One fall morning in 2003 Carolyn Gold Heilbrun (1926-2003) walks through Manhattan with her friend Mary Ann Caws (b. 1933). She says she feels sad. Caws asks why. Heilbrun answers, “The universe.” Then she goes home. The next morning her family finds her with a plastic bag over her head and the sleeping pills gone. The note runs seven words. “The journey is over. Love to all.”
Her son tells reporters she carried no illness, no diagnosis, no decline anyone could name. She was seventy-seven and in good health. She judged the story finished, so she finished it.
To read that death as despair reads it from the wrong hero system. Heilbrun spent forty years teaching women to seize authorship of their own lives. The death was the last sentence she wrote, and she meant it to scan.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gives us the frame. Man knows he will die. He cannot live inside that knowledge, so he builds a hero system, a scheme of significance that lets him feel he counts in something larger than his body and longer than his years. The hero system tells him what earns honor and what earns shame. It hands him a way to deny the grave by purchasing symbolic immortality. Sacred values are the coins of that economy. A man spends his life chasing the coin his system mints, and he dies defending the conviction that the coin is real.
The coin Heilbrun minted has a name. She called it the plot, and she taught women to refuse the plots the culture had stamped for them. Fiction about women, she argued, fixed on a girl whose fate hung unsettled, while the men got the questing, destiny-making hero. Two endings waited for the heroine, marriage or death, and both closed the book. So she made a curse word of closure. Closure was the passive life. Closure was contentment as a sedative. In Writing a Woman’s Life (1988) she told women that adventure starts at the moment they stop hoping for the thing to be over, settled, swept clear. The hero does not reach closure. The hero keeps the road open.
This is the heart of her system, and it explains a death that looks, from outside, like the one act she preached against. She did not fear endings. She feared imposed endings. The marriage plot writes the woman. Old age writes the body. Decline composes a final chapter no one chose, the slow loss Becker keeps pointing at, the animal truth under every hero system, that the body fails and soils and rots and drags the proud self down with it. Heilbrun called that chapter the miserable endgame. Her solution holds the logic of her whole life. If the body means to write the last page, seize the pen first. Authored closure is not the enemy. Authored closure is the throne. The pen, not the plot.
Hold the word completion up to the light and watch it change color in each hand that takes it.
In Heilbrun’s hand, completion means the ending she composed instead of the ending that composed her. The chosen death is the final proof that the self, not the body and not the culture, holds the pen. Becker would recognize the move at once. The hero system makes its last stand against creatureliness at the exact spot where creatureliness wins. She refused to be a character. She insisted on staying the author through the final line.
Now put the same word in the hand of an Orthodox Jew, which is the world Heilbrun left behind. She described her parents as humanistic Jews, and she walked from the synagogue into the secular academy and never looked back. In the world she left, the body is not hers to spend. It is borrowed. The soul returns when He calls it home and not one hour before. Completion there means the commandment kept, the deathbed Shema, the endurance held to the appointed time. To name your own hour is to steal what belongs to Him and to call the theft freedom. The pen she prized is, in that hand, a thing no man owns. Same word. Opposite content. The exit she chose is the one exit her grandparents’ world forbids without exception.
Hand the word to a Stoic and it warms again, because here she finds an ancestor. Seneca (c. 4 BC-AD 65) and Cato the Younger (95-46 BC) taught that the wise man keeps an open door. The chosen death proves that the tyrant, the disease, the slow ruin, none of them owns him. Completion means the rational exit taken on one’s own terms while the mind stays clear. Heilbrun’s hero system did not spring from nothing. It descends from this. Strip the feminism and her logic is old Roman, the citizen who walks out of the banquet before the host can throw him out.
Hand it to a hospice chaplain and the color goes cold. For the chaplain a good death is received, not authored. Completion means surrender, presence, reconciliation, the hand held at the end. The point of the last mile is the company on it. The chaplain hears “the journey is over” and grieves that she walked that mile alone by design, having built a life and a craft around the conviction that the self should never need company to finish a sentence.
Hand it to Diane Coleman (b. 1953), who founded a movement of disabled people against assisted death, and the word turns dangerous. Praise a healthy woman of seventy-seven for erasing herself and call it her freedom, and a message travels straight to the wheelchair and the nursing home and the ledger. If the self-chosen death of the able is heroism, the continued life of the dependent starts to look like a failure of nerve, or worse, a cost. Completion-by-choice becomes an expectation pressed on the people society would rather not fund. The sharp part is that Coleman and Heilbrun both stand inside the same feminism. One woman’s autonomy is the other woman’s death sentence dressed as a right.
Hand it, last, to a woman who cleans the apartments. Heilbrun authored her life from a high floor on the Upper West Side, with a country house upstate and a summer place in Alford and a fresh home bought at sixty-eight for the sole purpose of being alone in it. A room of one’s own, and then several more rooms. Her son recalled that she stopped giving dinner parties and had her groceries delivered, since squeezing oranges at Fairway wasted time she meant to spend writing. Time was the luxury. The authored plot runs on it. For the woman who delivers those groceries, completion might mean the last child raised and the rent made one more month, not a chapter she got to compose at leisure. The status detail does the argument. Authorship is a commodity, and Heilbrun could afford the whole inventory.
So her hero system stood on a foundation few could rent, and she knew the cost of standing on it inside the academy. She published fifteen mystery novels as Amanda Cross and hid the name for years, because the scholars’ hero system coded detective fiction as unserious, a thing a serious mind would not stoop to. She split herself to protect the half that earned the academy’s coin. A fan unmasked her through copyright records. The immortality project leaves a paper trail. Then came the long fight at Columbia, where she became the first woman tenured in the English department in 1972 and spent the years after, by her account, kept off the committees that ran the place, ridiculed, ignored. A former dean read her charge of ongoing bias and called it “rubbish.” She remembered Lionel Trilling (1905-1975) choosing his disciples among the young men and holding the young women at a distance, while Jacques Barzun (1907-2012) became, in time, a friend. She built for other women the hero system the men had denied her, and she taught a generation to want the quest.
Then she walked one mile with Caws, said the universe made her sad, went home, and closed the book on her terms.
Read the seven words of her note from inside her system and they read as a triumph, the author’s signature on a finished work. Read them from the synagogue and they read as a theft from Him. Read them from the Stoic’s porch and they read as the open door used well. Read them from the chaplain’s chair and they read as a hand let go too soon. Read them from the wheelchair and they read as a warning to everyone whose life costs more than it earns. Read them from the kitchen where the oranges get squeezed and they read as a luxury good. Becker’s point sits under all six readings. There is no view from nowhere. Each of us reads the note from inside the scheme that lets us feel we count, and the word completion will keep changing color for as long as there are different ways to deny the grave.
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…
If John J. Mearsheimer is right, his anthropology subverts the feminist literary criticism and social theories of Carolyn Gold Heilbrun whose work operates on the central premise that gender roles and identities are artificial, restrictive social constructs that individual reason can dismantle.
In Toward a Recognition of Androgyny, she argued for a modification of conventional masculine and feminine traits, treating gender fluidity as a liberating path toward greater human rationality and peace. In Writing a Woman’s Life, she claimed that women can actively “reinvent” their narratives and gain autonomy by consciously stepping outside the cultural scripts written for them by a patriarchal society. Mearsheimer’s realism upends Heilbrun’s emancipatory project in several ways.
Heilbrun treats a woman’s life narrative as something that can be self-consciously redesigned through critical reflection and new literary models. If Mearsheimer is right, this capacity for individual self-authoring is an illusion. Because humans have a long childhood characterized by intense socialization, the family and surrounding society impose an overwhelming value infusion on the individual long before her critical faculties develop. By the time a woman is mature enough to read feminist critique or attempt to rewrite her life, her foundational moral code, behavioral constraints, and social attachments are already fixed. The individual does not rewrite her cultural script; the cultural script has already manufactured the individual.
Heilbrun viewed rigid gender roles as unnecessary historical aberrations—artificial barriers that could be dissolved through the adoption of an androgynous ideal. Mearsheimer’s anthropology implies that these social arrangements are not arbitrary constraints that can be rationalized away; they are structures designed for group survival. Throughout human history, societies have specialized roles to protect the long childhood of human offspring and to maximize collective cohesion against rival groups. What Heilbrun diagnoses as a patriarchal distortion of human potential is the standard operating setup of the social animal under conditions of anarchic competition. A society that abandons these functional, cohesive structures in favor of individualized, fluid identity projects risks fracturing the very unit that ensures its security.
Heilbrun spent her career fighting to institutionalize feminist criticism and expand opportunities for women in the academy, treating the university as a space that should be governed by universal principles of equality and merit. Mearsheimer’s model, paired with David Pinsof’s alliance theory, suggests a far more calculated function for the feminist academic movement. The push to “decentralize” the traditional canon and establish gender studies was not a neutral triumph of objective reason; it was a highly sophisticated strategy deployed by an elite intellectual coalition. By organizing around a shared moral creed, Heilbrun and her allies successfully claimed institutional power, rewarded loyal partners, managed reputations, and policed boundaries against their status rivals in the traditional academic establishment.
In her later works, including The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty (1997), Heilbrun argued that as a woman enters her sixties, she finally escapes the reproductive and domestic demands of society. Heilbrun treated old age as a revolutionary threshold where a woman can discard her lifelong social programming, achieve an unconditioned autonomy, and live entirely for herself.
Mearsheimer’s realism shows that this late-stage liberation is an anthropological fiction. A man or woman is a profoundly social being from the start to the finish of life. The intense value infusion received during childhood is not a temporary skin that can be shed in old age; it is the permanent architecture of the mind. When an older woman attempts to step outside the conventions of her society, she does not enter a post-tribal space of pure individual reason. She simply remains dependent on the broader state structure that ensures her safety and material survival, mistaking the security provided by her group for absolute personal independence.
Heilbrun wrote extensively about the unique value of female friendship and exclusive women’s networks, treating them as egalitarian sanctuaries free from the aggressive, competitive, and hierarchical logic of male-dominated institutions. She viewed these groups as models for a more peaceful, non-combative human future.
Mearsheimer’s worldview, supplemented by Pinsof’s alliance theory, strips the romanticism from these arrangements. Exclusive networks—whether male or female—are not escapes from politics; they are primary political instruments. Humans form groups to cooperate internally so they can compete more effectively externally. The women’s groups Heilbrun championed operate on the exact same structural logic as any other tribe: they use intense socialization to enforce internal conformity, punish members who break ranks, and mobilize collective power to claim resources and status from rival groups. The language of mutual support and egalitarian peace is the ideological standard used to bind the coalition together.
Heilbrun’s entire career as a critic and professor rested on the liberal belief that by rewriting literary scripts—such as the feminist detective fiction she wrote under the pseudonym Amanda Cross—she could gradually re-engineer human behavior and reduce societal conflict. She trusted that exposure to alternative narratives would expand individual reason and empathy, leading to a more rational world order.
Mearsheimer’s ranking of human faculties reveals why this pedagogical project has a built-in breaking point. Reason is the least important of the three sources of preference. A collection of progressive novels cannot override the primal, unreflective survival instincts that emerge when groups face real scarcity or existential competition. Heilbrun’s belief that narrative could civilize the species ignores the permanent reality of structural anarchy. When the baseline security of a society is threatened, the sophisticated literary models Heilbrun designed are instantly overridden by the raw solidarity required for the group to survive.
If Mearsheimer is right, Heilbrun’s faith in the liberating potential of literature and the individual intellect overestimates the power of independent reason. Women, like men, remain social animals whose primary environment is the protective vehicle of the group, and they cannot simply think their way out of the deep socialization that ensures collective survival.
If David Pinsof is right, Heilbrun’s entire academic and literary project was built on a masterful deployment of the misunderstanding myth to capture institutional power for a new coalition.
In Toward a Recognition of Androgyny (1973), Heilbrun argued that civilization was destroying itself through excessive, polarized masculinity, as evidenced by the Vietnam War. Her solution was a move toward androgyny—the fluid blending of masculine and feminine traits. She framed gender polarization as a historical mistake, a cultural misunderstanding that could be cured by a revolution in consciousness.
From Pinsof’s perspective, sexual dimorphism and gendered behaviors are not an arbitrary cultural whoopsie or a conceptual error. They are evolved, highly strategic configurations driven by reproductive competition, resource acquisition, and coalitional survival.
By framing these deeply rooted biological and social structures as a mere “misunderstanding” that could be corrected by literary analysis, Heilbrun achieved a massive status lift. She positioned the feminist literary scholar not just as an analyst of books, but as an essential civilizational savior who holds the blueprint to end war and violence.
In Writing a Woman’s Life (1988), Heilbrun argued that women had been trapped for centuries because they lacked the proper narratives to imagine independent lives outside of marriage and domesticity. She claimed that the patriarchy maintained control by depriving women of text, and that by writing new biographies and analyzing hidden narratives, women could achieve liberation.
Pinsof’s logic reveals the strategic utility of this argument. Women do not make choices about career, family, and status because they are hypnotized by a bad script or because they lack an adequate library. They make choices based on the actual incentives, trade-offs, and competitive constraints of their immediate environments.
By inventing the idea that women are paralyzed by a lack of narrative, Heilbrun created a vast market for her own profession. If liberation requires the curation, decoding, and writing of complex texts, then society desperately needs university professors and literary critics to guide them. The “lack of narrative” is an intellectual fiction that transforms a raw struggle over domestic and economic resources into an academic curation project.
For decades, Heilbrun kept her identity as mystery writer Amanda Cross a strict secret until copyright records exposed her. She stated that she hid her popular fiction because Columbia’s traditionalist, male-dominated English department would have used her commercial writing to deny her tenure, viewing it as insufficiently serious.
Under Pinsof’s frame, this secrecy was a flawless exercise in elite resource acquisition. Heilbrun understood the zero-sum nature of academic warfare perfectly. She knew her colleagues were competitors fighting for limited tenure slots and institutional authority.
By adopting a pseudonym, she successfully extracted capital from two completely different markets simultaneously: she gained mass popularity and financial profit from the public as Amanda Cross, while maintaining the pure, high-status, anti-commercial credentials required to win the tenure fight at Columbia as Dr. Heilbrun. She did not change the rules of the academic hierarchy; she played them with expert strategic duplicity
In 1992, Heilbrun abruptly retired from Columbia University, declaring that she was doing so to protest the department’s institutional discrimination and hatred toward women. She framed her departure as a moral sacrifice, a public protest against a structural failure of equity and fairness.
Pinsof’s essay shows that partisan conflict within an institution is a fight over the coercive apparatus of that institution — who gets hired, who gets funded, and whose ideology controls the curriculum. Heilbrun’s public retirement was not a retreat; it was a high-stakes tactical strike.
By leveraging her immense cultural capital and using the language of moral martyrdom, she successfully infamized her departmental rivals in the national press. It was a dirty fight wrapped in the language of justice. She used her retirement to permanently brand her opponents as backward bigots, ensuring that even in her absence, her progressive coalition would hold the moral high ground and eventual control over the department’s future.

Eager to Fight: The Hero System of John Podhoretz
In the weeks after his father dies, John Podhoretz (b. 1961) sits at a keyboard and defends the graves.
Norman Podhoretz (1930-2025) goes in December. Within the month a fight breaks out over what the old man stood for. Kevin Roberts (b. 1974), who runs the Heritage Foundation, defends Tucker Carlson (b. 1969) for handing a friendly hour to Nick Fuentes (b. 1998), a man who traffics in Jew-hatred. John answers. He reminds Roberts that his mother, Midge Decter (1927-2022), sat on the Heritage board for forty years. He tells Roberts that Decter would have known him for the fraud he is.
Read that as a son in grief, and it scans one way. Read it through Ernest Becker (1924-1974), and it opens.
Becker says a man builds a hero system to hold off the knowledge that he dies. The system gives him a stage and a script. Play the part well and you earn the feeling that you will not be erased, that something carries your name past the body. A soldier earns it under fire. A mother earns it in the child. A scholar earns it in the footnote that outlives him. The terror is annihilation. The cure is significance, and the culture hands out significance on its own terms.
John inherits a stage already built. His father raised it. The magazine is his father’s. The friends are his father’s, and so are the ex-friends, a category his father turned into a book. The enemies are inherited the way a family business inherits its debts. When John tells Kevin Roberts that his dead mother would have seen through him, he fights two fights at once. He defends Israel and the West, the cause. He defends the parents in the ground, the line. In his hero system these are the same fight.
Start with the cause, because John names it himself and the naming is precise. He says the magazine he runs carries a four-part charge. Defend the West and its institutions. Defend Israel. Stand as a wall against Jew-hatred. Hold up, in the pages, the best that has been thought and said, the phrase he borrows from Matthew Arnold (1822-1888). Then he undercuts the grandeur with a shrug. It comes down to twenty items an issue, every month.
That shrug is the tell. The grand mission and the twenty items are the same object seen from two distances. The mission is the immortality. The twenty items are the labor that earns it. Commentary turns eighty with four editors across its life. Elliot Cohen founds it and dies. Norman holds it thirty-five years. Neal Kozodoy holds it thirteen. John takes the chair in January 2009. The magazine outlives its editors by design. A man who edits it joins a chain that runs past his own death. That is the deal Becker describes, struck in print and renewed monthly.
So the sacred word in this hero system is not loyalty, though loyalty rides close. The sacred word is courage. Norman praised Donald Trump for one virtue above the rest, the willingness to fight, and corrected himself to say eagerness. Not willing. Eager. The whole house turns on that correction. In the Podhoretz cosmos a man earns his place by fighting, and he forfeits it by deserting under fire. To go quiet when the enemy speaks is not prudence. It is a small death, a downpayment on the larger erasure the system exists to refuse.
Watch John live it. At midnight he is on the feed, swinging. Colleagues at the old Weekly Standard, which he helped found, said his self-regard had an effect people could not credit. A profile once said he took his father’s literary narcissism without the ideological vigor. He read it. He kept fighting. The fight does not close because the enemy does not sleep, and the enemy is plural: the campus, the chic anti-Zionist, the podcaster with the swastika in his back pocket, the conservative who decides Israel costs too much. Each one threatens the same thing, the erasure of the team, and the team for John runs from the State of Israel to the family name to the magazine to his dead.
The history sits under the courage and explains its heat. John’s grandparents come out of Galicia. The 1924 immigration law shuts the American door, and Jews who might have walked through it instead stay in Europe for what comes. Norman said he could not back a closed border because of what 1924 did to his people. For this family annihilation is not an abstraction a philosopher names. It is the family arithmetic, the cousins who are not born. So when Iran builds toward a bomb, the Podhoretz mind does not file it under foreign policy. It files it under 1938, under appeasement, under the door that closes. Courage means refusing the closed door. Cowardice means narischkeit, the Yiddish word for foolishness John reaches for when men dither over what he reads as plain. The man who weighs both sides of the bomb is not careful. He is the 1924 senator in a new suit.
Here the Becker frame earns its keep, because the same word he builds his life on means nothing he recognizes in the next hero system over. Courage does not travel. Each system mints its own, and the coins do not exchange.
Consider the Carthusian in his cell at the Grande Chartreuse. He keeps silence as a rule of life. He answers no insult. He builds no byline. He thins the self toward nothing so that God fills the space the self leaves. His courage is the daily refusal to assert. Set him beside John and the two men cancel. What the monk calls the high act, the swallowing of the retort, John calls the desertion. What John calls the high act, the answer fired back at midnight, the monk calls the noise that keeps God out. They use one word. They mean opposite worlds.
Consider the test pilot Tom Wolfe (1930-2018) chased through The Right Stuff. His courage is nerve held in the cockpit and never spoken of. The code forbids the naming. A man who announces his own bravery has none; he has shown the seam where the fear gets in. John’s courage demands the opposite. It must be performed, posted, printed, witnessed, because the witness is the point. An unfought fight earns no place in the chain. The pilot earns his immortality by saying nothing. The editor earns his by twenty items a month. Same virtue. Reversed grammar.
Consider the masmid in the Jerusalem study hall, bent eighteen hours over a folio. His courage is to ignore the news. Empires rise and the headline screams and he does not look up, because the page in front of him outranks the century. He treats the urgent as the trivial on principle. Now hand him Commentary, a magazine that lives on the now, twenty items about this month’s threat. To him the magazine is the distraction, the world pulling at the sleeve. To John the masmid’s serenity is a man asleep while the door closes. Each sees the other forfeiting the only thing worth holding.
Consider the hospice nurse at the bedside at four in the morning. Her courage is to stop fighting. She calls the fight off, takes the hand, sits while the breath goes shallow. Her whole training points her away from the swing John cannot stop taking. In her hero system the brave act is surrender done well, the dying made gentle. Speak the word appeasement to her and she will not flinch, because in her cosmos the refusal to fight is the mercy. In John’s cosmos that same refusal is the sin of 1938.
Consider the Pashtun greybeard under the old code, who shares more with John than the monk or the nurse and still cannot be read straight across. His courage braids with badal, the debt of revenge, and John honors revenge; the ex-friend stays an ex-friend. But the code binds the greybeard to melmastia too, shelter owed even to the man who wronged him, the enemy fed and housed under the roof for three days because the roof demands it. John shelters no one who has crossed the line. The line, once crossed, is permanent, which is what the word ex-friend means. The two men would recognize the feud. Neither could sit at the other’s table.
Five men. Five courages. None converts. Becker’s point, carried past where he left it: a hero system is not a set of opinions a man could trade for better ones. It is the apparatus that lets him feel he will not vanish, and you cannot argue a man out of the thing standing between him and the void. John cannot grant the monk’s silence the name courage without conceding that his own midnight fight might be vanity. The monk cannot grant John’s fight the name courage without conceding that his silence might be a hiding place. So the word holds, and the worlds slide past each other, and each man calls the others, in his private grammar, cowards.
The heir carries a second weight the founder never did, and this is where John parts from his father and where the frame turns fresh.
Norman built his hero system from nothing, the Brownsville boy who climbed into the room and then wrote a book about the climbing. He authored himself, or told himself he did, which Becker says is the deepest wish a man carries, to be his own father, to owe his existence to no one. John cannot make that wish. He did not build the room. He was born in it. The magazine has his father’s fingerprints on every wall. The fights are heirlooms. So his significance leans on a borrowed footing, and the borrowing is the thing the cruel profile named when it gave him the narcissism and withheld the vigor.
Read his memorial essay on his father and the structure shows. He does not only mourn. He speaks for the dead man. He tells you what Norman would have thought of this month’s news, what would have delighted him, what he would have dismissed as foolishness. The son ventriloquizes the father, and in doing so keeps the father from finishing the act of dying. As long as John can say what Norman would have thought, Norman thinks. The hero system that held off Norman’s death now holds off the part of that death that would otherwise reach John, the closing of the line, the end of the name as a force in the room.
This is why the Kevin Roberts fight runs so hot, hotter than a policy disagreement warrants. Roberts did not only excuse a Jew-hater. By doing it inside an institution Midge Decter helped steer for forty years, he reached into the family ground and disturbed it. John’s answer guards two graves and one cause in a single sentence, and the three are welded. Defend Israel, defend the West, defend the parents, hold the line their lives drew. To let Roberts pass unanswered would be to let the line blur, and a blurred line is a kind of forgetting, and forgetting is the annihilation the whole system stands against.
There is a release valve, and it is worth naming because it completes the man. John reviews movies. He has done it for decades, grades a Pixar feature or a Spielberg picture with the same faculty he turns on a statesman. He does a Yitzhak Rabin impression people remember. He writes jokes. In the dark of the screening room the terror loosens for two hours, and the same axis still runs, the serious against the fraudulent, the real article against the counterfeit, but the stakes drop to where a man can laugh. The comedy is not separate from the fight. It is the fight at rest, the soldier off the line for a night, still a soldier.
Set the frame down and the man stands clear. John Podhoretz runs a hero system that grants immortality through the fight, conducted in print, witnessed by the team, never deserted under fire, and now doubled by the duty of the heir who keeps a dead father speaking. Courage is its sacred word. The word means refuse the closed door, answer the enemy, hold the line your blood drew. To the monk, the pilot, the masmid, the nurse, the greybeard, the same word means five other things, and not one of the five would call John’s midnight swing brave. He would return the favor. That is not a flaw in any of them. It is what a hero system is, the local rule for earning the right not to disappear, written in a language that does not translate.
John fights because the alternative, in his cosmos, is to vanish, and to let his father vanish with him. A man who reads that as mere temper has not yet asked what he himself does at midnight to keep the dark at bay.
The Great Delusion
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
If Mearsheimer is right, his anthropology provides a definitive verdict on John Podhoretz.
Mearsheimer’s thesis treats John Podhoretz’s entire intellectual career as a classic demonstration of family-based value infusion and elite coalition management.
Mearsheimer argues that humans possess a long childhood in which they are exposed to intense socialization before they can reason for themselves. He writes that by the time an individual’s reasoning skills mature, his family has already imposed an enormous value infusion on him, leaving him with limited choice in formulating his worldview.
John Podhoretz is the literal embodiment of this principle. Born to the central power couple of neocervatism, Norman Podhoretz and Midge Decter, his path was carved by his inheritance. He attended elite schools, became a Reagan speechwriter, co-founded The Weekly Standard, and eventually succeeded his father as the editor of Commentary. His fierce defense of American exceptionalism, his hawkish foreign policy positions, and his alignment with the neoconservative elite are predictable results of his early environment. Mearsheimer’s anthropology implies that John Podhoretz did not independently survey the political landscape and reason his way to neoconservatism; his brain was wired for it before he ever wrote a word of copy.
John Podhoretz’s editorial tenure at Commentary is defined by a fierce commitment to preserving the specific legacy of his parents’ generation, maintaining strict political boundaries, and aggressively policing rivals on the left and right.
Mearsheimer’s model explains this role perfectly. A magazine like Commentary is not a neutral forum for abstract, intellectual debate; it is the institutional flag of a specific, highly cohesive intellectual tribe. John Podhoretz does not operate as a lone-wolf critic. He functions as a tribal trustee whose primary responsibility is to protect the status, prestige, and ideological purity of his coalition. His sharp polemics and media critiques serve to signal loyalty to his group and maintain its defense mechanisms in an anarchic media market.
In his 2004 book, Bush Country, John Podhoretz championed George W. Bush as a great leader, strongly backing the invasion of Iraq and the broader project of democratic transformation in the Middle East. Like his father, he operated on the liberal assumption that human beings are atomistic actors who, once freed from tyrannical governance, will readily adopt Western legal institutions and democratic practices.
Mearsheimer’s thesis reveals that this optimism was an anthropological fantasy. Because individuals abroad receive their value infusions from their own distinct cultures, families, and religious traditions, they remain bound to their primary group loyalties for survival. The institutional engineering John Podhoretz supported in Bush Country misread the creature entirely. The catastrophic friction that followed the Iraq War confirms Mearsheimer’s prediction: you cannot export a parochial Western political structure to a population whose deep socialization and survival needs are anchored in older, tribal, and sectarian realities.
If Mearsheimer is right, John Podhoretz’s career is a double confirmation of the realist thesis. His political activism abroad failed because he ignored the unyielding power of foreign tribal socialization, while his political survival at home succeeded because he obeyed the rules of his own.
‘A Big Misunderstanding’
If David Pinsof is right, John Podhoretz’s entire career is a textbook example of a media elite who uses a conservative version of the misunderstanding myth to run an identical status-and-influence operation.
Podhoretz is a central figure on the Commentary podcast and a frequent guest across conservative digital media. These platforms are framed as spaces for sanity where clear-eyed, rational people can dissect the absurd, biased, and “woke” misunderstandings of the mainstream media and progressive elites.
Pinsof might say that the podcast is not an instrument of public enlightenment; it is an alliance engine and a tool for coalitional warfare. Podhoretz does not talk into a microphone to correct the record out of a disinterested love for accuracy. He does it to signal solidarity with his specific subset of the elite—the anti-populist, neoconservative, and right-of-center intellectual class. By spend hours every week mocking the cognitive biases and “lunacy” of his cultural rivals, he provides his listeners with the vocabulary they need to feel morally and intellectually superior. It is a premium product designed to build a tribe and protect a media market share.
A major theme in Podhoretz’s commentary is the blindness of modern progressives. He argues that left-wing institutions—universities, the New York Times, Hollywood—suffer from a total detachment from reality, driven by ideological bubbles and confirmation bias. He frames his own commentary as a necessary corrective to these elite delusions.
Pinsof might say that Podhoretz uses the language of cognitive bias as a weapon to delegitimize his enemies. By claiming that progressives are blinded by an ideological virus, he avoids having to acknowledge that his opponents are actually rational actors fighting for their own group interests, resources, and control of the state. It is much more advantageous to call your rival “delusional” or “brained-washed” than to admit he is a savvy competitor. Podhoretz plays the exact game Pinsof describes: he frames a raw power struggle as a mental error on the part of his opponents, positioning himself as the sane arbiter who sees the world clearly.
When Donald Trump captured the Republican Party, Podhoretz found himself in a complex position—often critical of Trump’s populist base and manners, yet deeply hostile to the Democratic left. He frequently blamed Trump’s rise on the ignorance of voters or the failure of the media to properly explain the dangers of populism.
Pinsof might say that the horror that old-guard conservative intellectuals felt toward Trumpism was not a high-minded defense of institutional norms. It was a panic over a loss of professional utility. In the pre-Trump GOP, politicians relied on intellectuals like the Podhoretzes to provide the white papers, the ideological justifications, and the moral framing for state power.
Trump bypassed the intellectual class entirely, proving that voters did not care about elite conservative theory; they wanted direct, raw, zero-sum coalitional combat. Podhoretz’s complaints about the “degradation” of the conservative movement were a rational reaction to his class being made redundant. When he laments the “misunderstandings” of populism, he is really lamenting that the masses stopped buying his product, forcing him to spend his career studying and critiquing the very hole his own media ecosystem helped dig.