Archive for 2017

THE LIBERAL CRACKUP: It’s a shame that Mark Lilla’s brilliant article, adopted from his book, The Once and Future Liberal: After Identity Politics, (scheduled for release this Tuesday) is behind the Wall Street Journal’s subscriber login, because the left-leaning professor of the humanities at Columbia University makes some extremely timely points. Not least of which is this:

There is a mystery at the core of every suicide, and the story of how a once-successful liberal politics of solidarity became a failed liberal politics of “difference” is not a simple one. Perhaps the best place to begin it is with a slogan: The personal is the political.

This phrase was coined by feminists in the 1960s and captured perfectly the mind-set of the New Left at the time. Originally, it was interpreted to mean that everything that seems strictly private—sexuality, the family, the workplace—is in fact political and that there are no spheres of life exempt from the struggle for power. That is what made it so radical, electrifying sympathizers and disturbing everyone else.

But the phrase could also be taken in a more romantic sense: that what we think of as political action is in fact nothing but personal activity, an expression of me and how I define myself. As we would put it today, my political life is a reflection of my identity.

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As a teacher, I am increasingly struck by a difference between my conservative and progressive students. Contrary to the stereotype, the conservatives are far more likely to connect their engagements to a set of political ideas and principles. Young people on the left are much more inclined to say that they are engaged in politics as an X, concerned about other Xs and those issues touching on X-ness. And they are less and less comfortable with debate.

Over the past decade a new, and very revealing, locution has drifted from our universities into the media mainstream: Speaking as an X…This is not an anodyne phrase. It sets up a wall against any questions that come from a non-X perspective. Classroom conversations that once might have begun, I think A, and here is my argument, now take the form, Speaking as an X, I am offended that you claim B. What replaces argument, then, are taboos against unfamiliar ideas and contrary opinions.

Which is how you get Brendan Eich shoved out of Firefox, James Damore crucified by Google, and conservative cake bakers and pizzeria owners threatened by the left. And it’s also how you get this pair of incidents at the left’s Netroots Nation convention this weekend. First up, Jazz Shaw of Hot Air has a “Video [of] Democrats shouting down the “wrong sort” of Democrats at NN17,” to which he adds:

One of the incidents this week deserves at least a brief look however, since it speaks volumes about the current state of the Democratic Party and the schism currently taking place there. One of the scheduled speakers at the event was Stacey Evans, a member of the Georgia House of Representatives and a candidate in the Democratic primary race for Governor of that state. It’s important to say that Ms. Evans was a scheduled speaker, because she didn’t get the chance to do very much actual speaking.

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Nobody was saying a thing about Evans’ policies, voting record or insufficiently progressive positions. The chants were all about “Support Black Women.” In case you haven’t picked up on this yet, Evans is white and one of her opponents in the primary, Stacey Abrams (who is described in the article as having been “treated like royalty”) is black. That’s the entire difference. In fact, when one of the AJ-C reporters caught up with the protesters to ask about their opposition to Evans, they couldn’t come up with a thing. (Emphasis added)

And that’s just how the man who is the deputy chairman of the Democratic Party likes it. “Keith Ellison demands Democrats defend ‘intersectionality,’” Emily Jashinsky writes at the Washington Examiner:

Ellison, a Democratic congressman from Minnesota, implored progressives gathered at Netroots Nation on Friday to embrace the philosophy of intersectionality. “All of us in this room have got to defend intersectionality as a concept,” he said from the stage, drawing cheers from the crowd.

“That applause ain’t quite loud enough!” Ellison went on, riling up the crowd.

Seated to his left was Kimberlé Crenshaw, the feminist scholar credited with introducing the philosophy of intersectionality in the 1980’s. Crenshaw said she’s been “astonished” by the attacks on her work, which even prompted her to go back and read it herself, wondering if perhaps she said something wrong. From that, Crenshaw explained she came away “with an even greater feeling that the distortion isn’t accidental.”

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To sum up intersectionality in brief, it means that once you’ve accepted that everything is racist, consistency demands that you also accept everything is sexist, everything is transphobic, everything is Islamophobic, and so on and so forth. Think of it as the grand unified theory of victimhood.

Crenshaw herself has explained it “came from the idea that if you’re standing in the path of multiple forms of exclusion, you are likely to get hit by both.”

The doctrine is characteristic of the brand of progressive radicalism from which many centrist Democrats believe the party must disassociate in order to broaden its appeal and recapture working class voters between the coasts. With Ellison perched in power at the DNC, those pleas probably won’t be persuasive.

All of which is a reminder that the goons carrying tiki torches and pretending to be cast members in a revival of Triumph of the Will in Charlottesville aren’t the only group in America utterly obsessed with skin color. But they’re a powerless fringe group compared to the intersection of the Democratic party, academia, the media, and Silicon Valley. As someone whose worldview intersects at the crossroads of moderate to conservative to libertarian politics, I’m happy that such ideas have been an enormous anchor dragging down the left (err, aside from its aforementioned control of one of America’s two major political parties, academia, the media, and the computer industry). But as an American, I find racism repulsive on both sides of the aisle.

And of course, creating an army of angry SJWs has another downside for the left as well: “Creating Monsters Is The Easy Part,” David Thompson writes. “Enabling and excusing all that leftist psychodrama sure is expensive.”

AS PROBLEMS GO, THIS ONE DOESN’T SEEM TOO AWFUL: A Cancer Conundrum: Too Many Drug Trials, Too Few Patients. “With the arrival of two revolutionary treatment strategies, immunotherapy and personalized medicine, cancer researchers have found new hope — and a problem that is perhaps unprecedented in medical research. There are too many experimental cancer drugs in too many clinical trials, and not enough patients to test them on.”

ACTUAL NEW YORK TIMES HEADLINE: Why Women Had Better Sex Under Socialism.

Accompanied by a black and white propaganda photo of a smiling young woman “working at a collective farm near Moscow in 1955,” just to immediately reinforce that they’re talking about that kind of socialism, and not say, England or Sweden in the 1970s. And note that this story is running on the same weekend that idiots carrying the red flag of international socialism rumbled with idiots carrying the red flag of national socialism in Charlottesville.

Since this is the centennial of the founding of the Soviet Union, the Gray Lady is going all-in to celebrate communism; this past week, they ran a piece on “What Lenin’s love of camping and hiking did for nature conservation in Russia.” Cam Edwards of the NRA tweeted in response, “Find someone who loves you the way the New York Times loves Soviet Communism.” The Times doubles down and says, no you can’t get that kind of sweet, sweet lovin’, now that the Iron Curtain no more, baby.

But of course, as Iowahawk tweets today, the joke is on the Times: All that superior sex you imagined back in the USSR “doesn’t count honey, it wasn’t real socialism.”

(Somewhere, the ghost of Walter Duranty is probably muttering, “Geez, dial it back a bit, fellas – you’re not going to fool them with this level of fake news.”)

ROAD-TRIPPING in a Ferrari 488 GTB.

I WAS GOING TO WRITE SOMETHING ABOUT CHARLOTTESVILLE TODAY, but honestly I don’t think I could do better than Roger Simon. I do want to echo his comment that, for all the racial tension we see in the media and in politics, out in the actual world black and white people seem to be getting along pretty well. I wrote something about that here.

SHERLOCK HOLMES EXPLAINS WHY THE DEBBIE WASSERMAN-SCHULTZ DEMOCRAT PARTY IT SCANDAL IS NOT AT THE TOP OF THE NEWS: Democrat media privilege, he says.

“Democrat Media Privilege,” Holmes said evenly. Responding to my puzzled face, he explained. “American Democrats operate with an unrestrained presumption of media favoritism. So-called objective American media prefer to ignore Democrat wrongs, or, that tactic failing, attempt to justify the offences. It echoes The Adventure of Silver Blaze, good fellow.”

The dog did nothing in the night time.

“Yes, an echo of silence. The press lapdog that didn’t bark? In your media intense environment that makes Democrat political operatives a privileged class…Please proceed.”

Don’t smirk. He cracked the case.

UNMASKING SAMANTHA POWER:

The House committee has not identified the Trump people who were unmasked. Nor has it identified the “one official” who made those hundreds of requests. But it’s pretty obvious this was Samantha Power, Barack Obama’s ambassador to the United Nations. In May the House Intelligence Committee subpoenaed the unmasking requests from Ms. Power, former CIA director John Brennan and former National Security Adviser Susan Rice.

Ms. Power is the only one of those three whose job had no clear intelligence-related function. The plot got even thicker when the committee asked for the same unmasking records for Ben Rhodes. He was the hyper-political Obama Deputy National Security Adviser who last year gleefully boasted to the New York Times how he’d manipulated reporters to sell Mr. Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran.

I have a pretty good idea of what was going on.

BUFF LIGHTNING: A rather spectacular photo snapped last week at Minot AFB, North Dakota.

HARPERS’ “BIZARRE” TAKES TRUMP DERANGEMENT TO A NEW LEVEL: “If You Are Married To a Trump Supporter, Divorce Them.” This isn’t Lysistrata, this is flat out virtue signalling/moral preening.

Supporting Trump at this point does not indicate a difference of opinions. It indicates a difference of values.

Don’t tell Jim Carville and Mary Matalin. (Yes, she later changed her affiliation to Libertarian but for reasons unrelated to Trump).

U.S. ARMY VET PITCHING IN THE BIG LEAGUES: Chris Rowley made his debut last night with the Toronto Blue Jays. According to MLB.com, he’s the first West Point grad to pitch in the major leagues.

THEY HATE OMAROSA: Chaos Erupts at Black Journalists Conference Over Appearance of Trump Aide. “A panel discussion featuring White House aide Omarosa Manigault and relatives of two young black men killed by police degenerated into a tense, chaotic mess when audience members jeered and shouted at Manigault for her answers to questions.”

THIS WASN’T “BIAS,” IT WAS COLLUSION: Reporters were ‘reluctant’ to cover the Bill Clinton/Loretta Lynch meeting even if they deny it.

Most people hear claims about media bias and greet them with the same enthusiasm they’d share if they were told the Earth is round or that cotton is white.

Only reporters still act like it’s up for debate.

That’s why when President Trump cited a report this week showing journalists uninterested in last year’s scandalous meeting between Bill Clinton and then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch, the pushback from the media was predictably defensive.

The report, published in the Washington Examiner, was based on newly uncovered 2016 emails from Washington Post and New York Times journalists who were contacting Department of Justice officials for information on the meeting, which took place in the heat of the presidential campaign and as Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton was under federal investigation for her private email server.

“E-mails show that the AmazonWashingtonPost and the FailingNewYorkTimes were reluctant to cover the Clinton/Lynch secret meeting in plane,” Trump said Tuesday on Twitter, using his deliciously petty nicknames for the Washington Post and the New York Times.

The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza said the emails actually “show reporters trying to get info from DOJ, checking facts. Pieces were tough & forced Lynch’s semi-recusal.”

Coverage of the meeting was “tough” the way a mother is “tough” on her toddler when she catches him eating a bag of sugar: She’ll send him to his room, but only after she takes a photo of how cute he is.

News of the meeting was first reported by a Phoenix TV station and the New York Times didn’t publish anything about it for more than 24 hours.

That might be loosely related to the paper’s reporter, Mark Landler, emailing a DOJ contact to say he had “been pressed into service to write about the questions being raised” about the meeting.

Reporters today see their mission as government watchdogs clearer than ever — but before Trump’s election, Landler had to be “pressed into service” to even bother.

And when Landler’s report finally made it to daylight, it framed the episode as a “political furor” caused by Republicans who wouldn’t buy Lynch’s excuse that the meeting was, in her words, “primarily social.”

As usual.