At the end of last week I finally Thus Zarathustra spoke of Friedrich Nietzsche exquisitely. In the first period of this year that I read this book, this elegance, this intense desire, expressed in the most beautiful lyrics, I came to page 156, because I couldn't build it further. I read about 2 pages per day and that felt like a mountain rolling up a large round stone. The amount of impressions and the depth of the work were too great an attack on my then thought window.
A week or two ago I started again, on page 156, because I remained curious about this unusual, single, philosophical polemic by a man whose great talent was unfortunately too gibberish for personal ambitions of a very dark type. Curious, not least because Jung occasionally mentions the book in his equally elevated writings. This time I flew through, at least ten pages a day. Clear language this time, with ideas coming in in the same way as my savior on earth, Carl Gustaf Jung.
The attentive reader will certainly recognize the many winks in these paragraphs, but why I got back behind my keyboard is the urge to correct a great injustice. That Nietzsche is called a fascist because the Nazis have abused his lyrics in the service of their hideous, rücksichtslose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Just as the very erudite and in my view very intelligent Carl Jung, who also had the best with man, unfortunately, has fallen prey to an extreme right-wing group in the United States and the brilliant interpreter of Jungs ideas, the Canadian professor Jordan Peterson unfortunately seems to have acquired a, perhaps not undeserved, questionable reputation, so Friedrich Nietzsche's extremely subtle mindset has been compromised.
The reader might think I'm worried about things that haven't been going on for a long time, but I think it's very relevant at this time to try to contribute to the restoration of a great philosopher, poet and writer, which I think should be mandatory, like Jung. I am aware of the fact that That I only call for a reversal of Having read Nietzsche and my speech may be very easy to shoot, but I'll take my chances.

