chief executive officer of the planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts) said.

Amy G. Richter, a history professor at Clark University, said white middle-class women of the 19th century had more control over their fertility than lower-class and minority women of the 20th century.
“Middle-class women were perceived to be morally superior. They could say no to sex; abstain, and track their cycles,” she said. In addition, Ms. Richter said, middle-class women had more access to abortions.
“It’s impossible to say the pill did not change society in a variety of ways,” Ms. Richter said. “It was so reliable. it was transformative at so many layers, not in just controlling fertility, but by putting that control into the hands of women.”

Mrs. McCormick, who was one of the first women to earn a science degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in 1904, made an initial $20,000 donation to the Worcester Foundation, Mr. Pederson said, but held off on a second identical amount until she studied their work herself.
“Mrs. McCormick was very knowledgeable about science. she required Pincus to write out all his work and his research plans, which she reviewed and edited,” he said.
“She was very involved in the research progress; she wrote to Pincus every week,” he said. “She deserves a lot of credit.”

 excerpts from here
а вот и оригинал

Джон Дэйвисон Рокфеллер, младший

John Davison Rockefeller, Jr. родился 29 января 1879 года в Кливленде, Огайо в семье Джон Д. Рокфеллера, старшего (John D. Rockefeller, Sr., 1839–1937) и его жены Лоры Селестии Спелман (Laura Celestia Spelman, 1839–1915). Всего у них было 5 детей, но Рокфеллер, младший был единственным сыном (последним ребёнком) Рокфеллера, старшего, миллиардера, создателя Стандарт Ойл (настойчивого, по всей видимости, человека); младший родил 5 сыновей и одну дочь -- семья или клан Рокфеллеров очень известны, во-первых, огромным богатством, во-вторых, не менее огромными средствами, потраченными на благотворительность. В частности, на финансирование исследований в различных областях и, как теперь говорят, неправительственных организаций и гражданского общества

умер 11 мая 1960 года в Тусоне, Невада (поскольку ездил в город-герой Минск планы персоналий у меня сбились, но ничего страшного -- правда завсегда победит)

Рокфеллеры: старший и младший
Джонни Рок (студ. кличка) думал поступить в Йёль, но в конце концов выбрал баптиский (по сопсной принадлежности) университет Браун (Род Айленд, отличное место btw, думал, что еврейское). Надо думать, что был он не простым абитуриентом, и конкурс держала другая сторона (конкурс университетов на детей Абрамовича у нас (видимо всё-тки не у нас) ещё впереди:). В университете он прослушал несколько религиозных курсов и несколько курсов по социальным наукам, между прочим, по Das Kapitalу небызвестного Карла Маркса. После окончания университета (23 года) стал директором Стандарт Ойл, позднее стал также директором организованной в 1901 J. P. Morgan's U.S. Steel company. В 1910 уволился с этих постов после скандала со взятками и переключился на филантропию.

После бойни в Людлоу (подавление выступления шахтёров оказало огромное влияние на всю его жизнь и деятельность) Рокфеллер, мл. давал показания комиссии по промышленным отношениям, которые изменили отношение к семье в целом, она перешла из населённого разряда кровожадных акул империализма в малочисленное сообщество белых и пушистых спонсоров политкорректных мероприятий и институтов. Это время родидо и public relations (наш любимый пеар). Во время депрессии он приобрёл большой участок земли в центре Манхэттена, куда привлёк солидных арандаторов: GE and its then affiliates RCA, NBC and RKO, as well as Standard Oil of New Jersey (Esso), and Associated Press and Time Inc, as well as branches of the then Chase National Bank, now JP Morgan Chase. Как и старший младший нажил много миллиардов, но имя сделал на расходовании этих мегабаксов, такова трудная рокфеллеровская судьба.

В 1913 году дал денег на Bureau of Social Hygiene, которое стало заниматься проституцией и венерическими болезнями. В 1918 году он учредил Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, который потом стал Rockefeller Foundation -- это видимо крупнейший донор в истории. Он финансировал лигу наций и даже поначалу тайком Маргрет Сэнгер, а потом и явным образом под воздействием жоны (возможно и жоны президента Ф. Рузвельта -- Элеоноры). В 1932 году написал письмо Н. М. Батлеру, которое было опубликовано Нью-Йорк Таймс, в этом письме аргументировал против запрета принесения и распития алкоголя (18 поправка в конституцию пиндостана), мол запрет плодит криминал итыды -- с ним трудно не согласиться. Интересно, что некоторые страны повторили идиотию 18 попъ рафьки, идя своим за гад ошым Путём и не учившись чюжому горькаму опыту.

В 1936 году был награждён орденом почётного легиона за восстановление Франции из руин первой мировой. В 1946 году купил в Нью-Йорке участок земли, который передал ООН, теперь там секретариат этой ненужной организации. Организовал много национальных парков в США и способствовал сохранению памятников мировой культуры.

кто найдёт, может почитать:
Chernow, Ron. Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. New York: Warner Books, 1998.

May 22, 2010

VOA Special English

Margaret Sanger, 1883-1966: She Led the Fight for Birth Control for Women


Download MP3   (Right-click or option-click the link.)

I’m Shirley Griffith. And I’m Sarah Long with the VOA Special English Program, PEOPLE IN AMERICA.  Today, we tell about one of the leaders of the birth control movement, Margaret Sanger.

Many women today have the freedom to decide when they will have children, if they want them.  Until about fifty years ago, women spent most of their adult lives having children, year after year.  This changed because of efforts by activists like Margaret Sanger.  She believed that a safe and sure method of preventing pregnancy was a necessary condition for women’s freedom.  She also believed birth control was necessary for human progress.
Margaret Sanger was considered a rebel in the early nineteen hundreds.
The woman who changed other women’s lives was born in eighteen eighty-three in the eastern state of New York.  Her parents were Michael and Anne Higgins.
Margaret wrote several books about her life.  She wrote that her father taught her to question everything.  She said he taught her to be an independent thinker.
Margaret said that watching her mother suffer from having too many children made her feel strongly about birth control.  Her mother died at forty-eight years of age after eighteen pregnancies.  She was always tired and sick.  Margaret had to care for her mother and her ten surviving brothers and sisters.  This experience led her to become a nurse.
Margaret Higgins worked in the poor areas of New York City.  Most people there had recently arrived in the United States from Europe.  Margaret saw the suffering of hundreds of women who tried to end their pregnancies in illegal and harmful ways.  She realized that this was not just a health problem.  These women suffered because of their low position in society.
Margaret saw that not having control over one’s body led to problems that were passed on from mother to daughter and through the family for years.  She said she became tired of cures that did not solve the real problem.  Instead, she wanted to change the whole life of a mother.

In nineteen-oh-two, Margaret married William Sanger.  They had three children.  Margaret compared her own middle-class life to that of the poor people she worked among.  This increased her desire to deal with economic and social issues.  At this time, Margaret Sanger became involved in the liberal political culture of an area of New York City known as Greenwich Village.  Sanger became a labor union organizer.  She learned methods of protest and propaganda, which she used in her birth control activism.
Sanger traveled to Paris, France, in nineteen thirteen, to research European methods of birth control.  She also met with members of Socialist political groups who influenced her birth control policies.  She returned to the United States prepared to change women’s lives.
At first, Margaret Sanger sought the support of leaders of the women’s movement, members of the Socialist party, and the medical profession.  But she wrote that they told her to wait until women were permitted to vote.  She decided to continue working alone.
One of Margaret Sanger’s first important political acts was to publish a monthly newspaper called The Woman Rebel.  She designed it.  She wrote for it.  And she paid for it.  The newspaper called for women to reject the traditional woman’s position.  The first copy was published in March, nineteen fourteen.  The Woman Rebel was an angry paper that discussed disputed and sometimes illegal subjects.  These included labor problems, marriage, the sex business, and revolution.
Sanger had an immediate goal.  She wanted to change laws that prevented birth control education and sending birth control devices through the mail.
The Woman Rebel became well known in New York and elsewhere. Laws at that time banned the mailing of materials considered morally bad.  This included any form of birth control information.  The law was known as the Comstock Act.  Officials ordered Sanger to stop sending out her newspaper.
Sanger instead wrote another birth control document called Family Limitation.  The document included detailed descriptions of birth control methods.  In August, nineteen fourteen, Margaret Sanger was charged with violating the Comstock Act.
Margaret faced a prison sentence of as many as forty-five years if found guilty.  She fled to Europe to escape the trial.  She asked friends to release thousands of copies of Family Limitation.  The document quickly spread among women across the United States.  It started a public debate about birth control.  The charges against Sanger also increased public interest in her and in women’s issues.

Once again, Margaret Sanger used her time in Europe to research birth control methods.  After about a year, she decided to return to the United States to face trial.  She wanted to use the trial to speak out about the need for reproductive freedom for women.
While Sanger was preparing for her trial, her five-year-old daughter, Peggy, died of pneumonia.  The death made Sanger feel very weak and guilty.  However, the death greatly increased public support for Sanger and the issue of birth control.  The many reports in the media caused the United States government to dismiss charges against her.
Margaret Sanger continued to oppose the Comstock Act by opening the first birth control center in the United States.  It opened in Brownsville, New York in nineteen sixteen.  Sanger’s sister, Ethel Byrne, and a language expert helped her.  One hundred women came to the birth control center on the first day.  After about a week, police arrested the three women, but later released them.  Sanger immediately re-opened the health center, and was arrested again.  The women were tried the next year.  Sanger was sentenced to thirty days in jail.
With some support from women’s groups, Sanger started a new magazine, the Birth Control Review.  In nineteen twenty-one, she organized the first American birth control conference.  The conference led to the creation of the American Birth Control League.  It was established to provide education, legal reform and research for better birth control.  The group opened a birth control center in the United States in nineteen twenty-three.  Many centers that opened later across the country copied this one.
Sanger was president of the American Birth Control League until nineteen twenty-eight.  In the nineteen thirties she helped win a judicial decision that permitted American doctors to give out information about birth control.

Historians say Margaret Sanger changed her methods of political action during and after the nineteen twenties.  She stopped using direct opposition and illegal acts.  She even sought support from her former opponents.
Later, Sanger joined supporters of eugenics.  This is the study of human improvement by genetic control.  Extremists among that group believe that disabled, weak or “undesirable” human beings should not be born.  Historians say Sanger supported eugenicists only as a way to gain her birth control goals.  She later said she was wrong in supporting eugenics.  But she still is criticized for these statements.
Even though Margaret Sanger changed her methods, she continued her efforts for birth control.  In nineteen forty-two, she helped form the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.  It became a major national health organization after World War Two.
Margaret Sanger moved into areas of international activism.  Her efforts led to the creation of the International Planned Parenthood Federation.  It was formed in nineteen fifty-two after an international conference in Bombay, India.  Sanger was one of its first presidents.
The organization was aimed at increasing the acceptance of family planning around the world.  Almost every country in the world is now a member of the international group.
Margaret Sanger lived to see the end of the Comstock Act and the invention of birth control medicine.  She died in nineteen sixty-six in Tucson, Arizona.  She was an important part of what has been called one of the most life-changing political movements of the Twentieth Century.

Radio NZ interviews Alexander Sanger

it seems that not much research was done about Margaret Sanger at all,-- надо восполнять :)

You can listen to the full interview here

May 21, 2010

roots of idea

In his book An Essay on the Principle of Population Malthus proposed ideas that "project(ed) schemes," later to be applied by the world's most murderous tyrants, supported by hopelessly credulous true believers. Alinsky wrote: "All children born, beyond what should be required to keep up the population to a desired level, must necessarily perish.... Therefore...we should facilitate, instead of foolishly and vainly endeavoring to impede, the operations of nature in producing this mortality.

"We should sedulously encourage the other forms of destruction, which we encourage nature to use...we should reprobate specific remedies for ravaging diseases; and restrain those benevolent, but much mistaken men, who have thought they were doing a service to mankind by projecting schemes for the total extirpation of particular disorders."

About one century later came another disciple, Margaret Sanger, the seriously troubled, hateful creator of that which eventually became known as "Planned Parenthood." In Sanger's sanguinary screed The Pivot of Civilization, she openly revealed her glorious scheme for human progress — sermonizing for the salvation of the best of Mankind.
...
Malthus and Sanger did, effectively, project their progressive schemes into the future, with clear results. Along came Adolf Hitler, whose great crime seems to have been that he took seriously the ideas, accepted by so many of the intelligentsia in places like Great Britain and the United States, of Malthus, Sanger, and, we must not leave out Charles Darwin, for Hitler was a confirmed Racist, a product of his reverence for Darwin.

(Hitler was actually astounded that his presumed allies who reviled the Jews — the Fabian Socialist, Malthusian, Darwinian, eugenic-advocate, titled caste — turned against him.)

Alas, for the "mad corporal," Hitler's apotheosis into the ranks of the glorious, progressive antecedents was not to be. He was set aside as one misguided...one who took a wrong turn on the right road...an unfortunate aberration. He was dissed by his own, later, in Alinsky fashion, to be presented at every opportunity as evidence of the cryptic schemes of those who attempt to denigrate secular-humanist, atheistic-materialist, socialist-progressivist "truth." And, you know, it has worked very well. It is ironic that in Mein Kampf Hitler wrote that "People are more willing to believe the big lie than the small lie."

Let's start in 1912.

At the turn of the century (19th to 20th), Progressivism was allied with international, monopolistic, Capitalism. The leading Progressives were industrialists, bankers, Socialist/Fascists, and educationists. Select corporations and literati formed an oligarchy. They were, in many cases, Marxist-Leninists, Social Darwinists. They held no loyalty to any sovereign nation.


  • 1912: Colonel Edward M. House, future advisor of progressivist President Woodrow Wilson, published Phillip Dru: Administrator in which he promotes "socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx."

  • 1922: "Obviously, there is going to be no peace or prosperity for mankind as long as the earth remains divided into 50 of 60 independent states, and until some kind of international system is created." Philip Kerr, in the Journal of Foreign Affairs of the Council on Foreign Relations.

  • 1933: John Dewey, father of progressive education and co-author of the Humanist Manifesto, called for a synthesizing of all religions and a social economic order. Dewey said that "Education is the most powerful ally of humanism, and every public school is a school of humanism."

  • 1972: Dr. Chester Pierce, of Harvard University, in a keynote address to the Association for Childhood Education stated, "Every child in America is insane because he comes to school with certain allegiances toward the Founding Fathers, a supernatural being, toward a sovereignty of this nation as a separate entity.... It's up to you to make all these sick children well."

  • 1991: In a speech at Baden-Baden, Germany, David Rockefeller said "The super national sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national (self)-determination practiced in past centuries."

  • 2007: Cass Sunstein, ( Barack Obama's appointed "regulatory czar" (Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs) wrote in his 2004 book The Second Bill of Rights, that economic crisis "(provides) the most promising conditions for the emergence of socialism in the U.S." In a paper written by Sunstein entitled "Climate Change Justice: the Redistribution of American Wealth" — what he called "distributive justice" — "is more likely to occur through climate change policy than otherwise, or to be accomplished more effectively through climate policy than through direct foreign aid."

  • 2008: Professor Manning Marable of Columbia University wrote in the Socialist Review, "A lot of people working with him (Barack Obama) are, indeed, Socialists, with backgrounds in the Communist Party, or as independent Marxists.... Obama is not a Marxist or a socialist — he is a progressive liberal."

  • 2009: Van Jones, selected by Obama as "special advisor for green-jobs, enterprise and innovation to the White House Council on Environmental Quality" contributed to a 97 page treatise. The manifesto reads "We agreed with Lenin's analysis of the state and party... And we found inspiration in the revolutionary strategies developed in the Third World revolutionaries like Mao Tse-tung and Amilcar Cabral."


Rootless progressivism

психоанализ

  1. Психоаналитическое изучение ребенка в дореволюционной и послереволюционной России. // Ежегодник истории и теории психоанализа. – Ижевск: ERGO. – 2008. – С. 50–59. - 0,7 п.л.
  2. Развитие психоаналитического знания о ребенке в дореволюционной и послереволюционной России (историко-психологическое исследование). // Психоаналитический вестник. – 2009. – Вып. 20. – № 1. – С. 158–180. - 1,7 п.л..
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автор =  ПАРАМОНОВА Анжела Анатольевна
Контактная информация:
Тел. моб. 8-910-454-46-91;
Тел. раб. (495) 365-58-60;
E-mail: thera@mail.ruthera1@rambler.ru