Foucauldian Power Capillaries and Cuckery to Weaponized Slave Morality: a Call to Polity
We all know the cowering rightist when we see him. Ask him about politics, and, if he's not trying to change the subject, he'll inevitably say something akin to "both parties are a fraud." Corner him on his views, and you'll reveal he believes in some mix of conservative, libertarian, and/or nationalist positions on laws and public policy. But then, why won't he simply say who and what he supports? Why is nearly every statement affirming his rightist positions qualified with some eye-rolling iteration of "I don't like either [insert rightist politician] or [insert leftist politician], but... [insert meekly articulated rightist position in careful dialectic]"? Because, he knows the social consequences of wrong-think and is hedging his bets accordingly. Welcome to the world of Foucauldian power capillaries, a phrase associated with Michel Foucault, a leftist 20th century French philosopher and communism espouser associated with poststructuralism