Friday, April 22, 2022

The Very Stable Genius is so completely without self-control, he'll say anything, even if it undermines him

 He picked a hell of a time, what with Ukraine getting mercilessly raped by Russia for all the world to see, to lay this humdinger on the folks in attendance at a Heritage Foundation pow-wow:

Former President Donald Trump told a conference on Thursday that he once told a NATO country leader that the U.S. would not protect NATO members from a Russian attack if they did not pay more into the alliance.

Trump made the headline-grabbing remarks while giving the keynote address at the Heritage Foundation’s leadership conference on Amelia Island, Florida. The remarks quickly reverberated throughout the news media as pundits and observers noted the remarks were Trump’s “most explicit statement to date” about breaking NATO treaty commitments.

“Everyone was delinquent, they didn’t pay,” Trump told the crowd at the Ritz Carlton. “And they asked me, one of the presidents of the countries at a closed meeting…he said, ‘Does that mean that you won’t protect us in case – if we don’t pay, you won’t protect us from Russia — was the Soviet Union but now Russia?’”

“I said, ‘That’s exactly what it means,'” Trump continued, claiming he would violate the treaty’s key mutual protection clause. “Now, if I said, ‘No, I don’t mean that,’ then why would they pay? So somebody had to say it. I was amazed it didn’t get out. I was amazed. The fake news didn’t pull it out.”

“The money started to flow in,” Trump added, noting his threat to break the treaty’s Article 5 provision was very “risky.”

Just remember: he's still the frontrunner among names discussed as GOP presidential candidates in 2024.  

 

 


These are times that require our ability to pay attention to several things at once

There's no shortage of fresh horror being revealed throughout the length and breadth of Ukraine. At times, it's almost too much to let in.

But let's not confine our focus to that aspect of the state of the world stage.

For instance, there's the thinking of Russia's elites:

A prominent Russian TV presenter said that Russia's invasion of Ukraine is approaching a "new stage" in which Moscow will find itself at war with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization — and by extension, the entire world.

"I believe the special military operation is entering a new stage. Ukrainians alone are no longer enough," said Vladimir Solovyov, according to the translation of a video clip tweeted on Thursday by The Daily Beast's Julia Davis.

In the widely shared clip, Solovyov noted that NATO countries have been supplying weapons to Ukraine. "We'll see not only NATO weapons being drawn into this, but also their operators," he warned while speaking on his show "Evening with Vladimir Solovyov."

Solovyov, a prominent state media figure and supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has often repeated and amplified the Kremlin's pro-war rhetoric on the state-owned channel Russia-1.

In the clip, he noted that Russia was "starting to wage war against NATO countries."

We'll be grinding up NATO's war machine as well as citizens of NATO countries," Solovyov said. "When this operation concludes, NATO will have to ask itself: 'Do we have what we need to defend ourselves? Do we have the people to defend ourselves?'

"And there will be no mercy. There will be no mercy," he added.

Echoing Putin's call for the "de-Nazification" of Ukraine, Solovyov said: "Not only will Ukraine have to be denazified, the war against Europe and the world is developing a more specific outline, which means we'll have to act differently, and to act much more harshly."

And there are signals from the top echelon of influential Chinese figures that ought to give us pause:

The prominent former editor-in-chief of the Global Times, a highly popular state-run Chinese media outlet, published a commentary on Saturday urging Chinese citizens to “prepare for a military struggle” in the near future. 

The commentary, written by journalist Hu Xijin, came after U.S. senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and six other U.S. officials visited Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, last Thursday. The visit was strongly denounced by Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian, who warned that China is “firmly opposed to any form of official exchange between the U.S. and Taiwan.”

This guy doesn't mince words:

In his most recent comments about the highly tense U.S.-China-Taiwan situation, as reported by Newsweek, Hu asserted that there is a “very high probability” that there will “ultimately” be a “direct military confrontation.” He noted there was a "sense of crisis" in Taiwan.

"As the situation in the Taiwan Strait deteriorates, we must prepare for a military struggle," Hu wrote.

Regardless of who starts the confrontation, Hu added that any kind of “high-intensity military crisis,” even if not war, would be highly consequential. 

And North Korea doesn't take kindly to South Korean talk about preventing the North from  launch sites being positioned in a hostile manner: 

The sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un says Pyongyang would retaliate with nuclear strikes if South Korea launched a pre-emptive attack.

Kim Yo-jong, a senior official, has issued two statements responding to remarks from South Korean officials.

South Korean Defence Minister Suh Wook had said the South was able to strike the North's missile launch points - sparking the furious reaction.

Exit question: Is the possibility of a nuclear weapon being detonated somewhere by somebody in the near or intermediate future less or greater or the same than it was, say, a year ago?

 

 


 

 



It's not just the drool-besotted cult followers who are going to have to disappear for the GOP to begin to restore itself, it's also the cowardly liars like Kevin McCarthy

  This AP story speaks volumes about the state of the Republican party's spiritual health:

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy told fellow GOP lawmakers shortly after the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection that he would urge then-President Donald Trump to resign, according to audio posted by The New York Times and aired on Rachel Maddow’s MSNBC show .

In the recording of a Jan. 10 House Republican Leadership call posted by the Times Thursday night, McCarthy is heard discussing the Democratic effort to remove Trump from office and saying he would tell Trump, “I think it will pass and it would be my recommendation he should resign.”


McCarthy and Mark Bednar then proceeded to tell a stinking rotten lie about it:

Earlier Thursday, after the Times published its initial story describing the conversation, McCarthy released a statement calling it “totally false and wrong.” His spokesman, Mark Bednar, had told the paper, “McCarthy never said he’d call Trump to say he should resign.”

Bednar did not immediately respond to questions late Thursday night after the audio’s release. Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the tape.

 

The next paragraph speculates on what this does to McCarthy's political prospects, which, frankly, I don't give a flying fuck about:

The audio threatens to badly damage the relationship between McCarthy and Trump, who remains the most popular figure in the Republican Party, despite his role in inciting the Jan. 6 insurrection and his refusal to accept the results of the 2020 election. And it could threaten McCarthy’s standing with House Republicans aligned with Trump, whose support he will need for votes to become House speaker next year.

How about what it does to the post-American people's confidence in the integrity of one of the nation's two major political parties?

Look, as you can tell from the previous post here at LITD (about you-will-get-your-mind-right-ism), I am nobody's idea of a leftist. Which makes the current state of things all the more distressing. Yes, polls show that Dems face a wipeout of "biblical proportions" this fall, but what the hell good does that do if we're saddled by this bunch of cowards, nuts and sycophants?

 

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

"You will get your mind right" is a road to nowhere, but tyranny always is

 I'm not saying it's easy. Speaking out against the glaringly fallacious assumptions that permeate all aspects of post-American life requires courage. It entails professional and social risks that most people, understandably, aren't willing to take on.

Not only do the risks include getting fired, losing friends and family estrangement, there is the matter of perceptions of the risk-taker being mistaken. Because so many who do choose to speak out take up the shield of - what shall we call it? Neo-Trumpism? The New Right? - if one is decidedly not in that camp, it can be hard to mount one's defense.

But years of saying little, or sticking one's neck out in some particular instance, only to get burned and then retreat to relative silence, has allowed the dismantling of what we knew to be true about the universe we inhabit to metastasize to the point that it leaves nothing unaffected. 

I'm going to leave the global-climate discussion for another time, because that would be one too many rabbit holes to bring into the present argument. I will just say that the intimidation and defamation going on on that front has worsened every bit as much as it has in the two areas I do want to discuss. If you assert that the global climate is not in a state of crisis requiring humankind to abandon its advancement, your presence in polite company is brought into question.

But my focus here is identity politics militancy. 

The plain fact is that the individual human being's race and/or sexuality has been made the most important thing about him or her. It was not always thus. As I've discussed elsewhere, Ethics and Public Policy Center fellow Carl R. Trueman has written an entire book on the centuries-long process by which humankind has convinced itself that people could invent themselves. Prior to that, it was assumed, certainly by both Judea-Christian teaching as well as Greek philosophy, that human nature was fixed and that people needed to look outside themselves to determine what made for a well-lived life.

But the insistence on being able to declare that we are whatever we say we are, and having that respected by others, has now been codified into decree. One cannot insist to the contrary without getting into official trouble. 

The Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (or, as our acronym-enamored age has deemed it, DEI) movement has left no institution beyond its reach.

The U.S. State Department has made the embrace of it a requirement for career advancement, and it's not the only federal-government entity to make it unavoidable to people working within it. 

The K-12 education establishment has found a way to work around the stigma that has begun to attach to the term Critical Race Theory by talking up "Ethnic Studies" - actually more than just talking up. Taking an ethnic-studies course is a requirement for graduation in California. 

But the two concepts are intertwined:

“CRP” [culturally relevant pedagogy] is a concept pioneered by Gloria Ladson-Billings, the academic who introduced Critical Race Theory to K-12 education. In Critical Race Theory in Education: A Scholar’s Journey Ladson-Billings defines the core tenets of CRP as a “focus on student learning, development of cultural competence, and promotion of a sociopolitical consciousness.”

As parents have seen, CRT spreads through slippery language games. “Cultural competence” sounds like it should mean “getting along well with people from other backgrounds.” Maybe sometimes it does. But other times, it is defined as antonym for “color-blindness,” i.e., for treating people without regard to the color of their skin. Similarly, “sociopolitical consciousness” could mean “civic knowledge and spirit.” Or it could mean a very particular kind of politicized spirit.

In general, Ethnic Studies can take one of two forms: (1) Multicultural Ethnic Studies, which focuses on the positive historical contributions of minority groups; or (2) Liberated Ethnic Studies, which leverages race to push partisan political arguments about “identity,” “power,” and “social justice” rooted in Critical Race Theory ideology.

The codification of DEI into an imposition of rules and even laws is not confined to coastal areas or the federal level of government. 

There is a city, with a manufacturing-based economy (that is, it's not some insular bubble of egghead-ism), in the heart of an ostensibly rock-ribbed red state in which local government, the local community college, the local K-12 school district, hospital, newspaper, major employers and religious coalition have banded together to coordinate efforts to impose DEI on all aspects of daily life. 

The message is clear: You will be made to put your fellow human being's demographic classification front and center in your dealings with him or her. 

And what exactly is the end product of this way of interacting with each other supposed to be? As Glenn Loury and John McWhorter point out, economics, or natural sciences, including mathematics, are objectivity-based modes of inquiry. To speak of a "black economics" or "black math" is to spew an absurdity. Or, to address the cultural level, after we've celebrated the music, foods and modes of dress of other nationalities and ethnicities, we're faced with the same old question of how all those various peoples are going to address the human condition.

Then there's sexuality. I've gotten myself into some rabbit holes lately with articles I've written, as well as my chimings-in on comment threads and Twitter threads with my use of the term "basic architecture of the universe." There is one, and I've asserted, and am doing so again right here, that we've spent the last ten years, thirty at the outside, obliterating it. 

If one asserts that there are two sexes comprising the human race - and the preponderance of plant and animal species, actually - and that they were designed - that's right, designed - to get together to make more of that species, one must be prepared to wade into the weeds with recitations of statistics about chromosomal outliers that are somehow supposed to have as much weight as the plain fact of duality the air before our eyes. 

You know, "male and female He created them," and all that. Ah, but if one brings even a hint of Judeo-Christian substantiation into the conversation, something else becomes clear: a pervasive attitude along the lines of "oh, come on, you're not going to drag outmoded doctrine into this, are you?"

Well, you see, it's the Judeo-Christian angle that elevates the discussion above the biological facts about procreation. Love and the centrality of family to a heathy society are part of the equation. A damn important part, I'd say.

I'll conclude with the point that I always arrive at. I reiterate it here, because it's chilling to really take in and reflect on.

We're stepping onto completely uncharted terrain. Since we've tossed away the guideposts, there's no telling what the lay of the land looks like down this road.


Saturday, April 16, 2022

Easter weekend Saturday roundup

 

It would be interesting to see a comment thread get going here about a piece by Julie Mastrine at Evie entitled "Did Millenials Kill Flirting?"

In a piece at Quillette, Ron Radosh looks at what an unwieldy and unlikely project the founders of a new magazine called Compact are trying to get off the ground. The initial group of contributors includes writers ranging from "Against David Frenchism" author Sohrab Ahmari to David Reiff, a contributor to The Guardian and The Nation, and a board member of the arms division of Human Rights Watch. The founders have this idea that there is a Venn diagram overlap in the views of participants:

Compact [was] established as a rallying point for writers and thinkers from Left and Right fed up with the prevailing liberal consensus. “Our editorial choices,” explain the founders, “are shaped by our desire for a strong social-democratic state that defends community—local and national, familial and religious—against a libertine left and a libertarian right.”

Who are the founders?

Compact is the political project of two religious traditionalists and a left-wing populist. Matthew Schmitz is a Catholic convert who was, until recently, senior editor at the conservative religious magazine, First Things. Edwin Aponte was previously the founder and editor of the Bellows, a Marxist webzine that stands for “working-class populism for the future.” Sohrab Ahmari is perhaps the most prominent of the three, having worked as an editorial writer at the Wall Street Journal, then senior writer at Commentary, and finally as opinion editor at the New York Post from 2018.

Just who do they think they're going to attract as faithful readers of issue after issue, with positions like this?

The Nation’s editors and readers, after all, are overwhelmingly feminist, and are unlikely to be overjoyed by articles like Nina Power’s essay, “Why We Need the Patriarchy.”

There are some very kinky stakings-out of terrain out there. 

I've seen some pieces that critique certain perceived shortcomings of "Why The Past Ten Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid" by Jonathan Haidt, published in The Atlantic, but I think it stands as an important analysis of the effects of social media, and a great starting point for a general conversation about the stupidity topic:

The story of Babel is the best metaphor I have found for what happened to America in the 2010s, and for the fractured country we now inhabit. Something went terribly wrong, very suddenly. We are disoriented, unable to speak the same language or recognize the same truth. We are cut off from one another and from the past.

It’s been clear for quite a while now that red America and blue America are becoming like two different countries claiming the same territory, with two different versions of the Constitution, economics, and American history. But Babel is not a story about tribalism; it’s a story about the fragmentation of everything. It’s about the shattering of all that had seemed solid, the scattering of people who had been a community. It’s a metaphor for what is happening not only between red and blue, but within the left and within the right, as well as within universities, companies, professional associations, museums, and even families.

Park MacDougald's UnHerd piece "Joe Biden's Gender Agenda" is about how the president has gotten over his skis in terms of where the nation is regarding transgenderism.

If I may toot my own horn a bit, I cover similar territory in my Precipice piece, "Disney." 

While we're on this subject, there was an interesting story at the New York Post today about a - well, let's say person - who "transitioned" from one sex to the other and also practices psychology and who thinks our society's zeal for letting people with the slightest inclination to resent their DNA carve their crotches up and pump themselves full of hormones and puberty blockers may have gotten out of hand:

A transgender psychologist who has helped hundreds of teens transition has warned that it has “gone too far” — and fears many are making life-changing decisions because it’s “trendy” and pushed on social media.

Erica Anderson, 71 — who is transgender herself — told the Los Angeles Times that she is horrified that even 13-year-old kids are now getting hormone treatment without even meeting with psychologists.

“I think it’s gone too far,” said Anderson, who until recently led the US professional society at the forefront of transgender care.


Susan Bagwell, who wrote for RedState back when it was an important conservative organ and then got kicked out when a new editorial team took it in a Trumpist direction, has one of those man-I-wish-I'd-written-that pieces at The Racket News called "What Have We Become?" A taste:

While I walked away from the Republican Party because of Trump, I never abandoned my conservatism. I never abandoned my values. I’m no “blue waver.” I think it’s just as idiotic to make a hard swing from the right, to the left. You think it makes you “virtuous” and more anti-Trump than the rest of us, just because you wear a Beto hat in Texas, or suddenly start using cuss words and touting your newly found appreciation for socialism.

What are you trying to prove? Either those values you once claimed were always with you, or they never were.

My point – and I do have one – is that tribalism and personality cults have damaged this nation beyond measure. We need to reassess and find ground that will strengthen us, not tear us further apart.

Richard M. Reinsch II, writing at Law & Liberty in a piece entitled "Finding The Constitution's Common Good," clarifies what that phrase does and does not mean.  

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Medvedev gives away the real aim

 Just wow. 

In a Telegram post, deputy chair of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev made it about as plain as it can be made:

"The goal is for the sake of the peace of future generations of Ukrainians themselves and the opportunity to finally build an open Eurasia – from Lisbon to Vladivostok."

That means that Russia's current setbacks in its invasion of Ukraine are not going to discourage it to the point of turning tail and heading home to leave everyone alone. 

We'd better take him seriously. 


The world stage in 2022 is showing us once again that human nature doesn't change

 "We are entering a world that is becoming more unstable, and the potential for significant international conflict is increasing, not decreasing."

- Joint Chiefs chair General Mark Milley

"It is obvious that the key institution of the world to combat aggression and ensure peace cannot work effectively."

- Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky

"Sometimes doing your best is not good enough. Sometimes you must do what is required."

- Winston Churchill

A lot of keystrokes have been expended in recent weeks on the near-certainty that the 77 years of relative global stability we enjoyed from 1945 until 2022 were a hiccup. Events of late only reinforce that view.

There is, of course, the dressing down that Zelensky gave the UN General Assembly yesterday, in which he provided gruesome details of what Russian soldiers have been doing to his country's civilians. He then asked why the hell the UN should even exist:

The Ukrainian leader then criticized the body, asking representatives point blank: "Where is the security that the Security Council needs to guarantee? It is not there, though there is a Security Council."

Zelensky added: "It is obvious that the key institution of the world designed to combat aggression and ensure peace cannot work effectively.

    "Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to remind you of Article 1, Chapter 1 of the UN Charter. What is the purpose of our organization? Its purpose is to maintain and make sure that peace is adhered to. And now the UN charter is violated literally starting with Article 1. And so what is the point of all other Articles?" he asked.

     Mark Milley appeared before the House Armed Services Committee and spoke bluntly of a new era in which the world will be less stable. In terms of threats, he mainly spoke of Russia and China, and understandably so.

    But anyone interested in trying to stave off a really dark future had better, as the saying goes, be able to walk and chew gum at the same time.

    We - that is, the US, the West in general, along with stability-seeking Pacific Rim nations - have known for a long time that the North Korea problem was not going to go away by itself

    We've tried an Agreed Framework, Six-Way Talks, summits and "beautiful letters," but the threat has not abated.

    The Kim family is so damn touchy that any remark from anyone suggesting that prudent measures are called for in the face of the threat sparks even more explicit expressions of threat:

    On Sunday, Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, issued blistering rhetoric directed at Suh and threats toward Seoul.

    “The senseless and scum-like guy dare mention a ‘preemptive strike’ at a nuclear weapons state,” Kim Yo Jong said in a statement carried by state media. “South Korea may face a serious threat owing to the reckless remarks made by its defense minister.”

    “South Korea should discipline itself if it wants to stave off disaster,” she said. 

    Kim Yo Jong, a senior official in the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, is in charge of relations with Seoul and Washington. South Korea’s spy service says she is the North’s No. 2 official behind her brother. 

    Pak Jong Chon, a secretary in the Workers’ Party’s central committee, separately warned that “any slight misjudgment and ill statement rattling the other party under the present situation” may trigger “a dangerous conflict and a full-blown war.”


    The first-strike option is not new:

    Seoul has long maintained such a preemptive attack strategy to cope with North Korea’s growing missile and nuclear threats, but it was highly unusual for a senior Seoul official under the Moon administration to publicly discuss it.

    Well, maybe it was about time.

    The incoming South Korean administration seems to understand that serious readiness is critical at this time:

    Advisers to South Korea's president-elect sought redeployment of U.S. strategic assets, such as nuclear bombers and submarines, to the Korean peninsula during talks held on a visit to Washington, one of the advisers said on Wednesday.

    The team of foreign policy and security aides to incoming president Yoon Suk-yeol met U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan as Yoon seeks a more constant security presence to deter threats from North Korea as it steps up weapons tests.

    "Deploying the strategic assets is an important element of reinforcing the extended deterrence, and the issue naturally came up during the discussions," Park Jin, a four-term lawmaker who led the delegation, told reporters.

    Are the above-mentioned collection of the world's stability-seeking nations able to muster the requisite seriousness to deal with the moment? The Biden administration's zeal for reviving a JCPOA-type of agreement with Iran, which well may include Russia as a signatory, would indicate otherwise.

    Likewise, the imposition of sanctions on Russia and the seizure of oligarchs' yachts has not stopped the Russians from ripping out Ukrainians' tongues, raping mothers in front of their children, yanking people huddled in shelters out for torture and execution and shelling of government buildings, schools and hospitals. 

    What is to be done? Obviously, pretty much anyone reading this is not in a position to pick up a gun, to jar the UN back to its senses, or otherwise dramatically move the needle.

    But we can acknowledge that, per Milley, we are in a new era. We can maneuver through our daily lives in such a way that we aren't surprised when we encounter hard things. 

     We can stop prattling about our species having evolved beyond the innate depravity the has made itself abundantly clear throughout history. 

    Our little reprieve is over.

     

     


    Monday, April 4, 2022

    Just because the boneheads weigh in so vocally on the "culture wars" set of issues doesn't mean they're not important

     There's more to disentangle in the realm of "culture war" issues than ever before. 

    It's so fraught as to nearly be a third rail of national discourse. As our societal polarization - no, make that fragmentation - continues apace, the at-odds-with-each-other notions of what's acceptable for polite or productive conversation proliferate. It's enough to make one's head swim.

    I am a die-hard fan of the Principles First movement, but I sense from some of its most prominent voices that, since such issues are beyond the purview of public-sector solutions, they ought not to get an airing in the movement's conversations. It strikes me as sort of a big-tent appeal, a reluctance to drive away any possible allies. 

    That's fine, but it seems to me an argument can be made that the field is thereby ceded to the Left. 

    That's Erick Erickson's position:

    We actually live in a constitutional order where the left has seized on the constitutional order of the right to steer culture off a cliff. Conservatives view the constitution as a document on a printed page that sets out the powers of the government and the limits thereof. It restricts the government to the public sector and provides the metes and bounds description of the barrier between the public and private and the intersections of the two.

    Progressives view the constitution as a living and breathing document that gives order not just to the structure of government, but also to society at large. They have largely lost the argument because they decided to score their victories in the judiciary, unable to win at the ballot box, and now Clarence Thomas presides over the Supreme Court.

    As a result, progressives are playing a long game in the private sector even as conservatives are reversing the judicial fiats of the left. Now progressives have capitalized on a conservative vision of society.

    Conservatives think the public sector should be constrained in its regulation of the private sector. Progressives have slowly been hiring progressives into the ranks of the Fortune 500 and are now abandoning the public sector to have the private sector do its bidding.

    They would use Disney to bully Florida’s citizens as a major employer in the state. They have shaken down corporations to fund Black Lives Matter, an organization opposed to the private sector. They have used social media companies to silence conservatives where the government cannot. They have pressured companies to stop advertising in conservative spheres. They’ve advanced their agenda across corporate America and academia taking advantage of the right’s rules of lax regulation and constitutional parameters. They have seized on the libertarian argument of “if you don’t like it, go build your own” to push conservatives out of social media and private spaces while depriving those conservatives of the means to build anything new without extraordinary sums of money.


    But no sooner does one put forth that view than a bonehead like Laura Ingraham comes along, threatening to bring the coercive power of the state to bear against private organizations

    I won't take the space to reprint it all here - for one thing, it's getting rather lengthy - but have a look at the comment thread under the latest piece at Ordinary Times by Jennifer Worrell. She gets into some interesting considerations, such as why Rachel Dolezal came in for such castigating as a phony black, while trans people, no matter how much or how little physical transforming to the other gender they have done, are lauded for their authenticity. But her overall premise is well summed up by a money line in the second to last paragraph:

    . . . both the act of defining woman, and the act of not defining woman are each controversial.

    There is one progressive-type viewpoint that shows up prominently in the comment thread that takes advantage of the overreach of Ingraham-types by arguing that there is some sort of definable oppressor class of white heterosexuals who want to stiff the voices of oppressed classes using any means at its disposal. 

    But we can't get away from the well-documented encroachment of identity-politics militancy on every sector of out society, including the sector that has access to the noggins of our youngest and most impressionable:

    In a recent Washington Post article, SEL [social and emotional learning] advocates argued that the conservative outcry is an unwarranted attack on crucial mental-health programming for kids.

    A review of SEL materials obtained by the nonprofit Parents Defending Education (PDE) confirms parents’ concerns that mental-health language is being co-opted to advance radical ideas about race, gender, and sexuality. But even if some of the SEL material is innocuous, parents told NR they’d still be concerned because time spent on SEL is time not spent helping kids recover from the learning loss they suffered during two years of school closures.

    As Spiegel put it: “Where is the algebra? Where is the biology? Where is the English?”

    A life-long Democrat, Spiegel joined the fray over the school reopening issue. Her activism grew after her son started complaining about the weekly social-justice-heavy SEL lessons, curated by each individual teacher and administered to high-schoolers county-wide. One question on a quiz caught her eye: “How do you feel when you see two men kissing?” she said it read, paraphrasing. The choices were “A.) Aggressive, B.) Passive aggressive, C.) Neutral, or D.) None of the above,” she said.

    Her daughter, a high-school senior, took a quiz that asked something to the effect of: “If you didn’t have a diverse makeup of friends in your friend group, is it racist to seek out another race to fill your friend group?” Spiegel said.

    Given that the district never explained the purpose of the SEL lessons, Spiegel and many of her fellow moms felt like the lessons were either a waste of their kids’ precious instruction time or a manipulative tactic to diagnose a bigotry problem in the schools that didn’t exist.

    “My daughter’s asking me if she’s a racist and my son’s confused about why he has to take these,” Spiegel said.

    Of course, examples of SEL in the classroom extend beyond Howard County, Md.

    Elementary-school students in West Hartford, Conn., public schools were subject to “social-emotional learning through an equity lens,” and their parents were not given the choice to have their kids opt out, PDE discovered in November.

    Parents from the district sounded the alarm over materials being used to teach their kids about niche sex-and-gender identities, including transgender content being taught to kindergartners. For example, a first-grade text included Jacob’s New Dress, a story about a boy who wants to wear a dress to school, and a fourth-grade text included When Aidan Became a Brother, which pushes gender theory and teaches kids to question the sex they’re assigned at birth, parents told PDE.

    The West Hartford district’s director of equity advancement, Roszena Haskins, emailed parents that the schools have “redoubled district-wide efforts to attend to the social and emotional needs of children and adults” with “social justice standards” that come from the Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning framework, or CASEL.

    Haskins wrote that “CASEL acknowledges that ‘while SEL alone will not solve longstanding and deep-seated inequities in the education system, it can help schools to promote understanding, examine biases, reflect on and address the impact of racism, . . . close opportunity gaps and create a more inclusive school community.’”

    Yes, a movement aimed at reviving classical education - education that focuses on the Western canon of great works and the question of what constitutes a well-lived life - is going to serve as an antidote to this kind of identity-politics militancy - which is referred to with the shorthand term "wokeness," even though that term is fast outliving its usefulness - but these parents' kids are not going to be able to enroll in a classical-education setting tomorrow or next week.

    My point here is not to offer any hard and fast solutions. I would merely say that none of us should be surprised that school board meetings are scenes of bitter accusations and tense standoffs, and that types such as Ingraham are inclined to issue threats to corporations. 

    In ten short years - fifteen at the outset - we have codified the flouting of the universe's basic architecture in institution after institution. 

    We are treading, en masse, onto completely untrod territory. Not everyone is going to be on board with that. 

     

     

     

     

     



    Saturday, April 2, 2022

    Andrew Sullivan's experience on Jon Stewart's show speaks volumes about the bleak outlook for our society

     This is going to be one of those posts in which I excerpt generously from something I've come across that needs the widest possible dissemination. Merely sharing the original source on social media wouldn't be sufficient. LITD has a particular readership, and I want to make sure this makes it onto your radar screen.

    The piece in question is Andrew Sullivan's latest at The Weekly Dish, his Substack newsletter.

    One reason it's so important to get this out is that there's a lot of portrayal in the overall media of opponents of Critical Race Theory as Trumpist boneheads who disrupt school board meetings and obsess over "culture war" issues to the exclusion of other public policy considerations. The matter is further obfuscated by the argument that the term CRT should only be applied to the set of legal theories that emanated from American universities in the 1970s and 80s.

    Well, here's how the matter plays itself out in real life in 2022. Sullivan's experience puts the lie to the notion that concern about race hustling is overblown. 

    His story starts with a phone call he got while walking his dog:

    I was busy walking my dog several weeks ago, on my lunchtime Thursday break, preoccupied with the piece I was trying to write in my head. The phone rang and a frantic booker was on the line. Would I be able to get to New York tomorrow to do an interview with Jon Stewart on race? I literally laughed out loud. 

    “No I can’t. I’m on deadline and can’t really focus on anything until the Dish is done tomorrow. And why on earth would I do that anyway? Why would I go on a show just to be called a racist?” “No, no, no,” she replied. “Nothing like that would happen. This is not a debate. It’s just you talking one-on-one with Jon, and he’d never do that.” I said I’d think about it — especially since they seemed desperate with just 24 hours till taping — and later I called to say sure, if it’s just Jon. “I trust him to be fair.” I hadn’t had time to read the email invites, so I trusted the booker’s word.

    But just before the taping, as I emerged blearily from Dishing, I found out, in fact, that there would be two other guests, and that it would, indeed, be a debate. Surprise! As the show started, I also realized for the first time there was a live studio audience and that the episode was called “The Problem With White People” — a title I’d never have been a party to, if I’d known in advance. (I wouldn’t go on a show called “The Problem With Jews” or “The Problem With Black People” either.) At that point I should have climbed carefully off the stake, tamped down the flames, made a path through the kindling, and walked away.

    I protested to the producers that I’d been ambushed. And to be fair, they gave me the option of backing out at the last minute. But I didn’t want to leave them in the lurch, reassured myself that Stewart was a pro, and said I’d go ahead. I just assumed he wouldn’t demonize or curse at a guest; he would moderate; he would entertain counter-arguments; he would defend fair play. After all, this was the man who had lacerated Crossfire for bringing too much heat and not enough light. He believed in sane discourse. He was a liberal, right?

    Wrong.

    At some point, Stewart guzzled a copious amount of Kool-Aid, as he demonstrated in the way he began the show:

    On the race question, Stewart has decided to go way past even Robin DiAngelo, in his passionate anti-whiteness. His opening monologue was intoned at times in a somber tone, as if he were delivering hard truths that only bigots could disagree with. He argued that no one in America had been prepared to have an honest discussion about race — until the “reckoning” of 2020. He also suggested that nothing had been done by whites to support African-Americans from 1619 (yes, he went there) … till now. The most obvious solution — reparations — was, he implied, somehow, absurdly, taboo.

    His montage of “black voices” insisted that African-Americans are still granted only conditional citizenship, are still barred from owning property — “we don’t own anything!” — and ended with Sister Souljah — yes! — explaining that the thing that kills black people are not bullets, but white people. This is the same moral avatar who once said: “If black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people?” Stewart then hailed Angela Davis — a proud Communist, with a particular fondness for East Germany’s suppression of dissent — and warmly thanked her as “Angela.” But Stewart included not a single black voice of disagreement or nuance. He apparently believes that all black people hold the same view. And all white people just refuse to hear it.

    Jon Stewart’s insistence that Americans had never robustly debated race before 2020 is also, well, deranged. Americans have been loudly debating it for centuries. There was something called a Civil War over it. His claim that white America has never done anything in defense of black Americans (until BLM showed up, of course) requires him to ignore more than 300,000 white men who gave their lives to defeat the slaveholding Confederacy. It requires Stewart to ignore the countless whites (often Jewish) who risked and gave their lives in the Civil Rights Movement. It requires him to erase the greatest president in American history. This glib dismissal of all white Americans throughout history, even those who risked everything to expand equality, is, when you come to think about it, obscene.

    Sullivan is thorough in his refutation of what Stewart is trying to foist on the audience:

    Stewart’s claim that whites never tried to ameliorate black suffering until now requires him to dismiss over $19 trillion of public funds spent in the long War on Poverty, focused especially on black Americans. That’s the equivalent of more than 140 Marshall Plans. As Samuel Kronen has shown, it requires the erasure from history of “the Food Stamp Act of 1964, the Child Nutrition Act of 1966, the Social Security Amendments of 1965, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, the Social Security Amendments of 1962, and the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, and on and on.” To prove his point, Stewart has to pretend LBJ never existed. That’s how utterly lost he now is.

    Stewart then used crude metrics of inequality to argue, Kendi-style, without any evidence, that the only thing that can possibly explain racial inequality today in America is still “white supremacy.” Other factors — concentrated poverty, insanely high rates of crime and violence, acute family breakdown, a teen culture that equates success with whiteness, lack of affordable childcare — went either unmentioned or openly mocked as self-evident expressions of bigotry. He then equated formal legal segregation with voluntary residential segregation, as if Jim Crow were still in force. And he straw-manned the countering argument thus: white America believes that African-Americans are “solely responsible for their community’s struggles.”

    I don’t know anyone who believes that. I sure don’t. It’s much more complex than that. And it’s that complexity that some of us are insisting on — and that Stewart wants to dismiss out of hand in favor of his own Manichean moral preening. His final peroration ended thus: “America has always prioritized white comfort over black survival.” Note: always. There has been no real progress; white people have never actually listened to a black person; America is irredeemably racist. Those fucking white men, Lincoln and LBJ, never gave a shit.


    Stewart proceeded to go full ad hominem on Sullivan, with everybody else present piling on:

    At that point, it became clear that Stewart was not conducting a televised debate, but initiating a struggle session. The point of the session was not to discuss anything, but to further enforce the dogma he had pronounced. So I found myself in the equivalent of one of those workplace indoctrination seminars — in which any disagreement is regarded as a form of “hate” or “ignorance.” But worse: I was in a struggle session with a live mob sitting in, cheering and jeering, which Stewart led and orchestrated. For good measure, Stewart called me a racist and told me I was not “living in the same fucking country as we are,” and went on to angrily call me a “motherfucker.” 

    I’m a big boy, and smiled through these assaults, but it does strike me as astounding that someone who once insisted that he believed in good-faith debates and not circus-like theater, someone who postured as open-minded, and disdainful of silly political grandstanding, behaved this unprofessionally. Stewart’s show made the old Carlson-Begala Crossfire seem like a model of substantive and elevated debate.

    Stewart offered some weak tea indeed when Sullivan pressed him to show how 2022 America is systemically racist:

    when I asked Stewart to delineate “structural racism,” he reflexively listed a bunch of “systems” that no longer exist: post-war redlining, the GI bill, and so on. I fumbled in response, to my shame. That’s what happens when you’re rattled and tired and not prepped for an inquisition. But my core point is that in America in 2022, the only formal legal systems that openly advocate race discrimination are discriminating in favor of African-Americans, not against them. Affirmative action was only supposed to be a temporary diversion from liberal principles. It’s now a permanent system of race discrimination to favor blacks over every other demographic, disproportionately harming Asian-Americans. The federal government now enforces it across every department.

    And even with past systems, the debate about their impact is still a live one. Take racial redlining. This profoundly hurt African-Americans moving out of the South. But class mattered a lot too. Does Stewart know that 85 percent of households in redlined areas were occupied by whites? Or that the infamous maps with red areas probably had nothing to do with the problem? Or that, even if you go by those maps, the picture today is much more complicated than Stewart would ever acknowledge:

    [About 11 million Americans] live in once-redlined areas, according to the latest population data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (2017). This population is majority-minority but not majority-Black, and, contrary to conventional perceptions, Black residents also do not form a plurality in these areas overall. The Black population share is approximately 28%, ranking third among the racial groups who live in formerly redlined areas, behind white and Latino or Hispanic residents.

    Or take the strength of white supremacy in the early 20th century, later overcome by the Civil Rights Movement. You’d expect to see terrible data for black family life in the dark days of white supremacist America under Jim Crow, with only a resurgence of wealth and stability after civil rights took hold. In reality, we see the opposite: real progress for African-Americans before the 1960s:

    [B]etween 1940 and 1960, the percentage of black families with income below the poverty level was almost cut in half, from 87 percent to 47 percent. In key skilled trades, the income of blacks relative to whites more than doubled between 1936 and 1959, while black income rose absolutely and relative to white income across the board from 1939 to 1960.

    This, more than anything, speaks to the incredible resilience of black Americans in the face of terrible state-sanctioned oppression. Along those lines, Coleman Hughes adds:

    Black women, too, saw their incomes grow at a faster rate than white women [between 1939 and 1960]. Baradaran makes the same mistake in her description of life for blacks in the 1940s and 50s: “poverty led to institutional breakdown, which led to more poverty.” But between 1940 and 1960 the black poverty rate fell from 87 percent to 47 percent, before any significant civil rights gains were made.

    Or take the GI Bill, which Stewart repeatedly pointed to as a mechanism for systemic racism. Again, it’s complicated:

    [Suzanne] Mettler contends that African-American veterans widely benefited from the G.I. Bill’s education and vocational benefits, even if the housing loan provision had been implemented in a discriminatory and exclusionary manner. She expands this finding by explaining that black veterans who used the G.I. Bill, like their white counterparts, were more involved in civic and political organizations, but they were also more likely to be active in organizations involved in civil rights issues.

    Read more about that scholarly debate — and it is a debate — here.

    Or take the impact of family structure. A very solid finding in social science is that the key ingredient for success in America is being raised by two parents in the home, and getting married. It logically follows that when 84 percent of Asian kids grow up in a two-parent household, and only 33 percent of black kids do, you don’t need some abstract notion of “white supremacy” to explain why Asian-Americans, even the poorest, have sailed past African-Americans in educational success.

    Is the poor family structure itself caused by the impact of white supremacy? The data show that the black family was actually more intact before the Civil Rights Movement than after it. And marriage in general was more valued: 

    From 1890 through 1940, black women tended to marry earlier than white women did…. In 1950, black women aged 40–44 were actually more likely to have ever married than were white women of the same age. Racial differences in marriage remained modest as recently as 1970, when 94.8 percent of white women and 92.2 percent of black women had ever been married.

    And again, the importance of family structure isn’t limited to black Americans, of course:

    Being raised in a married-couple household led the poverty rate for black children to go down 73 percent compared to mother-only households and 67 percent compared to father-only households. And as evidence of the power of family structure to transcend race, 31 percent of white children raised in mother-only households live in poverty, versus just 12 percent of black children living with their married parents. That is a stunning realization.

    Being married brings you into a higher wealth bracket, with pooled earnings — which also accounts for some of the wealth gap. Age also matters for stats like median earnings. As Glenn Loury puts it, “Citing only the median in debates about the racial wealth gap … suggests that the wealth gap is more pervasive than it appears.” The median white American, for example, is 44 and married, whereas the median black American is 34 and single. That’s worthwhile context. 

    It’s also worth noting that in a country that Stewart calls “white supremacy,” legal immigrants are overwhelmingly of color. By 2065, Pew estimates, nonwhites will account for 80 percent of all immigrants. Among federal employees, about 20 percentare black. If this is evidence of a country defined by “systemic racism,” then I’m a heterosexual.


    Then Stewart let Race2Dinner's Lisa Bond have a crack at Sullivan:

    Stewart invited on, and fawned over, a woman named Lisa Bond, who runs an organization called Race2Dinner. She charges white women $2,500 per dinner to be harangued for their racism. And if you believe, as I and the vast majority of Americans do, that racism is a pejorative generalization about a whole group of people solely because of their skin color, Lisa Bond is unequivocably a racist — and a sexist. She said the following on the air in front of Stewart:

    I did not come on this show to argue with another white man. That’s one of the reasons we don’t even engage with white men at Race2Dinner, because quite honestly if white men were going to do something about racism, you had 400 years. You could have done it.

    When I tried to explain that I immigrated in 1984, and that a white man in 2022 cannot possibly be held responsible for something that happened four centuries ago, she replied: “I’m going to shut you down.” Stewart was enthralled. Then she spelled out exactly what she meant:

    All white people do this. I don’t care if we say we’re Abolitionists, I don’t care if we say we’re Progressive, I don’t care if we are literally members of the KKK. Every single white person upholds these systems and structures of white supremacy, and we have got to talk about it.

    This is the poisonous heart of CRT: that white people, by virtue of merely existing, are all morally problematic and always will be. Even if all the systems have been repealed. Even if you’d never racially discriminate yourself. Even if you spent your life fighting racism. That is why Bond called the Abolitionist movement indistinguishable in terms of its racism from the KKK! Why? Because whites are only ever whites. 

    Absorb that for a moment. This foul race essentialism, this view of white Americans as a single, undifferentiated blob of hate existing through the centuries as a force for the oppression of non-whites is simply the inverse of the old racism. It’s replacing hatred of blacks with hatred of whites; it’s replacing discrimination against blacks with discrimination against whites and Asians and others. It’s being used to make even more money for rich white people, to provide some elite whites with a weapon to destroy their career rivals, and to help build a new racial spoils system that leaves any notion of colorblindness or individual rights behind. (And the bigotry is palpable. When I spoke of the need to help a generation hobbled by absent fathers, high crime, and deep poverty, Lisa Bond responded: “Like you care about black kids.”

    This whole episode makes clear what a daunting challenge it is to try to restore any kind of comity and good faith in our national discourse. 

    How the hell do we begin to heal the polarization when nothing but the officially approved point of view will be tolerated?