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Top 25 News Stories (February 12, 2023)

NATION

Unvetted Aliens from 170 Countries Are Pouring Across the Border

 

Arizona Secretary Of State Shrugs Off Election Problems As Lawsuit Highlights 2022 Failures

 

Treasury Dept. Admits Targeting ‘MAGA’ Finances Without Due Process

 

   500+ Lab Tests Available

 

The Hostile Takeover of the Air Force Academy

 

Will Dems Swap Michelle Obama for Joe Biden? No Way

 

White House Reportedly Pressured Hur Behind Scenes To Take Out Passages On Biden’s Memory Lapses

 

The Coming 2024 Leftist Election Grift

 

Noetic Continental | Part I: How CIA Foists Military Equipment Through Private War Companies

 

The race for George Santos’ congressional seat could offer clues to how suburbs will vote this year

 

The Forgetting Is Mandatory

Only a few decades later, the same upheaval took place during and after the Second World War. Following that war, once again, the music shifted as did the architecture, painting, literature, demographics, and the ideas we held about the future. Optimism in general experienced its second massive blow in a century, replaced by an advancing nihilism that could not be contained until it exploded two decades later.

One again, the distance between 1940 and 1950 was far more than a decade. There was a multinational reset with the formation of “neo-liberal” world political institutions like the IMF and World Bank, plus GATT, which were supposed to guarantee global peace. And only a few years later, the Cold War wrecked those plans with the creation of walled trading blocs.

The writers of the interwar period seemed to vanish, dismissed as old-fashioned and out of touch. Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Nock, Mencken, Wharton, Garrett, Flynn – these were all household names in the 20s and 30s but gradually evaporated from the 1950s and onward. Magazines changed and industry too, with the old wiped away and the new granted a subsidized prominence.

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