Is Dugin Fascist, Neo Marxist, or What? | Stephen Hicks at the Museum of the Second WW

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  • čas přidán 8. 03. 2023
  • Alexander Dugin claims that Fascism and Communism are dead-and that Liberalism is evil. So a fourth political theory is needed for Russia’s future. What alternative does he propose? And is it really a fourth alternative-or a re-packaging of old illiberal ideas?
    Pr. Hicks reviews the ideas of Alexander Dugin, taking care to discuss their development over time in such works as "Fascism-Borderless and Red"(1997) and "The Fourth Political Theory"(2009).
    This talk was given at the Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk, Poland on December 15, 2022.
    Stephen R. C. Hicks, Ph.D., is Professor of Philosophy at Rockford University, USA, and has had visiting positions at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., University of Kasimir the Great in Poland, Oxford University’s Harris Manchester College in England, and Jagiellonian University in Poland.
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Komentáře • 274

  • @jcr4runner
    @jcr4runner Před rokem +45

    I would be great if people reading these opinions would read a book by Dugin, so they can see that Hicks probably skim read 4PT and then eisegeted his own biases into the text, that is, cherrypicked, distorted, caricatured, etc.

    • @AsadAli-jc5tg
      @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 11 měsíci +6

      Like how? Give us an example, concrete one, let it be as long as possible.

    • @safardebon9720
      @safardebon9720 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@AsadAli-jc5tg You can't read a book??

    • @AsadAli-jc5tg
      @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 10 měsíci

      @@safardebon9720 Well I can, but so many other books are in my reading quene, so I thought someone would tell me the gist of it, for example I've read that Dugin considers blacks and middle easterners bestial people.

    • @mfcorp9608
      @mfcorp9608 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I totally agree.
      In this presentation he brings up quotes, lets you read them & then blatantly misinterprets them.
      He has no interest in giving Dugin a fair analysis - he is giving a biases misrepresentation of his ideas.
      Given the political situation he is probably incentivised to give Dugin a bad interpretation

    • @jcr4runner
      @jcr4runner Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@AsadAli-jc5tg Sorry I didn't see this until now. I will make this brief. The first one is that Dugin is explicitly anti-fascist in 4PT. Prior to 2009, Dugin believed that there were redeemable aspects of communism and fascism. For fascism, he said that nationalism as far as the love of one's own people, and the love of history of one's own nation is a redeemable quality. But in 4PT he goes into a lot of detail explaining how if you remove the political subject of racism from fascism, it fails to be fascism any longer. He says that it is like an animal that has its most important internal organ torn out. It will fail to exist. So people just ignore statements like that and they claim that Dugin is certainly fascist. Which is just a blatant lie or ignorance from not having read him.

  • @DioscuriA85
    @DioscuriA85 Před rokem +52

    What bothers me most about the champions of Liberal-modernity: they can’t be honest enough to admit that their ideology is post-human/anti-human.

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před rokem +4

      Interestingly this is an Americanization of Liberalism. We accepted the brutalist aesthetics and the Brits stuck to their traditions. Americans were always more Germanic, more fundamentalist (which meant revolutionary), and less trusting of tradition.

    • @alexanderscott2456
      @alexanderscott2456 Před rokem +3

      It's not at all clear what group you're referring to. Are you referring to Leftists, the "woke", the very few defenders of free markets, or anyone who is opposed to the criminal Russian regime?
      It would be nice if comments like this make an implicit, vague statement explicit and clear.

    • @DioscuriA85
      @DioscuriA85 Před rokem +2

      @@alexanderscott2456 I wouldn’t say we’re talking about groups rather ideologies. The underlying metaphysic of Liberalism proliferates at the societal level in a variety of ways. Liberalism pervades the entire political spectrum in the United States.

    • @alexanderscott2456
      @alexanderscott2456 Před rokem

      @@DioscuriA85
      If you're using the term "Liberalism" that broadly, it sounds like a package deal to include Jefferson, Washington, and Franklin, or even Reagan and Thatcher. It doesn't sound like you're only referring to woke lunatics.

    • @DioscuriA85
      @DioscuriA85 Před rokem +3

      @@alexanderscott2456 That is correct. That’s not to demonize people. I’m stating: At the deepest levels of being, Liberal-modernity is not in accordance with what we actually are as human beings.

  • @markcounseling
    @markcounseling Před rokem +34

    Hicks imo, despite his considerable intellect, is too concrete and sectarian a thinker to even begin to understand Dugin. But I'd love to see a Millerman vs. Hicks battle.

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 Před rokem

      🤪

    • @markcounseling
      @markcounseling Před rokem +3

      @@thereignofthezero225 Zounds! The "zany" Emoji. I offer you this: 😘

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 Před rokem +1

      I'd imagine that battle would result in something very similar to the Hicks vs. Thaddeus Russell debate 😄

    • @markcounseling
      @markcounseling Před rokem +4

      @@thereignofthezero225 Absolutely not. Russell is a lightweight labile atheist postmodernist, God bless him. Millerman is a middleweight mystic postliberal traditionalist, 6'9" and he trains jiu jitsu. He would place Hicks in an intellectual headlock so tight Hicks'd be like: 🤪. And Millerman would be like: 🥱.

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 Před rokem +1

      @@markcounseling I'll check him out

  • @vaibhavsajith4267
    @vaibhavsajith4267 Před rokem +19

    1997 dugin is a different person from the 4th political theory dugin

    • @StephenHicksPhilosopher
      @StephenHicksPhilosopher Před 6 měsíci +3

      Yes, about 10% different at most.

    • @vaibhavsajith4267
      @vaibhavsajith4267 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@StephenHicksPhilosopher no.

    • @StephenHicksPhilosopher
      @StephenHicksPhilosopher Před 6 měsíci

      @@vaibhavsajith4267 : Go for it, and lay out the major differences you see.

    • @Petronium123
      @Petronium123 Před 2 měsíci

      what has changed about him? I also know that he met Leon Degrelle at some point.

    • @vaibhavsajith4267
      @vaibhavsajith4267 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Petronium123 he's suggested a whole new paradigm to fight liberalism because both communism and fascism failed according to him

  • @MG-ye1hu
    @MG-ye1hu Před 7 měsíci +5

    To call Heidegger a Nazi is not entirely appropriate. While he was indeed at the beginning drawn to them and thought they represent some of his own ideas, he grew more and more disappointed and even hostile towards them over time.

    • @StephenHicksPhilosopher
      @StephenHicksPhilosopher Před 6 měsíci +3

      Heidegger was a Ph.D. and highly versed in political developments. He joined the Nazi Party and became its most-famous academic exponent. He did not do well as a political activist and so backed out of day-to-day politicking. He never, ever, expressed disagreement with Nazi philosophy or recanted his activism.

    • @MG-ye1hu
      @MG-ye1hu Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@StephenHicksPhilosopher It's a little bit more complicated. There were parts in Nazi ideology (I would not call it a philosophy), namely a strong anti-intellectual streak (expressed in the book burning) that he reprehended. And in the "Schwarzen Hefte" are some very critical remarks about the Nazis which clearly show his disappointment and estrangement.
      However, to be clear, I would never deny that there are strong ideological ties of Heidegger's philosophy and Nazi ideology.

  • @carltyden78
    @carltyden78 Před rokem +23

    Jeez, if this is the standard of American philosophers, then that civilization is absolutely screwed.

  • @Bread_Butter
    @Bread_Butter Před 11 měsíci +5

    Individualism is restricted within the overall goals of the state. This is a factor whether you are in the USA, UK , Russia or any society on earth.
    So wheel and come again. your argument starts on a bias premise.

  • @user-gw5zr4ng9q
    @user-gw5zr4ng9q Před rokem +10

    Non russian does not understand that these two things:
    Rossianin
    Russki
    It seams that lecturer makes this mistake

  • @oldsachem
    @oldsachem Před rokem +18

    Today in the US anyone not Woke is cancelled, excluded from any positions of power in government, the legal and justice system, corporate hierarchy, organized labor, academia, Big Cyber, mass media, social media, education from pre-school through graduate universities, even sports.

    • @timelston4260
      @timelston4260 Před rokem

      That's a problem, and so is the rightist reactionary fascism led by Trump. Let's defeat them both!

    • @SuperDrainBamage
      @SuperDrainBamage Před rokem +1

      And you think Dugin is not woke?

    • @tankiebot704
      @tankiebot704 Před rokem +2

      ​@@SuperDrainBamage yes hes traditional nor woke

    • @thanoskoutroumbas356
      @thanoskoutroumbas356 Před rokem

      If he gets canceled by all those then all these are corrupt or terrorized (which is the same).
      Do as Solzhenitsyn said.
      "The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie. One word of truth outweighs the world."
      Keep speaking the truth.

    • @alexanderscott2456
      @alexanderscott2456 Před rokem

      OP is an apologist for a malevolent dictatorship. He's no better than the woke scum he pretends to hate.

  • @zzoliche
    @zzoliche Před 7 měsíci +4

    Hey, I have no problem with liberals critiquing Dugin. Understandable and appropriate. But to have so egregiously misrepresented Dugin's thought like this is an unconscionable hatchet job. He makes no effort to discuss Dugin's ideas and arguments in context, with nuance, or in some cases simply accurately. He literally never even says what the fourth political theory even is, which is kind of peculiar. But then doing so would undermine Hicks' key misrepresentation. Also, for his closing claims about Dugin's lack of original scholarship, maybe he might have mentioned the dozens of volumes published by Dugin covering the enthnosociology of most of the world's major cultures. Anyone who comes away from this video thinking they understand Dugin have been done a terrible disservice by Hicks.

  • @karlnord1429
    @karlnord1429 Před rokem +5

    @Hicks,
    Dugin is not racist. I think it is important to point out how his ideas of ethnicity are not based on genetics. This does imply much better historical outcomes (e.x., Franco was much better than Hitler).

  • @AsadAli-jc5tg
    @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 11 měsíci +5

    It would not be an overstatement to say that we're living in the days and times of Dugin. May God be with us as we fight Liberalism and Liberal-Leftism, and may every Russian lives to save each hair of Dugin's beard.

    • @Coastfog
      @Coastfog Před 9 měsíci

      Lmao, that's the dumbest sht I've read all day, and there was some *dumb sht* , I tell ya...

  • @KratomFlavoredAdidas
    @KratomFlavoredAdidas Před rokem +1

    What's the difference?

  • @radiozelaza
    @radiozelaza Před rokem +4

    Jünger was not a fan of Nazis

  • @ziadkhalaf198
    @ziadkhalaf198 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I think Millerman read f Dugin is more accurate.

  • @sergeymanakov6267
    @sergeymanakov6267 Před rokem +3

    Much of what has been said is far from reality. It is obvious that the speaker is extremely poorly familiar with factology and does not represent Russian realities and the language used by Dugin and about Dugin at all.

  • @markraftis
    @markraftis Před měsícem

    Thank you, Prof. Hicks I just saw Dugan talk to Tucker Carlson about an interesting talk. I can see were Dugan is coming from he lives in Russia.
    I guess he would look for a fourth way. Communism did not work, fascism was crushed. Well liberalism has taken a beating from WWI and WWII. Fascism was supposed to be the third way.

  • @cryptoemcee
    @cryptoemcee Před měsícem +1

    Thanks.

  • @howardhilliard9286
    @howardhilliard9286 Před měsícem

    "Ethnos" - Identify politics. How we know you well in the USA.

  • @itsallminor6133
    @itsallminor6133 Před 6 dny

    I like Heidegger. I found dugin more comical than anything.

  • @user-vo1vm9mr5i
    @user-vo1vm9mr5i Před 5 měsíci +1

    It seems that Hicks has missed the point that Dugin explicitly rejects these perspectives as a part of his premise. So what is his motive in using only what Dugin himself would consider illegitimate (and perjorative in this instance) categories? Is he envious? Is he poltical? Perhaps the Crown has advised him to pursue this faux criticism. It certainly seems to agree with British and western european demonization of all virtue in Russian advances in any sense. If you dont know what Dugin "is", perhaps respectful dialogue would help give clarity, rathet than pretentioys rhetoric that obfuscates rational discussion and injects a suggestion of deranged authoritarianism. Dugin invites ideas. Hicks seems intent reconstructing Dugins inquiry with contrived suspicions.

  • @picassomicasso1
    @picassomicasso1 Před 4 měsíci +1

    He’s none of the the above, read his works. He’s a brilliant mind and is making a valid case that’s perhaps too deep for western intellects. There are Russians around the world, hence the borderless metaphor

    • @itsallminor6133
      @itsallminor6133 Před 6 dny

      I read dugin. I have like hardly anything i picked up worth anything. Mostly a waste of time. I give him credit for a slightly different spin on the limits of freedom in liberalism. Other than that. Yah. Nothing...

  • @isokabooks3758
    @isokabooks3758 Před 7 dny

    Why am I listening to mediated Dugin as if I can't read the original?

  • @PabloMuerteUno
    @PabloMuerteUno Před rokem +8

    Going back to Mussolini: "Fascism is corporatism" Hence USA is becoming more fascists by day

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před rokem +8

      That is not corporations but the state as "corporeal body" which is an idea that goes back to at least Plato. It's the idea that the judiciary is the kidneys, the philosopher is the mind, and the vanguard is the immune system, etc. Corporatism was very popular for most of human history. Honestly there is something to learn from it in the modern age as the failure of institutions of government (or their success) is not limited to democratic government. The success of Louis IV's economic policies and then the problems they create in encouraging the French revolution are a lesson for modern times.

  • @eurasianheathen109
    @eurasianheathen109 Před rokem +4

    26:53 Dugin also refers to Francis Fukuyama quite a bit more than these other philosophers

  • @zeroonetime
    @zeroonetime Před 4 měsíci

    ALL THE ABOVE.

  • @bavundra
    @bavundra Před rokem +7

    I have a major problem with this video. It is too damn short! :)

  • @newdawnrising8110
    @newdawnrising8110 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Fascism is not socialism. It’s the opposite. Dugin didn’t say this. He is smarter then that.

  • @johnsmithe1379
    @johnsmithe1379 Před měsícem

    As an ex-Objectivist I find this criticism slanderous and ridiculous.

  • @Nikolaievich9837
    @Nikolaievich9837 Před rokem +10

    No is not a Facist . Dugin is a philosopher not a politican. Even if he did say it no one is gonna take him serious. Dugin actually endorses what he calls a version idealism of According to the Noose and he’s writing a huge project called Numahia. The Origins in the Noose which is the foundation of civilization come from what he calls the Newsphere which comes from the a mind and its through the intellect that one can interface with this and comes to actually reflect this. Dugin ascribes to a kind of metaphysical idealism. And according to his own words the idea has Primacy. So Dugin does respect the intellectual traditions of the world including Europe. Dugin has engaged in just about every single intellectual of the European Canada in the 20th century including the far left and the left. Dugin is first and foremost a philosopher and he’s not calling for violence or extermination of people or the massacre anyone. He’s a philosopher. And his daughter Dugina was going based of his philosophy.
    Walter Benjamin was a Jewish Marxist from the 1930s talked about something called “Divine Violence” and the meaning of violence has been very clear in the Marxist tradition. So Dugin saying words about violence in the abstract that dosent indict him as a Facist at all. now the claim Dugin wants an Imperial state. Dugin dosen’t want one but he recognizes what he calls the Russian big space of a common civilization. He wants a state to reflect that. But he dosent dream of the Hitlerite adventurism of just building something out of nothing cause might is right. It’s not where he’s coming from. And even if Dugin did say he wants to destroy Europe or Ukraine in this case. I’m sorry even if he did say that in the context you’re trying to say he did that dosent make a facist. There are also many anti-colonial Grievances and resentment over European Imperialism and European colonialism which actually forms is the concrete context of where facism came from. There is no facism without European colonism. There is no facism without European Slaverly, there is no Facism without the genocides in Africa and else where and also the interment camps that the Europeans pioneered. Hitlers camps wouldn’t have been possible if it were not for those camps. And by destroying Europe all Dugin means is destroying NATO and the European Union. In Ukraine he talks about the Bandeite regime that took power by a Western backed coup in 2014.
    So people claim Russia accuses anyone in Ukraine who resists “Russian colonism” being a nazi banderite. First of all Azov Battalion isn’t a battalion of philosophers they are a battalion of active neo nazis. When I say active neo nazis who do believe that Russians should be exterminated have taken actions towards the end of exterminating Russians in the Donbas and other parts of Eastern Ukraine. Including killing journalists and beating political activists and people dessidents of Ukraines so that’s a very real thing. The Azov Battalion has engaged in the terrorism aganist civilians of Donbas. That is an actual application of hitlers methods and methods of the banderites who massacred over hundreds of thousands of Polish in the 40s.
    Second of all the question of Stephan Banderas legacy in Ukraine is not a matter of dispute. Ukrainian schools and Ukrainian Government institutions and Ukrainian politicians are almost all unequivocal in their their campaign to redeem the image of Stefan Bandera. The Ukrainian independence movement unequivocally and indisputable has its origins in Banderism. They literally have songs where they call themselves “Banderists” in schools right now. So that’s not a smear by Russia. Finally the claim of colonization Russia does not want it. There’s no evidence of colonizing Ukraine. The only motivation we can derive as far as Russia’s intervention into Ukraine is because of NATO expansion. Russia does not want NATO to have a have stronghold and having a footing in Ukraine.
    Russia wants to defend its own border’s rightfully from NATO’s expansion. People call Russia or Putin “Hitlerite” and facists. But Russians were not the ones expanding militarily to the west unprovoked. As soon as the Soviet Union dissolved NATO decided to March East. Now they wanna go into Ukraine after a coup in 2014 that was explicitly anti-Russian and yet Russians have no right to be worried or somehow concerned that NATO is making these moves right on its border?
    Let me ask the following question would the US tolerate Russian bases in Mexico or Canada?

    • @alexanderscott2456
      @alexanderscott2456 Před rokem

      He is a fascist and you are a defender of a monstrous totalitarian dictatorship that destroys human life and freedom.

    • @AsadAli-jc5tg
      @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 11 měsíci

      No they won't, and neither should they. Anyways what's your point in asking this question? Russia is the clear oppressor in Ukraine war.

    • @likehang9195
      @likehang9195 Před 10 měsíci

      Thank you ❤

    • @likehang9195
      @likehang9195 Před 10 měsíci

      Good comments ❤❤❤

  • @lubomirmazal9693
    @lubomirmazal9693 Před 3 měsíci

    …… well I have to admit, that I sense a very serious neoliberal propaganda from words of this eloquent gentleman. Maybe he has some political aspirations. He is applying signals or resemblances of fasism somewhere , they do not exist.

  • @LongDefiant
    @LongDefiant Před 4 měsíci

    Yeeesh, bro. I'm just getting into Dugin, but this didn't sound right.

  • @ozzy5146
    @ozzy5146 Před rokem +6

    thank you for this. But it is a straw man to paint early america/locke as some sort of free market libertarians.

    • @SavingCommunitiesDS
      @SavingCommunitiesDS Před rokem +5

      Why is that? They are not perfectly libertarian, just as there is no perfect circle, but I think they represent major advances in libertarian thought.

    • @ozzy5146
      @ozzy5146 Před rokem

      @@SavingCommunitiesDS Locke was a majoritarian. and the majority could treat free enterprise as they best judged. So was the United states. No regime of "individual rights."

    • @SavingCommunitiesDS
      @SavingCommunitiesDS Před rokem +1

      @@ozzy5146, the two are not mutually exclusive. He was comparing the majority to kings who never respected individual rights.

    • @ozzy5146
      @ozzy5146 Před rokem +3

      @@SavingCommunitiesDS But Locke had absolutely no problem with the majorities in parliament to define freedom any way they wanted. And any such restriction on individual freedom can be considered "fascist." So whatever problem Hicks has with Dugin can also be applied to locke! Or, of course, Jefferson. In fact, to anything short of anarchy!

    • @budroe4057
      @budroe4057 Před rokem +3

      @@ozzy5146 A flippant and facile response if I've ever seen one. Loaded with hyperbole, exaggerations, and misappropriated, or undefined and abstract terminology.

  • @amiradil1060
    @amiradil1060 Před 4 měsíci

    Western capitalism is fascism as well because it is based on colonialism, imperialism, slavery, genocide and hegemony, be it cultural, political or economic.

  • @tankiebot704
    @tankiebot704 Před rokem +16

    Dugin is based

  • @bobschmitz3882
    @bobschmitz3882 Před 5 měsíci

    This guy suggests that Dugin promotes fascism. This is twisting his words. He even contradicts his own ppt slides!

    • @bobschmitz3882
      @bobschmitz3882 Před 5 měsíci

      The 2nd part of the lecture is better. Spiritual is not the same as religion. Russians have more sense of community than Anglo saxons. Marxism, liberalism and fascism are very materialistic and are lacking spiritually.

  • @stephensuddick1896
    @stephensuddick1896 Před měsícem

    He's alone. That's what he is.

  • @tonyfrench2574
    @tonyfrench2574 Před rokem

    Marx revealed the matrix that would give the results he prophesied. Nothing happens by emperical evidence and practice but because Marx reveals it. Too narrow to cover the true course of culture, society and economics and to wide to provide any mechanisms Marxism is another theoretical humbug.

  • @patrickvernon4766
    @patrickvernon4766 Před 9 měsíci +3

    You can just read what he writes… not very hard.

  • @xappuxok
    @xappuxok Před 12 dny

    He makes a mockery of Dugin's philosophy.

  • @voiceofchina1788
    @voiceofchina1788 Před 3 měsíci

    why Dugin needs this medium who looks twice as wise?

  • @johnarmitage6225
    @johnarmitage6225 Před 3 dny

    What an appalling caricature of Dugins thought this lecture is, Hicks comes across as a first year undergraduate way out of his depth

  • @tonyfrench2574
    @tonyfrench2574 Před rokem +1

    Dugin philosphizes about the aeroplane but he never builds it let alone flies it.

  • @newdawnrising8110
    @newdawnrising8110 Před 7 měsíci +4

    For me Dugan's 4th Political Theory seems like an ideology that is forced and artificial. It is basically what we see in Russia today, which is a new form of fascism for Oligarchs per se'. His idea of this fourth system is just an attempt to solve the age old Russian identity crisis the culture has lived under for centuries. Russians being neither totally European nor totally Asian thus identify as a kind of Eurasian culture. Dugin explains all the various values of the traditional Russian culture and all that is fine and good, but it doesn't make it a political theory. It is a cultural identity or description of values shared among a majority of the Russian population. From there it becomes its own form of Liberalism citing the importance of recognizing various cultures and their unique traits and values. His rejection of racism though is a joke. Russians' are some of the most racist ppl in the world. And especially the nationalists that would most identify with Dugin's ideas. The 4th political theory is a form of super nationalism and cultural supremacy at the end of the day. This theory would identify the Russian culture and ethnic group as superior to all other cultures and with the "Divine Right" to rule the world. Dugin explains his idea of Eurasians' as a culture with Russia at it center. Other cultures are to be accepted and offered a kind of buy in to the Russian lead Eurasian union. Many of these idea spin off of Mackinder's "World Island theory". Basically I see this 4th political theory as an attempt to define what it means to be Russian. It is not a political theory that can be applied to other non Russian cultures in my opinion. It is a kind of hodgepodge of Russian identity politics and liberalism. What he fails to recognize is that this ideology can not be adopted by other cultures. Rather it fits into the idea of Liberalism just fine. ie. If you want to practice what ever political ideology you wish, then that is fine. You just can not force it onto other countries. Liberalism is a kind of live and let live ideology. It is a form of moral and political relativism but it is a rule based order so that all the different cultures can live in as much harmony as possible. The problem for Dugin and Putin is that they are not the head of the present world order. Therefore they criticize Liberalism with its moral relativism and general open society attitude toward minorities as corrupt and decadent and not in line with traditional Russian values. The fact is that we have a pluralist culture all around the world as cultures and peoples continue to mix and immigrate to various countries all over the world. Russians and other traditional cultures can criticize the values of others but still operate under the same law and a general capitalistic economy. That is that not all cultural values will agree, but liberals agree on basics of human rights but it doesn't insist that anyone have the same economic or moral or social values. Cultures have the freedom to be or become who they wish to be. Just don't step on the rights of others Sovereignty and self determination. Liberals can accept Dugin and his 4th political theory as long as they know that it applies to themselves alone and can not be forced on other cultures or peoples. But as we have seen Putin has no respect for other culture or their rights or sovereignty. He believes that might makes right but only when it is him exercising his might and power that matters. The power of the idea of liberalism will not be argued away. The ideology is inclusive inviting all to come together and work together to make a better world. We the US are not trying to tell others what to do except to abide by the laws of the world community that has set international law . This is what the Russians refuse to do bc they still live in the 18th century and want to build an empire again. That simply can not be accepted by the world community. Land can not be taken by force and we need an international force to maintain these laws of respecting the sovereignty of our neighbors to be as they choose. Dugin is trying to justify empire building again for the Russians. And this is what the Liberal order can not let them do through the use of violence.

    • @BlackAdam-wk6cm
      @BlackAdam-wk6cm Před 5 měsíci

      He is sh...:)

    • @BlackAdam-wk6cm
      @BlackAdam-wk6cm Před 5 měsíci +1

      Fascist only in a different way. You explained this well. The character is the son of a KGB officer. It has 100% something to do with Putin. His idea is to invade Ukraine. He mentioned it for a long time and it finally happened. I don't like him at all. Greetings.

    • @princebuster93
      @princebuster93 Před 5 měsíci

      @ NewDawn, thanks for that, it’s unbelievable how many Putin lovers there are in Britain and the alt media in general. If you read the Bible and do a study of eschatology, we are definitely seeing a world wide exposure of all these Dictators intentions. A lot of people are caught up in this “ Great Awakening “ mindset, which is the false light of Lucifer. The people of the world are being set up to be deceived by the Anti Christ, Dear Leader that is coming with great miracles, wonders, charm and promises of economic prosperity for all. Thank God, he is going to send witnesses warning people to repent of their unbelief and turn back to Jesus Christ, the Saviour of their soul, who died on the cross for their sins

  • @tatenokaienjoyer
    @tatenokaienjoyer Před rokem +5

    He is just based, no need to put any other name on it

  • @6saturnacaprisun156
    @6saturnacaprisun156 Před rokem +3

    You're wrong about Dugin. Fourth theory will rise

  • @dachurchofeppie850
    @dachurchofeppie850 Před rokem +5

    Excellent.

  • @grosbeak6130
    @grosbeak6130 Před rokem

    I usually like Stephen Hicks, but something is missing here, or something is off with him here.

  •  Před měsícem

    I dont know whats this canadian pseudophilosopher read, but I presume it was a Jordan Peterson review of Dugin work or sort. What a waste of time!

  • @larysarowland2958
    @larysarowland2958 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Dugin like Ivan Ilyin is a fascist and a russian conservative nationalist ( even more he is the nazist) and Putin likes both of them....however Italian Fascist party was a revolutanary party...'Bordeless an our land" - Dugin...."Russia does not have borders"-Putin...

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci +2

      What's funny is, you're arguably right. If we take Umberto Eco's or Lawrence Britt's definitions of fascism, the ultimate goal of Dugin fits on a scale. I've only read exerts of aIlyin, and plan on reading his descriptions of "superior Russian." If you knw accepNot classical, but novel way of postmodern fascism. Hut you hit nail on the head with Ilyin, as in Russian supremacist evolving ideology, it's not Dugin, but Ilyin, which putin takes most methodics from, by both ananalyzing his actions and rethorics and leaked info from Kremlin shaika, as Putin did admit it beimg on top of the list. He carefully crafted his favourite 15 writers, Ilyin was among them, Dugin wasn't. That's hidfen on purpose.
      Some might argue, that this Dugins thought salad is not actual Nazism, but only if we take '30s Nazism definition: he don't spell it out to copy all of that failed quagmire. Howeber denying rhetoric connections, he suggests the very methods between the limes. And Kremlin already uses them, in own suitability. Like their Roskomnadzor with trollfarms are a modern coppy of aGoebbels office, and muvh more powrrful. That's why we have so much Russophilic tankies in the world and in these comments. The youth camps, perversed education system and history textbooks, collectivism and Grdtapo agents among own population, mindless repeating and slogans, talking points, casus-belli, the list is endless. Only thing - it's not Aryan supremacy, it's 'Russian' supremacy, not even based on ethnicity for most. It's based on ideology and 'way of being', with same postmodern spin on "homo sovieticus". Everyone can become a 'Russian', if sing by their book, that's why anyone can get the new label of "rashist". The less you know their accurate history, the betger. You just have to accept "the special Russian truth" and that's it. No thinkung, logic necessary and God forbid you find a healthy reason or common sense. But, if you live in thrir path of restoring the Empire, like me - you either accept the ideology of slaves, or -- . Ask Timofei Sergeytsev, about "What to do with " them who resist. The final solution of people who betrays Russian 'plan'.
      I bet most of those here, same as in '30s Europe (and many in US) are led to love Dugin's methaphysical cocktail are the ones dismissing democracy, all the things Dugin 'seems' to reject for a western mind, and unknowingly push for new fascism
      . Accusing the other side of their own traits, out of reason. That's why tankues who don't admit their preference for fascist system are now called 'sczizofascists'. The trend started in Russia: they religiously believe their holy war against 'fascist Ukraine' and would extend the frontline to all western border, as all neighbours there have long been labeled fascists. The more someone resist their bloody power show, the more fasco or Nazi they are.
      Dugin is not an innovative phylosopher. The reason why you see all these quotes and paraphrasing, is because his theory and ideology is a postmodern Frankenstein. It's carefully crafted to be appealing to certain values and demography, which has neen ever growing, probably unexpectedly. I don't despair or find surprising for loud voices giving support for Russia from genuine westerners, among massive trollfarm fake voices. What i find sombre is, that even after getting apparantly educated academically, the more you go into rashist fascism, the more you love it, at least from a distance. Grass is allways greener.. and some will happily move to Russia . Usually the black-ptropaganda quagmire and conspiracys flow from most ignorant, or pseudo-anything victims. And actually it's not so different in these comments. Most of 'intelligent' discussers are pseudo-intelligent ignorant fascism sympathisers or confused in post-truth, post-fact conservatives or extremists. They pretend to be high up educated philosophers themselves, but lack of understanding Russian and historic extreme-spectrum ideas show trough. You have to get to know the region and people on both sides of Russias border to go deeper tgan this or correctly getting Dugins thought. As of this deep as in the lecture, it passes for framework. Those who think he is the greatest philosopher and we live in 'his times', sorry to disapoint you. He rhashed and served what tankies like also for reasons of effective populism in society driven by engagement and increasingly confused. Newertheless it's the sign of times, if horrifying to see people who unknowingly justify return to the past dressed in whatever suits their beliefs. This is not progress, but regress to demolish basic human rights,

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci

      ..as defined by centuries of writing them in blood. Dugin wants to abolish rules-based order and instil new rules, defined by the 'big man'. And that's exactly what ageing Putin - and all his supporters are dreaming of. We stand in their way and don't know yet how they'll react and how many will try to join them.
      I never thought this is where postmodernism leads, allthough read a book of warning against it, which seemed written by a conservative. Please, friends of books, read "1984". Read the description of double-thought, double-speech and the state of the world. And particulary think about newspeech - but in a syntax form. Simplifying things and making them mantra. One example today is Rashists not only calling everyone who disagrees Nazis and fascists, but terms like Kyiv regime and US regime. Rare of them know

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci +1

      .. that it's against definition of regime, if you know what i mean. After few hundred times hearing it, no way of convincing them that it's them, who have a regime, not somewhere in Europe. And same goes for 1st world tankies. This is a warning to all. Don't fall in these traps, get to know sides fighting for your sympathy and appealing with propaganda personally. Harder to do with Russians, but given a chance - talk ti them, to Ukrainians, to any real Palestinians ("") though), Israelis, Iranians, Chinese, Azerbaijanis,

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci +1

      ..Balltic people, etc. Most will know the hustory, if nit necessarily Dugin's work. But they'll be able to explain where he is coming from.
      Excuse the multi-reply essay, and especially spelling mistake. You'll have decypher this with eyeball spellcheck - unfortunately i'm on my reserve phone, which doesn't display text while i write replies, often glitches that keyboard disappear and i can't edit that mess, only deleete.
      Be safe.

  • @TheNaturalLawInstitute
    @TheNaturalLawInstitute Před rokem +6

    Hmmm...
    1) The principle difference between civilizations is the degree of trust: meaning the trustworthiness of each individual in personal, private, social, economic, and political life.. Russia is a low trust civilization. China is a lower trust civilization. Iindia is an even lower trust civilization. The middle east (MENA) is a much much lower trust civilization. The subsaharan africa is a trustless civilization. The Japanese, South Koreans, and the Europeans (mostly northern europeans) are the only high trust civilizations.
    2) Russia is a low trust civ. Duggin is looking for a justification for russian imperial authoritarianism that is necessary for a low trust population to maintain a geographic extreme of eleven time zones, when there is no means of political, social, economic, cultural, competition against competitors. In other words, (just like canandians virtue signal over americans) Russians need a means of exctusing their untrustworthiness and not developing trustworthiness.
    3) Those civilizations that experimented with communism and socialism 'blew the window' of modernizing, where they hade but a century to sieze their share of incentives to create a majority middle class society, before market differences between civlizations eliminated any chance of advantage. Now they have built up consumption, but they have no capital to use to transform, and no market means of transformation. So most will choose like Dugin to double down on ideology religion or authority to compensate. Some others will knuckle under (india) and develop quickly. Others more slowly.

    • @budroe4057
      @budroe4057 Před rokem +1

      Consider that, Mr. Ozzy here, cannot reconcile (or aknowledge) natural law as an operative force, let alone any universal, cosmic moral order, either existentially or ontologically. This may be evident in his remarks regarding JL, where in the period a major crux was the move from the objective to the subjective.

    • @Nikolaievich9837
      @Nikolaievich9837 Před rokem +1

      No. Dugin is a philosopher not a politican. Even if he did say it no one is gonna take him serious. Dugin actually endorses what he calls a version idealism of According to the Noose and he’s writing a huge project called Numahia. The Origins in the Noose which is the foundation of civilization come from what he calls the Newsphere which comes from the a mind and its through the intellect that one can interface with this and comes to actually reflect this. Dugin ascribes to a kind of metaphysical idealism. And according to his own words the idea has Primacy. So Dugin does respect the intellectual traditions of the world including Europe. Dugin has engaged in just about every single intellectual of the European Canada in the 20th century including the far left and the left. Dugin is first and foremost a philosopher and he’s not calling for violence or extermination of people or the massacre anyone. He’s a philosopher. And his daughter Dugina was going based of his philosophy.
      Walter Benjamin was a Jewish Marxist from the 1930s talked about something called “Divine Violence” and the meaning of violence has been very clear in the Marxist tradition. So Dugin saying words about violence in the abstract that dosent indict him as a Facist at all. now the claim Dugin wants an Imperial state. Dugin dosen’t want one but he recognizes what he calls the Russian big space of a common civilization. He wants a state to reflect that. But he dosent dream of the Hitlerite adventurism of just building something out of nothing cause might is right. It’s not where he’s coming from. And even if Dugin did say he wants to destroy Europe or Ukraine in this case. I’m sorry even if he did say that in the context you’re trying to say he did that dosent make a facist. There are also many anti-colonial Grievances and resentment over European Imperialism and European colonialism which actually forms is the concrete context of where facism came from. There is no facism without European colonism. There is no facism without European Slaverly, there is no Facism without the genocides in Africa and else where and also the interment camps that the Europeans pioneered. Hitlers camps wouldn’t have been possible if it were not for those camps. And by destroying Europe all Dugin means is destroying NATO and the European Union. In Ukraine he talks about the Bandeite regime that took power by a Western backed coup in 2014.
      So people claim Russia accuses anyone in Ukraine who resists “Russian colonism” being a nazi banderite. First of all Azov Battalion isn’t a battalion of philosophers they are a battalion of active neo nazis. When I say active neo nazis who do believe that Russians should be exterminated have taken actions towards the end of exterminating Russians in the Donbas and other parts of Eastern Ukraine. Including killing journalists and beating political activists and people dessidents of Ukraines so that’s a very real thing. The Azov Battalion has engaged in the terrorism aganist civilians of Donbas. That is an actual application of hitlers methods and methods of the banderites who massacred over hundreds of thousands of Polish in the 40s.
      Second of all the question of Stephan Banderas legacy in Ukraine is not a matter of dispute. Ukrainian schools and Ukrainian Government institutions and Ukrainian politicians are almost all unequivocal in their their campaign to redeem the image of Stefan Bandera. The Ukrainian independence movement unequivocally and indisputable has its origins in Banderism. They literally have songs where they call themselves “Banderists” in schools right now. So that’s not a smear by Russia. Finally the claim of colonization Russia does not want it. There’s no evidence of colonizing Ukraine. The only motivation we can derive as far as Russia’s intervention into Ukraine is because of NATO expansion. Russia does not want NATO to have a have stronghold and having a footing in Ukraine.
      Russia wants to defend its own border’s rightfully from NATO’s expansion. People call Russia or Putin “Hitlerite” and facists. But Russians were not the ones expanding militarily to the west unprovoked. As soon as the Soviet Union dissolved NATO decided to March East. Now they wanna go into Ukraine after a coup in 2014 that was explicitly anti-Russian and yet Russians have no right to be worried or somehow concerned that NATO is making these moves right on its border?
      Let me ask the following question would the US tolerate Russian bases in Mexico or Canada?

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci

      @Nikolaievich9837
      Damn, kremlinbot, your FANfarm slavedrivers really care about what westerners think about your genocidal sczizofascists..

  • @oldsachem
    @oldsachem Před rokem +4

    Amazing the similarities between the tenets of Dugin's national fascist ideology and that of the Woke anarchists.

    • @craxd1
      @craxd1 Před rokem

      Third-way politics, which really was a new fourth type. I believe this Russian form is a similar, but more stringent form of mixing the left and right than in the US and UK, but it has the same roots. Both Clinton and Blair supported third-way, and Blair used Sweden as a model. Blair was also big on "social justice" and so were the Clintons, which we can see the results of today.
      Look for Antifa's banner in Minneapolis on February 18, 2017, in the Antifa Wikipedia article. Notice the colors: red banner, white circle, with black symbols. Much of what they use have always mimicked this.
      It was several years ago, but I read an article from the CFR about how the national socialists and socialists got their heads together, and come to an agreement, which they agreed to pursue.

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator Před 7 měsíci +1

      Complete opposites. Only thing common is seeming notion of end of rules based order. Anarchist want end of authority, not international rules as Dugin.
      And this way of thinking, is exactly what he preaches. Irony has never been so great, because this is a cult. Sczizofascist is your new name.

  • @danielsacilotto3196
    @danielsacilotto3196 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm having trouble localizing this kind of talk. It's too stupid to be seriously academic, and too abstract to be an intervention into public discourse. Who is his audience? It seems like he is trying to be an ideologue, but just coming across as hopelessly boring and silly.

  • @MrPeopleFUN
    @MrPeopleFUN Před 3 měsíci

    Imagine this guy is getting paid by some university for such type of "analysis"

  • @joeruf6526
    @joeruf6526 Před 4 měsíci

    LOL! It's parody. Great move Canada. Putting a disciple of Alisa Rosenbaum to defend liberalism. What a joke. I disagree with Dugin but he buries this guy intellectually and in his understanding of philosophy.

    • @itsallminor6133
      @itsallminor6133 Před 6 dny

      We don't know the audience. Possible he's simplifying for audience

    • @joeruf6526
      @joeruf6526 Před 6 dny

      @@itsallminor6133 possibly. But there's something comical about taking anyone from Ayn Rands ideology seriously. lol! I mean isn't everyone's boomer uncle dead at this point or too old and embarrassed to defend such positions?

  • @franklogrim8510
    @franklogrim8510 Před 2 měsíci

    This is so bad 🤣🤣

  • @ozzy5146
    @ozzy5146 Před rokem +2

    Any "should" is religious. Including whatever liberalism recommends.

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 Před rokem +1

      What a strange creature

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před rokem

      When an animal feels hungry, they are "shoulding" in the same way as when a man feels hungry. "Should" is an evolved thing, like all the things in man.

    • @ozzy5146
      @ozzy5146 Před rokem

      @@karlnord1429 there's a difference between doing something and saying the thing SHOULD be done. Animals can't SAY what is right or wrong. that's the difference.

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před rokem

      @@ozzy5146 Animals communicate desire all the time. Right and wrong---as human concepts---are abstractions of basic desire. If you kick a dog it will growl. If you kick a man he will as well. Somehow, though, I think dogs end up killing each other less than humans kill each other.
      So how good are these religious abstractions in practice when confronted with man's tyrannical nature?

    • @ozzy5146
      @ozzy5146 Před rokem +1

      @@karlnord1429 dogs can't be philosophers because they have very limited abilities to communicate. Thus, they never make "should" arguments.

  • @seviwolfowicz4110
    @seviwolfowicz4110 Před rokem +2

    Putin should not be listening to Dugin. This philosophy only leads to suffering.

  • @craxd1
    @craxd1 Před rokem +4

    The more I look into Dugin, I am reminded of third-way politics, which is pushed by some in the west.