When will we say "Enough!"
The women with whom I spoke – currently and formerly incarcerated at “Chowchilla” prison (as the Central California Correctional Facility is colloquially known), this state’s highest security women’s prison – are watching as biological males begin to self-identify as females and transfer in. Washington state, which has a similar policy, has already allowed a rapist and serial killer of women to transfer into the women’s prison. As is true in Washington state, California requires no sex reassignment surgeries or hormones for men to become eligible for transfer to the women’s prison. Self-identification is enough. With good reason, these women are terrified.
Abigail Shrier, Incarcerated Women Brace for Influx of Male Inmates
This is insanity imposed on us by a tiny minority of highly-educated ideologues and idiots. I’m sick of it. I’ll never knowingly vote for an unhinged, narcissistic Donald Trump-type, but I’ll vote for sane people who will try intelligent ways of stopping this sort of thing.
Helpful glossary
Populist worries
We worry desperately about money—not because of obsessive acquisitiveness, but because constructing a bulwark against a failing culture requires heaps of it. (How much is private security, in the absence of a police force? Private school, in the absence of non-racist public ones? Non-woke doctors, who will fulfill their oath to heal us? How much is all this going to cost, and how will we possibly afford any of it?)
Abigail Shrier, Don’t Judge Me
Interesting point. The overall article, though, is a defense of Ohio Senatorial candidate J.D. Vance against a wild screed in The Atlantic (which journal I didn’t renew, though I might some day).
Rod Dreher, too, vouches for Vance. As a Hoosier, I have no horse in this race.
Young ideologues
The youth is an intellectual merely, a believer in ideas, who thinks that ideas can overcome the world. The mature man passes beyond intellectuality to wisdom; he believes in ideas, too, but life has taught him to be content to see them embodied, which is to see them under a sort of limitation. In other words, he has found that substance is a part of life, a part which is ineluctable.
Richard Weaver, Ideas Have Consequences
I highlighted it, but apparently didn’t take it readily to heart.
The Enlightenment
The Enlightenment not only helped us to discover the Atom bomb but also gave us the intellectual means to use it without great guilt.
Stanley Hauerwas, Resident Aliens
I’m pretty bearish on "the Enlightenment," starting with the congratulatory name. I may write at greater length on this some day.
A crack in qualified immunity
"[W]hy should university officers, who have time to make calculated choices about enacting or enforcing unconstitutional policies, receive the same protection as a police officer who makes a split-second decision to use force in a dangerous setting?"
Justice Clarence Thomas, via Jonathan Adler.
Justice Thomas got his tacit wish very recently in the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Arrogant University of Iowa Administrators once again (yes, the University is a recidivist) decided that relatively conservative Christian groups should be brought to heel by stripping them of recognition until they stopped being, well, relatively conservative.
The 8th Circuit held that the individual administrators cannot shield their pocketbooks from individual liability for dollar-damages by claiming "qualified immunity" — because qualified immunity requires that the law be at least a bit murky, and the law against public institutions’ viewpoint discrimination is crystal clear.
Yay for the 8th Circuit!
Affective primacy
You can feel affective primacy in action the next time you run into someone you haven’t seen in many years. You’ll usually know within a second or two whether you liked or disliked the person, but it can take much longer to remember who the person is or how you know each other.
Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind. I experience that regularly, but I didn’t know there was a name for it.
How the BoBos Broke America
Third, [the BoBos have] come to dominate left-wing parties around the world that were formerly vehicles for the working class. We’ve pulled these parties further left on cultural issues (prizing cosmopolitanism and questions of identity) while watering down or reversing traditional Democratic positions on trade and unions. As creative-class people enter left-leaning parties, working-class people tend to leave. Around 1990, nearly a third of Labour members of the British Parliament were from working-class backgrounds; from 2010 to 2015, the proportion wasn’t even one in 10. In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the 50 most-educated counties in America by an average of 26 points—while losing the 50 least-educated counties by an average of 31 points.
… In 2020, Joe Biden won just 500 or so counties—but together they account for 71 percent of American economic activity, according to the Brookings Institution. Donald Trump won more than 2,500 counties that together generate only 29 percent of that activity. An analysis by Brookings and The Wall Street Journal found that just 13 years ago, Democratic and Republican areas were at near parity on prosperity and income measures. Now they are divergent and getting more so. If Republicans and Democrats talk as though they are living in different realities, it’s because they are.
…
[T]he educated elite tended to be the most socially parochial group, as measured by contact with people in occupational clusters different from their own. In a study for The Atlantic, Amanda Ripley found that the most politically intolerant Americans “tend to be whiter, more highly educated, older, more urban, and more partisan themselves.” The most politically intolerant county in the country, Ripley found, is liberal Suffolk County, Massachusetts, which includes Boston.
…
With their amazing financial and convening power, blue oligarchs move to absorb any group that threatens their interests, co-opting their symbols, recruiting key leaders, hollowing out their messages. “Woke capitalism” may seem like corporations gravitating to the left, but it’s also corporations watering down the left. Members of the blue oligarchy sit atop systems that produce inequality—and on balance their actions suggest a commitment to sustaining them.
David Brooks, How the BoBos Broke America
Great article to read and argue with. I say that as someone who almost certainly qualifies as a BoBo. The second paragraph in particular was an eye-opener.
Da Press
I have finally internalized the lesson that the press is too biased to merit reliance. All of them.
So how is one to know what’s going on in the world? Curate the least unreliable?
Next lesson: we’re not meant to know what’s going on far, far from kith and kin.
UPDATE: Someone who apparently feels as I do about this suggests that BBC World News is still reliable. I’m going to try it.
Viktor Orbán week
Tucker Carlson is in Budapest this week, which is the worst thing about Budapest I can think of off-hand. (I tried watching him to see what he had to say about Hungary, but I couldn’t get past his initial, dishonest, manipulative demagoguery about other things.) This has given the usual suspects an occasion to publicly affirm that they’re still on the left-liberal team, and gives Rod Dreher yet another chance to push back.
[W]hat sets [Viktor Orbán] apart from American conservative leaders is that he recognizes the nature of the crisis, and is prepared to act boldly to address it. He believes that contemporary Western liberalism has surrendered to a civilizational death wish. I prefer the (possibly flawed) ways that Orban is meeting the crisis than the ways that the American Right is failing to do same.
…
Which is the only power capable of standing up to Woke Capitalists, as well as these illiberal leftists in academia, media, sports, cultural institutions, and other places? The state. That’s it. This is disorienting to Anglo-American conservatives, who are accustomed to seeing the state as the enemy, and institutions of civil society, especially business, as friends of freedom. It’s no longer true, and people on the Right who want to fight soft totalitarianism had better start to understand this. This is why American conservatives ought to be beating a path to Hungary and Poland (as well as to Spain, to talk to the Vox party, and to other European countries to learn from non-Establishment populist parties).
Yes, I do include Rod in the unreliable sources. I could qualify that assessment, but suffice for now that he has backed up his "on balance" defense of Hungary with facts, whereas its foes have shown me no more than hand-waving, epithets, hyperbole, and "everybody-knows-ism." I’m more inclined to credit Rod.
The Spectator is closer to the situation than I am, and here’s its take:
Brussels’s problem is not really with Poland or Hungary. More fundamentally, ‘unity in diversity’ has become anathema to it. It cannot accept that the geographical borders of Europe do not neatly overlap with the European Union’s ideological fault lines.
Hungary, Poland and the EU’s ‘diversity’ problem
Ack-bassward
I’m not going to get into the history or beliefs of Orthodox Christians, beyond saying that the tradition began with the Schism of 1054 when millions of Christians who were unhappy with the direction of the Catholic Church (on theological and political grounds) broke away to form their own tradition.
Ryan Burge, Orthodox Christians Are More Republican Today than Twelve Years Ago. Why? – Religion in Public.
You’d have done better to say nothing at all, Ryan, since what you said is ass-backward. Here’s a more accurate account:
The unity of the universal church was disrupted over the 11th through 13th centuries as an increasingly willful Patriarch of Rome broke away from the other four great Patriarchates, taking the West into schism from the rest of the Church.
Little, nutritious bites
…they trained students to be spelunkers of their personal identities and left them incurious about the world outside their heads.
Mark Lilla, The Once and Future Liberal
Even the man we nailed on a tree for a lookout said little about it; he told us evil would come.
Les Murray, New Selected Poems
Adiaphora
The essential point I want to make here is this: elite liberals, as a class used to comfortable and orderly lives, were massively freaked out by the election of Donald Trump, and what they have demanded in turn is not a new and better political movement but for everyone else to be freaked out too … Feel the way that we feel or you will be exiled.
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Liberal Democrats want the bad things they say they fear to happen; that much is obvious. They would rather the bad things happen and be proven right about the threat than for the bad things not to happen at all. This is porn. It’s all porn.
Freddie deBoer, Orange Cheeto Man Bad?
The Spectacle of Latinx Colorism
The idea of sameness can devastate as much as it can connect.
By Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
They lie awake at night at the New York Times worrying about different things than I worry about.
open letter from a distinguished surgeon – Snakes and Ladders
I was gratified to read Federal Judge Imposes Sanctions on Lawyers Who Filed Frivolous Election Suit – Reason.com
May this be the first of many sanctions against rogue lawyers who joined in spreading manure about Election 2020.
I know that a lawsuit is preferable to riots in the streets, but you can’t just throw any crap on paper and call it a good faith legal claim. There’s junk law just as there’s junk science.
You can read most of my more impromptu stuff at here. It should work in your RSS aggregator, like Feedly, should you want to make a habit of it.
As a sometime Orthodox I too balked at Burge’s characterization of the ‘origin’ of the Orthodox tradition. It was not just wrong, but ignorant and incurious.
But I was even more struck by the shallowness of his political analysis in the balance of the article. Though he is a professor of political science, he pronounces himself stumped that a social group that has not changed in its mix of views of particular issues has become “more Republican.” Has it not occurred to him that, even if this group’s views have not changed, perhaps the political environment itself has changed? If the so-called ‘Overton Window’ has shifted leftward (and who can deny that it has?), then those whose politics have not in fact changed find themselves shifted rightward on the new political spectrum.
Burge is not a writer that I have read much of. The linked article does nothing to make me want to read more,
I have a weak social science background, but I thought that looking at just three issues — abortion, race and economics — was a very questionable choice. My parish is so untypical (midwestern, mostly converts) that I can’t generalize, but I can identify a lot of reasons why Orthodox Christians MIGHT lose enthusiasm for Democrat candidates, and it does come down to a change in the political environment in broad enough terms that maybe it defies outsider analysis.