There Are No Liberal Zionists

A Prefatory Note

The topic of Zionist Israel is not a gray area. There are no fuzzy uncertainties. We won’t tiptoe around harsh truths.

So, there is not invited, welcomed, or allowed any comments here that attempt to debate the finer points of settler colonialism, apartheid statism, ethnic cleansing, and genocide. There is only one correct response to such moral depravity and political evil, mass atrocity and crimes against humanity. That is unqualified judgment and denunciation.

This isn’t about Jews vs Gentiles, as many Jews too are opposed to Zionism, while many non-Jews support it. So, any claims, suggestions, or implications of antisemitism are bullshit and unacceptable. Wrong is wrong. “Never again!” is meant for everyone, no exceptions.

Don’t bother attempting to argue otherwise. Nor bother using whataboutism by distracting from the topic at hand. This is a piece about the ethno-nationalist fascism, fundamentalist theocracy, and state terrorism of Zionist Israel. Nothing else. If you can’t acknowledge and discuss that, then go elsewhere.

While trapped in a large death camp, the Palestinian people are being maimed and massacred by one of the most powerful and well-armed militaries in the world. Besides being a global superpower in its own right, Israel is backed by the United States, the largest empire that has ever existed.

If Palestinians don’t have a right of self-defense against ruthless oppression and systemic brutality enforced by a powerful government, then we are rationally compelled to conclude that the Warsaw Uprising of the ghettoized Jews along with the resistance violence (fighting, sabotage, killings, etc) of anti-Nazi freedom fighters was likewise wrong and so must be condemned.

That is, of course, ridiculous. No intelligent and moral person can deny Palestinian rights to freedom from terrorism, starvation, and mass murder. These are human rights violations, as every major humanitarian organization has declared. This is a second Holocaust, just with different victims this time.

We can be fairly and justly principled in our opposition to any and all blatant and undeniable wrongdoing, no matter who commits it and who suffers. And we can equally support the fight against authoritarian power and totalitarian rule, no matter who wields it and who is crushed by it.

That is the only true meaning of liberalism. That is the only righteous application of morality. If you can’t accept that, then take your authoritarian apologetics elsewhere.

Good liberals and Zionist propaganda

My longest lasting internet friend was — with emphasis on the past tense — a ‘good’ liberal of the so-called liberal class (i.e., the institutionalized establishment of supposed liberal democracy, consisting of professionals in the middle-to-upper class). Recently, she used right-wing talking points to defend Zionism, which for me crossed a bright line of morality. I’ve known her since the late 2000s and I didn’t expect this from her. The incident was rather shocking as a reminder of how powerful and pervasive is Zionist propaganda.

Though intelligent, educated, and successful, she is like many in the older generations who lack media literacy. As her career, she operates an alternative educational service that is part of an international company, but it’s for mathematics. That doesn’t help one grasp vast, complex social and political realities. From what I can tell, much of the ‘news’ she gets comes from her social media feed, not the best source for in-depth understanding. But at this point in time, ignorance of any sort, be it passive or willful, is no longer an excuse when it comes to Zionist oppression involving the first livestreamed genocide in history.

I also suspect that she is one of those people who is more influenced by who she is immediately surrounded by in her life. So, her repeating Zionist talking points is probably because she personally knows some Zionist Jews and so feels empathy for them, in the way she doesn’t feel for Palestinians who she doesn’t personally know. Hence, the latter are just monstrous terrorists, not fully human. Apparently, in her mind, there are no good Palestinians or she didn’t indicate otherwise.

As a side note, when I defended Palestinians, my former friend automatically translated that as defending Hamas, as being indoctrinated by Hamas. She specifically called it Hamas propaganda. That is absurd. Sure, every major government in the world, Israel and otherwise, uses propaganda. And we specifically have immense evidence from investigative reporting on Israel propaganda operations. But it’s absurd to suggest that Hamas, an oppressed and impoverished liberationist group trapped in an open air prison, is somehow able to run a global propaganda campaign. To believe that’s possible is a level of disconnect from reality that is shocking.

From personal experience, I do know how common is Zionist propaganda and how extensive in its reach. It’s hard to avoid, even as an anti-Zionist who avoids the corporate MSM. When I watch YouTube, I constantly get hit by pro-Israeli advertising. And of course, the corporate media reports on every Israeli death while ignoring the vastly larger number of Palestinian deaths. From most of the MSM, you likely wouldn’t even grasp that there is a genocide happening. But for whatever reason, some comedians and night show hosts, like John Oliver, have been willing to talk about it and somehow have gotten away with it. The viewers of such shows, though, are the already strongly liberal-minded.

* * * * *

The social science of ideological indoctrination

In any case, wherever the media manipulation is coming from, it’s not only about a general bias in what info one sees and doesn’t see but, more importantly, how it’s framed and narratized. My former friend likely is exposed to Zionist propaganda that elicits a worldview of of fear and anxiety, divisiveness and conflict — with narratives that build on decades of anti-Islamic rhetoric that went into high gear with the War On Terror. How this psychological alteration happens is shown in media studies. With research on cultivation theory (George Gerbner), those who repeatedly view media portrayals of and reporting on violence and crime fall prey to mean world syndrome.

Basically, there is an increase of threat perceptivity, mortality salience, distrust, paranoia, aggression, punitiveness, sadism, xenophobia, authoritarianism, etc. Informally, this is what’s often called the Fox Effect, but it’s not limited to outright right-wing media. In one study, liberals who first learned of the 9/11 terrorist attack from television (i.e., repeated violent clips played on a loop), as opposed to other media such as newspapers and radio, were more likely to later support right-wing policies and practices, such as the Patriot Act, Homeland Security, and the Iraq War. It didn’t matter if they were watching MSNBC, CNN, or whatever. It’s the violent imagery itself that is main the causal factor, although the narrative framing also plays a role.

It’s not only that various stressors tends to suppress liberal-mindedness, specifically as measured with ‘openness to experience’ (FFM). Anything that overloads, compromises, or suppresses neurocognitive capacity will do the same. In another study, slightly inebriated liberals spoke with more conservative-style language of stereotypes and prejudice. Such a way of talking is a simplifying heuristic, as treating every unique individual with (cognitive) empathy and (abstract) equality is actually a rather complex and taxing thought process.

Diverse other factors can achieve the same sad result and often they’re not things we’d think about in this way. The most fascinating example is the effect of nonzoonotic (i.e., human-spread) infectious and parasitical diseases. With such disease exposure or merely perception of it, there is a population-level decrease of ‘openness to experience’ with the expected increase of conservatism and right-wing authoritarianism (RWA). This goes with the expected worsening of prejudice, xenophobia, and other aspects of in-group bias. Now consider the entire world recently went through a pandemic scare that was exacerbated by fearful and divisive news reporting, including right-wing fear-mongering of conspiracy theories.

This is in the context of an already stressed-out population in many Western countries, as economic problems have been worsening for a long time. The main one of concern is high inequality that has been rising for at least a half century and now reaching a breaking point. It increases rates and levels of social dominance orientation (SDO) while drawing high SDOs into power where they use their power and influence to exacerbate inequality and, where lacking, create it. Unsurprisingly, SDO is also linked to low ‘openness to experience’, along with causing every king of social and health problem imaginable, including distrust, paranoia, conflict, aggression, polarization, and antisociality galore (Keith Payne, Richard Wilkinson, Kate Pickett, Thomas Piketty, Peter Turchin, & Walter Scheidel).

Anything along these lines, including general stressors (e.g., overwork), will interfere with diverse intellectual abilities: cognitive empathy, cognitive load, cognitive complexity, cognitive flexibility, etc; but also intellectual curiosity, pattern recognition, aesthetic appreciation, and such. What results is a decline in measured intelligence, critical thinking, abstract thought, perspective shifting, and on and on. On average liberals, exhibit such capacities to a greater degree. But even they will be negatively affected by stress. And of course, everyone has their breaking point, if for some it’s higher than for others. It would be less of an issue if there were only a single detrimental factor but, instead, we are in a shit storm and it brings out the worst in people.

That is the hard thing about our present society. We’re all vulnerable. There is no one who isn’t stressed out to some degree or another, with distraction, exhaustion, and sleep deprivation being common, among much else. We live under unnatural conditions. We weren’t evolved to deal with this level of chronic and pervasive stress: media manipulation, attention economy, high inequality, power disparity, dominance hierarchy, community breakdown, materialistic consumerism, socioeconomic alienation, systemic dehumanization, nature deficit disorder, etc. It puts us all on edge and causes us to be literally ‘retarded’ as individuals and as a society (i.e., the development of our full human potential is severely stunted, distorted, and maldeveloped).

It’s under such adverse conditions that critics speak of the failure of liberalism, but the reality is that it’s a failure of illiberal conditions, with oppressiveness inducing oppressive attitudes and behavior in a way similar to the victimization cycle. The fact of the matter is liberal-mindedness is shut down and liberals nearly helpless when not supported and promoted by the most optimal factors and environments as part of well-functioning systems, structures, organizations, and institutions. This is why liberals obsess about the public good and a culture of trust, as liberalism is utterly dependent on public welfare and public health being manifest as low stress, shared conditions. A good society.

Machiavellian right-wingers in power understand this. It’s why right-wing politicians, media elite, and propagandists — such as Zionists — push narratives of violence, criminality, threat, fear, desperation, scarcity, competition, class war, xenophobia, moral panic, folk devils, scapegoating, etc; along with the policies that make life worse in every possible way, such as cutting education, public services, worker rights, consumer protections, food safety regulations, and on and on. A permanent underclass and shit life syndrome are intentional outcomes. It’s a feature, not a flaw, of how this dysfunctional system was designed and structured.

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Knowledge and ignorance of Zionist oppression

To get back to the main topic, all of Zionism is built on this kind of dark worldview mired in traumatizing chronic stress. Right from the beginning, Zionism was bigoted, domineering, and violent. From the early to mid-20th century, the first generations of Zionist terrorists didn’t only kill Palestinians and Muslims but also anyone who opposed or wouldn’t comply with their demands: British, Swedish, Christians, and other Jews. Zionism literally emerged out of fascism, specifically allied with, modeled on, and shaped by Italian fascism. Benito Mussolini praised the founder of Zionism as a fascist and Israeli naval cadets trained in fascist Italy, prior to Italy allying with the Nazis and so purging Jews from their society.

No moral, rational, informed, and intelligent person could deny that Zionist Israel is settler colonialism and apartheid statism, that it has a long-term project of ethnic cleansing that has turned into outright genocide, the latter in the technical sense of eliminating a people along with their autonomy, culture, and collective identity. It’s not only the mass killing but razing villages, removing people from their land, and separating children from their families — the kind of actions, for example, taken against Native Americans over the centuries. Numerous international humanitarian and legal organizations have concluded that Israel is committing crimes against humanity, specifically genocide. That debate is long over.

The problem is the ability to change one’s mind is specifically a trait of liberal-mindedness. So, anyone who lacks this trait or has it debilitated won’t be able to easily and effectively take in new info, consider new views, and come to new conclusions, much less have the motivation to actively seek out challenging knowledge and critically think about it. Rather than being open, they’re closed off. Rather than empathy, understanding, and compassion, they retreat into anxiety, fear, and judgment. This is why speaking truth can feel so impotent and why alt-facts have come to dominate.

Most of us in the West begin in a state of ignorance about the history, operations, and evidence of Zionism and the state of Israel; as most of us are ignorant about nearly anything of grand importance. If you passively listen to corporate MSM, you will mindlessly internalize anti-Palestinian and anti-Islamic bigotry. And the education system — public and private, primary and higher — is rarely, if ever, going to even suggest there is another way of understanding such geopolitics. It takes active effort to get beyond that hegemonic Western bia within legacy media and other powerful institutions. One has to have a strong motivation to inform oneself. It requires a lot of time and effort with one’s only reward being despair at the state of the world.

Anti-Zionism, along with anti-authoritarian and pro-liberation views more generally, are purged not only from legacy news media but also corporate entertainment media, major universities, etc. Worsening in recent years, it’s been systematic censorship, silencing, shadowbanning, demonetizing, deplatforming, blacklisting, and blackballing. We are in a new McCarthyist era, but few yet fully realize how bad it’s gotten. I personally know Jewish professors who lost their jobs because, when asked, admitted they didn’t support the Israeli state and didn’t agree with its actions. Ironically, these Jews were attacked and purged by Jewish organizations that pressure universities. This is real antisemitism, as Judaism is co-opted by Machiavellians.

That is combined with overt Israeli propaganda and lobbying, far from limited to AIPAC. Israeli interests have been buying up media (Paramount, CBS, TikTok, etc), funding the indoctrination of journalists, using government grants to embed biases in ChatGPT, and on and on. After a Palestinian journalist was hunted down and assassinated by the IDF (like hundreds of other Palestinian journalists), Meta erased his entire social media account and so destroyed all the evidence of the genocide he had documented. As another journalist put it, this is a death upon death. It’s not enough merely to physically kill the individual but also all indicators that he once existed. It’s reminiscent of Stalinism, if such totalizing control is harder to achieve today.

Yet even with extensive censorship and systemic biases, more than enough information can easily be found online, but only if one wants to find it. I was in the middle of writing a detailed essay on Zionist Israel that would’ve been dozens of pages long. I had made specific claims, cited references, shared quotes, offered analysis, and put it all in historical and geopolitical context. But after spending two weeks of non-stop work on it, I realized that it was pointless and dissatisfying. The challenge we face is not a lack of info, rather a lack of people willing to seek out and acknowledge the damning truth that is undeniable, irrefutable, and overwhelming. There is no way to make people see what they don’t want to see, even when it’s out in the open. There is no way to change minds with facts when opinions weren’t shaped by facts in the first place.

It goes beyond just the info in general, though. It’s a massive amount of evidence to consider and so it’s overwhelming. Thousands of academic articles, scholarly books, and investigative journalist pieces have proliferated. One could spend a lifetime studying it and never reach the end of it. Even to begin to grasp some small corner of it requires immense levels of liberal-minded cognitive complexity, so as to make sense of it as a single phenomenon that involves generations of leadership, organizations, institutions, systems, networks, and operations not only in Israel but in multiple countries and empires. One needs to know at least the outlines of more than a century of history.

But it also requires significant cognitive empathy, psychological insight, sociological critique, etc to grasp the mechanisms, processes, and results of trauma, victimization cycle, right-wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, dark personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy, sadism), regality culture (Agner Fog), and some of the other facets already mentioned. Beyond ‘openness to experience’ and related ‘intellect’ (FFM), there is also ‘honesty-humility’ (HEXACO). With this knowledge, the observed patterns can be understood as typical and predictable; the basis of why history repeats, from Nazi Holocaust to Zionist genocide.

Only from there could one begin to contemplate the larger implications. As Zionism is a form of fascism, it’s important to understand that it is antisemitic as well, even as it weaponizes antisemitism by projecting it onto others. Plenty of anti-Zionist Jews, including Rabbis, have already explained Zionist antisemitism, as well as how Zionists falsely co-opted Jewish identity as based on a betrayal of Jewish tradition and a contradiction of scripture. If you want to know about all that, I’ll leave it to you to research it for yourself, as such info is easy to find.

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What is the Zionist endgame?

All of that is simply an issue of the facts, if requiring probing inquiry, meaningful analysis, and thoughtful consideration. Another level of the topic, though, gets into more nebulous territory. Besides a general understanding of why history repeats (i.e., why the survivors of Holocaust and their descendants would commit genocide against others), there is the difficulty of figuring out the game being played by the Zionist and Israeli leadership. What is it they hope to accomplish? And why are they willing to go so far, to exact such a horrific cost, not only to Palestinians but also to Israelis?

We live at a time when the ruling elite seem suicidally self-destructive, if the saddest part is how willing they are to sacrifice others. Donald Trump could care less if his policies and actions harmed, oppressed, and killed millions of Americans, including his own MAGA supporters. Likewise, Vladimir Putin has no more concern for the Russian people, with total disregard to using over a million as cannon fodder. These tyrants simply want to rule at all costs, even if it means they destroy the countries they rule over. In their dark personalities (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy, and sadism), nothing else matters besides their own power-mongering, hence it being irrelevant what might be the long-term consequences after their gone.

That is what one is forced to consider about Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel. He is as deranged and dangerous as Putin, in his endless homicidal rage. But it’s not only that he is willing to enforce mass oppression, terror, suffering, and death on non-Jews and non-Israelis. For one, Israeli prisons are also filled with Israeli Jews who have protested this political evil and these crimes against humanity. Furthermore, he is fomenting and exacerbating international conflict and destroying what’s left of Western support of Israel, as public opinion — including that of American Jews — turns against Zionism. Netanyahu seems to be intentionally isolating Israel, fomenting antisemitism, and inciting conflict.

This is setting Israel up for eventual disaster. But in conflating all Judaism with Zionism, and in conflating all anti-Zionism with antisemitism, the inevitable result will be increased antisemitism toward all Jews, even those non-Israeli Jews who are innocent and have nothing to do with Zionism at all. These Zionists, by maliciously and dishonestly attacking all opponents of Zionist genocide as antisemites, are making claims of antisemitism near meaningless. It’s a classic example of the boy who cried wolf. Worse still, this weaponization of antisemitism even against other Jews is itself antisemitic. The Zionists themselves are spreading antisemitism.

It’s not only a general hatred and bigotry, as a cynical ploy, that is being ginned up in all directions. Without a doubt, such authoritarians do love to create division and conflict, groupthink and tribalism. The worst of it, though, is that this will further isolate Israel, which will weaken its position and so set it up to being attacked. Eventually, even Israel’s allies will turn away or simply drop their support, possibly even join the opposition. The thing is Israel is the last colony of the British Empire and now a client state of the American Empire. It never would of risen to power nor stayed in power this long without the wealth and weaponry provided through Western imperialism. The moment it’s enemies sense vulnerability, Israel could be annihilated from the face of the earth.

Yet I doubt Netanyahu even cares. He is a standard dark personality playing power games. He isn’t defending Israel and Israelis, rather promoting himself simply to see what he can get away with. But if he can’t be in power of Israel, it matters not in his mind what happens to others, Jewish or otherwise. Like Putin, Netanyahu knows that the moment he loses political authority and control he is doomed. If he won’t likely be assassinated as surely would happen to Putin, nonetheless Netanyahu realizes that if he ever faced justice he’d likely end up in prison. His remaining the leader of Israel is the only thing protecting him from prosecution.

That is what’s sad about ‘good liberals’ like my former friend and like many politicians supposedly on the left, such as Bernie Sanders and many others (Anti-Zionism, Like Anti-Fascism, is the Dividing Line of Our Age; & “Left Wing” Zionism: How to Sell an Ethnostate). There is no such thing as a liberal Zionist, any more than there ever has been a liberal imperialist, a liberal fascist, or a liberal Klansman. No doubt, there were self-identified liberal Nazis who tried to emphasize the good aspects of Nazi ideology and policy: growing the economy, rebuilding infrastructure, improving worker conditions, funding scientific research, etc. This isn’t actual liberalism, no matter stated good intentions.

In the end, Nazism was inseparable from the horrors of the Holocaust, as Zionism is inseparable from the ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide. Zionism is inherently illiberal and inegalitarian, inherently racist and supremacist. There is no way an ethnonationalist state can be a democracy of any sort. Democracy requires universal and equal rights for all — all races, all ethnicities, all religious affiliations, all classes, all genders, etc — within the territory of a particular geographic population. Anyone on the broad left, to remain true to the core principles of leftism, is forced to completely oppose Zionism.

The End of the Age of the Masses

Fears of mass media and the masses

There were warnings about mass media more than a century ago, having gained traction in public debate during the inter-war period. By 1922, Walter Lipmann had already highlighted radio before it yet had much commercial reach. As a state propagandist for the U.S. government, he had been involved in manipulating public opinion heading into the First World War (and would again work as a propagandist during the Second World War). That gave him a dour view of an aspiring democratic citizenry.

As he saw it, mass media put “pictures in our head” that formed into what he called ‘stereotypes’, resulting in the “manufacturing of consent.” Hence, public opinion was shaped by ‘pseudo-­environments’, a term similar to what Daniel Boorstin would later coin as ‘pseudo-events’ (The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-events in America).

Preceding radio, there was already mass media. But unlike newspapers, radio was a spoken voice that could be passively listened to while relaxing in one’s living room or anywhere else.

Such a voice beams directly into the intimate, personal space of the home; thus bypassing our normal psychological and intellectual defenses. The voice would go on speaking with authority as we napped, would play in the background as we worked, would ride along with us in our vehicles, and generally was a regular part of everyday life. If listening to the same newscaster or talk show host every day, the broadcasted voice would become ever present company, potentially as familiar as one’s own inner voice, with the opinions spoken eliding into one’s own thoughts as if there were no gap at all.

That is what Lipmann foresaw and he was prescient, if also naive at times, such as praising Adolf Hitler the first time he heard him speak. Though fearing totalitarianism, it didn’t follow he necessarily recognized it right away when it finally arrived.

As a public intellectual, a reputable expert, and a political operative, Lipmann advocated and enacted technocratic paternalism (Public Opinion, 1922; & The Phantom Public, 1927). Of the so-called liberal class, he was an aspiring natural aristocrat or philosopher king, what has been labeled the liberal elite, a limousine liberal, etc. In Tom Arnold-Forster’s biography of Lipmann, he indicates the internal conflict with phrases such as ‘liberal imperialism’ and ‘a conservative liberal grandee’ (Walter Lippmann: An Intellectual Biography).

In correctly discerning the weakness, failures, and problems of democracy, his sad and uninspiring solution was to deny democratic self-governance to the people. As ‘mass man’ shaped by mass media, the public was not to be trusted with civic engagement and political involvement. Ironically, he agreed with totalitarians on this issue.

Lipmann argued that, “representative government, either in what is ordinarily called politics, or in industry, cannot be worked successfully, no matter what the basis of election, unless there is an independent, expert organization for making the unseen facts intelligible to those who have to make the decisions.” What then makes the intellectual elite representative when they can’t be democratically held accountable by the citizenry? We’re simply to trust them because, well, they claim to know better than us.

But isn’t that what every ruling elite that ever has existed has claimed in rationalizing disenfranchisement? Hasn’t that always ended in corruption and oppression?

“Lippmann fails spectacularly,” concludes Sean Illing, “and he fails because his solution to the problems of democracy is to abandon everything that makes democracy worthwhile. He couldn’t figure out how to intelligently guide public opinion, so he sought to transcend it altogether by creating a ‘bureau of experts’ that would decide public policy on behalf of the public. But that isn’t a democracy at all; it’s a technocracy at best, an oligarchy at worst” (Intellectuals have said democracy is failing for a century. They were wrong.). As a contemporary critic of Lipmann’s pessimism, John Dewey countered that, “No government by experts in which the masses do not have the chance to inform the experts as to their needs can be anything but an oligarchy managed in the interests of the few.”

Lipmann disavowed all idealism, forever relenting to cynical realpolitik (Walter Lipmann, The Basic Problem of Democracy). One can’t be principled if one doesn’t believe in resolute principles.

Accordingly, a constrained liberalism is only to be allowed when it’s convenient, apparently with the intellectual and ruling elites determining when that is the case. Part of the problem is that he defines his (pseudo-)liberalism according to liberty (as mere lack of overt oppression), not freedom (both negative and positive freedom). In the classical sense, liberty mainly refers the state of not being enslaved in a slave-based society, whereas freedom goes beyond that in requiring one to be a member of a close-knit community, as part of a self-governing people with equal standing and equally protected rights (Liberty, Freedom, and Fairness; Cultural Freedom, Legal Liberty; Libertarian Authoritarianism).

Fundamentally, freedom indicates the highest level of a culture of trust, more akin to Dewey’s egalitarian faith in public good. But it also refers to a specific mentality that is relational, rather than enclosed and enforced (Westworld, Scripts, and Freedom). It can’t be understood in power disparity and dominance hierarchy, and so a self-avowed elitist would be blind to it.

As a literary elite, Lipmann thinks of ideological principles as abstract ideals detached from concrete reality, which leaves any proposed liberal values as ghosts haunting the collective psyche.

So, in spite of claiming to speak on behalf of liberalism, he consistently opposed the most liberal policies and politicians of his own era, repeatedly veering toward outright anti-liberalism. He was one of those ‘liberals’ who supported liberalism for me but not for thee; like ‘libertarians’ who only want liberty as a privilege of the few; and like ‘communists’ who support an elite control of the means of production rather than by the workers themselves.

Are such people genuinely liberals, libertarians, and communists? Or are they poseurs, hypocrites, and reactionaries? How does one supposedly represent and defend an ideology by undermining and compromising it or, worse still, attacking it?

That is a recipe for decline and disaster.

“Arnold-Forster tosses off the term ‘bathetic’ liberalism, one that I’ve spent a lot of time trying to figure out. I think what he means is that the liberalism that Lippmann stood for, supposedly based on democratic principles but apt to bend or discard them as the circumstances dictated, sufficed as an ideology for decades, especially in the consensus postwar period, but in the post-Vietnam period had lost its way and become increasingly sad and incoherent” (Gerald Howard, The Most Public Intellectual).

That is how the United States went from Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, of which Lipmann opposed (in favor of “endorsing Alf Landon, an oilman and the Republican governor of Kansas, for president”~Howard), to the present DNC elite who are ever ready to sell out to the biggest monied interests that seek to bribe them. Lipmann’s vision of a pseudo-liberal bureau of experts resulted in an Establishment, along with a shadow network and deep state, that has become near impossible to dislodge (A Deep Dive Into the Deep State).

We are now ruled by self-styled ‘experts’.

* * * * *

The creation of the modern mass society

The idea and perception of a ‘mass’ wasn’t a recent invention, though.

By early modernity, the elite were dismantling feudalism and all that went with it. They came to worry about the old communal self of an aggregate social order, specifically becoming a perceived crisis in the context of rising mass urbanization during the 18th century. It wasn’t amenable to capitalism with its demands of atomistic individualism or else the pretense of it (Enclosure of the Mind). But the conflict wasn’t new. The feudal identity of serfs had allowed for powerful organizing as early as the 14th century peasants revolts and, again, with the English Civil War.

Long before the early modern revolutionary period, the elite were well on their way to razing the feudal villages so as to enclose the commons as privatized land. This left the landless peasants who, in being crowded into cities, were becoming an unruly mob, at least in the mind of those who ruled. In cities like London, the pre-revolutionary working class were forming protest movements and labor organizations, as well as erupting in food riots. The feared ‘mass’ was taking shape in how we presently understand it.

Collectivism and individualism were born as twins (The Link Between Individualism and Collectivism). They are part of the same overarching meta-narrative, as a product of dualistic thinking. But let’s keep the focus on the mass side of the equation.

In some ways, one could argue for a much older origin or rather an earlier precursor. The possibility of a large-scale group identity was made possible by increased literacy, hence the literary mind and literary culture. What literacy creates is abstract thought and hence abstract categories. It wasn’t until the Axial Age, when literacy was spreading as a major influence, that there arose such abstractions as a singular humanity (often using kinship terms: brotherhood of man, children of God, etc) within a singular universe (i.e., cosmos); as opposed to separate people who belonged to separate worlds under the rule of separate gods who created and enforced separate divine orders.

The older tribalistic identity was communal, probably often dividualistic, not collective. The same was mostly true in early feudalism that, after the fall of Rome, had largely resurrected the archaic self. But there was already that emerging sense of conflict between proto-collectivism and proto-individualism by the time of the Classical Period in Athens. One can even more strongly sense the notion of the masses with the impoverished and enslaved who were crowded into the first mega-cities like Rome, sometimes erupting into mass forms of revolt like the Servile Wars, the most famous being the Third Servile War led by Spartacus.

Obviously, the feared mass, often portrayed as ‘mobocracy’ today, didn’t suddenly appear out of nowhere in recent centuries. But rather than literacy in general, Jeff Jarvis marks out another dividing line (The Gutenberg Parenthesis).

He points out that the first mass produced product was made possible with the moveable type printing press. Only then could a singular message be spread quickly across large populations, even internationally with colonial trade networks. That meant the capacity of shaping mass opinion (as well as the forming of a generational identity among a national or international peer cohort, along with other ways of dividing people up into mass demographics; e.g., white working class). But also it was the transitioning beyond the conversational tone of much prior writing when a writer’s main audience was typically that of their immediate peers.

So, writers in the early age of print weren’t entirely free of the lingering oral culture. Much of what they wrote was shaped by a still functional orality, including public speeches, seminars, and debates; plus, conversations in coffee and tea houses. Increasingly, with the growing extent of printed material, the gap between writer and reader became a gulf, with the relationship going in one direction only. While in the past many readers were also writers, mass literacy formed a literate population that consisted of mere consumers of the writings of others.

That was demonstrated in the colonial period. Among American colonists, though literacy was common, almost all the reading material was written and published in England or other European countries (Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death). Even by the time of the American Revolution, it took a writer born and educated (and trained in debate) in England, Thomas Paine, to light a fire in the American public mind.

Within colonial empires, that larger readership is the origin proper of our mass society today. “The difference between the nineteenth-century mob and the twentieth-century mass is literacy,” wrote John Carey (quoted by Jarvis). “For the first time, a huge literate public had come into being.” It wasn’t only that, following the inspiration of the Protestant Reformation, public education promoted general literacy. The first mass media in how we think of it would’ve been the newspaper, beginning to take hold by the 17th century and becoming a major social force as early as the 18th century.

Much radical and revolutionary writings were published in newspapers. In the next century, someone like Abraham Lincoln had his ideology and worldview shaped by a habit of reading numerous newspapers, which at the time included writings of a high intellectual quality. The leading national Republican newspaper employed Karl Marx as a foreign correspondent. So, an international mass identity was fully formed with the corresponding partisan politics. The Red Republicans, as they were called, were held together by an inclusive meta-ideology made possible by a shared media culture.

In the 1600s and 1700s, that likewise had been more important than ‘high’ literature, partly because newspapers could be printed on cheap paper, at a time when quality paper was scarce in the colonies. During the American Revolution, much public knowledge and public debate was spread through newspapers. It allowed for a media environment that was local and autonomous, especially as the British government hadn’t thought to impose media restrictions on the colonies as they did back in England.

That shift to an American printing tradition was supercharged in the following generations. To put real force behind this change, the development of industrialized machines allowed for even greater mass printing.

Not only could enough newspapers be printed at a fast pace for a national readership but there was simultaneously the first mass transportation of trains to rapidly deliver those newspapers across an entire country and beyond; hence, the kinds of reading material made available to Lincoln. Plus, there were growing concentrations of urban populations that made larger markets with greater profits that could fund these wide-reaching publications, while also creating the conditions of public consciousness because of close proximity in cities.

That set the stage for the European revolutions of 1848 and the American Civil War, both being part of a collective sense of change in the Western world (e.g., many Civil War soldiers were immigrants, including Forty-eighters). Without mass publications, there couldn’t easily happen mass organizing and the development of mass identities of all sorts: national, secessionist, revolutionary, class, labor, generational, etc. The telegraph, in addition, created instantaneous spread of information that could be printed by any newspaper, along with the national syndication of columnists and such.

For the first time, a vast population could in real-time follow the same news and views, with a compelling sense of belonging to the same shared world. The masses were becoming ever more massive.

* * * * *

What kind of mass and to whose benefit?

This all sounds wonderful as it built the society we now know. Without this takeover of print, there wouldn’t be mass literacy and mass education, and hence no possibility of mass democratic citizenry based on a common humanity demanding universal and equitable rights, protections, processes, and systems. The modern West wouldn’t have come into existence, nor a global humanity.

Those like Neil Postman and Eric McLuhan (Marshall McLuhan’s son) have nostalgically opined over the end of a dominant literacy with the mentality and culture that once was taken for granted. Interestingly, Postman traces back the beginning of the end to the invention of photography that, by the the late 1800s, was having a major impact as the image gained prominence in newspapers and advertising, setting us down the path toward what Walter J. Ong has called secondary orality.

From Amusing Ourselves to Death, Postman writes:

“That the image and the word have different functions, work at different levels of abstraction, and require different modes of response will not come as a new idea to anyone. Painting is at least three times as old as writing, and the place of imagery in the repertoire of communication instruments was quite well understood in the nineteenth century. What was new in the mid-nineteenth century was the sudden and massive intrusion of the photograph and other iconographs into the symbolic environment. This event is what Daniel Boorstin in his pioneering book The Image calls “the graphic revolution.” By this phrase, Boorstin means to call attention to the fierce assault on language made by forms of mechanically reproduced imagery that spread unchecked throughout American culture—photographs, prints, posters, drawings, advertisements. I choose the word “assault” deliberately here, to amplify the point implied in Boorstin’s “graphic revolution.” The new imagery, with photography at its forefront, did not merely function as a supplement to language, but bid to replace it as our dominant means for construing, understanding, and testing reality. What Boorstin implies about the graphic revolution, I wish to make explicit here: The new focus on the image undermined traditional definitions of information, of news, and, to a large extent, of reality itself. First in billboards, posters, and advertisements, and later in such “news” magazines and papers as Life, Look, the New York Daily Mirror and Daily News, the picture forced exposition into the background, and in some instances obliterated it altogether. By the end of the nineteenth century, advertisers and newspapermen had discovered that a picture was not only worth a thousand words, but, where sales were concerned, was better. For countless Americans, seeing, not reading, became the basis for believing.”

This era, from the 1800s onward, was the rising of mass production, mass markets, mass culture, mass society, and mass media — the age of ‘Mass Man’ (e.g., organized labor). So, contrary to Jarvis’ diatribe against mass literacy, Postman is putting the blame on the image toppling the written word.

Even so, while Postman worries about what is being lost, he admits to what was earlier lost as well: “Typography fostered the modern idea of individuality, but it destroyed the medieval sense of community and integration. Typography created prose but made poetry into an exotic and elitist form of expression. Typography made modern science possible but transformed religious sensibility into mere superstition. Typography assisted in the growth of the nation-state but thereby made patriotism into a sordid if not lethal emotion.”

That is the nature of all change. The opening to new possibilities occludes much of what came before, again and again with each new media innovation, going back millennia. Humanity is transformed in a manner that always coincides with social destabilization, civil unrest, and moral panic. But Postman argues that the past two centuries of new media is far more tumultuous and, to his mind, concerning.

As for Eric McLuhan, he comes from a Catholic position of traditionalism. He has a bias, though, in thinking of his faith in the context of the Counter-Reformation where the Vatican embraced literacy and, in following the example of Protestants, promoted education for all. That is to say he has a modern bias of WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, & Democratic; or semi-Democratic).

Prior to that, most Catholics had been illiterate and European society had a largely oral culture. That might partly explain what, specifically, was so different in the early medieval period.

Following the fall of the Roman Empire, a highly literate elite had declined in their once central role. That was the first period of secondary orality where, though literacy was still established in the Church, the literacy of the clergy was translated back through the spoken word. Most Europeans of that time only knew the Bible, as with news and official proclamations, through hearing it given voice in the public sphere; quite a different experience to it being quietly read in the privacy of one’s own home and mind.

This meant a medieval resurgence of the archaic mind and communal experience, as described by Barbara Ehrenreich in Dancing in the Streets (Christians Dancing). It’s akin to what has been described by so many others (E.R. Dodds, Bruno Snell, Julian Jaynes, Eric Havelock, Walter Ong, James Kugel, etc).

Hence, our present secondary orality, though shocking in its overturning of the literary norms of a literary culture, is not without precedent. The last of the old Roman elite experienced such a rupture to a far greater degree with book bans, sometimes burnings, and the of the violent elimination of the learned literati (e.g., the 415 AD mob murder of Hypatia in Alexandria). If Trumpian censorship and tech oligarchical media control is bad enough, let’s hope we don’t descend to anything close to what brought on by the so-called Dark Ages in Western Europe.

On the other hand, to maintain balance, a literary elite is not necessarily a great thing considering how oppressive was the Roman Empire. Study of human remains shows that the average health of the peasants and serfs improved in a return to village life and a rural diet. The highly respected literary output of the Roman elite came at tremendous cost of oppression, impoverishment, starvation, disease, and suffering.

Indeed, the modern return of a literary elite initially corresponded to a return of brutally violent imperialism. For all the benefits that literacy brought, there has been a dark side as well.

This is where we might give Jarvis some credit. He emphasizes the costs and consequences. For all the idealism the literary mind brings with its abstract thought, it has rarely been applied equally, fairly, and justly. Think of the literate elite of the American Revolution who so often spoke of liberty for themselves while being slaveholders or else profiting from the slave trade. The genuinely principled like the working class Thomas Paine, while inspiring as a democrat and abolitionist, were the exception among an emergent liberal class.

To emphasize this point, the revolutionary soldiers who took to heart that beautiful idealism were crushed by the elites once the new country was established (e.g., President George Washington’s authoritarian crackdown of Shays’ Rebellion — a tax revolt — that also motivated the establishment of the class-and-slave-based Constitution). If the Declaration of Independence theoretically upheld The People as justification, it wasn’t long before the common man was to be treated as a dangerous mob. After the Constitution was passed and signed, only 3-8% of Americans had a right to vote, which was less than under British rule and so taxation was even less representative.

All the talk of individualism only applied to the privileged elite. Early on, that was limited to rich and landed white men. These were the highly educated and well read ‘natural aristocracy’ or ‘enlightened aristocracy’, at a time when universities prohibited anyone other than the elite. Individualism is socially constructed, at least partly, through literacy and a literary culture. These were the people who had a lot of liberty and leisure time to sit around reading, discussing ideas, and writing.

Everyone else was part of the voiceless and powerless mass.

* * * * *

Global village and secondary orality

This only got worse with ever growing concentration of wealth and centralization of power. It was pushed toward a breaking point in the Gilded Age, finally to be pushed over the edge with the Great Depression. This left many lost souls ground down by the gears of mass industrialized society.

Ironically, it was this disenfranchisement of the majority that forced them into a mass status, since they weren’t given the protected rights of individuals and so not allowed to act freely as individuals. This meant the only way they had to fight back against systemic and institutional power was by organizing among themselves, in their communities and workplaces, as well as increasingly across the country during the Populist Era.

The height of mass society, in the United States, was the 1950s when there was largest labor union membership in history. But the early 20th century showed the other face of mass society with the rise of the Ku Klux Klan, fascism, and such. To be forced into mass humanity is not a happy state.

Summarizing the view of Hannah Arendt, Jarvis explains that, “Loneliness is the root of the mass and the cause of totalitarianism.” Under the oppressive and desperate conditions of that era (with high rates of poverty, ghettoization, overwork, malnutrition, and disease), one was not only made an anonymous cog in the machine but also isolated by the social breakdown of traditional communities and loss of kin networks, with the impersonal anonymity of city life taking over. One’s identity was forced into the collective, lost in the mass.

We presently live in the aftermath of that mass catastrophe. Society has never fully recovered.

This is where Jarvis’ analysis seems a bit confused, inconsistent, or somehow off. He places the blame solely on the dominance of the printed word, the period beginning with the invention of the moveable type printing press and now in the process of ending. This is the the Gutenberg Parenthesis that, according to him, bookends all things mass.

He sees hope in the disintegration of the mass and, with the internet, its obliteration. He dreams of a true individualism that could take its place.

As he sees it, the internet allows us to have our own voices, to speak for ourselves. This has been the optimistic or outright utopian vision of what would be made possible by social media, the blogosphere, and video platforms. Rather than being dependent on a literary elite of journalists, public intellectuals, and such, there would arise lively public debate that would encourage the formation of a democratic citizenry in practice, spilling over into the real world.

Jarvis was writing that in 2023, maybe with the confidence that the brief Trumpian era had ended and Democrats were back in power. But just a year later in 2024 with Trump’s third presidential campaign, he wrote The Web We Weave and his mood had grown more critical, if still clinging to hope. A darkness was creeping into his voice, especially in reference to tech oligarchs like Elon Musk.

Here is what he had overlooked and maybe still doesn’t recognize.

Though familiar with both Marshall McLuhan and Walter Ong, he doesn’t seem to appreciate their predictions about the end of a literary age, that of an emerging tribalistic global village and agonistic secondary orality. The end of mass humanity won’t mean clearing the way toward individualism. The return of the spoken word and image, instead, would be neither collective nor individualistic.

He is correct that the mass is a fiction, a myth. What he doesn’t grasp is the same applies to the individual. These are socially constructed identities, if some fictions are more useful than others.

For most of human existence, the fundamental unit of humanity was the community (e.g., tribal dividualism). In our society being splintered by new media, aspects of such communalism are returning. Rather than falling back on egoic consciousness, people are increasingly identifying with specific groups: family, close friends, internet forums, etc. This is why identity politics is on the rise, but it’s also why we’re seeing an attraction back toward organized labor and third parties. More are looking for smaller units of organization.

That creates a much more unpredictable scenario. That kind of identity has never operated on the large scale. We might see balkanization and decentralization all across society, involving a return the local and interpersonal. Where that leads is anyone’s guess.

Of the thinkers discussed, they have or had diverse and sometimes divergent views. They’ve been concerned about different kinds of media and saw various possible outcomes, with a mix of optimism, pessimism, and uncertainty. But what all agreed upon is a a vast transformation is underway and a central cause to it is the change in media technology and systems, media mentalities and cultures. On the other side of it, an entirely new society will emerge.

This makes for unpredictability, as was the case the last time we transitioned from a literary culture to secondary orality. It would’ve been near impossible for an educated and literate citizen of Rome, while Christianity was rising to power in the empire, to imagine the post-Roman and Vatican-ruled feudalism that would take hold over in the following centuries. Yet in hindsight, we moderns easily see the theocratic and oppressive, regressive and destructive impulses in what was the increasingly fundamentalist, literalist, and theocratic Christianity by the late Roman Empire.

On the other side of the Middle Ages, the future was equally unknown as the West headed back into a literary culture. The new literary elite that came into power had to look back more than a millennia to get a sense of what a literary-based Western civilization might look like. But of course, that next time it was to be entirely different. There was a similarity, though, in what was required to once again eliminate the traces of orality.

* * * * *

The creation and destruction of mass identities

Such transitions are never easy and simple, quick and straightforward.

During the Axial Ages, the Jewish Tanakh records what it took for the literate priestly class to establish their dominance hierarchy in forcing the people into compliance. Similar to bans on worshipping at pagan high places, the last of the oral-based voice-hearers (i.e., bicameral mentality) were repeatedly rounded up to be executed. The Jewish scripture even commanded — and still commands, if one is a literalist — parents to kill their children if they claim to hear divine or supernatural voices (Literalist Fundamentalism Requires Murdering Children).

The age of oracles and prophets was then coming to an end and quite violently. It’s not merely that God or the gods — along with angels, demons, and daimons — had gone silent but were silenced. The Living Word was made into an abstract dogma of a literary document, not to be taken seriously as an actual voice to be heard… or else.

The wild and unruly divine was safely captured, contained, and controlled in the official holy texts to be presided over by the literate priesthood, and that was to be the end of it. The written word, as frozen utterance, was to command all authority from then on. The collective psyche, once as dynamic as the tides and waves of the ocean, had become as rigid as an ice shelf in the far north.

The situation, on one level, was less extreme in the late Middle Ages. Though orality had made a partial come back, it was only in secondary form. The full archaic orality was no longer around, and so literacy had retained a respected position, if mostly among scribal monks and the clergy. Yet the aspiring literati of modernity had much grander ambitions. They weren’t content to merely rule as a literary elite for they wanted to overturn all of Western civilization. With the moveable type printing press, their aspirations were not unrealistic, as would be proven.

This time, they hoped to finally and fully decimate every last trace of oral culture and mentality. Over centuries, finally culminating in this last period of the eponymous Gutenberg Parenthesis, mass literacy was finally achieved, not only in the West but across most of the world. At present, for those 15 years old and above, 87% of the global population is literate; an achievement that took millennia. The very memory of oral culture has been almost entirely erased, other than some isolated pockets.

Plato would be proud of orality’s final defeat. Or is it really and fully gone?

With internet and smart phones, reading ability is crashing. An entire younger generation struggles to read anything beyond texting and tweets. Much of communication now is no longer even words, instead images like emoticons and GIFs, with the coined words losing their literary coherence such as abbreviations and acronyms. Certainly, grammar, punctuation, and recursion has gone by the wayside.

This is secondary orality. It’s not just the form and style, as it goes deep into the psyche.

Communication becomes increasingly short and blunt, quippy and combative, elusive and playful, emotional and reactive, declarative and evocative. All extensive complexity of long, convoluted descriptions and explanations is excluded, sacrificed for the sake of a punchy immediacy. The structure and length of sentences and paragraphs is simplified down to singular statements, sometimes a single word.

Attention span accordingly shrinks (Johann Hari, Stolen Focus; Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation; Marc Berman, Nature and the Mind; etc). Long-form text loses its audience and prominence. Gone are the days when writers, as academics and public intellectuals, were the premier celebrities and social influencers, sometimes acting as political insiders who held great sway.

The last time around, secondary orality came as a result of the Roman collapse and loss of a ruling literary elite. But presently, the American Empire remains standing as its rapidly hollowed out by an elite of tech oligarchs (e.g., Elon Musk) and media personalities (e.g., Donald Trump) who have full-on sought its destruction, for whatever reason. It’s closer to how the early modern aristocracy and propertied class intentionally and systematically dismantled the entire feudal order to create something new (Enclosure of the Mind).

In that previous period, they achieved their end in constructing privatized capitalism, eventually becoming a geopolitical social order. But the elite right now just seem lost in mad fantasies that never could be made real.

That said, maybe we shouldn’t judge them too quickly. It’s hard to know what will or will not come in the following age of potential post-literacy, semi-literacy, mixed-literacy, or whatever it portends. This barely literate ruling elite, at the helm of the American Empire, is only now gaining control in enforcing whatever it is they have in mind. We’ll have to wait to see the results.

One has good reason to fear what might follow. The destruction of medieval communalism was harsh. As an example, to create vast nation-states and colonial empires, large standing armies were needed and that meant drafting young men against their will. People were pulled out of their villages and separated from their kin networks, in a process of mass cultural genocide where soldiers were banned from singing the songs of their homelands. All of this was done to create the new mass identities of nation-states and their citizenries.

This led to a disease that was called ‘nostalgia’ where these isolated individuals forced into an mass military would fall into despair, lose appetite, and sometimes wither away (The Disease of Nostalgia). To intervene and prevent it from spreading, the French military punished such people by burying them alive. So, the choice was to submit, fall in line, and act like a national citizen or be horrifically killed as an example and a warning.

But now we’re going the other way. The mass is dissolving back down to smaller groupings. The problem is there is no traditional communalism to fall back on, no living memory of a functional oral culture. So, what is resulting feels like mere chaos and conflict, feels like the threat of collapse.

Creating a mass can and must be done in a controlled manner, as it’s a difficult process requiring immense resources, effort, and time. That isn’t true in destroying the mass, the collectivity. And it won’t be just a change in identity. The mass was the foundation of the modern nation-state, upon which was further built an international order. The problem is we lack any other larger, coherent identity to replace what is being lost, and the elite causing the havoc seem to have no clue what they’re doing or what will happen when they achieve this end.

As an outside observer down here in the trenches, it doesn’t appear that anyone is at the wheel or at least no one who is sane.

* * * * *

A new mediated world will form

The last age of secondary orality gave us feudalism. And those like the tech broligarchy want to bring on technofeudalism, by way of Curtis Yarvin‘s proposed Butterfly Revolution.

Maybe they’re purposely destroying a literate society for that purpose. It’s hard to say. But I doubt they’ve thought that far. They don’t seem intelligent and clever enough to grasp such intellectual complexities that require a broad grasp of history, ideological systems, and the social sciences. They’re the descendants and the dregs of a once thriving, now dying, literary class who have thrown aside even the pretense of noblesse oblige and public good. The new generation of tycoons doesn’t even bother with philanthropy to justify their power and influence.

Rather than the visionary genius of technocrats, their destruction of the old elite order seems like uncouth disregard, cavalier hubris, and ignorant belligerence. Having inherited an empire, they are running it into the ground. They likely don’t even recognize or appreciate what they’re sacrificing and so it’s unlikely a rational calculation balancing costs and benefits. As trust fund babies, most of these oligarchs were simply born into immense wealth and power. They’re bulldozing everything in their way with no sense of the generations and centuries it took to build it all into a global order.

The illiterati don’t understand the soft power wielded by a literary culture. That is how Musk’s DOGE bulldozed USAID without realizing it was a supporting pillar of the American Empire. This new leadership of secondary orality can only grasp blunt tools, and hence the concrete symbol of the ‘DOGE Chainsaw’.

During the height of the literary age of print, politicians and other leaders were expected to be highly educated and widely read as part of the liberal arts tradition with knowledge in numerous fields: history, philosophy, philology, natural sciences, political science, etc. But in a world of capitalist realism and corporate politics, the military-industrial complex and the big tech plutocracy saw no use in it and so, instead, promoted STEM (and business schools*). In its crude reductionism, this destroyed that traditional elite education that maintained a leadership with greater intellectual capacity.

In its place, we’re left with a shallow illiterati (William Deresiewicz, Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life). At ivy league colleges, professors are complaining that even the children of the wealthy and powerful are struggling to read anything beyond short texts. As in primary schools, the education system has mostly given up on requiring students to read full books. Schools are increasingly using the newer media tech, such as tablets.

It seems secondary orality, or whatever we’re dealing with, has escaped popular culture and invaded the education system. And now it’s taking hold in the halls of power. Trump is the height of illiterate leadership, as never before seen in US history.

We are in a literacy decline that is verging on a freefall. All of modern, Western civilization was built on highly advanced literacy, literary culture, and the literate mind. No one knows if it can be sustained without it all, if the new media will be able to offer something equivalent or better. We’re going to find out.

Maybe failure is unavoidable at this point. But to put a positive spin on it, societal devolution is not necessarily a bad thing (Luke Kemp, Goliath’s Curse). Maybe the striving global totalitarianism was always doomed, right from the start. That is the nature of authoritarian dominance in all its forms, specifically at the largest scale. It requires endless expansion, exploitation, and extraction (Agner Fog, Warlike and Peaceful Societies). That isn’t a sustainable model, since the world is finite.

So, maybe the present incompetent fascists or inverted totalitarians are doing us all a favor. They’re forcing us into a new media paradigm that might force us back onto smaller scale identities and organizing. Maybe something better or at least different will emerge from this creative clashing of new and old media. It might not be that literacy is doomed but will be transformed. What seems like a return of the spoken word and image might instead be a merging into something entirely new.

In watching closely what is developing in the younger generations, one does sense that we aren’t merely seeing a repeat of past patterns, if surely there will be resemblances and echoes. The differences this time around, though, are likely to be immense. In any case, mass society is surely coming to an end. Right?

Then again, with a more complex and diverse media system, maybe a hybrid identity will be able to cobble together the remnants, an identity that might still be able to operate at a larger scale but more dynamically. The mass might not be wholly destroyed but transformed, as it takes on elements of aggregate communalism. From thesis to antithesis, there might be a synthesis that won’t be quite like anything that came before.

Assuming that is the case, there is little chance we’ll see it fully form and stabilize in the near future. Troubled times are here and will continue for a good while. In the murk of dissolution, we might at best barely glimpse what is heading our way, what might be aggregating out of the morass. It will be interesting, as the old generations give way to the new. Already, the powers that be are complaining about the up-and-coming youth not playing well in the mass conformity and depersonalization of corporate culture. I’m sure that is true.

But in this simmering conflict, soon to be a boil, it’s not mass corporate culture that will win. To whatever end, the youngest will remake our shared world according to the mediated world that has made them. Society will be forced to adapt, eventually. Or else collapse, which is just another way to adapt.

* * * * *

* Note:

From James Marriot’s The dawn of the post-literate society, there is a related comment by Re:Traction:

“I think you are absolutely correct to see the smartphone as an accelerant and not the cause.

“In Georgetown’s own history of business schools (https://bsi.georgetown.edu/home-page/our-history/), they all but brag about wealthy and powerful people purposely destroying a classical education.

“President of Harvard Charles W. Eliot wrote in The New Education in 1869: “What can I do with my boy? I can afford, and I am glad, to give him the best training to be had. I want to give him a practical education; one that will prepare him, better than I was prepared, to follow my business or any other active calling. The classical schools and the colleges do not offer what I want.”

“With just that one quote above, you have Georgetown celebrating the President of Harvard working to undermine “the classical schools.”

“A century and a half later, with that work, what else would we expect? The smartphone is attractive but manageable if there is a legitimate alternative. An alternative that we, as a society, have been working to strip away from college students. And I don’t know that blaming them is worthwhile.”

Reactionary Mind in Reactionary Times

What is the reactionary mind?

Many people identify the reactionary mind with conservatism or, more generally, right-wing ideology. It tends to be defined by such facets as dominance hierarchy, power disparity, nostalgia, obfuscation, etc; maybe also things like alienation as well. And the overlap with all things right-wing might be largely correct in the most extreme cases, at least in present WEIRD society.

Still, one might note that this reactionary mind is the complete opposite of the traditional mind. The recuperation of traditionalism is a superficial facade, and progressivism or anything else can just as easily be recuperated (more about this further on). Within the reactionary worldview, there is a ‘radical’ impulse to remake the world and then to erase all evidence of what came before — or rather counter-radical that, in reacting to the radical, takes on much of the radical style; in any case, often more destructive of the traditional than any radical.

With constant misdirection, this is how ideological realism operates in the Burkean moral imagination, along with related to what I call symbolic conflation (“Why are you thinking about this?”). Reactionaries are mercurial shapeshifters and so can appear in various guises (Reactionary Revolutionaries, Faceless Men, and God in the Gutter). It’s a socio-ideological version of a personality disorder.

When someone goes reactionary, it’s like a fairy abduction. They look and sound like the person you knew, but they no longer act like them. Something about them seems off, distorted, or deranged. Their psyches are thrown off balance where certain aspects are suppressed and others exaggerated. I’ve personally known people who this has happened to. In some cases, it was the standard pattern of right-wing media remaking a person (Fox effect, cultivation theory) and erasing the memory of who they used to be (kind, tolerant, easygoing, etc) and replacing it with something else (mean world syndrome).

But I’ve also seen people go reactionary just from general overwhelming stress.

It can be quite disturbing when the old personality collapses and shatters with something new forming out of the remnants. In talking to the individual, you keep looking for the person they used to be and you briefly might get in the groove of the kinds of conversations you once had. Yet something is now off. It feels wrong, disturbing. Who they were before wouldn’t respond in the way they do now. Some fundamental piece of them is gone or utterly transformed.

The stress of their life has completely taken over and there is a permanent edginess they carry with them. A wall has been raised that you can’t penetrate, that maybe even they can’t penetrate either. It’s a person who has become so scarred that all that is left of them is defense reaction and survival mode. It’s one of the saddest things to experience, especially when you used to like the person they once were. It requires mourning a loss, even as they remain alive — similar to seeing a loved one slip away into dementia.

One way to think of the reactionary is as a psychological complex. In Jungian terms, a complex is a constellation of emotionally-driven, unconscious ideas and ways of thinking, perceptions and narratives, tendencies and impulses. They’re organized around a common theme or mood. It’s a psychological pattern that hangs together, in how it can get deeply and powerfully entrenched. It locks into place a set of personality traits and behaviors.

Once you’ve identified a complex, then the outward expressions of it can start to make sense. This allows you to sense motivations and predict what follows from them. In being observable across individuals, societies, and times, the reactionary mind could even be considered an archetype. It represents a deeper but common potential in human nature, if exaggerated.

In the following, we won’t attempt a technical analysis, rather just a meandering exploration of its causations and implications in the real world.

How is the reactionary expressed and enacted?

Let’s return to defining the phenomenon in more conventional terms.

In Corey Robin’s theory, the reactionary seems more or less equivalent to social dominance orientation (SDO). But there is also a clear element of low ‘openness to experience’ (FFM), that is to say social conservatism and right-wing* authoritarianism (RWA). As SDOs tend to be authoritarian leaders, RWAs are typical authoritarian followers (see note at end).

When combined, SDO and RWA form what’s called a Double High. These are the people found on the far right, from Adolf Hitler to Steve Bannon. Hence, I’d argue that it’s this mix that most strongly defines the reactionary overall. But admittedly, the most potent aspect seems to be SDO, as it corresponds to dark personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy, sadism) and low ‘honesty-humility’ (HEXACO). On the other hand, the RWA component pushes toward the driven edginess of a true believer. A reactionary wants something to believe in, if they might randomly grasp whatever is available in trying on different beliefs.

More important is the act of believing than exactly what is believed. They have a talent for acting with conviction, acting as if something is true.

Yet SDO and dark personality is where the tricksiness and shiftiness comes from. This is the constant game-playing, manipulations, deceptions, and shit-fuckery. It’s why they’re extremely hard to pin down. And it’s what makes reactionary fantasizing so potent and mesmerizing. They have a way with not only nostalgia but also moral panic, culture war, folk devils, scapegoating, and such. They know how to reach deeply into the psyche and grab it by the balls.

Reactionaries naturally think in simplistic and punchy narratives. That is in contrast to the liberal mind that tends to fall back on abstractions and facts, on principles and ideals, on analysis and argument. Though to give credit where it’s due, if the non-reactionary narratives of liberals may have be less immediate impact, they work their magic over the long term. But reactionaries are more concerned about the here and now. They can be quick on their toes.

Also, this slipperiness is why reactionary rhetoric and narratives are more convenient than fundamental. Consider an observation made of Nazis. A visitor to Germany noted that Nazi propaganda was all over the place. There was no consistency and coherency to it. Everything was tailored to the audience, to what was going on in the world, and to the topic or issue at hand. There is a sensitivity of sorts to the reactionary mind, even while it’s often used toward blunt ends of tugging and inciting emotions.

The reactionary mind cares only about the effect and result. What holds it all together is simply authoritarianism itself (RWA + SDO).

Understand that authoritarianism is, first and foremost, a mentality and worldview. This is a deeper understanding of ‘ideology’. It might make more sense with familiarity of Louis Althusser’s theory of interpellation. It’s about a voice of authority that hails the individual, in attempting to command and compel them.

But one is only actually hailed if one turns toward the voice, in acknowledging it has any claim over you. Assuming one is conscious, informed, and attentive, a hail can be identified and then treated with care, either to accept it or ignore it. Of course, ignoring an authoritarian hail might end badly, if you’ll have the satisfaction of maintaining your liberty of the soul to the bitter end. Authoritarians, once in power, are known to imprison, torture, banish, and kill those who fail to be properly interpellated into the authoritarian identity.

Yet interpellation can be a perfectly innocent process as it underlies all social identities, including those that are happy and beneficial. In a liberal and egalitarian society, one wouldn’t mind being hailed into an identity of mutual support, collective action, and public good.

Please, I beg you. Find a voice of authority that can hail the American population into functioning liberal democracy and egalitarian justice. Stop for a moment to contemplate the words of those like Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, or following the death of his brother the last haunting speeches of Robert F. Kennedy. These people put their lives on the line because, through the power of oratory, they hoped to hail in a new vision for society.

That is why they were assassinated. Their voices of authority were too powerful and persuasive, too radical and dangerous. They represented a non-reactionary alternative to the reactionary system and those who ruled it.

The reactionary and what it’s reacting to

As one would expect, the reactionary is defined by what it’s reacting to in any given moment.

In Western countries like the United States for several generations, reaction has focused on both what has been dominant in the West (or at least in the Western imaginary, if not always in political practice), from liberal democracy to economic progressivism, and what has been dominant among the West’s Cold War enemies, primarily ‘communism’ (or rather what went for it: state capitalism? red fascism? neo-feudalism?).

So, reactionaries sometimes, as an instinct, take up opposing positions or else an oppositional attitude. On this level, they can’t help but be contrarians, often rather trollish. But their reaction isn’t arbitrary and random.

In reacting, they are still defined by what they’re reacting to. They never escape the gravity well of the dominant paradigm. And so they endlessly co-opt from the focus of their reaction, the shadow of their own mania falling back upon themselves (The Many Stolen Labels of the Reactionary Mind). Reaction is their only core motivation and so they need something exciting to react against, without which they are overtaken by boredom and ennui (Boredom in the Mind: Liberals and Reactionaries; Violent Fantasy of Reactionary Intellectuals; & The Fantasy of Creative Destruction).

Along these lines, this explains why reactionaries constantly try to elicit reaction from others (Reactionaries Seeking Reaction). It’s not only that Donald Trump needs to foment violence to justify violence. More than anything, he needs to stage a performance of violence, whether or not it erupts into real violence. The purpose is for narrative spin and, in the reactionary imagination, the only worthy narrative is melodramatic and over-the-top (e.g., Fox News falsely portraying Portland, Oregon as a post-apocalyptic hellscape ravaged by antifa hordes burning down the city).

The reactionary mind needs to be constantly fed with its hunger is never sated.

About being shaped by the object of reaction, they put their mark on everything, like a muddy dog shaking mud about as it runs through the house. This is true in relation to classical liberalism and libertarianism, what some right-wingers claim as being right-wing. Both of these once were radical ideologies on the left in representing a degree of extremism never before seen. Or consider that free trade was once seen as democratic and liberatory in being anti-authoritarian, anti-elitist, and anti-imperialist (Marc-William Palen, Pax Economica). The initial adherents challenged the reactionary dominance hierarchies of their own era.

Early liberals were egalitarian and anti-authoritarian in advocating for positions that, in many ways, remain radical to this day: direct democratic self-governance (even majoritarianism), broader suffrage, feminism, abolitionism, low inequality, access to commons, reparations for stolen commons (e.g., Thomas Paine’s citizen’s dividend), opposition to aristocracy and plutocracy, fear of corporate capitalism, secularist separation of church and state, critique of organized religion and a priestly class, etc.

And early libertarians were anti-statist socialists (Property is Theft: So is the Right’s Use of ‘Libertarian’). Once upon a time, libertarianism actually meant liberty for all (as free markets meant freedom for all), not dishonest rhetoric used in defense of liberty as a privilege of the few. Reactionary recuperation is how, in practice, elite claims of ‘liberty’ so easily morphed into the oppressive reality of neoliberalism (e.g., Ronald Reagan), techno-feudalism (e.g., Peter Thiel), and on and on.

Reactionaries can and will claim anything, or otherwise leave ideological and rhetorical chaos in their wake. We need to learn to ignore words and claims.

You know someone’s true nature by what they do and support, who they work and ally with, and what are the the consistent results. We should distrust those who speak of equality of opportunity and positive freedom, yet the policies and systems they promote always end with increasing oppression, disadvantage, and inequity. Actions and effects are how we observe and measure, determine and judge the reality of motivations and causes.

In co-opting and recuperating ideological labels and rhetoric, reactionaries are posturing. They  don’t actually adhere to liberalism and libertarianism of any kind (or ‘free markets’ and such), but in the Western mainstream those are the only respectable positions. So, they put on these ideologies like costumes to hide their true ideologies of authoritarianism and domination.

But once they think they’re in a strong position, the masks come off (e.g., the fascism of Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and cronies). To paraphrase Maya Angelou, when you see their true face, believe it the first time. Watch carefully and don’t ignore it. Take heed and take it seriously.

Reactionary (pseudo-)leftists

This reactionary tendency, though, applies more broadly. It’s a psychological potential in everyone.

In general, reactionaries are unprincipled because that is simply how reactionary psychology operates. This is why, for anyone seeking to be principled, creeping reaction in the psyche can be one of the greatest concerns. It’s hard to defend against the enemy within, but it’s necessary.

A certain kind of leftist, for example, reacts to liberalism and so embrace an illiberalism that easily becomes anti-leftist as well (Does Liberalism Matter to Leftism?) — one could argue that, ultimately in practice, there is no illiberal leftism as there is no inegalitarian liberalism. On a left-wing Reddit group I recently visited, the commenters were so obsessed with opposing and owning the libs that, in reaction, they ended up voicing views that sounded surprisingly right-wing. What they were reacting to is what really mattered to them.

And in the past, I’ve been attacked and blocked on the largest left-wing subreddits for advocating leftist principles like practical egalitarianism in the real world, full and direct worker control of the means of production, and such (Leftists For Leftism Against Leftists). To these (pseudo-)leftists, there is a taint to everything liberal: socially liberal tolerance and inclusivity, liberal proceduralism and democratic process, open-minded cooperation and collaboration — what seems like a basic good society to my mind.

Apparently, the only authentic leftism would be authoritarian and totalitarian. Somehow, tankies have come to dominate left-wing groups and forums. But I’d argue tankies aren’t really leftists in any meaningful sense. [One might wonder if they’re controlled opposition, maybe promoted in the way the CIA did with postmodernists to suck out the air from leftist debates and to silence Marxists.] They’re just authoritarians who are nostalgic for old authoritarianism like the USSR, if that is just something convenient to project upon. Even Stalinism, one suspects, would be gladly sacrificed when the moment demanded something else. Authoritarianism is the means and end. All else is details.

Their supposed leftism, one could argue, has become more of a posture and maybe always was. The leftist paraphernalia is incidental, as it’s not based on any leftist principle.

A centralized economy alone does not leftism make since an economy could be similarly centralized by a monarchy, empire, theocracy, or fascist state; or even ‘privately’ by monopolistic inverted totalitarianism. But in a leftist system, the economy would be controlled by the workers and the people, not by a ruling elite, no matter the ideological garb they wear and the rhetoric they hide behind. Real world leftism would require democratic (i.e., liberal) processes, transparency, accountability, and separation of powers that would tend toward decentralization. It would liberate and empower local populations (e.g., workers operating their own workplaces).

These illiberal left-wingers (or pseudo-leftists) are the kind who could switch to being right-wingers without missing a beat. And there are many such ‘conversions’ (Why do you think people become ex-leftists?). Their criticism of the right-wing, be it corporate capitalism or fascism, is not a disagreement over authoritarianism and dominance. They  simply want totalitarian power of their own preferred variety, one that would privilege and embolden people like them, maybe as a vanguard elite.

Were they to gain such a ruling position, they’d never give up that power. As demonstrated in Stalinism, the Leninist vanguard elite became a permanent ruling class who existed separate from and above the masses. It was never going to be a temporary, transitional elite who would eventually usher in real communism of, for, and by the people.

A left-wing vision was never the plan. Or else it’s just that some reactionaries are so unconscious that they don’t know themselves what motivates them. A few of them might sort of believe the lies they tell others, in the way that a successful con artist first cons himself. But such a con is merely method acting. Once the end is achieved, the act is no longer needed.

Reacting to reactionaries makes one a reactionary

As part of a reactionary society, we are immersed in all things reactionary and surrounded by reactionary forces. If we aren’t careful, it’s easy to fall into reaction. Then we internalize the reactionary and our behavior feeds into it. We become vectors of its spread. The reactionary is a virulent mind virus.

In hoping to get more involved as a leftist, I’ve come across leftists — or at least those claiming to be leftists — who seize control of left-wing activist groups and online forums. They demand that others submit to their identities, interests, needs, and agendas. This is not what it means to be an ‘ally’. In reality, an alliance is a relationship of mutuality, and that requires egalitarianism on a pragmatic level of how people relate to one another as genuine and worthy equals.

But to a reactionary, everything is about others submitting to them or to their preferred authority, no matter how they rationalize it. Inverting a dominance hierarchy still leaves us with a dominance hierarchy. Just as a victim becoming a victimizer keeps the wheel of the victimization cycle spinning.

This is why, after declaring ‘Never Again’, the Holocaust can’t be used as an eternal get out of jail free card that rationalizes all horrors Israelis commit against others. As Zionism was founded on fascism, it can never be made into liberal Zionism. There is no such thing as liberal fascism, as there is no such thing as illiberal and inegalitarian leftism.

Besides blatant hypocrisy, there are more subtle expressions of reaction.

In a discussion, Jimmy Dore was talking with Chris Hedges (The Liberal Class’s Ultimate Betrayal (w/ Jimmy Dore) | The Chris Hedges Report). They’re both alternative political commentators, if of far different calibers. The former, as sort of leftist in a confused way, opposes the Democratic Party. And so he dismisses anything related to Russia, since the DNC elite are against Russia.

The enemy of my enemy is my friend, so goes the thought process.

So, he waves away Russiagate and makes excuses for Russian actions. This is in spite of decades of overwhelming evidence tying Donald Trump to Russian oligarchs and organized crime, along with evidence of Trump having laundered money through foreign casinos and property sales. Plus, there were the weird happenings like the collusion between the Republican Manafort Firm, the Democratic Podesta Firm, and Putin-related figures who were meddling in Ukraine prior to the war.

By the way, Trump was one of the first clients of the Manafort firm back in the 1980s. So, he and Paul Manafort had long been in the same social, economic, and political network of cronies. Trump wasn’t directly tied into Manafort’s Ukranian activities that led to prosecution and imprisonment. But Manafort did later work as a campaign adviser for Trump. Then as president, Trump pardoned him because that is what friends do.

Whether or not Russiagate was simply devious political machinations and maneuverings by the DNC elite, no informed and honest person could deny that something important was going on there. And without doubt, the entire Trump family has been criminally corrupt for generations (Trump Family And Elite Corruption; Trump is Innocent of the Crime of Liberalism; & A Deep Dive Into the Deep State).

This is a case where, when there is smoke, there is fire.

Dore ends up being a pseudo-leftist version of Tucker Carlson. Dore and Carlson, while both anti-Zionists, are strangely quite friendly and forgiving toward Russia. They’ll both repeat Kremlin talking points, for whatever reason. So, it’s not a principled opposition to violent and brutal tyranny. It just depends, in each situation, exactly what they’re reacting to.

The reactionary makes us stunted and stupid

This is typical of one variety of leftist that still identifies with the Stalinism and Maoism, in spite of the fact that both Russia and China are now capitalist economies (i.e., market economies with corporate ownership and without worker control of the means of production). In their hatred of Western imperialism, they’ll embrace non-Western imperialism, as if the problem isn’t imperialism itself but the entirety of Western civilization that must be destroyed by any means necessary.

These leftist or pseudo-leftist reactionaries want good imperialism that is supposedly just and effective, whatever they think that means. They’ll praise Stalinist USSR and Maoist China as having lifted millions out of poverty while ignoring the millions starved to death. So, justice according to whose benefit and effective to what end?

They’ll support almost anyone and anything that represents a challenge to the hegemonic West. Their stance is simply about this anti-Western reaction without it being clear, maybe even in their own minds, what they’re ultimately for.

There are no clear inherent principles underlying why one kind of imperialism and/or capitalism is good and another bad, why American and Israeli oppression (War On Terror, CIA covert operations, Zionist genocide of Palestinians, etc) is evil but Russian and Chinese oppression (police-surveillance states, multiple wars of aggression including in Ukraine, persecution of Uyghurs, etc) is great.

But it’s not only what they support and oppose or their supposed motivation for doing so. We need to look past the ideological window dressing. In the end, all reactionaries, no matter their words and outward appearance, are more alike than not.

When under the thrall of the reactionary mind, people become unconsciously stupid, clueless, and obtuse, sometimes willfully and shamelessly so. It comes down to suppression of ‘openness to experience’ (and its twin trait ‘intellect’), which means the stunting and compromise of difficult cognitive abilities requiring greater cognitive load, nuance, complexity, flexibility, curiosity, and cognitive empathy.

Then these cognitively deficient individuals are likely to get stuck in dogmatic positions that are polarized.

This is what happens when people are severely and/or chronically stressed, alienated, oppressed, subjugated, shamed, disenfranchised, impoverished, overworked, exhausted, malnourished, sickly, media-saturated, and a thousand other forms and factors of harm and hopelessness, of degradation and desperation. Much of this is cumulative and transgenerational, systemic and environmental, structural and institutional, pervasive and inescapable.

At the worst extreme, it’s what’s referred to as shit life syndrome. It’s a totalizing hell on earth. Think of American Jim Crow, Nazi ghettoes, South African apartheid, and Israeli occupation. It can also merely be economic abandonment, such as in American Appalachia and the Global South.

The saddest part is how these bad conditions can bring out the worst in people, all across a society. There is a strong link between such things as poverty and inequality on one hand and low IQ and racism on the other. We humans didn’t evolve to handle such extreme levels of stress, conflict, and desperation. It warps the mind in a thousand different ways.

For those of us who are more fortunate, as we resist the reactionary mind and its allure, we should strive toward compassion in understanding what drives people into that mentality. But for the grace of God goes I.

Non-reactionary leftism depends on better conditions

That is where we get a certain strain of the reactionary mind that includes but goes beyond the MAGA demographic. It’s not enough to disparage the ‘basket of deplorables’.

What we need is understanding, so as to alter the conditions that elicit it. People are simply responding as best they can to sometimes impossible situations. The reactionary is one possible outcome of what happens when people get overwhelmed, when they give into cynicism. It’s better to judge the conditions that cause it than to judge those caught up in it. It’s only at the level of conditions that we have the leverage of influence.

As with the reactionary right, many people drawn to left-wing politics do so because they’ve had hard lives. Being damaged, it’s unsurprising that they’re often more than a bit illiberal (and inegalitarian), especially as they identify liberalism with classism. The fact of the matter is liberal-mindedness, indeed, is a privilege of optimal (or at least relatively better) conditions.

But if this were a liberal society, be it social democracy or democratic socialism with greater public good (public welfare, public health, etc), that liberal-mindedness and the conditions that support it would be a birthright for all. Until then, we have to deal with the world as it is and hence people as they are. Those negatively affected by these liberal-suppressing conditions, however, are the last to have the self-awareness and psychological insight to grasp the state they’re in or how to change it.

Knocking out ‘openness to experience’ weakens cognitive empathy, of which is essential for understanding oneself as much as understanding others. With extreme stress, people tend to look for risks, threats, dangers, and competitors outside of themselves. And that might be fine if they looked in the right places, such as among the elite who are the actual cause of their problems.

It’s too bad that there aren’t more people, particularly American leftists, who understand this (We Need To Talk About Health; Social Science As Intellectual Self-Defense; Sick Individuals = Authoritarian Societies; Filth of Rome, Health of Alexandria; & Life History Theory and Strategies: Part 1).

I know some hardcore, radical left-wingers who have hardscrabble working class lives. Everything about their modern lives is out of sync with evolutionary norms of human flourishing. Unsurprisingly, such people tend to have physical and mental health issues. And their behavioral patterns aren’t necessarily constructive by most measures.

Besides overall unhealthy lifestyles, such as drinking and smoking or drug abuse in some cases, they often eat a poverty diet and that typically means a Standard American Diet (SAD). Or else they have horrible sleep patterns with their circadian rhythm being off, from excess blue light at night and other problems such as working odd shifts or multiple jobs. And like so many others, nature deficit disorder is the norm.

Ideas like this, that nature is healing, can sound like liberal self-improvement or new agey woo-woo; in either case, a distraction from the supposed real issues of economics and politics (i.e., historical materialism). Who has time for mere health when there is class war going on and we’re fighting for survival?

In their concern for material problems, most leftists have a superficial conception of the material world. They launch themselves into battle without first surveying the battlefield. Or else they only look in one direction, not seeing the terrain behind them.

Old school leftism and public health

Interestingly, that wasn’t always the case.

Earlier last century, democratic socialists, in backing Milwaukee municipal socialism or Scandinavian social democracy, tended to prioritize public health in terms of practical improvements of living conditions. If they probably didn’t intellectually know that disease and dis-ease causes malignant psychology and society, they did see firsthand how mass sickliness could rip apart a society.

They had the advantage, in living in that first moment of mass urbanization and industrialization, to sense what had been destroyed and lost. There was still a living memory, if declining quickly, of what the previous collective and communal health looked like and felt like. Whereas today, we are simply lost in mind-numbing sickliness at a level that debilitates us with psychotic disconnection from reality, where the abnormal has become the new norm.

It’s ideological realism as mind virus.

That doesn’t have to be the case, though. There are factors under our control, most of the time. For instance, one can eat healthily by focusing on low-carb, nutrient-dense whole foods that typically are cheaper than ultra-processed foods (pork, chicken, lard, butter, etc; and, before prices rose, eggs). I get that many in the lower classes simply eat for convenience as life is already difficult enough. And preparing a meal from scratch is unattractive when collapsing at home after a day’s work.

It’s easier than it might seem (e.g., put a beef roast in a slow cooker before work). And it would pay off in the long-term. A better diet would increase energy, mood, and motivation. If stuck in a vicious cycle, one has to actively intervene to reset one’s situation into a virtuous cycle. But it might be hard for people in such a situation to imagine life could ever be different so as to take that first step.

Certainly, the entire system engenders pessimism and cynicism, apathy and resignation. And, besides, it’s hard for most people to think of the food system as part of social control (Ancient Dietary Ideology Persists). Underestimating this factor is common, if some leftists have long known that who ever controls the food supply controls a population, similar to who controls the vote counting controls elections and hence controls voters.

This is why leftists speak of worker control of the means of production. Basically, there is no freedom without control, without autonomy and agency, without self-determination and self-governance. It’s not only the means of production but the means of anything and everything (e.g., the need to democratize the education and media systems).

What could be added is that it’s not just control of people physically but also mentally, both psychologically and neurocognitively.

What few understand is how powerfully diet and nutrition can alter psychology and behavior (Mark Hyman, Food Fix; Georgia Ede, Change Your Diet, Change Your Mind; Christ Palmer, Brain Energy; Weston A. Price, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration; & Mary Ruddick, “The Sherlock Holmes of Health”). This includes in relation to morality, ethics, and prosociality.

Revolution of mind as an expression of public health

The typical leftist is so narrowly obsessed with conventional left-wing literature, political actions, and organizing that they have little other knowledge. Some of them commit themselves to the activist cause to the detriment of their own health, sometimes as self-conscious martyrdom. All that is likely to achieve is to make them even more illiberal or otherwise inconsistent, in reactionary style. Or else simply weaken their capacity to maintain the fight in the long run.

Without realizing it, they undermine their own leftist project.

If we had a healthier left-wing movement and a healthier society overall, we might have not only a more liberal and egalitarian leftism but also a less fractured and divisive leftism, a more functional and effective leftism (Magic Trick). I’ve repeatedly argued there is a simple reason that the American colonists successfully revolted as the English did not at the time (even when Thomas Paine returned home to England with the intention of inciting revolt), that the American Revolution avoided a vengeful and punitive bloodbath as happened in the French Revolution.

My theory is that it all has to do with American colonists having been among the healthiest people in the West at the time. Besides low infectious disease rate, Americans were the tallest Westerners in the world at the time. That is partly what made George Washington so impressive, as only some Native Americans had greater stature than him.

Unlike in the British Isles and the European mainland, most Americans had low population density, much open space to farm, and access to an abundance of natural resources: clean water, wild plants, seafood, wild game, beef, pork, chicken, eggs, dairy, etc — and, as a side note, beef consumption has an interesting history behind it (Ancient Dietary Ideology Persists). Continuing into the 1800s, the average American ate animal foods, often meat, with every meal. To put it another way, for breakfast, they didn’t slice up a banana with corn flakes and pour soy or rice milk on it, nor did they eat candy-like granola bars.

That extremely superior health gave them strength, endurance, and confidence. But it also probably made them more liberal-minded. As the revolutionary veteran Levi Preston put it, they knew they could govern themselves, they intended to do so, and they were willing to kill anyone who tried to stop them (Spirit of ’76).

It’s the same potent sense of virility and machismo that led Genghis Khan and the Mongols to conquer much of Asia and Europe, that drove Geronimo and the Apaches to outfight, outmaneuver, and outpace US cavalry even when crossing deserts on foot. It’s not just the willingness to fight but the capacity to do so and win, no matter that the opposing force may be larger.

Americans, Mongols, and Apache were regularly confronted by larger forces and yet repeatedly were able to overpower and outlast them. A population at peak health wouldn’t tolerate Donald Trump’s regime of MAGA, DOGE, and ICE. There would already be bloody fights in the streets or maybe heads rolling. That was what happened at other times in American history, long after the American Revolution.

Think of the Coal Wars. Those coal miners were still eating a nutrient-dense and animal-based diet from hunting, trapping, fishing, and subsistence farming. It’s not merely that those coal miners had guns and numbers, along with solidarity, for they also had the bravado to stand up to corporate goons, Pinkertons, and the US military. They refused to act as if they were defeated because defeat wasn’t an option, wasn’t allowable.

If they hadn’t been willing to fight and die, we wouldn’t today have many of our workers rights. Will future generations be able to say that about us? So far, it’s not looking like it.

What underlies the health of the non-reactionary?

Obviously, much else is involved. We need to understand not only that people were different in what they did but what made that possible and probable.

The health-induced liberal-mindedness means that, far beyond merely being able stand their ground and fight, they also were able to organize and act collectively toward a constructive goal of betterment for all. That’s prosocial behavior, a culture of trust. Rather than bickering and splintering into identity politics, those prior generations of left-wingers had something we now lack. No matter how hard we try, we can’t regain that special quality without re-establishing the healthy conditions that made it possible in the past.

This health factor constantly gets overlooked. This is partly because conventional views of health are likely incorrect, as we’re in the middle of a replication crisis in numerous fields like nutrition studies. In Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam discussed the Italian-American residents of Roseto, Pennsylvania. In the immediate post-war period, they were the healthiest population in the US.

But they didn’t fit the profile of how health was understood then and now.

Many worked in a nearby toxic factory. Drinking alcohol and smoking tobacco was common. And they ate a diet that supposedly everyone knew was death-dealing: plenty of noodles, lots of animal foods, traditional processed meats (probably with ground organ meats), and lard used to cook everything in. The Rosetans, on average, even had a fair amount of belly fat, one of the supposedly greatest indicators of health risk.

If all these were factors that should’ve sent the Rosetans to an early grave, then it must’ve been something else that was saving them. Putnam speculated it was their close-knit communities, regular socializing, and civic organizations. As the title suggests, these people were bowling in leagues, rather than alone.

Without a doubt, that was a major influence. We are social creatures, after all.

But as others have noted, all those animal foods might also have been a saving grace (Research On Meat And Health; & Blue Zones Dietary Myth). These Italian-Americans, unlike most other Americans at the time, were still eating a traditional diet of nutrient-dense foods. They were eating a diet closer to the early American coal miners and American Revolutionaries, Apaches and Mongols.

Maybe there is something to the traditional diet, along with a traditional lifestyle in general. As an ethnic immigrant population, those Rosetans had maintained much of their old world customs, way of life, and social relations.

I bet they had large extended families and multigenerational households. Without a doubt, many of them still gardened, hunted, and fished. In general, they likely spent a lot of time outside and often walked to places, as it was a period when there still were neighborhood churches, stores, schools, and parks. It would’ve been a real community, more similar to how humans had been living for millennia.

Relative to today, their lives were super unstressed and little time was spent consuming (or rather being consumed by) manipulative, propagandistic media. They probably only worked 40 hour work weeks and so had lots of free time to spend with family, friends, neighbors, and fellow congregants. Because of the highest labor membership in US history, they surely had great pay, lifetime job security, awesome benefits, great healthcare, and a guaranteed retirement.

All of that was on top of the social democracy and welfare state established by Franklin Delano Roosevelt and progressive leadership across the country: anti-poverty programs, nutritional fortification of foods, Social Security, Medicare, GI Bill, nearly free college education, massive funding into R&D, and on and on and on.

To be self-aware and wary but not fearful

It was an era of optimism, positive feeling, progress, and public good. Indeed, basic metrics of health and prosperity were improving on all accounts, with even a growing black middle class. Post-war Americans were already well into the liberal consensus that would last some more decades before being dismantled.

If our present personality tests had been around at the time and a researcher had gotten data, one suspects that most post-war Americans would’ve been higher on ‘openness to experience’ (and possibly ‘honesty-humility’) with those like the Rosetans being among the highest. That would’ve contributed to the success of organized labor at the time. If Putnam doesn’t talk about it, Roseto probably had been a labor union stronghold.

The point to all of this goes back to my original observations.

As with MAGA on the far right, the extreme illiberal and authoritarian leftism we see dominating many activist circles would be far less of a thing under better conditions. But we also wouldn’t see the reactionary attitudes among the DNC elites and Democratic partisans. This reactionary mind in all its forms, rather than being limited to a single group like MAGA, has become a contagion that has taken over our society.

We on the broad left shouldn’t get too self-righteous. In these hard times, we need to humble ourselves to see our situation with clear eyes, so as to be on guard. We can’t fight what we don’t understand. Otherwise, we’ll tire ourselves out while swinging at shadows. That is when we can slip into the reactionary mind without realizing it.

We need to be on guard so as to better defend what matters most. But we simultaneously must avoid falling into fear. That is yet another reactionary trap. Our concern is what we’re striving toward, not merely what we’re fighting against. Even as the reactionary is an obstacle, reactionaries aren’t our primary concern. Defeating them won’t alone get us to where we want to go.

Our lodestone is the hopeful vision of a better society. It’s about remaining open. It’s the power of radical imagination, to see beyond what is to what might be. One has to fall in love with possibility.

* * *

*Note:

According to the researcher Bob Altemeyer, the ‘right-wing’ in RWA doesn’t only refer to recent history of the political right. Instead, it’s based on the original definition from revolutionary era France. To be on the right side of power means that one believes perceived legitimate authority, however defined, should have their total domination submitted to or else enforced.

Hence, Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong were right-wing leaders in this sense. The Russian and Chinese people weren’t give a democratic choice of self-determination and self-governance. All the decisions were made in top-down fashion by a ruling elite.

Even as as Stalinism and Maoism are conventionally described as left-wing, the authoritarianism they represent is both inegalitarian and illiberal. Sure, some might argue (if I’d argue otherwise), a left-winger possibly might be illiberal and still genuinely be far on the left. But for certain, there is no such thing as leftism without egalitarianism. Intrinsically, dominance hierarchies and power disparities are anti-leftist, by definition.

If an elite — private and plutocratic or public and political — controls the economy (means of production, natural resources, etc) and in particular controls capital (i.e., fungible wealth), then that is the capitalist class by definition. This is why Stalinism is often called state capitalism or red fascism. China has become even more fascist in that there are semi-privately-owned corporations, but the ‘owners’ are entirely beholden to and controlled by the state. That is similar to how capitalism operated in Nazi Germany.

So, the Soviet and Chinese ruling elite having wielded or still wielding a centralized economy were or are acting as capitalists, if the capitalism was or is monopolized by the state instead of by corporations. Ironically, many communists have predicted that capitalism always results in monopolies. Stalinism and Maoism proved that to be true, as they resulted in a monopoly of state capitalism. The communist alternative is still waiting to be attempted at the large scale.

Unwanted Unknowns

To be wrong

“What if everything you knew was wrong?”

Way back in the late 2000s, I began blogging on an independent website called Zaadz, later bought up and destroyed by the rapacious maw of the Gaia corporation. When still operational, they had a daily writing prompt and, on one occasion, it was the above question. I answered it as a serious inquiry (and I had another stab at it later on). But, at the time, in looking around at the responses of others, it became apparent that it was impossible for most people to even imagine this kind of a scenario or allow it into their mind.

Basically, such a level of skeptical doubt and contemplation requires an extreme degree of the personality trait ‘openness to experience’ (FFM). This specifically includes tolerance for uncertainty, ambiguity, and cognitive dissonance (i.e., low need for certainty and closure), as related to what artists and the literati like to call negative capability.

The problem for most people in the modern world is that we are under stress that is severe and chronic, systemic and cumulative. Many of us are near constantly exhausted, depleted, and overwhelmed by life, pushed to or beyond our limits. As research shows, that shuts down ‘openness’ and hence everything that goes with it, such as need for cognition along with intellectual curiosity and intellectual humility.

If ‘openness’ is really low, a question like the one above would simply be incomprehensible and uninteresting or else felt as an existential threat to identity and the social order. Many of the relatively more liberal-minded could at least think about the posed inquiry, but even most of them are significantly compromised in a society like this. They would less likely have the fuller cognitive complexity, cognitive flexibility, and perspective shifting to entertain radically challenging answers to the question.

A strong expression of ‘openness’ is a rare hothouse flower at present in the United States. It’s like trying to swim back to shore against the pull of a rip tide or rip current.

This feeds into our demoralizing sense of being stuck. It’s been said that it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If so, that is only true because of a collective lack of ‘openness’. It forces us into an oppressive condition of ideological realism, a hopeless state of fatalism. There seems to be no way out of the prison, in the minds of an increasing number of people, other than overthrowing or killing the guards and blowing it up.

That is why a significant portion voted for Donald Trump, as the same people often said they would’ve voted for Bernie Sanders. Anyone who offers them a way out (or merely pretends to) will be supported, no matter the means of escape (even if only into fantasy). What Trump proposed was that he’d throw a grenade into the bunker of power (The Fantasy of Creative Destruction); and, in a way, he kept his promise, if he also destroyed so much that was good and worthy in the process.

MAGA and DOGE is a greater blow to the American Empire than was the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the entirety of World War II. Ironically, the present ongoing dismantling and dysfunction may have cleared the stage to allow more people, if mostly Trump’s opponents and detractors, to embrace radical imagination. It’s why socialism is suddenly on the table again, with someone like Zohran Mamdani able to win a major election.

A poly-crisis and a meta-crisis

Some of it may only be out of desperation. When everything seems to be failing or else in the process of intentional destruction, when the personal stakes are high and the consequences harsh, people can become more willing to consider and try something else, anything else. It’s a public mood that hasn’t been seen in generations.

Authoritarian pseudo-centrism, propagandistic false equivalency, and malignant lesser evilism is dead and buried.

Whatever comes next, good or bad, will be entirely new. The problem is there are too few with enough ‘openness’ to help guide us through the wreckage and pitfalls, to shine a light on future possibilities and visions. Like Trump with populists and the GOP, Bernie Sanders (and AOC, etc) too has ended up always herding leftists strays and stragglers back into the fold of DNC corporatism and Zionism where any leftist promise is neutralized (Anti-Zionism, Like Anti-Fascism, is the Dividing Line of Our Age).

Such co-optation and recuperation needs to end, and it seems most Americans are coming around to realizing that is the case. The purpose of our thought experiment here, though, is not mainly political. We are considering ideology on a larger battleground.

My thoughts at present are closer to a more recent piece of mine (A Paradigm Shift of Paradigm Shifts). We are in the middle of a replication crisis across nearly every major field of research, development, and application. To put it simply, the beginning question isn’t rhetorical. We are literally facing a situation of mass ignorance, including among supposed experts and other authority figures, where we’re unsure that we actually know what we think we know.

Many perceived reputable and foundational studies that have upheld conventional views, standard practices, and established protocols for decades or generations, once retested, have been challenged or disproven in part or whole. Simply put, a surprising percentage don’t replicate.

We are teetering on a precipice. The replication crisis is just one of numerous uncertainties and catastrophes looming on the horizon. It’s not only a general meta-crisis as we are also, specifically, in an identity crisis, civilizational crisis, and existential crisis. But to be fair, it’s happened before (The Crisis of Identity). If total destruction isn’t inevitable, the world as we know it might collapse, whatever may or may not follow afterwards.

Yet most people are still going about their lives as if it will go on on forever, as if the ship will be righted at the last moment before sinking. Allowing existential doubt into consciousness is too scary.

Knowledge of knowledge, or lack thereof

It’s an interesting situation. And though dire, maybe not as hopeless as we think. Answers are within our reach, if we’d reach out to grasp them.

We do have enough knowledge — along with wealth, resources, expertise, and human potential — to solve numerous problems and remedy diverse harms, to save the world and create a utopia (or eutopia and protopia) for the entirety of global humanity. It’s true that our ignorance of the universe and everything in it is vast beyond what our knowledge will ever be, since ignorance (or rather potential knowledge) is infinite. But we have enough working knowledge to know how to improve things on a basic level that, at a human scale, could be transformative.

Our only limitation is our own psyches, specifically the conditions that suppress ‘openness’. Ironically, the very problems that could be solved by enough people with high ‘openness’ are the same problems that close down the human mind and constrains human behavior; hence, unleashing conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), social dominance orientation (SDO), and dark triad or tetrad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism). And the right-wing elites understand this and so never let off on the pressure of stress-induced and fear-riled manipulation, forcing us into a state of endless anxiety and alienation.

The ruling elite are playing a game of chicken as they hit the gas pedal to launch us full speed at a cliff edge. They’re betting that the rest of us will blink rather than wrestle the steering wheel out of their hands. Our aspiring overlords are deranged and destructive, not only to others but also to themselves.

These elite, like most people in the world today, are severely compromised. They too lack the cognitive abilities to understand the world and what they’re doing, maybe to a greater degree than any other elite in modern Western history or maybe all of world history. They’re merely clever monkeys who got their paws on some levers of power and now are jerking them around with amused and manic glee. They’ve convinced themselves they’re visionary geniuses; but so far, as inept chaos agents, they’ve only accomplished not-so-controlled demolition.

We can’t last much longer at this pace.

So, the problem is twofold. First, we really do lack knowledge to a tremendous degree. Future humans, if we are to survive as a species and a civilization, will look back upon our present crude and primitive brutality with amazement. They won’t be able to understand how we lasted as long as we did or why we allowed it to go on.

Then, second, it’s not only the knowledge that we know we lack or even don’t know we lack but also, more importantly, the knowledge we think we know yet don’t. We know neither the limitations of our knowledge nor the extent of our ignorance. Too often, we’re confident and cavalier where we should be cautious, and we’re dismissive and defensive where we need to be open to new information, theories, hypotheses, and avenues of research.

But most of the funding, drawn from the profits of capitalism, is funneled back into further studying the certainties and convictions, further confirming the biases and beliefs of conventional ‘wisdom’, much of it being false at best. Good money gets thrown after bad, in an endless attempt to maintain the system and the establishment.

We have the most well-backed ignorance of any generation. Most humans in the past were content with blind faith, whereas we moderns deny our faith is faith. In many cases, we’ve been spending generations of effort and trillions of dollars on red herrings that keep us misdirected and preoccupied. For stability, a known falsehood is safer than an unknown truth.

The example of allopathic medicine

That pointless waste and diversion is seen, for example, with research on cancer and Alzheimer’s that have gone down many blind alleys (genetic mutations, brain plaque, etc), if that’s finally beginning to change with younger generations of researchers proposing new hypotheses and protocols.

Part of the difficulty is that most of the focus has been on diagnosing patterns of symptoms, putting a label on them to create a false sense of certainty, and then treating those symptoms to ameliorate anxiety, but often in the process conflating an effect with the cause. Much of healthcare is simply the placebo effect, subject-expectancy effect, and Pygmalion effect.

It creates an illusion that, under the sway of official authority, causes us to sometimes be interpellated into symptom relief or sometimes even measurable improvements. We want to be the good patient who heals and so our body tries its best to conform to expectations or maybe assuage the doctor’s ego. For example, many medications work well when first introduced on the market — and heavily advertised in the U.S. — but lose their efficacy over time.

Thus, the big pharma has to constantly pump out new hyped-up drugs. That indicates much of their efficacy was never objectively real in the first place or at least was never solely and fully attributable to the medication itself. They’re placebos, at least partly

Heck, a placebo isn’t required. Research has found that simply going to a doctor’s appointment, even when the doctor takes no medical action at all, will tend to leave the patient feeling better about whatever ails them. That is to say, to put it colloquially, a significant part of modern medicine is faith healing, hence the importance of good bedside manner. That isn’t to wave healthcare away as having no value, but it does once again demonstrate how little we understand.

Obviously, beyond simple and straightforward issues, this kind of confidence game can only go so far in dealing with real world problems.

For many major diseases, similar to large-scale and convoluted messes in society, we still don’t know the fundamental causes. Typically, the potentially most fruitful research is being ignored because it doesn’t fit into the hegemonic paradigm, not to mention it usually being difficult and expensive with rare promises of it leading to a profitable product that can be quickly marketed for a guaranteed return on investment.

Considers Dr. Dale Bredesen’s protocol for Alzheimer’s that is based on the premise that there is no single disease (hence, why a cure has been so elusive), rather overlapping patterns of symptoms involving various systems that are being affected by diverse causes: toxicity, nutritional deficiencies, metabolic disorder, mitochondrial dysfunction, etc. So, the treatment is multi-factorial and personalized, but almost no one wants to offer funding for a larger study. The majority of research grants go to studies that are limited to single factors.

That is why allopathic medicine primarily involves either a chemical pill or invasive procedure used in a targeted fashion, usually where separate specialists are treating each health issue as if it were unrelated to all the rest other than concern about drug interactions. Whereas functional medicine looks at the whole body as an integrated system of systems, all operating within larger conditions and environments requiring the doctor to holistically consider the patient’s lifestyle, diet, living situation, workplace, social stressors, relationships, etc.

The inadequacy of the former is that, in people’s lives, there is no such thing as controlling everything but one isolated factor, symptom, or issue. This is why standard research doesn’t always translate well or else only applies partly and inconsistently. Much of healthcare is throwing darts. The doctor tries one thing after another to see what might happen, in the hope that something will eventually show benefit, if also side effects at the same time.

We’re good at dealing with single symptoms or single physiological mechanisms, sometimes with amazing results. The problem is that, when you change one thing, it pushes and pulls numerous other systems with complicated and cascading webs of effects. This is how patients end up with long lists of drugs where many of them are treating the side effects of the others.

The doctor is often working blind or else with only the capacity to get glimpses into this or that, but doing so might require more expensive tests than insurance will pay for or the patient can afford. Even then, trying to put all the pieces together to make sense of it might be a near impossible task. It’s similar to reverse engineering, the attempt to figure out what was a piece of technology and what it did by looking at the scattered parts found after an explosion.

Reductionism and capitalist realism

What reductionism doesn’t acknowledge is that the whole is greater than the parts. There might be no way to get back to a comprehension of the whole merely going by the parts, no matter how many parts one has. Humpty Dumpty can’t be put back together again. The only way to get to the whole is to start with the whole.

Falling short in this fashion is not only intrinsic to medicine but the whole scientific model that has dominated for centuries. It’s been about an atomistic and analytical approach where one tiny factor and causal mechanism is isolated. Without a doubt, the knowledge gained can be literally powerful (e.g., atomic bomb). Though this has some merit in advancing science, the largest and worst problems we’re facing aren’t amenable to such a limited strategy (e.g., anthropocene).

This leaves us in a state of utter cluelessness about the complex systems within systems and their vast number of dynamically and interactively moving parts (e.g., biosphere). Sadly, our obsession with individual bodies, isolated from the social sphere and separate from environments, has caused us to ignore individuals in actual practice of medicine where everyone is put into cookie cutter diagnoses and treatment protocols, largely because of the capitalist demands of bureaucratic healthcare systems and insurance companies.

Obviously, the failure with this approach is that, though it sometimes can be narrowly effective, it rarely promotes and re-establishes full physical health and flourishing, either for the individual or society, much less for the environment. It’s the difference between treating millions of lead-poisoned children and cleaning up the lead in the environment and preventing the lead pollution in the first place. It targets particular areas or individuals, but often with many potential side effects and long-term consequences or simply leaving the cause of the problem unresolved.

Most modern medicine is a blunt instrument, while what really need is multifactorial interventions, often at the level of public health or other governmental policies, programs, and practices. We need to flexibly combine the large-scale with the individualized, but at present we don’t typically get either. Instead, we end up with a muddled compromise that only has the benefit of increasing profits.

This is how the U.S. has ended up with one of the most expensive healthcare systems in the world that gets far worse outcomes than countries with universal healthcare.

The challenge, of course, is that doctor deals with patients who live in a society that is systematically destroying their health on a daily basis: trauma, inequality, poverty, debt, economic desperation, permanent underclass overwork, exhaustion, dependence on simulants and sleep aids, malnourishing food system, manipulative media, and on and on. In the worst situations, it’s all combined as shit life syndrome.

Most often, the doctor can’t or won’t bother to try to change those conditions as it would make them the enemy of the very system they serve and benefit from. They too are trapped in ideological realism that is entrenched in path dependence. Understandably, with learned helplessness as cogs in the machine, the average doctor would rather not think about it because then they’d feel miserable and guilty. No one wants to see themselves as the bad guy, as part of the problem.

There is no profit in researching, promoting, and enacting this other systemic, integralist, and comprehensive understanding. All the institutional incentives, in fact, indoctrinate those working within the system to put their heads down and pretend they don’t see the horror show all around them. So, doctors try their best to patch up their patients, lessen the symptoms, numb the pain, and send them back into the battle to be sacrificed for the greater cause of the elite games of wealth and power.

It’s like the ancient Roman physician working on gladiators who only needed to fix them up enough so that they could later put on a good fight and die in the arena, as the second part of bread and circus. Or think of the vet treating the cow so that it will soon be healthy enough to pass inspection and be turned into meat. Modern medicine doesn’t need to heal us, doesn’t need to help us thrive and flourish, doesn’t need to ensure we live up to our potential. All that’s required is, however suffering and short our lives may be, that we can be good workers for a few decades to keep the profits flowing into the private bank accounts of the capitalist class. But with AI and automatization, most of us might no longer even have that value.

Certainly, the purpose isn’t to save anyone, other than the middle-to-upper classes with the privileges and access to resources. What the hegemonic status quo requires is relatively healthy ruling and managerial elites to keep the system running and to keep the peasants in line.

Costs: externalized and socialized, immeasurable and unknowable

The scale of the problem is vast.

Public health relates to environmentalism, and the latter operates at a global scale (Environment-Caused Deaths: Who is Counting, and Who Counts). Such harms don’t respect national boundaries. But it’s at a local level that it’s immediately and personally experienced. The capitalist class is able to pick healthy environments for themselves and their families while concentrating the sickness and suffering on the exploited, oppressed, and disenfranchised (e.g., offshoring factories in foreign countries with weak regulations, consisting of populations that are mostly poor and brown).

Such externalized costs are a way of punishment and control, a means of disciplining the permanent underclass (Capitalism as Social Control). The costs, though harming all of society, are deemed a worthy investment by the plutocrats and oligarchs so as to maintain their power and privilege (Costs Must Be Paid: Social Darwinism As Public Good). But such ruling elites don’t really have a clue what they’re doing, don’t appreciate the full costs, especially not the extent to which it even harms them (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder; Christopher Ryan, Civilized to Death; etc).

That is what makes unrecognized and unconscious ignorance so dangerous. Informed rational actors would never create, support, and defend a civilization this insane and self-destructive.

Consider that the greatest known cause of disease and death, about 40%, is pollution (Socialized Medicine & Externalized Costs). Not to mention all the other physical and mental health issues likewise caused or contributed to by it, with the problems incurred being spread unevenly. Living near an unregulated factory pumping out pollution would translate to far higher numbers — 80%? 90%? — of disabilities, diseases, and deaths related to pollution. If we reduced that single factor alone, all the costs of healthcare, sick days, lost pay, disability payments, psychiatric problems, orphaned children, etc would drop like a rock.

It probably would be a reduction of at least trillions of dollars that are presently wasted worldwide every year. The global GDP is over $100 trillion, while a UN report found that almost no major global industry is a net gain for society when environmental costs are included.

Then consider environmental costs are just one portion of costs typically that are overlooked and dismissed. The diverse costs are so numerous and immense that we don’t even know what it all adds up to, especially as most of the costs are being deferred onto ignored populations and future generations. How does one put a price tag on resource loss, mass extinction, ecosystem destruction, ecological collapse, climate change, refugee crises, environmental-caused civil conflicts, resource competition that causes wars, poisoned groundwater, escaped GM crops, and on and on? Not to mention annihilation of indigenous knowledge that might hold answers to present or future problems, diseases, etc.

Most of the causes of harm are collective or else privatized with externalized costs, as part of socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor. We not only get sick because of what the rich do (e.g., factories and farmers dumping chemicals into our public waterways and atmosphere) but then we have to pay the rich to treat our sickness. They get us coming and going, as we’re corralled down the chute of the slaughter house.

At the very least, all of this means the global externalized and socialized costs are greater than the global net GDP, indicating that our apparent civilizational progress is actually an overall decline since its unsustainable and eventually the bill will come due. Some of the consequences could last for hundreds or thousands of years and, in some cases, forever.

Ignorance is magnified by inequality

Yet we’re told we can’t afford universal healthcare, environmental protections, or any other form of public good. That everything that benefits the common people must be cut. That destruction of the natural world is an inevitable price to be paid. But maybe we can’t afford to not improve conditions for all, can’t afford continued indifference and inaction, can’t afford the status quo that brought us to this point of crisis.

Certainly, though our ignorance is immense, we know enough to realize that wisdom tells us to heed the precautionary principle. That is part of the point of contemplating the original question: “What if everything you knew was wrong?” If we took it seriously, we’d act far differently. We need to be humbled. Then we might recognize that most of these costs could be avoided. But none of that is possible under capitalist realism that offers false confidence, a mirage of experts in control.

This constrained worldview applies to everything else as well.

Because of the profit model, most R&D funding simply goes to ascertaining methods to more effectively manipulate the physical and human world, including the psyche: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” said Jeff Hammerbacher, an early employee at Facebook. It’s practical knowledge of a sorts, but it offers nothing in terms of wisdom and value. It doesn’t tell us what we should or shouldn’t do, what are the consequences of what we do or don’t do (Jathan Sadowski, The Mechanic and the Luddite).

As such, we’re able to obtain natural resources and build a vast industrial and technological society. But the Cassandras of the world get little audience and traction, no matter how vast and obvious are the costs, no matter how the evidence piles up. We remain collectively ignorant while awash in more knowledge than has ever before existed.

The techno-optimists simply wave it all away with their grand visions and authoritative posturing. New innovations will magically solve all problems, as it’s claimed. This sense of faith is theological dogma, not a thoughtful assessment and clear-eyed conclusion. These ambitious elites have no interest in the petty concerns of the “reality-based community” because they make their own reality or so they believe. They’re idiots with too much power. But in the power disparity of dominance hierarchies, there is no one in a position to tell them they’re idiots to their faces.

That is the thing. Humans didn’t evolve to be scientific researchers, objective analysts, and rational actors. Nor did we evolve to to live under such freakishly abnormal conditions that disconnect us from reality, that alienate us from one another. Our ability to comprehend the world was shaped under much simpler conditions of evolution.

Maybe that is why, among tech giants, they start sounding rather religious in their prognostications, as a new breed of self-proclaimed prophets. Consider Peter Thiel who talks about the Anti-Christ and AI in a single breath. One gets the sense that he sees himself as a priest-godman who will capture and control these new demiurgic forces and redirect their power toward a grander vision of humanity, if many will have to be sacrificed in the process. In his case, that means techno-feudalism with a daker version of trickle-down.

Nothing about this is scientific and rational. Such people are madmen. But they wield an immensity and extent of power that no human before possessed.

Ruled by animism projected onto social constructions

The supernatural impulse never goes away. It just gets transformed. If we continue on this path… Machines are what we’ll worship in the future. Machines are what we’ll put our faith in to save us. This is naive, of course. It’s hubris. Yet we’re well on our way.

Animism is what we humans fall back on when complexity is too great for our minds.

One can sense that in our having given corporations legal ‘personhood’, to the point they have more rights, privileges, and protections than actual humans. As we once had god-kings and god-emperors, we now have god-corporations. This creeping animism is an undercurrent that we pretend isn’t there because we modern Westerners are supposed to be smarter and more sophisticated than the primitive, backwards cultures of the past.

We treat collective organizations and systems as if they have lives of their own, as if they’re inevitable and outside of our control. They’re greater than us, above and beyond us. We’re told that we have no choice but to relent to their claims and demands, that to reassert our own humanity would be morally wrong because property rights are the only rights that matter, hence property is all that matters, with violence against property being the greatest of crimes (e.g., the FBI designating Earth First as a terrorist group).

Disturbingly, instead of corporations being property, we are moving toward a neo-feudalism where we of the neo-serfdom will be beholden to corporations (Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash). Already, on social media and such, we the commoners are treated as products, not customers. They harvest our data, our attention, etc and then sell it to the highest bidder.

This is our inevitable fate, as long as capitalist realism continues to rule our lives and minds. As Margaret Thatcher put it, there is no alternative (TINA). That is what they want us to believe without question, that we’re trapped without an escape.

Capitalism has come to be treated more real than humans. It’s a hegemonic entity and immortal deity that, presumably, can’t be defied, thwarted, or killed. We have no choice, so we’re told, other than to submit and bow down to the system that stands far above us, that came before us and will continue long after us. That is literally true in the case of some corporations that have continued for generations at this point, something the American Anti-Federalists and other revolutionary radicals warned about based on their direct experience with the British East India Company.

This might be understood as a result of the modern disenchantment and rationalization of everything, as Max Weber argued. It has been denied that the world is alive, that the biosphere is a living system. This took the wind out of traditional religion that, until quite recently, treated nature as divine Creation. It might be filled with demons as well as angels but it was never doubted that it was filled with animate powers, beings, minds, and voices. It wasn’t limited to overtly animistic cultures like indigenous tribes, as it likewise remained a potent worldview among early modern Europeans.

This was the expression of an oral culture. It’s easy to forget that, until the past century, most people in the world were still illiterate or else barely literate (e.g., only able to write their signature and maybe read a simple sign). It’s interesting that we only finally achieved mass literacy at the very moment the literary paradigm had been toppled from its throne by photography, radio, film, and television; as explained by Walter Lippman’s Public Opinion, Jeff Jarvis’ Gutenberg Parenthesis, Marshall McLuhan’s global village, and Walter J. Ong’s secondary orality.

Other things likely contributed. One intriguing case in point is the transition in substance usage. Western animism largely disappeared, by the 1800s, when caffeinated beverages and other addictive stimulants finally replaced the traditional gruit ales that were sometimes mildly psychedelic, beyond that of alcohol as depressant (“Yes, tea banished the fairies.”).

The point is that we modern WEIRDos (or MYOPICS) are not normal. And the world we’ve collectively created should not be treated as normative.

Old wine in new wineskins

In any case, the point is that animism is likely the starting point and resting state of the human psyche. It’s the evolutionary norm.

The more deadened the natural world comes to feel, the more its essence is displaced by the human-made world. As with a golem or tulpa (e.g., Pinocchio), we bring a sense of life and vitality to what we fantasize about and focus on. We pour ourselves into what we obsess over. We create the monsters that haunt us and vampirically prey upon our life force, leaving us depleted.*

Animism has never gone away, however much it’s repressed and unappreciated. The repressed, as it’s been said, returns with a vengeance.

In this light, capitalism has become our religion, technology our gods, and the tech oligarchs our priestly class (Eugene McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon). While we peons are lost in confusion, our lords and masters tell us they have everything under control. They give us the myth of rational téchnē. But it’s really the rituals and magic of a priesthood.

The rational facade is constantly breaking down and the underlying animistic impulse is forever reasserting itself, whether or not we acknowledge it. In fact, it can operate all the more powerfully to the degree it dwells in the shadows, by remaining obscured and hidden in the unconscious.

In the Bronze Age, no language had a word for ‘religion’.

That is because they perceived nothing separate from or outside their shared and contained ideological worldview. They were at the center of their world. Often referring to themselves as ‘The People’, they took the world they knew as having been made for them, or else that they had been made out of it.

It was comprehensive and totalizing, making sense of every aspect of their world and lives — there were no parts left on the shop floor. When a social system of beliefs, values, and practices gets labeled as something distinct in itself and distinct from all else (e.g., religion), it’s already been weakened and so, to that degree, needs to be enforced from above (e.g., a theocratic priestly class).

That is why religions have been involved in so much mass bloodshed since the Axial Age Revolution. Different than the Bronze Age, later rulers could no longer completely depend on a people who organically conformed and submitted to a communal reality without doubt and question.

Nonetheless, though clearly declining after the Bronze Age collapse (approximately 1177 BCE), there lingered much of the archaic sensibility, identity, and culture: dividualism, animism, bicameral mentality, bundle theory of mind, and 4/5E cognition (embodied, embedded, enacted, & extended; + ecological). Being a transitional period made the ancient world dynamic. Boundaries were less hardened and rigidified. There was constant conversion between, mixing of, and influence by diverse groups that made different claims on identity and reality.

Everything more easily could shift and become something else. There was still some animistic dirt on the roots. In their reaction, the new and emboldened literary elite (e.g., Plato in Classical Athens) didn’t like that continued vitality of oral culture and so they were constantly trying to stamp it out. But it kept reemerging and resurging, until more fully being strangled into a coma millennia later during modernity.

That ancient syncretism of ideologies and clash of mentalities, with its creative flux (why it’s sometimes called the Axial Age revolution), was eventually replaced by the authoritarianism of religion proper — the new world religions. But that old time religion has been slowly dying out in recent history, generation after generation. Ironically, the weapon of murder was the Protestant reformation with its promotion of mass literacy.

The modern ruling elite have needed a more powerful theurgy of interpellation (i.e., indoctrinated mental capture). What makes both science and capitalism so compelling is that, like the Bronze Age religions (and, if to a lesser degree, the medieval Church), they’re totalizing; hence, why political totalitarianism proper didn’t appear until the 20th century. Even fundamentalists today feel compelled to rationalize their faith with pseudo-scientific Creationism, as did the fascists with eugenics. And of course, televangelism is among the most successful and profitable products on any capitalist market.

One may be an atheist, Christian, Buddhist, or whatever, etc. But no matter the specific group identifiers, significant or superficial, everyone under science and capitalism has no choice in the matter in the claims held over them. It’s a hegemonic ruling paradigm that contains and defines all else. The past century of totalitarianism has been the return of that archaic hunger to be fully immersed, the longing for the lost living divine that once inhabited direct experience (Hunger for Connection; & Music and Dance on the Mind).

This totalitarianism has been so effective and successful that most of us can’t recognize it. And there is a mindless comfort in willfully not recognizing it. This is the blindness of our mass ignorance. It gets mistaken for reality, like a mime who can’t find his way out of an invisible box.

*Side note

Julian Jaynes’ offered a similar explanation about egoic consciousness (i.e., individualism; or, more broadly, what Brian J. McVeigh called the ‘propertied self’). Schizophrenics, with weak egoic boundaries, often have near boundless energy. Jaynes postulated that may have been true of archaic humans (i.e., bicameral mind). It would explain why they were capable of architectural feats through methods forgotten after the Bronze Age collapse.

Maybe it wasn’t only lost knowledge — yet another example of our present ignorance — but also lost energy.

The new psychic structure required more energy usage. It could also explain why we hyper-egoic moderns with our obsessive individualism need constant intake of sugar and stimulants (caffeine, theobromine, nicotine, cocaine, meth, Ritalin, etc), for mere daily functioning, along with depressants (alcohol, l-theanine, opioids, semi-opioids like kratom, etc) to take off the edge from our exhausted and frazzled existence. We’re running on fumes.

The thick, rigid, and highly-controlled boundaries of egoic consciousness are energetically expensive. But it allows for a much more complex society with all its advantages and benefits. There appears to be a correspondence between the intricacy of societal structures and intricacy of the psychological structures. Considering our modern massive nation-states, empires, and geopolitical order, that would suggest an equally impressive socially constructed identity to match it, all of it internalized.

In contrast to modern WEIRD society, take the Old Kingdom of Egypt.

The archaic Egyptian population was relatively small (1.5-2 million; equivalent to present Phoenix AZ, Philadelphia PA, or San Antonio TX), was mostly spread out across small farms in rural areas, had multiple semi-autonomous regions (though technically unified), and had little infrastructure or technology (no paved roads, bridges, cranes, etc). They didn’t even have a large slave class at the time to sacrifice in back-breaking labor.

Instead, the Great Pyramids apparently were built by freely acting farmers in the off-season. Mostly using sheer manual labor, apparently combined with innovative thinking, they quarried and transported — from about 500 miles away — stones that weighed upwards of 80 tons (e.g., above the King’s Chamber in the Great Pyramid of Giza), all of which was amazingly positioned with exacting precision. We literally don’t know how they accomplished this exploit and no one has ever been able to repeat it or come close to it. In any case, the manpower used was immense.

To put it in context, the first crane that could lift 80 tons was the Grove TM 800 built in 1970.

Another point could be added. It’s not only lost technical knowledge and lost access to physiological energy. It seems to represent a loss of an entirely different way of being. Part of modern ideological realism is that it traps us in a narrow sense of self, maybe by design (Enclosure of the Mind; & Containment of Freedom). We built the trap and, after being lured into it, we forgot that it was a trap, something separate from us. It’s ideological realism as Stockholm syndrome.

The familiarity of this ignorant state is comforting to many. Or rather, like a straightjacket, it would be extremely uncomfortable to get out of it. It’s easier and more relaxing to just accept the constraints of one’s conditions and work within them. Being blind doesn’t feel so crippling when one has never known anything else, has never met anyone who could see, and couldn’t even imagine the possibility of sight.

The constraints and the fatigue feel natural. Even if we could escape, we are like the animal confined to a small cage since birth. Most of us have permanently lost our range of motion. The hobbling is built into our very developed self. And it’s hard to miss what you never knew.

Conclusion: What’s next?

Let’s return to the question we began with.

  • What if all that we’ve taken as true and real turned out to be some combination of false, misunderstood, inaccurate, partial, uncertain, questionable, confused, illusory, fantastical, delusional, deceptive, contrived, artificial, socially constructed, obfuscatory, mystifying, and alienating?
  • Could we, if only momentarily, drop our guard of ideological realism, essentialism, absolutism, and fatalism to allow into consciousness our own doubts, uncertainties, and ignorance, maybe to glimpse beyond the veil of our psychological defenses and ideological groupthink?
  • Could we sit naked before our own immediate experience of the world as terra incognito and see it with fresh eyes, to relax into that undefended state of unknowing so as to find out what we might discover, notice, and learn, even to be surprised or fall into awe?

But to my mind, that’s merely the first step. It clears the board to start again. It empties the cup to fill it with something else. To imagine having a false understanding then makes possible imagining a better understanding. It’s a hopeful exercise of radical imagination. Ultimately, it’s a contemplation of human potential.

What if you, humanity, and the world are vastly greater than you were taught and indoctrinated to believe?

Many would see this emphasis of challenging criticality as negative. It goes against the prevailing mythos of Whiggish progressivism and confident utopianism, that the world is continuously improving and progressing in a linear pathway. If with nicer garb, our society is still ruled by an ideology of Manifest Destiny and White Man’s Burden. It’s just now our paternalistic overlords are think tank intellectuals, technocratic politicians, philanthro-capitalists, and big tech broligarchs.

Still, even as we are free to challenge this claim of authority over us and over our imaginations, we don’t have to deny that the arc of history bends toward justice, though that arc may take a winding and halting path. Sometimes the only realistic and meaningful way to have optimism about the future is through pessimism of the present. We must be ruthless in clearing the way for more inspiring possibilities, for greater expressions of human potential.

If this is the best of all possible worlds, then we should abandon all hope. But this being the best it can get is a simplistic conclusion of shallow optimism. It seems unlikely and silly, the mere self-serving rationalization of small minds and corrupt power. It’s time to take on our responsibility as co-creators of the good society we’ve long aspired toward, however often it gets obscured and forgotten.

The challenge is, in order to move in the right direction, we first need to stop going in the wrong direction. We need to pause, take a breath, and look around us so as to reorient ourselves, to reestablish environmental awareness, to assess our situation. Scientifically speaking, that is the purpose of the default mode network, a more open and undirected focus. Think of daydreaming, meditating, or going for a walk in nature. It’s to loosen the grip of egoic consciousness, if but for a moment.

In the modern world, we’re almost always in directed attention and repeatedly drawn into hard fascination, from work to media that leaves us in directed attention fatigue. Driven by stress and anxiety, this results in irritability, impatience, anger, aggression, etc; but also it’s associated with addictive behavior. Basically, we’re always on edge and distracted, and so ever more dependent on substances and activities to calm us down or ramp our minds back up to regain focus, never reaching a point of balance.

There is little left over for involuntary attention, such as soft fascination and a flow state. Yet it’s precisely in this other open and relaxed mentality where our psyches can process more deeply and think divergently, can engender creative and innovative responses (attention restoration theory). Otherwise, we get stuck in ruts.

Fortunately, it’s easy to change this. First off, we need to become aware of the attentional economy and how it’s harming us (Johann Hari, Stolen Focus; Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation; & Marc Berman, Nature and the Mind). Pulling back from distraction and sidestepping addiction, we need to reclaim our own minds, our own personal psychic space. We need to regain our sense of place in the world.

The only way to enter, embrace, and pass through uncertainty is by relaxing into it. We should befriend the darkness, grow accustom to it, and develop our night vision. We might begin to discern the outlines of something else. We might glimpse something in our periphery, something around the next corner. At the edge of what we’ve seen before, on the other side of the dim murkiness, there might be gallery of light. Or an opening onto a vista. Or multiple pathways that leads deeper into the woods.

But we’ll never know if we passively remain in place, mesmerized by the flickering shadows on the wall.

Right-Wing Media Types: True Believer, Grifter, and Hybrid

We’ll explore three examples: Glenn Beck is a true believer. Russel Brand is a grifter. And Tucker Carlson is a hybrid or a transitional form. Each type will be described and explained, according to each individual’s media history. Comparisons will be made and conclusions offered. Also considered, in a social science context, will be the expression of and relation between right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), social dominance orientation (SDO), and double highs (RWA + SDO).


File:Glenn Beck 2025 (cropped).jpg

Source: Wikimedia Commons

The True Believer

To begin, Glenn Beck had the misfortune of being a true believer. He is a Mormon convert and has embraced a zealous fundamentalism. That is common among converts. Increasingly, he has merged that with religious populism, a carryover of the old religious right mood (700 Club, Focus On the Family, etc). If not intelligent or insightful, there at least can be a disarming sincerity and earnestness.

He has followed a typical life pattern of an ideologue who enters the public sphere. His unself-conscious charisma, of a sorts, propelled him into fame, initially as a radio shock jock. He played his media character to the hilt because he was personally identified with it, hence becoming a caricature of himself over time. He presents his demagoguery with conviction.

With dogmatic confidence, Beck drew in authoritarian followers as his fanbase. But as a true believer, he wasn’t manipulating them to any other end. Here is what gave him access to national media platforms, specifically Fox News. For a time, he was useful to the Machiavellians who wanted to take advantage of his influence and harvest his viewers for their own agendas.

His being a true believer, however useful, was also inconvenient. In his own way, Beck has principles, in the sense that is true of any authoritarian. This led to a simplicity for his stage act. He was a one-trick pony. So, when he was no longer useful, when he was used up, his handlers cut him loose. That is to say he was never going to last at Fox News. Reporting indicated there had been friction.

With declining viewership of his show, management began telling him what to say and not to say, supposedly such as toning down the religiosity — too much preaching and praying, not enough pushing Republican talking points and spin. In the end, a full-on religious nutjob doesn’t play well for a mainstream audience, especially not prime time, not even on right-wing media. If they wanted a televangelist, they’d hire one.

The ideologue will tend to have a short career span on big biz media. Such people usually start out small time and end the same way. Beck will always have his cult-like following. And he’ll probably do fine in being able to financially support his family. But he will never again have any greater relevance on the big stage. He has been permanently shunted off to the religious right market, which to be fair can be quite profitable.

One might note that he ‘s never turned alt-right, remaining consistent as a rather boring MAGA Republican, Christian nationalist, pro-Israel Zionist, etc. There is no grift about him, as he lacks the skill and imagination for it. Many of those who drop out of the spotlight might try to shift their views in hope of regaining a large audience. But Beck seems more or the less the same, if with less manic goofiness as he’s aged.

He really is just a standard model right-wing authoritarian (RWA), that is to say more of a follower than a leader. That’s why he couldn’t last with the big boys. He doesn’t have the ruthless or ambitious edge of SDO, especially not in terms of dark personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy). Rather than being the one others submit to, he’d rather be the one submitting.


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Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Grifter

Next in line is Russell Brand. He is the complete opposite, as a grifter par excellence. A grifter does whatever they can to get attention, gain fans, stay relevant, and keep the money flowing in. He has been successful to that end, if more so in the past. In recent years, he had become a professional celebrity, mostly just famous for being famous.

Like Beck, Brand began as an entertainer; in his case, an actor and comedian. But what distinguishes him is that he is nothing more than an entertainer. He simply plays various roles or else variations on a role, often with a guru vibe that works with his flowing locks. Interestingly, he has tried to take on the guise of an ideologue, such as a right-wing conspiracist, even awkwardly pretending to be a Christian convert, sort of. It was unconvincing and indicated desperation.

This is the problem with a full-on grifter. In the end, there is nothing there other than the grift itself. There is no substance, no conviction; just pure narcissism or whatever. The challenge for the grifter is that they have to persuade their fans that they are more than an empty vessel to be filled with the audience’s emotions and fantasies. Initially, Brand was able to hold up a facade, if he couldn’t maintain it.

That is the life cycle of a grifter. The grift is only convincing as long as it doesn’t appear as a grift. He was compelling enough as a pseudo-leftist critic. Then in following the money, he did what nearly every grifter does. He tried to go right-wing, in acting out the old trope of leftist who saw the light, the liberal who was mugged by reality. A grifter, as an addict, always has to push it to that next level.

He just couldn’t pull it off, though. Not in the long run. I don’t know if he has much of following at all these days or if he is even putting out material. Certainly, his cultural cache and appeal has plummeted. He is rarely talked about in the corporate MSM and among major social media influencers. He has largely become persona non grata.

A grifter tends to reach their peak at the precise moment they begin to decline, and that happened a while back for Brand. It’s the sad fate of dedicating one’s life to endless deception and lies. Once the grifter is seen for what they are, most of their former and prospective audience sees through their mask and suspension of disbelief is no longer possible. A grifter out in the glaring light begins to look pathetic.

To finish off his career, he was charged with two counts of rape, two counts of sexual assault, and one count of indecent assault. But no doubt, he’ll go on grifting to the best of his ability, even as his days of fame are behind him. I’m sure, if possible, he’ll try to grab even a moment of media focus again. Maybe he’ll write a memoir where he spills dirty secrets of other famous people.

All of this could be interpreted as a variety of dark personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy) and social dominance orientation (SDO), the latter specifically as status seeking (SDO-E). Such people want the power, authority, and influence. They want to be above others, to be the center of attention. SDOs are more likely to be the authoritarian leaders, although Brand doesn’t have the chops for that.


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Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Hybrid

We’ll end with the most interesting case, that of Tucker Carlson. He is no ordinary media figure. For one, he was born into immense wealth and security, privilege and comfort — he may have inherited $10-15 million, as well having married into $100 million. He has never needed to work a day in his life and so his various media gigs are simply a fun game to play. Quite likely, social connections originally helped him get into big biz media.

Still, credit has to be given where it’s due. He is several steps above the likes of Beck and Brand. Though Brand has attempted to remake himself (and mostly failed), Carlson has successfully done so multiple times, from a nerdy moderate conservative on MSNBC to a loud-mouthed pundit modeled on Bill O’Reilly at Fox News to the present alt-right gadfly on his own show. He is a true shapeshifter.

To that degree, he too is a grifter and quite talented at it. I take him as a wind vane, as he always knows which way the wind is beginning to blow in and quickly tacks into it. That is what caught my attention when, like a rat jumping from a sinking ship, he went from posing as a MAGA true believer (while speaking the opposite in private correspondence) to now play-acting as a Trump critic. He’s even gaining traction with his anti-Zionism, fitting his new persona of hard-hitting independent.

But in his early media appearances, from the mid-1980s to the late-2000s, it was a very different atmosphere and so he was playing a different kind of role. He used to offer the visage of a mild-mannered, reasonable, and conservative. He used to be the persona of a former young Reagan Republican. His role was simply to be the predictable stock character for liberal or centrist media hosts to play against.

Now his grift, one suspects his final grift, is that of an ideologue. But he has an advantage over an actual true believer like Beck, the latter too limited by a simpleminded faith. As a top-notch actor, Carlson is far more persuasive in this role for, after all, if you can fake sincerity you’ve got it made. He commits to it with gravitas of a sorts, as if a prophet in the wilderness.

That is where he is right now and likely where he will remain. There is no likely way he is going to reverse back to a respectable media figure of any sort. It appears to be a one-way career trajectory. Where does that leave him? He hasn’t simply disappeared down the obscure hole of media freaks like Beck or into a small niche like fundamentalist media. Nor did he crash and burn like Brand.

The question is can he pull off what the latter couldn’t in maintaining for the long term this last grift of faux true believer. He may have found the only way to keep this kind of grift going. It helps that he has access to funds to dump into his own self-promotion, likely along with many old crony ties from having been born and married into the elite.

For psychological observations, Carlson would be a similar mix of SDO and dark personality as seen with Brand. Yet they part ways with some other quality. If he could never be a hardcore true believer, one has to wonder if the reason he can pretend at al is because he would additionally measure a bit higher on RWA. Maybe he has that special quality of a double high. They have the ability to both con others and con themselves.