Date: June 10th, 2026 3:23 PM
Author: COCKazn (✅🍑)
https://x.com/brivael/status/2064493618782785780?s=20
Brivael Le Pogam @brivael · 19h Translated from French
Everyone thinks that the free world won in 1989, with the fall of the Berlin Wall.
That's false.
And that's exactly why the world is on fire today.
What fell on November 9, 1989, was a machine.
A planned economy, a military empire, a concrete wall. What didn't fall was the idea. The idea that the world is divided between oppressors and oppressed. The idea that there is a final equality to be achieved, by any means necessary. The idea that everything that exists (the family, the nation, merit, inheritance) is a structure of domination to be torn down.
That idea wasn't in the building when the building collapsed.
We need to rewind the timeline, because everything is in the timeline:
Economic communism had a fatal flaw: it was refutable. It promised abundance, it produced famines. It promised emancipation, it produced barbed wire. Budapest 1956, Prague 1968, The Gulag Archipelago published in Paris in 1973, the boat people of 1979: every decade, reality sent its refutation. The boat people were a floating refutation, visible from the beaches.
So the ideology did what every threatened organism does: it mutated.
The mutation has a name, and I've traced its genealogy here: French Theory.
Foucault shifted the war from the terrain of facts, where communism lost every time, to the terrain of knowledge itself.
If there is no truth, if there are only power relations disguised as knowledge, then no famine, no wall, no gulag can refute anything anymore.
French Theory didn't bury Marxism.
It made it irrefutable.
And the mutation has dates. All prior to 1989.
1934: The Frankfurt School, chased from Germany, sets up at Columbia. The critique of the economy becomes a critique of culture.
1964-1965: Marcuse, German exile turned American professor, replaces the failing proletariat with a new revolutionary subject (minorities, students, outcasts) and writes in black and white that tolerance must be granted to left-wing movements and denied to those on the right.
October 1966: The landing has a precise date. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. Derrida, Barthes, Lacan present French thought to American campuses.
1967: Rudi Dutschke launches the slogan, the long march through the institutions.
1968: Street revolutions fail everywhere.
No matter. The revolution will no longer pass through the streets; it will pass through the classroom.
1975-1985: Yale, Berkeley, Columbia absorb the theory, which becomes the operating system of the humanities.
1987: Allan Bloom publishes The Closing of the American Mind to sound the alarm. A million copies sold.
The university calls him a reactionary and moves on.
America had its Aron, and it did the same thing to him that we did to ours.
Then comes November 9, 1989.
The Wall falls. The West celebrates. Fukuyama had declared the end of History the previous summer, even before the fall. We dismantle the missiles, cash in on the peace dividends, declare the match over.
We celebrated our victory over an empty address. The ideology had moved out twenty years earlier. We won against the tanks and lost against the chairs.
Meanwhile, the other communist empire read the situation the opposite way. Beijing had crushed Tiananmen in blood five months before Berlin. Grim, but clear-sighted on one point: China knew the war was ideological.
It chose: abandon Marxist economics, keep control of the narrative. The West did exactly the opposite: it kept the market and absorbed the ideology. Thirty-five years later, look at who's building power plants and who's toppling its statues.
You want proof that it's the same software? Make the correspondence table.
The class struggle has become the identity struggle.
The kulaks have become the privileged.
Maoist self-criticism has become privilege checking. The political commissars have become DEI officers.
The samizdat has become the shadowbanned account.
The nomenklatura left Moscow for Davos and Brussels.
And paradise is no longer called the classless society: it's called equity, equality of outcomes.
Exactly what I described here a few weeks ago.
People will say: there is no Gulag.
That's true. That's even the entire genius of version 2.0.
Hard communism had to break bodies because it didn't hold minds.
Soft communism holds minds: it just has to break careers.
No camps, just HR departments.
No Moscow Trials, just public apologies.
No Siberia, just social death.
Ask the Eastern Bloc émigrés settled in the West what they feel when they walk through an American university in 2026.
They recognize the smell.
And that's why the world is on fire.
A civilization spent thirty-five years teaching its own children that it was the problem. Result: it no longer knows how to defend its borders, pass on its heritage, or even name its enemies.
When the president of Harvard, before Congress, responds that condemning a call for genocide "depends on the context," you see the software running in production.
And the predators from outside read that weakness like an open book: Moscow probes, Beijing waits, Islamism advances in the streets of our capitals.
The external fire is only the consequence of internal disarmament. You only burn well the houses that have emptied themselves of their defenders.
The Wall didn't fall. It moved. It no longer separates East from West: it now runs through the inside of every Western institution, between those who build and those who deconstruct.
The first Cold War was won with missiles and GDP. The second will be won with schools, free media, and AI models. Whoever writes the values into the machines will write the next 1989.
This time, let's not mistake the victory. To work.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5872852&forum_id=2...id.#49928201)