Canadian historical sociologist
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Is Canada on the road to civilizational disappearance? Ricardo Duchesne, a former sociology professor at the University of New Brunswick, explains how multiculturalism took root in Canada and has made its politics go irreversibly leftward. If things continue going this way in Canada, Duchesne believes the country will disappear into the ether. Tune in to this episode of El Nino Speaks to learn why Canada has a rough, multicultural future in the decades ahead. Buy My Book "The 10 Myths of Gun Control" TodayIf you're serious about changing the gun control status quo we live in, this book is a must.After reading this text, you will be able to hold your own in any debate with your anti-gun friends, family, or associates. No questions asked.And heck, you will have a solid foundation in championing issues like gun rights should you take your activism to the next level.Knowledge is power and the foundation for any worthwhile endeavor. With this next-level information at your fingertips, the sky is the limit.So make today the day you say NO to the gun control status quo by taking action NOW.The full retail price for The 10 Myths of Gun Control is $6.Get Your Copy TodayBookmark my Website For Direct ContactIn the era of Big Tech censorship, we can't rely on just one or two platforms to keep us connected. Bookmark my website today so you always know where to get the true, unfiltered information about the news and views that matter to you.Subscribe to my Premium Newsletter TodayThe Niño FileIf you're serious about changing the authoritarian status quo we live in, make sure to join the Niño File on Patreon for as little as $5 a month. This is the premier source for dedicated and passionate leaders who want to not just “move the needle”, but actually win and change the landscape ahead of us.The Niño File is bringing you the necessary and concise ways to help you identify and train strong candidates, kill bad legislation while actively passing good bills, keeping incumbents accountable and knowing how to replace them when push comes to shove. Those are just the tip of the iceberg, the only way to get so much more is to join today!Don't Forget to Follow me on Twitter @JoseAlNino This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit josbcf.substack.com/subscribe
After discussing the recent bird news and the foiled marriage of Shinzo Abe at the Georgia Guidestones, Dimes and Judas deeply unpack a recent controversy kicked up by Scott Adams on broken children and how he would deal with hopeless teenagers, framed around the recent Highland Park Fourth of July massacre. Dimes then heaps on the data and discusses the book "The Information" by James Gleick, which breaks down the multidisciplinary field of information theory and the ultimate merging of thought, engineering, and biology. It is here we learn the full breadth of what information is and how it influences our physical reality. In the last segment, The Copepranos Society features Canada's own Dr. Ricardo Duchesne where they discuss the unique Faustian spirit of the Western man, global multipolarity, fighting for the identity of European Canadians, and how the discussion of the Great Replacement is being handled by academia.
The EBL crew (Tyler and FZ) are joined by special guest Dr. Ricardo Duchesne and Zero Schizo to discuss Aleksandr Dugin's Fourth Political Theory. We will explicit on just what Dugin's Fourth Political Theory is and pose some questions and challenges to the crucial deadlocks of postmodernity. With, against or beyond Dugin.
00:00 The Social Dilemma documentary, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/09/movies/the-social-dilemma-review.html 15:20 Hugo Mercier – Why Humans Are Less Gullible Than We Think, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cT-TZUSn2To 20:00 Facebook to take down false reports of antifa arson in Oregon, https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/facebook-take-down-false-reports-antifa-arson-oregon-n1239966 39:00 Bad forest policies and political indifference kindled Oregon's wildfires, https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/09/12/bad-forest-policies-political-indifference-kindled-oregons-wildfires/ 42:00 Jaron Lanier Fixes the Internet | NYT Opinion, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Np5ri-KktNs 46:00 Claire Khaw: If all religions were lies and you had to choose one, which would a rational/moral person choose?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=151vrCfD748 1:25:00 Anita Bryant 1:46:00 Lockdown vs herd immunity responses to Covid-19 1:49:30 Smashing the Boomer Truth Regime, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJ7OJ7_32y8 1:52:30 Ricardo Duchesne on Alexander Dugin, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2k07sWDHD-c 1:57:00 Virologist Dr. Li-Meng Yan Claims Coronavirus Lab 'Cover-Up' Made Her Flee China, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Lq3_rsBJ9w 2:07:00 Academic argues the Right can't take back the institutions, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X80z-ktWg68 2:11:00 The plunge in highly skilled work visas 2:12:30 Why do people become fascists? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vB1VQhEuuHg 2:32:00 Episode 1121 Scott Adams: "Losing Strategy" of BLM and Palestinians, a New Black-Only Town, Kurds, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TW3HEBFB6Kg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nothing_but_the_Truth_(2008_American_film) Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=134344 Saying Goodbye to Australia, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=134368 https://www.dailywire.com/news/comedian-trevor-noah-offended-by-gender-reveal-parties-child-hasnt-picked-gender-yet https://www.wnd.com/2020/09/chose-tackle-obamas-sexuality/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Right#United_States https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Right_(United_States) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Perlstein https://archive.org/details/beforestormbarry0000perl https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixonland The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980 Not Born Yesterday: The Science of Who We Trust and What We Believe, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=130046 https://twitter.com/michaelshermer/status/1304796478892843010 Polls, questions, super chats: https://entropystream.live/app/lukefordlive Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/lukeford/ Periscope: https://www.pscp.tv/lukeford/1nAJEAnVRDaJL Soundcloud MP3s: https://soundcloud.com/luke-ford-666431593 Code of Conduct: https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=125692 Reb Dooovid: https://twitter.com/RebDoooovid https://www.patreon.com/lukeford http://lukeford.net Email me: lukeisback@gmail.com or DM me on Twitter.com/lukeford Support the show | https://www.streamlabs.com/lukeford, https://patreon.com/lukeford, https://PayPal.Me/lukeisback Facebook: http://facebook.com/lukecford Book an online Alexander Technique lesson with Luke: https://alexander90210.com Feel free to clip my videos. It's nice when you link back to the original.
In this extremely dynamic episode, we're still talking about black people like pretty much everybody else, but there's a whole arc where we discuss owning the future by rewriting the past, a review of Canada in Decay by Ricardo Duchesne, the history of liberalism and its inability to exist with real politics, the impossibility of nationalism in the Western world, and a part where we think about how cool it would be to be homeless. Come on, forget about it.
In this extremely dynamic episode, we're still talking about black people like pretty much everybody else, but there's a whole arc where we discuss owning the future by rewriting the past, a review of Canada in Decay by Ricardo Duchesne, the history of liberalism and its inability to exist with real politics, the impossibility of nationalism in the Western world, and a part where we think about how cool it would be to be homeless. Come on, forget about it.
henlo Sackville! We were lucky to perform at the big music style festival this weekend. Even luckier to be joined onstage by Cheryl Hann. We talk about New Brunswick's very own Ricardo Duchesne and go through a rundown of some of Canada's worst statues and public monuments. Thank you to Sappyfest and Thunder & Lightning for having us.
I dagens avsnitt bland annat: Oljetankers angripna i Omanbukten, Migrationsverket utvisar ytterligare två islamister, trut polisanmäls för mjukglasstöld, Ricardo Duchesne förtidspensioneras, Danderyds KD-ledare Joachim Gahm utesluts ur partiet och Hongkong pausar lagförslag om utlämningsavtal med Fastlandskina https://radio.bubb.la/tisdag-18-juni-2019/
Jacob Reaume of Trinity Bible Chapel discusses his encounter with a growing white nationalist sympathy in Canada, and critiques its leading thinker, Ricardo Duchesne. The false hope of ethnic purity can only be defeated by the turn in repentance and faith to the hope of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Cultural Marxism in Canadian Society Ricardo Duchesne and Shawn Dalton
I dagens radio bubb.la avhandlas bland annat att SpaceX når ny milstolpe i rymdfarten när de skjuter upp och landar återanvänd raket, SVT framställer anonym samhällskritik som subversivt och hänger ut person bakom Facebooksida, Ricardo Duchesne om feminina män som återkommande fenomen i civilisationers förfall samt romsk kulturfond i Norge anmäls för bedrägeri och medföljande lyssnarbrev från Redaktionszigenaren. http://radio.bubb.la/2017-04-02/
One of the standard assumptions of modern Western social science (history included) is that material conditions drive historical development. All of the “Great Transitions” in world history–the origins of agriculture, the birth of cities, the rise of high culture, the industrial revolution–can, so most Western social scientists claim, be associated with some condition that compelled otherwise conservative humans to act in new ways. This premise is of course most closely linked to Marx, but it is found throughout post-Marxist big picture scholarship (including my own humble contribution to that literature). Ricardo Duchesne argues in his new The Uniqueness of Western Civilization (Brill, 2011) that we have it all wrong. History, he claims, is driven by creative people and their ideas, not by the conditions they find themselves in. If you see a bit of Hegel and Nietzsche here, you are not wrong: Duchesne embraces them both (and throws in a considerable amount of Weber to boot). But he goes much further. He trys to demonstrate using the best literature available on a wide variety of topics that the Hegelian-Nietzschian view of historical development is correct. This is not a book of theory alone; it’s an attempt to empirically demonstrate a theory. Even more radically, Duchesne uses the Hegelian-Nietzschian view to argue that since the invasion of the Indo-Europeans, a pastoral people who were imbued with unique aristocratic-warrior ethos, the West has been more creative than other world historical civilizations, and that this creativity explains in large measure the “Great Divergence” that we have seen in modern time. This is a challenging book, and one that requires study. It is not light reading. But anyone who is brave enough to try to understand what it says will be greatly rewarded. I know I was. PS: Brill, could you please put out an affordable paperback edition of this book, or perhaps release it in electronic version once it’s been sold to all the libraries that will buy it? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One of the standard assumptions of modern Western social science (history included) is that material conditions drive historical development. All of the “Great Transitions” in world history–the origins of agriculture, the birth of cities, the rise of high culture, the industrial revolution–can, so most Western social scientists claim, be associated with some condition that compelled otherwise conservative humans to act in new ways. This premise is of course most closely linked to Marx, but it is found throughout post-Marxist big picture scholarship (including my own humble contribution to that literature). Ricardo Duchesne argues in his new The Uniqueness of Western Civilization (Brill, 2011) that we have it all wrong. History, he claims, is driven by creative people and their ideas, not by the conditions they find themselves in. If you see a bit of Hegel and Nietzsche here, you are not wrong: Duchesne embraces them both (and throws in a considerable amount of Weber to boot). But he goes much further. He trys to demonstrate using the best literature available on a wide variety of topics that the Hegelian-Nietzschian view of historical development is correct. This is not a book of theory alone; it’s an attempt to empirically demonstrate a theory. Even more radically, Duchesne uses the Hegelian-Nietzschian view to argue that since the invasion of the Indo-Europeans, a pastoral people who were imbued with unique aristocratic-warrior ethos, the West has been more creative than other world historical civilizations, and that this creativity explains in large measure the “Great Divergence” that we have seen in modern time. This is a challenging book, and one that requires study. It is not light reading. But anyone who is brave enough to try to understand what it says will be greatly rewarded. I know I was. PS: Brill, could you please put out an affordable paperback edition of this book, or perhaps release it in electronic version once it’s been sold to all the libraries that will buy it? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One of the standard assumptions of modern Western social science (history included) is that material conditions drive historical development. All of the “Great Transitions” in world history–the origins of agriculture, the birth of cities, the rise of high culture, the industrial revolution–can, so most Western social scientists claim, be associated with some condition that compelled otherwise conservative humans to act in new ways. This premise is of course most closely linked to Marx, but it is found throughout post-Marxist big picture scholarship (including my own humble contribution to that literature). Ricardo Duchesne argues in his new The Uniqueness of Western Civilization (Brill, 2011) that we have it all wrong. History, he claims, is driven by creative people and their ideas, not by the conditions they find themselves in. If you see a bit of Hegel and Nietzsche here, you are not wrong: Duchesne embraces them both (and throws in a considerable amount of Weber to boot). But he goes much further. He trys to demonstrate using the best literature available on a wide variety of topics that the Hegelian-Nietzschian view of historical development is correct. This is not a book of theory alone; it’s an attempt to empirically demonstrate a theory. Even more radically, Duchesne uses the Hegelian-Nietzschian view to argue that since the invasion of the Indo-Europeans, a pastoral people who were imbued with unique aristocratic-warrior ethos, the West has been more creative than other world historical civilizations, and that this creativity explains in large measure the “Great Divergence” that we have seen in modern time. This is a challenging book, and one that requires study. It is not light reading. But anyone who is brave enough to try to understand what it says will be greatly rewarded. I know I was. PS: Brill, could you please put out an affordable paperback edition of this book, or perhaps release it in electronic version once it’s been sold to all the libraries that will buy it? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One of the standard assumptions of modern Western social science (history included) is that material conditions drive historical development. All of the “Great Transitions” in world history–the origins of agriculture, the birth of cities, the rise of high culture, the industrial revolution–can, so most Western social scientists claim, be associated with some condition that compelled otherwise conservative humans to act in new ways. This premise is of course most closely linked to Marx, but it is found throughout post-Marxist big picture scholarship (including my own humble contribution to that literature). Ricardo Duchesne argues in his new The Uniqueness of Western Civilization (Brill, 2011) that we have it all wrong. History, he claims, is driven by creative people and their ideas, not by the conditions they find themselves in. If you see a bit of Hegel and Nietzsche here, you are not wrong: Duchesne embraces them both (and throws in a considerable amount of Weber to boot). But he goes much further. He trys to demonstrate using the best literature available on a wide variety of topics that the Hegelian-Nietzschian view of historical development is correct. This is not a book of theory alone; it's an attempt to empirically demonstrate a theory. Even more radically, Duchesne uses the Hegelian-Nietzschian view to argue that since the invasion of the Indo-Europeans, a pastoral people who were imbued with unique aristocratic-warrior ethos, the West has been more creative than other world historical civilizations, and that this creativity explains in large measure the “Great Divergence” that we have seen in modern time. This is a challenging book, and one that requires study. It is not light reading. But anyone who is brave enough to try to understand what it says will be greatly rewarded. I know I was. PS: Brill, could you please put out an affordable paperback edition of this book, or perhaps release it in electronic version once it's been sold to all the libraries that will buy it?