- https://PayPal.Me/lukeisback
"Luke Ford reports all of the 'juicy' quotes, and has been doing it for years." (Marc B. Shapiro)
"This guy knows all the gossip, the ins and outs, the lashon hara of the Orthodox world. He’s an [expert] in... all the inner workings of the Orthodox world." (Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff)"This generation's Hillel." (Nathan Cofnas)
Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, as the daughter of alcoholic Pat Summerall, understands what you can and cannot control. (57)
Posted in Addiction
Comments Off on Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, as the daughter of alcoholic Pat Summerall, understands what you can and cannot control. (57)
Trump vs Big Law
I’m fascinated by Trump’s war on America’s leading institutions.
* David Lat: On The Need For Diverse Viewpoints In Big Law
* Why Should I Care About Big Law?
* The Trump vs Big Law Power Struggle
* Does Jones Day lean conservative?
* Big Law vs Conservatives
* Constitutional Law Professor Josh Blackman: Remember When The Obama Administration Pressured Baker Hostetler To Drop Its Representation In House of Representatives v. Burwell?
* How does niche construction help us understand the operations of Big Law?
* Trump vs Big Law
* Big Law’s Self-Serving Claims
* Big Law Seems To Be Winning The Narrative War Against MAGA
Posted in Law
Comments Off on Trump vs Big Law
Decoding The Pundits
The hosts of the podcast Decoding the Gurus developed the Gurometer, which is “not a scientific instrument, not a psychometric scale, not a revolutionary theory.” Rather, it’s a fun analysis developed by psychologist Matt Browne and cognitive anthropologist Chris Kavanagh.
By guru we refer to the standard definition of “an influential teacher or popular expert” but our specific focus tends to be the subset of gurus who make liberal use of ‘pseudo profound bullshit’ referring to speech that is persuasive and creates the appearance of profundity with little regard for truth or reference to relevant expertise. The recurring characteristics identified collectively trend towards negative traits, so a high score on the gurometer could be regarded as identifying ‘bad’, potentially exploitative gurus who produce ersatz wisdom: a corrupt epistemics that creates the appearance of useful knowledge, but has none of the substance.
1. Galaxy-brainness is an ironic descriptor of someone who presents ideas that appear to be too profound for an average mind to comprehend, but are in truth reasonably trivial if not nonsensical. Gurus often present themselves as fonts of wisdom, and it is an all-encompassing kind of knowledge that tends to span multiple disciplines and topics.
I ask Grok to apply the Gurometer to various pundits:
* Richard Spencer
* Victor Davis Hansen
* Matt Walsh
* Luke Ford
* Mark Levin
* Curtis Yarvin
* Auron MacIntyre
* Douglas Murray
* Tucker Carlson
* Jordan Peterson
Decoding Dennis Prager – Short Version
Dennis Prager Biography Condensed My Dennis Prager Story
April 14, 2025, I asked Grok to rewrite my lengthy essay and it said:
Dennis Prager’s Epistemic Blind Spots: A Guru’s Harmful Influence
Dennis Prager, talk show host, author, and founder of PragerU, has built a career teaching right from wrong, cloaked in moral clarity. Yet his epistemology—his approach to knowing what’s true—is deeply flawed, often prioritizing narrative over evidence, charisma over rigor. This epistemic corruption, as Google AI defines it, occurs when a knowledge system sacrifices truth for agendas, like cherry-picking data to fit a story. When Prager manipulates knowledge for personal or ideological gain, he misleads his audience, sometimes with deadly consequences. While I’ve admired Prager’s insights on happiness and ethics—and credit him for giving me purpose during dark times—his distortions demand scrutiny.
The Good and the Harm
Prager’s appeal lies in his ability to simplify complex issues into digestible truths, offering a moral compass for those feeling lost. His PragerU videos, with their concise conservative takes, resonate with millions seeking clarity in a chaotic world. Personally, from 1988 to 1994, bedridden with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, I found solace in Prager’s tapes. His fight for “God-based ethics” gave me a mission, a virtual father figure when I felt disconnected from my own. As Christine Emba wrote in the Washington Post (July 10, 2023), fandoms can buffer an atomized world, and Prager’s community was my lifeline.
But this strength—his ability to weave a “tapestry of meaning,” as Grok described in March 2025—has a dark side. Prager’s certainty sacrifices nuance, distorting reality. His dismissal of COVID-19 vaccines as harmful (Oct. 24, 2022) exemplifies this. Despite overwhelming evidence—studies showing vaccines saved millions globally—he claimed they do “more harm than good” for those under 50, citing unverified VAERS data. This isn’t skepticism; it’s epistemic sabotage, ignoring peer-reviewed research for contrarian clout. By advocating unproven therapeutics like ivermectin (Nov. 15, 2022), he fueled distrust in institutions, potentially costing lives. The New York Times (Feb. 2022) reported vaccine hesitancy linked to misinformation contributed to thousands of preventable deaths.
Similarly, Prager’s political hyperbole—like equating Democrats to Nazis (Oct. 31, 2022)—inflames division. Pew Research (2020) shows such rhetoric deepens partisan mistrust, eroding social cohesion. His claim that “the Left has been working to destroy this country for a century” (Dec. 19, 2022) isn’t just exaggerated; it’s a conspiratorial narrative that paints half the population as evil, ignoring the evolutionary roots of political differences. Left and right, as Predisposed (2013) argues, are adaptive responses to different survival needs—neither inherently malicious.
The Guru’s Playbook
Prager fits the guru archetype, as anthropologist Chris Kavanagh outlined on Decoding the Gurus (July 18, 2023): a charismatic figure claiming unique insight into cosmic struggles. His confidence in his “perfect pitch” for logic (Jan. 1, 2024) and assertion that his instincts mirror the Torah’s (Oct. 3, 2022) reveal a narcissism that blinds him to error. Grok noted (Mar. 15, 2025) that gurus thrive on attention, and Prager’s self-aggrandizement—calling himself “one of America’s most original thinkers” (Still the Best Hope, 2012)—fits this mold. His PragerU, while not a profit-driven scam, amplifies his brand, with bought views (evident in erratic YouTube spikes) inflating its reach.
His rhetoric leans on grievance-mongering, framing conservatives as victims of a malevolent Left. Claims like “the greatest of all freedoms, speech, is disappearing” (April 4, 2023) exaggerate reality—America’s First Amendment protections remain robust compared to most nations. His conspiracies, from questioning the JFK assassination (June 19, 2023) to alleging the CDC serves Big Pharma (Nov. 15, 2022), lack evidence but fuel distrust. As Kavanagh notes, gurus use “pseudo-profound bullshit” to sound wise, and Prager’s sweeping statements—like “if truth is allowed out, there is no left” (Dec. 12, 2022)—collapse under scrutiny.
Personal Cost and Clarity
My fandom had costs. From 1988 to 1997, Prager’s influence strained my relationship with my father, whose teachings I dismissed as flawed compared to my hero’s. I spent thousands on Prager tapes, not health, alienating friends who saw my obsession as unhinged. By 1997, I began blogging critically about his show, losing my Prager-centric social circle. This taught me a hard truth: loyalty to a guru often trumps reason. As Grok put it (Mar. 15, 2025), when family and friends anchor you, gurus become “optional extras.” I wish I’d learned that sooner.
A Path Forward
Prager’s not evil—he genuinely believes his mission uplifts. But his epistemic flaws—overconfidence, selective evidence, and narrative-driven reasoning—harm more than they help. A wiser Prager would embrace humility, engage with critics, and prioritize data over dogma. He could promote gratitude over outrage, as Alcoholics Anonymous advises: “We have stopped fighting anybody or anything.” Instead, he fuels fear, like warning of “communism coming to America” (April 4, 2023), which alienates rather than unites.
For fans, the lesson is clear: no guru has all the answers. Prager’s clarity is seductive, but truth requires skepticism, even of heroes. As I’ve learned, real meaning lies not in fandom but in relationships and reason—messy, human, and grounded.
Posted in Dennis Prager
Comments Off on Decoding Dennis Prager – Short Version
Is Trumpism Fascism?
Was it a mistake to vote for Trump?
If I’d known that MAGA would become a poverty cult obsessed with bringing Chinese sweatshops to the US, I would have supported DEI Kamala. However, as far as I am aware, no one (including Karlin) anticipated that Trump would declare war on every other country on earth and tank the economy for no reason. Given the information available on November 5, 2024, I think a Trump vote was reasonable. Should we not attempt to win because it’s possible that we will fail?
But there are lessons.
The problem isn’t *Trump*. It’s that the American so-called “right” has become a coalition of stupid people from across the political spectrum. At the lowest IQ levels, the left and right converge on fascism. They favor a controlled economy over the invisible hand, wisdom of the “volk” over universities and book learning, and thuggery over due process. Trump wouldn’t be able to get away with this if he didn’t have an army of @catturd2’s with the same dumb intuitions cheering him on. His future torchbearer will have to be an idiot in order to keep the MAGA coalition together, so he’ll be no better.
All over the world, almost everyone with more than half a brain is looking at the disaster of Trump (along with Putin, Yoon Suk Yeol, et al.) and drawing the very reasonable conclusion that right-wing, anti-woke parties are incapable of effective governance. This is also my conclusion. The right *in its current form* attracts such low human capital that it is counterproductive for it to actually take power. What happens when a dog catches the car it’s chasing? It looks confused, jumps around for a minute, and pisses on the wheel. That’s anti-wokesters taking over the government.
I’ve been arguing that the right needs to focus on winning the battle of ideas and bringing the elites to our side. The way to do that is to refute the false empirical belief that underlies the ideology of wokism (the equality thesis). But I lost the battle to set the agenda for the right. Instead, it was decided that the only thing that matters is taking power and trolling leftists. Trump won the election, issued some executive orders, and anti-wokesters declared victory. But we are seeing the fruits of this strategy: a right that is on track to be totally discredited and cede power back to the woke.
It is still theoretically possible to turn this around. The Republican-controlled Congress should invoke the 25th Amendment, carry Trump away in a straitjacket, revoke the tariffs, and spend their political capital (which would be soaring) on important issues like deporting illegal aliens. But this is the kind of action that would be taken by smart people, not Republicans.
If you want the right to prevail in the long run, you should do everything you can to prevent right-wing political parties from gaining power prematurely. All focus should be on the Hereditarian Revolution, which we fight for in the realm of ideas, not (yet) in the ballot box.
The term “fascist” is used as a generic insult, but Trumpism has essentially become 1920s-style fascism. The original point of fascism was to combine nationalism with socialism under the leadership of an authoritarian state. Toward these ends, Mussolini ordered job-making public-works projects and nationalist economic policies. Although it wasn’t an explicit part of the ideology, fascism was also associated with thuggery, which is increasingly the MO of the Trump administration.
Just as there was no Christianity 2100 years ago, there have been no fascist states since 1945.
If Trump were a fascist, people would be too scared to publicly call him a fascist.
The people who know the most about fascism are the least likely to call Trump fascist.
Cofnas: “Under the conditions of war, we reorder the economy with the single goal of destroying the enemy. How is this relevant to what we should do in peacetime, when the goal is wealth generation?”
The world is often a brutal place that requires brutal choices to maximize your chances for survival, safety and prosperity.
The number one priority for every state is survival, not wealth creation.
Cofnas: “What is your point about countries having command economies during wartime?”
When stakes are the highest, countries are the least free market/free trade and it is not because they are stupid.
Cofnas: “[P]eople don’t trade when they’re killing each other. One of the benefits of peace is that people can trade and become rich. During war, people are conscripted and forced to go to boot camp and fight in trenches. Doesn’t mean we would get rich by doing that all that time.”
Nonsense. Prior to WWI, England and Germany were each other’s number one trade partner.
Countries at war with each other often do trade with each other. The world is a complicated place. Google AI: “Yes, countries at war can and sometimes do still trade with each other.”
When countries fight for their survival during times of war, do they become free traders? No, they become command economies with protectionism. When life becomes real, countries use protection.
As we have no example of a sizeable country becoming rich without protectionism, perhaps protectionism deserves more respect. What works for a small country like Singapore during a rate time is less compelling in this discussion than the 100% result for sizeable countries.
Elites were close to 100% wrong about Trump winning the 2016 election. It happens. Economists were wrong when Trump raised tariffs in his first term without causing inflation.
What Trump II is doing is unprecedented (for good or ill). Trump is operating out where the buses don’t run no more. I hate Trump’s contempt for our allies and I hate the right’s contempt for academia and expertise and I hate the experts 100% contempt for populism.
Every advanced economy contains some capitalism, socialism, nationalism, oligopoly, democracy, and authoritarianism. No nation-state is overwhelmingly just one of these things. Every state is a mix. Dictatorships often contain considerable elements of democracy (dictator Nikita Khrushchev was pushed out in 1964) and democracies are often dictatorial (such as during covid).
There is a huge amount of nihilism among Trump supporters (and that is reflected in the Trumpist quotes in that Pavlou article), but it is usually a type of nihilism that is adaptive, as in, laugh about things beyond one’s control. Better to laugh than cry.
Describing Trumpism as fascism and maoism (it’s either/or, man, it cannot be both fascist and maoist, these are contradictory) and arguing that the low-IQ left and right meet in fascism is not a serious response to reality per anyone who has studied fascism. Left and right mean something. They have distinctive qualities. Invoking fascism to describe something that has nothing to do with fascism is weak.
You haven’t given any distinctively fascist signs of how Trumpism aligns with fascism. Socialism and nationalism along with bullying and authoritarianism are not distinctively fascist. If they were, then hundreds of regimes in history have been fascist and “fascist” has no meaning.
Left and right mean something. “The political left [supports] equality and novel ways of doing things; the right [supports] authority, hierarchy, order, and the traditional way of doing things.” Fascism was a movement of the right reacting to totalitarian communism.
Trump has shifted the culture. His executive orders are primarily important for stimulating cultural conversations. Trump has crushed DEI and affirmative action.
The Paleocons have been right about everything for at least 70 years and they have always been protectionist. Paleocons are not a low-IQ movement and Chronicles magazine is now low IQ. The Claremont crowd of pro-Trumpers is not dumb.
Putin is the most effective leader of a major power in over 80 years. He’s done more with a bad hand than could possibly have been expected.
There is nothing remotely Maoist or fascist about Trump’s policies. They might be wrong or bad, but you are dispensing Jason Stanley-tier analysis. We have zero examples of fascist states post WWII. The left can never be fascist because fascism is right-wing.
I care 100 times more about American excellence than about personal corruption among Trumpists.
Posted in Fascism, Nathan Cofnas
Comments Off on Is Trumpism Fascism?