Month: February 2023
A ‘Progressive’ Paradox
Leader of the Stack.
Leftists like to call themselves 'progressives.' We can't or rather ought not begrudge them their self-appellation any more than we can begrudge the Randians their calling themselves 'objectivists.' Every person and every movement has the right to portray himself or itself favorably and self-servingly. "We are objective in our approach, unlike you mystics."
But if you are progressive, why are you stuck in the past when it comes to race? Progress has been made in this area; why then do you deny the progress that has been made? Why do you hanker after the old days? Why, Mr. President, do you go on about lynching?
Read it all. Pithy, on target, true.
Hey Jackass!
Statistics on crime in Sweet Home Chicago. "Illustrating Chicago values." By cops, for cops. Fascinating analyses of shot placement, etc. Where do Chicagoans get shot? How many in the face? How many in the head but not in the face? How many in the chest, the buttocks? Useful information if you plan to sally out onto the mean streets of "that toddlin' town." It turns out that it is statistically better to wear a helmet than to cover your ass. Delightful details on how leftist lunacy can destroy a once-great city.
If you love crime. be sure to vote Democrat! I can't wait to hear whether Lori Lightfoot survives politically. The lovely Lightfoot ordered the cops in Chi-town to refrain from foot pursuit of criminals. But of course! We can't have that. It would be racist!
Further indicators of civilizational collapse aided and abetted by Dementocratic wokery:
1) Ukraine refugee fails to find safe haven in San Francisco middle school.
2) The DFL’s Blackout Bill, requiring that all electricity be produced by wind and solar energy by 2040, has now been signed into law by Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. Commentary here.
3) Black thug in St. Louis calmly shoots homeless man through the head. The DA, Kim Gardner, is Soros-funded.
UPDATE (3/1). Lori Lightfoot got the boot. So not all news is bad. And this despite her 'wokifications,' being black, female, and openly gay. Dov Fischer:
So Lori Lightfoot counterintuitively has been kicked out with a heavy boot, and we soon blessedly will have heard and seen the last of that apparition unless she appears in a future police bulletin as a crime victim during a Saturday night gang spree in Chicago. She now is the first elected Chicago mayor in 40 years to lose a reelection bid. Still, it seems that 17 percent of the voters in Tuesday night’s Chicago mayoral primary were idiots enough to vote for her reelection. Presumably, the other 83 percent of the Democrat primary voters were racists and misogynists and homophobes, voting against a Black lesbian woman (the “Democrat Trifecta” or the “Progressive Hat Trick,” your pick).
[. . .]
Or consider how Mayor Lightfoot campaigned: “I’m a Black woman and, let’s not forget, some folks frankly don’t support us in leadership roles.”
Yeah. Also some people frankly don’t support morons who lead a once-great city into the dungheap of murderous crime. In 2021, under Lightfoot’s enlightened footwork, the city suffered the most murders it had recorded in a quarter-century. Plus 3,651 shootings — comprising 1,415 more than had occurred only two years earlier. Chicago had more homicides that year under Lightfoot than any other city in America.
Saturday NIght at the Oldies: Ordinals and Cardinals > 10
I did zero to ten a few years back. What songs can you think of that feature ordinals or cardinals greater than tenth or ten? Well, racking wracking my brains there's
Connie Stevens, Sixteen Reasons. With footage from David Lynch, "Mulholland Drive."
Simon and Garfunkel, 59th Street Bridge Song. What a great song! Slow down you hyperkinetic hustlers, you're moving too fast!
Cannibal and the Head Hunters, Land of 1000 Dances. This one goes out to Tom Coleman who probably danced to this at the El Monte Legion Stadium circa '65. "Be there or be square!"
Question Mark and the Mysterians, 96 Tears. Is that a Farfisa organ making that cheesy sound? This one goes out to Colin McGinn.
Bobby Darin, 18 Yellow Roses
Cannonball Adderley, 74 Miles Away
Chicago, 25 or 6 to 4
Frank Zappa, Twenty Small Cigars
Tom Waits, Ol '55
Dr. Feelgood, Route 66. Energetic and attitudinal.
Paul Simon, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover
Paul Simon, English major, was a wee bit pretentious in some of his '60s songwriting. Case in point: Dangling Conversation. But I like it; if I didn't I wouldn't link to it.
And we spoke of things that matter
With words that must be said
Can analysis be worthwhile?
Is the theater really dead?
Billy Ward and the Dominoes, Sixty Minute Man. Explicitly sexual. I don't need to explain to my sophisticated readers what 'rock and roll' means. Some say this was the first R & R record. Others cites the following number. I myself take no position on this weighty question.
Ike Turner, Rocket 88 The video features footage and 'legage' of 1950's sex kitten Bettie Page.
Beatles, When I'm 64
Dave Allen, Highway 61 Revisited. Ever hear this version? No you haven't, which is why you need Uncle Bill's Saturday Night at the Oldies.
Bob Dylan, Highway 61 Revisited
And no doubt more . . .
Ingredients of Happiness
Top o' the Stack.
Of DEI and the Devil
The genitive of deus. Advocates of D.E.I. being slanderers, they are properly labeled diabolou (διαβόλου, genitive of διάβολος), "of the devil." (Anthony G. Flood)
I am as little an etymologist as I am an entomologist, but to extend Tony's riff, I have often suspected an etymological connection between the German Zweifel (doubt) and the German Teufel (devil) via the zwei (two) in the first word. The Father of Lies is duplicitous. Latin duplex, duplicis means twofold, double, divided. Latin duplicitas, duplicitatis can mean doubleness, duplicity, deceit, ambiguity.
You have heard me say that doubt is the engine of inquiry. Admittedly, though, doubt is two-faced in that it can, driving inquiry, lead to truth, but also degenerate into denial of truth. Leftists, being duplicitous, regularly conflate doubt and denial as when they tar the right-thinking with 'climate denial' when we merely question their hysterical claims about the imminence of "boiling oceans" (Al Gore at Davos, Switzerland recently) and such other nonsense as they spew.
Hypocrisy is a from of duplicity, and who more hypocritical than the climate summit attendees who travelled by private half-filled jets to Davos when, if they themselves believed their climate claims, could have much more easily and 'environmentally' convened via Zoom. And note where they convened: in a country that, unlike the USA under the 'leadership' of the brazen liars Biden, Harris, Mayorkas, et al. actually controls its borders.
And you still vote Democrat?
The hard Left, which now controls the Democrat Party, is evil at its core. I don't say that every leftist, 'progressive,' and wokester is evil. Most of these folks are useful idiots. A large subset of them are superannuated, low-information, life-long Democrats who are pissing away their 'golden years' in empty socializing, hitting white balls into holes, and other forms of Pascalian divertissement.
I am talking about the drivers of this demonic, duplicitous assault on civilization. Prime example here in the 'City of Angels.'
The Age of Feeling and Proto-Wokery
Over the last few years I have spoken often of the Age of Feeling in which we now live, here for example. The feeling fetish is downstream from the feminization that has been in flow for quite some time. These are ingredients of the proto-wokery now 'flowering' into full-on wokery. An excerpt from an article in First Things you should read:
The emphasis on “feelings” is rooted in a deeper ideology of Safetyism. Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff, in their 2018 book The Coddling of the American Mind, define Safetyism as “a culture or belief system in which safety has become a sacred value, which means that people are unwilling to make trade-offs demanded by other practical and moral concerns.”
While Haidt and Lukianoff focus their analysis on proto-woke novelties like “trigger warnings” and “micro-aggressions,” the cult of Safetyism is best exemplified in our response to the pandemic. Think of the litany of violations of our basic rights to personal freedom and choice over the last two years that were justified on the basis of harm reduction. The economy, our dying loved ones, our faith practices, our children's education, all of it served up on the altar of Safetyism. Think of the Covid Karen: Triple-masked. Quad-boosted. Self-confined for months on end. Hyperventilating in panic as she ventures to the grocery store for the first time in a year. Then scolding the rest of us for wanting to send our kids back to school, and demanding instead that we all abide by her hypochondria, on pain of punishment by the bureaucratic state. This person—who is as often male as female—is the avatar of the Longhouse.
Look out for Longhouse Karen who will report you to the WokeState apparatchiki.
Perception: An Inconsistent Triad
London Ed writes,
I am making great progress on the perception book. I have borrowed your idea of an aporia, which I use to illustrate the central problem of perception:
(1) Transparency: This is the surface of my desk.
(2) Continuity: When I shut my eyes, the surface of my desk does not cease to exist
(3) Discontinuity: When I shut my eyes, this ceases to exist
Here is how I 'see' it. The problem concerns the nature and status of the referent of the demonstrative pronoun 'this' when uttered by a person as he looks at a physical object such as a desk and says, 'This is the surface of my desk.' To what, exactly, does 'this' refer? There are two main possibilities. Roughly, either 'this' refers to something physical that exists in itself or it refers to something non-physical or mental that does not exist in itself.
P1. The referent of the pronoun is a proper physical part of a physical thing that exists whether or not any person is looking at it. (Note that if the thing exists whether or not perceived, then so do its parts.)
P2. The referent of the pronoun is not a physical part of the desk but an item that exists only as a correlate of the act of visual awareness of the person who is looking at the desk at a given time. This correlate is an epistemic intermediary that has (or encodes) all and only the properties of the desk the person has before his mind at the time of his perceiving.
On (P1), the solution to the aporetic triad is by rejecting (3) while accepting (1) and (2). On (P2), the solution is by rejecting (2) while accepting (1) and (3)
I assume that Ed will plump for (P1). That makes Ed a kind of direct realist. The other type of view can be developed in a realist way as a type of indirect realism or in an idealist way. But no more about that for now.
Well, why not be a direct realist? Are there any considerations that speak against it?
Depredatory Wokery: Resist and Refuse
The good Baron over at Gates of Vienna has some worthwhile suggestions. (HT: Bill Keezer)
My main suggestion is that you vote with your wallet. For example, if your alma mater requests money, tell them, politely but firmly, no dice as long as they support DIE.
('Die' is the singular of 'dice.' Surely DIE is more fitting an acronym that DEI, which, technically speaking, is not an acronym at all, but a mere abbreviation.)
In other news: no self-defense allowed in Canada.
Ash Wednesday
"Remember, man, thou art dust and unto dust thou shalt return." Memento, homo, quia pulvis es et in pulverem reverteris. This warning, from the Catholic liturgy for Ash Wednesday, is based on Genesis 3, 19: In sudore vultus tui vesceris pane, donec revertaris in terram de qua sumptus es: quia pulvis es et in pulverem reverteris.
How real can we and this world be if in a little while we all will be nothing but dust and ashes?
The typical secularist is a reality denier who hides from the unalterable facts of death and impermanence. This is shown by his self-deceptive behavior: he lives as if he will live forever and as if his projects are ultimately meaningful even though he knows that he won't and that they aren't. If he were to face reality he would have to be a nihilist. That he isn't shows that he is fooling himself.
More here.
Christopher Hitchens has been dead for over eleven years now. In Platonic-Augustinian-Christian perspective, what no longer exists never truly existed. So here we have a man who never truly existed but who denied the existence of the Source of his own ephemeral quasi-existence. Curious.
Bullshitting and Lying
Top o' the Stack.
Is Sin a Fact?
Substack latest. A passage from G. K. Chesteron examined.
How to Leave a Call Back Number on the Eve of WWIII
Don't make me re-play the message a dozen times. Pronounce the string slowly, clearly, and distinctly, numeral by numeral. You are not in a competition to see how fast you can spout it. And then repeat the string. Don't say 'o' if you mean 'zero' (0). 'o' is a letter, '0' is a numeral. Confusing the two is a mark of a linguistically slovenly 'liberal.'
And now you see the fix the Democrats have landed us in, on this, the Eve of Destruction. (The accompanying video is the best I have seen attached to this song.) Joey B in his infinite incompetence, mendacity, and stupidity-cum-dementia has brought people together alright, but the wrong people, the Chi-Coms and the Russkis. Way to go, Joe. And all you useful idiots who voted for him, what were you thinking? You weren't, you were emoting, like good 'liberals.' And now:
Russian leader Vladimir Putin announced in a nearly two-hour speech on Tuesday the unilateral suspension of the longstanding New START agreement that limits American and Russian nuclear development, describing Western support for Ukraine amid an ongoing Russian invasion as an existential threat to Russia.
An exciting, and possibly an exiting development.
Elsewhere in his remarks, Putin bemoaned the “spiritual catastrophe” of the West.
“They distort historical facts and constantly attack our culture, the Russian Orthodox Church, and other traditional religions of our country,” Putin claimed. “Look at what they do with their own peoples: the destruction of the family, cultural and national identity, perversion, and the abuse of children are declared the norm. And priests are forced to bless same-sex marriages.”
This is how Putin sees us, and with some justice. We are in grave danger. We would not be had Trump been re-elected.
Tulsi Gabbard talks sense on this issue.
UPDATE (2/23): Russia deploys nuclear-armed ships for first-time in 30 years. Let's go Brandon!
UPDATE (2/23): A U-2 eye's view of the ChiCom spy balloon's massive payload. Let's go Brandon!
The Toxic Racialist Obsessions of Joe Biden
Victor Davis Hanson makes many fine points, but fails to lay bare the root of Biden's racist flip-flopping, namely that the man is an utter phony and fraud who is rooted in no principle except that of self-promotion at all costs.
Does Classical Liberalism Destroy Itself?
Joe Odegaard sends us to The Orthosphere where we find Classical Liberalism Destroys Itself. The opening paragraph is stylistically brilliant, especially the concluding sentence, and I agree with the paragraph content-wise, though not with the quotation from Dreher:
“Classical liberalism detached from the Christian faith is what got us here.”
Rod Dreher, “David French: Not Woke Enough For The Times?” The American Conservative (Feb. 16, 2023)
The above is from a long thumb-sucker in which Dreher sadly ponders the performative conservatism of David French. Performative conservatism means striking conservative poses rather than striking blows that actually conserve. Performative conservatives have plenty of principles but precious few wins. Dreher is himself what Sam Francis called a “beautiful loser,” which is to say a conservative pundit who is admired for his prose, his erudition, his broadmindedness, and his many, many friends on the left, but who is not and cannot be admired for success. French and Dreher are the spiritual sons of George Will, a belletristic bimbo and court clown who went down fighting by the Queensbury Rules.
As I said, brilliant writing and a delightful skewering of that yap-and-scribble lap dog of the Left, George Will, of the Beltway bow-tie brigade. There is only one mistake: the rules are Queensberry, not Queensbury. My pedantry having now been satisfied, I proceed to the substantive issues. My disagreement begins with the second paragraph:
Classical liberalism is detached from Christian faith because classical liberalism detached Christian faith from public life. It did this intentionally and by design. Does Dreher really not understand that the first task of classical liberalism was to liberate men and women from classical Christianity. Some emancipated Christians went straight to atheism while others chose a couple of generations of decompression in the halfway house of liberal Christianity. Many worked as thoughtful Christian conservative columnists who believe that the United States was not really a Christian country until passage of the Fourteenth, perhaps Nineteenth, amendment.
The bias of the author surfaces with "the first task of classical liberalism was to liberate men and women from classical Christianity." Not so. The task was to separate church and state, not to "liberate" men and women from "classical" Christianity. What does "liberate" mean here? And what is "classical" Christianity? Roman Catholicism? Some form of Protestantism? The author is attributing nefarious motives to the Founders who were classical liberals and men of the Enlightenment. A government that is neutral on such theological questions as the divinity of Jesus Christ and the tri-unity of God and that allows for freedom of religion and the freedom to practice no religion is not inimical to Christianity but tolerant of different forms of Christianity as well as tolerant of other religions and of those who practice no religion.
There may be some truth in Dreher’s proposition that classical liberalism only works so long as the United States contains a great many Christians. But that is just additional evidence that classical liberalism destroys itself. It is a simple and obvious historical fact that Christians fare no better under classical liberalism than they fared under the Roman Emperor Nero. The disappearance of Christians under the former is not so swift and sanguinary as under the latter, but it is equally certain.
The "obvious fact" is neither obvious nor a fact. Would the author prefer to be a practicing Christian under Nero or under Biden? Christians obviously fare better now under Biden and those who pull the puppet's strings than they did under Nero. And the talk of "equal certainty" is a wild exaggeration. Undoubtedly, Christianity is presently under assault. That is an obvious fact. But there is no necessity that Christianity succumb. There is no inevitability at work here.
More importantly, there is nothing in the nature of classical liberalism that necessitates that Christians be forced into latter-day catacombs. After all, the touchstone of classical liberalism is toleration. Toleration is part of the very essence of classical liberalism. That toleration extends to Jews, Christians, and even Muslims if the latter renounce Sharia (Islamic law), which is incompatible with the principles and values of classical liberalism. Toleration has limits. Perhaps the thought of people like the author is that if you tolerate many different views, then you must tolerate all, including the view that Christianity must be destroyed. But the inference from Many to All is a non sequitur. Logically viewed, all slippery slope arguments are invalid. If we tolerate the consumption of alcoholic beverages, must we also tolerate drunk driving? Obviously not. To tolerate drinking is not to tolerate drunkenness, let alone drunk driving. To tolerate drinking by adults is not to tolerate drinking by children. To tolerate private inebriation is not to tolerate public inebriation. And so on. A government that tolerates sodomy in private between consenting adults can also tolerate the existence of private schools in which it is taught that sodomy is a mortal sin. Why not?
Besides the Many to All fallacy, there is also the fallacy called post hoc ergo propter hoc (after this, therefore because of this.) From the fact that classically liberal government has been followed temporally by the decadence and insanity all around us (wide open national borders, celebration of worthless individuals, destruction of monuments to great men, the institutionally-mandated DEI agenda, et cetera ad nauseam) it does not follow logically that the first is the cause of the second.
Dreher admits as much when he writes
“I cannot imagine a form of government and a social compact that most of us can consent to, that upholds classical liberal standards without a broadly shared religion..”
Nor can I. I cannot imagine that form of government and social compact because classical liberal standards necessarily destroy a broadly shared religion. Classical liberalism destroys a broadly shared religion because it removes all civil disabilities from apostates and infidels. The natural result is that there are more of both and the broadly shared religion disappears.
I disagree with Dreher. We don't need a broadly shared religion; what we need is a minimal conception of the common good to which most of us can consent, whether we are Christians, Jews, Buddhists, atheists, agnostics, etc. Of course, the commonality of a broadly shared religion freely subscribed to by its adherents would greatly enhance comity. Imagine the social harmony and social cohesion we would all enjoy if each of us, sincerely, and without coercion, subscribed to and lived by the Baltimore Catechism! But that is hopelessly utopian. Our Protestant brethren would surely raise a stink to high heaven.
I even more strongly disagree with the author. We are being told that classical liberalism "necessarily destroys a broadly shared religion because it removes all civil disabilities [liabilities?] from apostates and infidels." First of all, where does this necessity come from? There is no necessity or inevitability at work here. That's the slippery-slope trope once more. And again, to tolerate broadly shared religions is not to destroy them. And what exactly is the author proposing? A politically totalitarian theocracy? What then would he do with the "apostates" and "infidels"? What penalties would he exact? Would he support a throne-and-altar form of 'woke cancellation'?
To mask the disappearance of the broadly shared religion, our court clowns and progressive propagandists have invented preposterous pseudo-religions like Judeo-Christianity, or now “People of Faith.” What this shows is that our broadly shared religion is that there shall be no broadly shared religion—classical liberalism, in short.
I agree that there is no such specific religion as Judeo-Christianity, but by that reasoning there is no such specific religion as Christianity either given the manifold sects and doctrinal divergences. My friend Dale Tuggy, noted philosopher of religion, is a unitarian, a denier of the divinity of Christ, and someone who thinks (gasp!) that Platonism has nothing to contribute to Christianity. And he has said bad things about Trump in my presence. But he is probably a better Christian than me in some ways.
And surely it is a slovenly misuse of 'religion' to refer to classical liberalism as a religion. Call it an ersatz religion if you like, but note that an ersatz X is precisely not an X. A salt substitute such as potassium chloride is not table salt (sodium chloride).
The irony is that Dreher knows this and says as much when he writes about Christianity and not politics. Christianity cannot survive as a broadly shared religion if it does not possess a political community in which apostasy comes at a price, and from which infidels are rigorously excluded. Classical liberalism forbids both of these necessary measures, and this is why Christianity and classical liberalism both are doomed.
This is doubly mistaken. Christianity can easily survive as a broadly shared religion under a limited, constitutionally-based government whose provisions secure, inter alia, religious liberty. No politically totalitarian theocracy is need to assure Christianity's survival. Toleration and limited government suffice. Of course, we have neither now. So what we have to do is get back to American conservatism which includes a sizable admixture of classical liberalism. I understand what animates those on the Reactionary Right, just as I understand what inspires those on the Alternative Right who, unlike the Orthospherians, think that Christianity is the problem, it having weakened us and made us unfit for living in this world, the only one (they think) there is. But both of these right turns lead to dead ends. There will be no return to throne-and-altar conservatism.
Finally, neither Christianity nor classical liberalism are doomed. Again the inevitability 'argument' which is akin to the slippery-slope trope, and the fallacies of Many to All, and post hoc ergo propter hoc. That being said, things in the near-term look bad indeed, and I am none too sanguine about turning things around and returning to America as she was founded to be.