Music and Dancing with Demons Dr Eric Karlstrom
Popular music orchestrated the Baby Boomer experience from birth to advanced age, thanks to the Tavistock Institute and psychopaths from the Frankfurt School. From their very conception under the umbrella of post war swing, this generation weathered the sappy pre hippie movement love songs of the 50’s and early 60’s, Woodstock, disco, funk, punk, hip/hop and are now twerking with Beyonce. How did this flotilla of sound shape these boomers into good cultural marxist foot soldiers bending the morals that made civilization possible and placing subsequent generations on the slippery slope of not only moral relativity (do what though wilst) but now into a hall of mirrors that we call Reality Relativity or Politically Correct Palsey? Join us as Eric and Paul review “the boomer experience.” Visit www.erickarlstrom.com to hear more from Eric.
Dr. Eric Karlstrom’s presentation, “Music and Dancing with Demons,” explores how popular music has influenced the Baby Boomer generation, suggesting that institutions like the Tavistock Institute and the Frankfurt School played roles in shaping cultural and moral values through music.
He argues that from the 1950s onward, various music genres—including swing, love songs, rock, disco, punk, and hip-hop—have been used to promote cultural Marxism, moral relativism, and political correctness.
Karlstrom contends that this musical evolution has led to a decline in traditional moral values and has influenced subsequent generations toward a more relativistic view of reality.