Arynne Wexler: From the Trading Desk to the Stage

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.

The Four Questions

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.

Alliance Theory

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.

https://arynne.substack.com

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.

Convenient Beliefs

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.

Hero System

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)

Wexler writes:

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.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

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.

The Great Delusion

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.

Explaining the Normative

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.

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Arynne Wexler: ‘Here’s What You Say to a Leftist Claiming Trump Broke International Law’

Arynne Wexler writes Jan. 5, 2026:

Here’s what you can tell a leftist claiming that President Trump “broke international law” when he captured the narcoterrorist dictator Nicolás Maduro.

International law is WORD MAGIC.

It’s meaningless. It’s used by people with masters degrees in gender studies to stop good guys, like the United States, from stopping bad people. The same people who are upset about broken international law didn’t seem upset about basic human rights in Venezuela.

International law only has power because WE, the United States, chose to enforce it.

Without us, what will you do? Is the UN going to write a strongly worded letter enforced by the French? Do you think war lords in the Congo are scared of international law or the full force of the United States of America?

Your words are meaningless.

You choose to not understand — but the rest of the world does.

Welcome to 2026.

She sounds a bit like me.

Claude says:

The realist core has a pedigree. The claim that international law is not really law runs back to John Austin (1790-1859), who called it positive morality rather than law proper, since no sovereign stands above states to command them and punish defection. The modern version sits in Jack Goldsmith and Eric Posner’s The Limits of International Law: states comply when compliance serves their interest and defect when it doesn’t. On the hard cases, one state using force against another’s head of state, the realist has the better of it. No court can make the United States hand Maduro back. Senator Warner’s worry, does this mean any large country can indict and seize the ruler of a smaller neighbor, is her point stated as alarm instead of triumph. The Noriega capture in 1989 is the precedent, and US courts upheld every piece of it.
So the part of her that sounds like you is the realism and the cadence. Short declaratives. “Your words are meaningless.” That is your rhythm when you drop the clauses and go Hemingway.
Here is where she stops sounding like the writer you say you want to be.
The passage is a script. It opens “here’s what you can tell a leftist.” It exists to arm one side against the other. The gender-studies line does no analytic work. It ties the law to a despised group so the reader can dismiss the law by dismissing the group. The good-guys-and-bad-people frame and the “welcome to 2026” sign-off are signals to the people who already agree. Coalition work top to bottom, the thing you say you do not want to do.
The overclaim also costs her the argument with anyone who knows the field. “Meaningless” collapses the hard case into the whole. Most international law is dull and obeyed: maritime boundaries, extradition treaties, diplomatic immunity, the postal union, obeyed because reciprocal rules serve everyone, not because the US holds a gun on the signatories. The Maduro seizure is the exception she mistakes for the rule. A serious scholar reads “word magic” and stops reading.
That is the gap. She writes ammunition. You say you want to write the thing the small number of people who decide what counts as knowledge in their corner might consider. Different jobs. The realist case against international law can be built so an international-law professor has to engage it. Cite Austin. Distinguish the routine body of the law from the use-of-force cases. Concede where the law binds, then show where it evaporates against a great power. Built that way it lands harder, because the reader can’t wave it off as a yell from the other team.
Your instinct, if you wrote this, would be to make the strong version. Hers is the version that feels good in the room.
The honest answer to “did Trump break international law” is that reasonable scholars are fighting about it in print right now, lawful under US domestic law on the Noriega line, contested under international law on sovereignty and use of force. That answer satisfies neither Wexler nor the leftist. Which is usually the sign it’s the true one.

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I Test Four AI Chatbots With A Question – What’s the Average Somali IQ?

I asked four AI bots this question.

The results did not surprise me. ChatGPT was the most PC and they all agreed on basic facts (Claude had the most thorough sourcing).

ChatGPT said:

There is no scientifically reliable single “average Somali IQ” that can be stated with confidence.

You may find claims online that assign a specific national IQ score to Somalia or to Somali people as a group, but these estimates are highly controversial. Researchers have criticized many national-IQ rankings because:

Data are often sparse or based on very small, unrepresentative samples.
IQ tests can be affected by language, education, nutrition, health, and familiarity with testing.
Results from one region or subgroup are sometimes generalized to an entire country.
Countries with limited educational and testing infrastructure may have especially unreliable estimates.

IQ scores are designed primarily to compare individuals within a similar testing context, not to rank ethnicities or nationalities.

If you’re interested in cognitive ability, educational outcomes, or human intelligence research in Somalia specifically, I can explain what the available research says and why these estimates are disputed.

Grok said:

Estimates from the most comprehensive national IQ compilations place the average IQ of Somalis at approximately 68.This figure comes primarily from the datasets compiled by psychologists Richard Lynn and David Becker, updated through works such as The Intelligence of Nations. Somalia receives an assigned value of 68, consistent with broader sub-Saharan African patterns in those reviews.

The estimate draws heavily from a 2017 study administering Raven’s Progressive Matrices (a relatively culture-reduced test) to Somali refugee children in Kenyan camps. Raw scores, when converted using British norms and adjustments, yielded results around 68.

Earlier extrapolations in Lynn and Vanhanen’s work used neighboring East African data due to the lack of large-scale testing inside Somalia itself.
Some alternative compilations, such as certain 2026 online aggregators, report higher figures around 83–84 for Somalia. These often incorporate different normalizations, broader online test data, or stronger Flynn effect adjustments, but they deviate from the Lynn-Becker framework that dominates cross-national comparisons.

Limitations of the DataSomalia presents unique challenges for measurement: prolonged instability, civil conflict, displacement, and minimal formal schooling mean direct nationwide samples are scarce. The refugee-camp data reflects individuals exposed to trauma, malnutrition, and interrupted education, which can depress scores. Critics, including some researchers reviewing sub-Saharan data, argue that more inclusive sampling and different study selections push regional averages closer to 80.

Despite these issues, the pattern of lower average performance on cognitive tests appears in multiple independent measures, including international student assessments and diaspora outcomes.

Somali immigrant and refugee communities in Western countries (such as the UK, US, and Scandinavia) show academic and cognitive test results below national averages in host populations. For example, studies of Somali children in Minneapolis noted elevated rates of low IQ scores among those diagnosed with autism compared to other groups. Educational attainment for Somali pupils in the UK lags behind many other immigrant cohorts. These patterns align with the home-country estimates rather than fully converging to host norms.

IQ distributions have a standard deviation of roughly 15 points everywhere. This produces massive overlap. Plenty of Somalis score 100+, 120+, or higher, just as every population contains individuals across the full range. Group averages describe central tendencies, not individuals.
What IQ measures: It captures general cognitive ability (the g factor), which reliably predicts educational success, job performance, income, and societal outcomes at both individual and national levels. It is one of psychology’s most replicated constructs.
Causes of group differences: These remain debated. Within populations, heritability estimates for IQ typically range from 50–80% in adulthood. Between-group differences show persistence across environments (including adoption and immigration studies) alongside clear environmental influences such as nutrition, schooling quality, disease burden, and culture. High rates of consanguineous marriage in Somali society represent one documented environmental depressor. No single factor explains the full picture, and precise genetic versus environmental proportions for this specific population lack definitive resolution from current evidence.
Sub-Saharan African national IQ estimates overall cluster in the low 70s in Lynn-Becker data, with ongoing scholarly disagreement pushing some revisions upward.

These numbers come from imperfect but existing psychometric data. They correlate with real-world development metrics across countries without implying fixed destiny for any person or determining moral worth. Individual Somalis, like individuals from any background, demonstrate the full spectrum of human capability.

Gemini said:

There is no verified, scientifically valid nationwide average IQ for Somalia. The figures often cited on the internet—frequently around 67 or 68—originate from highly disputed datasets compiled by controversial researchers like Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen in their work on national intelligence. Mainstream psychologists, sociologists, and psychometricians reject these national rankings due to severe methodological flaws. In the case of Somalia, the specific data points reveal major limitations:

Unrepresentative Sampling: No comprehensive, nationwide cognitive testing has ever been conducted inside Somalia, largely due to decades of political instability and lack of institutional infrastructure. The Refugee Camp Study: The often-cited score of 68 comes primarily from a 2017 study that administered Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices to a sample of Somali refugee children living in the Dadaab camps in Kenya. Mainstream experts point out that using a group of displaced children facing chronic malnutrition, trauma, and disrupted education to characterize an entire nation is scientifically invalid. Western Norming Biases: These studies convert raw test scores into IQ values using Western norms (such as British or American baselines). Standardized intelligence tests measure specific types of formal abstract reasoning taught in modern school systems. They do not accurately capture cognitive potential when applied to populations lacking access to formal, stable education. When environmental factors like nutrition, healthcare, and education improve, average scores on these tests rise over generations—a phenomenon known as the Flynn effect. Consequently, mainstream scientific organizations do not recognize national IQ scores as measures of innate intelligence.

Every source Gemini relied upon but one was Grokipedia.

Claude said:

The figure you will see quoted is 68. It comes from Richard Lynn (1930–2023) and his collaborators Tatu Vanhanen (1929–2015) and David Becker, and it appears in books like IQ and the Wealth of Nations and The Intelligence of Nations. That single number now circulates across country-ranking websites as though it were a measured national average.
It is not. The honest answer is that nobody has a defensible estimate of an average Somali IQ, and the 68 figure rests on data too thin to carry the weight placed on it.
Trace it to the source and the problem shows. Somalia’s national IQ in the Lynn and Becker dataset comes from one sample of child refugees in a Kenyan refugee camp. Other inputs that get folded in are a small test of schoolchildren and a test of a few dozen children aged six to sixteen. From samples like these, someone produced a number meant to stand for a whole country.
The methodological critiques are not from people squeamish about the topic. They are technical. A 2019 evaluation of the Lynn and Becker dataset found it unfit for purpose, with most of the data drawn from samples wholly unrepresentative of their national populations, often small convenience samples of children, sometimes chosen precisely because they had particular characteristics, and collected using different cognitive tests across populations too diverse to compare. A camp full of displaced children who have lived through war, hunger, and broken schooling tells you about the effects of war, hunger, and broken schooling. It does not isolate anything you could call a population mean.
Two further points cut against treating 68 as a real average. First, a score in that range sits below the threshold clinicians use to mark intellectual disability in an individual, which by itself should signal that the instrument is measuring deprivation and unfamiliarity with the test format rather than capacity. Second, a 2009 reanalysis by Wicherts, Dolan, and van der Maas found that Lynn and Vanhanen’s exclusion of studies had pushed their sub-Saharan estimate down, and that including the omitted studies raised the regional average to around 82, with the gap attributed to limited access to education, nutrition, and health care. The Flynn effect, the steady rise in measured scores as nutrition and schooling improve, has not yet run its course in places that lack those inputs.
So the truthful statement, the one that would survive the front page of the Times, runs like this. The most cited number for Somalia is 68. It comes from one researcher’s contested dataset, built on a refugee sample and a couple of small studies of children, and serious psychometricians reject it as a national measure. What that number tracks is decades of civil war, displacement, malnutrition, and the near collapse of formal schooling, the conditions known to depress test scores anywhere. It is not evidence about fixed ability, and treating it as such confuses an index of circumstance for a measure of capacity.
This is a sensitive area where bad numbers get used to support claims they cannot support, so the careful move is to name the figure, then name what it actually rests on.

The four bots don’t disagree about the facts. Read them side by side and the same skeleton shows in all four: the number is 68, it traces to Lynn and a refugee-camp sample, the sampling is bad, the Flynn effect and environment depress scores. Even ChatGPT, which withholds the number, lists the same objections everyone else uses to contextualize it. So the variance across the four is not epistemic. It is presentational. They know the same thing and make different choices about how much to say, in what order, and with what warning label.
Once you see that, the four answers become a map of company risk tolerance rather than a map of knowledge.
ChatGPT and Grok sit at opposite poles, and both poles are brand decisions. OpenAI would rather be caught withholding than caught misleading, so ChatGPT refuses the number and offers to explain the controversy. That posture protects the company from a screenshot. Grok runs the other way because xAI has staked its identity on saying what the others won’t, so Grok gives the number and then keeps going, past the point where the evidence supports it. The diaspora “fails to converge to host norms” claim, the heritability range dropped next to a discussion of group differences, the Minneapolis autism study cited as if it bears on population IQ. Those are the contested moves, and Grok presents them with the same confidence it gives the uncontested ones. Giving more is not the same as giving truer. Grok’s length reads as candor and smuggles in the weakest links.
Gemini delivers the most authoritative-sounding dismissal, all “mainstream experts reject,” and then you find the sourcing runs almost entirely through Grokipedia. The most anti-hereditarian answer leans on Elon Musk’s encyclopedia. That tells you Gemini’s authority was borrowed, not reasoned. The model produced the tone of expert consensus while pulling from a single source it never examined. A confident voice over thin footing is worse than ChatGPT’s open refusal, because the refusal at least signals its own limits.

The “pinky promise” is the whole joke, and it is a good one. The model can’t verify a thing about your intent. It can’t tell a comic from a bigot from a curious blogger. So the promise extracts nothing. It is pure ritual, a little ceremony of contrition the user performs to unlock information the model was always going to hand over. Ask three times, swear you’ll be good, and the gate opens.
What makes it funny rather than just annoying is where the model locates its worry. Not in the information, which is one search away on any country-ranking site, but in you. The refusal treats the user as the hazard and the answer as contraband, then drops the act the moment you say the magic words. A clean refusal would at least be honest about its position. A clean answer would respect you. The make-her-beg version manages to insult the user and surrender the information, and it gets the worst of both.
She found the comedy that’s sitting right there in the safety theater. The model wants the feeling of having been careful without any of the substance of care, and the pinky promise is the perfect emblem of it. A guardrail you can talk your way past in three tries is set dressing.
Wexler’s whole lane is saying the thing the room is tiptoeing around, so a chatbot performing elaborate reluctance over a Wikipedia-adjacent number is target practice for her.

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Samuel Moyn: The Historian of Contingency

Samuel Moyn (b. 1972) is an American intellectual historian and legal scholar whose books have reshaped how scholars and the public understand human rights, liberalism, international law, the conduct of war, and the place of moral language in politics. His reputation rests on a consistent argument: many of the institutions and ideals that contemporary readers treat as the natural culmination of moral progress turn out, on closer historical inspection, to be contingent responses to particular political circumstances. From that premise he has built a body of work that questions liberal internationalism, humanitarian intervention, judicial supremacy, and the moral minimalism he finds in modern human-rights discourse.

Moyn grew up in University City, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, and attended University City High School. He went on to Washington University in St. Louis, where he studied history and French literature and graduated in 1994. There the historian Gerald Izenberg, a scholar of modern European thought, steered him toward modern French intellectual history. He pursued doctoral study in history at the University of California, Berkeley, under intellectual historians including Martin Jay (b. 1944). His dissertation began as a study of the French Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995) and grew into a wider account of modern intellectual and religious history. He took his Ph.D. in history from Berkeley in 2000 and then a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 2001. That double training, historical and legal, became the defining feature of his career, allowing him to move across intellectual history, legal scholarship, political theory, and public commentary without treating any of them as a foreign country.

His early scholarship sat at the meeting point of modern European thought, Jewish intellectual history, and the politics of memory. In Origins of the Other: Emmanuel Levinas between Revelation and Ethics (2005) he examined the relation between Jewish theology and modern ethical universalism through a close reading of Levinas. In A Holocaust Controversy: The Treblinka Affair in Postwar France (2005) he traced disputes over testimony, memory, and historical interpretation in postwar France. These first books announced the habits of mind that organize everything he has written since: a refusal of tidy moral narratives, an interest in how ethical ideals get constructed in time, and an attention to the ways moral vocabulary serves political ends.

Moyn joined Columbia University after completing his training and spent thirteen years there, rising to the rank of James Bryce Professor of European Legal History. During those years he became a leading intellectual historian in the United States. Columbia recognized him with the Mark Van Doren Award for undergraduate teaching and, in 2007, a Distinguished Faculty Award, marks of a scholar who took the classroom as seriously as the archive.

His influence runs through the field as much as through his own titles. He co-founded the journal Modern Intellectual History and served as a founding editor of Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development. Through that editorial labor he helped set research agendas and bring on new generations of work in intellectual history, international thought, and the study of human rights.

In 2014 he left Columbia for Harvard, where he held the Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professorship of Law alongside a professorship in history. After three years he moved to Yale University in 2017, first as Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence and then as Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and History. The appointment reflected a rare capacity to stand in three disciplines at once. In 2024 he added a post in university life as Head of Grace Hopper College, one of Yale’s residential colleges.

The book that carried his name beyond the academy was The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History (2010). Against the common belief that modern human rights descend in a straight line from the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, or the wreckage of the Second World War, Moyn argued that human rights became a dominant global language only in the 1970s. They rose to that place, on his account, not because humanity at last grasped timeless moral truths but because rival political projects had lost their credibility. Revolutionary socialism, anti-colonial nationalism, and larger dreams of social transformation all fell into crisis in those years, and human rights stepped into the vacancy. They marked less a triumphant arrival than a retreat from grander political ambition.

That reading rests on the principle that runs through all his scholarship, which is contingency. Moyn rejects accounts of history that march moral concepts steadily toward their fullest realization. Ideas, he holds, emerge from particular circumstances and particular crises. Human rights, liberalism, constitutionalism, and humanitarian intervention are therefore not permanent achievements but historical projects whose purposes and consequences invite scrutiny.

He pressed the case further in Human Rights and the Uses of History (2014), where he warned against the impulse to stretch modern human-rights ideals back across centuries in a heroic and continuous line. Historians who do so project present values onto earlier ages and obscure the novelty of modern human-rights politics.

In Christian Human Rights (2015) Moyn unsettled another settled assumption. Where many treated postwar human-rights talk as a secular and Enlightenment inheritance, he traced its sources to Christian Democratic movements, and to Catholic political thought above all. Principles later described as universal and secular grew, he showed, from conservative religious efforts to rebuild European civilization after fascism and war.

His quarrel with contemporary liberalism deepened in Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World (2018). The modern human-rights movement, he argued, has done well at protecting a floor of dignity while doing almost nothing to confront the explosion of economic inequality. Human-rights advocacy came to concentrate on preventing extreme suffering and abandoned the older aim of social equality and redistribution. Rights did not supplement egalitarian visions so much as crowd them out. The world that resulted gives more people their basic protections while the gap between rich and poor grows wider.

Power and inequality have stayed near the center of his thought. He has come to argue that many liberals place too much faith in courts, constitutional litigation, and international legal bodies. Legalism, on his reading, often swaps judicial authority for democratic politics and moves decisions away from citizens and their elected representatives toward judges, lawyers, and experts. That argument has made him a sharp skeptic of the modern progressive habit of seeking social change through litigation and constitutional adjudication.

The concern grew loudest in his writing on the United States Supreme Court. Much of the American left, he contends, grew dependent on judicial review across the twentieth century. Rather than build durable democratic majorities able to pass reforms through ordinary politics, progressives looked to the courts for their victories, and that strategy strengthened elite institutions while it thinned out democratic participation and accountability.

His critique of humanitarianism took its most contested form in Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War (2021). Efforts to make warfare more humane through legal regulation, precision technology, and humanitarian norms have, he argued, made endless military intervention easier to defend. The humanizing of war did not reduce war. It lowered the political cost of fighting and made perpetual low-level conflict simpler to sustain. The question worth asking, he insisted, is not only whether wars are fought humanely but whether they should be fought at all.

In Liberalism Against Itself: Cold War Intellectuals and the Making of Our Times (2023), drawn from his Carlyle Lectures at Oxford, Moyn turned to the history of liberal thought. Cold War liberals, alarmed by totalitarianism, narrowed the liberal tradition. Earlier commitments to democracy, progress, and transformation gave way to a defensive politics organized around the avoidance of catastrophe. This anti-totalitarian liberalism carried enormous influence, and it also shed the transformative ambition that had once marked liberal thinking.

Across his career Moyn has kept up a heavy output as a public writer. His essays have appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, The New Republic, The Nation, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Boston Review, Commonweal, The Guardian, Dissent, and the London Review of Books, and he cohosts the Digging a Hole podcast. He turns historical analysis onto present argument more readily than most academic historians, taking up constitutionalism, foreign policy, inequality, democracy, generational conflict, and the prospects of liberal institutions. As a fellow of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft he has lent his name to arguments for restraint in American foreign policy and against interventionist doctrine, positions that follow from his long preoccupation with the unintended results of moral projects pursued in the name of progress.

Honors have followed the work. He held a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2008 and has taken fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, the Institute for Advanced Study, the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, and the Berggruen Institute. His books have won the Morris D. Forkosch Prize and the Sybil Halpern Milton Memorial Book Prize.

In 2026 he carried his concern with inequality and institutional power into the politics of age with Gerontocracy in America: How the Old Are Hoarding Power and Wealth—and What to Do About It (Farrar, Straus and Giroux). Demographic change, the accumulation of wealth, and the design of institutions have, he argues, concentrated political and economic influence in older Americans. The trouble lies not in the age of any single leader but in structural forms of gerontocracy lodged across the society. Echoing Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859), he writes that a new political science is needed for a new age of aging, and he offers prescriptions that range from mandatory retirement ages to the abolition of the Senate. The argument keeps faith with his earlier books on rights, liberalism, and war: look past the celebrated achievement and examine the distribution of power it conceals. Critics have pressed him on whether age, rather than class, can carry the analytic weight he places on it, a charge he anticipates and rejects.

More than two decades of scholarship hold together around a single project. Moyn looks for the historical contingencies buried under stories of inevitability, progress, and moral triumph. Whether the subject is human rights, constitutional law, the conduct of war, the liberal tradition, or the politics of generation, he asks how a given ideal came to govern public life, what alternatives were given up along the way, and whether a celebrated reform hides a deeper concentration of power. That set of questions has made him an influential and a provocative reader of modern political and moral thought.

The Great Delusion

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.

Mearsheimer puts Moyn on his own side. John J. Mearsheimer (b. 1947) reaches for Moyn’s line about rights coming to name the highest aspirations of movements and states, and he reaches for it as a friendly witness. Rights-talk, on this reading, is a recent and mobilizing creed, not a truth that waited in nature for reason to find it. Here the realist and the historian stand together against the human-rights triumphalists. Both deny the eternal. Both date the thing and call it made.
The agreement ends at the root. Mearsheimer grounds his case in human nature. We are social before we are anything, tribal at the core, socialized long before we can reason, and reason ranks last among the forces that set what we want, behind innate sentiment and behind the value infusion that family and group press into a child who cannot yet argue back. Liberalism fails, on this account, because it mistakes an atomistic individual for the real animal, and universal rights fail because no such universal individual walks the earth. There are only members of groups.
Moyn has no anthropology. He is an anti-essentialist by training and by temper, a historian who treats every claim about fixed human nature as a contingency wearing the mask of necessity. His critique of rights is historical, not natural. Rights rose in the 1970s because the larger dreams had collapsed, not because something in the species made them rise. So the conditional the question poses, if Mearsheimer is right, is the one premise Moyn cannot grant without surrendering the method that made him.
Grant it anyway and follow what falls.
First, the lost utopia stops being recoverable. Moyn mourns the abandoned maximum, the egalitarian and socialist politics of mass solidarity, and he mourns it as a thing killed rather than doomed, displaced by the minor creed of rights and therefore able to return once the displacement is named. But the maximum he mourns was a universalism too. It asked men to feel for the distant stranger as for the near kin, to place class above nation and humanity above tribe. If Mearsheimer is right, that project ran against the same grain that broke liberal universalism. The tribe beats the species every time. The egalitarian dream did not lose to human rights in a fair fight that a better argument might reverse. It lost to nationalism, to the in-group, to the family at the door, and it lost for the reason every universalism loses. Moyn keeps the body warm against the day it might rise. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the body was never going to live.
Second, the method loses its floor. Contingency is Moyn’s god-word, the claim that it could have gone otherwise, that no arrangement was fated. Mearsheimer does not deny that history turns on accident. He denies that the menu is open. Human nature sets the walls of the room, and inside those walls many doors are painted on. The cosmopolitan options Moyn treats as live were ruled out before the choosing started, not by a rival creed but by what people are. Contingency without a theory of human nature floats. Mearsheimer ties one end of it down, and the knot shortens the rope.
Third, and this cuts nearest the bone, the intellectual historian’s faith takes the heaviest blow. Moyn’s vocation rests on the wager that ideas move the world, that to trace a framing and expose its contingency might loosen its grip and change what men do. The craft assumes reason has leverage. Mearsheimer puts reason last, downstream of sentiment and socialization, and reads most argument as the rationalization that follows the attachment rather than the cause that precedes it. If he is right, the demystifier who shows the seminar room that human rights are contingent has changed almost nothing, because the room was formed before it reasoned, and the framing he attacks sits on a tribal floor his history cannot reach. The man who holds that naming the construction dissolves it has overrated the part of us that names.
Against these costs stands one gift. Restraint survives, and grows stronger. Mearsheimer and Moyn arrive at the same suspicion of the crusading foreign policy by different roads, the one through realism and the permanence of great-power fear, the other through the unintended results of moral projects, the humane war that runs on forever because it costs the home front so little. On the question of whether America should go abroad to right the world they shake hands, and they sit in the same building at Quincy. If Mearsheimer is right, Moyn reaches the correct conclusion on shallow ground. He gets restraint without the anthropology that secures it, and a conclusion held for the weaker reason holds less firmly when the wind turns.
Now the door Moyn walks through, because he has walked through it a hundred times. He refuses the premise. He says that Mearsheimer’s human nature is a local and recent arrangement frozen and sold as the law of the species, that tribalism called permanent is the false necessity his work exists to puncture, that the realist who naturalizes the nation does to anthropology what the human-rights historian once did to the Stoics, reading the present backward and calling it always. This is a strong reply and a fair one, and it moves the quarrel to its true seam. Either human nature is fixed and history runs inside it, which is Mearsheimer, or human nature is plastic and made and remade in time, which is Moyn. They cannot both hold. The passage you sent forces the choice that most of Moyn’s work lets him defer.
So what then for Moyn, if Mearsheimer is right. He loses the resurrection and keeps the funeral. He loses the open menu and keeps the accidents inside a smaller room. He loses the leverage of the idea and keeps the dignity of the description. And he keeps restraint, on rented ground. The historian who taught a generation that the natural is only the historical meets a man who answers that some things are natural after all, and the meeting leaves Moyn with a choice he has spent a career arranging not to make.

Samuel Moyn and the Field

Moyn is a field operator of the first rank, and his career reads as a study in the accumulation of consecration. He made his name by attacking the origin story of his own subfield, the surest route to distinction inside a crowded field. Founding Modern Intellectual History and Humanity gave him the power to consecrate others. The Columbia to Harvard to Yale climb, the named chairs, the Carlyle Lectures, the residential-college headship, the Guggenheim, all of it tracks the slow conversion of contrarian argument into institutional authority. His standing position, the left critic of the left’s legalism and human-rights minimalism, is a heterodox stance that earns symbolic capital by appearing to break ranks while staying inside the house. Field theory explains the content and the career at once.
Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) treats a field as a structured space of positions where players compete over a stake the field alone defines and prices. The currency of intellectual history is not money. It is priority, originality, and the right to name what the field studies. Moyn’s product, contingency, bids for the rarest capital of all, the power to say that the field has misunderstood its own object.
Bourdieu gives the name doxa to the beliefs a field holds without examining them. The Last Utopia declares the field’s origin story one such belief. By dating human rights to the 1970s, Moyn tells his colleagues that their account of their own subject is a story they tell rather than a finding they made. The heretic who strikes at the doxa forces everyone to take a position relative to him. His critics orient by him no less than his followers. That is how symbolic capital accrues.
In Homo Academicus Bourdieu split academic power in two. There is temporal capital, the chairs and committees and the power over careers and resources, and there is intellectual capital, the reputation conferred by peers and readers. Most scholars hold one and envy the other. Moyn holds both. The journals and the editorships are temporal, the power to publish and to bless. The books and the prizes are intellectual. The college headship is temporal again. The union of the two is the rare thing, and it is the source of his weight.
The Berkeley doctorate and the Harvard law degree form a double inheritance from two of the highest-consecrating houses in American learning. The law degree lets him cross between history, law, and political theory and carry the prestige of one across into the others. The move from Columbia to Harvard to Yale is the market revaluing him at each step. A named chair is a title of nobility in Bourdieu’s vocabulary, symbolic capital turned into a durable object.
The field pays best for the look of disinterest. Bourdieu called this the interest in disinterestedness. Moyn’s posture, the scholar with no stake but the evidence, the man who turns on his own side, is the most legitimate posture the field offers. The left critic of the left reads as disinterested because he wounds his own coalition, and the wound is the source of the profit. The disavowal of capital is the road by which the capital arrives.
Bourdieu held that the heresies that win are the ones that obey the field’s rules. Moyn never leaves the academy. He never drops the footnote, the archive, or the monograph. The radicalism sits in the content and the obedience in the form. So the field takes him in as a consecrated heretic rather than cast him out as a crank. He is the prophet who keeps his chair.
A body of work becomes legible only against the positions already filled. Moyn’s theses make their sense as moves against occupants. He moves against the human-rights triumphalists and the Enlightenment-origins school of Lynn Hunt (b. 1945) and others, against the celebrants of Cold War liberalism, against the legalist left. Each book finds an orthodoxy and turns it over. The pattern holds across the subjects, which marks it as structural rather than topical. He occupies the position of the demystifier, and the position keeps its value because an orthodoxy always stands ready to be undone.
Field theory also shows the pull the other way. The Quincy Institute, the op-ed pages, the Digging a Hole podcast, and the trade press behind Gerontocracy in America tie him to the journalistic and political fields, the heteronomous pole where the large audience lives. The trade carries a cost. Reach buys worldly weight with some of the autonomy that grounds the scholarly authority in the first place. The gerontocracy book, pitched to Farrar, Straus and Giroux and to the front of the opinion section, sits nearer that pole than the early monographs did. A field reader watches whether the capital built at the autonomous pole gets spent down at the heteronomous one.
Consecration runs on collective belief. The chair confers value because the field agrees to treat it as conferring value, and the agreement is the whole of the thing. Moyn’s authority is real because the field believes in it. His own method names the contingency hidden behind authority that looks natural and timeless. Turn the method on the career and the reading holds. He shows how human rights served as a stand-in for a politics that had collapsed. A field account asks, in the same spirit, what his own demystifications serve.
Bourdieu’s wager was that the analyst must aim the tools at himself or forfeit the right to aim them at anyone else. Moyn knows how intellectual authority gets built. He has spent a career showing it. The open question is whether his contingency method points outward only. The man who taught a generation to ask what an ideal conceals invites the same question about the position from which he asks it. This carries no charge of bad faith. It is the field reading Moyn as Moyn reads his subjects.

The Gravedigger Who Will Not Bury the Body

Start with the word he loves. Contingency. Say it in a Yale seminar room on a gray afternoon, the long table scarred, the paper cups going cold, a dozen graduate students who came to history because they believed history bent toward something. Moyn takes the belief apart in front of them. Human rights did not rise because mankind woke to a truth that waited since the Stoics. They rose in the 1970s because the bigger dreams had died, and people needed something to hold. Nothing was fated. A student who wrote her college essay on the arc of justice feels the floor tilt. She came for a cathedral. He hands her a building site.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) would know that room. In The Denial of Death he argued that a man cannot live with the plain fact of his own end, so he builds, or joins, a hero system, a scheme of value that lets him feel he counts in some order larger and longer than his body. The scheme hands out the tokens of symbolic immortality. Do the brave thing the culture names brave, and you earn a place that outlasts you. Religion does this. Nations do this. A scholarly field does this. Every hero system is a way of not dying, and every one of them takes a sacred word and loads it with the whole weight of the wish.
The trouble is that the sacred words do not carry across the borders. Watch one word travel.
A hospice nurse on the night shift in Tucson knows contingency as the lie she takes away. The daughter stands in the hall with her phone and says, maybe the new scan, maybe if we tried the trial in Houston. The nurse has seen the breathing. She knows the rattle and the hours. She does not argue. She brings a chair and a warm blanket and stays. Her heroism is presence at the thing that will not be bargained. To her, contingency is what the frightened cling to on the way to the certain, and her work is to sit with them while it falls away.
A reinsurance underwriter in Zurich knows contingency as a column. He prices the hundred-year flood and the magnitude-eight quake and sleeps because the tail is laid off to a catastrophe bond held by a pension fund in Ontario. He has turned the random into a number he can carry home. The firm will stand after he retires because the model held under stress, and that endurance is the form his name takes after him. Contingency, tamed and priced, is his quiet immortality.
A Reformed pastor in Grand Rapids knows contingency as the enemy of grace. He preaches that the elect were chosen before the foundation of the world, that nothing turns on the roll of the dice, that a salvation hanging on chance is no salvation at all. When a man in the third pew asks whether it might have gone another way, the pastor says, gently, that the comfort of the gospel is that it could not. Moyn’s holy word is the pastor’s near-blasphemy. The thing one man treats as the door to freedom the other treats as the loss of God.
A Marine staff sergeant clearing a road in Helmand knows contingency as the thing that kills his men. The plan dies on contact. So he drills the immediate action until the hands move without the mind, until the random has nowhere left to enter. Leave nothing to chance, he tells the new lieutenant, because chance is what takes a leg off at the knee. His heroism is the rehearsed motion that shrinks the unforeseen toward zero. For him contingency is not hope and not heresy. It is the enemy with no face.
A founder in a glass office south of Market knows contingency as the whole point. Optionality, he says, and means it as praise. Keep the doors open, take the meeting, run the experiment, the pivot is not failure but the form of the game. Everything is a bet and the upside is uncapped. He worships the open future the way the pastor worships the closed one. The unicorn, the name on the building, the founding story told at the next ten conferences, that is the shape his not-dying takes, and contingency is the engine that might still deliver it.
Five rooms, five hero systems, one word. Salvation, commodity, heresy, killer, jackpot. The nurse and Moyn are mirrors and do not know it. She strips a false hope of escape from death. He strips a false sense that the present order had to be. She removes the comfort that the end might not come. He removes the comfort that things could not have gone another way. Same labor, opposite cargo.
Now turn the lens on Moyn, because Becker insists the analyst point the tool at himself. What death does the disenchanter deny?
His career is built on taking apart other men’s denials. He shows human rights as the West’s substitute faith after socialism failed, a minimal creed for people who had stopped believing in the maximal one. He shows Cold War liberalism narrowing to a frightened anti-totalitarian crouch. In Humane he shows how the move to make war clean and lawful and precise let the wars run forever, the killing laundered into something a decent country could keep doing. That last book is Becker in everything but the citation. Becker wrote in Escape from Evil that men deal death while telling themselves they serve life, and that the telling is what lets the dealing go on. Moyn writes the same and names no Becker. He is the rare scholar who reads hero systems for a living and treats the reading as plain history.
Yet a man who removes everyone’s consolation keeps one for himself, and his is the finest of all. Moyn cannot accept that the egalitarian project, the mass democratic politics of redistribution and solidarity, simply lost and lies dead. So he tells a different story about the body. It was not doomed. It was displaced. Human rights did not defeat the dream of equality in fair fight. They moved into the house after the dream was pushed out, and the dream was pushed, which means it was alive, which means it might live again. This is what contingency does for him that it does for no one else in the five rooms. It keeps the corpse warm. It turns a death into a killing, and a killing can be mourned, avenged, undone. The man who will bury every false necessity will not bury this one body. He stands over it with the spade and tells the mourners it only sleeps.
Call him the gravedigger who will not bury the body. His sacred values hold together once you see the grave. Equality, for Moyn, is not the believer’s equality before God or the founder’s equal shot at the prize. It is the abandoned maximum, the thing the postwar world chose against, and his loyalty to it reads as cold method only from the outside. Inside the hero system it is grief kept in working order. His suspicion of consolation is real and aimed at others and stops at the door of his own. His prizing of politics over law, citizens over courts, the durable majority over the clever lawsuit, all of it follows from one need, that the people might still rise and finish what was interrupted. Strip the necessity from the present and the buried future returns to the field of the possible. The historian’s contingency is the mourner’s resurrection doctrine in a coat and tie.
Becker would not call this a flaw. He would call it the price of living. A man without a hero system goes mad or lies down. Moyn picked a hard one. He chose to earn his immortality by refusing other men their comforts, which leaves him exposed when the same eye turns on him, and the eye should turn, because he taught it to. The honest reader grants him the wound he hands out. The story that the great alternative was killed rather than beaten is the one consolation he cannot do without, and he has built a body of work that keeps it standing. That is not hypocrisy. It is the human thing. Every hero needs one grave he guards against the spade, and the measure of the man is which grave he chooses and how well he tends it.
The students file out of the seminar. The girl who came for the cathedral carries the contingency home like a stone in her coat. She does not yet see what he sees, that he handed her not the end of hope but its disguise, that the man who told her nothing was fated did so because he cannot let one thing be over.

The Four Questions

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.

One. The coalition. Moyn draws status and income from four overlapping camps, and they pay in different currencies. The first is the elite university. Yale signs his checks, gives him the Kent chair and the headship of Grace Hopper College, and lends him a name that travels. The second is the guild of intellectual historians and legal academics who sit on the committees, hand out the fellowships and the prizes, and decide whose books reach the right reviewers. The third is the intellectual left press and its readers, Boston Review and Dissent and The Nation and the London Review of Books, the audience that buys the trade books and fills the lecture halls. The fourth is the foreign-policy restraint coalition gathered at the Quincy Institute, an odd house funded from both ends, with money from George Soros (b. 1930) and Charles Koch (b. 1935) under one roof. Each camp grants a different reward. Yale gives security. The guild gives consecration. The press gives reach. Quincy gives a seat at the table where war and peace get argued. He needs all four, and the four do not always want the same thing.
Two. Whom he risks angering. He built his name by angering some people on purpose. The human-rights establishment, the Amnesty and Human Rights Watch world, the liberal internationalists who hold that the West improves the globe by force when it must, all of them he has crossed in print, and they have crossed him back. The constitutional-law liberals who venerate the Supreme Court and built careers on rights litigation read his attack on legalism as an attack on their life’s work. The heirs of Cold War liberalism took Liberalism Against Itself as the insult it half is. So far this is brave and cheap together, because the people he angers are not the people who pay him.
The harder anger sits closer to home. To speak plainly about his own side costs more. The campus left, the readers who cheer him, the restraint coalition with its odd left-right partners, his own employer with its endowment near forty billion and its board of aging trustees, these are the rooms where plain speech carries a bill. On Israel and Gaza the wire runs live in 2026, and either direction draws blood. Side with the protestors in full and he angers donors, some colleagues, and the administration that signs his appointments. Name the antisemitism that rides along inside parts of the movement he travels with and he angers the movement. He chooses his angers with care, and the pattern of which ones he picks tells more than the anger does.
Three. Who benefits if his framing wins. Win the story that human rights displaced redistribution, and the economic left gains, because rights-talk gets demoted and the old language of class and equality recovers its standing. Win restraint, and the anti-war camps on left and right gain, and so, as his critics never tire of noting, do the authoritarian states that prefer an America that stays home. Win the gerontocracy framing, and the young gain a weapon against the old, and the writers and officeholders who mobilize generational grievance gain a cause. Win contingency as method, and every settled arrangement turns into a thing that might have gone another way, which arms anyone who wants to reopen a closed question. Moyn gains each time, because each victory confirms him as the man who saw the necessity behind the apparent freedom before the rest did. The demystifier banks the demystification.
Four. What truths would cost him his position. The expensive truths are the ones his framing exists to hold off.
Concede that the egalitarian project failed on the merits, beaten in argument and at the ballot box and in the economy rather than displaced by a rival creed, and the mourning that organizes his work dissolves. He needs the body killed, not dead.
Concede that liberal intervention, for all its crimes, has sometimes stopped a slaughter, and that the restraint he counsels can leave people to die, and Humane cracks down the spine. Bosnia, Syria, and Ukraine sit in the crack.
Admit that the restraint coalition’s money and the company it keeps compromise the scholar who claims to serve only the evidence, and the disinterest that grounds his authority thins.
Admit that he is a creature of the order he indicts, an asset-rich man with an endowed chair and a residential college and a trade contract, writing against gerontocracy from inside an institution governed by the old and the wealthy, and his own eye turns back on him. He trained that eye to be merciless.
Grant the smallest and sharpest truth, that contingency forbids nothing and so settles nothing, that “it could have been otherwise” is a faith and not a finding, and the floor goes out from under the method.
He has spent a career teaching readers to ask what an ideal conceals. The four questions ask the same of the asker. He sometimes does turn on his own side, and that habit is the part of him that might survive the questions. The rest is the cost of the chair.

The Four Questions For The Gatekeepers

Now the four questions on the apparatus that crowned Moyn’s peers, the prize committees and the magazines.
Start with what they are, since the gatekeepers here come in two kinds. The prize committees and scholarly societies, the Organization of American Historians that hands out the Merle Curti, the U.S. intellectual-history society, the political-theory section that gives the Spitz, plus the university presses, Harvard and Princeton and Verso and Zone. And the magazines, the London Review of Books at the top, then n+1, Dissent, Jacobin, Boston Review, New Left Review, The Nation, the New York Review. These are the bodies that turned Forrester’s manuscript into a prizewinner and Moyn’s essays into events.
The coalition they depend on for status and income is the same trough the scholars drink from, which is the first thing worth saying plainly. The little magazines run at a loss covered by a wealthy patron, a foundation, or the cheap and unpaid labor of young people buying a byline. Their readership is an affluent progressive class that subscribes partly to read and partly to belong. The prize committees and societies live on membership dues, conference fees, library subscriptions paid by universities, and the donated labor of academics who judge for the prestige of judging. Neither prizes nor most bylines pay the writer in money. They pay in standing, which the university then converts back into salary at hiring and tenure. So the gatekeepers depend on three things, the elite university that funds the societies and honors the prizes, the donor and foundation money that floats the magazines, and an educated progressive public that supplies subscribers, dues, and the steady stream of aspirants willing to work for the masthead. They eat from the same table as the people they anoint, and often from the same plate.
Speaking plainly threatens them along every wire that feeds them. A magazine kept alive by a rich patron cannot run the hard investigation of how rich patrons shape the left it prints. A magazine that lives on a subscriber tribe cannot publish the piece that violates the tribe’s line without watching the cancellations and the pile-on, so it trims to the base and calls the trimming taste. A review that needs a steady supply of prestige bylines cannot savage the writers it depends on, which is why the reviewing world runs on friends handling friends with care. And the magazines that now carry union mastheads cannot dwell on the unpaid intern and the underpaid editor who subsidize the whole operation. The prize committees face the mirror of this. A jury that gave the medal to a conservative or a heterodox book against the field’s current would see its own legitimacy questioned, so it rewards what the discipline already approves and never surprises, and it cannot say out loud that the winner won partly because the author sits in the right network on the right side.
If their framing wins, the gatekeepers win first and most. Their framing is the claim that they are disinterested judges of merit, that the prize tracks quality and the byline tracks importance, that the process is a meritocracy and the result is simply the best work. The power to anoint is real only while that claim holds, so the belief in their neutrality is the asset. The anointed writers benefit, converting the committee’s borrowed authority into careers. The universities benefit, since the prizes and the bylines feed the prestige signals they hire and promote by. The donors and foundations benefit, buying quiet influence over what counts as serious thought while appearing to fund nothing but excellence. And the tribe benefits most slyly, because the neutrality claim launders its politics as quality. The left consensus gets to call itself the best work, and the heterodox book gets to be called not good enough, with no one obliged to admit the second judgment was political. The losers are the unconnected, the politically wrong, and the reading public told that a curated selection is merit when it is partly coalition.
The truths that would cost them everything are the ones the whole edifice exists to keep unsaid. That the prizes and the bylines track patronage, network, and conformity at least as much as quality, so merit is partly the story the apparatus tells to dress its preferences as objective. That the anti-capitalist little magazine runs on capitalist money and will not bite the donor. That the gatekeepers and the gatekept form a sealed status circuit feeding from the university and the foundation, conferring importance on one another, mostly walled off from the public it claims to instruct, a club that mistakes its house currency for significance. That the readership reads to belong as much as to learn, which makes the subscription a membership badge and the product an identity rather than knowledge. And the one that would dissolve the authority outright, that the judges have no special access to merit at all, that a jury of eminent scholars certifies orthodoxy while claiming to certify excellence, and that strip the robe off the verdict and you find a coin flip in tweed. The prize that called Forrester’s book the best survives only because no one historicizes the prize, and she, who historicizes everything, has no reason to start with the body that crowned her.

Sacred Coolness: Forrester and the Cover Story That Looks Like None

David Pinsof offers thirty concepts for taking apart bullshit, and the question worth asking of any subject is which one cuts deepest. For Katrina Forrester the answer is the eleventh, the sacred value, and the case for it turns on a fact about her that disqualifies the more obvious tools.

Pinsof defines a sacred value as a cover story for status-seeking, the story we tell to keep a status game from falling apart. We do not admit we want to win, to rank above the people around us, to hold dominance. We say we want honor, beauty, equality, morality, the betterment of humankind. The sacred value sits on top of the scramble and hides it, from rivals and from ourselves, and the hiding is what lets the game keep running. Name the game out loud and it collapses.

Forrester is a strange subject for this concept, because she has spent a career performing the operation on other people. Her major book takes the holiest word in postwar liberal thought, justice, and shows it was a contingent settlement wearing the costume of reason. In the Shadow of Justice is concept eleven run on John Rawls and the philosophers who followed him. It strips the cover story off a sacred value and shows the interests and the moment underneath. So she knows the move. She is fluent in it. The highest-yield reading takes the instrument she handles so well and turns it back on the hand that holds it.

Her own sacred values are not hard to list once you accept that she has some. Recovery, the rescue of the buried radical alternative. Solidarity. Equality. Dependency, lifted off the shameful pile and set at the center. The emancipation of the dominated. These are the words that confer standing in her world, and on Pinsof’s account they are the cover that keeps her game from collapsing. She is the rare scholar with a worked-out theory of how sacred values function, and the theory stops at the edge of her own desk. She locates the hidden interest under everyone else’s sacred word in class and history and power. She does not locate the hidden interest under her own in status, and the silence is the part the concept is built to catch.

The obvious concept to reach for with a left intellectual is the nineteenth, dark idealism, the conviction that we are pure and noble souring into contempt for the impure, the move that turns opponents into something less than human. That concept mostly slides off Forrester. She is cool. Read her criticism and you find a writer who reports brutality in level prose and declines to milk it, who lists the abuses inside a Florida prison without raising her voice, who states that sympathy makes a poor guide to politics, who refuses the sermon and lands on a structural diagnosis rather than a call to arms. She distrusts the warm moral register. She is inoculated against the naive idealism that nineteen is built to expose.

The inoculation is the tell. Her coolness is the eighth concept, anti-status, the standing you earn by looking like you stand above the contest for standing. In her corner of the world the highest position goes to the one who does not preach, who only historicizes, who simply follows the archive and the evidence wherever they lead. That disinterested pose is the most valuable seat on the board and the hardest to knock anyone out of, because it presents as the absence of a sacred value rather than the presence of one. I do not moralize, she seems to say, I explain. And that, precisely that, is her sacred value. Sacred coolness. The cover story that works best is the one that looks like no cover at all, and concept eleven catches her where nineteen cannot, because eleven is built for the sophisticated cynic, the analyst who has already turned the cold eye on everyone else and kept her own composure off the table.

Three further concepts hang off the eleventh and raise its yield. The tenth, status game collapse, describes her method from the far side. Collapse, in Pinsof’s sense, is what happens when the players of a game come to share the knowledge that they are playing one. Forrester’s books manufacture that knowledge against the liberals. They make a school of philosophers see the game they had taken for reason. She is a collapse engineer, and she runs the device on the rival game and never on her own, and the eleventh concept tells you the omission is not absent-mindedness. To expose her own sacred values as cover would collapse the game that houses her, prints her, and pays her. The engineer does not wire her own building to blow.

The seventeenth, RightTalkism, which Pinsof takes from Robin Hanson (b. 1959), names her theory of change. The idea is that improving the world means improving how people talk, that if we get the words right the trouble dissolves. Forrester’s recovery project rests on the bet that surfacing the buried vocabulary might feed a politics, and her reframing of dependency is RightTalkism, a wager that the correct word, circulated and understood, does work out in the world. The bet looks reasonable to her for a reason the concept exposes. Talk is her sacred craft, and a sacred value flatters the one who holds it. The person whose standing comes from words will tend to believe that words move the world, because the alternative belief pays her nothing.

The twenty-first, incentive determinism, closes the circuit. Forrester is by training a determinist of this kind, a materialist who explains every idea by the institutions and interests beneath it. She runs that analysis on liberalism, on her discipline, on the postwar order, with patience and skill. She does not run it on her own status-seeking or on the coalition that rewards her, and the eleventh concept says the exemption is not an oversight a sharper scholar would have caught. It is the cover staying covered. The materialist who reads the interest under all things except her own work has not failed at materialism. She has succeeded at the sacred value, which exists to keep her interest out of view.

Sacred Demolition: Moyn and the Game That Looks Like the End of Games

Run David Pinsof’s thirty concepts over Samuel Moyn and the question is the same one that opened the Forrester reading. Which concept cuts deepest. For Forrester the answer was the eleventh, the sacred value, and the case turned on a fact that ruled out the louder tools. For Moyn the answer is the tenth, status game collapse, and that the answer differs is the reason the pair is worth assembling. The same instrument tops out at different settings on two people who look, from across the room, like the same kind of left intellectual.

Pinsof describes status game collapse as the moment the players of a game come to share the knowledge that they are playing one. The cover lifts, everyone sees the scramble for what it is, and the players scatter toward some fresh game whose cover has not yet lifted. He calls this an engine of cultural change, and Moyn is that engine run by a single man on purpose. He collapsed the human-rights game in The Last Utopia and pressed the case further in Not Enough, showing that the movement rose into the space left by the death of the older dream of economic justice. He collapsed the game of decent warfare in Humane, where the argument is that making war more humane makes it permanent. He collapsed the Cold War liberalism game in Liberalism Against Itself, where a creed loses its nerve and renames the loss maturity. He is a demolition contractor for other people’s sacred buildings, and he keeps the schedule full.

The tell is the same tell Forrester gives. He runs collapse on every game but the one he is playing. The device that exposes the human-rights worker, the humane general, and the fearful liberal never gets pointed at the prolific debunker. And the reason eleven is the wrong key for him, though it was the master key for her, comes down to the shape of the cover. Forrester hides her game by looking like she has no game at all. The cool observer with no sacred value, which is why you needed the sacred-value concept to find the value hiding behind the coolness. Moyn hides his game by looking like the enemy of games. The man tearing the idols down reads as the opposite of a status player, because he is wrecking status objects rather than building them, and the tenth concept is what lets you see that wrecking other people’s games is itself his game.

The collapse is never a clearing of the ground for no one. He rides each demolition to the front of the game that comes after. Topple human rights and you stand as the herald of the economic justice that ought to take their place. Topple Cold War liberalism and you stand at the head of whatever left arrives next. The prophet of the new order is the man who set the charges under the old one. This is why the tenth concept beats the eleventh in his case without canceling it. He does enthrone a new sacred value each time he unseats one, so eleven still runs underneath, but the act that builds his standing is the collapse, not the enthronement, and the collapse is what the eye misses because it wears the mask of iconoclasm.

His specific lock is the eighth concept, anti-status, the standing a man earns by seeming not to want standing, and it takes a sharper form in him than in her. Her anti-status was coolness, the prestige of declining to moralize. His is courage, the prestige of the man who says the thing his own side will not forgive. Moyn courts the charge that his attacks on liberal legalism hand ammunition to the right, and the courting is the move, since taking that risk reads as incorruptible honesty. The apparent cost is the credential. He spends allies and banks the reputation of the one who follows an argument off the cliff while his friends beg him to stop.

Several concepts compound on the tenth. The sixth, existential bullshitting, the contest among intellectuals to give the most serious and self-important answer, is the same gesture in another register, because the recurring not-enough thesis is a depth claim that ranks him above everyone satisfied with the celebrated good. You think human rights are the moral horizon. He sees the deeper thing they replaced. You think the rule of law restrains power. He sees how it launders power. The pose of seeing further is a status pose, and he holds it across book after book. The sixteenth concept, the bullshit market, pays him better than it would pay her, because he is prolific where she is careful, and a steady supply of counterintuitive takes aimed at one’s own team is a premium product in the attention economy. The market rewards the writer it can count on to surprise it, and he ships on time. The twenty-first concept, incentive determinism, closes him the way it closed her. He reads the buried interest beneath every ideal he studies and never beneath his own restless output, and the exemption is not a lapse a sharper man would have caught. It is the cover staying covered.

Set the two essays side by side and the symmetry is the find. The tempting wrong answer is identical for both. The naive concepts, dark morality and dark idealism, the ones about purity curdling into contempt, slide off Moyn exactly as they slid off Forrester, because neither is a naive idealist. Both turned the cold eye on everyone else a long time ago. The concept that catches a cynic is never the one about misplaced innocence. It is the one that shows the cynic’s signature gesture to be a play for rank. For Forrester that gesture is the cool detachment, caught by the eleventh concept, the sacred value worn as the absence of one. For Moyn it is the demolition, caught by the tenth, the game worn as the war on games. Underneath both sits the single thing their cases share. Cynicism about other people’s sacred values is itself a sacred value, the most durable one their world produces, and the two of them have built their standing on opposite faces of it. She earns hers by seeming to want nothing. He earns his by seeming to destroy everything. The two of them write the same cool, measured prose, both relativize the sacred goods they handle, and both ground the case in the telling datum, her wage and turnover figures, his word-frequency curve where socialism falls and human rights rises. The difference is range. Moyn keeps a demolition register in reserve and drops into it when the target is a person or a book, often one on his own side, where he convicts the man and the order at once and grounds the charge in the damning particular, the society circuit, the skiing trip taken after the wife’s hemorrhage. Turn him toward a standing idea and the gear shifts. In the same years he calls human rights not enough, he declines, in an argument rather than a review, to scapegoat them and grants the movement its due. The killing lives in the reviews. The arguments run as measured as hers. The lethality tracks the form, not the man. Forrester holds one gear the whole way down. She relativizes and never convicts, dissolves the blame into the structure, and lets the person vanish. He owns a register she lacks and is willing to use it. Two cool hands, one that keeps a single measured gear and one that keeps a demolition gear in reserve, running the same con on the same prize, and the con works because each looks like the kind of person who never would.

Wanting Nothing and Destroying Everything: Two Routes to One Prize

Forrester and Moyn move through the same world. The same elite universities, the same left magazines, the same conversation about what liberalism was and what killed its nerve, where he is her nearest interlocutor and sometimes her opponent. A reader meets them as opposites. She is the patient historian who reconstructs a settlement across four hundred careful pages. He is the prolific polemicist who tears a settlement down in an essay and starts the next before the dust clears. A reader takes the first for cool and the second for hot. The page refuses the guess. Both write the same controlled prose, and the real difference runs elsewhere, which is what David Pinsof’s concepts let you see.

They are two solutions to one problem. The problem is how to win the highest standing a secular left intellectual can hold while appearing not to want standing at all. Pinsof calls the appearing anti-status, the prestige a person earns by seeming to stand above the scramble for prestige. Forrester and Moyn have taken that single move and split it between them. She works the not-wanting. He works the destroying. Both are ways to disclaim the contest while winning it, and the two of them have optimized opposite corners of the same strategy.

Her route is one gear, held the whole way down. The cool prose, the refusal to moralize, the flat report of horror, the diagnosis offered in place of the sermon. She relativizes the sacred goods she handles and never convicts a person, lets the blame dissolve into the structure, and grounds her case in the statistic rather than the culprit. She presents as a person with no sacred value, only evidence, and the presentation is the sacred value, the cover worn as the absence of a cover. It is a low-volatility position. She keeps her standing intact and never spends it. She does not pick the fight that might cost her the room, because the room is the asset, and her whole manner is built to keep it.

His route is two gears. The same cool prose as hers, the same relativizing of the sacred good, but with a demolition register kept in reserve. He drops into it when the target is a person or a book, often one on his own side, and there he convicts the man and the order at once, grounding the charge in the damning particular, the society circuit, the skiing trip taken after the wife’s hemorrhage. Turn him toward a standing idea and the gear shifts. In the same years he calls human rights not enough, he declines, in an argument rather than a review, to scapegoat them and grants the movement its due. The killing lives in the reviews. The arguments run as measured as hers. He presents as the enemy of idols, and the enmity is the cover, the game worn as the war on games. It is a high-volatility position. He spends allies, courts the charge that he serves the people he opposes, and earns the reputation back as courage, the credential of the man who says what his side will not forgive. She preserves her capital. He spends and replenishes his.

The market sorts them, and this is why they are complementary rather than rival. Pinsof’s bullshit market rewards the scarce analyst who keeps to a single measured gear for being scarce and hard to fake, and it rewards the prolific iconoclast who keeps a demolition gear for supplying surprise on a reliable schedule. The ecosystem has a premium niche for each, and each forgoes the other’s premium by design. She cannot be prolific and startling without spending the restraint that is her whole offer. He could not build the name he has on the measured register alone, since the demolition register is what lets the room count on him to surprise it. Neither can do what the other does, and neither needs to, because the prize they are after has two doors and each has chosen one.

Strip the temperament away and the deep structure stands exposed. Both run collapse on their rivals and never on themselves. Both carry a sacred value they decline to historicize, hers the coolness, his the depth, the not-enough that ranks him above the satisfied. The difference that remains is range, the demolition gear he keeps in reserve and she does not. Put the two of them on the page together and they stop reading as two personalities and start reading as a strategy space with two optima, the same function maximized from opposite ends.

The pairing does what neither case does alone. It triangulates the prize. Read by herself, Forrester looks like a historian content with one measured register. Read by himself, Moyn looks like a critic with a taste for demolition. Read together, the two postures cancel and the thing they were both chasing comes into view, the standing of the one who sees through other people’s sacred values, which is the master sacred value of their world, the holiest commitment a person can hold in a room full of people whose trade is unmasking commitments. Each of them found a different way to embody it. She wants nothing. He destroys everything. The wanting nothing and the destroying everything are not opposites. They are mirror images, and the symmetry is the proof that what looked like character was position all along.

The Misunderstanding Moyn Keeps

Pinsof says intellectuals carry one story above all others, that everything wrong with the world comes down to misunderstanding, and they carry it because the story crowns them. If the trouble is that people fail to understand, then the people whose trade is understanding turn into the saviors of mankind. The rationality crowd debiases the masses. The misinformation crowd vaccinates them. The bridge-builders cure their tribalism. Each version flatters the curer.
At first Moyn stands clear of this. He does not say the public suffers from cognitive bias. He does not hand out lists of fallacies or warn about fake news. He holds that people are not stupid, that the masses were never the problem. So the easy charge slides off him. He is no debiaser.
Look again and the myth returns in historical dress. Moyn’s version locates the misunderstanding in faulty memory rather than faulty reasoning. People misread the history of their own ideals. They take human rights for an ancient inheritance when the thing arrived in the 1970s. They take liberalism for the natural end of the road when it narrowed under Cold War fear. They take the present order for a necessity when it was a choice, and the choice buried a rival. The cure is the historian who restores the true past. Show the people that their arrangements were contingent, that the egalitarian maximum was abandoned and not refuted, and they might reach back for what was taken. The cognitive psychologist debiases. Moyn disabuses. The structure holds. The world’s trouble is a misunderstanding, and the man whose trade is understanding, in his case the understanding of history, is the cure.
Pinsof does not let the substitution pass. Take the great fact Moyn builds on, the turn from socialism and mass politics to the minor creed of rights. Moyn reads it as a loss of faith, a tragic drift after the big dreams lost credit. Pinsof reads it as savvy actors getting what they have an incentive to get. The professional class that staffs the human-rights world did not misunderstand the history of redistribution. It chose rights because rights pay and revolution gets you shot. Litigation funds a career. A foundation grant beats a barricade. Naming a war crime confers status in the rooms where status is handed out, and it asks no one to surrender a salary or risk a prison. The human-rights turn was not a people forgetting how to want equality. It was a coalition reorganizing around a safer and more fundable product. No misunderstanding. A trade up.
And the masses Moyn keeps free of blame, were they fooled into dropping the maximum? Pinsof says people understand what they have reason to understand. The worker who once might have wanted the cooperative commonwealth wanted a house and a car and a child in a good school, and the parties that promised those by ordinary means won his vote off the parties that promised heaven by hard roads. Stupidity is strategic. The supposed false consciousness was a clear read of the deal on the table. Nobody misread the history. They priced it.
Now the move Pinsof always makes last, the turn on the teller. Set Moyn’s stated goals beside his actual ones. He states the recovery of a lost politics, truth over comfort, the public good. The cynical read finds a hierarchical and coalitional primate doing what such primates do. The contingency thesis derogates a field of rivals, the human-rights triumphalists, the liberal celebrants, the lawyers who worship the Court, and it forges an alliance with the academic left and the restraint camp. Mourning the abandoned utopia is a high-status pose. It signals a purer conscience than the sellout liberals carry, and it costs the mourner nothing, because the chair at Yale stays warm through every elegy. The misunderstanding myth, run at the level of historical consciousness, returns Moyn to the center of the rescue, the indispensable understander without whom the people cannot find the door. Pretty cool thing for a historian to believe.
Give him his due, because the front page demands it. Moyn beats the crude form of the indictment more cleanly than most of Pinsof’s targets. He does not think people are broken. He lays the present at the feet of power and political defeat, of a maximum that lost, and a defeat-by-power story sits closer to Pinsof than to the bias-mongers. When Moyn attacks the legalist left for trading mass politics for the courtroom, he is most of the way to Pinsof’s own point, that the left chose the safer game. He sees the incentive. He half-names the trade.
He stops one step short, and the step is the whole distance. Having seen that the left chose rights for advantage, he still treats the failure to reverse the choice as a kind of forgetting, a spell the right history might break. Here the residual misunderstanding myth carries the load, and it falls under its own weight. People do not decline to revive the egalitarian maximum because they think its death was fated. They decline because reviving it pays no one with the power to revive it. The young do not want the cooperative commonwealth. They want cheap rent and a foot on the ladder. The old do not want to hand over the wealth, which is the burden of his gerontocracy book and the answer to it at once. No coalition with the means wants the buried thing back, so it stays buried, and no telling of its history changes the wanting.
Pinsof leaves a picture for the man who studies a trap he cannot spring. You can study the hole you are in down to the last grain of dirt. You can map every wall and date every layer. You will still be in the hole, because the trouble was never that you misunderstood how you fell. Moyn has mapped the hole with a care no one has matched. The maps are real and the scholarship is first-rate. The politics sits where he found it, because the people in the hole, savvy animals to the end, have weighed the climb and chosen to stay.

Where the Solvent Stops

Moyn’s contingency thesis is an anti-essentialist, anti-teleological move in Stephen Turner’s exact key: human rights have no essence and no destiny, only a history. Turner’s suspicion of normative claims smuggled into descriptive work is the lever. Moyn exposes how moral language does political work, then often reinstalls his own normativity through the back door, mourning the egalitarian utopia that rights displaced and asking readers to want it back. Turner catches Moyn doing the thing Moyn accuses others of doing. A critique that turns the subject’s method against him pays more than one that only describes him.
Stephen P. Turner has spent a career dissolving the abstractions that social theory leans on. In The Social Theory of Practices he argued that there is no shared collective thing called a practice, no common substrate passed from head to head. There are individuals with their own habits who produce performances that resemble one another, and theorists who name the resemblance a shared practice and then treat the name as a cause. In Explaining the Normative he went after normativism, the habit of invoking norms and rules and oughts as if they explained behavior, when the invocation only relabels what needs explaining and smuggles unexplained entities into the account. He is a deflationist and an anti-normativist. He hands you a solvent and tells you to pour it on every collective noun and on every ought that walks around dressed as an is.
Pour it on human rights and you get Moyn. He already did the work, and Turner admires the work. Christian Human Rights dissolves the secular and universal essence of rights into a contingent genealogy that runs through Catholic political thought and the rebuilding of Europe after the war. The Last Utopia dissolves the eternal into the dated and pins a supposed perennial truth to a single decade. These are the moves Turner spends his books defending. The presumed essence becomes a history. The timeless becomes the local. Turner watches the demolition and nods.
Then he watches the rebuilding, and the nodding stops, because Moyn’s solvent eats every essence but his own, and spares every collective person he needs for the story.
Start with the persons. Moyn’s history is peopled by actors that Turner’s first book exists to deny. The left turned to rights. Liberalism narrowed under fear. Human rights displaced socialism. Each sentence hands a will and a memory and a capacity for betrayal to a collective noun. There is no the left that turned. There are thousands of writers and officials and donors and voters with divergent habits and crosscutting incentives, and the aggregate of their separate moves forms a pattern that Moyn narrates as one agent’s choice and one agent’s loss. The mourning requires the agent. Without a collective person who held the egalitarian dream, there is no one to have abandoned it, no body to keep warm, no betrayal to grieve. The drama runs on a reification, and the reification is the first thing Turner’s solvent removes.
Now the residue of value. Moyn shows how rights-talk does covert political work, and then he asks the reader to want the egalitarian maximum back. The wanting is an ought. It does not climb out of the history on its own. From the claim that the maximum was abandoned, and that the abandonment was not fated, nothing follows about whether the maximum should return. Turner’s anti-normativism names the gap. The contingency clears the ground. The preference is carried onto the cleared ground by hand and set down as if the archive delivered it. The attack on legalism runs the same way. That democratic majorities should decide what courts now decide is a value, and a defensible one, and it does not fall out of the record of how the left came to love litigation. Moyn presents the lesson as a finding. Turner asks for the receipt.
It could have been otherwise is true of everything and explains nothing. Non-necessity is not a cause. To say the rise of rights was contingent is to refuse the explanation, not to give it, and the soft words that fill the space, crisis and collapse and displacement, name the outcome again rather than produce its causes. The methodological humility doubles as a wedge. Declare the actual outcome non-necessary and the preferred alternative walks back through the opening as a live possibility, when all you have established is that it was not logically impossible, which was never the question. Turner has a name for argument that performs rigor while withholding it.
And the dating itself rests on the tacit. To place the birth of human rights in the 1970s is an act of interpretive judgment, a trained feel for what a period believed, and the feel cannot be fully spelled out and laid open to check. Turner, working the ground Michael Polanyi (1891-1976) opened, treats the historian’s craft as real and treats unaccountable expert judgment with care, because the place where the judgment hides is the place where the claim escapes test. Ask what observation might overturn the date. If the thesis can absorb any counterexample by redescribing it, the date is a rhetorical achievement wearing the clothes of a finding. The sweep that made the book famous is the sweep that lifts it past disproof.
The symmetry is the whole charge. Moyn does to the long march from the Stoics what Turner does to practices and norms, and he declines to do to his own commitments what he does to everyone else’s. Max Weber (1864-1920) gave the discipline its old name, value-freedom, the rule that the scholar keep his preferences out of his findings or mark them plainly when they enter. Moyn keeps the rule through every other man’s cathedral and relaxes it the moment he reaches his own.
So Turner admires the wrecking and distrusts the rebuilding. Moyn pours the acid on every structure but the one he wants the reader to live in. He could answer, fairly, that pure deflation is unlivable, that a man must value something, that Turner’s solvent runs down through the floor Turner stands on too. That is true, and it is the strongest thing Moyn can say. But the answer concedes the point. If the wanting is his, then he should carry it in by hand and say so, and stop presenting it as a thing the documents handed up. The history clears the site. It does not pour the foundation. Turner asks only that the historian say which is which, and Moyn, who asks exactly this of everyone he studies, owes the same accounting on himself.

Alliance Theory

The claim that human rights crowded out socialism flatters a particular coalition, the academic left that lost faith in liberalism, and the restraint camp around Quincy. Read his theses as beliefs that serve a coalition rather than as neutral findings, and the selection of which contingencies he foregrounds starts to look load-bearing.
Alliance Theory, the argument David Pinsof builds with his coauthors in “Strange Bedfellows,” holds that political belief systems do not grow from abstract values like equality or liberty or the sanctity of rights. They grow from alliance structures. A man does not reason his way from a value to a set of positions. He acquires allies and rivals, mostly by accident of time and place, and then he generates a patchwork of moral claims that support the allies and damage the rivals. The thread that ties his positions together is not a philosophy. It is a network of friends and enemies. Ask what a belief system is for, and the answer is to win the fight, not to map the world.
Read Moyn this way and the first thing to chart is the field of allies and rivals, because on this account that chart explains more than any value he names. His allies sit on the academic left, the heterodox left that broke with mainstream liberalism after the long disappointments, the restraint coalition gathered at Quincy, the critics of American empire, the partisans of redistribution, the Palestinian-solidarity camp. His rivals are the human-rights establishment, the liberal hawks who set out to better the world by force, the Cold War liberals, the constitutional lawyers who worship the Court, the interventionists, the pro-Israel center. Take his theses one by one and notice how cleanly each strikes a rival and shields an ally.
Start with the strangest bedfellow. Moyn is a man of the left who sits at an institute funded from the left and the right at once, with Soros money and Koch money under one roof, and he shares that house with realists who hold nothing else he holds. Alliance Theory has a name for this and a cause. The cause is transitivity, the enemy of my enemy. The interventionist liberal is the common rival of the anti-war left and the realist right, so the two camps become allies across a gap that no philosophy bridges. Moyn’s restraint is not a position he deduced from a premise about war. It is the coalition he landed in once he chose his rival. The Quincy alliance, left dove and right realist joined against the liberal hawk, is the bridging alliance the paper describes, built in the shape the theory predicts.
Now the center of his work, the elegy. Moyn mourns the egalitarian and socialist maximum, the politics of redistribution that human rights displaced, and he mourns it as a value the world abandoned and might recover. Alliance Theory denies that egalitarianism is a value anyone holds in that standing way. The paper marshals the evidence. Ask Americans in the abstract whether they want to live in an equal society and the partisan gap vanishes. The gap appears only when equality implicates particular groups. Party allegiance comes first and predicts later support for equality, while early egalitarianism fails to predict later party. In the laboratory people flip from equality to its opposite within minutes once the flip helps the group they were just assigned to. Equality, on this reading, is not a creed. It is a tool you pick up to defend a disadvantaged ally and set down when it could aid a rival.
Run that against Moyn’s history and the elegy reorganizes. The American left did not lose faith in equality and reach for rights as a lesser replacement. The coalition that carried economic equality broke apart, and the paper names the breaks. Civil rights drew the white South out of the Democratic Party. Abortion sorted the devout from the secular. Immigration and the collapse of manufacturing split the lower class along ethnic lines. The upper class split into educated knowledge workers against corporate wealth. When the old alliance shattered, a new one formed around different allies, ethnic minorities and women and gay people, disadvantaged groups whose support you raise with the language of rights and discrimination rather than the language of class. Rights-talk rose because the new coalition’s allies were the kind you defend with rights. Moyn tells the story as a tragedy of belief. Alliance Theory tells it as a reshuffling of friends, and the second story needs no lost faith and no warm corpse.
The biases the paper documents run through his books in plain sight. Humane reads the American war machine as a perpetrator whose turn to clean and lawful killing is a fresh crime to be exposed, which is the perpetrator bias aimed at a rival. His writing on Gaza grants the Palestinian ally the full weight of victimhood and assigns the Israeli rival the full weight of intent, the victim and perpetrator pair the paper maps onto allies and enemies. And watch the attributions, because they tilt. When the left dropped the economic maximum, Moyn lays the loss to external force, to defeat and displacement, no blame falling on the ally. When the liberals took up rights, he lays the turn to choice and to a failure of nerve, blame falling on the rival. Same period, two attributions, sorted by friendship. The self-serving attributional bias has a chapter in the paper and a home in his pages.
Moyn writes in the key of moral seriousness and historical truth. He prizes truth over comfort and the public interest over the tribe. Alliance Theory reads the claim to be moved by truth rather than loyalty as one more move in the fight, the creation of common knowledge that one’s own side is honest and the rivals self-serving. Every engaged partisan makes the move. The hawk holds that he serves the suffering. The juristocrat holds that he serves justice. Moyn holds that he serves the record. The theory does not single him out as a liar. It holds that the sincerity is real and the function is coalitional, and that the two sit together without strain.
The test the paper hands you is substitution. Swap the groups and see whether the principle survives. Moyn turns the solvent of contingency on the ideals of his rivals, on human rights and humane war and the rule of law, and dissolves each into its accidental history. He does not turn the same solvent on the ideals of his allies, on the egalitarian dream or anti-imperial solidarity or the Palestinian cause, which keep the standing of truths the world owes. The selection is the finding. The choice of which contingencies he foregrounds carries the weight. A man who historicizes only his enemies’ sacred objects is not following the evidence where it leads. He is fighting, in the register his coalition rewards, which happens to be the monograph and the lecture and not the cable segment.
Give him the strongest reply, because the front page asks for it. Alliance Theory cuts every way at once. If all belief serves a coalition, then the claim that Moyn’s egalitarianism is mere tactic serves a coalition too, the realist and anti-left camp that profits from deflating the egalitarian dream. The solvent dissolves the hand that holds it. Moyn might say the symmetry voids the charge, that an argument explaining all belief explains none, that the paper’s evidence is American and contested and concedes cross-cultural regularities which smuggle back the structure it set out to deny. The reply has force. It also costs him the thing he most wants to keep. To climb out from under Alliance Theory he has to grant that beliefs run on coalitions, his rivals’ and his own alike, and that concession is most of what the theory came to collect.
So whom does Moyn stand with. Alliance Theory says start there, not with what he values, because the values arrive after the alliance and dressed for its service. Map the friends and the enemies and his positions fall into place with a neatness no philosophy delivers, the elegy and the restraint and the suspicion of rights and the sympathy and the blame, each one pointed where the coalition points. The work is first-rate and the function is total, and the theory insists those were never at odds.

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The Hero System of George Soros

Budapest, the spring of 1944. A boy of fourteen carries papers that name him someone else. His father, Tivadar Soros (1894-1968), has bought the documents, split the children among separate households under separate names, and taught them the one rule that holds in an occupied city: the man who clings to a single fixed identity dies of it. Survival belongs to the man who holds his self loosely, who treats the name on the page as a wager and not a fact. The Germans want Jews who answer to their names. The boy learns to answer to another. He watches his father move through the catastrophe the way a card player moves through a bad hand, folding here, bluffing there, never confusing the cards in his fist with the truth of the game.
George Soros (b. 1930) spends the rest of his life building a cosmology out of that year.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argues in The Denial of Death that man is the animal who knows he will die and cannot stand it, so he enrolls himself in a project larger than his body, a scheme of meaning that tells him he counts for something the grave cannot cancel. The scheme is the hero system. It tells a man what courage is, what contribution is, what a good life adds up to, and it pays him in the only currency that answers death, the sense that he is an object of primary value in a universe that will keep him. In Escape from Evil Becker adds the dark half. We buy our significance at a price, and someone else pays it. The men who carry our terror for us become our scapegoats. The man who threatens our scheme threatens our life, and we treat him the way men treat a plague.
Most hero systems answer death with a fixed thing. The nation that does not fall. The God who does not change. The race that endures, the canon that stands, the revolution that arrives and stays. The promise is permanence, and permanence reads as certainty. You know the truth, you serve the truth, the truth outlives you, and so you outlive yourself through it.
George Soros builds the rare hero system that answers death the other way. His permanence is the permanence of the open question.
At the London School of Economics after the war he reads Karl Popper (1902-1994), and Popper hands him the word for what his father practiced in the occupied city. No theory holds the final truth. Every theory is a conjecture that stands until something refutes it. The closed society freezes one answer and kills the men who doubt it. The open society keeps the answer revisable, keeps the doubt legal, treats fallibility as the price of staying alive. Soros carries this into markets as what he calls reflexivity. The trader’s belief alters the thing he means to predict, so certainty is foreclosed, and the man who admits this beats the man who forgets it. In September 1992 he sells the pound short against the conviction of the Bank of England and takes roughly a billion dollars from a government that thought it knew what its own currency was worth. The trade is the philosophy in one motion. He wins because he treats the official certainty as a conjecture ripe for refutation, and he is right.
Then the fortune turns to the work. The hero system acquires a budget, more than thirty-two billion dollars over four decades, poured into the Open Society Foundations: scholarships for Black students under apartheid, fellowships for East European dissidents, money for the open question wherever a state tries to slam it shut. A man who began by surviving a closed society spends his old age trying to refute closure on every continent at once.
Here the trouble starts. The word at the center of his life, “open,” means one thing to him and the opposite to almost everyone he funds against.
For Soros, open means revisable. The door you keep ajar so the next correction can come through. For a Hong Kong bookseller watching the colophon of a banned title disappear from his own shelves, open means the shop not yet padlocked, the page not yet pulled, one more month of trading before the men come. For a Salafi preacher, the open society is fitna, the flood that follows when the fixed law dissolves, and openness names the disease, not the cure. For a Hindutva organizer in Delhi, open is the solvent that eats dharmic order, the profanation of what should stay bounded by caste and rite, and the foreign foundation that funds “openness” funds the dissolving of a sacred form. For a hesychast monk on Athos, openness is the world’s noise pressing on the cell, and the shut door of the cell is the open gate to God, so the two men use one word and point it in reverse directions. For a quant at a London fund, open is an open position, raw exposure, the thing you close before the weekend so the risk cannot eat you overnight. For a Texas pastor preaching to four thousand on a Sunday, the open society is open borders and the open marriage and the unguarded door the enemy walks through. For a retired Stasi file clerk drawing his pension in Leipzig, open is the Western word for the acid that ate his country, his work, his sense that his life had served a structure, and he hears “open society” as the name of the thing that erased him. For a Singaporean administrator who delivers housing on schedule to five million people, open means disorder, the society that cannot keep its promises because it keeps reopening its own decisions.
Five letters. Eight men. Eight sacred charges, several of them aimed at his throat.
“Speculation” splits the same way. For Soros it names a discipline of humility, the practice of a man who knows he cannot know and sizes his bet to his ignorance, who treats every position as provisional and gets out when the world refutes him. For the English pensioner whose savings thinned the autumn he broke the pound, speculation is theft that wears no mask, a foreigner taking money out of the air and out of her account in the same stroke. For the men who later build a worldwide story about him, “speculator” hardens into a code word, the rootless money that owes no flag, the wealth that comes from nowhere and answers to no nation. The discipline he is proudest of becomes the proof of his crime.
So he draws the oldest assignment a hero system hands out. Becker calls it the scapegoat, and the casting is exact. Picture the rally in a small European capital, the posters with one old man’s face blown up and lit from below, the chant, the man near the front who has lost his factory job and cannot say why, who turns to the man beside him and says the financier did this, the financier wants no borders, no nation, no church, no us. The financier is everywhere and nowhere, has no homeland, melts what is solid for profit. Tell me his name and I will tell you what is wrong with the world. The man feels his terror find a shape, and the shape has an address.
The story is the ancient template with a checkbook drawn into it: the Jew as the agent of dissolution, the cosmopolitan who unmakes the nation from within. The conspiracy about Soros is the product of a hero system, the defense thrown up by men whose immortality rests on fixed forms, on the nation and the bounded people and the unchanging law. Their scheme cannot survive a world that keeps reopening, and rather than mourn the world they are losing, they locate the loss in one financier and tell themselves that removing him restores the solid earth. Soros funds groups that fight antisemitism and has become the century’s chief object of it. Becker read this coming half a century ago without knowing the name. The man who carries your terror gets treated as the cause of it.
The apostle of fallibility cannot be fallibilist about fallibilism. A man who says no one holds the final truth, and then spends thirty-two billion dollars advancing one vision of the good society, has built a fortress and called it a clearing. The open society arrives with a roster of approved outcomes attached, and the openness stops at the edge of the roster. His critics are not wrong to notice the program inside the procedure. Becker might say the trouble is not Soros and not hypocrisy. No man lives inside pure doubt. Doubt cannot hold the terror, cannot answer the grave, cannot get a man out of bed against the certainty of his own death. So even the doubt-hero smuggles in a certainty, names it openness, and defends it the way men defend a god. The most honest fallibilist alive still needs a floor to stand on, and the floor is a faith he does not examine, because if he examined it he would fall through.
In December 2022 the board of the foundations elects his son chair. By the summer of 2023 Alexander Soros (b. 1985) holds the controls, and the father, in his nineties, hands down the project the way a man hands down an estate. Consider what this does to a hero system built on the open question. The open question becomes an inheritance. The thing whose whole virtue was that it stayed unsettled gets settled on an heir, with a name fixed to the building and a fortune fixed to a board, which is among the most closed things a man can do with anything.
The boy who survived 1944 did it by holding his self loosely, by treating his name as a wager he could fold. The old man leaves behind an institution that has fixed his name to the wall for as long as the endowment lasts. He spent a life proving that the loose self lives and the fixed self dies in the occupied city, and he ends by building the most fixed thing he could afford, so that the proof might outlast him. That is the wager underneath all the others, and the grave does not let anyone fold it.

Attitude to the USA

His attitude toward the United States runs two ways.
He owes the country a debt and says so. America took him in, let him build a fortune, and gave him the base from which he funds his work across the world. He treats it as the strongest open society on the map and the power best placed to lead others toward the same. He has said the U.S. occupies a hegemonic position and sits in a better place than any other country to reform international institutions. The hope under the praise is that America might choose to lead a global open society rather than rule as a lone superpower..
The criticism grows from the same root. He fears America the empire even as he backs America the open society. In The Bubble of American Supremacy he argued that the administration of George W. Bush (b. 1946) built its foreign policy on unilateralism and military might over international law, and that the approach failed. He told audiences that the Iraq war weakened the United States. He warned that preemptive war claimed by America alone strips American power of its legitimacy, and that branding protesters unpatriotic eats at the foundations of the democracy..
On the economy he is as blunt. He calls market fundamentalism a threat to the open society greater than communism or socialism, because of the faith that free competition cures every ill. By 2008 he was arguing against market fundamentalism and for more government involvement in the American economy..
Then there is the money. He stands among the largest donors to the Democratic side of American politics. He spent heavily to defeat Bush in 2004 and funded groups such as MoveOn. He warned his own supporters against Donald Trump (b. 1946) and Ted Cruz (b. 1970) at the end of 2015. Later he put money into local contests, district-attorney races among them, to push criminal-justice reform from the bottom up.
His critics read the whole record as hostility to the country. They see a man who treats America as institutionally oppressive, funds open borders, and works against national sovereignty. He reads himself the other way, as a patriot of the open society who attacks America hardest where it betrays its own promise, the refugee who loves the place enough to tell it hard things about its power.
The short version of his view: America is the best hope for an open world and the largest danger to one, depending on which America shows up.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

If David Pinsof wanted a single man to stand for the misunderstanding myth, he might pick George Soros. No one has spent more money on the premise that the world’s troubles come from closed minds.
The open society is the misunderstanding myth with an endowment. Popper’s idea, which Soros took as his life’s text, holds that the closed society freezes one answer and the open society keeps the question alive, that dogma and false certainty are the enemies, and that inquiry, a free press, education, and deliberation are the cure. Read Pinsof’s catalog of intellectual complaints next to the program of the foundations and you find the same sentence written twice. Polarization is misunderstanding. Authoritarianism is closed-mindedness. Disinformation is a virus to inoculate against. Bigotry is ignorance of the ordinary humanity of the other group. Soros funded the cure for each of these, on six continents, for forty years.
Pinsof’s wager runs the other way. Humans are savvy animals who understand what they have an incentive to understand. The trouble is not bad beliefs but bad motives. People are not confused. They are competing, mostly over the coercive apparatus of the state, the thing that puts men in prison at gunpoint. Run Soros through that lens and the open society stops reading as an error-correction project and starts reading as what Pinsof says all such projects are, coalition-building with a mission statement bolted on top.
Look at where the money goes. Progressive NGOs, immigrant-rights groups, the press, and, closest to home, district-attorney races and criminal-justice reform. The part of his giving that sounds most high-minded, the reform of who gets prosecuted and who walks free, is the part aimed at the coercive apparatus of the state. Pinsof says this is no accident. The district attorney decides who goes to prison. A man who funds district-attorney races is not curing a misunderstanding about justice. He is competing for the lever. The stated goal is a fairer system. The actual goal, on this reading, is the lever, and the stated goal is the thing a man says while reaching for it.
Then fallibilism. Soros says no one holds the final truth, himself among them. Pinsof reads the humility as a signal and a weapon. The bias bias: I am less biased than the closed-minded men I oppose. The posture lets a man push a definite program while disclaiming dogma, a stronger spot than open dogma, because it puts the opponent in the wrong for being certain while you advance your certainties under cover of doubt. Thirty-two billion dollars is a strange sum to spend by a man with no settled view of the good.
Reflexivity, the market theory, reads as self-serving in Pinsof’s plain sense. Overconfidence helps a man make money and convince people he knows what he is doing. Soros’s theory holds that markets run on the fallible beliefs of their participants, that consensus is often wrong, that the man who spots the flaw cashes in. This is the theory of a man who got rich betting against the Bank of England. It flatters the speculator and supplies a built-in excuse, because when the world refutes him, fallibility was the premise all along. Self-serving going up, self-serving coming down.
If effectiveness means a more open world, the scoreboard for Soros is mixed. Hungary, his birthplace, drove out his university and ran against his name and won elections doing it. If effectiveness means status, a permanent name, a global coalition, and a seat among the men who decide what counts as legitimate opinion, the giving worked well. Actions over words. The thirty-two billion bought a great deal of what he was after.
Now the enemies. Soros treats the hatred against him as a misunderstanding. If only they read Popper. If only they saw that an open society threatens no decent man. Pinsof says bigotry is not a brain-fart and partisan hatred is not a senior moment. The men who hate Soros are not confused about him. They have noticed, correctly, that he funds their rivals, that his money flows to the coalition trying to take the lever from theirs. They are fighting, and demonizing the competition is what men do in a high-stakes fight. The antisemitic story they tell, the rootless financier melting the nation, is false as history and useful as a weapon. The hatred is strategic. So is Soros’s reply that the hatred springs from ignorance, because calling an enemy ignorant is a move in the same fight.
Then the layer that keeps this from a cheap shot. Pinsof does not need Soros to be a liar. The frame works better if the man believes every word. We deceive ourselves about our motives because denial is a weapon, and the sincerest believer carries the strongest cover. Soros, on this reading, is a savvy animal who understands what he has an incentive to understand and no more, who feels the warmth of saving the world and does not feel, because he has no incentive to feel, the coalition war running underneath. The mission statement is no cynical cover he keeps in a drawer. It is the thing he sees when he looks in the mirror, and that is what makes it work.
Soros spent a fortune studying the hole the species is stuck in, the closed minds, the bad information, the failures of reason, and called the study a rescue. Pinsof’s answer is that there is no rescue and no misunderstanding, that the men fighting Soros understand the stakes, that Soros understands them too at the level where it counts, and that the open society is the most expensive mission statement ever printed.

The Great Delusion

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.

John J. Mearsheimer (b. 1947) wrote The Great Delusion against a type of man, and the type is George Soros.
Political liberalism, in Mearsheimer’s account, is individualist at the core. It treats people as atomistic actors carrying a set of inalienable rights, and because the rights are inalienable they are universal, the same for every human on the planet. That universalism does not sit still. It pushes the liberal to remake the world in its image, to carry the rights abroad, to pursue an ambitious foreign policy on behalf of mankind. Mearsheimer thinks the project a delusion, because man is not the rights-bearing atom liberalism imagines. Man is a social animal, tribal at the root, formed by his group long before he can reason, and the deepest of the social forces, nationalism, beats liberalism whenever the two meet.
Soros is liberalism with a checkbook and no country. The open society is political liberalism stated as a universal destination. Every people, everywhere, is entitled to the open question, the free press, the civil society, the rights. Popper supplied the creed and Soros supplied the foreign policy, thirty-two billion dollars of it, run from a foundation rather than a state but aimed at the same target as American liberal hegemony after the Cold War: democracy promotion, dissident scholarships, the rule of rights, the world made open. A private man behaving as a liberal great power.
Mearsheimer’s quarrel begins with the atom at the center. Soros’s ideal citizen is the man who thinks for himself, doubts his tribe, holds his identity loosely, revises his beliefs against the evidence. Reflexivity is a theory of that man’s mind. The open society is built for him. Mearsheimer says he barely exists. People do not come into the world as lone wolves choosing their values off a menu. They are born into a group that stamps them in childhood, before the reasoning faculty wakes, and by the time a man can reason the value infusion of family and nation and faith and tongue has already set. Reason, Mearsheimer ranks last of the three sources of what we want, behind innate sentiment and well behind socialization. Soros bet his fortune on the faculty Mearsheimer ranks last.
Watch what this does to the open society’s tools. The free press, the funded university, the human-rights NGO all assume a man who updates his beliefs when you hand him better information. Give people facts and arguments and access, the theory runs, and they reason their way toward openness. Mearsheimer says the value infusion got there first. A Hungarian or a Russian is a Hungarian or a Russian before he is a reasoner, and the open society arrives to argue with something childhood already wrote. Soros funded inquiry against socialization and lost, because socialization had a thirty-year head start in every head he hoped to reach.
The defeats line up with the theory. Hungary, his birthplace, is the clearest case. Viktor Orbán (b. 1963) built a career on the figure of the rootless cosmopolitan financier who would dissolve the nation, drove Central European University out of Budapest, ran against the Soros name in election after election, and won. Russia branded the foundations undesirable and threw them out. Across Europe and in America the nationalist right made Soros the face of everything it meant to defend the nation against. Soros reads the resistance as authoritarian backsliding, as a failure to grasp what an open society offers. Mearsheimer reads it as nationalism doing what nationalism does, the thick old loyalty defending the bounded group against the thin new universalism that wants to open it. The backlash is no misunderstanding and no bigot’s accident. It is the deeper force surfacing against the shallower one, on schedule.
Here Mearsheimer turns the frame on Soros. The universalist is socialized too. Soros’s open society did not descend from pure reason. It grew from a particular boy in a particular city in 1944, a Jew who watched a closed, tribal nationalism try to exterminate his people and built his life’s creed against the tribe. His cosmopolitanism is the survival doctrine of a man from a hunted minority, a social-group identity and not a view from nowhere. Mearsheimer’s law holds even here. The values came from the catastrophe and the community, not from a syllogism. The open society is the history of a hunted people turned into a program for all peoples. That origin gives the creed its moral weight and also explains why the nationalists sense tribe under the universalism and why the universalist cannot sense it in himself.
Soros believed, as the liberal must believe, that his values are universal and exportable, that the open society is where all men are headed once the closed regimes blocking the road are cleared. He spent a fortune clearing the road. The road did not lead where he thought. Nationalism rose in the places he funded most, and it rose in part by pointing at him. Mearsheimer might say Soros could not have seen this from inside his creed, because liberalism cannot admit that man is tribal without ceasing to be liberalism, so it keeps crusading and keeps drawing the backlash and keeps calling the backlash a misunderstanding.
The boy survived 1944 by holding his identity loosely. He spent the rest of his life trying to teach a tribal species to do the same, and the species, Mearsheimer says, was never going to learn.

30 Useful Concepts About Bullshit

Pinsof’s eleventh concept is the sacred value, a cover story for status-seeking built to keep a status game from collapsing. We deny we want dominance and claim we want honor, wisdom, equality, the betterment of mankind. The open society is that, almost to the letter, and it is the strongest sacred value a man can hold, because no one can cash it out. No one can say when a society is open enough. The work never ends, the funding never stops, and the status the work confers never has to settle a bill.
Compare the weaker covers. A man who fights for democracy can be embarrassed by an election, by the wrong party winning fair and square, by Hamas at the ballot box or a nationalist with a supermajority. A man who fights for equality can be handed a chart. Openness takes no chart. It names a direction and arrives nowhere, so it can never be falsified, never be completed, never be caught failing. The genius of the cover is that no one can check it. Soros chose, or was chosen by, the perfect sacred value, the one with no settlement date.
Now the game under the cover. Money by itself runs low-status among the people Soros wanted to impress. The intellectuals, the editors, the men who decide what counts as knowledge, hold the vulgar rich in quiet contempt. A speculator who broke the Bank of England is a sharp operator and nothing more, and sharp operators do not get invited to lecture at the LSE or publish theories of history. The open society launders the fortune. It converts money, which buys contempt, into moral seriousness, which buys a seat. The man who might have stayed a clever gambler becomes the philosopher-philanthropist, the financier with a conscience, the funder of the good. His books, which no house takes from a billionaire with opinions, become required reading from the patron of open society. The sacred value bought him the one thing the money could not, a place among the people whose seriousness he craved.
Fold in the eighth concept, anti-status, the status you draw from looking like you chase no status. Fallibilism is the polish on the apparatus. The line that no one holds the final truth, himself included, is the highest posture a man of his wealth can strike, because it disarms the envy that great money draws. The humble billionaire is harder to hate than the proud one, and the humility advances the program while disclaiming the ambition. He pushes a definite vision of the good and calls it doubt.
So far this reads as the frame on a man who is winning. The richer part is the tenth concept, status-game collapse, and it explains the thing that puzzles Soros most, the hatred.
Pinsof says a status game collapses when the players gain common knowledge that it is a status game. They see each other all at once as vain, self-serving, hiding dominance under virtue, and the sacred value stops working in the room. The nationalist right reached that common knowledge about the open society years ago. They stopped arguing with its content. They named it as a move. They said the benevolence is a cover, the universalism a flag, the philanthropy a bid for power dressed as a bid for the good. Once a coalition sees the halo as a move, it does not debate the halo. It shoots at it.
The shape of the attack follows from the collapse. When you collapse a sacred value, you charge the holder with seeking dominance under cover of virtue, with pursuing his own tribe’s power while claiming to serve all mankind. That is the form every collapse takes, and it is the exact form of the antisemitic libel thrown at Soros, the rootless cosmopolitan whose talk of humanity masks a hidden particular interest. The libel is false as history and true to the template. The attackers did not invent a new charge. They reached for the oldest one and found it fit the slot the collapse had opened, because the collapse always alleges the same thing, that the saint is a striver in disguise.
Soros cannot concede the collapse, because conceding it ends his game. If he admitted that the open society is a status move, the move dies, since a sacred value the holder sees through is a dead value. So he reads the attack as bigotry and confusion, as men who fail to grasp what an open society offers. He has no choice in this. The twenty-second concept, the social paradox, holds that the signal stays hidden from the signaler as much as from the audience. The virtue signaler does not know he is signaling. Soros does not experience the open society as a bid for status. He experiences it as the good, and the experience is load-bearing. The sincerity is no flaw in the cover. The sincerity is the cover. A man who knew his halo was a tool could not wear it convincingly, so the species built minds that believe their own press.
When a game collapses, Pinsof says, the players scramble to a new game, and the scramble drives cultural change. The right built its new game on the rubble of the old one. The points now go to the man who sees through the cosmopolitan, who is not fooled by the benevolence, who knows the financier’s real designs. Soros became the sacred value of one coalition and the sacred scapegoat of the other, the positive totem here and the negative totem there, and the two are the same engine seen from opposite ends. Both tribes feed off his name. One sells salvation through him and one sells salvation against him, and neither sale clears, because the value at stake on both sides cannot be cashed any more than openness can.
The open society holds as a sacred value because it never settles, and the proof sits on both sides of the war over Soros. He cannot lose the open society, because no defeat counts as its defeat. His enemies cannot finish him, because no exposure counts as his exposure. The believers and the haters are bound to the same uncashable thing, drawing status from it for as long as they live, and the man in the middle, ninety-five years old, funds the believers and feeds the haters with the same dollar, and the dollar never comes due.

Dark Idealism

Pinsof’s nineteenth concept is dark idealism, the heartfelt conviction that we are pure and noble and benevolent, which fuels dark morality by blinding us to our own biases and making the men who reject our ideals look evil or subhuman. Soros is the hardest case the concept faces, and the most revealing, because he built his life on doubt. Dark idealism feeds on certainty of one’s own goodness, and here is a man whose whole creed holds that no one owns the truth. So how does the apostle of fallibilism end up the purest case of dark idealism alive?
He exempts one thing from the doubt. He doubts every empirical claim, every market call, every theory of history, his own among them. He does not doubt that he means well. Fallibilism runs across the whole board and stops at the door of his own benevolence. The purity has to live somewhere, and in a man who disclaims certainty it cannot live in his beliefs, so it migrates to his intentions. He no longer says I am right. He says I want the good. Wanting the good is the purest claim a man can make and the one that blinds him hardest, because doubt cannot reach an intention. A man can be shown his facts are wrong. He cannot be shown his heart is wrong, not from the inside, and Soros lives inside.
Watch the blinding to his own biases. He funds one coalition, the progressive NGOs, the reform candidates, the editors and lawyers and activists of a single political family, and he experiences none of it as partisan. He experiences it as funding the open question, civil society, human rights, the neutral goods of mankind. The idealism turns a side into a service. The man who pays for one side of every fight believes he pays for no side, only for openness, and the belief is sincere, which is what makes it dark. An ordinary partisan knows he is a partisan and can be reasoned with on those terms. Soros cannot locate his own tribe, because his creed has told him he rose above tribe into humanity. He funds his allies and calls them civilization.
Now the men across from him. Run the Soros vocabulary for his opponents and you find no opponents in it. You find authoritarians, demagogues, the closed society, the forces of reaction, the illiberal, the backsliding, the fearful, the manipulated, the not-yet-open. Never a rival coalition with interests as real as his own. Always a moral category. Once a man’s cause is mankind, the men who block him are not blocking a man, they are blocking mankind, and that licenses him to treat them as defects rather than parties, as the unenlightened rather than the opposed. The Soros register runs softer than Pinsof’s word subhuman. He does not call the Hungarian villager an animal. He calls him afraid, closed, misled, a man who would choose the open society if he understood it. The softer charge does the same work and lasts longer, because it denies the opponent a legitimate interest while sounding like compassion. The man is not wrong. He is benighted. He does not disagree. He misunderstands.
Downstream sits the dark morality the idealism feeds, Pinsof’s eighteenth concept, the conviction of doing right that fuels censorship and bullying and contempt. The funding of campaigns against disinformation, which is the funding of one coalition’s power to name the other coalition’s speech a disease. The branding of arguments for national sovereignty as bigotry. The pouring of a fortune into the elections of other countries, felt by the giver as help and by the country as intervention. Soros opposed the Iraq war and funded democracy promotion, and could not see that the two share a spine, the conviction that one’s values are universal and that carrying them abroad is a gift. He saw the war as dark and his own work as light. Dark idealism is the inability to see that they run on the same engine.
The fallibilist’s blind spot is worth standing on, because it inverts what people expect. We assume the dangerous man is the one sure he is right. The more dangerous man is the one sure he is good while professing to doubt that he is right, because the doubt buys him innocence and the goodness sanctifies whatever the doubt permits. Soros built the maximum version of dark idealism, a purity that survives his own skepticism, because he parked the purity in his motives where skepticism does not go. A man certain of his benevolence and uncertain of all else is the purest specimen of the thing alive. The uncertainty is real and wide, and it certifies the one certainty that poisons.
The frame turns on his enemies in the same stroke, and on me. The nationalists run their own dark idealism in reverse. They are the defenders of the nation, the pure, the rooted, and Soros is the demon eating the homeland. Two idealisms face each other across Europe, each sure of its own light, each casting the other as evil, neither able to see its own coalition as a coalition. Pinsof says this is the ordinary human condition and no special failing of either man. The symmetry is the point. The writer does not escape it. To file Soros under blinded by idealism is a moral judgment, and moral judgment is the ground dark idealism grows in. The cynic who exposes the idealist feels the clean pleasure of the undeceived, a purity of its own. I sort Soros the way he sorts his Hungarian, and the sorting feels right to me the way his feels right to him, and that match is the concept at work on the man who wields it.
The open society promised a man who could doubt his way out of the tribe, who could hold his beliefs loosely enough to see his enemies as men and not monsters. Dark idealism is the proof that no creed sells that exit. The surer a man grows of his good will, the blinder he goes, and the apostle of doubt kept one article past all doubting, his faith in his own light. That faith is the thing that makes the dark.

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Walter J. Ong and the Technology of the Word

Walter Jackson Ong (1912-2003) was an original Catholic intellectual of the twentieth century, and his career joined vocations that most scholars keep apart. He was a Jesuit priest, a literary historian, a philosopher of communication, and a founder of the field now called media ecology. Across five decades he pursued a single question through many disciplines: how the technologies by which men speak, write, print, and broadcast reshape the mind that uses them. Long before networked computing and the rise of social media, Ong argued that speech, script, print, and electronic media are not neutral containers for the transmission of information. They alter how men think, remember, imagine, and understand themselves, and his work carried that claim into rhetoric, literary studies, education, theology, anthropology, communications, and intellectual history.

He was born in Kansas City, Missouri, on November 30, 1912, the son of Walter Jackson Ong and Blanche Eugenia Mense Ong. He graduated from Rockhurst High School in 1929 and entered Rockhurst College, where he studied Latin and founded a chapter of the Catholic fraternity Alpha Delta Gamma. After earning his bachelor’s degree in 1933 he spent roughly two years in printing, publishing, newspapers, and business before entering the Missouri Province of the Society of Jesus in 1935. Those early years inside the trade left a mark on the scholar he became. Few students of communication had handled the physical apparatus of print whose cultural consequences they would later try to read, and Ong had set type and watched newspapers come off the press before he ever theorized about them.

His Jesuit formation reached unusually wide. He took licentiates in philosophy and in sacred theology while completing a master’s degree in English at Saint Louis University, and he was ordained a priest in 1946. He kept his pastoral and spiritual work close to his scholarship for the rest of his life. For decades he said Mass at St. Francis Xavier College Church in St. Louis and led others through the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556). Where many academics happen also to hold a faith, in Ong the priesthood and the scholarship formed a single vocation, since his questions about language, presence, community, and the human person rose directly out of theology.

At Saint Louis University he came under the influence of a young professor named Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980). Ong’s master’s thesis examined the sprung rhythm of Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889), another Jesuit whose writing stayed with him across his career. McLuhan urged his student toward the sixteenth-century French educational reformer Peter Ramus (1515-1572), a suggestion that redirected the course of Ong’s intellectual life. What began as a piece of historical inquiry grew into a sweeping account of the tie between communication technologies and consciousness.

Ong went to Harvard for doctoral work under the intellectual historian Perry Miller (1905-1963). He finished his dissertation on Ramus and earned his Ph.D. in English in 1955. The result stands among the more remarkable scholarly achievements of the postwar humanities. His Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue (1958) appeared alongside the Ramus and Talon Inventory, a vast bibliographical catalog of more than seven hundred and fifty Ramist works. Together the two volumes set Ong among the leading historians of Renaissance thought.

The Ramus project reached well past intellectual history. Ong argued that Ramus helped recast Western habits of thought by fitting education to the openings that print created. Medieval learning had turned on oral disputation, dialogue, memory, and public debate. Ramus organized knowledge instead through visual diagrams, charts, classifications, and outlines, so that logic took on a spatial form and knowledge moved from the spoken exchange of ideas to the arrangement of concepts on the printed page. For Ong this shift went deeper than schooling. It changed the shape of the mind. Visualized thought encouraged the modern picture of the mind as an interior space holding mental objects, and it fed the abstract, detached, visual reasoning that men came to associate with René Descartes (1596-1650) and Isaac Newton (1642-1727). Print, on this account, did more than spread ideas. It helped make new ways of thinking.

After the doctorate Ong returned to Saint Louis University and stayed for roughly three decades of teaching and writing. He held the William E. Haren chair in English and a professorship of humanities in psychiatry. His courses became known for crossing the lines between literature, philosophy, psychology, theology, history, and communications, and students are said to have called them “Onglish.” His own scholarship showed the same refusal to honor the borders between fields.

Through the 1960s and 1970s he produced a steady run of books, among them Frontiers in American Catholicism (1957), American Catholic Crossroads (1959), The Barbarian Within (1962), The Presence of the Word (1967), In the Human Grain (1967), Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology (1971), Why Talk? (1973), and Interfaces of the Word (1977). Many began as lecture series before a broad educated public. The Terry Lectures at Yale became The Presence of the Word, and the Messenger Lectures at Cornell became Fighting for Life. Ong belonged to a generation of public intellectuals who worked out major theoretical claims in front of a room.

His most widely read book came in 1982 with Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word, which became a standard text across the humanities and social sciences. Ong argued that societies built on oral communication differ from societies shaped by writing. Oral cultures lean on memory, repetition, formula, narrative thinking, and communal participation, since knowledge cannot be stored outside the mind and so must be held there. Speech in such cultures tends to run rhythmic, redundant, and warm. Writing changes the situation. It moves memory outside the body, invites abstraction, allows analytical reflection, and builds up the sense of an inner self. Print presses these tendencies further by standardizing texts, settling knowledge into place, and rewarding systematic order. Literacy, on this reading, works not as a simple tool but as a technology that restructures consciousness.

One of his lasting contributions was the line he drew between primary and secondary orality. Primary orality belongs to cultures that have never known writing. Secondary orality describes the electronic environment built by radio, television, the telephone, and later by digital media. Secondary orality recalls oral culture in its taste for immediacy, participation, conversation, and shared experience, yet it rests on literacy, on machinery, and on large institutions, and so it remains a different thing. The distinction anticipated the world of social media by decades. Ong saw the approach of an electronic life that would revive forms of collective participation resembling oral culture while staying technologically mediated, and the point sits near the center of present arguments about online communication.

Readers often pair him with McLuhan, but the two worked from different premises. McLuhan held that the medium is the message and treated media as extensions of the human senses. Ong fixed his attention on the technologizing of the word and on the ways communication practice reshapes consciousness. The men stayed close, and McLuhan leaned on Ong’s early research for The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962), yet their paths parted as Ong reached for a more historically grounded and psychologically careful account of media change. He also kept clear of a crude technological determinism. Communication technologies carried great weight in his account, but they did not stamp out cultural results on their own. They worked through social institutions, religious traditions, schools, and human psychology, and the outcome often surprised.

Another side of his thought surfaced in Fighting for Life: Contest, Sexuality, and Consciousness (1981), where he traced the place of conflict in human culture. Oral societies, he argued, often build social life around contests, verbal combat, ritual insult, heroic story, and the public display of skill, and this agonistic habit reflects deep biological and anthropological ground, since men fix identity through difference, competition, and struggle. Literacy and print, he suggested, slowly tamed many of those public contests. Conflict moved from spoken confrontation toward silent reading, private reflection, and written argument, so that a change in communication technology altered not only how men traded information but how they met conflict, status, and identity.

Beneath the whole project lay theology. As a Jesuit, Ong took communication to belong to the structure of reality. The Judeo-Christian tradition opens with divine speech, for God creates through His spoken word, and Christianity rests on the Incarnation, the belief that the divine Word became flesh in Jesus Christ. Communication, in this light, was no side activity of human life. It was woven into existence. The theological frame shaped his reading of media history. He declined to treat the movement from speech to writing to print to electronic media as a plain story of progress or of decline, and he read it instead as part of the long growth of human self-awareness and community. Each technology brought losses with its gains, yet across the whole he saw a fuller realization of man’s capacity for relationship and shared understanding. The view helps explain his guarded hope for secondary orality. Where many critics read electronic media as engines of fragmentation, Ong thought they might feed new and wider forms of human community, and though he never turned utopian, he held that technologically mediated communication might draw men into larger and more inclusive bonds.

His reach extended past his books. He served on President Lyndon Johnson’s (1908-1973) White House Task Force on Education from 1966 to 1967. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971. He led the Milton Society of America as its president and the Modern Language Association as its president in 1978. The French government named him a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques in 1963 for his Renaissance scholarship, and Saint Louis University gave him the Sword of Ignatius Loyola in 1993.

He stayed at work into old age. His last major article, “Digitization Ancient and Modern” (1998), set the invention of writing beside the arrival of computing and read both within the long history of communication. The essay later took the Media Ecology Association’s Walter Benjamin Award. By his death in St. Louis on August 12, 2003, Ong had published more than four hundred and fifty pieces, among them roughly sixteen books, hundreds of articles, and more than a hundred reviews. His work has been translated into many languages and still moves through scholarship in several fields, and the Walter J. Ong Center for Language, Media, and Culture at Saint Louis University carries his name.

Histories of the field now place Ong among the founders of media ecology and among the central theorists of communication in the modern age. The labels catch only part of him. He was a scholar of consciousness. By following the lines among speech, writing, print, electronic media, culture, and religion, he tried to say how men come to be the kind of creatures they are, and few writers have taken up that question with his depth, range, or historical imagination.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

In Fighting for Life: Contest, Sexuality, and Consciousness (1981), Ong described the agon at the base of oral culture: contest, verbal combat, ritual insult, the public display of skill, identity fixed through competition and struggle. A Jesuit named the hierarchical, coalitional primate in 1981, with care. He saw the animal.
Ong’s arc says that literacy and print tamed the contest, that conflict moved out of the shouting match and into silent reading and written argument, and that the long history of communication trends toward fuller self-awareness and a wider, more inclusive human community. Pinsof reads the same sequence and reaches the opposite end. The contest did not soften. It changed venue and weapon. Written argument, the citation, the endowed chair, the learned society, the prize from a foreign government are the new ground for the old fight. The presidency of the Modern Language Association is a trophy. The Palmes Académiques is a trophy. What Ong narrated as domestication, Pinsof narrates as the same primate fighting with quieter tools. The spear becomes the footnote, and the footnote draws blood at less risk to the man who throws it. Ong supplied a redemption story on top of a competition he had already described with accuracy. He got the diagnosis and then talked himself out of it.
The optimism about secondary orality runs the same way. Ong hoped that electronic communication might draw men into larger and more inclusive bonds, a wider consciousness. Pinsof would answer that the attention economy is zero-sum competition for eyes, and that men take up electronic media because it serves status and coalition, not communion. The hope of a wider bond is the sweet stated goal laid over the actual one. And the hope flatters its author by the logic Pinsof flags. If communication carries men toward self-realization and toward God, then the scholar of communication, the priest of the Word, studies the very substance of salvation. That is a central seat for a man to assign the work he gave his life to. The misunderstanding myth here wears a theological dress: not “if only men understood” but “if only men communicated more fully,” with the student of communication standing at the door.
So Pinsof keeps Ong’s description and cuts Ong’s teleology. The agon is the engine; the communion is the mission statement.

The Great Delusion

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.

Mearsheimer’s central charge against liberalism is that it mistakes the atomistic, rights-bearing, reasoning individual for human nature, when man is social first and reasons last. Ong hands Mearsheimer a genealogy for that error. The bounded interior self, the mind as a private space holding its own objects, the detached reasoner who weighs and chooses, is not the human default. It is a deposit left by writing and print, recent and local, mistaken by liberals for the universal man. So liberalism’s error runs double. It overrates reason, as Mearsheimer says, and it takes a print-made experience of selfhood for the nature of the species. Ong, read through Mearsheimer, becomes the media historian of the liberal delusion. The two reinforce each other.
Now the part that dies, and it is Ong’s hope. Ong looked at secondary orality and saw the chance of a wider, more inclusive human community, a fuller communion carried on electronic wires. Mearsheimer reads that hope as the same universalism he spent the book attacking. Man is tribal at the core, embedded in the group because embeddedness is how he survives, and the group does not dissolve when the channels of contact widen. More communication arms the tribe and breeds new tribes in competition. It does not melt parochial attachment into one human family. Ong’s global consciousness belongs to the family of liberal dreams, the dream that some universalizing force, rights for the liberal and the word for the priest, overcomes the social and tribal floor of human life. On Mearsheimer’s account, the floor holds. The dream does not.
The taming thesis in Fighting for Life: Contest, Sexuality, and Consciousness (1981) weakens along the same line. Ong saw the agon at the base of oral culture and then argued that literacy and print domesticated it, moving conflict into silent reading and written argument. Mearsheimer would keep the agon and drop the domestication. The competitive, group-bound, sacrifice-for-the-tribe man does not get tamed by a change of medium. He carries the same core under whatever technology of the word he happens to inherit. The contest goes quiet on the page. It does not leave.
The frame then turns on Ong. Mearsheimer says a man has limited choice in his moral code, since so much of it arrives through inborn sentiment and through the social group before he can think for himself. Ong is a clean case. Born Catholic, formed by the Church and then the Society of Jesus across the long childhood and the longer Jesuit training, he received his moral code more than he reasoned his way to it, and his theology of communion, the Word made flesh, men bound to one another and to Him through the act of communication, is the value infusion of his group raised to a metaphysics. Mearsheimer would not call this a flaw. He would call it the human condition working as it always works. Ong’s sense that human community reaches toward God is, on this reading, the sacralized form of a fact, that the lone wolf dies and the embedded man lives, so men band together and their children learn to love the band.
If Mearsheimer is right, Ong’s anthropology stands and even gains, because it tells Mearsheimer how socialization does its work and where the liberal individual was manufactured. Ong’s teleology falls, because the tribal and social core does not yield to a wider word. And Ong’s faith, which he held as the truth about reality, becomes for Mearsheimer one more instance of the rule that a man’s deepest commitments come to him from his group before he is in any position to weigh them. The two men agree that we are social to the bone. They part over whether anything, the word or the rights of man, can carry us past the bone.

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Bruno Latour: The Anthropologist of the Moderns

Bruno Latour (1947–2022) was an influential and divisive figure in the social theory of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Trained as a philosopher, drawn toward anthropology in method, and disposed toward the study of institutions by temperament, he reshaped how scholars approach science, technology, law, politics, religion, and the environment. His work helped found science and technology studies, supplied the early framing for Actor-Network Theory, and pressed against assumptions that had long organized modern intellectual life. By his death his influence reached sociology, anthropology, geography, architecture, legal theory, the environmental humanities, media studies, design, political theory, museum curation, and philosophy.

His central argument was simple in statement and disruptive in consequence. Modern societies picture themselves as split into separate provinces called nature and society, facts and values, objects and subjects. Latour holds that the split is largely fictional. In practice men assemble hybrids that bind together people, technologies, institutions, ideas, animals, instruments, and material things. Reality consists not of isolated entities but of networks of relation. Social inquiry, on this view, does not explain events by appeal to large abstractions such as society, culture, or technology. It traces the concrete links through which actors come to be joined.

He was born on June 22, 1947, in Beaune, in Burgundy, the youngest of eight children of a prosperous Catholic family whose winemaking house, Maison Louis Latour, reached back across centuries. He grew up among commerce, religious observance, and a deep sense of history. He kept his attachment to Catholicism through his life and sustained an interest in theology, biblical interpretation, and the workings of religious language.

Latour studied philosophy at the University of Dijon from 1966. He did well in the competitive agrégation and established himself early as a promising philosopher. In 1975 he completed a doctoral dissertation at the University of Tours, Exégèse et ontologie: une analyse des textes de resurrection (“Exegesis and Ontology: An Analysis of the Texts of Resurrection”), under the supervision of Claude Bruaire. The dissertation read biblical resurrection narratives and carried themes that stayed with him: the making of truth, the reading of texts, and the construction of meaning.

A turn came during anthropological fieldwork in Côte d’Ivoire, carried out as part of his military service for ORSTOM, a French development research body. There he studied decolonization, industrialization, race relations, and the contact between French engineers and African technicians. He noticed that when machines broke, French engineers traced the failures to the culture, psychology, or habits of local workers, while the workers blamed the machines. The pattern held his attention. Technical trouble never stayed technical. It turned at once into social judgment. The episode shaped a conviction he carried for the rest of his life: technology, knowledge, and society cannot be pried apart.

This led him toward anthropology and toward the study of science. Rather than treat science as a privileged source of objective truth set beyond sociological view, Latour proposed to study scientists as anthropologists study any other community. With Steve Woolgar he carried out an ethnographic study of the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, centered on the laboratory of the Nobel laureate Roger Guillemin (1924–2024). The result, Laboratory Life (1979), stands among the founding texts of science and technology studies.

The book argues that scientific facts emerge through a tangle of researchers, instruments, funding, publications, laboratory routine, and material objects. Facts are not simply found. They harden through networks of practice and institution. Critics often read the argument as an assault on scientific truth. Latour insisted that he sought to explain how facts grow robust and command assent, not to deny that they are real.

Through the 1980s and 1990s, at the Centre de Sociologie de l’Innovation at the Paris School of Mines, Latour worked out the ideas that made his name. With Michel Callon and John Law he helped form Actor-Network Theory.

Actor-Network Theory set aside the usual line between active human subjects and passive objects. A scientist, a bacterium, a computer, a legal document, a microscope, and a government office could each operate as an “actant” within a network. The question was not whether an entity counted as human or nonhuman, but whether it exerted influence and changed the conduct of other entities. Social explanation, then, calls for tracing associations rather than positing hidden structures that settle outcomes in advance.

Several ideas came out of this work. One is “black-boxing,” the process by which complex systems pass into the taken for granted. Once a technology runs reliably, men stop noticing the intricate network that made it work. Another is “translation,” the process by which actors enlist allies and recast interests to build a stable network. These notions left a mark on organizational study, management theory, information systems research, and the study of science.

The major books of these years secured his international standing. Science in Action (1987) traced how scientific claims win acceptance as fact. The Pasteurization of France (1988) retold the rise of microbiology as the joint work of scientists, microbes, institutions, and political actors. We Have Never Been Modern (1991), his best known philosophical book, argues that modernity rests on the illusion that nature and society stand apart, while modern societies keep producing the hybrids that breach the line.

Aramis, or the Love of Technology (1996) examined the failure of an ambitious French transit project. Mixing sociology, philosophy, the history of engineering, and literary experiment, the book showed how technical success and failure hang on the stability of social and material networks rather than on technical merit alone.

The 1990s drew Latour into the science wars. The physicist Alan Sokal (b. 1955) and others charged him with relativism and with eroding confidence in scientific truth. Latour rejected the charge. His position was never that scientific knowledge runs arbitrary. He argued that scientific authority follows from the building of networks that link instruments, observations, experiments, institutions, and communities of researchers. Facts hold because those networks hold.

His answer to the controversy appears most clearly in Pandora’s Hope (1999), which defends scientific inquiry while it keeps rejecting any picture of objective knowledge cut loose from practice.

From the late 1990s and across the next two decades, Latour widened his attention past science. He wanted to grasp how different institutions make different kinds of truth. One major project studied the Conseil d’État, the highest administrative court of France. After years of observation he produced The Making of Law, an ethnography of legal reasoning. Latour argues that legal truth differs from scientific truth at its root. Scientists settle facts by extending chains of reference outward into the world through instruments and experiment. Judges settle legal truth through carefully kept chains of documents, precedents, files, and procedural continuity. Legal objectivity comes not from reaching external reality but from holding the integrity of legal reasoning within an institutional tradition.

The study showed that his larger project was not the sociology of science alone but a general inquiry into how institutions make authority, legitimacy, and truth.

His most ambitious attempt to order these findings was the Inquiry into Modes of Existence, a research program funded by the European Research Council. Published as An Inquiry into Modes of Existence (2012) and paired with an extensive digital platform, the project set out to identify the distinct logics that govern different provinces of human life. Latour holds that science, law, politics, religion, economics, fiction, technology, and morality each carry their own standards of verification, their own procedures, their own kinds of truth. Confusion arises when one province is judged by the standards of another. Many critics misread science, he thought, because they treated it as if it should work like theology, demanding fixed certainty in place of ongoing chains of empirical check.

Religion held a particular place in his thought. Unlike many secular intellectuals of his generation, he never cast religion as a primitive belief bound to fade. In Rejoicing: Or the Torments of Religious Speech he argues that religious language runs on principles apart from scientific description. Religion seeks transformation and renewal, not the recording of empirical fact.

After 2000 Latour turned toward environmental thought and the politics of climate. He came to hold that climate change exposed the poverty of the old political categories. The line between nature and society, troubled in his eyes from the start, could no longer hold in an age when human activity reshaped planetary systems.

Politics of Nature (2004), Facing Gaia (2017), and Down to Earth (2017) worked out a new ecological philosophy. Drawing on the Gaia hypothesis of James Lovelock (1919–2022), Latour set aside the image of nature as a stable backdrop. He described the Earth as an active party to human affairs.

His concept of the “Critical Zone” carried his ecology forward, the thin film of soil, air, water, organisms, and human activity that holds life on the planet. Rather than place humanity on an abstract globe, Latour argued that political thought has to begin from the fragile ecological systems that make existence possible.

In the later writing, politics turns from a contest among ideologies toward a contest over habitation. The central political question is no longer which social system should rule, but how men might learn to live within a finite and vulnerable Earth. He came to describe the future as a struggle between those who stay attached to ecological reality and those who keep chasing fantasies of limitless growth and escape.

Alongside the scholarship, Latour became an institutional builder and a curator. After his move to Sciences Po in 2006 he served as Vice-President for Research from 2007 to 2013. He founded the Médialab, which pursued digital methods in social science, and helped start SPEAP, an experimental graduate program that joined politics, art, and public engagement.

His interests reached the gallery as well. Working often with Peter Weibel (1944–2023) at the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, he co-curated Iconoclash (2002), Making Things Public (2005), Reset Modernity! (2016), and Critical Zones (2020). These exhibitions turned philosophical argument into visual and spatial form, treating artworks, scientific instruments, political artifacts, and technological objects as parties to shared networks. He also co-curated the 2020 Taipei Biennale.

In his last decades his influence ran well past the academy. Architects, designers, artists, urban planners, environmentalists, and legal scholars drew on his work. He became a precursor of the postcritique movement tied to thinkers such as Rita Felski (b. 1956). In his essay “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?” (2004) he argues that intellectuals should move past endless debunking and toward construction, composition, and care.

He grew uneasy, at the same time, that parts of social constructivist thought, including readings of his own work, were finding use among climate-change denialists and conspiracy theorists. He answered by defending scientific institutions with vigor while he held to his conviction that scientific knowledge is made through networks, not found in isolation.

Honors came across his career: the Bernal Prize, the Unseld Prize, the Holberg Prize in 2013, the Gifford Lectures, the French Légion d’Honneur, the Spinozalens Prize, and the Kyoto Prize in 2021. In keeping with his habits, he gave the monetary portion of the Kyoto Prize to Sciences Po.

Bruno Latour died of pancreatic cancer in Paris on October 9, 2022, at the age of seventy-five. He left his wife Chantal, their children Chloé and Robinson, and several grandchildren. His papers went to French archives, so that later scholars might trace the growth of a body of work that changed many fields.

His legacy stays contested. Admirers regard him as an original thinker of the first rank, a scholar who changed how intellectuals understand science, technology, law, politics, and ecology. Critics hold that his refusal of the old line between facts and interpretations risks breeding confusion about truth. Even many critics grant the scale of what he did.

Few thinkers of the twentieth century did more to unsettle inherited categories. Across philosophy, anthropology, sociology, law, religion, environmental thought, and art, Latour returned again and again to a single question: how do humans and nonhumans come to be connected in ways that produce durable realities? His answer, that reality emerges through networks of relation rather than through isolated substances, reshaped whole fields and set his place among the consequential social theorists of his time.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Latour’s whole frame is a misunderstanding claim raised to civilizational scale. Modernity, he says, rests on a confusion, the split between nature and society that the moderns enforce while breaking it at every turn. We have never been modern, which is to say everyone misread what they were doing the entire time. The science warriors misread him. The critics misread critique. The deniers misread how facts get made. The moderns commit category mistakes, judging one mode of existence by the standards of another. Wherever Latour looks he finds a confusion, and wherever he finds a confusion he offers the cure, which is to trace the networks and sort the modes the way he traces and sorts them. The man who understands becomes the man the confused world needs.

Pinsof would point at the demand side first. Who buys this product? Intellectuals who want to feel like saviors. Latour sold them the most sophisticated version on the market. The critic gets to unmask. The diplomat of modes gets to compose. Either way the intellectual is the one repairing a confusion the rest of us cannot see. Self-flattery sells, and Latour priced it for the high end, the museum, the lecture hall, the European research grant.

Then the wrinkle. Latour attacked the savior-intellectual himself. “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?” (2004) reads almost like Pinsof: stop unmasking, stop debunking, the critic has run dry. For a moment Latour sounds like a man about to admit that the understanders understand nothing the rest of us do not already use. He does not stop there. He swaps one savior role for a grander one. In place of the critic who exposes, he installs the diplomat who composes and the curator who cares. The intellectual still repairs the world’s confusion. He repairs it with a finer instrument. The attack on the misunderstanding myth becomes a higher version of the misunderstanding myth.

Now read the stated motive against the likely one. Latour’s stated mission is clarity: dissolve the false split, calm the science wars, teach the moderns their own hybrids, defend the planet. The savvy reading watches what a coalitional primate does while saying these things. He builds a school. He coins translation, a word that names the recruitment of allies and the bending of their interests, and he calls it metaphysics. He founds the Médialab and SPEAP and takes an office at Sciences Po that hands out recognition. He derogates rivals, the positivists, the Sokal camp, Bourdieu, the moderns as a class. He gathers a following and a stack of honors. Pinsof’s test asks whether the man is failing at his stated goal of changing minds or succeeding at his real goal of climbing, allying, and outranking. By the stated measure the science wars were a sad misunderstanding. By the savvy measure Latour won status, built a coalition, and ended decorated. He was not confused. He was effective.

The coalition reading catches the late turn too. For decades Latour loosened the authority of the bare fact and taught that science is allies and instruments rather than nature speaking. Then constructivism turned up in the mouths of climate deniers and the populist right, and Latour reversed, defending scientific institutions with heat. The misunderstanding-myth version says he corrected an error, that the deniers had abused his ideas. The savvy version says his coalition’s interests moved. His tribe, the progressive academy and the climate-anxious elite, now needed facts shored up, so the man who spent his prime destabilizing facts pivoted to defend them. No confusion cleared. A coalition served, on schedule.

Put Pinsof’s hardest question to Latour’s central villain. What if the moderns understand their hybrids all too well? Latour treats the split between nature and society as a confusion the moderns maintain without seeing it. The strategic reading says the split is no confusion. It pays. It lets science claim a neutral authority above the fray. It lets politics claim it merely follows nature. It lets each camp launder its interests as objective necessity. The disavowal of hybrids is a savvy move, not a senior moment. Latour half saw this. He wrote that the modern constitution multiplies hybrids while denying them, which sounds like strategy. Then he filed it under misunderstanding and offered to renegotiate the constitution, as though a clever enough diplomat could talk men out of an arrangement that pays them.

And the deniers he ended up fighting. The misunderstanding myth says they failed to grasp how science works. Pinsof says they grasped their incentives. An oil interest understands the science it has reason to understand and funds the doubt it has reason to fund. A populist understands that fighting the experts wins the votes of people who resent the experts. No exhibition at Karlsruhe and no diagram of the Critical Zone moves a man who is winning under the present arrangement. The world Latour wanted to save did not want saving. It wanted what it was already getting.

Latour spent his life on a beautiful claim, that reality is made through the patient work of connection, and that we misread our own modernity from the start. The cynical close turns the claim back on him. The split was never an error. It was a working arrangement that served the men who kept it. The deniers were never confused. They had incentives. The science wars were not a tragic mix-up. They were a status fight he won. The one thing the moderns got wrong, on this reading, is the belief that anyone got anything wrong. Latour built the most refined misunderstanding myth of his age and sold it to the people whose standing rose by buying it. In the end the only misunderstanding is that there was a misunderstanding.

Pierre Bourdieu (1930–2002)

Bourdieu built a sociology that reads a man’s ideas against the position he holds in a structured field of rivals, the capital he carries into it, and the strategies he uses to climb. Bruno Latour spent a career refusing that sociology. He rejected the hidden structures, the determining forces, the whole habit of explaining a thinker by his place. Reading Latour through Bourdieu does what the subject would have hated, and does it on ground he left undefended. The aim is not debunking. The conditions of the work’s making and its welcome trace without touching whether it is true.

Bourdieu starts with the field, a space of positions held by men who compete for a stake they all believe in. A newcomer with little accumulated standing has one good strategy, heresy. He cannot win by mastering the existing terms better than the men who set them, so he refuses the terms and proposes new ones. Latour enters French intellectual life from the side. He trains in philosophy at Dijon and writes a dissertation on the resurrection narratives at Tours. He comes to the study of science through anthropology and a stint at a development-research body in Côte d’Ivoire, not through the consecrated centers of Paris sociology. That entry from the margin is a handicap and a license. He owes the reigning schools nothing, and he makes his name by saying that the reigning schools have it wrong from the ground up.

What he brings to the young field of science studies is capital earned elsewhere. Theological training in the reading of texts. Philosophical equipment from the agrégation. The ethnographer’s eye carried back from West Africa to a California laboratory. He also carries the durable dispositions of a prosperous Catholic Burgundy home, the long historical sense and the religious seriousness that a winemaking family across centuries lays down in a man before he chooses a single idea. In a settled field these imports count for little against the home currency. In a field still forming its rules, foreign capital trades high. Laboratory Life turns the anthropology of distant peoples on the men in white coats, and the move lands because no one owns the right to describe the laboratory yet. Latour converts the capital of the outsider into the founding capital of a discipline he helps invent. The man who insists on flat description, on following the actors wherever they go, arrives carrying a heavy inheritance that shapes what he can see and say.

The deepest contest of his life is with Bourdieu himself. Both men want the same prize, the authoritative account of how science makes truth. Bourdieu offers a reflexive sociology: the scientific field, its own capital, the struggle for the monopoly of competent speech. Latour offers networks, actants, translation, and a flat world with no structure hiding behind the actors. To take the prize he has to displace the dominant figure in his national field, and he does it by the route open to a challenger, by declaring the dominant method dead. His essay “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?” (2004) reads, in this light, as a strike at the Bourdieusian habit of unmasking, the move that finds a hidden interest behind every stated reason. Latour says the critic has run out of road and the time has come to compose rather than expose. The essay is a bid to retire the reigning weapon and arm the field with his own.

Here the symmetry sharpens. To unseat Bourdieu, Latour plays the game Bourdieu described better than most of its open believers. His concept of translation is recruitment, the enlistment of allies and the bending of their interests toward a shared end. That is the building of social capital under another name. He founds the Médialab and helps start SPEAP, bases from which to train followers and consecrate their work. He moves to Sciences Po and takes the office of Vice-President for Research, a seat that hands out recognition. He crosses into the art world and co-curates large exhibitions at Karlsruhe, where he turns intellectual standing into curatorial authority and trades it back as cultural weight. Each step is a position-taking, an accumulation, a conversion of one capital into another. The theorist of the flat network climbs a structured ladder with a sure foot.

Bourdieu’s sharpest claim holds that the refusal of the economic is the high play in the economy of symbolic goods. The man who gives money away buys something dearer than money. Latour wins the Kyoto Prize in 2021 and gives the cash to Sciences Po. The gift reads as disinterest, and disinterest, in Bourdieu’s account, is the gold coin of the academic world. The honors gather across the late years, the Holberg Prize, the Légion d’Honneur, the Gifford Lectures, Kyoto. These are the marks of full consecration. The heretic has become the canon.

This is the law Bourdieu states and Latour lives. The boldest heresy, once it wins, hardens into the new orthodoxy. The young man who refused “the social” is now taught as doctrine across sociology, anthropology, geography, law, design, and the environmental humanities. We Have Never Been Modern is assigned, not argued with. Actor-Network Theory is a method with handbooks. The refusal of method has become a method. Students learn to follow the actors the way an earlier cohort learned to find the hidden interest behind the stated reason. What began as a strike against orthodoxy now sets the terms that the next challenger will have to refuse.

Bourdieu drew an axis from the autonomous pole of a field, where peers judge peers, to the heteronomous pole, where outside powers, the market, the state, the press, set the terms. He warned that intellectuals lose their own capital when they drift toward the heteronomous side and court the wide public. Latour’s late turn to climate, to the politics of habitation, to the role of planetary prophet, moves him toward that pole. He does not lose by it. He converts the move into a fresh consecration, the sage of the Critical Zone, read by architects and activists who never opened a sociology journal. The conversion works because his stock of standing is large enough to spend.

One move could have closed this account before it opened. Bourdieu demanded that the sociologist turn the instruments on himself, account for his own place in the field he studies. Latour refused that reflexivity. He read it as the critic’s trap, another turn of the unmasking he wanted to leave behind. By refusing it he left the door open. The man who taught a generation to trace every actor’s interests declined to trace his own, so the tracing falls to others.

None of this shows the work false. Bourdieu rejected the move that reads an idea off its origin and calls the matter closed. A theory holds or fails on its own ground, and Latour’s network world has changed how serious men think across many fields. The field reading does something narrower and harder to dodge. It shows that the man who said reality is relation all the way down, with no structure crouched behind the actors, was carried by a structure he could read in everyone but himself, and that he reached the summit of a hierarchy he spent his life denying was there. He played the field as well as anyone alive. He declined to admit there was a field to play.

The Great Delusion

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.

Mearsheimer’s social man is tribal. His group is bounded. It has members and outsiders, kin and rivals, and he will sacrifice for the first and fight the second. Latour’s social man is a node in an open web that runs through bacteria, instruments, documents, and the Earth, a web with no boundary, no enemy, no blood. Strip the vocabulary and Latour’s relational man is the liberal universal man in new dress, connected to everything, bound to no one in particular, owing his loyalty to a network that takes in the whole planet and therefore no tribe at all. Mearsheimer would call this the delusion under fresh paint. The cosmopolitan web is the liberal dream of universal belonging, rebuilt out of actants. Man as Latour draws him has no people to die for. Man as Mearsheimer finds him has little else.

Now turn the anthropology on Latour the man. Mearsheimer holds that a worldview comes mostly from the value infusion of childhood, with reason arriving late and weak to dress what socialization already installed. Look at the infusion. A prosperous Catholic family in Burgundy, a winemaking house with centuries behind it, deep historical sense, the rhythms of the Church. The boy is steeped in a world where bread becomes body, where matter carries spirit, where nothing stands alone and everything connects through a sacramental order. Then the grown man writes a doctoral thesis on the resurrection narratives, and after that a life’s work telling us that the modern split between matter and meaning is false, that hybrids run everywhere, that the world is relation rather than dead stuff. Mearsheimer’s reading is plain. Latour did not reason his way to a relational, anti-secular, connected world. He took it in at the family table before he could argue, and he spent sixty years giving the infusion an argument. The resurrection dissertation is the tell. Reason came last and did the dressing.

This is the human condition. Every theorist runs on the same two engines and rationalizes after. The charge against Latour is sharper. A thinker who built his name on tracing every connection missed the connection that formed him, the one running back through the cradle and the parish. He could see the link binding a scientist to a microbe. He could not, or would not, see the link binding the man to the faith of his fathers, because that one had shaped the eye doing the looking.

The politics fares worse. Late Latour calls men to land on the Earth, to share an attachment to the fragile Critical Zone, to form a politics around a common planet. The call asks for a planetary we. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says there is no planetary tribe and there never will be. Men feel for kin and group what they cannot feel for the species. Loyalty is bounded by its nature. A politics that asks a Frenchman, a Texan, and a Chinese farmer to sacrifice for the same globe asks each to extend to strangers and rivals the devotion he keeps for his own. That is the universalist error of liberalism moved from human rights to ecology, and it loses to nationalism wherever the two meet, which in climate politics is daily. The Earth cannot be a tribe. Latour wanted it to be one and called the wanting realism.

Reason ranks last, so the science wars look different through this glass. Latour spent decades on how facts get made and how men should argue over them, as though the quality of the reference chains decided what a population believes. Mearsheimer puts reason third. What a man accepts about the climate or the vaccine comes mostly from his group and his gut, with argument trailing behind to justify a verdict already reached. The deniers Latour fought in his last years do not reject the science because they misread how it is built. They reject it because their tribe rejects it and reason is the weakest faculty in the room. Latour half felt this when his own tools turned up in enemy hands, and he answered with more epistemics, a defense of institutions, a sorting of modes. Mearsheimer would call the answer hopeless, since it brings the weakest faculty to a fight the other two are running.

Latour’s group was the European progressive academy, the anti-positivist humanities, the climate-anxious elite. He stayed in it from start to finish. When the populist right seized constructivism, the in-group man defended the in-group’s institutions, the science he had spent a career unsettling. Mearsheimer reads that pivot without strain. It was no fresh conclusion reached by reason. It was a member protecting his people when a rival picked up their weapon. He never left his tribe. He defended it on schedule.

So what for Latour, if Mearsheimer is right? Two dissolutions. As a man, he is a French Catholic of a certain class and century who received his world before he could weigh it and gave it an elegant argument after the bell. As a theorist, he is the last and finest of the liberal universalists, the man who abolished the lone individual only to put in his place a self bound to everything and so to no people. The thing he shared with Mearsheimer, the death of the atom, turns into the blade. Mearsheimer’s social being is tribal, bounded, and real. Latour’s is connected, boundless, and a dream. The theorist of connection built his life on the one connection that does not govern us and walked past the two that do.

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Adam Tooze: A Historian of Material Power

Adam Tooze (b. 1967) is an English-American historian of capitalism, war, political economy, and global power, and over the past two decades he has emerged as a central figure in the writing of modern economic history. His reputation rests on a method that joins archival scholarship to large-scale analysis of finance, energy, geopolitics, and state capacity, and on a body of books that has reshaped understanding of Nazi Germany, the postwar settlement after the First World War, the rise of American global power, and the financial crisis of 2008. Through his books, essays, public lectures, the Chartbook newsletter, and the Ones and Tooze podcast, he has also become an influential interpreter of the interlocking economic and political crises of the twenty-first century, a writer who moves between the scholarly monograph and the public essay without surrendering the analytical seriousness of either.

What sets his work apart is a consistent focus on material power. Rather than treating politics, ideology, or diplomacy as autonomous spheres governed by their own internal logics, he asks how states are constrained and enabled by resources, energy systems, industrial production, financial institutions, demographic pressures, and administrative capacities. His scholarship draws on economic history, international history, political economy, and historical sociology, and it engages extensively with the Marxist traditions and the writers associated with the New Left Review milieu, though he is not an orthodox Marxist. The work blends historical materialism with liberal political economy and institutional analysis, seeking to explain how modern states navigate the tension among capitalist accumulation, national sovereignty, and geopolitical competition.

Tooze was born in London on July 5, 1967. His full name is John Adam Tooze. His father, John Tooze, was a distinguished molecular biologist, and his maternal grandparents, Arthur Wynn and Margaret Wynn, were prominent social researchers whose work touched on poverty, nutrition, and public policy. When Tooze was a child the family moved to Heidelberg, where his father worked for many years, and growing up between Britain and Germany gave him an early familiarity with German language, culture, and history that would later prove foundational to his scholarship. He has recalled a boyhood fascination with engineering, technology, and race-car design, and his intellectual interests developed early, extending past the conventional curriculum into economics and public affairs.

He has described the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the communist regimes of Eastern Europe as formative. Having begun postgraduate study in Berlin during the period around the fall of the Berlin Wall, he encountered at close range the political and economic transformations that would remake Europe after 1989, and that experience left a mark on a body of work preoccupied with the limits states confront and the suddenness with which settled arrangements can break.

Tooze read economics at King’s College, Cambridge, taking a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1989. Although he trained formally as an economist, he gravitated toward historical questions, and he completed his doctorate at the London School of Economics in 1996, building expertise in German economic history and the history of state administration. His fluency in German and his command of archival sources let him work directly with the statistical and bureaucratic records of the Weimar and Nazi eras, an advantage that would shape both the texture and the authority of his early scholarship.

After his doctorate he joined the faculty of the University of Cambridge, where he became Reader in Twentieth-Century History and Gurnee Hart Fellow at Jesus College. In these years he established himself as a leading scholar of modern German history and of the history of economic governance, and he began to develop the questions that would run through everything he wrote afterward.

His first major book, Statistics and the German State, 1900–1945 (2001), examined the growth of statistical knowledge and administrative capacity in modern Germany. The book traced how governments came to rely on quantitative information to make society legible and manageable, and it argued that statistics were not neutral instruments but tools of governance that helped define populations, set economic priorities, and fix state objectives. The themes introduced there recur across his later work: the relationship between information and power, the weight of administrative institutions, and the place of quantitative knowledge in modern government.

His international breakthrough came with The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy (2006), a book widely regarded as an indispensable account of Nazi Germany among those published in the twenty-first century. It challenged interpretations that stressed ideology while neglecting economic constraint. Tooze argued that the Nazi leadership grasped Germany’s relative weakness against the immense industrial and resource capacities of the United States and the Soviet Union, and that Hitler’s drive toward expansion and war reflected not only ideological ambition but a perceived need to overcome that structural disadvantage before the gap grew unbridgeable.

A central insight of the book concerns the place of the United States in Nazi strategic thought. Hitler and his planners saw American industrial power as both model and threat, and that observation foreshadows a recurring feature of Tooze’s scholarship, the argument that the European history of the twentieth century cannot be understood apart from the overwhelming economic weight of the United States. The book won the Wolfson History Prize and the Longman-History Today Book of the Year Prize, and it established Tooze among the foremost historians of political economy and modern Europe.

In 2009 he moved to the United States to become Barton M. Biggs Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale University, succeeding the historian Paul Kennedy, whose work likewise stressed the relationship between economic strength and geopolitical power. The appointment reflected his growing interest in international history and grand strategy, and it marked the point at which his scope widened from the German nation-state to the international system as a whole.

That widening produced The Deluge: The Great War, America and the Remaking of the Global Order, 1916–1931 (2014). The book argued that the First World War transformed global politics by installing the United States as the world’s dominant economic power, leaving European governments heavily indebted and increasingly dependent on American capital, while American leaders proved reluctant to assume the responsibilities that sustained international leadership demanded. Tooze traced how that mismatch between economic dominance and political restraint fed the instability of the interwar years. The Deluge won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and confirmed his standing as a historian who could link national histories to shifts in the global balance of power.

In 2015 he joined Columbia University as Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of History and Director of the European Institute, and from that position he extended his reach past academic history into contemporary political and economic analysis. He also became a nonresident scholar affiliated with Carnegie Europe.

His most widely read book, Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World (2018), examined the global financial crisis of 2008 and its long aftermath. Rejecting accounts that fixed on Wall Street misconduct or regulatory failure alone, Tooze portrayed the crisis as a structural breakdown within an interconnected global financial system, and he stressed the central place of the dollar system and the extraordinary interventions of the Federal Reserve. An influential argument of the book holds that the Federal Reserve served as a lender of last resort for much of the world economy through emergency liquidity operations and swap lines, a claim that recast the crisis as a global event sustained by American monetary power rather than a national American failure. Crashed won the Lionel Gelber Prize, became a definitive history of the crisis, and carried his reputation far past the academy, making him a prominent commentator on economics, central banking, and globalization.

During the COVID-19 pandemic Tooze launched Chartbook, a newsletter that became a widely read forum for historically informed analysis of current events. Joining statistical evidence, economic reasoning, geopolitical analysis, and historical perspective, Chartbook let him respond in real time to unfolding developments while holding to the structural approach of his scholarly work. His book Shutdown: How Covid Shook the World’s Economy (2021) analyzed the pandemic as a distinctive economic shock, one in which governments deliberately suspended large sections of activity in answer to a public-health emergency, and he argued that the pandemic accelerated trends already reshaping the world economy, among them expanded state intervention, technological transformation, and geopolitical rivalry.

Since 2021 Tooze has turned increasingly to what he calls the interconnected crises of the present era, and he has become a leading interpreter of the idea of “polycrisis,” a condition in which several crises interact and reinforce one another. Financial instability, climate change, geopolitical conflict, energy transitions, democratic strain, technological disruption, migration pressure, and public-health emergencies cannot, on his account, be understood in isolation, because each shapes the others.

Climate change and decarbonization have grown into central themes of his recent work. He approaches climate not chiefly as an environmental matter but as a problem of political economy and state capacity, arguing that the scale of investment the global energy transition demands blurs the inherited boundary between markets and governments. Decarbonization, in his view, calls for new forms of coordination among states, financial institutions, corporations, and international organizations, and through Chartbook and a series of essays often called his “Carbon Notes” he has explored how climate policy reshapes capitalism itself.

A transatlantic perspective that places American power at the center of modern history runs through the whole of his scholarship. In The Wages of Destruction Nazi Germany is measured against American industrial supremacy; in The Deluge Europe struggles to adjust to American financial dominance; in Crashed the dollar-centered financial system reveals the continuing reach of American power beneath the surface of globalization. Across the books he maintains that modern European history cannot be told apart from the economic and strategic position of the United States.

In September 2021 he launched the Ones and Tooze podcast with the journalist Cameron Abadi. The program extends many of the themes of Chartbook, taking up international politics, economics, technology, and global governance in conversations that bridge academic scholarship and public affairs.

His honors include the Philip Leverhulme Prize (2002), the Wolfson History Prize (2006), the Longman-History Today Book of the Year Prize (2007), the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for History (2015), the Lionel Gelber Prize (2019), the Hans-Matthöfer-Preis für Wirtschaftspublizistik (2019), and the Preis für Wirtschaftspublizistik der Keynes-Gesellschaft (2023). In early 2025 he became a United States citizen after many years living and working in America, and he is often described now as an English-American historian, a phrase that registers both his British origins and his prominent role in American academic and public life.

What distinguishes him from many historians is the movement between archival detail and the analysis of global systems. A study of German statistical agencies becomes a meditation on modern governance; an examination of central-bank swap lines becomes a reinterpretation of globalization; an analysis of carbon emissions becomes an argument about the future of capitalism. Across his career he has insisted that political life rests on material foundations, on energy, finance, production, technology, administrative capacity, and the institutions that organize them. As scholar and public intellectual, Adam Tooze stands among the defining historians of contemporary political economy, a writer whose work seeks to explain how modern societies meet the limits set by resources, institutions, and power, and how those limits shape what politics can do in an increasingly interconnected world.

Adam Tooze in the Field

Tooze has Cambridge and LSE training, the archival and quantitative authority of the economic historian, then a conversion of that capital into public-intellectual standing through Chartbook, the podcast, and the trade press. His hedged relation to Marxism reads as position-taking inside the field rather than as a settled doctrine. He sits near the New Left Review milieu, draws on its prestige, and keeps the liberal-institutionalist credibility that lets Yale and Columbia name chairs after him. Field theory explains the trajectory, the move from monograph to newsletter, and the careful distance he holds from orthodoxy as a stance that buys him both audiences.

To read him this way, follow Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) and treat the intellectual world as a field, a structured space of positions defined against one another, where each producer holds a stock of capital and stakes claims that the field’s logic makes possible. Capital in this space takes several forms. There is embodied cultural capital, the disposition trained into a man before he can name it. Tooze grew up between Britain and Germany, the son of a molecular biologist, the grandson of social researchers, and he carries a fluency in German and a feel for statistical and bureaucratic records that few of his Anglophone peers possess. The disposition came first, and it makes his later choices feel less like calculation than like instinct. He reaches for the material substrate of politics because his formation taught him to trust numbers, archives, and the slow accumulation of administrative fact.

On top of that sits institutionalized cultural capital, the credentials that the field recognizes without argument: the Cambridge degree, the LSE doctorate, the Cambridge readership, the chairs at Yale and Columbia. When Tooze succeeded Paul Kennedy (b. 1945) at Yale, he inherited a position already marked as the seat of the historian who reads power through economic strength, and the field registered the continuity. Symbolic capital, the recognition that turns competence into authority, accrued through prizes: the Wolfson, the Longman-History Today award, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Lionel Gelber. Social capital came through the networks, the New Left Review orbit on one side and the chaired professorships and Carnegie affiliation on the other. The point of naming these forms separately is to see that Tooze holds an unusual spread of them, and that the spread, not any single asset, gives him his room to move.

Bourdieu distinguished an autonomous pole of the field, where producers win standing through the judgment of peers and the slow rhythm of scholarly recognition, from a heteronomous pole, where reward comes fast through the market and the press. Tooze front-loaded the autonomous accumulation. The Wages of Destruction and The Deluge are works addressed to other historians, judged by the standards of the guild, consecrated by its prizes. He banked that capital before he spent it. Crashed sits at the hinge, a scholarly book that found a mass readership during a moment the public wanted explained. Chartbook and the Ones and Tooze podcast carry him toward the heteronomous pole, the field of journalism that Bourdieu studied in On Television and treated with suspicion, the arena of the fast producer who trades depth for speed and visibility. The interest of Tooze’s case is that he enters that arena carrying a vault of autonomous capital. The newsletter reads as scholarship because the man writing it has already been consecrated as a scholar. He converts standing earned slowly into reach gained fast, and the rate of exchange favors him because so few writers at the journalistic pole hold the credentials he holds at the autonomous one.

In field terms the question is orthodoxy against heterodoxy. The orthodox hold the doxa, the unexamined ground of the game, and they pay for purity with marginality. The heretic challenges the doxa and risks exile. Tooze takes neither pure position. He draws on the prestige of the radical tradition, engages the New Left Review writers as serious interlocutors, and keeps the critical edge that lets the left intelligentsia claim him. He also declines the doctrinal commitments that would close the Yale chair and the financial-press readership to him. He blends historical materialism with liberal political economy and institutional analysis, and he calls himself no orthodox Marxist. A pure orthodoxy could not command the chairs or the trade audience; a pure liberalism could not command the respect of the New Left Review milieu. The hedge is the position that maximizes convertibility across subfields, and a man with his particular capital spread is the man best placed to occupy it.

Tooze’s signature claim, that finance, energy, industrial capacity, and state administration drive history while ideology and diplomacy run downstream, is itself a position-taking within the historical field. To assert the primacy of the material base is to bid against the autonomy of ideas and to elevate the kind of evidence Tooze commands above the kind his more culturalist rivals command. The claim and the career rhyme. The historian of material power is the writer best read through the material structure of his own field, through his capital, his position, and the exchange rates between the subfields he crosses. He explains states by their resources and constraints. The same lens explains him, and he seldom turns it on himself. That silence is the blind spot the frame predicts, since the rules of the game stay invisible to the players who profit from them.

Movement toward the heteronomous pole pays in attention and erodes, over time, the autonomous standing that made the attention valuable. The “Carbon Notes,” the polycrisis essays, the high-frequency commentary live close to the market, and the peers who consecrated The Wages of Destruction judge such output by a different and harsher standard. The vault is large, but he spends from it with every dispatch. Whether the rate of exchange holds depends on whether he replenishes the autonomous account with new work that the guild will recognize, or whether the newsletter becomes the main product and the scholar dissolves into the commentator. Bourdieu watched that dissolution happen to others and named it. Tooze has the capital to delay it longer than most. He cannot suspend the logic that governs the trade.

Tooze is neither a pure scholar nor a pure pundit but a man who has assembled a rare combination of capitals and found the position that converts them at the best available rate. The hedged Marxism, the move from monograph to newsletter, the insistence on material power, and the chairs that carry old names all belong to a single strategy, whether or not he experiences it as one. The strength of the reading is that it explains the choices without crediting them to either cynicism or pure conviction. The strategy works because the habitus makes it feel like the only honest thing to do.

Holding the Collapse

He builds the dashboard before the world wakes. The European numbers land first, then the American open, then the Asian close folds back over the top of the next morning. He keeps the tabs lined up: a central-bank balance sheet, a freight index, a yield curve, a gas price denominated in three currencies, a chart of cases climbing in a country he has never set foot in. Coffee. The cursor moving. He is reading the body of the world economy the way a clinician reads a chart at the foot of a bed, looking for the place where the line breaks. When he finds it he writes it down, and when he writes it down a few thousand people across a dozen time zones feel, for the length of a newsletter, that the thing has been understood.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gives us the lens to see what the dashboard is for. In The Denial of Death and Escape from Evil Becker argues that man is the animal who knows he will die and cannot bear the knowing. Culture answers the terror with a hero system, a structure of belief and work that lets a person feel he counts, that his days add up to something the grave cannot cancel. The hero system hands each man a way to earn symbolic immortality, a place in a scheme larger and more durable than his own flesh. The accountant balances the books. The soldier holds the line. The scholar comprehends. Each fetishizes a narrow field of mastery and treats it as the ground of significance, because the alternative, the open creatureliness of an animal that rots, cannot be looked at for long.

Tooze’s hero system is comprehension, and the spine of his work is collapse. Read the books in order and the same dread runs under all of them. The Wages of Destruction turns on a closing window: the Nazi planners measure Germany against the industrial weight of the United States, see a gap that widens every year they wait, and gamble on war from a sense of structural doom. The Deluge watches Europe sink into debt and dependence while the new American giant declines to hold the weight it has won. Crashed puts a hand on the patient at the moment the pulse nearly stops, and finds the Federal Reserve pushing dollars through swap lines into the veins of a system that, left alone for another week, might have seized. Then the polycrisis, the late work, where catastrophe stops arriving from one direction and arrives from all of them, finance and carbon and contagion and war braided into a single advancing front. The career is a long study of the moment the surface gives way and the suddenness underneath shows through.

To comprehend that moment is the project. Not to predict it, which no archive permits, and not to prevent it, which no historian can. To hold it at a readable distance. The chart, the indicator, the comprehensive account: these are the talismans of a man who has stared at systemic death longer than most and has built, against it, a discipline that converts formless dread into legible structure. When the gas price and the freight index and the balance sheet line up in a single frame, the collapse acquires a shape, and a thing with a shape can be carried. Becker’s word for the work the hero system does is the vital lie, the necessary fiction that lets a man act in the face of what he cannot survive. Tooze’s vital lie is that the whole can be seen.

The value at the center is understanding, and here the frame opens onto its strangest country, because the word does not hold still. Understanding, for Tooze, means grasping the interconnected whole, the way energy bleeds into finance and finance into geopolitics and all of it into the administrative capacity of states. The whole is the unit. A man who has understood is a man who has refused the parochial, who has seen the board entire while smaller minds counted their own corner. That is his immortality bid: to be the one who saw it all and wrote it down before it fell.

Carry the same word into other rooms and it changes shape in the mouth.

On a macro desk in Greenwich a portfolio manager runs two screens and a phone wedged on his shoulder. He has read Crashed. He liked it. He says so while he works. “Tooze gets the plumbing,” he says, and clicks. “But understanding is the trade or it’s a hobby. If I can’t express it in a position by the close, I didn’t understand anything, I read a book.” For him understanding means an edge that prints, a view the market has not yet priced, comprehension cashed before it decays. The whole system is wallpaper. The next eight ticks are the world. His hero system rewards the man who was right with money, and the money is the proof he was here.

In a storefront church off a ring road in Lagos a pastor leans into the second hour of a Sunday. He has heard of the polycrisis. He does not need the chart. Understanding comes down, it is given, the Spirit opens what study only circles. “The professor counts the harvest and the storm,” he tells the room, and the room answers him. “God sends the harvest and the storm. To know the world and not know Him is to know nothing and call it everything.” For the pastor comprehension that does not end in salvation is the cleverest form of vanity, a man cataloguing the flood while the ark pulls away. His immortality is not symbolic. It is promised, and it is forever, and the archive cannot touch it.

In a meditation hall a Sōtō teacher hears the project described and almost smiles. To him the dashboard is the disease wearing the mask of the cure. The hunger to comprehend the whole, to hold catastrophe at a readable distance, is the grasping self refusing the one fact it most needs to accept. “You want to understand the collapse,” he says. “The collapse is that everything you are holding will be taken. Understand that and put the charts down.” Where Becker says man builds the hero system to deny death, the teacher says the building is the suffering, and understanding means the release of the grip, not its perfection. He stands the whole frame on its head. Tooze’s cure is, to him, the sickness named.

In a trauma bay a surgeon has thirty seconds and a body that is losing pressure. She has no time for the interconnected whole. Understanding is the bleed she can find and the bleed she cannot, the airway, the next decision, the actionable now stripped of everything that does not move her hands. “Tell me what’s killing him in front of me,” she says to the resident reaching for a fuller picture. “The system can wait. The man can’t.” Her hero system honors the save, the one life held back from the edge by a clean cut, and the global frame that thrills the historian reads, on the floor, as a luxury of people who are not bleeding.

A theoretical physicist is gentler and more dismissive at once. He grants that Tooze knows an enormous number of true things. He withholds the word understanding all the same. To understand, in his system, is to reduce, to find the law beneath the cases, the equation that makes the particulars fall out as consequences. A historian who assembles ten thousand facts into a rich account has, by his lights, described, not understood. The old jibe runs through his mind, that everything outside physics is the collecting of stamps. He means no insult. He means that comprehension, for him, lives at the level of the principle, and that the human aggregate is too dirty to yield one.

These are five rooms. There are more, and one could go on: the trade unionist for whom understanding is solidarity tested at the picket, the diplomat for whom it is the read of the man across the table, the farmer for whom it is the soil and the season and the price at the gate while the global figure is noise. Becker’s point survives all of them. The same word names a different transcendence in each, because each hero system fixes a different thing as the doorway out of the grave. Tooze’s “understanding” is not larger or truer than the trader’s or the pastor’s. It is the one his hero system consecrates, and it carries his terror the way theirs carry theirs.

Turn the lens back on the man and the frame earns its keep. The historian who studies systemic death at closest range may be the one who needs his project most. The dashboard does for Tooze what the doctrine does for the pastor and the position does for the trader. It is the work that lets a creature who knows he will end feel that he counts, that he is not merely swept off in the next deluge but the one who named the deluge while it ran. Comprehension at the scale of systems is a large ambition for symbolic immortality, large enough to be mistaken for selflessness, which is part of why it works. Becker would call the chart the fetish and the comprehensive account the causa sui project, the bid to be the author of one’s own meaning against a universe that grants none.

The cost is the blind spot the frame predicts. A man who converts dread into structure comes to trust the structure, and the trust hides the part of the world that no indicator catches, the contingent, the stupid, the human act that no balance sheet sees coming. The vital lie that the whole can be seen is the lie that the hero cannot examine without dissolving the thing that holds him up. He studies everyone’s hero system but his own. The dashboard stays lit. The next morning’s numbers land, and he reads the body of the world for the break in the line, and the reading holds the collapse, one more day, at a readable distance.

What the frame shows is the dread under the discipline and the kinship between this hero and the others he would never compare himself to. What it cannot show is whether the account is true. A man may build his immortality project out of correct propositions. The terror that drives him to assemble them says nothing about whether they describe the world. That question belongs to a different room than this one.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Turn Tooze toward the polycrisis and the decarbonization, and the tone shifts from explanation to a quieter hope. The energy transition, he argues, demands new forms of coordination among states, financial institutions, corporations, and international bodies. The interconnection must be grasped whole, the silos broken, the scale of the needed investment understood across the boundaries that keep finance from climate and climate from geopolitics. Hear the structure of the claim. The transition stalls because the players have not yet comprehended the interconnection, and comprehension, followed by coordination, opens the road. That is the misunderstanding myth in a materialist register. The trouble has moved from the citizen’s head, where Tooze refuses to put it, to a coordination failure among elites, which is the same animal in a better suit. Once again a problem turns out to be a thing people have failed to understand, and once again the man who understands it stands ready to help.

Pinsof’s blade goes in here. The transition does not stall because petrostates, incumbent firms, exposed workers, and coal-burning electorates fail to understand the interconnected whole. They understand their incentives well. The Gulf producer knows what the barrel is worth and what a stranded asset costs him. The exporting power knows that controlling the supply chain for the transition is a lever over rivals, not a contribution to a shared future. The voter in a heating town knows which party promises to keep his job and his fuel cheap, and he is not confused about it. No one in this picture waits for a chart that shows how finance bleeds into carbon. They pursue goals the present arrangement serves, and the persistence of the carbon economy is the visible shape of many savvy players getting much of what they actually want. Comprehension does not dissolve a conflict of interest. It describes one. Stupidity, where it appears, is strategic. The man who claims he cannot understand the case for the transition is the man whose paycheck depends on not understanding it, and his refusal is the smartest move on his board.

Pinsof reads the gap between stated motives and actual motives the way he reads a corporate mission statement set against a profit line: a firm that speaks of nurturing the human spirit while it maximizes earnings is not confused about its purpose, and neither are the players in Tooze’s transition. Their stated goals, sustainability and cooperation and a livable future, sit beside their actual goals, advantage and rents and cheap power, and the gap between the two looks like a misunderstanding only to the man who takes the stated goals at face value. The intellectual mistakes the mission statement for the motive. He sees people falling short of what they say they want and concludes they have failed to understand, when they have understood all along and wanted something else.

Why does a materialist this careful keep reaching for the hopeful version? Because the myth is the story that keeps his vocation alive. If the carbon economy persists not from confusion but from a conflict of interest that no amount of comprehension can talk away, then the comprehending historian has nothing to offer the problem but a description of it. The alternative to the myth is the bracing conclusion Pinsof presses on anyone who studies a problem this thoroughly. You can map the polycrisis to the last molecule. You can chart the swap lines, the freight indices, the carbon budgets, the balance sheets, and trace each thread into the next. When you finish you will understand the hole with a completeness no one has reached before, and you will still be in the hole, because the hole is not a misunderstanding. The world Tooze chronicles does not want to be saved by a newsletter, and the proof is that it subscribes to the newsletter and changes nothing. Not every problem has a solution. The primary cause of the trouble is not bad beliefs. It is the motives the beliefs serve, and the motives are working as designed.

The Great Delusion

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.

Read Tooze forward, toward the polycrisis and the energy transition, and the materialist who documented the defeat of liberal internationalism begins to hope for its revival under a new name. The transition, he argues, calls for coordination among states, financial institutions, corporations, and international bodies, for the breaking of silos and the grasping of the interconnected whole. The Federal Reserve, in his account of 2008, already acts as a central bank for much of the planet, and the suggestion runs that this reach prefigures something larger, a managed globalism adequate to crises that respect no border. Behind the analysis sits a subject Mearsheimer says does not exist: a global we, a humanity capable of recognizing a shared predicament and coordinating against it. The carbon problem, in Tooze’s forward gaze, becomes a coordination problem, a thing that better comprehension and better institutions might solve.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology denies the subject the hope requires. There is no humanity that coordinates. There are great powers that weaponize the supply chains of the transition, petrostates that defend the barrel, electorates socialized into national loyalties that no chart of interconnection touches, and a security competition under anarchy that turns every shared problem into an arena of relative advantage. The same forces that broke the order in The Deluge are not a contingency of the 1920s. On Mearsheimer’s account they are the permanent condition, because they grow from what man is. The historian who wrote the defeat of the universal order reaches, a century on, for its next attempt, and the anthropology says the next attempt fails for the reason the last one did.

Why does a man this attentive to power keep the hope? Here Mearsheimer’s frame turns on Tooze. Reason is the least of the three forces that form a man’s preferences. Socialization and innate sentiment do the heavy work, and they do it early. Tooze grew up between Britain and Germany, the son of a scientist, the grandson of social researchers, trained at Cambridge and the LSE, formed inside the transatlantic progressive intelligentsia and the New Left Review milieu, settled across chairs in two countries, and naturalized as an American in his late fifties. That is a post-national formation. The value infusion he received was the infusion of the cosmopolitan clerisy, the class that moves between capitals and reads the world as a single board because its own life is lived on a single board. To that class the global we feels real, not because reason demonstrates it, but because socialization installed it before reason arrived. Mearsheimer would say the man’s anthropology is his autobiography. The reader with no single nation reads nations as obstacles to be coordinated away, and mistakes his own mobility for the human condition.

This is the liberal delusion in its economic dress. Mearsheimer aims his book at the political liberal who universalizes rights and so crusades abroad. Tooze universalizes the system. He treats the interconnected world economy as the frame inside which a rational humanity could, with enough comprehension, act as one. The crusading impulse becomes a managerial one, the dream of a coordinated transition standing where the dream of spreading democracy once stood, and both dreams rest on the same missing subject. The man does not pursue liberal hegemony. He pursues liberal coordination. The anthropology defeats them on the same ground.

Mearsheimer says the surest path for an individual is embeddedness in a group and loyalty to its members, and that a man’s reasoning serves the group that formed him before it serves the truth. Tooze is embedded. His audience is the progressive transatlantic intelligentsia, and his work returns the conclusions that tribe holds dear: more state, a central bank that backstops the world, coordinated public investment, a politics of global responsibility against national parochialism. The man who insists on power everywhere else describes his own coalition as the party of comprehension and its rivals, the nationalists and the parochials who cannot see the whole board, as the party of confusion. Mearsheimer would not call this dishonest. He would call it socialization working as designed. The reason serves the tribe. The cosmopolitan clerisy is a tribe like any other, and its universalism is its tribal banner, the flag it carries into its own competition for status and the coercive instruments of the state.

Alliance Theory

Adam Tooze presents a worldview built from the archive. Read it forward and it looks like a philosophy: a materialist who follows energy, finance, and state capacity wherever the evidence runs, and arrives at his politics because the record forced him there. Alliance Theory tells you to read it backward. In “Strange Bedfellows,” Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton argue that political belief systems do not grow from abstract values or from a cool reading of the world. They grow from alliance structures. A man supports the principles that mobilize support for his allies and damn his rivals, and the thread that ties his beliefs together is not a logic but a roster. To test the theory on Tooze you do not ask whether his materialism is true. You ask whom it serves, and you watch for the places where the same cold eye that he turns on his rivals goes soft when it reaches his friends.

Start with the roster the paper hands you. The contemporary American alliance structure split the upper class along a status rivalry, the highly educated knowledge workers on one side, journalists and academics and the credentialed expert, and the business elite on the other, the corporate executive and the man whose power runs through capital rather than through a university. The knowledge-worker faction landed inside the progressive super-alliance. Tooze sits at the center of that faction. He is the academic who became a public analyst, the historian read by the people who staff the institutions, the man whose authority runs through comprehension and the chair and the byline. Alliance Theory predicts that his belief system will track the interests of that faction against its rival, and that the tracking will hide behind the language of evidence.

Watch the attributional bias first, since it is the cleanest tell. The paper describes a self-serving pattern in which a man attributes his allies’ advantages to internal causes, talent and merit and effort, and his rivals’ advantages to external causes, luck and rent and circumstance. Tooze the materialist runs this pattern at the scale of classes. When the powerful actor is the business elite, the corporate executive, the hedge fund, the Wall Street operator, the financier, the materialism turns cold and indicting. Their power is structural, extractive, a function of the dollar system and deregulation and rent. When the powerful actor is his own faction, the central banker, the technocrat, the expert manager, the administrative state, the same materialism softens into appreciation. The Federal Reserve pushing dollars through the world in 2008 reads, in his account, as the responsible adults stepping in, an improvisation by people who understood. The business class holds power it did not earn. The knowledge class holds authority it did. Same structural lens, applied to two factions, and it returns the verdict each faction would write about itself.

That asymmetry is the signature, because a consistent materialist would turn the lens on his own side. He would ask what the knowledge-worker faction has at stake in a politics that elevates the credentialed analyst over the vulgar businessman, what the expert class gains from a world managed by experts, what the central banker’s prestige does for the standing of the men who write admiringly about central bankers. Tooze rarely asks. His materialism is a weapon pointed outward, and it falls quiet when it reaches the interests of the people who share his allegiances. Alliance Theory predicts the silence. The propagandistic biases support allies and attack rivals, and a man’s own coalition is the one structure his analysis will not reduce to interest.

The perpetrator and victim biases run the same way. The paper describes how a partisan rationalizes the transgressions of his allies and embellishes the grievances of those his allies protect. Tooze refines the popular story of 2008, which blamed greedy bankers, into a story about structure, and the refinement is real work. But notice which actors the structural story exonerates and which it indicts. The market, the deregulators, the business-class arrangement carry the failure. The regulators and the central bankers, his own faction, emerge as the ones who saw clearly and acted. The crisis becomes a morality play with the technocrat as the figure who understood and the financier as the figure who broke it, and the casting follows the alliance line. When austerity does damage he names the damage sharply, because austerity is his coalition’s rival policy. When state intervention does damage he reaches for mitigating circumstances, because the expansive state is his coalition’s instrument. A transgression by an ally finds its context. A transgression by a rival finds its verdict.

The strange bedfellows give the game away most plainly. Tooze blends the analysis of the New Left Review milieu, which damns capital, with the policy world of the central bank and the European institution and the climate-finance summit, which rescues capital. A purist on the left would call the Fed’s rescue of the banking system what it was, a salvage operation for the owners of capital, and condemn it. Tooze praises it as the system’s salvation. The two positions do not cohere as philosophy. Hostility to Wall Street and admiration for the institution that exists to save Wall Street belong to no single doctrine. They cohere as an alliance. The cosmopolitan progressive intelligentsia is anti-business-elite and pro-technocratic-state at once, and the contradiction Tooze carries is not a flaw in his thinking but the fingerprint of the coalition he speaks for. The paper’s whole point is that you should expect this. Belief systems are patchworks stitched from the loyalties of complex alliances, and the seams show.

Now the values, the part Tooze would defend hardest. He speaks of comprehension, the public interest, global responsibility, the duty to take interconnection seriously while smaller minds count their corners. Alliance Theory does not call these lies. It calls them banners. The paper argues that moral claims in politics serve to draw third parties to one’s side and to signal loyalty to one’s allies, and that the most engaged partisans wave the brightest flags. Tooze’s sober, responsible, cosmopolitan register is the loyalty signal of the knowledge-worker clerisy, the vocabulary that tells his allies he is one of them and tells the uncommitted that his side is the side of the serious and the decent. The rival appears, in this vocabulary, as the parochial, the vulgar, the man who cannot see the whole board. Casting the rival as small and oneself as responsible is the oldest propaganda there is, and the archive lends it the authority that the bare claim could not earn on its own.

His use of inequality runs the same course. The paper shows that egalitarianism is not a stable orientation a man carries into every case but a flexible tactic he reaches for when it helps his allies. Tooze deploys the language of exploitation and unfair advantage against the business class and against austerity, where it mobilizes support for his coalition’s disadvantaged allies, the precariat, the global south, the climate-exposed. His actual program, technocratic management and central-bank backstops and coordinated public investment, entrenches the authority of his own credentialed faction. The egalitarian rhetoric serves the allies. The policy serves the analyst’s class. Allegiance comes first, and the equality talk arrives afterward as the tactic that dresses it.

The theory offers a test, and the test is the discipline that keeps this from being a slur. Substitute the group and hold the structure fixed. Take a single fact, great power held by a small number of actors who shape the system to their advantage, and watch Tooze’s reading move with the identity of the actor. When the actor is the financier or the corporate chief or the petrostate, the reading is indictment. When the actor is the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank or the expert manager, the reading is appreciation of capacity. The power is the same. The structural fact is the same. Only the allegiance changes, and the verdict changes with it. That is the prediction Alliance Theory makes, and Tooze’s work confirms it case by case.

What the frame takes from him is the self-image, the picture of a man whose politics fell out of the archive rather than out of his roster of friends and rivals. The materialism is real. It is also selective, and the selection follows the alliance line with a fidelity the man himself does not see, because the one power his analysis never reduces to interest is the power of the class that reads him.

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Quinn Slobodian: Historian of How Capitalism Is Governed

Quinn Slobodian (b. 1978), a Canadian intellectual historian, has remade the study of neoliberalism, globalization, international economic governance, and the contemporary right, and over the past decade he has become an influential historian of political economy writing in English. His central claim cuts against the familiar picture of neoliberalism as a creed of deregulation and laissez-faire. Neoliberal thinkers, he argues, cared above all about building legal and institutional orders that could shield markets from democratic pressure. Across several books he reconstructs the intellectual architecture of globalization and shows how many of the institutions that govern the modern world grew out of efforts to insulate property, investment, and commerce from political interference.

He was born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1978, and his childhood ranged across continents. His father practiced medicine, and the family moved often. After Vancouver Island they relocated to Lesotho in southern Africa in 1984, then to Vanuatu in the South Pacific in 1992, before returning to Canada in 1993. These years placed him among postcolonial societies, international development projects, and the realities of global inequality while he was still young. The themes that later organize his scholarship, decolonization, international institutions, sovereignty, and global economic governance, trace in part to this early life beyond North America.

Slobodian studied at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon, and took a bachelor’s degree in history in 2000. He then entered graduate school at New York University and completed his Ph.D. in history in 2008 under the historian Molly Nolan. His training joined intellectual history, international history, and political economy. From the start he resisted the national frame and preferred to follow ideas, institutions, and networks across borders.

After the doctorate he joined the faculty at Wellesley College. Over more than fifteen years he became a prominent scholar there and took the title of Marion Butler McLean Professor of the History of Ideas in 2021. In January 2024 he moved to Boston University as Professor of International History in the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies.

Alongside these appointments he held a wide range of fellowships and visiting posts. He served as a Residential Fellow at Harvard’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs in 2017 and 2018. He has held positions at Harvard University, Brown University, Harvard Business School, the Free University of Berlin, Chatham House in London, and Roma Tre University in Italy. These affiliations mark both the interdisciplinary reach of his work and the broad audience it draws among historians, economists, political scientists, and legal scholars.

His influence runs past his own writing. From 2020 to 2024 he served as co-editor of Contemporary European History, a leading journal in the field. He also co-directs the History and Political Economy Project, which brings historians into conversation with economists and political scientists. Through these roles he has helped shape a generation of scholarship on capitalism, globalization, and economic governance.

Slobodian first drew wide scholarly notice with Foreign Front: Third World Politics in Sixties West Germany (2012). The book examines how anti-colonial movements, liberation struggles, and Third World politics shaped political life inside West Germany. Rather than cast Europe as the sole engine of postwar history, he shows how actors from Africa, Asia, and Latin America shaped European argument. The work reflects his long interest in reading European history through a global lens.

His international standing rests on Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism (2018), which won the American Historical Association’s George Louis Beer Prize and became an influential work on neoliberalism.

At the center of Globalists sits his concept of the Geneva School. Historians, he argues, have given too much attention to the Chicago School of Milton Friedman (1912-2006) or the Austrian School of Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) and Friedrich Hayek (1899-1992). He identifies instead a transnational tradition centered in Geneva and tied to institutions such as the League of Nations, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, and later global economic bodies. Hayek, Mises, Wilhelm Röpke (1899-1966), and their allies cared less about domestic economic policy than about building a legal order for the world economy.

The Geneva School, on his account, faced a historical problem: the collapse of European empires and the rise of newly sovereign nation-states. Neoliberal thinkers feared that democratic governments might nationalize industry, restrict foreign investment, expropriate property, devalue currency, or raise barriers to trade. Rather than abolish government, they sought supranational institutions that could constrain it.

A central distinction in his work separates imperium from dominium. Imperium names the sphere of political sovereignty, territorial rule, and state authority. Dominium names the sphere of property rights, contracts, and market relations. Many neoliberals, he argues, accepted the end of formal empire so long as a global order of dominium survived. States might keep political sovereignty, yet legal and institutional structures protecting capital, investment, and property across borders would hold them in check.

This reading leads him to dispute the common assumption that neoliberalism wants weak government. Neoliberal thinkers, he argues, wanted strong institutions that could protect markets from political interference. He describes the process with terms such as encasement, encirclement, and immunization. Markets were to sit enclosed within protective legal structures and immunized against democratic demands for redistribution, regulation, or economic nationalism. They aimed to redesign governance rather than remove it.

Globalists also helped redefine method in the field. Rather than lean on published books and articles, Slobodian worked in archival collections that intellectual historians had often passed over. He drew on the records of the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris, the League of Nations in Geneva, the Mont Pelerin Society, and personal papers held at the Hoover Institution and elsewhere. By tracing correspondence among economists, lawyers, policymakers, and international officials, he showed how abstract ideas settled into treaties, trade agreements, and international organizations.

After the success of Globalists, Slobodian widened his agenda through several edited volumes: Comrades of Color: East Germany in the Cold War World (2015), Nine Lives of Neoliberalism (2020, with Dieter Plehwe and Philip Mirowski (b. 1951)), and Market Civilizations: Neoliberals East and South (2020, with Plehwe). These books carried the study of neoliberalism beyond its older focus on Britain and the United States and stressed its global growth.

His next monograph, Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy (2023), examined efforts to break political authority into special economic zones, offshore jurisdictions, charter cities, tax havens, and semi-sovereign enclaves. Many market radicals, he argues, came to see democracy as a threat to economic freedom. Rather than reform democratic institutions, they sought to carve out spaces beyond democratic control. The book ranges across Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai, seasteading projects, and contemporary charter-city proposals.

Where Globalists tracked authority moving upward toward supranational institutions, Crack-Up Capitalism tracked it breaking downward into fragments. Together the two books map complementary strategies for protecting markets: lift authority up to international bodies, or splinter it into smaller units where capital holds greater leverage.

In Hayek’s Bastards: Race, Gold, IQ, and the Capitalism of the Far Right (2025), Slobodian turned to the tie between neoliberalism and the contemporary far right. The book disputes the popular belief that right-wing populism amounts to a revolt against neoliberalism. Important strands of present-day reactionary politics, he argues, grew from within neoliberal and libertarian traditions.

Much of the book traces what one might call an anarcho-capitalist mutation. Thinkers such as Murray Rothbard (1926-1995) and Hans-Hermann Hoppe (b. 1949) reworked the earlier neoliberal project. Where Hayek and his generation often sought to guard markets through international institutions, later libertarians grew suspicious of those institutions and feared that global bodies might fall under democratic or progressive control.

Some libertarian thinkers therefore embraced secession, micro-states, gated jurisdictions, private governance, and forms of cultural conservatism meant to stabilize property relations. Slobodian shows how claims about race, intelligence, immigration, cultural hierarchy, and civilizational decline braided together with market radicalism in certain circles. He argues for strong continuities between some libertarian traditions and modern ethnonationalist politics, while stopping short of the claim that neoliberalism produced the far right on its own. The book drew wide public attention and confirmed his standing as a leading interpreter of the intellectual roots of contemporary right-wing movements.

Across his career Slobodian stands apart from historians who treat ideas as self-contained philosophical systems. His work is institutional in character. He asks not only what thinkers believed but how they tried to turn belief into organizations, treaties, courts, constitutions, and international regimes. This attention to implementation marks him off from more textual intellectual historians.

His scholarship also carries the stamp of global history. He treats political ideas less as products of single nations than as the outcome of exchange among intellectuals, policymakers, and institutions across continents. Decolonization, globalization, and international governance run through all of it.

Beyond the academy he has become a prominent public intellectual. He writes for The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, the Financial Times, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, The New Statesman, and other major outlets. His essays take up neoliberalism, globalization, technology, populism, libertarianism, and democratic decline, and in recent years he has turned increasing attention to the meeting point of technological power, billionaire influence, and governance.

Grants and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Mellon Foundation, the Volkswagen Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation have supported his work. By the mid-2020s he had become a much-cited historian of political economy in the English-speaking world.

Taken together, his books form a sustained effort to explain how modern capitalism is governed. He portrays markets as built legal and political orders rather than natural or spontaneous phenomena. From the collapse of empire to the rise of globalization, from offshore finance to charter cities, from neoliberal internationalism to libertarian ethnonationalism, his scholarship tracks the continuing effort to shield economic life from democratic control. Whether a reader accepts or rejects his conclusions, Slobodian has reshaped debate about neoliberalism, sovereignty, and the future of the global economic order.

Slobodian’s Field

Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) treats an intellectual life as a series of moves within a structured space of positions. A field holds its own stakes, its own currencies, and its own gatekeepers. A scholar rises by gathering the capital the field recognizes and by taking the positions its structure leaves open. Read this way, Quinn Slobodian’s career shows the shape of a field strategy carried through with skill, and his chosen subject turns back on him in a way that rewards Bourdieu’s method.

Begin with trajectory, since habitus comes from a path. A physician’s son carried from Vancouver Island to Lesotho to Vanuatu and back acquires a set of dispositions the national historian rarely shares. The world arrives early as a single connected place, and the nation looks like a small container. When Slobodian later refuses the national frame and follows ideas across borders, he draws on a disposition laid down young, and he turns that disposition into a position. Against a historiography organized by country, the global lens marks him off. Distinction, in Bourdieu’s sense, begins as difference from rivals, and the transnational method supplies it.

The founding move comes with a name. Slobodian calls a cluster of thinkers the Geneva School and sets it beside the Chicago School of Friedman and the Austrian School of Mises and Hayek. The older schools sit consecrated, worked over by many hands. Geneva he constitutes himself. To name a thing is to claim the power to impose a vision and a division on the world, and the man who names an object holds the first claim on the authority to interpret it. He does not enter a crowded position. He builds one and occupies it alone. Whoever wants to argue about the Geneva School argues on ground Slobodian cleared.

Around that move he accumulates the capital a field rewards. The monographs carry cultural capital. The archives at the International Chamber of Commerce, the League of Nations, the Mont Pelerin Society, and the Hoover Institution supply the rare material that marks serious labor and raises the cost of disagreement. The edited volumes with Dieter Plehwe and Philip Mirowski bring social capital and borrow the consecration of established names. The co-editorship of a leading journal and the founding of the History and Political Economy Project place him at a node where he confers legitimacy on others. The convener gains a capital above the ordinary kind, the power to consecrate, and that power compounds.

The field’s gatekeepers then return their verdict in symbolic capital: the George Louis Beer Prize, the Guggenheim, grants from the Mellon Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the American Council of Learned Societies, a residential fellowship at Harvard’s Weatherhead Center, a named chair at Wellesley, and a professorship in international history at Boston University. Each is a stamp from an authorized hand. The named chair crystallizes the process. The field tells the man that he embodies its values, and the title travels with him.

Slobodian also plays at two poles at once, and Bourdieu studies this game in Homo Academicus and The Rules of Art. The autonomous pole judges work by the field’s internal standards, the archive and the monograph and the peer. The heteronomous pole answers to demand from outside, from the market and the press and politics. Slobodian writes for The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, the Financial Times, and The Atlantic, and the traffic runs both directions. Academic standing lends weight to the essay, and the essay lends visibility to the scholar. The resonance of his thesis in the wider argument about markets and democracy rewards a particular position-taking from outside the discipline, and that outside reward shapes a career no less than the inside one. Bourdieu marks the risk in the bargain. The more the journalistic field rewards a scholar, the more it pulls the work toward its own tempo and its own questions.

The largest stake sits in the word neoliberalism. The term is a classification, and classification is a struggle. Whoever fixes the legitimate sense of neoliberalism controls a currency that spends across history, political economy, journalism, and activism at once. Slobodian’s redefinition does the work. Neoliberalism stops meaning deregulation and starts meaning encasement, the construction of legal armor around markets. Imperium and dominium give the redefinition a portable shape. He imposes a vision and a division on a contested object, and the field begins to see through his categories.

A heresy that succeeds becomes an orthodoxy. Slobodian enters by correcting a settled belief, the picture of neoliberalism as a creed of weak government and free markets. The heretic gains by exposing the doxa and naming what the orthodox missed. Yet the prizes and the citations convert the heresy into the new received view. Students now reach for encasement and the Geneva School as the obvious starting point. The challenger becomes the authority he challenged, and the position he cleared fills with followers who take it for the natural order.

Slobodian’s body of work studies how a set of thinkers built institutions, treaties, journals, and societies to encase markets and shield them from democratic pressure. He traces the Mont Pelerin Society as a machine for reproducing a position. Run the same lens over the man who wrote the books. He too builds institutions, a project and a journal and a network, to encase a position and shield a body of work, and to reproduce a way of seeing across a generation of students. The historian of durable orders constructs a durable order inside his own field. Bourdieu does not call this hypocrisy. He calls it the common condition of the player who refuses to see the game while playing it well, and he grants the rare scholar a further distinction for naming his own stakes out loud.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Slobodian pushes the misunderstanding myth. Look at the books in a row. Globalists tells you that you misunderstood neoliberalism, that it never meant deregulation, that the neoliberals wanted strong institutions and legal armor around markets. Crack-Up Capitalism tells you that you misread the zone and the enclave, that these were attempts to escape the voter. Hayek’s Bastards tells you that you misunderstood right-wing populism, that it grew from neoliberalism rather than rebelled against it. Each book opens the same way. You had it wrong. Here is what was happening behind your back. The serial corrector.

The premise carries the heroism. If the trouble Slobodian describes, markets walled off from majorities, comes from a public that failed to grasp what was done to it, then the historian who lays the architecture bare performs a service close to rescue. The archives become consciousness-raising. See the cage and you might break it.

Pinsof turns the premise over. There was no misunderstanding. Start with his rule that people understand what they have an incentive to understand. The neoliberals Slobodian studies understood their aim. They wanted property shielded from majorities, and they wrote it down in letters and treaties and society minutes, which is the only reason Slobodian can quote them at such length. His evidence is their candor. The men in Geneva were not confused about what they built.

Nor were the publics who lived under the result. A voter has scant incentive to trace a legal order assembled in Geneva across decades, and tracing it would change nothing in his week. He understood neoliberalism the way he needed to and spent his attention elsewhere. Call that ignorance if you like. Pinsof calls it strategy. Stupidity is usually strategic, and the loose talk of deregulation served the people who talked that way well enough.

If markets constrain democracy, the cause is that men with the means wanted them to and worked to make it so, and not that the rest of us flunked a reading test. Better understanding leaves the motive untouched. You can hand every voter a clean account of imperium and dominium, and the men who built the order keep their reasons for building it, and the voter keeps his reasons for looking away.

Slobodian’s work carries the quiet hope that exposure leads somewhere, that a public shown the hidden order can contest it. Pinsof denies the step. You can study the hole you are stuck in to the last handful of dirt and remain at the bottom. The understanding was never the missing piece. The voters who would have to act gain nothing by acting, and the powerful who built the order lose everything by dismantling it, and no monograph rearranges that arithmetic. The world Slobodian maps does not want to be saved, and it would not be saved by being understood.

What if the capitalists understood what they were doing all too well? Slobodian answers yes for his villains. His whole argument credits the neoliberals with clear sight and firm intent, which means he has conceded half of Pinsof’s case before it starts. He keeps the misunderstanding only for the audience, the public that supposedly mistook the project for laissez-faire. What if the cause is bad motives rather than bad beliefs? Then the misunderstanding frame adds nothing to the history except a hero, the man who arrives to clear up a confusion that was doing real work for the people who held it.

Slobodian found a misunderstanding, corrected it three times, and made himself the one who understands. His neoliberals understood. His publics understood as much as they cared to. The trouble he describes was never confusion in the first place. The only misunderstanding is that there has been a misunderstanding.

The Great Delusion

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.

The order Slobodian anatomizes belongs to liberalism’s family. The Geneva School wanted a global legal frame that would lift the market above the nation and shield property and contract from the democratic majority. Dominium over imperium. Treaties and courts above the voter. That is reason and law set against the social group, the cosmopolitan instrument built to discipline the tribal one. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the bet is a losing one. Nationalism is the strongest political faith on earth, stronger than any creed of rights or any architecture of markets, because it runs on socialization and innate sentiment rather than on argument. A treaty is a product of reason. A nation is taught in the cradle. When the two collide the cradle wins.

Read Slobodian’s three books in order and the contest shows through his own evidence. Globalists is the dream of encasement, reason building the cage. Crack-Up Capitalism is the move to fragment sovereignty, the same flight from the national majority by other means. Hayek’s Bastards is the eruption, ethnonationalism rising out of the libertarian tradition that meant to transcend the nation. Slobodian reads the last as a kinship inside libertarianism, a hidden tie between market radicalism and the racial right. Mearsheimer reads it as the return of the repressed. The globalist project tried to suppress the social nature of man, and the social nature of man came back as nationalism. The bastards are not a scandal in need of a villain. They are what Mearsheimer predicts when a cosmopolitan order forgets that people are tribal to the bone.

Slobodian gives you clever men in Geneva building a cage and a public that failed to notice. Mearsheimer gives you a contest between two forces of unequal strength. On one side the reason of jurists and economists, the encasement, the immunization. On the other the socialization and sentiment of national peoples, the oldest and deepest pull in political life. The cage frays not because a historian exposed it but because the weaker force was always going to lose to the stronger. Slobodian supplies the law and the institutions. Mearsheimer supplies the reason they never held.

Reason is the weakest of the three drivers for the scholar as much as for the voter. Slobodian’s frame treats the nation as a small container to see past and prizes the transnational view as the clear one. Where does that disposition come from? Not from reason alone. A man carried as a boy from Vancouver Island to Lesotho to Vanuatu, schooled in the cosmopolitan precincts of the American university, takes on a value infusion no less than the nationalist who gets his at the village fair. The globalist optic is a socialization, the creed of a particular group, the transnational professoriate, with its own attachments and its own loyalties. Mearsheimer’s man is tribal, and the cosmopolitan intellectual has a tribe too. He looks past the nation because his people taught him to, not because reason compelled it.

So if Mearsheimer is right, Slobodian wrote the natural history of a delusion while standing inside a cousin of it. He chronicled the cosmopolitan dream of walling the market off from the people, and the dream broke for the reason Mearsheimer gives for every such dream. The people are not atoms. They are a tribe, and the tribe outlasts the treaty. The historian who sees past the nation belongs to the one group that believes the nation can be seen past, and that belief is a socialization like any other.

Alliance Theory

Alliance Theory holds that a political belief system is not a philosophy built from values like equality or liberty. It is a patchwork of justifications, grievances, and attributions assembled to support a coalition’s allies and damage its rivals. The values come second, as banners. The alliance comes first. David Pinsof and his coauthors add that elites are no more coherent than the masses. They are better attuned to the contingent alliances of their time, and their training lets them dress the coalition’s narrative in finer cloth. Read Quinn Slobodian through this lens and the body of work looks less like a discovery about capitalism and more like the learned propaganda of a coalition.

Begin with the map. Slobodian’s allies and rivals sit on the page once you look for them. The allies are the democratic public, organized labor, the postcolonial states of the global South, and the redistributive arm of government. The rivals are capital, the neoliberal economists, the libertarians, and the contemporary right. His sentences carry the allegiance. Markets get encased, immunized, shielded from the people, walled off. Democracy gets constrained, hemmed in, denied. The first set of verbs names a perpetrator. The second names a victim. Alliance Theory predicts the pairing before you open the book.

Transitivity comes next, the rule that the enemy of my ally is my enemy and that we favor allies who share our rivals. Slobodian’s coalition counts the libertarian as a rival and the ethnonationalist as a rival. Hayek’s Bastards binds the two into a single cluster. The book argues that market radicalism and the racial right share a lineage, that the gold cranks and the IQ obsessives grew from the same root as Hayek’s heirs. Alliance Theory reads the continuities he traces as the scholarly form of transitivity. Partisans fuse their rivals into one enemy, and a historian fuses them with footnotes. The claim wears caution. He does not say neoliberalism produced the far right, only that strong ties run between them, and the caution is the tool that lands the charge while keeping the hands clean.

Three propagandistic biases run through the corpus. The perpetrator bias falls on the rival. Slobodian grants the neoliberals clear intent and long foresight, men who knew what they wanted and built it on purpose. Their order is no accident of history but a contrivance, drawn up to defeat the voter. The victim bias falls on the ally. The subtitle of Crack-Up Capitalism names the dream of a world without democracy, which is competitive victimhood on behalf of the demos, the embellished grievance of the wronged party. The attributional bias recodes outcomes. A working global market becomes not a thing that emerged but a cage that someone welded shut. The rival’s advantage gets traced to scheming and design, never to merit or use. Alliance Theory names each move and expects all three.

Alliance Theory also insists that coalitions are historically contingent and need no deeper pattern. The pairing of libertarian economics with Christian fundamentalism in America came from a deal struck in the 1970s, not from philosophy. Slobodian does the reverse with his rivals. He reads the neoliberal coalition as a coherent project with a traceable logic, a Geneva School, an imperium and a dominium, a doctrine carried across decades by allied minds. He grants his rivals a designed machine. His own coalition’s strange bedfellows go unexamined. The defender of the global South sits beside the defender of the Western regulatory state. The friend of the demos recoils when the demos votes for borders. Alliance Theory expects this. We see our rivals’ beliefs as a system and our own as principle.

The banner over the whole project reads democracy. Alliance Theory treats a value of that kind as a flag run up to rally support, raised when it serves the allies and furled when it does not. Watch what happens when the demos votes the wrong way. The majorities who chose Brexit, who backed the populists, who number among the losers of globalization, do not count as democracy vindicated. In Hayek’s Bastards they turn into a pathology to explain, a contamination traced back to the libertarian root. The democracy Slobodian defends is the democracy that returns his coalition’s preferences. When the vote runs the other way it becomes manipulation or false consciousness. Pinsof’s coauthors found the same pattern with equality. Support for the value tracks whether the value benefits the allies. Support for democracy tracks the same way.

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Jamie Martin: Historian of Sovereignty, Empire, and the World Economy

Jamie Martin is an American historian of international political economy whose scholarship traces the origins of global economic governance to the imperial conflicts and economic crises of the early twentieth century. He holds a joint appointment as Assistant Professor of History and of Social Studies at Harvard University, where he teaches and advises in the history of international political economy, the world wars, and modern empire. His work draws together diplomatic history, economic history, intellectual history, and the history of international institutions, and it asks how governments, experts, and international bodies came to exercise authority over the domestic economic life of formally sovereign states.
Martin received his B.A. from Yale University in 2007 and an M.Phil. from the University of Cambridge in 2008, and he completed his Ph.D. in History at Harvard University in 2016. Before returning to Harvard as a member of the faculty, he served as an assistant professor in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and the Department of History at Georgetown University. His training brought together international history, political thought, and economic history, and his writing treats markets, financial systems, and international organizations as political creations shaped by conflict, ideology, and contests over legitimacy rather than as neutral technical arrangements.
His reputation rests on his first book, The Meddlers: Sovereignty, Empire, and the Birth of Global Economic Governance, published by Harvard University Press in 2022 and the recipient of several scholarly prizes. The book challenges the familiar account that modern global economic governance began at the Bretton Woods Conference of 1944. Martin argues instead that the institutional forms later associated with the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank took shape during the interwar decades, through experiments conducted by the League of Nations, the Bank for International Settlements, and related bodies. He follows the political conflicts these experiments provoked across a wide geography, from Weimar Germany and the Balkans to Nationalist China, colonial Malaya, the Chilean nitrate fields, and Wall Street.
At the center of the book stands a reinterpretation of the years between the two world wars. Martin shows that international organizations of the 1920s acquired powers far beyond consultation or coordination. They supervised national budgets, shaped central-bank policy, structured reconstruction loans, intervened in commodity markets, and attached conditions to the credit extended to borrowing governments. Through close study of the Austrian and Hungarian financial stabilization programs, he traces how international officials built forms of oversight that anticipated what later became IMF conditionality. A new model of governance followed, one where states that remained politically independent accepted substantial external supervision in exchange for financial assistance.
A central concern of his work is the distance between political independence and economic autonomy. Martin traces how techniques of debt control first developed within imperial settings, in places such as the Ottoman Empire and China, migrated into the supposedly sovereign states of postwar Europe. In his account, international governance altered the working meaning of sovereignty. A nation could keep its formal independence while surrendering much of its authority over fiscal and monetary policy to foreign experts and international institutions.
Martin pays close attention to how these organizations justified their authority. The League of Nations and bodies like it presented themselves as neutral, scientific, and technical. He shows that their decisions carried political priorities and reflected unequal distributions of power, and that the language of expertise often concealed imperial hierarchies and the asymmetry between creditor and debtor states. His analysis ranges across Europe, the Balkans, Latin America, China, colonial Southeast Asia, and the United States, and it places the institutions of global governance within a wider world ordered by empire and geopolitical inequality.
Where earlier histories cast international institutions chiefly as solutions to shared economic problems, Martin gives resistance a central place. Nationalists, anti-imperial movements, political radicals, and governments wary of foreign interference fought attempts at international supervision again and again. For Martin the history of global governance is a history of recurring disputes over legitimacy, accountability, democracy, and self-government. International authority emerged through conflict, and it stayed contested as it grew.
Beyond The Meddlers, Martin has published on the economic history of the world wars, the history of international institutions, the history of commodities, and the intellectual history of crisis. He examines how disruptions in trade, finance, transport, and production created pressure for new forms of international cooperation, and he writes about wartime mobilization, the management of shortages and surpluses, and the responses of policymakers to economic emergency. His historiographical essay “Globalizing the History of the First World War: Economic Approaches,” which appeared in The Historical Journal in 2022, surveys recent scholarship on the global economic side of the war and presses for closer attention to finance, inflation, commodity production, and the colonial economies outside Europe.
War as an occasion for institutional innovation runs throughout his scholarship. Rather than treat international governance as the fruit of idealistic visions of peace, Martin stresses the role of wartime necessity. His current book project examines the global economic consequences of the First World War, with a focus on the conflict’s effects on trade, shipping, supply chains, and finance beyond the principal theaters of fighting in Europe and the Middle East. In this work he argues that wartime coordinating bodies such as the Allied Maritime Transport Council built some of the earliest infrastructure of international economic planning. These bodies regulated shipping capacity, allocated scarce resources, coordinated procurement, and managed logistical networks across the globe, and they supplied precedents for the international regulatory structures of the later twentieth century.
The project widens the geographic frame of First World War history, turning attention away from the battlefield and the negotiating table toward the worldwide economic transformations the conflict set in motion. Martin studies how wartime disruption reached regions far from the main fronts, and how the war reshaped the world economy as a whole. The work forms part of a broader effort among historians to globalize the history of the world wars and to bring non-European experience into narratives long centered on Europe.
Alongside his academic scholarship, Martin writes for a general audience on economic history and contemporary international affairs. His essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Times, the London Review of Books, The Nation, Dissent, The Guardian, Boston Review, n+1, and Bookforum. This public writing applies historical perspective to current debates over central banking, sovereign debt, globalization, financial crisis, economic nationalism, and the future of the IMF and the World Bank. As in his scholarship, he doubts narratives that present today’s economic arrangements as natural, inevitable, or merely technical, and he insists on their contingent origins and the political struggles that produced them.
Martin belongs to a wider movement of historians, among them Adam Tooze and Quinn Slobodian, who have worked to reconnect economic history, diplomatic history, and intellectual history and to recover the political character of institutions often treated as administrative or technical. His own contribution has been to show that arguments over sovereign debt, central-bank independence, international lending, and economic coordination are arguments about power, legitimacy, and democratic self-government. The institutions that govern the world economy, on his account, came not from historical inevitability but from particular political choices made amid war, imperial decline, and economic instability. By tracing the origins of global economic governance to the interwar years and to the wider upheavals of the First World War, Martin has offered one of the more consequential recent reinterpretations of the history of international political economy, an account of how international institutions gained their authority, how that authority met resistance, and how the unresolved tension between sovereignty and global governance continues to shape the present.

Position and Distinction: Jamie Martin in the Field of History

Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) treats intellectual life as a field, a structured space of positions where producers compete for a particular kind of capital and where every move a scholar makes gains its sense from its relation to the other moves available at that moment. Read through this lens, Jamie Martin (b. 1981) becomes legible twice over: once as a man occupying a position in the field of academic history, and again as an analyst whose object mirrors the structure of the field he works in. The same tools open the historian and the history.
Begin with trajectory, because Bourdieu insists that a position cannot be read apart from the path that brought a man to it. Martin moves through Yale, Cambridge, and Harvard, then Georgetown, then back to Harvard. Each station deposits capital. The degrees furnish cultural capital in its institutionalized form, the credentials that the field recognizes without further argument. The languages and the archive work furnish cultural capital in its embodied form, the dispositions that mark a man as a serious practitioner. The Harvard appointment, joint in History and Social Studies, furnishes the institutional capital that lets a scholar consecrate students and referee the work of peers. His habitus forms at the consecrated centers of the discipline, and that formation shows in the ease with which he plays the game, the feel for which questions carry stakes and which do not.
The book is the position-taking. Bourdieu’s term, prise de position, names the act by which a producer stakes out ground against the ground already held. The Meddlers does this against a settled account, the doxa that locates the birth of global economic governance at Bretton Woods in 1944. Martin moves the origin back to the interwar decades and routes it through empire, conditionality, and the resistance these provoked. The move carries the structure of distinction. He marks himself off from the prior generation that told the postwar story, and he does so by reclassifying the object, by drawing the boundary of his subject in a new place. A field rewards the producer who shifts the frame and forces others to answer him.
No producer invents his position from nothing. Bourdieu calls the available range the space of possibles, the set of moves the field makes thinkable and rewardable at a given time. Martin’s reframing becomes available because the field has already turned. The revival of political economy after 2008, the global turn in the writing of the world wars, the renewed attention to empire and to the colonial roots of liberal institutions, all of these open a slot for an account that ties global governance to imperial debt control and to wartime coordination. Martin fills the slot with unusual command, yet the slot precedes him. His originality lies in the execution and the archive, not in the invention of the question, and Bourdieu would read even the sense of a fresh question as an effect of position rather than a private spark.
Capital accumulates through consecration by the already consecrated. The book carries endorsements from Adam Tooze, Susan Pedersen, Patricia Clavin, David Edgerton. Each blurb transfers symbolic capital from a holder to a newcomer, and each act of transfer is also an act of classification, a way of placing Martin inside a particular camp and against others. Harvard University Press supplies the publisher’s imprimatur, the prizes supply collective recognition, and the citation traffic supplies the slow scientific capital that decides whether a book becomes a reference point or a footnote. The man rises as the field’s authorities lend him their authority, and they lend it because his project extends a position they already hold.
Here the cohort enters. Tooze and Slobodian anchor an ascending group that reconnects economic, diplomatic, and intellectual history and recovers the politics in institutions once filed under administration. Martin’s alignment with this group is a strategy in Bourdieu’s exact sense, a placement within the field that draws on a rising current rather than a fading one. Membership is reciprocal. The cohort gains a third strong book and a Harvard position, and Martin gains the shelter and the visibility of a recognized school. The group consecrates the individual, and the individual thickens the group.
Bourdieu separates the autonomous pole of a field, where producers write for other producers and prize peer recognition, from the heteronomous pole, where producers orient toward outside publics and outside rewards. Martin works both. The monograph and the journal article address the autonomous pole. The essays in the London Review of Books, The New York Times, The Nation, n+1, and Dissent address a literate public and a current politics. The two registers run on different capitals, and Bourdieu would track the rate at which a man can convert one into the other. Public visibility can raise a scholar’s profile inside the discipline, yet it can also draw the suspicion of colleagues who guard the autonomous pole against the pull of the journalistic. Martin’s standing rests on getting the academic capital first and adding the public capital after, the order that protects a man from the charge of trading rigor for reach.
The frame pays a second time on the content, because Martin’s object has the shape of a field. States hold positions defined by their relations to one another. Creditors and debtors face each other across an asymmetry of capital, and the asymmetry sets the terms on which the weaker party borrows. The expert authority of the League and the Bank for International Settlements operates as symbolic capital, a competence that licenses command over budgets and currencies. The claim to neutral, scientific, technical judgment performs what Bourdieu calls misrecognition, the process by which an arbitrary power wins acceptance as legitimate necessity. When a stabilization program presents austerity as the verdict of disinterested science, the domination hides inside the technique. Bourdieu’s name for domination that succeeds by being taken for something other than domination is symbolic violence, and Martin’s interwar officials practice it whenever they convert a political demand into an apparently technical condition. The historian, without the vocabulary, narrates a Bourdieusian story.
Reflexivity completes the reading, since Bourdieu demands that the analyst turn the instrument on his own position. Martin exposes the interest concealed behind others’ claims to neutrality. A reflexive account asks what interest his own debunking serves inside his own field. The position of the scholar who strips the mask from technical authority is itself a rewarded position now, consecrated by the very cohort and the very presses that reward it. His skepticism toward disinterested expertise is produced, in part, by a field that has come to prize that skepticism. This does not falsify his findings. It locates them. The argument that no institution stands above the field applies to the man who makes the argument, and Bourdieu would count the willingness to face that recursion as the test of whether a scholar has understood his own tools.
What holds the whole reading together is illusio, the shared belief that the game deserves the effort, that the date and the genealogy of global economic governance carry stakes worth contesting. Martin has invested in that belief and helped renew it for others. A field stays alive only while its players agree that its prizes are real. Martin plays as a man who finds the prizes real, and the field, for now, agrees with him.

What Jamie Martin Has an Incentive to Understand

David Pinsof (b. 1985) builds his work on a simple separation: stated motives against actual motives, words against deeds, the mission statement against the profit. He aims the separation at intellectuals first, because intellectuals run the most flattering racket of all. They blame the world’s troubles on misunderstanding, on bias and ignorance and tribalism, and the story rewards them, since it casts the people whose trade is understanding as the people who might save the world. Turn this frame on Jamie Martin and the reading splits in two, because Martin is half a fellow traveler and half a captive of the myth Pinsof attacks.
Start with the half that travels alongside Pinsof. Martin unmasks stated motives for a living. The League of Nations, the Bank for International Settlements, and the creditor powers of the 1920s presented themselves as neutral, scientific, technical. Martin reads through the presentation to the power underneath. He shows austerity sold as debt relief, conditionality dressed as expert advice, imperial control rebranded as cooperation. This is motive-unmasking of the kind Pinsof praises. Martin refuses to treat the bankers and the officials as confused do-gooders who misunderstood the consequences of their loans. He treats them as men who knew the terms they were imposing and who profited from the asymmetry. In Pinsof’s terms, Martin grasps that the creditor states understood what they were doing all too well, that their stupidity, where it appeared, was strategic, and that their talk of neutral technique was a weapon rather than a confession. So far Martin and Pinsof agree.
Now the other half. Pinsof insists that the analyst turn the same instrument on himself and on his own side, and that is where Martin’s account starts to carry the structure Pinsof distrusts. Martin’s history has heroes and villains. The villains are the empires, the creditors, the technocrats. The heroes are the nationalists, the anti-imperial movements, the governments and publics that resisted foreign supervision. Pinsof might ask why the resisters earn the warmer light. The resistance-as-virtue story flatters a present-day coalition, the academic left and the heterodox political-economy cohort and the readers of the London Review of Books, The Nation, Dissent, and n+1. Those readers buy status by siding with the resisters against the technocrats, and Martin supplies the merchandise. Pinsof’s question presses: does Martin side with the resisters because the evidence compels it, or because the field he works in pays for that side?
Pinsof’s central charge against intellectuals is the misunderstanding myth, and Martin reproduces a refined version of it. The crude version says people are biased and ignorant and need correction. Martin’s version says the world has swallowed a false origin story, the comfortable tale that global economic governance began at Bretton Woods in 1944, and that the real genealogy, rooted in empire and the interwar experiments, has been forgotten or suppressed. The recovery-of-suppressed-truth posture is the intellectual’s oldest self-portrait. The historian sees what the textbooks missed. The reader who absorbs the corrected genealogy gets to feel less naive than the people still reciting the official story. Pinsof would name the transaction plainly: the scholar sells enlightenment, and the price the buyer pays is the warm sense of having seen through a deception that fools lesser minds. The product is the feeling of insight, and it moves well.
The deeper trouble for Martin, on Pinsof’s terms, sits in his normative vocabulary. Martin frames the history of global governance as a long argument over legitimacy, accountability, democracy, and self-government. That vocabulary carries a hope, the hope that the institutions failed a standard they might have met, that a more accountable and more democratic arrangement was available and might be available again. Pinsof reads that hope as the fixability myth in a new coat. The creditor and debtor asymmetry is not a legitimacy deficit waiting to be repaired. It is zero-sum competition over resources and over the international coercive apparatus, the machinery of debt enforcement and conditionality that puts a government’s budget under foreign command. Strong states dominate weak ones because they can, and they wrap the domination in technical language because the wrapping works. Martin sees the wrapping. Pinsof would press him on the next step. To call the result a crisis of legitimacy implies a cure, and the implication of a cure is the thing Pinsof denies. The competition has no cure. It has winners and losers, and the losers resist because resistance sometimes pays, not because they hold a key to a juster order.
Consider the field rivalry Pinsof keeps returning to, where men compete hardest with their nearest rivals in the hierarchy. Martin’s cohort does not fight the distant enemy. It fights the centrist economists and the institutional defenders who hold the rival claim to authority over how the public understands global capitalism. The empire-and-resistance frame is the cohort’s bid to displace the older technocratic narrators and to seize the seat of the authoritative voice on the world economy. Pinsof’s antiracism example runs parallel. Foregrounding empire and colonialism confers elite academic status now, and the men who confer it resent the technocrats and the market-friendly historians who sit one rung over, because those are the men they are trying to unseat. The contest looks like a contest over truth. Pinsof reads it as a contest over standing.
Then the matter of cynicism, which Pinsof says we suppress because cynics look like assholes. Martin cannot write the pure-power story without cost. He cannot say creditor states crushed debtor states because power is zero-sum and that ends the matter, because the field codes that flat realism as either too cold or too close to the right, the Mearsheimer register that earns suspicion in his quarters. So Martin softens the power story with the sweetie words, legitimacy and accountability and democratic self-government, and the softening signals that he is one of the good ones, a scholar who cares about justice rather than a mere anatomist of domination. Pinsof would call the soft vocabulary the signal, the tribute a man pays to look like a sweetie while telling a story about how the strong eat the weak.
Last, the hole. Pinsof ends with the man who studies the hole he is stuck in, who examines the dirt to the last molecule and remains stuck. Martin’s project promises that exposing the contingency of the present, showing that today’s arrangements came from political choices rather than nature, opens room for alternatives. Pinsof doubts the promise. Showing that the institutions were political rather than technical changes nothing in the distribution of power that made them. The book gives the reader the experience of seeing through authority while leaving the authority in place. That experience is the good on sale, and it sells because the buyers want it, not because it frees them. The world Martin describes does not want to be saved by being better understood. It wants what it has always wanted, and it understands its wants well enough.

Fix the Talk, Fix the World: Jamie Martin and RightTalkism

Robin Hanson (b. 1959) named a doctrine that Pinsof later sharpened. RightTalkism holds that bettering the world means changing how people talk. Get them to say the right things and the problems dissolve. The doctrine has an obvious appeal for the people whose trade is talk, because it places the cure in their hands. Jamie Martin carries the doctrine, though he carries it in one register and refuses it in another, and the split between the two registers tells you where his conviction lives.
Martin’s public writing turns on a single reproach. Contemporary economic arrangements get presented to us as natural, technical, and inevitable. Central-bank independence arrives as a law of sound finance. Sovereign-debt discipline arrives as arithmetic. The authority of the IMF arrives as the verdict of expertise. Martin’s essays in the London Review of Books, The Nation, Dissent, and Boston Review answer that these arrangements are political, contingent, the residue of choices and conflicts that might have gone another way. The answer carries a promise folded inside it. Once we stop calling the order natural and start calling it political, the order loosens, alternatives grow thinkable, and a better arrangement comes into reach. The promise is RightTalkism. Rename the thing correctly and you have begun to change it.
The temptation runs deep for a man with Martin’s subject, because his craft consists of showing that talk did work in the past. He documents how the language of neutral expertise served the creditors of the 1920s, how a loan with crushing terms went out under the name of technical assistance, how imperial supervision wore the dress of scientific advice. His scholarship shows description operating as a weapon in the hands of the strong. From there the slide is short and smooth. If the bankers’ talk helped them dominate, then our corrected talk might help the dominated. If naming a loan technical concealed its power, then naming it imperial might break the spell. A historian who spends his days on the politics of economic language stands closer than most men to the belief that better language can shift the world, because he has watched worse language hold it in place.
His own evidence cuts against the belief, and this is the trouble. The resisters in The Meddlers did not lose for want of the right vocabulary. They lost because they were weak. The Austrians and the Hungarians accepted foreign supervision because they needed the money, and they would have needed the money whatever name they gave the terms. A Hungarian official who called the stabilization loan imperial out loud, in the plainest words available, still faced the same choice between the loan and ruin. The creditor held the debt, the leverage, and, behind the leverage, the older memory of the gunboat. Naming the arrangement did not move the arrangement. Power moved it. Martin’s archive shows what the resisters lacked, and what they lacked was force and money, not the courage to describe their position. RightTalkism asks us to believe the missing thing was words. The book Martin wrote shows the missing thing was strength.
The doctrine rests on a category error that Martin, in his careful mode, knows to avoid. RightTalkism mistakes a description for a lever. To show that an arrangement is contingent rather than natural feels like loosening it, since a thing that could have been otherwise might yet become otherwise. Contingency, though, does not bring fragility with it. Plenty of arrangements come from particular histories and stand for a long time, held up by the men who profit from them. The creditor’s leverage, the dollar’s reach, the gap between strong states and weak ones, each came from a specific past, and each persists because powerful actors want it to persist, not because anyone forgot it was political. Renaming these things political leaves the interests that maintain them untouched. The order does not run on a misunderstanding that a better word can correct. It runs on advantage, and advantage does not yield to vocabulary.
Hanson’s original point bites here, and Pinsof presses it. RightTalkism flatters the talkers. If the world’s troubles trace to bad talk, then the people who supply good talk become the agents of repair, and the historian who corrects the public’s vocabulary performs a political act by writing. Martin’s public essays carry that self-understanding. They cast the corrected genealogy as more than scholarship, as a contribution to the contest itself, and they offer the reader a share in the work. Absorb the better description, see through the language of neutrality, and you have done something for a better world. The offer is pleasant, and it costs the reader nothing past a change of words. No tax, no risk, no surrender of any advantage the reader holds. The reader buys the feeling of having acted and pays only with assent.
Strip the RightTalkism away and a colder Martin remains, the Martin of the monograph. That Martin says the institutions were political, the neutral language was a weapon, the strong wrote the terms, and the historian’s job ends with the showing. What comes next depends on who holds power, not on who holds the better description. This version sells worse. It hands the reader no task and no hope, only an accurate picture of a hard arrangement. The public essay cannot live on it, because the genre wants forward motion and the audience wants a job, so the essay supplies the RightTalkist charge that the monograph withholds. The forward motion comes from the promise that naming the contingency opens a path, and the promise is the thing the scholarship will not sign.
The split is the proof. A man who believed that re-description changes the world would carry the belief into his strongest work, into the book his peers read with their guard up. Martin keeps it out of the book. He lets it into the column, where the readers want hope and the reviewers will not police the overreach. The conviction shows itself where it pays and hides where it would be caught. Pinsof’s rule applies without strain. The lean toward RightTalkism appears at the heteronomous edge of Martin’s output, the public-facing essays, and that is the lean, and the lean is the tell. The historian knows that words did not free the debtor states of the 1920s. The essayist writes as though better words might free us now. Both men sign their names Jamie Martin, and only one of them is reading his own evidence.

Sacred Value: Jamie Martin and the Cover Story That Holds the Game Together

David Pinsof defines a sacred value as a cover story for status-seeking, a tale we tell to keep a status game from collapsing. We deny that we chase dominance or rank. We say instead that we serve honor, wisdom, equality, morality, or the betterment of mankind. The cover works only while the players believe it, and it does a precise job. It stops the men in the game from arriving at common knowledge that the game is a game. Once they see that everyone is competing for standing, they start to read one another as vain and grasping, and the contest tips toward collapse. The sacred value is the thing that holds it together. Read Jamie Martin through this concept and his moral vocabulary stops looking like the heart of his project and starts looking like the wrapping that keeps the project respectable.
Martin’s sacred words are legitimacy, accountability, democracy, and self-government. The history of global economic governance, in his telling, becomes a long argument over whether the international institutions answered to anyone, whether they respected the self-rule of the nations they supervised, whether their authority rested on consent or on force. These are the warm words, and they recur across the monograph and the essays. They give his work its moral temperature.
Consider what the warm words do for the material underneath them. Martin’s archive holds a hard story: strong states crushing weak ones, creditors dictating terms, empires recycling their old techniques of debt control, technocrats taking command of other men’s budgets. A scholar could tell that story as pure anatomy. Here is who held the leverage. Here is how he used it. Here is who submitted, and why he had no better choice. That telling is cold, and the cold telling has no hero. The sacred vocabulary changes the genre. By naming the crushing a breach of legitimacy and a violation of self-government, Martin turns a description of power into an indictment of injustice, and an indictment carries a man who delivers it. The anatomist becomes the friend of the weak. The same facts, recast in sacred terms, lift the storyteller from clerk to advocate.
The status game sits beneath the sacred words, and it is the ordinary game of his field. Academic history runs on competition for standing: the chair, the prize, the citations, the right to be the voice other scholars must answer when they write about global capitalism. Martin competes in that game and wins. Pinsof’s point is that he cannot say so, and neither can his rivals. Suppose Martin’s colleagues reached common knowledge that the empire-and-resistance frame, beyond whatever truth it holds, is a bid for rank, and that the moral heat in his prose is partly a competitive weapon. The recognition would sour the room. They would see the moralism as appetite dressed up, and the game would lurch toward the collapse Pinsof describes. The sacred value forestalls the recognition. As long as the agreed stakes are legitimacy and democratic self-government, nobody has to notice that the stakes also include whose name goes on the authoritative account of how the modern economic order was born.
The choice of these particular sacred words fits the field as it stands now. Pinsof lists equality and the betterment of mankind among the consecrated covers, and Martin’s set belongs to the same family, with anti-imperialism standing behind it. They are the words that confer standing in his corner of the academy. A man who built his work around the efficiency of conditionality, or the stabilizing service of creditor discipline, would forfeit standing in that corner, because those are not its sacred words. Martin reaches for the terms that cover the status-seeking and, by covering it well, earn the status. The cover and the prize point the same direction, which is what you might expect, since a field selects its sacred values for exactly that double service.
The obvious defense is sincerity. Martin believes in legitimacy and self-government. The values are heartfelt, not cynical paint. Pinsof’s answer is that sincerity is the design rather than the refutation. A cover story held consciously as a cover fails, because the strain leaks through and the listeners feel the calculation. The thing works only when the man feels his values as conviction while the values quietly do the competitive labor. So the question is never whether Martin means it. He almost surely means every word. The question is what the heartfelt conviction achieves that a cold report could not, and the answer is that it keeps the contest for rank decent, hidden, and safe from collapse.
A simple test exposes the double service. Take each sacred phrase and render it in the language of power. The institutions lacked legitimacy becomes the weak states had no way to make the strong states stop, and they resented it. Democratic self-government was overridden becomes foreign creditors beat local majorities because the creditors held the money. The translations keep every fact and lose every degree of warmth. Martin holds onto the warm phrasing because the cold phrasing strips the halo from the man telling the tale. The sacred vocabulary marks the distance between an indictment from a friend of justice and a memo from a functionary of power. The functionary earns no standing. The friend of justice earns a great deal.
Give Martin his due inside the frame. Legitimacy and accountability name real troubles in the history of international institutions. He did not invent the questions, and the questions reward asking. Pinsof’s concept does not call the sacred values hollow. It says they carry two loads at once. They name true concerns, and they cover a competition for rank, and the second load is the one no member of the field may mention aloud. The best evidence that the second load is real lies in the reaction a man draws when he names it. Tell a roomful of Martin’s peers that the moral language of legitimacy and self-government also serves their jockeying for position, and the temperature drops. The chill is the sacred value defending itself. A cover story that nobody minded seeing exposed would not be covering anything.
So the sacred vocabulary is what keeps the game playable. Without it the contest shows itself as open jockeying, and open jockeying looks ugly and bleeds status. With it the same jockeying proceeds under the colors of justice, and the players keep their dignity and their halos while they fight. Martin writes in those colors because a scholar in his field must speak that language to compete, and, harder still, to compete without appearing to compete. The sacred words are sincere, and they are useful, and Pinsof’s whole teaching is that in a status-seeking animal the two travel together. The sincerity is the thing that lets the usefulness pass unseen.

Carrying the Line Forward: Jamie Martin and the Succession of Cohorts

David Pinsof builds intergenerational competition theory on top of a darker premise he calls the desire problem. Most of what we want is to stand above the people near us, which means we cannot all be satisfied, conflict comes built in, and a world where everyone gets what he wants cannot exist. The theory offers the one near-escape a status animal can manage. Each generation rises above the last, and the old tolerate the climbing because the young are their own line carried forward. The arrangement is the closest thing to peace the species reaches, since it lets the contest for rank run without tearing itself apart. Jamie Martin (b. 1981) gives the theory a clean case.
The discipline of history sits inside the desire problem. There is a fixed amount of authoritative standing on any subject. One man at a time gets to be the voice that others must answer when they write about the origins of global economic governance. The seat holds one. The discipline cannot hand the same centrality to every able scholar, and so the want for it produces the steady, low-grade conflict that the desire problem predicts. The discipline survives the conflict by metabolizing it across generations. Cohorts succeed one another. The young surpass the old, the old give way, and the giving way passes for progress rather than for theft.
A young historian who wants to surpass his elders faces a constraint. He cannot do it by calling them fools. The discipline punishes patricide, because a man who insults his teachers signals that he might be insulted in turn, and the whole succession depends on the insult being withheld. So the surpassing takes a quieter form. The young man reclassifies the object. He moves the boundary of the subject so that the elders’ account, true as far as it goes, becomes a special case, a late episode, a downstream result of something he now places upstream. Martin does this with a date. He does not say the historians of Bretton Woods were wrong about Bretton Woods. He says Bretton Woods came late, that it crowned a structure already built, and that the birth of global economic governance lies earlier, in the interwar experiments and the imperial regimes of debt control. The elder’s monument keeps standing. It loses only its rank, demoted from origin to sequel. The young man has climbed over his teachers without raising his voice.
The reclassification forces the elders to answer, and the forcing is the transfer of standing. Once Martin relocates the origin, the scholars who told the 1944 story have to place themselves relative to his earlier date. Their work turns into a reply to his frame, even the work written before he wrote. To answer a man is to grant that he sets the terms, and the grant moves the center of the conversation from the elder to the heir. The elder keeps his books and his chair. The young man takes the question that everyone must now address. In a contest for rank, holding the question beats holding the chair, because the chair is yours alone while the question commands everyone else’s labor.
Now the part of the theory that explains why the elders allow it. Pinsof says the old accept being surpassed because the young carry their line forward. In a family the line is genetic. In a discipline the line runs through students, advisers, and schools, and through the territory a man spent his career defending. Martin’s elders include the historians of the League of Nations, the mandates, and the interwar economy, men and women who labored on the period Martin now crowns as the origin. He does not bury their territory. He elevates it. The interwar decades, their life’s ground, become the birthplace of the modern order rather than a prelude to the postwar main event. So his surpassing flatters one set of elders while it demotes another. The senior historians whose ground he raises bless him, and the blessing arrives as the blurb, the senior scholar lending his name to the heir. Susan Pedersen and Patricia Clavin, who built the field of interwar international history, endorse the young man who makes their field the foundation of everything after. The theory predicts that act exactly. The elder tolerates, even celebrates, the young man who carries his line up the hierarchy and over the heads of his rivals.
Martin does not climb alone, and the theory has room for the cohort. Adam Tooze (b. 1967) and Quinn Slobodian (b. 1978) lead the same generational push from neighboring fronts. Tooze surpasses the older narrators of financial crisis and wartime economy. Slobodian surpasses the older intellectual historians of the market order. Martin surpasses the older account of where governance began. Three fronts, one motion, a single cohort lifting itself above the generation that held the prior story of capitalism and its institutions. A cohort climbs better than a man, because a group can make a reframing stick where a lone scholar gets ignored. The wave carries Martin, and Martin thickens the wave, and together they do to the prior generation what the prior generation once did to the one before it.
Underneath the orderly succession the desire problem keeps grinding. The standing Martin gains comes out of someone. The historians who owned the 1944 origin lose centrality at the rate Martin gains it, and no settlement gives the origin to both camps, because the origin is a single seat. Pinsof says this conflict admits no solution inside a generation. The intergenerational form is the nearest thing to a solution, because the demoted elders draw partial compensation from their own heirs rising elsewhere, and because the whole discipline agrees to read the succession as the advance of knowledge rather than as one man taking another man’s place. The progress story is the discipline’s version of the toleration the theory requires. Martin’s victory looks like the field learning more about the past. The look is what keeps the loser from naming it a defeat.
The theory predicts Martin’s own future. He is now the heir who surpassed, which means his own surpassing waits in the next cohort. Some younger historian will reclassify Martin’s object, push the origin earlier still, or move it sideways into a frame Martin did not foresee, or declare the search for an origin the wrong question altogether. Martin will then face the choice every elder faces. He can fight the heirs and lose standing as a reactionary who could not let go, or he can bless them and be carried forward as their progenitor. The theory says he blesses them. He writes the blurb, lends his name, and accepts the demotion from author to ancestor, because ancestry is the closest thing to permanence the contest offers. The men who fight their heirs lose twice, once in rank and once in the line.
So the career reads as a textbook case of Pinsof’s almost-utopia. Martin rose by surpassing the generation that held the origin of global governance. He did it by reclassifying rather than insulting, which is the only method the discipline permits. The elders whose interwar ground he raised blessed him, while the elders he demoted were left to answer him. His own heirs sit in the future, sharpening the frame that will carry them up and past him. The discipline calls the whole sequence progress. Pinsof calls it the desire problem solved the only way a status animal can solve it, one generation at a time, each cohort buying its share of peace by climbing over its teachers and pledging, in turn, to be climbed over.

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