Aleksandr Dugin on freedom beyond liberalism

in politics •  7 years ago  (edited)

Famous (infamous for some) Russian philosopher and author of "Forth Political Theory" Aleksandr Dugin answers questions about his views on liberalism.

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I read somewhere that the foundations of economic and technological breakthrough South Korea was laid by General Chun Doo-hwan, a dictator. The Japanese "miracle" largely owes its appearance to the mentality of the Japanese, by grafting the liberal ideology. In its purest form, liberalism is represented in the US, but also that, with many caveats and, to a large extent, as an ideology for external consumers. On the other hand , it is accepted to cite the example of the "Golden billion" as a sign of the triumph of liberal ideology, while forgetting that there are another 6 billion, where the liberal ideology has not brought such an effect. And if we take Arab countries as an example, the events of recent years show that there is only harm from liberal reforms. On the other hand, no one claims that liberal ideology is an absolute evil. Evil is the absolute liberalism promoted now without any restrictions. (Something similar took place in the minds of some figures at the dawn of Soviet power in the USSR of the 20s of the last century: the world revolution, the generalization of wives and children, the theory of "glass of water".

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