Ragabul wrote:The content of the idea is what matters. Not having this as a standard inevitably puts you into a position of hypocrisy. I promise you that some idea you are fond of is 7 degrees of Kevin Bacon away from an origin in Nazis, fundamentalist religion, militant communism, or the like.
Being able to get away with naked hypocrisy, however, while flirting with these topics, is the danger. If someone important can stand on a soapbox, extoll the moral and economic virtues of civil rights, then segue into why concentration camps are necessary for malcontents, and face no more pushback than whining that they're a hypocrite, they're carrying institutional and public acceptance.
Or more simply, if the contents of a popular belief is, hypocritically, X and ¬X, and X is the current standard, then ¬X will reasonably overtake it. Ideally, this happens only for irrelevant issues, they skirt by. Everyone can look to their extremists and put up toll booths at each step in that direction. We are in a situation where a lot of those toll booths have been paved over. It doesn't materially feel that way, we still live very comfortably and peacefully, but the inane discourse is the warning, along with disturbing recent events. The far-left:left, far-right:right, authoritarian:libertarian situation is rather like the Mexican border, the Korean border, and the strait of Taiwan, respectively.
And again on some level, this strikes me as a complaint about fairness. It is not fair that the cultural powers-that-be condemn right wing whackery with considerably more vehemence than they do left wing whackery. And yet, given that this is true, any strategy that consists of not much more than railing against it but doing nothing in particular to work around it or change it is going nowhere fast.
Sort of. There is no appeal to a higher authority than the barnacles that run our government, we appear to be left to figure these things out for ourselves, more a whimpering demand to respect the common culture and rules we once largely agreed to. I don't expect fairness or wisdom, because the ghouls that run us are not Solomon, but I expect a greater respect for American liberal principles than a toddler letting an ice cream cone melt in the sun because they thought not licking it would make it last longer. It is deeply frustrating, but not unexpected.
Voluntary withdrawal for purposes of building a replacement institution is one thing, but otherwise what does withdrawal get you other than a personal sense of moral purity? This is on some level the same dead end as many of the original critical race theory people entered. Most of them were deeply, deeply, deeply pessimistic about the possibility of ending racism against black people.
There's a key distinction here, and studies back this up. Conservatives tend to believe in liberal (philosophy) ideals. There's the inertia of tradition, and Chesterton's fence, but once you get over that, they let you play in the sandbox too. That is not reciprocal, moderate leftists are about the same as moderate rightists, but beyond that point, there is a gross intolerance for dissent. The hidebound white men accepted their ideological opponents, accepted them into schools, hired them, and let them have a fair shake. And now, as those people who had their dreams denied take up those posts, young white men are lying about their race to get into college. Companies and agencies are actively boxing out people on racial and ideological lines, so where do you look to for people to hold the line?
I agree, fighting (abstractly) to retain those institutions is the higher road, withdrawal is a last resort in lieu of violence. And that the time for this fight was 40-60 years ago. Calling for a Long March through the institutions was a very different prospect for civil rights activists, they were facing people who vehemently disagreed with them, but did not have the means or will to wipe them out. That's why the times it did happen, it became iconic. The idea that someone right now could become a hiring manager for any big company, implement a totally blind merit process, and survive the consequence of having mostly white, Jewish, and Asian people get hired, seems as quaint as Andy Griffith. What is the strategy to begin a push with? Assuming of the population of conservatives, there exists the talent and will to handle all these roles, and that a parallel society could be built, consolidation and hardening of hearts seems more reliable than feeding people into the ideological Somme.
Mindlessly rationalizing why you should capitulate to each and every new thing on practical grounds is not what I'm advocating. But "ragequit" is not a workable strategy to every slight and whatever actual strategy of resistance you formulate will probably at some level look like capitulation to the types of people for whom the answer is always "ragequit." Taking your marbles and going home does not mean that people won't just keep playing marbles without you and telling you to make sure the door doesn't hit you on the way out.
To keep the Chinese metaphor going, Ben Shapiro is Mao and Tim Pool is Zhang Guotao, and they're herding the moderate true believers to Shaanxi. And then Shapiro will murder Pool's followers to secure power, heh.
I think my difficulty is imagining what you're describing. The practical means of putting up a bulwark of traditional sanity via vocation. Ironically, as social Darwinism has come back into style, Darwinist principles also show the failure of those ideologies to propagate. There's a pressing need for the few productive demographics to supply children to sustain institutions, so homeschooling/homesteading is a beautifully effective idea to starve out the crazies. Until that becomes illegal. But if you're talking more broadly of the mood of the right, "all is lost, fend for yourself, and maybe an election win will fix everything," then yeah, that's not helpful. Presupposes there exists that potential for the liberal principles that invited their own downfall to be used to restore them, and that gets harder to think is true every year.
It's also arguably what the Tucker Carlson type niche in the ecosystem is for. Part of what they do is dust off things with bad pedigrees into a form that is plausibly possible for elites to take up and also to translate egghead ideas into a more populist frame the masses will listen to.
Pretty much. My only qualm with him, besides a couple neocon beliefs, is that he floats the ideas out there, puts them in vaguely acceptable terms, then stops short. Strategically, he's a steam release, Hannity is for the Boomers, and O'Reilly once was/still is.
But once you do manage to overcome the punishment and the change becomes part of the status quo, they will defend whatever the new thing just as vehemently as they originally resisted it. This is pretty much what happened with Obamacare.
And as mentioned, civil rights. We're semi-obligated to assume that what's popular has a good reason, hence why manufacturing consent is obscene.
(Though if Bernie Sanders is anything to go by, losing but doing way better than expected is also a viable tool for pushing people on your own side at least in a direction you want).
Sanders is an odd case, because his effect seems to have pushed the party more authoritarian than left, but emboldened the left to be brazen. At the same time, I think almost all of the right, except the Rand libertarians, are going to be on board with universal healthcare. Not on the principle of giving our government total power of life & death as a moral act, or that they'll not embezzle trillions into their cronies, but as a practical matter of grabbing a last shrimp cocktail from the buffet as the ship takes on water. So Sanders did a vital job of forcing that idea to a moderate position, or the moderate perception of power dynamics away from individual liberty.
Given the shifts in Latino votes in the last couple of elections, this does not appear to be the case. They are also consistently very amenable to the old school American principle of "people who work hard get ahead" and do not actually have a massive negative opinion of law and order. (Again according to recent polling anyway). One reason I've deeply, deeply chilled on Mexico specifically. You want some natural non-white allies? Immigrants from Mexico who have been here for decades and people from Asia that got in with some merit type visa are totally it. But it's going to require chilling on ethnonationalism and being pro meritocracy and free markets on some level.
https://sacredstructures.org/messages/w ... ary-fable/It's an interesting case, as Europeans-descent is now below 50% of the youth. Mostly mestizo (I think), and living in a failed state bordering a sick one, there should be a lot of that overlap, to be "cousins." As I've said, even the open racists I know agree that immigrants that live like "Americans should" can be tolerated, though not (socially) forcibly mated to their kids or planted in their communities. My father loathes illegals as a group, but of the Hispanics he's personally worked with, nothing but praise. And the slow process of integration seemed to be working, until academics trained enough radicals to shit the bed.
It gets into a weird place that isn't exposed to the sunlight. I suppose if offered a choice between Orania, or an identical community but ethnically diverse, I'm picking Orania. But I'd rather have Jose and his devoutly Catholic family as a neighbor than a lily-white feminist activist. Loud, obnoxious rednecks or loud, obnoxious Orthodox Jews, coin flip. It's an intersection of expectations and harmony, and if I'm the dumbest, most evil person around, I'm living in a good place.
So if the rapidly growing Hispanic bloc does not end up splitting, with large amounts of swing votes, do you shift?
But it also means that any idea prefaced on maintaining ethnic or racial purity forever will also fail.
Yes, until we start living in space colonies anyway.
It's a paradox, where if the philosophical idea that ancestry is irrelevant is true, to live by that philosophy means to acquiesce to anyone else who does care about ancestry. We're not defending or preserving anything, therefore anyone who does, by default, overrides the apathy. So are we correct to treat the handful of genes that make us white as utterly valueless, and does that apply to every other ethnic group in existence? And if other groups (writ large) disagree, are they inherently more correct?
I have to think the reasonable path is somewhere between the poles of Nazi and nihilism.
That boring middle-of-the-roadness did not stop all this?
The boring system was working well enough, but was woefully unprepared for the shock of miseducated Millennials entering the workspace. Lots of people asleep at the helm, missing trends and warning signs, along with fantastical economic theory not working out.
Identifying when radicalism is definitely better is probably something that requires a rare genius to do well. It's an interesting question and probably something I should read more about.
Hypothetically, what possible situation would cause you to think a radical solution is best? I'm not quite there, but it's like a closing window kept open because my fingers are trapped, and half the country is hitting the frame with a mallet.
As I said earlier in the thread, the most successful type of radical thing off the top of my head appears to be terrorism trying to get an occupying power to give up and leave.
Wouldn't be too hard to make America too much of a pain in the ass to be worth governing. Cell towers, bridges, highways, power stations, it's all out in the open, lots of chokepoints, needs to always be running full tilt to maintain our immense quality of life. In theory anyway. But it reads better than random acts of violence.