THE 19TH CENTURY ROOTS OF 9-11?
Could the
100-year-old ideas of a French political philosopher be the impetus for
the Bush Administration's record of cruelty and deceit?
PETER'S NEW YORK, March 20, 2007--T.H. Robsjohn
Gibbing, in his "Mona Lisa's Mustache" (1947), attempts to show the
influence of the occult on the roots of the modern art movement. On
pages 73-74, Gibbings writes on the political philosopher Georges Sorel
(1847-1922):
"Sorel urged, in opposition to democracy, the creation of myths as a
means of promoting powerful minorities. Though the myth might be a
complete lie, nevertheless, according to Sorel, leaders had for
centuries achieved mastery over the common man by just such ‘noble
lies,’ which were vital in their promotion of powerful leadership....
"Sorel, like Nietzsche and Pareto, propounded the morality of force and
denounced what he considered the futility of elections, parliaments,
and laws. The moral value of violence, he stressed, must be given an
important place in the attitudes of modern society. Progress would come
through struggle that involves disrespect or disregard for the law."
This sounds eerily like the philosophy of the Bush administration. It
also reminds one of David Ray Griffin's references in his works and
speeches to the government's version of the events of 9-11 as a myth.
It is not farfetched to imagine that the current crop of foreign policy
elitists were raised up on Sorel's ideas, which are said to have been
instrumental in the rise of both communism and fascism.
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