List of the left-bank and right-bank tributaries of the River Irrationalism


Andrzej Koraszewski 2024-03-17

The flood of the River Irrationalism, sometimes called the tsunami of global antisemitism, prompts many authors to search for the original source.


British historian Bat Ye'or points to the links between Islam and Nazism and the fact that Nazi ideas survived the defeat of Nazism in the Arab countries and returned to Europe.


American historian Izabella Tabarovsky, who studies the history of the USSR, points to the Soviet propaganda that survived the collapse of the USSR in Western universities.


The American essayist Hussein Aboubakr Mansour points to Fanon, Algeria and Arab anti-colonialism and orientalism, which is little known in Poland.


The American historian Richard Landes goes deeper and refers to the millennial myths.


They're all right and show hard facts.


Interestingly, Wikipedia presents Bat Ye'or as a supporter of conspiracy theories, and Judith Butler as an eminent philosopher who is hard to find fault with. Bat Ye'or and Mansour were both born in Egypt and are very familiar with both the history and atmosphere of the Arab world.


Tabarovsky was born in the USSR and has no difficulty finding plagiarism from Soviet pamphlets in Western books and newspapers.


Douglas Murray reminds us that UN Resolution 3379 of 1975 equating Zionism with racism was presented by the dictator from Uganda Idi Amin (at the instigation of the USSR), and a magnificent banquet after its adoption was given by a former Nazi and then UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim.


Probably not all tributaries of the River Irrationalism have been identified, but all of them contribute, which is clearly visible even in such a backyard as Poland.