Arynne Wexler (b. 1993) is an American writer, commentator, comedian, and former finance and technology professional whose career tracks the loosening boundary between elite professional institutions and independent digital media. She came to prominence in conservative and heterodox circles during the 2020s, building an audience through political commentary, cultural criticism, humor, and a command of social platforms. Her path from the University of Pennsylvania to Goldman Sachs, to venture-backed startups, and then to independent media reflects a wider shift in American public life, where influence moves outside the older journalistic, academic, and political channels.
Wexler grew up in Scarsdale, New York, an affluent suburb north of New York City known for its schools and its professional class. She has described herself as the political odd one out in a liberal home and a liberal town, an experience she credits with shaping her interest in dissent and in the pressures toward conformity inside institutions. She showed early interests in politics, writing, and argument alongside strong academic performance. She attended the Horace Mann School in Riverdale, where she took part in student government and model United Nations and competed in a national constitutional essay contest, an early sign of the interest in civic and constitutional questions that runs through her later commentary.
She entered the University of Pennsylvania through the Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business, a selective four-year undergraduate course of study that joins business education, advanced language training, and the liberal arts. Huntsman students graduate with two bachelor’s degrees, a B.A. in International Studies from the School of Arts and Sciences and a B.S. in Economics from the Wharton School, and they specialize in the region tied to their target language. Wexler’s target language was Arabic and her regional focus the Middle East. She served as editor-in-chief of the Penn Political Review and held a leadership post with Wharton Women. Her years at Penn shaped the interests that would persist through her career: the relationship between institutions and incentives, the role of elite leadership, and the interplay of culture and political power.
After graduation she entered finance, joining Goldman Sachs as a G10 foreign-exchange trader in the firm’s fixed-income, currency, and commodities division, a role she held from roughly 2015 to 2017. The desk put her inside global currency markets during a period marked by the long aftermath of the financial crisis, European sovereign-debt worry, and the steady automation of trading.
That training stayed visible in her commentary. She tends to read political questions through incentives, organizational behavior, leadership, and accountability rather than through moral or partisan first principles. Her writing carries the assumptions of someone schooled to judge a system by whether it meets its own stated aims.
After Wall Street she moved into technology and startups. She held operating and leadership roles, among them project management and chief-of-staff work at HiredScore, a firm in workforce and hiring technology, and later positions at venture-backed companies including Melio, Avenue, and Seam, where she led business development and implementation in the early 2020s. These roles gave her direct contact with startup culture, venture capital, hiring systems, product work, and the strains that come with fast growth.
The pairing of finance and startup work gave her a vantage point that set her apart from many political commentators. Where the older conservative media figures often came from law, electoral politics, or the newsroom, Wexler came from places where survival depended on execution and measurement. The result is a recurring interest in merit, institutional competence, and the side effects of bureaucratic decision-making.
In the early 2020s she turned toward public commentary. She built a large following on social platforms by mixing short-form political analysis with observational comedy and cultural criticism. Her quick, blunt style fit platforms that reward personality and direct contact with an audience. She took up contested subjects: relations between the sexes, elite institutions, free speech, media narratives, identity politics, and the texture of contemporary American life. By the middle of the decade her main Instagram following numbered close to a million.
Her writing has appeared in outlets including The Federalist, Blaze Media, Tablet, and Human Events, and she has built a direct readership through Substack, X, and similar channels. Across these venues she returns to the link between cultural norms and institutional incentives, arguing that organizations drift from their stated missions once symbolic goals come loose from measurable results. Much of her attention falls on elite institutions, the universities, corporations, media organizations, and professional bureaucracies, and on her claim that many of them reward ideological conformity over competence. Her critics read this as another front in the culture war. Her readers read it as a diagnosis of organizational failure and falling public trust.
A substantial part of her public profile concerns Jewish identity, antisemitism, Zionism, and Jewish participation in American civic life. In writing and in appearances she has taken up the strains facing Jewish communities at home and abroad. Her emphasis falls on civic responsibility, democratic participation, coalition-building, and communal resilience rather than grievance. Her work for Tablet and her ties to Jewish communities in New York, Miami, and Tel Aviv inform this strand of her thinking.
Wexler hosts the podcast NONNEGOTIABLE with Arynne Wexler, which blends interviews, commentary, and cultural analysis and gives her room to develop themes that surface in her shorter posts: polarization, elite institutions, technology, media incentives, and social change. From the middle of the decade she moved into stand-up and live performance, and she treats the comedy as part of the same project rather than a sideline. Her sets draw on corporate offices, human-resources culture, online discourse, dating, and the manners of educated urban Americans, carrying online arguments onto the stage. Appearances on programs such as The Rubin Report, Fox News, and The Adam Carolla Show have carried her past the social platforms to a broader audience.
Wexler belongs to a cohort formed by the decline of institutional gatekeepers and the rise of direct platforms. She is neither a conventional journalist nor a party activist. She holds a hybrid place that joins analyst, entertainer, entrepreneur, and commentator, and her career shows how skills learned in finance, technology, and management can convert into cultural argument.
The thread running through her work is incentives. Markets, corporate management, higher education, media, political movements: she asks the same questions of each. What incentives drive the behavior. Does the institution reward competence. Do its structures match its stated goals. This managerial, systems-minded habit separates her from many of her peers and helps explain her pull with audiences who distrust established institutions yet still care about governance, performance, and social cohesion. She stands as a twenty-first-century media figure, a person who came out of elite professional institutions, went around the traditional gatekeepers, and built a following through direct contact with a large digital audience, her career sitting where finance, technology, politics, culture, and entertainment meet.
Arynne Wexler and the Conversion of Capital
Arynne Wexler reads institutions for a living. She asks what incentives drive them, whether they reward competence, whether their structures match their stated aims. She treats this as clear sight, the plain view of a woman trained on a trading desk to watch outcomes rather than stated reasons. Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) offers a different account of where that sight comes from and what it does. For Bourdieu a person carries dispositions laid down by his path through the social world, a habitus, and the habitus shapes how he sees before he forms a single opinion. Wexler’s way of seeing is not a window. It is a position.
Her path makes the position legible. Scarsdale gave her the first stock of capital, the home and the town that send children to selective schools. Horace Mann added more. Then Penn through the Huntsman Program, then the Wharton degree in economics paired with the degree in international studies. These are institutionalized cultural capital, the credentials a school confers and the wider world recognizes on sight. Goldman added economic capital and something scarcer, an embodied capital the currency desk rewards, the quickness and the nerve to price risk under pressure. The startups added operating experience and a network across venture capital and technology. By her early thirties she holds a thick stock of capital in several forms.
The arc is conversion. Bourdieu’s word for the movement of capital from one form into another. She converts the credentials and the desk and the operating roles into the cultural and symbolic capital of the commentator. The Wharton line and the Goldman line do work in the commentary field they never did on the desk. They buy credibility. Former Goldman trader is a claim on attention before she says a word. The selective program, the elite degree, the Wall Street years, all turn convertible the moment she steps onto the new field. She spends the credentials she markets against.
Each move crosses a field, and each field runs by its own rules. The financial field prices positions in currencies and settles its scores in profit and loss. The startup field trades in growth and equity and the judgment of investors. The field of cultural production runs on a different stake, recognition, and it splits along a line Bourdieu draws with care. At one pole sit the producers who serve a large audience and take their reward in money and reach. At the other sit the producers who claim independence from the market and take their reward in prestige among peers. Wexler stands at the large-audience pole, near a million followers on a single platform, a comedy tour, a podcast, the cable appearances. Yet she claims the prestige of the other pole. She presents herself as the independent voice, free of the gatekeepers, saying what the credentialed will not. The claim is a position-taking, a move in the field that distinguishes her from the producers she competes against.
Her favorite tool comes from the desk. The reading of every institution through incentives and competence is a disposition, not a finding she arrived at by inquiry. The currency desk teaches a man to see the world as a set of positions and payoffs, to discount stated reasons and watch revealed ones. She carries that habitus off the desk and turns it on universities, newsrooms, corporations, party movements. It serves her well. It also hides its own source. She sees the incentives running other people and misses the field forces running her reading of them.
Beneath the tool sits a doxa, a thing held as given and seldom stated. She holds that an institution should reward measurable competence, and that drift from measurable goals marks decay. She states this as common sense. Bourdieu calls it the view from a particular position, the view a trading floor produces and then offers to the world as plain truth. The floor prices everything. A woman formed on the floor comes to feel that what resists pricing must be evasion or rot. The conviction has force. It also has an address. It comes from somewhere, and the somewhere shapes what it can see and what it cannot.
The somewhere matters most where she fights it. She brands herself against the gatekeepers, the deans and editors and human-resources officers who reward conformity over merit. The brand sells. It also rests on the consecration those same gatekeepers granted her. Penn admitted her to a program that takes few. Wharton stamped the degree. Goldman hired her onto a desk that screens hard. Each of these acts of consecration travels with her into the new field and pays out there. The audience that cheers her attack on credentialism grants her a hearing in part because of her credentials. The old consecrating institutions made the outsider, and the outsider trades on what they made.
The new field has gatekeepers of its own. The platform and its sorting, the heterodox network and its hosts, the editors at the outlets that run her work, Tablet and the rest. These confer the recognition that builds a name. Wexler reads the old gatekeepers with a cold eye and grants the new ones a pass, because the new ones consecrate her now. Bourdieu’s point is not that she cheats. It is that every player in a field misrecognizes the field that holds him. The misrecognition is the price of play. A man who saw the whole board, including his own square, could not take the game seriously enough to win at it.
This returns the question to her. Bourdieu built his work on reflexivity, the turn of the tools back onto the analyst and his position. Wexler has built a strong tool and pointed it outward with skill. She reads the incentives of the professor, the editor, the manager. The frame asks her to read one more position, her own. What field forces produce a woman who reads all institutions through incentives and competence. What does that reading buy her, and in which market. What truths about her own trajectory does the tool keep her from seeing. She conducts a sharp audit of everyone’s books. The frame asks for her own.
Field theory does not call her wrong about the institutions. Universities drift. Newsrooms reward the safe. Corporations dress symbol as substance. The trader’s eye catches real things. The frame adds the part the eye cannot catch on its own, that the eye is a trained eye, made on a desk, sharpened in a field, and convertible now into a following. The conversion is the career. The sight is the product. And the product, like every product in the field of cultural production, carries the marks of the position that made it.
1. What coalition do they depend on for status and income.
2. Who do they risk angering if they speak plainly.
3. Who benefits if their framing wins.
4. What truths would cost them their position.
The coalition behind the status and the income is the audience disaffected from liberal institutions, the heterodox and conservative attention market. Her platforms confirm it: Rubin, Carolla, Fox, Blaze, The Federalist, Human Events, the Substack subscribers, the comedy rooms that draw the same people. Her brand is the defector, the Wharton woman who left the liberal fold, a nonlib girl in a crazylib world. A second, overlapping coalition funds the Jewish and Israel material, a Zionist civic audience reached through Tablet and her ties in New York, Miami, and Tel Aviv. Status flows from staying legible to these rooms. Income flows from the same rooms through subscriptions, tickets, fees, and the bookings that reach brings.
If she speaks plainly, the risk sits with her own coalition. The brand rests on the defector story, so a fair word for the institutions she mocks costs her. Praise a university that gets something right, grant a progressive critic a point, soften on the culture-war fronts her audience tunes in for, and the audience reads it as a betrayal of the bit. The two halves of the audience also pull against each other. A joke too partisan loses the comedy fans who came for the laugh. A take too mild loses the political fans who came for the fight. The hardest plain speech sits on the right’s own antisemitism. Name it square and she angers a part of the coalition that now hosts her. Hold back and she trims the truth to keep the room.
Her framing says institutions reward conformity over competence and that gatekeepers suppress merit. Several parties win if it carries. The new attention producers win, she among them, because the framing strips legitimacy from the old gatekeepers and opens ground for the direct-to-audience voice. Employers who want fewer constraints win, since the anti-conformity case doubles as a case against the programs they hope to shed. The conservative project wins, because lower trust in universities and the press serves it. The credentialed win twice, the people who hold the degrees and now recode their advantage as pure merit. The framing flatters the audience too. It tells them they are the competent ones held down by the conformists. Few messages sell better than that one.
The truths that cost the position are the ones the position makes hardest to say. That her standing rests on the credentials she trades against, that the outsider is a consecrated insider stamped by Penn, Wharton, and Goldman. That the incentives-and-competence eye is a trained habit from a trading desk and not neutral sight, and that the attention market she works now rewards heat over the measured competence she praises. That a large share of her output is coalition maintenance worn as independent candor, the saying what you fear to think calibrated to a paying room. That the right she sits inside runs its own conformity and carries its own antisemitism, and that saying so plainly costs her there. Each might be true. Each cuts the brand. The truths that threaten a position are the ones a person in that position finds hardest to speak.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory starts from a claim that strips the dignity out of political belief. A belief system is not a philosophy. It is a patchwork of justifications, rationalizations, and grievances built to support a person’s allies and oppose his rivals. Moral principles are not so principled. Core values are not so core. The thread that runs through a set of beliefs is not a value like merit or freedom. It is the roster of who counts as a friend and who counts as an enemy. Apply this to Arynne Wexler and the question changes. Stop asking what she believes. Ask whom she fights for, and in what order.
The order is the part a first pass gets wrong. Read her public brand and you draw a flat roster. Allies: the heterodox crowd, the conservative media circuit that hosts her, the competent she casts as held down, employers who want fewer constraints. Rivals: the university, the newsroom, the diversity officer, the professional-managerial class. From that flat roster you might predict that she extends the perpetrator bias to the right across the board, rationalizing her own side’s faults to hold the coalition together. Her own writing breaks that prediction, and the break is the lesson. Alliance Theory does not require a flat roster. Pinsof builds in transitivity, the rule that the enemy of my enemy is my friend and the friend of my enemy is my enemy, and he builds in super-alliances between groups that can fracture when their interests diverge. Her roster is layered. At the top sits Israel and Jewish peoplehood. The rest of the coalition ranks below.
Her Substack shows the hierarchy plainly. The brand sells a finance analyst. The page delivers an observant Jew. The longest and most patient essays work through the Book of Esther at Purim, through the Exodus and the danger of a people forgetting, through the Hasidic idea of run and return and the broken tablets kept in the Ark. Pinsof would not read these as theology for its own sake. He argues that worldviews are built to signal allegiance and mobilize support, not to view the world. The Esther piece tells the reader to stand with his people rather than hide, for such a time as this. That is allegiance signaling in the register of scripture, a call to similarity and interdependence with the senior ally. The tradition gets recruited to the present alliance.
Once you see the senior alliance, the faction fight makes sense, and the faction fight is where the earlier prediction fails. On Iran she turns on her own side. The pieces on what happened in MAGA and on the online right losing its mind go after the isolationist Tucker Carlson wing by name, hard, after the strikes on Iran. She mocks their forecasts, jeers that math is not their strong suit, calls them dupes tricked by men who make a living fooling conservatives, and reaches for a slur, the Retard Right. This is not a woman softening on her coalition. This is the perpetrator bias and the attributional bias aimed at a rival, and the rival is a wing of the right. Transitivity explains the target. The isolationists oppose striking Iran. Iran is the enemy of her senior ally. The friend of her enemy becomes her enemy, even when he carries a MAGA hat. So she grants the isolationist right no mitigating circumstances and no good intentions. She attributes their stance to internal causes, grift and stupidity and cowardice, the same self-serving attribution Pinsof describes, applied here against people who sit inside her broader camp. The senior alliance overrides coalition peace.
The three propagandistic biases run clean once the roster is ranked right. The attributional bias is the big one. Pinsof describes the pattern: a person attributes his allies’ advantages to talent and effort and their disadvantages to luck and mistreatment, and reverses the assignment for rivals. Wexler’s merit framing is this bias raised to a creed. The success of her allies she lays to internal worth. The success of her rivals, the diversity hire, the credentialed conformist, she lays to ideology and lowered standards. The failures of her rivals she lays to incompetence dressed as virtue. The Tucker wing gets the rival treatment, their bad calls read as proof of low character rather than honest error.
The victim bias comes next, and the Iran feminism piece carries it. She asks why left-wing feminists stay silent about the women of Iran and casts the Iranian women’s struggle as the true feminism. The grievance is real. The frame predicts she will reach for the victim register on behalf of her allies, the women under the regime that threatens her senior ally, and discount the register when her rivals claim it. The same writer who tells the audience that people are too easily offended keeps a careful ledger of the offenses that should sting, and the ledger tracks the roster.
The perpetrator bias completes the set, and here the revised reading sharpens the antisemitism prediction. The flat roster suggested she would go soft on the right’s antisemitism to keep the coalition. The layered roster predicts something narrower and truer to her output. Where a faction of the right threatens Israel, she treats it as a rival and spares it nothing. Where a faction of the right stands with Israel, she extends the ally’s benefit. Her allegiance does not run to the right as such. It runs to Israel, and the right earns her defense or her contempt by where it stands on that axis. The perpetrator bias follows the senior ally, not the party.
Now the strange bedfellows. Pinsof’s title points at the incompatible standards that sit together because the coalition holds them, not because they cohere. Wexler carries several. She attacks identity politics and writes a fervent Jewish identity politics. She praises merit and defends a media class, her own, whose standing comes from reach rather than measured skill. She mocks grievance and runs grievance for her allies. She tells the reader to think for himself under a banner that names the approved conclusion, common sense patriots. A philosophy resolves these. An alliance does not need to. Pinsof’s point is that the bundle did not come from analysis. It came from the groups that travel together in this country at this moment, and the senior place of Israel in her bundle is a fact of her alliances, not a deduction from a value.
Alliance Theory holds that the alliance psychology is the same across political lines, part of the species toolkit. Wexler is not running cleaner software than the progressive she fights. She has different allies in a different order, and she applies the same three biases to them. Her opponents attribute their allies’ gains to virtue and their rivals’ to privilege, embellish their allies’ grievances, and rationalize their allies’ faults, and they call it clear sight too. The frame grants neither side the high ground.
The contingency claim closes it. Drop her in another country or another decade and the bundle comes apart and reforms around different friends. The ex-trader who does anti-woke comedy, defends Israel against a wing of her own coalition, and writes Hasidic commentary for two thousand subscribers is not the carrier of a coherent creed. She is the carrier of a roster, ranked, with one alliance at the top. Learn the roster and the order, and you can predict the beliefs, the faction fights, and the silences. The Substack does not show a thinker breaking from her tribe. It shows which tribe ranks first when her tribes collide.
The persona we’ve been working from, the ex-Goldman trader who reads everything through incentives and competence, barely appears on the Substack. The incentives lens is mostly absent. What dominates is Jewish religious writing. The Purim piece on Esther, the Exodus piece on memory and forgetting, “The Freedom to Fail” working through the Hasidic idea of ratso vashov and the broken tablets in the Ark. These lean on Talmud and Tanakh and Hasidut, and they are the more textured writing on the page. The finance-and-systems analyst is not the writer here. The observant Jew is. Her own long-form output weights toward Torah and peoplehood, not org-chart analysis.
I thought she would go soft on the right’s own faults to keep the coalition that pays her. On the Substack she does the reverse where Israel is the stake. “What Just Happened in MAGA?” and “The Summer the Online Right Lost Its Mind” go after the isolationist Tucker Carlson wing hard, by name, over Iran. She calls them the “Retard Right.” So her allegiance to Israel overrides any comfort with the populist right, and she will knife a faction of her own side to defend it. Her Israel loyalty is the senior commitment, and it beats coalition peace when the two collide.
On the writing. Two registers sit side by side and they are not equal. The religious essays are patient and built on sources. The political posts run hot, reach for the dunk, and in the MAGA piece reach for a slur. She plays to the room and it forecloses the reader she says she wants, the one she tells to read and to think.
Last, the reach gap is large and tells you what the Substack is for. Over 2,000 subscribers here against something near 937,000 on Instagram. The Substack is the annex, not the main house. The mass audience lives on video and the short form. The newsletter is where she does the longer, more Jewish, more earnest writing for a small, already-converted readership that opens with “common sense patriots” and a line flattering them as the people who read. It is a side channel for the part of her that wants to write paragraphs, attached to an operation that runs on clips.
Stephen Turner’s idea of convenient beliefs cuts at a soft spot in how people argue. A convenient belief is one a person holds because it pays him to hold it, not because he has grounds for it. The belief legitimates his authority, secures his income, flatters his self-image, or licenses his standing, and these payoffs explain why he keeps the belief better than any evidence he can cite for it. The believer does not feel the convenience. He feels conviction. He experiences the belief as a thing he discovered about the world, and he can always produce reasons when asked. Turner’s point is that the reasons come after the belief and that the convenience came first. The test is counterfactual. Ask whether the man would drop the belief if holding it began to cost him. The beliefs he cannot afford to drop are the convenient ones, and his certainty about them carries no weight as evidence, because he would hold them whether or not they were true.
Run this on Arynne Wexler and the structure of her commentary appears.
Her central belief is that institutions reward conformity over competence and that gatekeepers suppress merit. Set aside whether this is right. Ask what it pays her. She left finance and technology for direct-to-audience media. If the institutions are corrupt and merit-blind, then her exit reads as the sound judgment of a competent person fleeing a broken system, and her present standing reads as vindication. If the institutions are mostly functional, her path reads as a career change like any other. The belief converts a biography into a verdict in her favor. It also pays at the register. The belief flatters her audience as the competent and clear-eyed, held down by the conformists, and a flattered audience subscribes. Turner’s frame does not call the belief false. It notes that the belief earns its keep, and that her conviction about it tells you nothing, because the convenience would hold the belief in place even if the institutions were fine.
She judges institutions by measurable competence. Why that yardstick and not another. A school might be judged by care, a newsroom by courage, a community by how it holds together, a firm by whether its people can stand each other for thirty years. She reaches past these for the metric of measurable output, and the metric is the one a person trained on a trading desk scores highest on and the one her rivals score lowest on. Turner’s anti-normativism presses here. He doubts that claims about what an institution ought to reward track any moral fact waiting to be found. They express a position. The choice of the competence standard is not a discovery about the proper aim of institutions. It is a convenient selection, convenient because she wins under it and the people she fights lose under it. She presents the standard as plain sense. It is a ruler cut to fit her hand.
Her authority rests on a second convenient belief, that her years inside elite institutions give her transferable knowledge of how institutions in general work. The Goldman line and the Wharton line function as a warrant. They license her to pronounce on universities, newsrooms, and human-resources offices she never worked in. Turner spent a career doubting expertise claims that cannot be cashed out, asking what the expert knows that he can demonstrate rather than assert. The belief that a currency desk taught her the hidden grammar of all institutions is unproven. It is also convenient, because without it she has opinions and with it she has expertise. The transfer might be real. The point is that she has every reason to believe in the transfer and no cost for believing in it, so her confidence in her own insider knowledge is not evidence that the knowledge transfers.
The bravery belief is the most convenient of all, because it is the product. She holds that she says what others are too afraid to think, that her candor is courage. Turner’s test bites hard here. The candor is a paid performance calibrated to a room that rewards exactly this stance. The belief that the performance is bravery lets her experience a market transaction as a moral act. She could not run the enterprise while believing the truth that the frame suggests, that the daring is priced and the room pays for it. So the belief stays, not because she has weighed it, but because the enterprise needs it. A writer who told her audience that her boldness was a business model would have a smaller audience and a worse self-image. The belief protects both.
A fourth convenient belief is the self-attribution that her own success reflects her merit. This is the same standard turned inward, and it pays the same way. Turner notes that a person reaches for internal causes when the outcome favors him. Wexler reads her rise as earned. The reading is convenient because the alternative readings, luck, timing, the lift her credentials gave her, the accident of a media moment that rewarded her manner, all cost her the merit story she sells to others. She cannot run the competence argument against the institutions while crediting her own arrival to fortune. The self-attribution holds because the public argument requires it.
Her religious writing sits at the edge of the frame. Her essays calling the reader to stand with his people and not hide are convenient to her standing in the community she writes for and the audience she writes to. The belief that this is the brave and righteous posture pays in belonging and in readership. The faith may be deep and the belief may be true. The convenience remains, and it explains some of the certainty that the faith alone might not.
Now the counterfactual that Turner asks of every belief. Which of these could Wexler afford to drop. Not the belief that institutions reward conformity over competence, because it vindicates her exit and flatters her readers. Not the competence standard, because it is the ruler she wins by. Not the transfer of insider knowledge, because it is her warrant. Not the bravery, because it is her product. Not the merit of her own rise, because it is the argument turned inward. Every one of these beliefs pays her, and none of them could go without taking a piece of her position with it. By Turner’s test, that is the signature of the convenient belief, the kind a person cannot give up because giving it up costs too much.
The frame does not call her a liar, and it does not call her wrong. Institutions might reward conformity. Her training might transfer. Her rise might be earned. Turner’s claim is narrower and harder to shake. Because each of these beliefs is convenient, her sincerity about them proves nothing, and her certainty proves less. A belief that pays its holder this well would persist on the payoff alone, with the truth left as an open question the holder has no reason to investigate. The honest move is the one her own commentary never makes. It is to ask which of her beliefs she would still hold if they started to cost her, and to treat the rest as what they are, not findings about the world, but the beliefs a person in her position finds it convenient to hold.
‘An Open Letter to the Groypers from a Jewish Woman’
Arynne Wexler writes Nov. 12, 2025:
If you are one of Fuentes’ followers, I’m betting the thing that hooked you wasn’t just the anti-Jewish message. I bet you found him funny, which he is, and I bet he said something that resonated with you, and felt true to your experience.
I don’t want to take that away from you. In fact, I think the Right gains nothing by denying the true parts of Fuentes’ message. We simply look unreasonable, out-of-touch, and heartless.
Groypers, I agree with you – you are suffering.
Particularly if you’re young. I also agree that it’s not your fault; you couldn’t control the fact that you were born in this era – in an era when cost-of-living has ballooned, when the older generations have turned the housing market into basically a crypto scam, and when college degrees are oversupplied and thus comparatively worthless despite still being vastly overpriced.
What’s more, you’re right to look at the past and sense that this is not normal. It used to be that men could have secret second families on a teacher’s salary. Now, men can’t even have main families, and even if they could, what woman are you going to have it with? Someone you don’t want, or more likely, someone who all of society tells you will never want you? No one would want that.
This is the most ambitious thing of hers I’ve seen, and the most revealing. Most writing aimed at antisemites condemns and closes the door. Hers opens with concession. She grants the economic grievance first, housing and worthless degrees and a dating market and a politics rigged for the wealthy and old and corporate, and only then turns to the conspiracy. That sequence is the right persuasive instinct. You cannot move a man you open by calling evil. The “cheap date” passage on the aid figure is her strongest stretch, because it is checkable and it reframes the conspiracy on the audience’s own populist ground. Aid to Israel runs near six hundredths of a percent of the federal budget. Point a resentful man at the auto, pharma, and tech money instead and you have at least made an argument he can test. The Fuentes-and-the-algorithm close is also sharp and probably true. A man who profits from your anger has no reason to end it.
Then there is the central gambit, that the Groypers are themselves victims of antisemitism, and this is where I part from her. The move where their idealized Hitler “actually describes” Abraham, Moses, and the Messiah is a magician’s reveal. It thrills the writer and it will thrill her own readers. It will not survive contact with the target. A young man who came for Fuentes does not experience being told what he secretly is as a gift. He experiences it as a Jewish woman reaching into his head and renaming his contents, which is the exact posture his movement is organized to resent. The cleverness works against the persuasion. The more the trick lands as a trick, the more the reader braces.
Calling Palestinians people who strap bombs to their children is a flat dehumanizing generalization, and it sits inside an essay whose whole claim is that you do not write off a whole people for the acts of some. The line refutes the ethic of the piece around it. Pulled out and printed, it is the sentence that ends her week. “You are us,” said to Groypers, and “gay race communism,” and the open call to end aid to Israel, and the soft nods toward the immigration and H-1B framing, each travels badly without the surrounding paragraphs. She is writing for an audience that rewards heat, and heat photographs poorly.
The structural problem is quieter and deeper. She diagnoses a material wound, rigged housing, captured politics, a generation priced out, and then prescribes a cultural cure, join a community, study the Israeli model, stop hating us. The diagnosis is populist and economic. The remedy is belonging and peoplehood. The gap between them is the soft center of the essay, and the sharper sort of Groyper, the kind she claims to respect, will feel the switch. You told me the system stole my house and then offered me a warmer family. Those do not meet.
Which raises the honest question of who the letter is for. I doubt it moves many Groypers. It reads as a performance of generosity staged for her existing audience, a demonstration that she can extend a hand to the people everyone else only curses, and be funny doing it. That is not nothing. Modeling sympathy for a hostile camp has its own worth, and refusing to write off the young men inside it fits the better part of your own values. But the essay mistakes catharsis for reach. It feels like persuasion and functions like applause.
Net read: the impulse is humane and rare, the entry is well built, the aid argument is real, and the long psychoanalytic middle is too pleased with its own pattern to do the work she wants from it. If she cut the Palestinian line, trimmed the you-are-secretly-us conceit by half, and closed the gap between the rigged-system diagnosis and the join-us cure, it would be both safer and more likely to land. As it stands it will delight the people who already agree with her and harden the people she addresses, which is the opposite of the result the title promises.
On a currency desk the number comes every second and it does not care who you are. The screen runs red or green. The squawk box barks a figure from London and the figure is true or it ruins you, and no charm, no pedigree, no good intention bends it by a basis point. A trader on a G10 desk learns the lesson young and learns it in the body. Worth is earned. The earned is real. The rest is a story people tell to feel better about the figure on the screen.
Arynne Wexler carried that lesson off the floor and built a life of talk on top of it. The talk changed. The lesson did not.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gives the tool for reading what she built. Man is the animal that knows it will die and cannot live inside the knowing, so he raises a hero system, a structure of meaning that lets him feel he counts past his span. The hero system answers two terrors. The first is death plain. The second hides behind the first and bites harder. It is the terror of insignificance, the dread of having eaten and slept and left no mark, of having been a creature and nothing more. A man quiets both by becoming, in his own eyes and in the eyes he respects, someone whose worth is real and will outlast the body. The hero system is how he earns the right not to vanish.
Wexler’s system turns on a single sacred word. Earn. To earn is to be real. To be handed a thing is to be a fraud holding it. The word organizes everything she fights for and everything she fears. Behind it sit her two terrors, and they are the same terror wearing two coats. The private terror is that she is not the genuine article, that somewhere a number will come back and show her carried, soft, mediocre, a person who was given her place and could not hold it on her own. The collective terror is larger and older. It is the erasure of a people, the chain of generations broken, the name forgotten, the Esther who stayed hidden and let her people die. Both terrors are death. One is the death of the self that turns out to be nothing. The other is the death of the people that turns out not to endure. Her hero answers both with the same act. Earn your worth so the number cannot break you, and belong to the people who earned their survival across three thousand years so the chain does not break either.
Every hero system needs a story of loss, a thing taken away that the hero exists to restore. Hers is decline. Competence subtracted by ideology. Nerve subtracted by self-flagellation. A country that forgot what made it, a people coaxed into apology, a generation that mistook grievance for worth. The hero stands against the subtraction. She names what was taken and shows the way back, and the way back is always the same road, the road of the earned and the proven and the tested.
The word is sacred to her. It is not sacred in the same way to anyone else, and this is where Becker turns the lights up. A hero system does not just hold values. It defines them. The same word carries a different cargo in each system, and a man cannot hear the other meanings while he stands inside his own.
Take the word into a clapboard Reformed church on a Sunday, where the pastor in a gray suit tells a packed room that no man earns the air in his lungs. Here merit is the oldest sin. Worth cannot be earned. It is given, unasked, undeserved, by grace, and the belief that you earned your standing is the very pride that damns you. “Grace is not wages,” the pastor says, and the room says amen. To this man Wexler’s sacred word names a trap. The harder you work to deserve, the further you fall.
Take it into a monastery where the bell rings at three in the morning and a man rises in the dark because the rule says rise. He has given up his name, his hours, his will. He does not want to be the genuine article. He wants to be no one, emptied, a reed the wind moves. Ask him what he has earned and he stares. To earn is to still be clutching the self he came here to put down. His worth, if the word fits at all, lies in the surrender of the project Wexler cannot stop running.
Take it down a fluorescent corridor to a man who has kept a water system, or a court docket, or a benefits office, running for forty years. He wears a lanyard. His chair is worn at the arms. No one has heard his name and no one ever will, and the checks cleared and the water ran and the lights stayed on because he came in every gray morning and did the unglamorous thing. “Somebody has to keep it running,” he says, and he believes his life is earned, every hour of it, by a merit that produces nothing you can sell and shows up nowhere on a screen. He is the conformist she scorns. He reads his own steady decades as worth. She reads them as the absence of worth. They use her word and mean opposite things.
Take it to a bedside where the tea has gone cold and a nurse sits with a man who will die before morning. She will produce nothing tonight. She will win nothing, prove nothing, earn nothing the desk would recognize. She holds a hand. “I just sat with him,” she says after, and in her system that sentence names the most worthy act in the building. Output is a category error here. The unmeasurable is the point. Wexler’s word has no purchase in the room at all.
Take it to a workshop where a man bends a rib of maple over a hot iron for a violin no famous hand will ever play. He works for no audience and no crowd and no number. “It will sound right or it will not,” he says, and that is the whole of his standard. He is close kin to her, a craftsman who believes in the proven and the real. But strip away the crowd and the win and the measurement, and you see what her version adds and his does not need. She requires witnesses. The earned must be seen to be earned, or the terror creeps back.
There are more rooms. The soldier who earns by dying for men he never met. The mother whose worth is poured out and never returned. The scholar who earns a footnote and counts it immortality. The point is not the list. The point is that her word is one word among many, and each system hears it in its own key, and she stands inside hers and hears only the trap, the sloth, the excuse, the fraud, where the others hear grace, surrender, stewardship, and care.
How much of this does she see. Less than she thinks. She holds herself the clear-eyed one, the realist among sentimentalists, and the holding is the blind spot. Her ledger has columns for output and victory and proven nerve and no column at all for the worth of the carried, the surrendered, the unwitnessed, the soft. When she reaches toward the people she would normally code as losers, the open letter to the young men who hate her, the reach is real and the terms are hers. She offers help on the condition that they become worthy, join a model that works, stop licking their wounds, earn their way out of the pit. Even her mercy runs through the turnstile of merit. The one thing her system cannot do is grant worth to the unproven as such, because to grant it is to admit that worth might be given, and if worth can be given then the desk lied, and if the desk lied then the terror she has outrun her whole life comes back over the wire.
Three coordinates.
The shape of her hero is the genuine article. The one who earned it and can show the work, tested by the number and not found wanting, real where the others are frauds, and bound to a people who earned their endurance and will not be erased. She is undeniable, or she is nothing, and she has built a life so that she will never have to find out which.
The rival she fights without naming is not the progressive. Him she names a hundred times a day. The rival she never names is grace. It is the whole family of systems that say a man does not have to be impressive to be worthy, that worth is given and not won, that the reed and the steward and the nurse and the dying are already enough. She cannot name that rival because her system has no room to hold it, and naming a thing you cannot hold is how you start to lose your grip on the thing that holds you.
And the cost her ledger cannot price is rest. There is no grace in a hero made of merit, and where there is no grace there is no rest, because the earned worth must be earned again tomorrow, and the number comes every second and does not care who you are. She suspects, on the bad nights, that she might be one of the carried after all, and she answers the suspicion the only way her system allows, by earning it again, and again, against a screen that never goes dark and a ledger that never, ever closes.
The Set
Picture the room where this set gathers. A Free Press live event, or a dinner in a private room off Lafayette, or the back table at the Comedy Cellar after the late show. The dress is expensive but reads as casual, the kind of casual that costs money. Someone arrives late from a taping and gets the long hello. Someone else, a Substacker with twelve thousand subscribers and no institutional perch, gets the short one. A waiter pours natural wine. A man says, “I’ve been saying that since 2019,” and three people nod, because in this room the date you started saying a thing is a form of seniority.
Arynne Wexler sits at the young, loud, social-media-native edge of this world. The commanding heights belong to others. To understand her, you map the set.
The center of gravity is Bari Weiss (b. 1984) and The Free Press, which she founded after walking out of the New York Times with a resignation letter that became the set’s founding scripture. As of October 2025 she runs CBS News, bought there when Paramount Skydance acquired her company for a reported one hundred fifty million. She brought writers with her, Abigail Shrier, Rod Dreher (b. 1967), Arthur Brooks (b. 1964). She fired Scott Pelley in June. Her old newsletter was called Common Sense before it was The Free Press, and you hear that phrase everywhere in this world, down to Wexler’s own banner, common sense patriots. The vocabulary is shared because the worldview is shared.
Around Weiss sits a dense Jewish, pro-Israel, anti-woke commentariat. Commentary magazine and John Podhoretz (b. 1961) and Seth Mandel hold the older intellectual flank. Dan Senor (b. 1971) and his Call Me Back podcast hold the Israel-policy flank. Eli Lake works the national-security beat. Batya Ungar-Sargon argues the populist-but-anti-woke line on cable. Then the heterodox crossover crowd, not all Jewish but all fluent in the same moral language: Coleman Hughes (b. 1996), Douglas Murray (b. 1979), Konstantin Kisin and Triggernometry out of London, Ben Shapiro (b. 1984) and the Daily Wire orbit, Megyn Kelly (b. 1970) on her own show, Dave Rubin, Dennis Prager (b. 1948). The comedy wing matters more than it looks, because this set treats comedy as the last free speech, so the Comedy Cellar and Noam Dworman’s table carry weight, and Wexler’s old co-host Emily Wilson runs the same lane. Adam Carolla and the Rubin Report give her the bookings that built her past social media.
What do they value. Courage above all. Free speech, merit over identity, the West and America and Israel as goods a man should defend without apology, the individual over the grievance group, and a recent turn back toward religion, family, and nation after a decade of thinking markets and snark were enough. They prize the person who says the unsayable thing and pays for it. They despise the coward who trims to keep his seat.
Their hero is the defector. The one who stood inside a prestigious institution, saw it go mad, and walked out into the cold to tell the truth. Weiss is the type specimen, and the resignation letter is the relic. The significance a man earns in this world comes from exile, from having been cast out of somewhere good for refusing to lie, and then vindicated when the world caught up. The set builds its own institutions to house the exiles, the Substacks and the podcasts and now a television network, and it tells itself a second story underneath the first, the story of a people who endure. For the Jewish core, the courage myth and the survival myth fuse. Weiss says her Judaism gave her a road map for how to be brave. Wexler says the same in scripture, stand with your people, do not hide.
The status games follow from the hero. The first is the cancellation credential. The man who lost the most prestigious perch is the most authentic, so a Times resignation outranks a tenure denial, which outranks a brand deal pulled by a nervous sponsor. The second is the priority claim, the I-said-it-first game, where the date of your first heresy is your rank. The third is proximity to the nodes, a piece in The Free Press, a seat on Honestly, a guest spot with Megyn or Rubin, the booking that says the set has ratified you. The fourth is the count, the paid subscribers, the followers, the sold-out room, all of it worn lightly and known precisely. And the fifth, the cruelest, is the purity audit. Are you brave or are you a grifter. Are you the real thing or controlled opposition. The same word the set throws at the left, coward, it turns inward at the first sign that a member is performing courage for money rather than paying for it.
Their normative claims are blunt and they state them as obvious. Institutions ought to reward merit. Speech ought to be free. A man ought not apologize for his civilization or his people. Courage is the first virtue and cowardice the first sin. The individual answers for himself. Victim culture rots whatever it touches. They do not argue these as one position among many. They argue them as the recovery of plain sense after a long collective madness, which is why the word sane does so much work in their mouths.
Their essentialist claims sit just under the surface and carry the real charge. Human nature is real. Sex is real, which is why Shrier and Riley Gaines (b. 2000) became saints of the set. Merit is a real thing you can measure, not a mask for power. Culture is real and some cultures produce better outcomes than others, which Wexler says plainly when she tells the young men that Israel’s prosperity owes something to values and not only to aid. And the people is real, an essence that runs through three thousand years, a chain a man can betray by hiding or honor by standing. Reality is the master term. The left denies reality, the set lives in it, and the whole moral universe turns on that claim.
The moral grammar runs on one axis above the others, courage against cowardice. The progressive grammar runs on harm and care. The old religious right runs on purity and sin. This set runs on brave and afraid. Its honorifics are brave, fearless, honest, heterodox, sane, real, based. Its curses are coward, captured, woke, grifter, midwit, NPC, controlled opposition. To sin is to lie so you can keep your job, to apologize for your tribe, to punch down while calling it punching up. To be saved is to tell the truth at cost and survive it. There is no grace in this grammar. A man cannot rest on courage already spent. He has to be brave again this morning, which is why the set never stops and why its members burn out or harden.
Now the part that makes the present moment sharp, because the set is at war with its own right flank and the war is the live drama. For years the enemy was clear and to the left, the woke dean, the captured newsroom, the struggle session. Then a younger, harder, often openly antisemitic right rose on the same anti-woke energy and turned on the Jews. Nick Fuentes (b. 1998) and the Groypers. Candace Owens (b. 1989), pushed out of the mainstream right and into open Jew-hatred. Tucker Carlson (b. 1969), isolationist now, skeptical of Israel, willing to platform Fuentes. Marjorie Taylor Greene (b. 1974), whom Wexler files under the retard right. The set that organized against the left now spends half its force excommunicating its own flank, drawing the line at antisemitism and at abandoning Israel. Wexler’s open letter to the Groypers and her strikes at Tucker and Megyn are moves in exactly this war. The fight is over who stays sound on the Jews and on Israel when the coalition’s young blood drifts the other way.
And there is a second strain the set feels and seldom says. Its hero is the exile from the captured institution. Its champion now runs CBS News and fires its veterans. Weiss built her authority on being cast out and now does the casting. Pelley walked out accusing her of murdering 60 Minutes, the way she once walked out of the Times. When the outsiders capture the tower, the courage myth that ran on being outside starts to strain, and the set has not worked out what to tell itself about that yet. Watch that strain. It is where the next round of purity audits will land, and Wexler, young and hungry and standing at the edge of the room where the seating is not yet fixed, has every reason to be watching it too.
The Rubin Report: ‘If You Want More Women to Be Conservative, Do This | Arynne Wexler’ (Feb. 8, 2025)
This is Rubin’s couch, so it’s the loosest, least guarded version of her. He says they’re friends, he reads no prepared questions, and the room laughs along. That makes the hour the most revealing thing of hers I’ve seen and the least disciplined. Set it next to the Substack and the Groyper letter and you have one person in three registers, and this is the bottom one.
The key ideas, with timestamps.
0:00 and 44:20. Her sharpest original line opens the show and she throws it away. She inverts Shapiro. Facts do not care about your feelings becomes feelings do not care about the facts. The 2024 vote, she argues, ran on felt experience, not new data. Nobody learned a number. They felt the grocery bill. The trouble is she illustrates it with the litter-box-and-furries story, which is a hoax, stated as fact (0:40, 44:51). The one insight in the hour gets propped on a fabrication.
2:55. The persona in a sentence. Joan Rivers and Ben Shapiro had a baby. Comedy plus punditry, diamonds plus eyebrows. She is telling you the act is built, not found.
5:11. The strategy said out loud. The Ivy League and the Goldman trading floor are armor, so the left cannot call her stupid. She names the credential as a shield in the same career she spends attacking credentialism.
10:10. The engine belief. The bathroom whisperers, the underground railroad of secret conservatives. The thesis that a silent majority agrees and only lacks courage. It powers the whole project and it cannot be tested, and it flatters her and her audience at once.
15:53 and 54:36. The essentialism about women. Women run on feeling, easily swayed, and she is the exception, I am different, I am just a girl. She makes a living as a woman telling women they reason worse than men, and the only way to hold the claim is to exempt herself from it on a running joke.
21:36 and 23:04 and 25:06. The cruelty turn. The fat-nippled androgyne, the high-school classmate rendered as a white Oompa Loompa, the call to bring back bullying. The bullying line ends at school shooters (25:30), where it stops making sense and turns ugly. Am I a mean girl, she says, (24:31).
27:51 to 31:02. Her most serious stretch. The right is seduced by celebrity and forgives anything for a follower count. Kanye, the standards problem, Tucker stoking antisemitism. This is the through-line that also runs the Groyper letter and the Substack MAGA pieces, and it is where she takes real risk inside her own camp.
32:05. The conspiracy double standard. She faults Tucker for conspiracism and then plants a flag on Obama being gay, citing Tablet, as a die-on-this-hill conviction. She cannot see her own conspiracy as one. The facts-and-feelings blade cuts back at her and she does not feel it.
41:16 to 42:51. The leftist Jews passage. Disown them, a mental defect in these Jews. Then, in the same breath, she says the Nazi crew will clip this out of context. She watches the New York Times front-page test fail in real time and keeps going.
48:29. The Trump devotion. She gets emotional about how he sacrificed his life for us. The clear-eyed skeptic who reasons from felt facts turns worshipful. The back-half save is the pessimist turn (50:07), where she splits Trump voters from conservative voters and worries the coalition peels back, which is the one piece of cold political analysis in the hour.
Now the thoughts.
The hour runs on a fusion she never examines. She sells courage, saying the thing others fear to say, and a large share of what the courage cashes out to here is meanness about faces and bodies. Bravery and cruelty get welded together until the brand cannot tell them apart. The Groyper letter extends a hand to the lonely young men. This hour mocks a former classmate’s body for sport. Same month, same woman, opposite ethics, and the difference is the room. Rubin’s couch pays for the dunk, so she dunks.
The 42:51 moment is the one to sit with. She knows the line will be clipped and she says it anyway. That is the incentive structure showing its face. In her own terms, the felt reward of the laugh beats the known cost of the clip. Run her own opening thesis on her own performance and it explains the whole hour. She is not reasoning to these positions. She is feeling for the applause and narrating backward.
The strongest thing she does is the standards argument against her own side from 27:51 on. Holding the right to account on antisemitism and on celebrity worship takes real risk in her coalition, and it is consistent across her work. If she has a contribution, it lives there. It does not live in the body-shaming comedy, which any number of people can do and which costs her nothing with the audience that matters to her.
The women-and-feelings material is the weakest, because she is the standing refutation of it and has to keep stepping outside her own category to make it work. A claim that needs its author exempted is not a claim. It is a costume she can put on and take off, just a girl when it is funny, the smartest person in the institution when it is flattering.
If you wanted one thing from the whole hour, it is the first minute. Feelings do not care about the facts is a real idea, better than anything built on top of it, and it would be sharper still if she turned it on herself. She will not, because the act depends on her being the exception to every rule she names, the one woman who runs on fact, the one skeptic who weeps for Trump, the one truth-teller whose cruelty is only courage. The hour is funny and quick and, by the New York Times front-page test, mostly indefensible, and she tells you so while she does it.
Adam Carolla: ‘From Wall Street to Stand-Up: Arynne Wexler on Comedy & Why More Liberals are Turning Right’ (Apr. 7, 2026)
The format here matters before anything else. On Rubin she drove. Here she rides. This is Carolla’s machine, built on bits, and she plays straight man and co-signer for most of two hours. So the revealing question is not what she argues but what she chooses to amplify and where she stays quiet.
Key ideas, with timestamps.
0:54 and 32:50 and 48:21. The Wharton credential becomes the running gag of the whole show, with Carolla casting his street smarts against her degrees. She leans into the pedigree on entry, Goldman as a boutique bank you have probably never heard of (3:13). The credential is the bit and the armor at once, same as on Rubin.
6:37. A real piece of candor. She says she started standup six months ago and that people warned her not to admit it. She admits it. The honesty is to her credit and it also tells you how new the comic is under the viral clips.
11:16 and 17:41. The black girl spelling device. She uses the spelling of her own name as a license to say things about Black people, I get to say it because I have a black girl spelling.
17:22 to 19:42. The worst stretch, and she is an active builder of it, not a nodder. Carolla floats that Black people resent Jews because Jews hold a mirror to what they should accomplish. She co-signs hard, you are so correct, and supplies her own material, the short bridge to the Holocaust against the long bridge to slavery, the broken-arm versus sore-back sports analogy, we own sports we do not play sports. This is racial essentialism about Black failure in the present, performed as a two-hander for laughs.
12:30 and accepted again at 1:26:45. The women-are-emotional line returns, the woman’s nature of being emotional, and later she lets Carolla’s she is a chick so she just spits it stand without pushback. Same self-exempting pattern as Rubin.
20:09 to 20:48. Her sharpest analytic moment. On Mamdani and rent she separates the constant from the variable. The rent is the same number for everyone, so the thing to explain is not the rent but why it lands harder on some groups. Look at the variable. That is a clean move and it comes straight from the trading habit of mind.
29:34. A second point. Do not assume these people cannot win. Democrats are good at turning out votes. She refuses the comfort of writing off the other side, which is rarer on the right than it should be.
34:24 to 36:51. Her best sustained run. The 2024 win came from the widest tent the right has had, Elon and the tech bros and MAHA and the suburban moms, and good times will erode it, because people forget and the social permission to vote right evaporates once the fear recedes. New York under Mamdani is the warning. The pessimist case is the most political thinking she does all show. She also drops the litter-box hoax again (35:20), the third time across these transcripts, still as fact.
39:51 to 40:16. The most independent thing she says. She rejects the silent-majority framing outright. Being in the majority does not make you right, and history often puts the right people in the minority. That cuts against her own side’s populism, and she says it anyway.
45:55 and 46:17. Her aesthetic creed. Comedy is the truth with good timing, so unfunny means untrue. Then the Bill Burr (b. 1968) set, where she laughs at jokes coded against her side and respects him for being a comic first. Strong media criticism, and consistent with the comedy-as-courage line she runs everywhere.
Now the thoughts.
The episode splits her into two people. One is a sharp political analyst with a finance brain. The rent variable, the turnout pessimism, the warning against underestimating Democrats, and above all the refusal of majority-equals-right are the best things in two hours, and they are buried under Carolla’s bits because the format rewards the bit over the argument. If she wrote up the anti-majoritarian point alone, in her own voice, she would have something worth reading. It is the rare moment where she thinks against her tribe rather than for it.
The other person is the co-signer, and that one pays a heavy price for the seat. The 17:22 stretch is worse than anything on Rubin, not because the lines are sharper but because she builds the structure with Carolla rather than tossing a single jab. Racial generalization about a whole people’s failure, dressed as comedy, with the black girl spelling used as a hall pass. Run her own creed against it. Comedy is the truth with good timing, she says, and then the laughs here come from generalization, not truth. The creed and the practice split, and the split is the tell. She knows the difference between a true joke and a cruel one. She chooses the room.
On venue, the contrast with Rubin and with the Substack is the whole story of her. The Substack is the earnest observant Jew. The Groyper letter is the generous persuader. Rubin is the brand owner running her own line. Carolla is the apprentice feeding setups in someone else’s house and matching its register, which here runs to race and to dunks. Four rooms, four ethics, and the through-line is that the room sets the floor, not she. The warmth toward Trump at the end, where she coos along with Carolla’s autograph story and the he-reads-everything material (1:13), is the same courtier note from Rubin. Access flatters her, and she lets it.
She’s learning, six months in, that the fastest way to land on Carolla is to hand him the next bit, even when the bit is about who plays sports and who owns them.
‘Arynne Wexler: If New York Falls, The West Falls | Sage Steele Show | EP 79’ (Oct. 29, 2025)
Of the three, this is the warmest room and the most revealing. Sage Steele (b. 1972) plays the admiring older friend, no edge, frequent you-are-so-brave. That ease pulls out the most biography, the most sincere religion, and the clearest statement of her project, and it also lets a steady run of ethnic jokes slide by unchallenged. The contrast with Carolla is the lesson. There she co-signed race material to land bits. Here the depth comes out, and the jokes turn Arab and Muslim and softer-seeming because the room is gentle.
Key ideas, with timestamps.
3:39 to 5:25. White liberal women as the master villain, more damaging than Islamic terrorists because they import and excuse them. The pronoun-users-are-worse-than-trans-people line. The villain is gendered and racial at once, and it recurs all show.
6:09 and 1:09:13. Rob Henderson’s (b. 1990) luxury beliefs, used as a real analytic tool. Life is candyland, so people can afford ruinous ideas. She reaches for an actual concept here, twice.
12:59 to 13:21. The tell of the whole worldview. She got LASIK because she did not want to manage contact lenses during a civil war if Trump lost. The fear was sincere and apocalyptic, and it is the engine under everything.
25:39 to 25:59. The anti-majoritarian point, for the third time across three interviews. Being in the majority does not make you right. It is her single most stable independent idea, and she states it cleaner here than anywhere.
28:11 to 28:46. In her own words, the Penn degree. A dual bachelor’s through a fifty-person program, a BA in international studies and a Wharton BS, four years of Arabic.
30:32 to 30:49 and 35:37 to 36:26 and 1:42:00. The Arab and Muslim jokes. The textbook character who marries her cousin, at least not a goat. The Jihadi Jihad airport skit. The dog who, were he Israeli, would be hunting terrorists in tunnels. These are the lines that fail the front-page test hardest here.
42:22 to 50:16. The center of the episode and her best work. The Charlie Kirk (1993-2025) Save the West retreat with Bill Ackman (b. 1966) and others, and Candace Owens (b. 1989) accusing her of running a Jewish cabal tied to Kirk’s death. She denies, refuses to name attendees, and turns it into a charge against the unnamed household names who were there and stayed silent. Her formulation lands: moral cowardice under the guise of political bravery (50:16).
47:47 to 59:20. The Megyn Kelly (b. 1970) indictment. Kelly calls Candace brilliant while claiming not to watch her, calls Tucker (b. 1969) a friend and not an antisemite without saying why, and says I don’t care when pressed on it. Wexler notes Kelly’s independent media is Fox-owned now [LF: not true], so the independence claim is hollow, and that independent media is more swayable than mainstream, not less (53:35). This is real media criticism with cost attached.
55:49 to 56:31 and 1:01:53. Tucker as a pro-life Marxist peddling a victim mentality. The old right was iron your shirt and get a job. The new right blames the elites and the women and the Jews. Horseshoe theory, stated plainly, and consistent with her other appearances.
1:09:53 to 1:11:43. The strategist showing up. She argued incremental abortion politics to Kirk, start with late-term, ease people in, and he refused. There are your beliefs and then there is strategy. Paired with feelings don’t care about facts (1:11:59), it is the analyst at her best.
1:19:53 to 1:20:05. The peoplehood creed, undisguised. Earning my stripes as a Jew today, the nation of Israel always lives, we get to be strong for everyone because we have had the easiest lives, I don’t sleep anymore. This is the merit-and-endurance worldview in her own mouth.
1:21:05 to 1:21:47. Her explicit theory of her own method. Comedy is the last free speech, and when you make people laugh they are agreeing before they realize they should not be. Disarm, then implant.
1:39:34. The women-are-emotional line again, now co-signed with Steele as why a conservative man may marry a liberal woman but never the reverse. Same essentialism, same self-exemption.
Now the thoughts.
This is the best material she has, and it sits next to the worst, and the room is why both come out. The Megyn Kelly argument is her strongest, most courageous, most consistent work across all three tapes. It costs her inside her own coalition, she names the incentive structure of independent media without flinching, and moral cowardice under the guise of political bravery is the sharpest sentence she has said anywhere. The Candace Owens cabal accusation is a frightening thing being done to her by a large-following figure, not a performance of victimhood, and it explains the security fear that runs under the episode. On this front she is serious, and she is right to be.
The religious material is the engine. Earning my stripes as a Jew, the people who always live, strong for everyone because we have had it easiest. That is the merit-and-endurance worldview stated flat, down to the joke that the dog must earn his meal. She even applies the creed to a spaniel. A person who organizes the world around earning and proving and enduring will say exactly these things, and she does.
The abortion incrementalism against Kirk, the beliefs-versus-strategy split, luxury beliefs, the turnout pessimism, and for the third straight time the refusal of majority-equals-right. If you wanted the portable Wexler, the one worth reading, it is these passages. The anti-majoritarian line especially. She has now said it to Rubin, to Carolla, and to Steele, and it is the one idea she holds against her own MAGA tribe rather than for it.
The cost is the same as before and the warm room makes it worse, not better, because nobody pushes. The Arab and Muslim jokes are the heaviest here, and the goat line and the airport skit are indefensible by the New York Times test. And she keeps narrating her own awareness while she does it. She tells the vet the Lil Jew line is fine, the vet says it is not, and she says it anyway (1:42:19), the same move as the Nazi-crew-will-clip-this moment on Rubin. The awareness is part of the act. Her own theory of comedy explains why. If the laugh makes people agree before they notice they should not, then the ugly joke is not a lapse, it is the method working.
The LASIK story is the key. A woman gets eye surgery so she will not have to manage contacts during the civil war she expects if her side loses. The fear is sincere, and sincere fear of civilizational collapse is the thing generating both the serious work and the catastrophizing. It is what makes the Megyn Kelly argument feel urgent and also what makes a mayoral race read as the fall of the West. The same engine drives the best and the worst of her.
Net, across the three rooms. Rubin got the brand owner, Carolla got the apprentice feeding bits, Steele got the fullest person, the one with a faith, a strategy, a real grievance, and a joke habit she cannot or will not govern. The throughline holds. The room sets the floor, the fear sets the urgency, and the cold analytic core, the strategist who knows the majority is not the truth, shows up for maybe fifteen minutes and is worth more than the other three hours combined. If she ever wrote from that core without the disarming joke and the manufactured license, she would have the contribution she keeps saying she wants. On this evidence she has it in her, and she spends most of her time elsewhere.
‘Biden and Blinken’s Betrayal | Arynne Wexler | The Buck Sexton Show’ (Feb. 22, 2024)
She is thirty, still NonLibTake, still in the man-on-the-street phase, before the standup, before the Substack, before the war with her own flank. So you can read the whole later arc backward from here and see what was already in the seed and what got grafted on.
Key ideas, with timestamps.
0:22 to 1:04. The origin, confirmed. Buck Sexton’s (b. 1981) wife Carrie, a former Fox producer, found her videos, recognized the building behind her as next door, and sent them to Buck. The discovery vector and the first node in the network that later runs through Rubin’s parties.
3:33 and 16:01. The woman as villain is already fully built. Androgynous woke Jihadi Jane in February 2024, and the Jihadi Janes marching for a ceasefire later in the same hour. The archetype that anchors everything after is present from the start.
3:47 to 4:28. The low-t soy beta, which she says she coined at the dog park, the same dog park where she says she coined the handle. The masculinity policing starts early in her arc.
4:35 to 11:03. The dating pre-screen, and the Rosetta stone of the whole person. She phone-screens suitors for conservatism and, in her words, to hear whether they sound gay (7:00). The old version was a Romney litmus, vote for him or you will not father my children. This is a loyalty test for romance, built exactly like the loyalty test she later runs on the movement.
5:45 to 6:43. The platform grievance, fifth YouTube channel, shadowbanned, fifty viewers. The same persecution narrative as the later TikTok-prison stories, and in early 2024 more grounded than it became.
12:58 to 16:09. The Israel segment, the serious core. Drawing on her Federalist and Blaze pieces, she argues Biden’s support is fleeting, optics over outcome, and that the war is religious, not territorial, because Hamas wants eradication and not a border. Agree or not, it is an argued position, not a bit, and it is the one commitment that stays senior all the way to 2026.
16:18 to 17:53. Her best moment here, and cold. Asked whether Jews will shift right, she says cautiously optimistic, very cautiously, because Jews want to be accepted and will curl back to the Democrats the way they did after the 2021 rockets. She predicts her own side’s behavior against her own hopes.
22:37 to 23:25. The name bit, and note what is missing. Here it is innocent. Aaron is a boy’s spelling, Erin reads Catholic, her parents were ahead of the celebrity-baby curve. There is no black girl spelling line. That device, the one that later manufactures a license to talk about Black people, has not been invented yet.
Now the thoughts.
Read against the three later tapes, this one tells you what is essential and what is acquired. Essential, present in the seed: the sexual villain and the masculinity vocabulary, Israel as the senior loyalty, the platform-persecution grievance, the cold predictive read on her own tribe, and above all the screening instinct. Acquired later: standup and the disarm-then-implant theory of comedy, the devotional Torah register, the war on Candace and Tucker and Megyn, and the black girl spelling license. In February 2024 the enemy is entirely to her left. The right has not fractured, or she has not yet turned to face it.
The dating pre-screen is the key to all of it, and it is funnier and more revealing than she means it to be. Her root instinct is the loyalty test, the phone call to check whether a man is sound before the small talk is allowed. She runs it on suitors here and, two years later, on the leading voices of her movement, Megyn Kelly and the household names in the Hamptons. The object changes. The instinct does not. She is a screener by temperament, and the screen is binary, sound or not sound, the father of my children or not. That tells you why the later purity fights feel so natural to her. She has been doing this to her own dates for years.
The Israel material is the spine, and it is the most consistent thing about her across two years. It is senior here, argued in print, and it stays senior all the way to the point where she will knife her own coalition to defend it. Whatever you make of the hawkishness, it is the one position that is never a bit and never venue-dependent. The 2021 prediction, that Jews want acceptance and will drift back, is the analyst showing up in the serious stretch again, the same cold register as the anti-majoritarian line she repeats in every later interview.
The sound-gay line and the soy-beta talk are the New York Times front-page failures of February 2024, and they are tame next to the goat jokes and the race license of 2026. So even the transgression has a trajectory. It escalates as the audience pays for it. The innocent name bit becoming the black girl spelling device is the whole pattern in one detail. The same fact about her name, harmless in 2024, gets repurposed two years later into a hall pass for the otherwise unsayable. Nothing was added that was not already latent. It just got rewarded, and grew.
So the seed contains the plant. The loyalty screen, the Israel commitment, the gendered villain, the platform grievance, and the cold eye on her own people are all here at thirty. What the next two years supply is a stage, a pulpit, a license, and an enemy on her own side. The best of her, the realist who tells you her tribe will not move and that being in the majority is not the same as being right, is audible already in this small early room, between the dating bit and the soy betas, and it remains the thing she should build on and mostly does not.
‘The Eulogy Charlie Kirk Deserves’ (Sep. 11, 2025)
Many have remarked on the similarities between the 60’s Left and today’s Right. On those terms, there’s only one appropriate comparison: Charlie Kirk was our Martin Luther King Jr., and not only because we’ll always remember where we were when we heard he was shot. In an era when young conservative men were treated like pariahs – ostracized, shamed, scapegoated, dehumanized, and demonized – Charlie alone could channel their rage without being consumed by it. He not only felt their pain, but genuinely worked to fix it, which gave him the moral authority to tell them to rise above their worst instincts: to take the high road to self-betterment rather than one of the many primrose paths to self-immolation.
Unlike many other conservative influencers who claim to speak for young people, Charlie did not do this as a cynical ploy to protect donors. Quite the opposite.
I had the privilege to be with him a month ago for an off-the-record, high-level discussion with some TPUSA donors, where the topic unexpectedly became home-ownership among young people. It was a topic that Charlie chose. And in a room with people who arguably paid his salary, a lesser leader would have simply parroted what the people with money wanted him to say, but not Charlie Kirk. He refused to let that dictate his words. He refused to give up on the idea that young people deserved to experience the American dream, because as a man who never finished college and yet who ended up leading and shaping an entire movement, he personified the American dream.
I never once saw him look at his phone during the two days we met. Even when we disagreed, it was as if he had nowhere else to be. Like right there, in that moment, all that mattered was the subtle thrust and parry of intellectual fencing between two minds. He was preternaturally laser-focused, and despite the fact that he was both a literal and figurative giant (6’5’’ even when slouching), he somehow never made you feel small.
And it worked. In refusing to accept what his nearest historical analogue, William F. Buckley Jr., called “the failure of the conservative demonstration,” Charlie Kirk demonstrated that conservatism could be fun.
Judge this one by its genre and its clock. It is a eulogy written within a day of a murder, for a man she had met and admired.
The anaphora carries it, the man who never walked out of a fight, a friendship, his family, his country. The Buckley echo is earned and shows she knows the lineage, stood athwart, the failure of the conservative demonstration, the line about William F. Buckley Jr. (1925-2008) doing more work than the rest of the references combined. The best paragraph is the donor-meeting anecdote, because it is specific and humane and it argues by detail rather than by adjective. Charlie Kirk (1993-2025) picks the homeownership topic in a room of people who pay him, refuses to parrot the money, never looks at his phone, never makes you feel small at six foot five. That is eulogy doing its actual job, turning a public figure back into a person. It is also, notably, the same meeting she later relitigates on the Sage Steele show as the Candace Owens cabal fight. Here, the day after, it is pure tribute. Two months on it becomes evidence in a war. The event holds still. The use of it moves with the room.
The most serious thing in the piece is the restraint plea near the end, and it is to her credit. In the white heat of the day after, she tells her own side to ignore the people who want violence for violence. Justice, not vengeance. Right reason, not blind rage. Punish, but not irrationally. Calling your own grieving tribe off the warpath in that moment takes more nerve than any of the dunks, and the closing turn, that persuasion is the punishment our enemies fear most, is both shrewd and consistent with the better strategist in her.
Now the breaks. The Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968) comparison is the overreach that swallows the essay. King led a mass movement against state violence over years and died for it. Hanging the analogy on we will remember where we were is thin. It is the boldest claim and the least earned, and the Buckley comparison she makes in the next breath is both more apt and more modest. She had the right analogy and reached past it for a bigger one.
The deeper problem is an internal contradiction she does not resolve. The same essay that pleads for right reason, not blind rage spends its middle dehumanizing the killer as an animal, an insect, a sniveling thing she will not dignify. Grief explains it. The genre invites it. But you cannot counsel your movement against blind rage in one paragraph and model it in another. The plea would land harder if the rhetoric around it practiced what it preached. The bigger-than-9/11 line is the same kind of reach, and she flags the risk herself while taking it anyway, which is a habit by now.
Then there is the register problem. He bled aura and courage is always cool, cowardice is always cringe are influencer lines in a funeral oration. They are her native idiom, and in the analytical pieces they pass, but next to a coffin they cheapen the grief they mean to carry. A murder reduced to a coolness binary reads small, and she is capable of better, as the donor anecdote proves three paragraphs up.
The piece confirms what runs through all her work, that courage against cowardice is her master axis and that her hero is the man who walks into the room and will not walk out. Kirk is that hero, and her grief is real, and the eulogy is at its best when it trusts the specific memory and its plea for restraint, and at its worst when it inflates the man into a martyr-saint and dehumanizes the killer in the same breath that warns against rage. Cut the King comparison, cut the bigger-than-9/11 reach, let the animal-and-insect lines go, and keep the phone he never checked and the topic he chose against his donors and the call to persuade rather than avenge, and it would be both truer and more moving. As written, it is a sincere eulogy at war with its own counsel.
David Pinsof’s misunderstanding myth describes the story intellectuals tell to make themselves the heroes of the world. The story says that everything wrong with the world comes from misunderstanding. Polarization, bigotry, war, unhappiness, all of it springs from bad beliefs, and the cure is better understanding, which makes the people who supply understanding the most important people alive. Pinsof’s reply is that there is no misunderstanding. People understand what they have an incentive to understand. Stereotypes are often accurate, partisan hatred is rational competition over the power of the state, and the cognitive biases the intellectuals want to fix are savvy strategies that serve the people who run them. The trick the myth performs is to swap stated motives for actual motives. Judge a person by what he says he wants, to change minds and better the world, and he looks like a failure in need of more enlightenment. Judge him by what he is doing, climbing hierarchies and derogating rivals and dominating under a moral cover, and he looks like what he is, a rational animal getting exactly what he came for.
Run this on Arynne Wexler and the first surprise is that she is half inside Pinsof’s camp before he arrives. She is the rare commentator who has already said the anti-myth thing out loud. Feelings do not care about the facts, she repeats in interview after interview. Nobody voted for Trump because a chart on the border changed his mind. People felt the grocery bill and saw the streets and voted the feeling. She tells her own side they are fools to think facts win anyone over, that they have to meet people where the wanting is, not where the data is. That is the misunderstanding myth refuted in her own words. She has looked at the persuasion business and concluded that understanding is not the lever.
The second surprise is that she runs the myth anyway, flipped. Where the liberal intellectual believes that if people only understood they would be progressive, Wexler believes that if people only understood, or were given the courage and the permission, they would be conservative. Her whole engine is the silent majority of secret conservatives, the classmates who whisper in the bathroom that they agree, the conviction that the country is with her and only fear and brainwashing keep it quiet. She brands the product common sense patriotism, and common sense is the myth’s signature word. It says the truth is plain and only confusion, ideology, or intimidation stops a person from seeing it. So she keeps the structure the intellectuals keep. The other side is not pursuing its interests. The other side is mistaken, gullible, captured, holding luxury beliefs it could afford to drop if it understood.
The tell is the asymmetry, because she applies the two readings by team. For her rivals she reaches for motive. Liberal women run on emotion. The leftist Jews want acceptance and will trade their politics for it. The activist holds luxury beliefs because life is candyland. These are incentive readings, and they are sharp, and they are pure Pinsof. For her own side she reaches for understanding. The right reasons its way to truth. She herself came to conservatism, she says, because she had a brain and was allowed to think. So liberals believe what they believe because of what they want, and conservatives believe what they believe because of what is true. The myth survives precisely where it flatters her, in the gap between how she explains her enemies and how she explains herself.
Turn the frame on her own motives and the gap closes. Her stated goals are the mission statement, persuade, save the West, give people the courage to say what they think, put the truth out there. Measure her against those goals and the results are thin by her own admission, because the people who agree with her already agree and the people who do not are not being moved. Measure her instead against the goals Pinsof says are the real ones, status in the post-gatekeeper market, the derogation of rivals, the building of a name, and she is a model of competence. She does not deny this so much as document it. She talks about her launch in the language of a startup, proof of concept and go to market. She notes that her videos perform better when she looks worse, and adjusts nothing about the looking, because performance is the point. And she says the quiet thing all the way out loud when she explains her comedy. The joke makes people laugh, and by laughing they are agreeing before they realize they should not be. That is not a theory of enlightenment. That is a theory of getting past the guard. A woman who understands persuasion as slipping the conclusion in before the defenses close is not laboring under the misunderstanding myth. She is running the attention economy with her eyes open and calling it truth-telling for the brand.
So apply Pinsof’s hardest question to her hardest case. She is baffled by the leftist Jews. She calls them the dumbest smart people and says she has to disown them, that after everything they still will not get it. The myth is doing all the work in that bafflement. It insists the people who disagree must be confused, because if they are not confused then they are doing something rational that her own framing cannot allow. Pinsof supplies the thing it cannot allow. They get it fine. A secular Jew in a progressive milieu who keeps voting with that milieu is buying acceptance at the going rate, which is the most rational purchase on the shelf, and Wexler has already said as much in her cooler moments, that Jews want to be accepted and will curl back to the party that offers it. She has the incentive reading in hand. She drops it the moment it would dissolve her grievance, and reaches back for confusion, because confusion lets her keep saving people who are not lost. The Mamdani voter gets the same treatment, written off as not being thoughtful, when the simpler account is that he wants cheaper rent and a new face and is voting for both. There is no misunderstanding to clear up. There is a want being satisfied.
Pinsof ends on the bracing idea that the world does not want to be saved, that the hole cannot be studied your way out of, that the trouble with us is that nothing is broken. Wexler spends her days trying to save the West and grieving that it will not be saved, and the grief is the myth charging her rent. If the country were merely confused, her courage and her clips might fix it. The country is not confused. The voters want what they want, the press chases the market it chases, the rival commentators protect the audiences that pay them, and the leftist Jews are buying exactly the acceptance they mean to buy. Nobody in the picture has misunderstood anything. They have all understood their incentives, which is why none of them can be argued out of their position by a woman with a microphone and a mission statement.
The frame does not say she is wrong on the merits. The right might be right about a great deal. It says her belief that her side arrives at its views by understanding and the other side by misunderstanding is the myth, and that the myth is the most useful thing she owns, because it casts her as the one who saves people by helping them see. Strip it and her function is what she does and not what she says, recruit the already-persuaded, mock the rivals, and bank the status the market pays for the performance. The proof that she half-knows this is that she has already said the cynical thing, that feelings beat facts and people believe what they want to believe. She just exempts herself and her tribe from the law she has discovered. She is a Pinsofian about everyone in the world except herself, and the last misunderstanding she protects is the belief that she is clearing up a misunderstanding.
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.
Hold this up to Arynne Wexler and the first thing it breaks is the story she tells about herself.
Her self-image rests on reason. She was conservative, she says, because she had a brain. Her parents let her come to her own conclusions, sat her at a debate table, told her to back it up, and she reasoned her way to the right. She is the thinker among feelers, the woman who saw through the herd by the light of her own mind. Mearsheimer says no one does this. No one reasons his way to a moral and political code, because the reasoning equipment comes online years after the code is installed. And Wexler, without seeming to notice, narrates the installation in full. Two Ivy League parents in a conservative home. A Jewish culture that treats education as sacred, she says, even back when the Jews were poor peasants in the shtetls. A suburb where good schools and good jobs were the total expectation. A move, as an adult, into an Orthodox synagogue to be among friends who shared her values. That is Mearsheimer’s value infusion described from the inside, generation on generation of it, and at the end of the description she credits her own intellect. She is the best evidence for his thesis and she presents it as the exception that proves she is free.
The symmetry she will not grant is the heart of it. She mocks liberal women for running on feeling instead of fact, for being emotional, easily swayed, socialized into their views by late-night television and the campus. Mearsheimer agrees that they are socialized into their views. He adds that she is too. The liberal woman absorbed one value infusion and Wexler absorbed another, and neither reasoned her way anywhere, because reason is last for both. Wexler has even said the true half of this out loud. Feelings do not care about the facts, she repeats. People feel their way to their politics and reach for the facts later. That is Mearsheimer’s ranking in her own words, reason behind sentiment and socialization. She applies it to the masses and to the left and exempts herself and her side, as though common sense were a faculty of pure reason rather than the residue of a particular upbringing. Common sense is the value infusion talking. Every tribe calls its own infusion common sense.
Once the rational-individual story falls away, what is left is exactly the animal Mearsheimer describes, and it explains her far better than she explains herself. Her deepest and steadiest commitment is not to a principle. It is to a people. The nation of Israel always lives, she says. Stand with your people, do not hide. I am earning my stripes as a Jew. This is not the language of an atomistic rights-holder reasoning about universals. It is the language of a tribal being attached to her group and ready to sacrifice for its members, which Mearsheimer names as the most human thing there is. Her willingness to risk her safety, her advertisers, and her standing inside her own movement to fight the antisemites on the right is not the heroism of a lone individual. It is the social animal taking a wound for the group. She frames it as personal courage. Mearsheimer would frame it as loyalty, the oldest force in the species, and his frame fits her conduct better than hers does. Her American nationalism runs the same way. Save the West. If New York falls, the West falls. The MAGA hat worn as a flag. Mearsheimer holds nationalism to be the strongest political force on earth, and Wexler is moved by two nationalisms at once, the Jewish and the American, far more than by any individualist creed she could name.
So here is the irony that the frame exposes and she cannot. She is an anti-liberal who carries a liberal at her center. The content of her politics is tribal, all peoplehood and nation and group loyalty and sacrifice. The story she tells about her own mind is liberal in Mearsheimer’s exact sense, the tale of an atomistic individual who reasoned his way to truth, free of the society that made him, equipped with a brain that cut through what fooled everyone else. That self is the liberal fiction Mearsheimer wrote the book to refute. The lone wolf who thinks for himself. She is no lone wolf. She is a thoroughly socialized member of a particular tribe, an affluent, educated, conservative, pro-Israel New York Jewish world, and her common sense is that world’s value infusion wearing the mask of reason.
The frame also cuts her foreign policy in two. Mearsheimer respects the tribal and the particular. A people defending its own homeland, the Jew who stands with the Jews and wants Israel to survive, is acting on the soundest part of human nature, the group looking after its own. That part of Wexler he would not argue with. But her larger key changes register. Save the West, common sense for everyone, America must lead and set the world right, and the eradication of an enemy framed as a war for civilization itself. That is no longer the particular tribe guarding its own. That is the universal crusade, the belief that one set of values fits all of mankind and that a great power should go impose it. And the universal crusade is the very delusion Mearsheimer blames on liberalism, the dream that springs from treating rights as universal and people as the same everywhere. The anti-liberal smuggles a liberal universalism into her hawkishness. She is particularist when she defends her people and universalist when she would save the world, and she does not feel the contradiction.
So what does Mearsheimer mean for Wexler, if he is right. It means the woman she takes herself to be does not exist. The rational defector who reasoned past the herd is a socialized tribesman who happened to receive a conservative value infusion instead of a progressive one, and her certainty that she is the clear-eyed exception is the surest sign that the infusion took. It means her real authority and her best work are tribal, not rational. The loyalty to her people, the willingness to sacrifice for the group, the nationalism, these are her strongest and most consistent forces, and they are exactly the forces his anthropology predicts will dominate. It means her project of persuasion succeeds only in the form she half conceals from herself. She will not reason anyone into the right, because reason is last and changes little. What she can do is socialize, hand the young their permission and their courage, slip the value past the guard with a joke before the critical faculty wakes, reshape the sentiment that gets installed before anyone can weigh it. She runs Mearsheimer’s playbook, the management of socialization and sentiment, while telling herself the liberal story about reasoning people toward truth. And it means the last liberal thing about this anti-liberal is the one she guards hardest, the belief that she authored herself. That belief is the delusion at the center of her. She is not the mind that saw through her tribe. She is what her tribe made, doing for the next set of children what was done to her, and calling the result common sense.
Stephen Turner on Essentialism
Stephen Turner’s anti-essentialism is a solvent for a habit of mind. The habit is to take a collective noun, a people, a culture, a society, a sex, a civilization, common sense, and treat it as the name of a real shared essence, a substance or nature that all the members carry and that makes them what they are. Turner denies that the essence is there. What is there, when you look, is a scattered distribution of individuals, each one shaped by his own causal history, each holding habits and dispositions that differ from his neighbor’s, none of them carrying an identical copy of some common stuff. The sharedness is an inference we draw from the outside, a projection thrown over the scatter, not a thing inside it. There is no collective mind, no group soul, no essence of a practice that every practitioner instantiates. There are only persons, various and separately made, and the words we lay across them.
Arynne Wexler builds her entire world out of the essences Turner says are not there.
Listen to the nouns she leans on and every one of them is an essence. Women have a nature, emotional, intuitive, easily swayed by feeling. Men have a nature, and its decline produces the low-testosterone figure she mocks and the masculine energy she misses. The Jews are a people with a character that runs unbroken across three thousand years, education-loving, family-bound, the nation that always lives. The West has a soul that can decay and a greatness that can be lost. America has a soul too, and a next generation whose soul is the prize. There is a natural state of the human being that ideology has deformed, and she would un-deform it, send men and women back to what they essentially are. And over all of it sits the master essence, common sense, the shared faculty that sound people possess and that the captured and the confused have lost. Each of these is a claim that a category names a real nature. Turner’s whole argument is that it does not.
The cleanest place to watch the essence dissolve is the one she returns to most, the nature of women. She says women are emotional. In the next breath she says she is not like other women, that she liked math and the trading floor and argument, that she is just a girl only as a joke. So the essence admits an exception, and an essence that admits exceptions was never an essence. It was a loose generalization over a spread, and the spread includes her. Turner’s point lands without argument here, because she supplies the counterexample herself, every time, in the same sentence as the rule. There is no womanhood-substance that all women carry, one emotional and one not. There are women, many of them, variously made, and Wexler is one more point in the distribution, not the exception to a nature. She keeps having to step outside the category she defines, and the stepping out is the proof that the category has no inside.
The same solvent works on the larger nouns, and it works whether the essence is dear to her or not. The nation of Israel always lives, she says, a people with one character across the millennia. What persists across those millennia is not a substance handed down whole. It is a long chain of separate persons, internally various in every generation, transmitting texts and habits and quarrels that no two of them held in quite the same way, and the always lives is the projection thrown over that scatter from the outside, a destiny read into a population that contains every kind of person and every kind of disagreement. Turner is not denying that Jews exist or that the word picks something out. He is denying that the word names a shared essence with a nature and a fate. The West is the same. There is no soul of the West to save or lose, no civilizational substance that New York’s fall would drain away. There is an immense heterogeneity of persons and practices that the word papers over, and the soul she fears for is a thing the word created, not a thing the word found.
Her natural state is the boldest essence of all and the easiest to dissolve. She posits a true human nature, masculine men and feminine women in their proper complement, the family as the natural unit, and she casts the present as a deformation of that nature by ideology, to be corrected back toward what we essentially are. Turner asks where the fixed nature is. What you find across societies and centuries is not one natural arrangement distorted here and there, but a wide range of causally produced arrangements, different in different places, none of them the essence and all of them the distribution. The natural state is a normative picture she favors, dressed as a nature she discovered. Calling it natural does not locate an essence. It only hides the preference inside a noun.
And common sense, her brand and her banner, is the master case. Common sense names, in her usage, a shared faculty that all clear-eyed people own and that ideology has clouded in the others. Turner says there is no such shared faculty. There is a distribution of acquired dispositions, and what she calls common sense is one cluster of them, the cluster she happens to hold, essentialized into the human baseline so that everyone outside it reads as a deviation from a nature rather than as another point on the spread. Every position calls its own dispositions common sense. The word does the work of turning a particular into an essence and the disagreeing particulars into defects.
Here is the turn she will not make, and it is the one that should sting, because she has already made half of it. Against the left she is an anti-essentialist in good standing. She mocks the reduction of people to their race and their gender, the it-impacts-the-black-and-brown framing, the people-of-color category that flattens individuals into a group nature. She says treat the person, not the identity, merit and not the essence of the tribe. That is Turner’s solvent, and she pours it freely on her rivals’ categories. Turner only asks her to pour it on her own. The same logic that dissolves the left’s race-essence and gender-essence dissolves her people-essence, her West-essence, her woman-nature, her natural state, her common sense. She is right that the left reifies. She is blind that she does the same, and the blindness has a shape. She sees the essence clearly when it belongs to her enemy and not at all when it belongs to her.
So what does the frame mean for her. It does not touch her preferences. She may still want strong families and a secure Israel and a confident country, and none of that requires an essence to stand on. What the frame removes is the metaphysical floor she keeps trying to lay under those preferences, the sense that she is defending real natures against people who deny reality, that there is a true human essence and a true Western soul and a true womanhood that the other side refuses to see. There are no such essences to defend, on her side or theirs. There are persons, separately made and various, and the nouns we throw across them, and the throwing is not the finding. She spends her days fighting for essences that were never there, against opponents fighting for essences that were never there, and the only essentialism she can recognize as a projection is the one she did not make. The natural state she wants to restore was not lost. It never was a state. It was a word.
In Explaining the Normative, Stephen Turner takes aim at a move that most moral and political talk depends on. The move is to treat an ought as a fact. The normativist holds that there are real binding norms in the world, genuine obligations, valid standards, things we truly must do and truly owe, and that these normative facts stand over and above the plain causal facts of what people feel and do, with an authority that holds whether or not anyone honors it. Turner denies the facts are there. When you look for the binding norm, what you find is people. People who feel a demand as binding, who experience certain things as sacred and certain failures as intolerable, who sanction the ones who fall short, all of it caused and explicable in the ordinary way. The feeling of being bound is real. The binding fact is not. Turner’s sharpest cut is the line between the two. That a person experiences an obligation as authoritative is a fact about him. That there is an obligation out there with authority over everyone is the inflation he refuses, because the felt authority is not evidence of real authority, and the real authority does no work the feeling has not already done.
Arynne Wexler named her show Nonnegotiable. The tagline is that some values are not up for debate. That is the strongest normativist claim a person can make, the claim that certain oughts bind regardless of anyone’s assent or feeling, and she has put it on the marquee.
Her whole vocabulary is the ought stated as a fact. Institutions ought to reward merit. A man ought to say what he thinks and ought never apologize for his people. Courage is a virtue and cowardice is a sin, always cool and always cringe. Ours is the party of justice and not vengeance, of right reason and law and order. The competent deserve their place and the merit is owed to them. And underneath the political oughts sit the sacred ones, the covenant she was chosen to keep, the commandments that bind, the judgment of God which is the only judgment she says she fears. Every one of these is presented not as something she demands but as something that is so, a standard already valid, an obligation already in force, a fact about the moral structure of the world that she is reading off and others are failing to honor.
The Megyn Kelly indictment is where the normativism runs hottest, and where Turner cuts cleanest. Wexler’s charge is moral cowardice under the guise of political bravery. Megyn, she says, has an obligation to denounce the antisemites, and her silence is a real failing, a binding norm broken. Wexler wields the obligation as a fact that holds over Megyn whether or not Megyn feels it. Turner asks where that fact is. What is there is Wexler’s demand, felt by her as binding, and her sanction, the public naming of the failure. Megyn’s flat I don’t care, said of whether Tucker is an antisemite, is not the failure to honor a real obligation she somehow cannot see. It is the simple absence in Megyn of the demand that grips Wexler. Two people, two different felt demands, and no third standard hovering above them that settles which is bound. Turner is not telling Wexler her demand is wrong or that she should drop it. He is telling her that the obligation she points to is her demand wearing the face of a fact, and that the force of you have an obligation reduces, on inspection, to I require this of you and will sanction you for refusing.
Nonnegotiable is the banner that undoes itself. To call a value nonnegotiable is to say it carries authority no negotiation can touch, that it binds before anyone agrees and after anyone refuses. Turner says nothing carries that authority, because there are no such binding facts, only people who feel certain things as nonnegotiable and who sanction the ones who treat them as up for grabs. Her nonnegotiables are her sacreds, felt as binding and caused like any feeling, and the word nonnegotiable is the authority she projects onto them, not a property they own. They are nonnegotiable to her. The marquee leaves off the last two words.
The sacred case asks for care, and Turner gives the room. His deflation is about the logic of the claim and not about whether God exists. The believer who feels a divine command, who experiences the covenant as binding and the commandment as real, has a genuine first-person experience, and Turner does not touch it. What he denies is the step from that experience to a normative fact that binds the man who does not share it. Wexler can hold her covenant and feel it bind her. What she cannot get from it is an obligation that holds over the secular Jew she would disown or the friend who will not denounce, because their not feeling the bind is not the violation of a fact. It is the absence of the feeling. The covenant obligates the one who stands inside it. It issues no ought to the one who stands outside, however much she experiences it as issuing one.
The same deflation runs through her verdicts. The coward, the bad person, the evil policy, the justice owed and the justice denied. She delivers these as perceptions, as readings of real moral facts that any honest eye would see. Turner relocates them. They are sanctions, the expressions of a demand felt so strongly that it presents to her as the sight of something out there. This does not make her disapproval idle or fake. The disapproval is real and it does real work in the world. It is just not the discovery of a normative fact. It is the issuing of one, by her, in the only way normative things ever get issued, by a person who feels the demand and acts on it.
Here is the turn she has half made already, and it is the one that should land. Against the left she is a normative deflationist in full cry. Their you must use the pronouns, their moral demands, the whole apparatus of being forced to submit, she sees through at a glance. She names it for what it is, coercion dressed as a binding norm, social pressure pretending to be a real obligation, a felt demand of theirs that they have inflated into a fact that supposedly binds her. That is Turner’s exact move, performed by Wexler, on her enemies. She knows in her bones that you ought to affirm this is not a fact in the world but a demand with a sanction behind it. Turner only asks her to look at you ought to denounce that, and you ought to reward merit, and these values are nonnegotiable, and notice that they have the same shape. A felt demand. A sanction for refusal. No fact above the fray. She is a deflationist about the oughts she resents and a realist about the oughts she loves, and the line between the two is not a line in the world. It runs through her.
So what does the frame mean for her. It removes the floor under her favorite move. When she says these values are nonnegotiable and you are obligated to honor them, she is not reporting a feature of reality. She is voicing a demand and threatening a sanction, which is what everyone does, including the people she accuses of denying reality. Her indictment of Megyn, the bravest thing she has said, keeps all its force as a sanction and loses its standing as the perception of a violated fact. She can demand that Megyn speak. She cannot truthfully say the obligation was there all along, binding Megyn, waiting to be honored. There is a freedom in this, the freedom to own her values as her demands instead of pretending they are stitched into the structure of the world. But the cost is the rhetorical move she leans on hardest, the appeal to a binding ought that is supposed to obligate the people who do not feel it. Strip the normativism and the marquee changes. Not nonnegotiable. Nonnegotiable to me, and I will fight you over it. That is the honest version, and it is the one she already grants when the ought belongs to someone else.
The Voice
Her signature is a collision of registers, and once you hear it you hear it everywhere. She talks like someone who went to Wharton and lives on 4chan, and she runs both idioms in the same breath without a seam. The Charlie Kirk eulogy gives you the high end at full stretch, Buckley’s “stood athwart,” “a Daniel come to judgment,” “the many primrose paths to self-immolation,” “the unwitting tributary.” Two sentences later she writes “he bled aura.” That is the voice. Credentialed highbrow slammed into meme-native lowbrow, and the friction between them is the thing she sells. Most people who can reach for “tributary” cannot say “based” without sounding like a substitute teacher, and most people fluent in “cringe” and “good and hard” cannot build a tricolon. She does both, and the blend is her competitive edge.
The diction follows from that. She manufactures sticky epithets the way a trader books quick wins, “low-t soy beta,” “Jihadi Jane,” “androgynous woke,” coinages built to travel. She speaks fluent Extremely Online, normies and libtard and aura and mid, and she folds in a finance lexicon when she turns analyst, proof of concept, go to market, the rent variable held constant. Then the Jewish register, covenant and the nation and earning her stripes. She reaches for absolutes by default. Always, never, the goat, nonnegotiable, literally. The vocabulary deals in totalities, which is part of why she lands hard and part of why she overshoots.
Her speaking manner is fast and fluent and almost never gropes for a word. She packs subordinate clauses and then drops a short flat punch, and the punch is delivered deadpan, in the same even tone as the mild thing before it. The flatness is the comic engine. She says the wild line with no vocal italics, so the laugh comes from the gap between content and delivery. She told us her own method, that comedy makes people agree before they realize they should not, and you can watch her run it, the build, the level tone, the landing, the move-on before anyone reconsiders. She also narrates herself while she performs, the running meta-aside, “the Nazi crew will clip this,” “I’m obviously kind of crazy.” She is the act and the color commentary on the act at once, which flatters the audience into feeling they are in on something.
The rhetoric proper is more trained than the meme surface suggests. The eulogy is full of real figures, anaphora on “never walked out,” the tricolon “Fight. Fight. Fight.,” antithesis everywhere, the clean inversion “9/11 showed us we weren’t safe from the world, 9/10 showed us we aren’t safe from each other.” Her master structure is the binary, courage against cowardice, sound against unsound, the Romney test, the phone screen, would you date across the aisle. She thinks in litmus and sorts people in or out, and the sorting drives the prose. She likes the mirror move, the claim that the hatred aimed at her side is really the enemy seeing his own reflection. And she leans hard on the pre-emptive concession, “at the risk of sounding disrespectful to the victims of 9/11,” then says the disrespectful thing anyway. The disclaimer is doing deniability work, the same job as “I’m just saying, I have no oversight on this.” She wants the transgression and the alibi in one gesture.
Underneath the persona there are two voices, and they do not quite get along. One is the analyst, cold and quotable, “feelings don’t care about facts,” the turnout pessimism, the prediction that Jews want acceptance and will not move. That voice is spare and good and you wish she stayed in it longer. The other is the provocateur, the slurs and the bits and the body jokes, and it runs on the coined epithet and the shock. She switches between them by room. With Rubin she is wonkier, with Carolla she is cruder and feeds the race bits, with Steele she is more devout. The register tracks the venue, which tells you the manner is a tool she controls, not a temperament she is stuck with.
The tells are mostly tells of excess. She inflates, the MLK comparison, the line about a death bigger than 9/11, “the dumbest smart people,” and the inflation cheapens the sharp thing it sits next to. The deniability tic, said often enough, reads as wanting credit for daring and cover from the cost. And the register collision that works in an interview misfires in a eulogy, where “bled aura” cheapens the grief it means to carry. Her reliance on the manufactured label can stand in for an argument she has not made.
What is distinctive and good is the fluency in two idioms almost nobody combines, the real ear for the phrase that sticks, the comic timing, and the trained rhetorician who shows up when she decides to work. The self-narrating awareness is unusual and effective. When she drops the bits and lets the analyst talk in plain declaratives, she is better than most of the people she shares a stage with, and she knows it, which is why she keeps reaching past it for the laugh.
