Monday, October 19, 2020

The Ultimate Principle of the Ultimately Unprincipled

It's difficult -- impossible, actually -- to see a cloud when one is inside it. Rather, one can only recognize its contours from a distance.   From the inside it's just a fog.  A blob. 

Same with a diabolic infestation.  One can only recognize it from outside or above.  Or better, only with recourse to a vertical axis or center can the diabolical be seen at all. It's why cannibals don't know cannibalism is evil, or why leftists can't see that Antifa is more than an idea, or that Hunter Biden's laptop is real.  

You'd think evil would be easy to recognize, but moral clarity is the exception, not the rule. In the 1930s people dismissed Churchill as deranged for his moral clarity vis-a-vis National Socialism.  And from the revolution of 1917 all the way up to its demise in 1991, leftists defended the USSR against the naive and simplistic moralism of Ronald Reagan and other anticommunists.   

Buried somewhere at the bottom of my library is a 1996 book by the eminent hisorian Eric Hobsbawm called The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991, in which he persists in defending Marxism.  Even from a distance, he couldn't see the outlines of the demonic swarm; or, he could, only he located it in the U.S. and not the USSR.  Extremes -- you know, like Americanism.

Hobsbawm was obviously an intelligent man, so mere intelligence is entirely insufficient to explain why someone would defend such patent evil. Writers for the New York Times are -- or used to be, anyway -- of at least average intelligence, but the paper declared Hobsbawm's magnum dopus to be a "powerful, bracing and magisterial work."   

Lately I've been bombarded with vertical murmurandoms regarding the essential nature of the left.  Over the years -- exactly 15, come to think of it -- we've obviously discussed the nature of leftism from various angles, but I'd like to get to the bottom of it once and for all:  what is it? And why?    

Of course, we want to be scrupulously fair and balanced.  We don't want to eviscerate a straw man, nor do we wish to pretend that anything with which we happen to disagree is a priori evil.  Let's give the devil his due.  Above all let's not imitate the left and merely project our own unacknowledged impulses, plans, and desires into our opponents.

This will no doubt be a long and rambling series of posts. Nevertheless, by the end of our exploring we hope to rearrive at the beginning and know it for the first time, such that our solution can be reduced to an aphorism or printed on the front of a t-shirt. 

Now, when I say I've been bombarded with vertical hints and clues, I'm talking about the old Baader-Meinhof effect, whereby you see something once and then see it everywhere.  So, everywhere I'm seeing things that go to the deep structure of the left.  

I'll start with this essay by Bari Weiss which I read yesterday, called Stop Being Shocked.   She's that leftist lady who quit the Times because it was too far left, so naturally she's shocked at the nature of the left.  While she makes some excellent points, she can't see the meta-forest evil for these trees. Nevertheless, if she continues on her present course, she may well find her way out of the forest.  

She notes that

No one has yet decided on the name for the force that has come to unseat liberalism. Some say it’s “Social Justice.” The author Rod Dreher has called it “therapeutic totalitarianism.” The writer Wesley Yang refers to it as “the successor ideology”—as in, the successor to liberalism.

There is no name for this illiberal force. What could it be?   What does it involve?

At some point, it will have a formal name, one that properly describes its mixture of postmodernism, postcolonialism, identity politics, neo-Marxism, critical race theory, intersectionality, and the therapeutic mentality. Until then, it is up to each of us to see it plainly. We need to look past the hashtags and slogans and the jargon to assess it honestly—and then to explain it to others.

We can't yet name the forest, but some of the trees that grow and flourish in it include postmodernism, postcolonialism, identity politics, neo-Marxism, critical race theory, intersectionality, and the therapeutic mentality.  Not to mention anti-female feminism, anti-science climate hysteria, and anti-biology gender confusion. 

Now, is there something that unifies these cosmic heresies, some underlying principle that renders them sensible -- even inevitable -- instead of absurd?  On their face, these ideas are intellectually suicidal. By what magic do they hijack the mind and ape the living?

The new creed’s premise goes something like this: We are in a war in which the forces of justice and progress are arrayed against the forces of backwardness and oppression. And in a war, the normal rules of the game—due process; political compromise; the presumption of innocence; free speech; even reason itself—must be suspended. Indeed, those rules themselves were corrupt to begin with—designed, as they were, by dead white males in order to uphold their own power.

Now we're getting a little closer to the target, for it looks like we're dealing with a kind of inversion; there is a method to their madness, which is to say, a principle of the unprincipled.  

As one leftist puts it (quoted by Weiss), they are using "the master's tools" (i.e., principles) to "dismantle the master's house" (i.e., the political body that is both a cause and consequence of these principles).  So it's intellectual suicide, but more like an Islamic suicide bomber who uses his own suicide as a means to homicide (and even genocide).  The leftist might well be saying:  "yes, I've lost my mind, but I'm taking yours with me."  

And before you are tempted to think that's an exaggeration, Weiss quotes a legal scholar who writes that 

Unlike traditional civil rights discourse, which stresses incrementalism and step-by-step progress, critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law.

Again, homicide by means of suicide:

Critical race theory says there is no such thing as neutrality, not even in the law, which is why the very notion of colorblindness—the Kingian dream of judging people not based on the color of their skin but by the content of their character—must itself be deemed racist. Racism is no longer about individual discrimination. It is about systems that allow for disparate outcomes among racial groups. If everyone doesn’t finish the race at the same time, then the course must have been flawed and should be dismantled. 

Here again, this is a transparent inversion of our founding principles. Now, if our principles are arbitrary or false or pernicious, then it scarcely matters what principles we use. More to the point, principles by definition come at the beginning.   A principal that comes at the end is no longer a principle at all.  This is like saying that one's team lost the baseball game because the rules of baseball are wrong.  We can only be certain that the rules are correct if every game ends in a tie.  

And now you know why the left invented affirmative action and other participation trophies.   It takes the markers of success -- which are only revealed at the end -- and frontloads them at the beginning.

For example, just yesterday I read of how the San Diego Unified School District is going to see to it that all races are graded equally.  If too many blacks fail, then their grades will be inflated so as to render them better at math and reading.  "Intelligence" is a matter of tweaking its effects -- like turning back the odometer to make your car newer.  

Thus the efforts to do away with the SAT, or the admissions test for elite public schools.... Or  the argument made recently by The New York Times’ classical music critic to do away with blind auditions for orchestras.

In fact, any feature of human existence that creates disparity of outcomes must be eradicated: The nuclear family, politeness, even rationality itself can be defined as inherently racist or evidence of white supremacy, as a Smithsonian institution suggested this summer. The KIPP charter schools recently eliminated the phrase “work hard” from its famous motto “Work Hard. Be Nice.” because the idea of working hard "supports the illusion of meritocracy."

Our detective story is about done for today, but we've picked up some valuable clues that seem to point to a cosmic inversion of some kind. However, it won't matter that the left is upside down unless there is a right-side up: objectively, intelligibly, and metaphysically.  To be continued....

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

Loved the post. This un-named movement, the forest of many trees, is probably reactionary.

To understand this movement, you must understand what it is reacting to.

Things got a little bit stupid in the 20th Century around environmental degradation and warfare.

The blame fell on white men, who seemed to be in the power seats.

Like a very slo-mo train-wreck, this reactionary movement has slowly unfolded beginning in the 1960's (the inception) to now.

Your objections to the movement are that it is illogical and does not cleave to reality.

But the movement is very much akin to the outraged shrieks of a young girl being violated. The movement has no real existence except it is out-raged. That is all it consists of. When opened, every bucket in the ware-house of Social Justice will emit a bad smell, a scream, and then be found to contain nothing.

So. Now you understand.

So we must do the work of correcting mistakes. Fortunately a large and sensible cadre of middle-of-the-road, pragmatic persons runs this nation and improves it slowly.

We are great and getting greater, fear not.

Gagdad Bob said...

More Baader-Meinhof phenomena seen this morning:

--anti-Trump protesters burn a flag and then eat a bloodied heart symbolizing the president

--A progressive church took communion with skittles and iced tea to remember the “crucifixion” of Treyvon Martin

Anonymous said...

I remember back when Soviet women were said to all be fat and ugly, or downright freakish. I remember the pride they took in their Olympian Uļjana Semjonova, who to my eye looked a bit like Frankenstein.

In addition, communist women wore ugly commie clothes when they actually did want to stand in those long wait lines. And if they didn't they wore rags. With no makeup.

But when the USSR fell, the Russian women suddenly became beautiful. Don't believe me? Google "russian women" and go to 'images". Sweet googly moogly.

This is what freedom and liberty does to fat old babushkas. And now the Democrats want us to go back to the days of ugly women. We cannot let this happen.

Anonymous said...

As a kid I played basketball in Bobby's backyard which had a half court. One day the ball 'broke'. So Bobby went inside his house to get another ball and I followed to help him find it. He busted into his little brothers bedroom and there was Donny walking around in his mothers clothes and shoes playing house with himself. Bobby shoved Donny aside and kept looking for the ball and shouted: "Where the hell is the other ball?!"

I just stood there pointing at Donny: "But, but..." Bobby didn't care it was just old news to him. We eventually found that ball and went back to playing, but I was horrified by what I'd witnessed.

Many years later, my sister told me that not only was Donny officially out of the closet, but he was married to another man and they were co-preachers at a denominational church in Carolina.

It's a confusing world we live in.

julie said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
julie said...

Now we're getting a little closer to the target, for it looks like we're dealing with a kind of inversion; there is a method to their madness, which is to say, a principle of the unprincipled.

Another example from Colorado,
"'I am going to do everything morally acceptable to win. I will lie. I will cheat. I will steal. Because that’s morally acceptable in this political environment. Absolutely. We are pirates on a pirate ship,' said Kristopher Jacks, who functions as trainer, mentor and on-the-ground quarterback at Our Revolution protests."

Interesting use of "morally acceptable" there.

Nicolás said...

When a revolution breaks out, the appetites are placed at the service of ideals; when the revolution triumphs, ideals are placed at the service of the appetites.

Anonymous said...

So I googled this Kristopher Jacks, and found mostly rightwing cult links. If he’s such a threat, where are all the leftwing cult links offering support?

Not to mention the discredited Project Veritas which represents investigational reporting the way either Trump or Biden represents the common American.

Sorry, but getting all shocked and awed over hopeless losers feuding with each other is pointless. Wouldn’t it be smarter to help them find actual jobs and careers and wives and real futures for them to put all their energies into?

Maybe you guys can work on shaming and Christianizing and re-educating them into having proper principles. And I’ll work on getting leaders who will actually make the ground more fertile for them.

Dougman said...

Discredited Project Veritas

Proof please?

Rob Springer said...

I teach English at a small Midwestern college. I got my MA not long ago, so I was old enough to see what the Critical Theory class I had to take was made of. (BTW, to learn what it's all about from people who really understand it and are trying to stop it, check out https://newdiscourses.com/). This rot first infected the Liberal Arts, and English in particular beginning in the middle of the last century. Now, like a virus that's taken over its host and has released particles into the body, we're seeing it spread to other organs. I just watched a "woke" add by the makers of Vaseline. The election of Trump and then the pandemic has taken this to fever pitch.

Anonymous said...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_O'Keefe

Gagdad Bob said...

Roger Kimball:

The key issue, I hasten to add, is not partisan politics per se but rather the subordinating of intellectual life to non-intellectual—that is, political—imperatives. “The greatest danger,” the philosopher Leszek Kolakowski wrote in “What Are Universities For?” “is the invasion of an intellectual fashion which wants to abolish cognitive criteria of knowledge and truth itself. . . . The humanities and social sciences have always succumbed to various fashions, and this seems inevitable. But this is probably the first time that we are dealing with a fashion, or rather fashions, according to which there are no generally valid intellectual criteria.”

Indeed, it is this failure—a failure to check the colonization of intellectual life by politics—that stands behind and fuels the degradation of liberal education. The issue is less about the presence of bad politics than about the absence of non-politics in the intellectual life of the university

Anonymous said...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Veritas

Anonymous said...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Kimball

Gagdad Bob said...

Robert Godwin:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_theory_(Ken_Wilber)#Contemporary_figures

Speaking of the trustworthiness of wikipedia.

Anonymous said...

I earned a post graduate English degree from a Bay Area university in 2006.

Until I found this blog I wasn't sure exactly what I had experienced. I thought there was some kind of mass delusion at this one university. It was so PC it hurt. It was bewildering for the unprepared (naive) student to transition into this milieu. I met with professors and admitted that Focault in particular was incomprehensible; deconstruction in general was a cognitive no-fly zone; was semiotics an instrument of repression? After somehow sneaking past deconstructionist theory I was asked to write papers analyzing "the neocolonialist project" and "the confinement of women to the home sphere." The class discussions denounced white males and Eurocentric culture.

I never bought in because I couldn't stomach the intellectual flimsiness of it all. I did keep my love of great literature so I don't regret getting the degree. But damn...

After graduation I worked in manufacturing and fell in with some guys who were openly racist and mysogynist. They were morally repugnant. This end of the spectrum was every bit as nauseating as the other. And you had better agree with your "buddies" when they started talking about "slapping your b*tch" or you would be excommunicated if lucky or beaten up if not so lucky. The ring-leaders would not let you out of their circle once you were in; there was no leaving. They would ask "Hey dude how come you ain't been coming round as much? Is your b*tch tellin' you what to do? We'll fix her for you. So you better show this Saturday." These were sketchy, violent, and disturbing people. I had to leave a city to break out of this toxic scene.

I have a strong love for the middle-of-the-road, the reasonable, the tolerant. I do not like extremism of any sort.

Gagdad Bob said...

Moderation is fine, but just don't take it too far.

Anonymous said...

Can this insanity be stopped, or will we have to go through the fire until it burns itself out?

Everyday it seems there is a new story of things we wouldn't believe could happen if we were told about it even a few years ago.

Nicolás said...

Today the conservative is merely a passenger who suffers shipwreck with dignity.

Anonymous said...

Sorry Gags. I'm more into skeptically following principled institutions, such as they are, then I am into worshipping con artists, such as they usually are.

I'm aware that they do try at conservapedia, but the pranksters keep modifying the texts just for fun and they don't seem to have the budget to keep up. It was so much easier back in the days when it was obvious that the public library's Encyclopedia Britannica had been tampered with.

Anonymous said...

Anon @10/19/2020 11:32:00 PM,

The moderate solution is enforcing a culture of mutual respect for truth, and each other, regardless of opinion. Sadly, that would mean that the meek would actually have to inherit the earth. It's hard to do when meekery always gets infiltrated by dark agents, who are always on the left.

(If I was on a leftist blog, that would read "always on the right".)

Some say that the human species is, across all temperaments mild and vicious, conscientious and slothy, intelligent and dopey, always primed to fight some enemy. That's why scapegoating is such an effective strategy by power players. The minions may not believe that the scapegoat deserves it, but the feelings they get from attacking some enemy are just too addictively delicious.

I think this is why we haven't been visited by aliens yet, though there will always be some humans who want to fight me over this, and eventually destroy me if their leadership decrees.

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