I wonder if more of the people here who are promoting the Marxist Left are part of the Millennial Generation, born from the early eighties to the early 2000's? If so, that would fit the dominance of the Millennials in the Marxist Left nationally in 2016-2017.
And could it be that the Millennials are more caught up in the use of the dialectic, and do not know what the dialectic is? If true, this does not mean that the people on TOL who are older than the Millennials are free of the dialectic.
There probably are many people from the two Baby Boomer age groups on TOL. The oldest Baby boomers are now about 61 to 70. They are mostly the children of the World War II age group. Then there are the younger Baby Boomers who are mostly the children of the Korean War age group. These younger Baby Boomers were born from about 1956 to 1964 and are now about 53 to 61. There was another generation between the youngest Baby Boomers and the Millennials, born from about 1965 to 1980, sometimes called the Generation X people.
It would not be surprising that the influence of Marxism and of the dialectic increases from the oldest Baby Boomers to the Millennials, while the influence of Marxism and the dialectic upon Americans born before about 1946 was confined to a very few people.
Look at the people who began the present day populist and patriot movement, who, if known by the Marxist Millennials, are highly disliked. Ron Paul was born in 1935, almost a member of the Korean War age group. Then there were the short wave broadcasters of the nineties. William Cooper was maybe the oldest of this group, born in 1943. I don't know when Steve Quayle was born, but probably also in the early forties. Larry Nichols was born in 1951 and Mark Koernke in 1957.