While I never doubted the power of the intelligentsia -- philosophy, sociology, politics, and economics -- in world politics, I think most of the world do. Especially now that we have the short-attention span generation saturated with social media and visual-centric societies. If some government had stopped in their vigilance in tracking the trajectory of the intellectual movements, that government is plain stupid.What lessons might we draw from this report, particularly in the current political environment with its ongoing assault on the critical intelligentsia? First of all, it should be a cogent reminder that if some presume that intellectuals are powerless, and that our political orientations do not matter, the organization that has been one of the most potent power brokers in contemporary world politics does not agree. The Central Intelligence Agency, as its name ironically suggests, believes in the power of intelligence and theory, and we should take this very seriously. In falsely presuming that intellectual work has little or no traction in the “real world,” we not only misrepresent the practical implications of theoretical labor, but we also run the risk of dangerously turning a blind eye to the political projects for which we can easily become the unwitting cultural ambassadors. Although it is certainly the case that the French nation-state and cultural apparatus provide a much more significant public platform for intellectuals than is to be found in many other countries, the CIA’s preoccupation with mapping and manipulating theoretical and cultural production elsewhere should serve as a wake-up call to us all. — Olivier5
If the CIA wants to create public opinion then it ought to be active on TikTok and TPF. — magritte
Intellectuals gave us Machiavelli and Marx, and Lenin has shown how to wield those ideas as weapons. If the CIA wants to create public opinion then it ought to be active on TikTok and TPF. Maybe I could get one of those cushy jobs. — magritte
It's not the bookish intellectuals like Marx & Engels that the CIA is worried about, but those sword-wielding activists, like Lenin & Stalin, who are motivated by Utopian visions to follow Marx's advice. "The philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world in various ways,” he famously said. “The point, however, is to change it.” Apparently, the CIA reads PoMo as a left-wing manifesto, to be implemented as Socialism or Communism. :smile:It is often presumed that intellectuals have little or no political power. — Olivier5
If the CIA wants to create public opinion then it ought to be active on TikTok and TPF. — magritte
It's not the bookish intellectuals like Marx & Engels that the CIA is worried about, but those sword-wielding activists, like Lenin & Stalin — Gnomon
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