Speech by Lucien Cerise at the Global Conference on Multipolarity, 29 April 2023
Good morning to all,
First of all, I would like to announce that I will be in Moscow from May 24 to May 29, and then in St. Petersburg from May 30 to June 4 If you are available during this time, I would be very happy to meet you in Russia.
Then, I would like to specify a second thing, which is the reason for my presence at this conference: I participated in 2012 in the translation into French of Aleksandr Dugin's book, "The Fourth Political Theory". I have a beginner's level of Russian language, so I didn't do the first translation, but I corrected the translation errors by comparing the French translation with the original text. I also wrote the summary of the book that you can find on the back cover, and that I will read to conclude my speech.
My field of research is social engineering. Multipolarity is synonymous with decentralized governance. Each people is responsible for its territory because it is best placed to take care of it. I am in a better position than my neighbor to take care of my house and garden. Multipolarity is synonymous with governance by order and social negentropy. Globalists, on the other hand, try to govern by chaos and social engineering, a scientific approach to social phenomena from a "change management" perspective derived from the applications of cybernetics and psychology in the fields of management, marketing and systems security. It is the general method of hacking and transforming any social being, allowing the stealthy, planned and lasting modification of the behavior of this social being (company, organization, population), most often to destroy it. The two key concepts of social engineering are phishing, a kind of "deadly seduction" based on the abuse of trust and identity theft, and triangulated conflict, or "war by proxy". This method is widespread in the collective West, which made Vladimir Putin say that it was the empire of lies. Indeed, these notions find geopolitical applications in transitology, the globalists' method of provoking putsches, colored revolutions, psychological operations, false flag terrorism, hybrid wars and regime changes, the dramatic consequences of which are visible in Ukraine and Syria. The question is therefore urgent: what to do about this global and unipolar governance by chaos? I summarized my view in the back cover written for Aleksandr Dugin's book, The Fourth Political Theory - Russia and the Political Ideas of the 21st Century:
"When the Right and the Left in politics no longer mean anything, when liberals and libertarians agree on the essentials, when the three great political theories of the twentieth century, communism, fascism and capitalism, have proven their inability to govern, what is left to do? We still have to invent a Fourth Political Theory, says Alexander Dugin, one of the most listened-to thinkers in Russia today. His thought, which goes beyond artificial ideological divisions and reflexes conditioned by the media, advocates a return to traditional spiritualities in order to face the future in a resolutely conquering manner. War is thus declared on Western postmodernism, this morbid mixture of the society of the spectacle and consumption emanating from the Anglo-Saxon empire and its projects of definitive world domination. Dugin shows that the construction of a multipolar world based on authentic values of life will only be possible by maintaining at all costs an exteriority to the Atlanticist and globalist West. How can this be done? By unconditionally preserving the geopolitical sovereignty of the powers of the Eurasian continent, Russia, China, Iran, India, as well as the African continent, guarantors of the freedom of other peoples on the planet. A veritable manual of cultural guerrilla warfare, this book demonstrates once again that ideas can only be defended with weapons as a last resort."