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<p><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87Tw_Fqbq3I">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87Tw_Fqbq3I</a></p>
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<p><span>Although the only acceptable criticism of Modern Technology
is the Frankfurt School cliché that it makes the subject “too
big” by allowing it to dominate the entire cosmos with
instrumental reason, Haag argues that this academic industry
caricature actually gets the problem exactly backwards. Because
the self-moving simulation eventually squeezes out the
possibility of interpretation, technology causes the subject to
disappear through a paradoxical excess rather than lack of
sensory stimulation. Through an in-depth analysis of all six
somatic contexts, Haag reveals that Modern Technology is not
just another Soma because it somehow oversteps its own
hermeneutical limits to become something other than a counter
sense object based on fossil fuels. Detailed readings of the
greatest anti-technological thinkers Ted Kaczynski, Jacques
Ellul, Julius Evola, Pentti Linkola, John Michael Greer, Martin
Heidegger, Michael Ruppert, and John Zerzan reveal that
Gadamer’s false dichotomy between sensation and language misses
the point that it is precisely Technique’s excessive linguistic
clarity which destroys the horizon of ecological hermeneutics.
Meditations on the forbidden thinkers Sayyid Qutb, Ted Bundy,
David Icke, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, and René Guénon reveal that the
Power Leaked collective racks up nominally-massive
accomplishments but only at the cost of degrading the individual
to nothing except a cog in the System with no agency beyond
feeling sensations and obeying mandates. Critiques of Social
Justice Politics, as well as prominent technophiles like Ray
Kurzweil, Mark Zuckerberg, and Anita Sarkeesian, expose the
contradictions inherent in technological apologetics, while
readings of pop culture phenomena like Star Trek, Death Note,
and Marvel Comics reveal the unspeakable truth about our own
technological society.</span></p>
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