Archive for 2022

NO ONE WANTS TO JOIN THE MILITARY ANYMORE:

Imagine you are an eighteen-year-old, white, Christian male in Georgia with a family history of military service. As you progressed through your teen years, you watched Confederate statues being torn down and military bases being renamed, endless media and elitist demonization of your culture as racist and deplorable and backwards, and military and civilian leadership that thinks diversity and inclusion (i.e. fewer white men) is best thing since sliced bread. Would you volunteer? Identity politics works both ways. Trash my tribe and I won’t associate with you, let alone risk my life. It shouldn’t be a shock, then, that those expressing a “great deal of trust and confidence in the military” dropped from 70 percent in 2018 to 45 percent today.

The long-term health of the all-volunteer force that began in 1973 now appears to be in serious jeopardy. The general public’s declining connection and trust in the nation and its institutions paired with the elites’ incessant culture war targeting the very Americans who traditionally served in the highest numbers spells trouble.

There’s another reason why military ranks are diminishing in 2022:

“MEDICAL GASLIGHTING” IS THE NEW TERM FOR WHEN DOCTORS TELL PEOPLE THERE’S NOTHING WRONG WITH THEM: ‘Medical gaslighting’ is common, especially among women.

Of course, sometimes doctors will be wrong, because in my experience most of them are not great diagnosticians. And it will usually involve women because women visit doctors with complaints much more often than men. But “medical gaslighting” imports a notion of bad faith instead of error. It’s the medical version of “believe all women,” and you know how well that turned out. . .

POUNCING, SEIZING — AND LATCHING! New York Times: GOP ‘Seizes on Inflation,’ Campaign Ads Risk Recession?

[New York Times economic policy reporter Alan Rappeport] couldn’t avoid how the inflation issue was killing the administration in polls. When Republicans weren’t “seizing,” they were latching:

….Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has acknowledged that the pandemic aid package contributed to inflation by spurring demand in the economy. Last month, she admitted that she was “wrong” to describe price increases as “transitory.”

Republicans have latched on to that as proof that Democrats and the Biden administration misled voters and mishandled the economy and to claim — despite a strong labor market and other signs of economic health — that the nation is on the verge of economic collapse.

Even though Joe Biden is president and his party controls both houses of Congress, Rappeport suggested further inflation fallout, including a recession, might be the fault of….the Republican Party talking about it in political ads?

Evergreen:

 

ROGER KIMBALL: Regime Propaganda, Ray Epps, and the New York Times. “Feuer’s embarrassing piece in the Times at first seemed inexplicable. Why would the Times seek to exonerate, or at least to drum up sympathy for, someone who was caught on video urging the crowd to break into the Capitol? The whole thing seemed like a higher-order hermeneutical conundrum. Until, that is, one recognizes that Epps might just be a sort of double agent, an agent provocateur, laboring not on behalf of Trump’s supporters but his enemies. Then it all begins to make sense.”

 

HARVARD SHOULD BE EMBARRASSED:  The Harvard University web site refers to Students For Fair Admissions v. Harvard, which is currently pending before the Supreme Court, as a “politically motivated lawsuit.”  Well … I guess … if Harvard means that in the sense that Brown v. Board of Education (1954) was a politically motivated lawsuit, then yes.  The web site also states, “Harvard College does not discriminate against applicants from any group in its admission processes.” This is simply false.

(Here’s my amicus curiae brief supporting Students For Fair Admissions.  After reading the Harvard web site, I’m all the more happy that I had the time to write it.)

GUERRILLA COMEDY: The fight totalitarians can never win.

You could say that comedy today is effectively dead, or at the very least it is on life support. The notion of being “canceled” appeared around the same time as the emergence of the #MeToo movement. Strictly speaking, getting “canceled” is something that happens to you—it is not something you are. But those who accept the terms of their cancellation, or allow the fear of it to chill their speech, are effectively internalizing the regime’s censorship: put bluntly, they are letting the bad guys win. Whether the person getting censored is truthful or not, vulgar or polite, is beside the point. What’s important is that they have said something which somehow threatens or challenges state-approved ideology.

That is why true comedians are often targets of authoritarian regimes. Plenty of entertainers masquerade as comedians, but in reality they are doing something like anti-comedy—not subverting but reinforcing dominant modes of thought. Their jokes suck the air out of the room just insofar as they are constructed to disallow criticism of preferred targets. (Ever since Barack Obama was elected president, this has been the state of basically all mainstream late-night shows, SNL sketches, and awards-show monologues—with a few notable exceptions.)

If you pay close attention to the so-called “woke comedians,” you will find that their routines boil down to using mockery as a strategy for reinforcing a list of leftist ideological points, and forbidding a list of disfavored right-wing thoughts (for instance, making opposition to abortion and transgender extremism seem ridiculous). The jokes are rarely smart or incisive, and have instead the character of schoolyard taunts: they are social cues for distinguishing the ingroup from the outgroup. Regime-reinforcement “comedy” says: “you had better find the following viewpoints ridiculous, or else you are anathema.”

Are there people who laugh at such humorless humor? Sure, just as there are bullies who enjoy mockery of others in order to elevate themselves. Fake comedians perpetuate this propaganda because they too are weak, and generally do not understand their targets. Think of leftists making fun of conservatives. Very rarely do they know their subject well, and thus, the comedy act has nowhere else to go but to retreat into full-blown mockery. What is lacking is intelligence, and a clear sight of human absurdity in the everyday.

Earlier: Destroying Comedy: David Zucker, the co-writer and director of a little-known and rarely watched comedy film called Airplane! on the state of comedy today, and those who are attempting to eliminate it.

MEN CAN DO ANYTHING BETTER THAN WOMEN, EVEN BE WOMEN: Lia Thomas nominated for NCAA Woman of the Year. See also Bruce/Caitlin Jenner, Woman of the Year.

It’s funny, we were told for ages that men were the obsolete sex. And now . . . .

OLD AND BUSTED: The Great Relearning.

The New Hotness? The Great Unlearning: Is classical colonial? Naive proposals to “decolonise” Western classical music risk losing the richness of its history.

In the UK, the Musicians’ Union published an article in 2019 by David Duncan, noting among other things the lack of non-white representation in the curricula of examination bodies. A 2021 issue of Ethnomusicology Forum, edited by Shzr Ee Tan, was devoted to “Decolonising music and music studies”. 

Tan also organised a roundtable in 2021 on “Decolonizing Music Studies” and she with other ethnomusicologists based at Royal Holloway, University of London produced a statement on behalf of their department on “Inclusion, participation and decolonisation in music”. Various other journals and institutions have produced their own statements. 

The issue surfaced again last year when the musicologist J.P.E. Harper-Scott resigned from his chair at Royal Holloway, claiming universities had become dogmatic rather than critical environments and citing rhetoric on decolonisation “which admits of no doubt, no criticism, no challenge”. 

I limit my discussion here to the debate in Europe, especially Britain, as the history and demographics of the Americas, South Africa and the Antipodes create distinct issues. The most frequent target of decolonisers here is the central Western classical tradition, which developed primarily during periods when minority populations in Europe were considerably smaller than today.

In terms of the demographics in France and Britain at the time, it should come as no surprise that black composers such as Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges or Samuel Coleridge-Taylor are exceptional cases. Similarly, it is not unnatural that European music traditions continue to be studied widely in countries where 85-90 per cent of the population is of European ethnic origin.

It is already the case that Western classical music has an ever-decreasing role in British degree courses. Figures from 2020, excluding conservatoires, show fewer than 20 per cent of music students are enrolled on degree courses in which academic study of the classical tradition plays a significant role — the majority of whom now take more vocationally-oriented courses, such as music technology, musical theatre or popular music, equally important but of a different nature. 

It’s not just composing music, there’s also, as the new wave band Re-Flex would say, the politics of dancing: Woke dance school drops ballet from auditions as it is ‘white’ and ‘elitist.’ Leeds’ Northern School of Contemporary Dance reviews ballet art form as part of a diversity drive.

COOLEST DAY IN HISTORY:  On this date in 1902, Willis Haviland Carrier completed his design for the modern air conditioner.  God bless him.  I still remember the day the house where I grew up in Virginia got air conditioning.  I was probably about nine years old.

Here’s a reminder of how much difference air conditioning has made:    In 1900, Phoenix’s population was 5,544; today the Phoenix metro area has 4,652,000 people–an unthinkable number without Carrier’s invention.  This afternoon, the temperature in Phoenix is expected to reach 110 degrees.