Matthew Lee Welch is born July 31, 1968 in Bellflower, California, and grows up in Long Beach. He attends UC Santa Barbara and leaves without a degree. Through his mother, Mary Bobbitt Townsend, he descends from Rear Admiral Hugo Osterhaus.
In the early 1990s Welch moves to Central Europe and stays five years. In Prague he co-founds Prognosis, an early English-language paper in the post-communist region. He reports from Slovakia for UPI. He manages the Budapest Business Journal. These countries are emerging from forty years of party discipline, press control, and official fiction. Welch watches how state rhetoric and lived conditions diverge. He sees an entire intellectual class servicing a consensus that turns out rotten. He sees how ordinary people read between the lines of public speech.
Where most American commentators treat official language literally, Welch keeps a second channel open. He listens for the gap between what a policy claims and what it does, between the emergency justification and the permanent apparatus the emergency creates. He arrives at libertarianism as a reflex learned in countries where deference to authority had cost too much.
He returns to the United States in the late 1990s. He writes for Tabloid.Net alongside Tim Blair and Ken Layne. He contributes to the Online Journalism Review. He researches the humanitarian toll of UN sanctions on Iraq, an early sign of his interest in the hidden costs of moral foreign policy. From 2006 to 2007 he serves as assistant editorial pages editor at the Los Angeles Times. By temperament he belongs to the first cohort of American writers who hope the web might loosen legacy control over opinion. That hope shapes his voice: conversational, cross-linked, skeptical of professional decorum, at home with argument rather than pronouncement.
His first book appears in 2007. McCain: The Myth of a Maverick takes apart the central claim of John McCain’s public identity, that McCain stands apart from party orthodoxy as a principled independent. Welch reads McCain as a coherent statist, a believer in “national greatness” politics who wants to use federal power to discipline American life into virtue. Welch sees a tendency the Republican party rarely admits to itself, a love of state power when the state performs honor and muscle. When Trumpism arrives in 2016, the libertarians who had watched the McCain side of the GOP with unease recognize the earlier diagnosis.
In 2008 Welch joins Reason magazine. He serves as editor-in-chief until 2016 and continues as editor-at-large and columnist. Reason gives him the rarest resource an American opinion writer can find, a stable institution built for people misaligned with both coalitions. He edits a magazine that prints arguments against the drug war, against foreign intervention, against licensing regimes, against moral panics on the right and bureaucratic overreach on the left. He writes cover essays on Rand Paul, Gary Johnson, Hillary Clinton, and Donald Trump. In 2011 he co-authors The Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What’s Wrong With America with Nick Gillespie. This book argues the two-party system has calcified into a duopoly that serves neither liberty nor competence, and that the new political energy lives outside party loyalty.
After joining Reason, Welch drops rhetorical heat. He treats issues as tradeoffs rather than moral emergencies. He assumes his reader can handle complexity without cues telling him how to feel. Most political writers of the period rely on escalation to produce engagement. Moral urgency drives reach. A writer who makes readers feel implicated and righteous builds mass. A writer who makes readers feel informed and slightly amused builds something smaller and more durable.
During the Covid years Welch writes against emergency powers, shifting public health guidance, school closures, vaccine mandates, and the suppression of dissenting scientific voices. He does so without endorsing the populist countermove, the claim that Covid was a hoax or that vaccines were poison. He tracks how temporary authority hardens into permanent apparatus, how expert consensus enforces itself through social punishment rather than argument, how the administrative state expands under cover of crisis. His Covid writing belongs to an older liberal tradition more interested in procedure than in outcomes. Welch wants to know who is deciding, on what authority, with what sunset, reviewable by whom.
Since 2016 Welch co-hosts The Fifth Column with Kmele Foster and Michael Moynihan. The podcast gives him a format print cannot offer. Long, discursive conversations let him connect media criticism, foreign policy, historical reference, and cultural observation across a single evening. The show also places him inside a small heterodox circuit, a set of writers and broadcasters who fit poorly in progressive or MAGA lanes and who talk to each other partly because they have fewer other homes.
Welch’s libertarianism is urban, cosmopolitan, antiwar. It is hostile to police power, to nationalism, to bureaucratic expansion, and to the use of the state for socially conservative ends. It sits uneasily with Chamber of Commerce libertarianism, which often cares more about tax rates than civil liberties. It sits equally uneasily with right-populist anti-statism, which critiques the administrative state while cheering executive power exercised by the right team. Welch’s version draws from his Central European decade, from Cold War liberal anti-totalitarianism, and from the early-web culture of procedural open argument.
He respects Orwell’s attention to political language. He carries a journalist’s loyalty to Mencken and Liebling. He shares the Cold War liberal tradition of Isaiah Berlin and Karl Popper without quoting them often. His intellectual kin inside contemporary libertarianism include Nick Gillespie, Virginia Postrel, and Katherine Mangu-Ward.
The dry tone signals that political judgment requires distance from tribal emotion. Reliance on tradeoffs rather than denunciations assumes most public questions have real costs on both sides. The irony implies that anyone too certain has stopped thinking.
Welch corrects errors. He punctures inflation. He supplies counter-evidence. He has no movement and leads no faction. In a media system that rewards mobilization, this caps his power while stabilizing his credibility. He has a long career, a stable institutional home, a recognizable voice, and a readership of readers rather than followers.
Levinson and Balkin give Welch’s Covid and war-on-terror writing a constitutional architecture he rarely spells out. Welch writes case by case against AUMF creep, emergency public health orders, surveillance authorities, and the administrative state’s habit of converting temporary powers into permanent apparatus. Levinson and Balkin show this is the American pattern since Lincoln. Presidents ask for emergency powers during a crisis. Congress hands them over. The powers never expire. Lawyers later read them broadly. A subsequent president inherits the expanded toolkit and adds to it. The authors call this “constitutional dictatorship” and argue the United States has been building it steadily since the 1940s. The paper supplies the depth Welch cannot.
Their concept of “governing through emergency” explains Welch’s target. Presidents use crisis framing to route around ordinary political resistance. When the first crisis fades, they find another. Levinson and Balkin call this a presidential Ponzi scheme. Welch spends his career documenting individual instances of it: the sanctions regime against Iraq, the Patriot Act, the surveillance statutes, the lockdown machinery, the bank bailouts.
The paper’s account of distributed dictatorship sharpens another Welch preoccupation. Unreviewable discretion no longer sits with a single strongman. It sits with the Federal Reserve chair, the CDC director, the NSA head, and a network of agencies staffed by career officials who answer to almost no one between elections. Welch’s procedural liberalism, his preoccupation with who decides and under what rules, follows from this structural fact.
Stephen Turner on Carl Friedrich supplies the sociology Welch needs. Friedrich, a Harvard power broker, built a career arguing that bureaucratic elites were different from old elites because they shared “the instinct of workmanship” with the common man. Turner shows this was a rhetorical trick. The bureaucracy Friedrich championed governed through what he called the “rule of anticipated reactions,” that is, through discretion exercised quietly, with attention only to which moves might provoke pushback. Welch writes about official class behavior all the time. He rarely names the move Turner identifies. The priestly class calls itself democratic because its instincts align with progress, expertise, and public health. It then runs the country through discretionary measures that require no consent.
Turner also explains why Welch keeps running into a wall. Friedrich’s successors set the terms of respectable opinion. Those terms treat procedural skepticism toward administrative power as cynicism, bad faith, or populist contamination. Welch’s dry tone and refusal of moral theater read as unseriousness inside that tradition.
Pareto argued that ideologies (derivations) shift constantly while the sentiments (residues) beneath them stay stable. When you meet an ideology, you look for the underlying sentiment and the group that shares it. This is close to Welch’s working method, learned the hard way in post-communist Prague and Budapest. The words “freedom,” “safety,” “public health,” and “democracy” travel in his columns as derivations whose stability he distrusts. He looks for the sentiment underneath, usually coalition interest or class self-protection.
Pareto’s circulation of elites also places Welch in his niche. He is not a lion. He cannot mobilize force. He is also not quite a fox, because foxes rise inside the governing class. He is outside talent of a kind Pareto thought elites must absorb if they want to survive. The late-Roman foxes who rule American media and policy will not absorb him. His Central European schooling, his anti-war instincts, his refusal of moral intensity, and his dry style all make him the wrong shape for the governing class. Such figures remain visible and ignored. History vindicates them when the current elite falls.
Under-theorized, Welch fills the gap with convenient beliefs. He diagnoses individual episodes. The papers supply the frameworks that would let him diagnose the system producing the episodes. He never reaches for those frameworks.
Welch writes as if exposing the gap between official rhetoric and lived reality were the central task of political journalism. Pareto showed a century ago that the gap is permanent, that derivations shift while residues stay stable, that coalitions generate the ideological cover they need and discard it when fashions change. A Paretian would not be surprised that “freedom” served the left in 2024 and the right in 2016, that public health became a loyalty test, that free speech migrated across coalitions. A Paretian would treat these as normal. Welch treats them as betrayals of principle. Principles play a big role in political rhetoric and almost no role in political reality.
The Fifth Column format amplifies the problem. Three hosts drinking and talking produces camaraderie, not inquiry. The show rewards the quick diagnosis and the witty framing, not the sustained theoretical read that would require silence, disagreement, and boredom. Welch has the raw intelligence and discipline for deeper work but the format does not ask it of him and the audience does not demand it.
Welch belongs to a heterodox professional-managerial circuit that includes Moynihan, Foster, Bari Weiss, the Free Press orbit, and the adjacent Substackers. The circuit rewards procedural liberalism, cosmopolitan taste, hostility to both MAGA and progressive excess, and a careful distance from anyone who names groups as groups. Welch does not write about tribalism as a permanent feature of human behavior. He does not write about group differences in outcomes. He does not write about the class interests of his own circle.
The Central European decade gave Welch better instincts than most American journalists of his generation. He saw up close what bureaucratic lying does to a society. Those instincts carry him a long way. They do not carry him as far as sustained theoretical reading would. He uses his biography as a substitute for the reading.
Matt Welch spent the pandemic tracking the collapse of expertise into authority. He logged the reversals on masks, the selective exemption of lockdown rules for the George Floyd protests, the retracted Lancet paper on hydroxychloroquine, the demonization of anyone who asked a question.
Most of what Welch said about expert reversals, selective enforcement, and media credulity turned out correct. The framework asks a different question. What does it cost him to say those things, and what would it cost him to say the opposite?
Turner writes as an academic, using Schmitt and Agamben and Habermas to frame the pandemic as a revelation of the naked state. Welch writes as a reporter, using discrepancy and hypocrisy as his tools. Neither man gets a view from nowhere. Turner acknowledges this more than Welch does. The academic form gives Turner the grammar to describe his own position. The podcast form does not give Welch the same grammar, and the libertarian coalition does not reward its use.
Welch saw the pandemic because his coalition rewarded seeing the pandemic. On topics where the coalition rewards not seeing, Welch sees less. The libertarian ecosystem he inhabits has its own convenient beliefs, its own hero system, its own tacit codes, its own status hierarchy.
Welch writes as if he stands outside the bureaucratic apparatus and describes it. Weber’s framework treats him as an agent inside a different principal-agent structure. Reason Foundation is his principal. Fifth Column subscribers are his principal. The libertarian donor class is his principal. He operates under Friedrich’s rule of anticipated reaction like any bureaucrat. He avoids positions that cost him status, income, or protection within his coalition.
The skittle boy image captures something the earlier framework missed. The Tsar could knock down all nine pins, but then had to set them up again himself. Welch spends his career knocking down nine. The administrative state. The public health apparatus. The progressive cultural machine. The drug warriors. The hawks. The media establishment. The tenured priesthood. The regulatory commissions. The NGO-governmental complex. He does not want to set them up again. He does not want Trump to set them up again.
Turner and Mazur call this position untenable. There is no practical alternative to setting them up again, which appears to the critic class as a new tyranny. The choice falls between a bureaucratic status group that cannot reform from inside, and a populist the coalition-maintaining elite will call a tyrant. Welch calls Trump a tyrant. He has done so for years. He does so while documenting the pseudo-constitutional apparatus that produced Trump.
The heterodox libertarian position after 2016 is the critique without the remedy. You can have the critique or you can have the populist correction. You cannot have the critique while a majority of voters pick the remedy you find distasteful.
The pseudo-constitutionalism concept names what Welch has been criticizing for twenty years. The 1905 Russian settlement created councils with vague powers and diverse membership that obscured responsibility. American governance through delegation to commissions, NGOs, academic expert panels, scientific advisory bodies, and quasi-private accrediting organizations follows the same logic. Welch sees this. What he sees less is that his own side runs on the same template. Reason Foundation is a 501(c)(3). The Fifth Column is a Patreon network. The heterodox podcast ecosystem functions as an NGO apparatus by another name. Donors fund it. Elections do not check it. It produces expert-style commentary that serves its coalition’s interests.
Who does Welch rely on for status, income, and protection?
The Reason Foundation sits at the base. Reason magazine pays him as editor at large. The foundation runs on donor money, with Koch-network money prominent in its history alongside smaller libertarian funders and reader contributions. Welch edited the magazine from 2008 to 2016 and stayed on as a continuing presence after stepping down.
The Fifth Column is the second pillar. The podcast runs on Patreon subscriptions and advertising. Kmele Foster and Michael Moynihan share the income stream and the audience. The three men cross-promote each other’s work, appear on each other’s platforms, and vouch for each other in the broader heterodox media ecosystem.
The speaking circuit rewards the same voice. Reason events, libertarian conferences, free-speech organizations, heterodox intellectual gatherings. Book royalties for his past work on McCain and on the Obama administration. Guest appearances on other podcasts in the adjacent network. Bari Weiss’s Free Press. Glenn Loury. Coleman Hughes. Yascha Mounk. Nick Gillespie.
Protection runs through the same channels. Reason defends its own. The Fifth Column hosts defend each other. The broader heterodox network closes ranks when one of its members comes under attack from either the progressive left or the populist right.
Who does Welch need to attract or retain as allies?
The libertarian donor class. The Reason Foundation’s continued health depends on men and women who write checks because they want Reason to exist. Welch does not fundraise. He produces the product that justifies the fundraising.
The Fifth Column audience. Heterodox liberals, libertarian-curious readers, lapsed progressives, free-speech absolutists, anti-woke moderates, drug-policy reformers. The audience pays monthly. The audience can leave monthly.
The adjacent heterodox network. Weiss, Loury, Hughes, Taibbi, Greenwald, Moynihan, Foster, Gillespie, Welch. Mutual citation, mutual guesting, mutual defense. A writer who loses standing in this network loses access to the cross-promotion that sustains small-audience media work. The network polices itself through invitation and disinvitation.
The legacy press contacts from his earlier career. Welch has worked in mainstream journalism. He has contacts at major outlets. He can still place columns and get quoted. This access depends on remaining a recognizable type of commentator. A heterodox libertarian who still sounds like a journalist. Not a MAGA partisan. Not a progressive true believer.
What beliefs and signals mark membership in his coalition?
Free speech absolutism. Drug legalization as a foundational commitment. Skepticism of the administrative state. Opposition to foreign wars, with the Iraq War as settled case and subsequent wars as ongoing scandal. Anti-woke without being conservative on culture. Pro-immigration. Cosmopolitan rather than nationalist. Mockery of both party establishments, with the proportions adjusting by month. Hostility to the pandemic response. Hostility to media credulity. Hostility to academic orthodoxy.
The cultural signals matter as much as the positions. Brooklyn. Punk rock. Jazz. Czech-language credibility from his Prague years. References to figures the coalition respects. Hitchens. Orwell. Mencken. Thomas Szasz. Friedrich Hayek at arm’s length. The signals mark him as not-MAGA, not-progressive, not-conservative, not-establishment.
The tonal signals matter too. Exasperated amusement. The raised eyebrow. The dry aside. The refusal to sound sincere about anything except free speech and drug policy. Earnestness is suspect. Irony is the house voice. A writer who started sounding earnest about Trump’s virtues or progressive policies would sound wrong in the room.
The tacit codes run deeper. Do not endorse candidates. Treat Trump as a threat to liberal order while documenting the apparatus that produced him. Treat progressive excesses as the more immediate cultural danger without quite saying so. Never sound like you are rooting for either party. Keep the drug war central. Treat every speech-suppression case as a canary. Mock the bien pensants but do not join the populists.
What would Welch have to give up if he changed his public position?
Suppose Welch began writing that the pandemic response was roughly correct, that the experts did their best under uncertainty, that the media got the big picture right, that Trump is the larger threat to the republic than the administrative state, and that libertarianism has been a dead letter since 2008. The costs come in stages.
The Fifth Column audience would leave in waves. Subscribers pay for a voice. The voice includes positions. Changing the voice ends the subscription relationship. Foster and Moynihan would face a choice. Either follow Welch or part from him. Most likely they would part from him. The show would continue without him or with him diminished.
Reason would face an awkward internal conversation. An editor at large who no longer holds recognizably Reason positions is no longer useful to Reason. The foundation does not fire people for thinking. It does quietly let relationships lapse. The byline would appear less. The title might persist for a while as a courtesy. The income stream would thin.
The heterodox network would cool. Weiss, Taibbi, Greenwald, Loury, Hughes. The invitations would decline. Not through exclusion exactly. Through the slow loss of relevance to the conversations the network wants to have. A man who sounds like The Atlantic does not get booked on the shows that define themselves against The Atlantic.
The legacy press contacts would not make up the difference. A former Reason editor who has come around to mainstream liberal positions is a modest addition to a crowded field. The New York Times already has David French and Michelle Goldberg. The Atlantic already has its stable. There is no premium slot waiting.
The status loss would hurt most. Welch occupies a specific position in the heterodox intellectual hierarchy. He is a respected elder. He has been doing this longer than most. He has the books. He has the shows. He has the contacts. The position comes from being the heterodox libertarian he is. The position does not transfer to a different identity. A sixty-year-old journalist restarting from a new coalition position does not arrive at an equivalent status in the new coalition. He arrives as a newcomer with a suspect history.
Belonging is the quiet cost. Welch’s professional life is built around men who share his frame. The meals, the green rooms, the conferences, the text threads, the casual citation of shared premises. These relationships run on the shared frame. Changing the frame strains the relationships. Some survive. Most thin.
Welch’s career runs on the premise that exposing hypocrisy, documenting reversals, and holding up better evidence produces political change. The premise does not survive Pinsof’s essay intact.
Take Welch’s pandemic work. His columns and podcast segments treat the expert failures as things the public should see through once the reversals are laid out in sequence. The mask guidance changed. The Floyd-protest exemption contradicted the lockdown logic. The hydroxychloroquine studies got retracted. Fauci shifted positions. Welch documents these with care and wit. The implicit theory is that a sufficiently clear record produces political correction. This fails. The public health apparatus did not act out of confusion. It acted out of coalition interest. Its defenders did not misunderstand the contradictions. They accepted the contradictions because accepting them was the price of coalition membership.
The drug war case shows the pattern over longer time. Reason has been producing evidence against drug prohibition for fifty years. The evidence is overwhelming and has been overwhelming for decades. Prohibition persists. Pinsof’s framework says this persistence is the expected outcome. Prohibition serves the interests of the coalitions that benefit from it: police unions, prison systems, pharmaceutical lobbies, moral-conservative voters, parents who want a legal hammer against their children’s drug use. None of these groups holds its position because it has not yet read the Reason archives.
The Fifth Column format embodies the myth at its purest. Three men with different political starting points sit around microphones and work through contested questions by talking. The show’s premise is that careful dialogue across difference produces clarity. The audience pays for this performance. What the performance delivers is coalition maintenance for a specific subculture: heterodox liberals, drifting libertarians, anti-woke moderates. The three hosts do not arrive at clarity through dialogue. They arrive at the positions their shared coalition already holds. The dialogue is the theater. The coalition is the structure.
The heterodox positioning that sustains Welch’s career depends on the misunderstanding myth in a sharper way. The whole premise of heterodox media is that partisans on left and right are trapped in coalition confusion, and only the heterodox see. Pinsof denies the premise. Neither side is confused. Both pursue their coalition interests with adequate self-knowledge. The heterodox media class is its own coalition with its own interests, its own donors, its own audience, its own status hierarchy. Its members pretend to occupy a view from nowhere. The pretense is the product.
The irony tone reinforces the myth. Welch’s characteristic exasperated amusement assumes the audience recognizes what he is pointing out. The affect says: can you believe these people are doing this? The question presumes the viewer shares his frame and is not the target of the critique. The tone is a coalition filter. Outsiders hear smugness. Insiders hear the pleasure of shared recognition. The work signals membership in a coalition that flatters itself on seeing through the confusions of lesser coalitions, while remaining unable to see its own position as a coalition at all.
What does Welch gets from holding the myth? Welch gets a career. He gets the Fifth Column audience. He gets Reason’s continued patronage. He gets the adjacent heterodox network. He gets the sense of himself as a man who sees what others miss. All of this rests on the premise that careful communication across coalition lines matters. Abandon the premise and the career has no justification.
Welch’s career is built on the fiction that careful reasoning about AUMFs, surveillance authorities, and emergency powers might persuade someone. Persuasion is not what arguing is for. People argue to recruit allies, signal loyalty, lower rivals, and cover the coalition work underneath. If that is right, Welch is the man who shows up to a knife fight carrying an annotated bibliography. He brings the wrong tool because he believes the tool works.
Welch watched post-communist societies dismantle state lies and assumed the lesson was that careful public reasoning could prevent the return of official fiction. Not exactly. The Soviet cover stories collapsed because the coalition enforcing them collapsed, not because someone out-argued them. When the new American coalitions hardened after 9/11 and again during Covid, Welch’s careful arguments did almost nothing to slow them. The arguments were not the mechanism. Coalition strength was.
The public break with Megyn Kelly now reads as pseudoargument. The hosts did not engage Kelly’s positions. They announced that her positions had become embarrassing to be associated with. This is what arguing is, most of the time. A status move that lowers the target and raises the speaker, dressed up in the language of principle. The Fifth Column did not out-argue Kelly. They moved her from the coalition of respectable people to the coalition of people who must be kept at distance. The move protects their own status inside the prestige-adjacent heterodox circuit. The “disappointment” language is the cover story. Naked coalition management looks ugly. Principled disappointment looks dignified.
This also explains why Welch has made peace with high credibility and low power. Pinsof says to be persuaded is to concede intellectual inferiority, which is why arguments in coalition fights are designed to prevent persuasion rather than enable it. Welch’s opponents have no incentive to let his arguments land. Landing his argument would lower their coalition’s standing. They are not going to do that, no matter how careful his reasoning is.
Welch writes columns. Columns present themselves as mini-arguments. Pinsof says arguing is mostly bullshit. If he is right, then the column form is a bullshit form, no matter how honest the columnist. The form requires the writer to pretend that reasoning in public is the mechanism by which public affairs adjust. It is not the mechanism. Coalitions are the mechanism. A columnist who understood this would either stop writing columns, switch to coalition analysis, or keep writing columns while knowing that the visible activity is a cover story for the coalition work the columns perform.
Welch cannot go deeper without losing his career. To descend from the level of argument to the level of coalition analysis would require Welch to say, in public, that his friends and allies are doing coalition work rather than careful reasoning, and that he is too. That move would cost him his standing inside his own coalition. People never make this move unless they have already exited the coalition that would punish them for it. Welch has not exited. The Fifth Column, Reason, the heterodox circuit, the Substack-adjacent audience, all of them reward the careful-reasoning pose and punish the coalition-analysis move. Welch stays inside the frame his readers require.
Welch presents as the man who pays the cost of inconvenient belief and survives. He sits outside the major coalitions. He criticizes wars Republicans want and surveillance Democrats want. He writes against lockdowns without joining the hoax caucus.
Welch holds the convenient beliefs of a specific coalition. The coalition is smaller than the two majors, which lets him feel like an outsider. The coalition is the cosmopolitan professional-managerial heterodox circuit that includes Reason, the Free Press orbit, the Fifth Column listenership, and the Substack-adjacent commentariat. Inside that coalition, Welch’s positions are not costly. They are the price of admission. Suspicion of state power, contempt for moral panics, irritation with progressive enforcement, wariness of populist enthusiasm, procedural liberalism, cultural permissiveness, antiwar instincts, skepticism toward public health overreach. Every one of these is the correct view inside his circuit. Holding them earns him standing. Holding them lets him appear on the right podcasts, publish in the right places, and receive the right invitations. Welch’s beliefs are exactly what his coalition wants him to hold.
The test of an inconvenient belief is whether holding it would cost you your coalition. Apply the test to Welch. What belief would he have to adopt that would cost him the Fifth Column, Reason, and the heterodox circuit? The list is short. Tribalism is a permanent feature of human life rather than a mistake to be educated away. Groups differ in outcomes because groups differ in traits, not only because of environments and injustices. American assimilation is partial and uneven rather than inevitable and complete. Cosmopolitan procedural liberalism is a local product of a Protestant-derived culture rather than a universal default. Immigration policy has biological as well as economic implications. The professional-managerial class is a class with interests rather than a meritocratic assemblage of competent individuals. Civil-libertarian proceduralism may have structural limits when dealing with coordinated asymmetric threats. Welch does not write about any of these. Not because he has examined them and rejected them. Because the coalition that sustains him cannot afford him to.
Welch’s intellectual map is a map of what his coalition can pay for, not a map of what the evidence supports. The blank-slate-adjacent assumptions his writing rests on are load-bearing for his circuit. If he dropped them, he would lose the circuit.
The Central European decade looks different through this frame. Welch watched one coalition’s convenient beliefs collapse and be replaced by another coalition’s convenient beliefs. Post-communist societies did not move from falsehood to truth. They moved from one set of coordination devices to another. Welch read the lesson as vindication of his proto-libertarian instincts. Turner would read it as an ordinary cycle. The institutional collapse briefly lowered the price of deviation. A new coalition formed. The new coalition generated its own convenient beliefs, built its own institutions, and raised the price of deviation again. Welch mistook a cyclical reset for progress toward truth.
Welch believes his libertarianism because he reasoned his way to it. The Reason coalition around him believes the same thing about its own positions. Every member of the coalition experiences coalition-maintained belief as independent reasoning.
Welch’s style makes this worse rather than better. The dry skeptical voice, the refusal of moral theater, the ironic distance from hysteria, all of it performs the buffered self more convincingly than the hotter voices around him. Moynihan gets excited. Foster gets didactic. Welch keeps the ironic temperature low. The effect is to signal that he is reasoning rather than performing loyalty. Inside Turner’s frame, this is the most effective form of loyalty performance available. The coalition that rewards apparent independence rewards Welch more than it rewards his co-hosts.
The expert-led social engineering taboo catches Welch partially. He is better than most mainstream commentators on this question. He notices administrative state overreach. He writes about the failures of technocratic confidence. He is willing to say that complex systems defeat top-down control. This is one place where his circuit’s convenient beliefs happen to align with evidence. But notice what he does not do. He does not extend the insight to his own class. He does not write about how the cosmopolitan professional-managerial class generates failure as a structural byproduct of overreach. He criticizes the administrative state without criticizing the class that staffs and populates it, which is his own.
The biological variation taboo catches Welch completely. He does not touch it. Reason does not touch it seriously. The Fifth Column does not touch it. The heterodox professional-managerial circuit does not touch it, with rare exceptions that are quickly punished. Welch has spent forty years arguing about policy questions whose answers depend heavily on empirical claims about human variation, and he has never seriously engaged the empirical literature on human variation. The silence is coalition-enforced.
The private man is more thoughtful than the public performer. Welch knows better than to say the cliches he utters publicly.
Truth becomes briefly less expensive during institutional failure. The current American moment is one of partial institutional collapse. Major newspapers are losing their grip. Academic credentialing is losing its prestige. Public health authorities are losing trust. Intelligence agencies are losing legitimacy. The cost of deviation from elite convenient beliefs has dropped. A writer with Welch’s training could use the window to push further than his coalition has previously permitted. The question is whether he will. The new coalition forming in the wreckage will have its own convenient beliefs. Welch will attach to the version of the new coalition closest to his existing one. The prestige-adjacent heterodox circuit, now rebranded, will continue to reward him for holding the beliefs it already rewards him for holding.
Welch sorts the world into enemies. The public health establishment. The cancellation apparatus. The drug warriors. The hawks. The regulatory state. The tenured academic orthodoxy. The credulous establishment press. The populist right and its tariff-friendly economic program. The coalition coheres around shared hostility to these targets. Shared enemies as more load-bearing than shared positive programs. The Fifth Column audience does not agree on what to build. It agrees on what to oppose. The agreement on opposition is what holds the coalition together. A listener who stopped hating the right set of targets would stop being the show’s listener.
The enemies within the adjacent coalitions sharpen the point. Welch’s network has internal fights. Libertarians who went MAGA. Libertarians who went full anti-Trump. Heterodox liberals who drifted back to mainstream progressivism. Free-speech absolutists who softened on specific cases. Each of these defections produces commentary inside the coalition about who is still inside and who has left. The commentary is coalition maintenance. It tells remaining members where the boundaries run. Welch participates in these boundary-policing conversations on the Fifth Column and elsewhere. The participation is normal coalition behavior.
The moral vocabulary Welch uses carries the coalition’s signature. Words like authoritarianism, moral panic, moral entrepreneurship, censorship-industrial complex, expert failure, credentialism, rent-seeking, regulatory capture, status anxiety. Using the vocabulary marks the speaker as inside the coalition. Welch uses it fluently because he has been using it for thirty years.
Alliance Theory predicts the shape of Welch’s blind spots. He sees coalition behavior when other coalitions do it. He sees the progressive cultural coalition enforcing orthodoxy. He sees the MAGA coalition enforcing loyalty to Trump. He sees the public health coalition defending its members against criticism. He does not see, with anything like the same clarity, his own coalition doing the same work. The Fifth Column enforces its own orthodoxies. Reason enforces its own orthodoxies. The heterodox media network enforces its own orthodoxies.
The theory also predicts which of Welch’s positions will hold and which might bend. Positions the coalition rewards will hold even when evidence shifts. Positions the coalition is indifferent to might bend with evidence. Positions the coalition penalizes will not develop even when evidence supports them. Welch’s free-speech absolutism is load-bearing for the coalition. It will not bend. His drug legalization is load-bearing. It will not bend. His anti-tariff commitments align with the libertarian donor class. They will not bend. His positions on topics the coalition is less invested in will prove more mobile.
Welch lived for years in Czechoslovakia and Slovakia. His wife is French. He has spoken publicly about using French healthcare and finding it adequate or better than American alternatives. His position on healthcare is not derived from libertarian principle applied to the healthcare sector. It is derived from his life experience.
The belief system is not a unified philosophy that a man works out and then applies to each policy question. The belief system is a package of positions a coalition holds, and members absorb the package because the package is what the coalition pays them to hold. The package has internal contradictions because it was not built by a logician. It was built by the accumulated preferences of the men and women the coalition needs to retain. The contradictions are invisible from inside because coalition members do not inspect their own package.
The convenience is the coalition fit. The shallowness is the absence of any underlying system that would require the positions to cohere. Welch is not shallow as a man. He is well-read, seasoned, and sharp in his observation of rival coalitions. The belief system does not have depth because it does not need depth to do its work. It needs only to mark membership, signal enemies, and reward allies. Depth would be a luxury the coalition does not require and might not survive. A worked-out libertarianism would strip out the positions the coalition depends on for its class coherence. The worked-out version would be unpopular inside the coalition. The package version is what the coalition wants. The package version is what Welch supplies.
The same framework applies to most of Welch’s adjacent network. Glenn Greenwald the civil libertarian who supports Lula. Matt Taibbi the populist critic who keeps his Vermont distance from the populists. Bari Weiss the heterodox journalist who runs CBS News and the Free Press, a venture-funded institution with an ideological shape. Michael Moynihan the anti-extremist who keeps specific extremists off-limits from his mockery. Each case shows the package rather than the philosophy. Humans do not hold philosophies. Humans hold packages.
Thinkers do not just occupy intellectual environments. They build them. The environment rewards certain traits. Those traits build more of that environment. Later entrants are selected for fitness inside the constructed niche. The niche hardens. The thinkers inside it become specialists. They lose the ability to survive outside it because they have been shaped by and have shaped the niche.
Welch’s niche is the cosmopolitan heterodox-libertarian professional-managerial circuit. It was constructed over several decades by a small set of institutions and personalities. Reason magazine anchors it. The Cato Institute provides its policy wing. The libertarian-adjacent wing of the legal academy gives it credentialed support. The Fifth Column provides conversation. The Free Press and parts of Substack give it a newer media layer. Adjacent figures at places like the Atlantic, New York magazine, and the New York Times op-ed page provide permeable boundaries with prestige media. The niche has its own vocabulary, its own reference points, its own inside jokes, its own enemies, its own pantheon.
Welch did not simply enter this niche. He helped build it. The McCain book, the Declaration of Independents, the editorship of Reason, the co-hosting of the Fifth Column, the relationships with Gillespie and Mangu-Ward and Suderman, all of it is niche construction work. Every essay he wrote made the niche a little more hospitable to writers like him. Every podcast episode reinforced the conversational norms the niche would reward. Every hire at Reason selected for the traits the niche needed.
Welch’s traits fit his niche almost perfectly. The dry style, the irreverent tone, the procedural liberalism, the antiwar instincts, the suspicion of panic, the cosmopolitan references, the Central European seasoning, the irony-forward stance. Every one of these traits is exactly what the niche rewards. This is co-construction. Welch’s traits made the niche. The niche then selected for more writers with those traits. The writers who joined reinforced the traits Welch already had. Over time Welch and the niche became so tightly matched that no other habitat could sustain him.
Niche construction also explains the niche’s durability and its limits. The niche is durable because it has been built out across multiple institutions, audiences, and formats. It has its own reproduction system. Young writers enter Reason as interns, absorb the niche’s norms, move to adjacent outlets, bring new readers into the niche, and eventually take editorial positions where they hire more writers with the same traits. The niche reproduces itself the way any constructed environment reproduces itself, by shaping the organisms that depend on it so that they continue to maintain it.
The niche has limits because it was constructed to solve certain problems at a certain moment. It was built in the 1990s and early 2000s to house writers who were too antiwar for the right and too anti-state for the left, too cosmopolitan for the Chamber of Commerce libertarians and too procedural for the populists. The niche solved the homelessness problem for a particular generation of writers. It was never designed to handle the problems that became central after 2015. Tribalism as a permanent feature of human behavior. Group differences in outcomes. The limits of assimilation. The biological basis of variation. The class interests of the professional-managerial stratum. The structural rather than ideological sources of elite failure. The niche did not evolve to process any of these. It was built to fight the last war, which was the war against post-Cold War technocratic confidence and post-9/11 emergency-state expansion.
Constructed niches can become traps. Beavers are magnificent inside their ponds and helpless outside them. If the pond drains, the beaver does not adapt. The beaver dies. Welch’s niche is draining. Reason is smaller than it used to be. The Fifth Column exists but does not grow the way it once did. The heterodox circuit has fractured as younger writers moved toward either the post-liberal right or the populist left. The prestige-media outlets that used to treat the niche as an interesting sidebar now treat it as a relic. The audiences that used to listen for sophistication now listen for heat. Welch’s traits are still excellent inside the niche he built. Outside the niche, those traits do not travel well. He cannot go to Tucker Carlson’s audience. He cannot go to the progressive academy. He cannot go to the populist-right magazines.
The frame also illuminates the relationship between Welch and the broader American political ecology. Niches interact. One organism’s construction affects the selection pressures on others. The libertarian heterodox niche that Welch helped build contributed to the construction of adjacent niches that now threaten it. The Free Press emerged partly from the same construction materials and has largely absorbed the audience. The Substack heterodoxy scene has taken over functions Reason used to perform. The podcast-first political commentary genre has taken over functions magazine journalism used to perform. Each of these niches was built partly out of materials Welch and his collaborators laid down. Each of them now out-competes the niche Welch lives in for attention, money, and talent. He helped construct the adaptive landscape that his own niche now loses on.
What Welch helped build is what now gets inherited by younger writers. Virginia Heyer Young, Peter Suderman, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Matt Welch’s podcasting circle, the younger Reason staff, the Free Press young writers who came through adjacent training, all of them inherit an environment that was constructed by a small number of people over roughly twenty-five years. They experience it as the natural habitat of principled heterodox writing. It is not natural. It is constructed.
Welch’s eventual obsolescence is the ordinary fate of niche constructors. The dam gets built. The dam holds for a generation. The water finds another course. The beaver that built the dam cannot build a new one in a new place at the end of its life. The next generation of beavers builds somewhere else, using different materials, for different water. Welch built well. His dam held. The water is moving. The dam will be a feature of the landscape that later writers grew up in and partly shaped them, and also an artifact of a period that has ended.
Welch’s Central European decade is the crossing event. He took an American libertarian inheritance and ran it through Prague, Bratislava, and Budapest at the moment those societies were metabolizing the collapse of one imposed ideology and the construction of another. The crossing produced a version of libertarianism with traits the native American strains lacked. Suspicion of emergency rhetoric, allergy to official language, instinct for the gap between stated purpose and institutional function, comfort with the view that ideologies are mostly cover stories. These traits did not come from Rothbard or Hayek. They came from watching a society try to rebuild while everyone involved knew that everyone else was partly lying. The Babylonian Talmud analogy is not forced. Welch’s sensibility is a diaspora product. His American contemporaries who stayed home and read the same books produced thinner work.
Then the hybrid vigor stopped. Welch returned to the United States in the late 1990s and entered Reason. Reason is a closed breeding population. The staff recruit from a narrow pipeline. The readers self-select for a narrow set of priors. The intellectual inputs are broadly shared across the staff. For twenty-five years Welch has not crossed his formation. He has refined it, polished it, deployed it across new subjects, and transmitted it to younger writers. What he has not done is force it into contact with traditions that would stress it. He has not engaged biological frames. He has not engaged the sociology of knowledge. He has not seriously left critique of capital. He has not engaged right critique of cosmopolitanism. The diaspora sage stopped traveling, got married, reproduced, and stayed safe. The tradition he brought back became a closed system. Inbreeding depression has set in. The deleterious recessives are now expressing themselves. The work is predictable. A reader can guess Welch’s view on any new issue within ten seconds.
The life history theory frame reads Welch’s career strategy. He runs a slow life history inside a fast-life-history industry. Long tenure at a single publication. Deep investment in a small set of professional relationships. Incremental accumulation of craft. Careful maintenance of reputation over decades. Low risk tolerance for the moves that could have expanded his range. Columnists with faster strategies published the incendiary book, took the cable gig, swung for the viral moment, and either flamed out or broke through. Welch did none of this. He stayed at Reason. He co-hosted the Fifth Column. He waited. The slow strategy paid off in credibility and durability. It did not pay off in influence, which is what fast strategies purchase.
The Red Queen hypothesis reads the Fifth Column‘s endless argumentative labor. The show produces weekly episodes in which the hosts run to stay in the same place. The targets change, the takes update, the outrage gets processed, and the coalition’s position inside the heterodox circuit is maintained. Nothing gets built. No theoretical apparatus accumulates. No institutional power gets captured. The labor is defensive. It maintains relative standing against rival podcasts, rival outlets, rival voices in the same audience. The audience listens partly because it also has to run to stay in place. Everyone expends energy to not fall behind. Welch’s columnist labor is the same at a slower frequency. The Red Queen frame explains why forty years of good work has produced so little influence. The work was not designed to accumulate. It was designed to maintain position against competitors who were also maintaining position.
The immune system frame reads Welch’s Covid writing. The American public health apparatus had immune memory of certain historical pathogens: epidemics, quarantine failures, under-regulation of drugs. The memory persisted. When a new pathogen arrived, the immune system mounted a response calibrated to the historical exposures. Welch saw the response as disproportionate, which it was in many particulars. What Welch missed is that disproportionate immune responses are what immune systems do. They are not a failure of reasoning. They are the predictable output of a system shaped by selection to minimize Type I errors at the cost of Type II errors. Welch wrote as if better reasoning could have produced proportionate response. The biological frame predicts that no amount of reasoning would have produced it, because the system is not a reasoning system. It is an immune system with memory.
The superorganism frame reads Welch’s relationship to the administrative state. Welch writes about bureaucratic overreach as if it were a correctable deviation from properly limited government. The frame suggests the administrative state is not a deviation. It is a superorganism performing the functions that superorganisms perform. It maintains homeostasis. It constructs niches. It engages in horizontal gene transfer through the revolving door. It calibrates its immune system to identify threats that justify its continued expansion. Welch’s critique treats the organism as if it could be disciplined through better rules and more public scrutiny. Better rules produce more sophisticated superorganism behavior, because the organism adapts. Welch has been writing variations on the same critique for thirty years while the organism has grown.
Welch has tacit knowledge as a journalist. He has read press releases, watched press conferences, interviewed politicians, edited copy, and written columns for over thirty years. He knows when a story is managed. He knows which officials are lying and which are merely confused. He knows which retractions matter and which do not. He knows how the Washington press pool works because he has worked inside it. Much of what he notices in his pandemic coverage, his media criticism, and his political commentary comes from this accumulated sense. He cannot write it down as a set of rules. A twenty-five-year-old cannot read Welch’s columns and acquire what Welch has. The knowledge lives in him as practice.
The targets of Welch’s criticism run on tacit knowledge too, and Welch often treats their tacit knowledge as if it were something else. The CDC’s pandemic advisories were not mechanical applications of a rulebook. They were the product of committee judgments, informal risk assessments, bureaucratic accommodations, and professional instincts accumulated over careers. Turner’s work on public health describes these documents as boundary objects built through tacit processes. They are not “the science” in the literal sense. They are the negotiated output of a community of practice. Welch sees the failures: the reversals on masks, the selective lockdowns, the retracted Lancet paper. He presents the failures as if they prove the whole enterprise is fraudulent or the whole class of experts incompetent. Turner would say the failures are what tacit expertise looks like when its object is uncertain. The tacit knowledge was operating. The object was too novel for the tacit knowledge to handle. The result was the mess Welch documents. Welch is right about the mess. He is less right when he treats the mess as evidence that the tacit expertise was always a con.
Welch’s own coalition runs on tacit knowledge, and the tacit knowledge is invisible to him. The heterodox media class has a vast body of unwritten rules about what can be said, what tone is permitted, which alliances are acceptable, which guests are welcome, which positions mark the speaker as still inside and which mark him as outside. None of this is in any Reason editorial guide. None of it is in the Fifth Column‘s Patreon page. It lives in the practice of the men and women who produce the work. Welch knows the code so thoroughly that he does not experience it as a code. He experiences it as reasonable judgment about what serves the audience and what does not.
The tacit code of the heterodox class governs. Guests on the Fifth Column are selected by a standard no one has written down. Some heterodox figures are welcome. Some are not. The line is clear to insiders and opaque to outsiders. Coleman Hughes yes, Curtis Yarvin no. Glenn Greenwald yes, Tucker Carlson conditional. Bari Weiss yes in most eras, less so when she strays too farn. The topics that get sustained attention follow a similar code. Drug policy reliably. Speech suppression reliably. Lab-leak origins with appropriate tone. Specific foreign policy questions with the coalition’s preferred framing. Other topics get avoided or handled with care. The tacit knowledge tells Welch and his collaborators where the lines are without requiring them to articulate the lines.
The tacit code also governs tone. The Fifth Column voice is exasperated amusement. It is ironic. It is knowing. It refuses earnestness except about a small set of topics where earnestness is permitted. A guest who comes on and speaks earnestly about, for example, the positive case for progressive institutional reform will be handled differently than a guest who comes on and speaks earnestly about the harms of cancellation. The hosts have internalized which topics take which tone. They do not consult a manual. They operate on sense.
Who checks this tacit knowledge? The answer is no one easily, because tacit knowledge resists external scrutiny. The heterodox media class claims to be the outside check on the expert class. It presents itself as the readers’ corrective to institutional authority. Turner’s framework notes that the heterodox class has its own tacit authority, its own unwritten rules, its own insiders and outsiders, its own way of closing ranks against criticism. A reader who tries to evaluate the Fifth Column from the outside faces the same problem a citizen faces when trying to evaluate the CDC. The tacit knowledge of the practitioners is not fully legible. The reader trusts the heterodox class or rejects it.
Citizens can learn to distrust certain expert claims, support rival centers of expertise, and refuse the collapse of science into authority. Turner supports this modest project. Welch is part of the modest project in practice. He just does not see that his own work runs on the same tacit structure he criticizes in others.
Randall Collins’s Interaction Ritual Chains
The Fifth Column podcast fits Collins’s ritual model. Welch, Foster, and Moynihan gather in a studio. They focus on shared targets. They share a mood of irreverent skepticism. Listeners eavesdrop across a barrier, which heightens the intimacy of the core ritual. The podcast produces emotional energy (EE) for the three hosts and for the listeners who share their sensibility. It charges sacred symbols: free speech, heterodox journalism, skepticism of moral panics, contempt for legacy media piety. The Reason Roundtable with Suderman, Mangu-Ward, Gillespie, and Welch does the same work for libertarian policy symbols on a weekly schedule.
Collins’s concept of emotional energy explains Welch’s career arc better than ideological biography. Welch has moved among ritual venues. LA Times editorial page, Reason print magazine, Fox Business cable show, Twitter, now mostly podcasts. People gravitate toward higher-EE venues and away from lower-EE ones. Welch’s move from cable TV and Twitter toward long-form podcasts tracks this. Cable produces short-burst EE with low sustainability. Twitter produces micro-hits with rapid burnout. Podcasts sustain a richer ritual because they restore mutual focus and extended co-presence.
Deflationary criticism cannot produce high-EE rituals at scale. Collins’s model requires shared sacred symbols for solidarity. The Fifth Column charges symbols of skeptical independence, but the content of those symbols runs anti-ritual. Mockery and irony work well for niche solidarity and badly for mass politics.
Welch’s McCain book shows the problem in compact form. McCain as maverick was a symbol charged by decades of rituals. Sunday show appearances, Senate floor moments, town halls, POW narrative invocations at every campaign stop. Welch’s book was one deflationary intervention against a vast ritual apparatus. It circulated in libertarian circles and shifted nothing in the mainstream charge on the McCain symbol. Only his 2008 loss, his late turn against Trump, and his death drained that symbol, and the draining came from inside the civil religion rather than from outside critique.
Welch lived in Prague and Budapest for eight years starting in the early 1990s. He watched a whole symbolic economy collapse and a new one try to take shape. Communism’s sacred symbols went flat when the rituals that charged them, party meetings, parades, mandatory ideological study, stopped. Market democracy’s symbols tried to acquire charge through new rituals, NATO accession ceremonies, EU negotiations, IMF press conferences, but stayed thin. Welch watched this at close range. His later skepticism about symbolic construction has an empirical basis in that decade.
Welch critiques macro-rituals like Russiagate while building micro-rituals like the podcast. The micro-rituals give him the EE to sustain the macro-critique. The sustainability of his project depends on whether his podcast ritual chain can keep charging the symbols of skeptical independence faster than mainstream rituals can ignore them.
Symbols go flat without regular ritual recharging. The libertarian canon has this problem. Hayek, Friedman, Rand, Nozick. These names once carried high charge for young intellectuals because they circulated through campus rituals, YAF meetings, Cato internships, IHS seminars. The IR density has thinned. The symbols are fading. Welch’s work tries to recharge a smaller set, free speech, procedural fairness, anti-panic skepticism, through podcast rituals.
Welch presents as a journalist documenting what he sees. The presentation conceals an enormous selection operation. Welch’s coalition determines which stories deserve sustained attention. Pandemic reversals yes. Hunter Biden laptop yes. Defense spending with appropriate framing yes. Tariff policy with libertarian framing yes. Other stories get less attention or different framing. The selection is tacit. Welch does not consciously think, “This story fits my coalition’s needs.” He thinks, “This story matters.” What makes a story matter is a coalition judgment he has internalized so thoroughly that he experiences it as perception. The paradox works because he experiences his selection as attention to reality. His audience experiences his selection as attention to reality. The symbiotic deception requires the shared experience.
The unambitious careerist. Welch performs as a man who stumbled into journalism through Prague, kept writing because the work interested him, and ended up at Reason because Reason was where he fit. The performance conceals a substantial career. He has edited a national magazine. He has co-founded one of the more successful opinion podcasts in a crowded field. He has written several books. He has accumulated influence in a professional class. The career is real. The performance of non-ambition makes the career possible. A man who openly pursued a national opinion platform would have had a harder time reaching one. The man who presents as indifferent to the prize gets the prize in his niche.
The sincere cynic. Welch’s tone is exasperated amusement. The voice is ironic, world-weary, knowing. The ironic distance conceals a set of sincere commitments. Free speech. Drug legalization. Opposition to specific wars. The sincerity underneath gives the irony its weight. A purely cynical commentator reads as a troll. A purely earnest commentator reads as a crusader. Welch sits in the spot where the ironic surface protects the earnest core. Both the performer and the audience need both layers at once. If Welch dropped the irony, the sincerity would sound preachy. If he dropped the sincerity, the irony would sound empty.
The individualist who needs a team. Libertarian individualism is the official creed. Welch’s work runs on collective structures. The Fifth Column is a three-man operation. Reason is an institution with donors and editors. The heterodox network is a mutual-defense coalition. The libertarian who preaches self-reliance depends on his collaborators, his employer, his donor base, and his adjacent allies. The dependence is invisible inside the individualist frame. A man who said openly, “My individualism is produced and sustained by a coalition of people who make it possible,” would break the frame. No one in the coalition says this. The frame stays intact because all the members protect it together.
The Prague authenticity. Welch’s biography carries weight inside his coalition. He did not take the Harvard-to-NYT path. He learned Czech. He lived in Central Europe during the post-communist transition. He built a writing career through unusual channels. The biography is real. The biography also functions as a status signal inside the heterodox class, which values the self-made-man narrative and distrusts the Ivy-League-to-elite-media pipeline. Welch’s audience pays partly for the biography.
The coalition-relative character of the charisma matters. Welch reads as charismatic inside the heterodox liberal and libertarian-curious audience. His tone lands. His references connect. His pacing on the podcast rewards attention. The same performance reads differently to MAGA listeners, who see a fake libertarian selling out to the cosmopolitan class. It reads differently to progressives, who see a reactionary with a journalist’s cover. It reads differently to establishment libertarians, who see a man who has softened on healthcare and drifted on economic policy. The charisma is not a property of Welch’s voice. It is a property of the match between his voice and the coalition that listens to it. Pinsof’s framework insists on this relativity. Welch inside his niche is charismatic. Welch outside his niche is not.
The failure modes are instructive. Occasionally critics try to make Welch’s paradoxes visible. The libertarian-who-supports-socialized-medicine attack tries to force the paradox into the open. The you-always-attack-the-right-more attack tries the same move from a different angle. The you-select-your-evidence attack targets the reporter-following-the-evidence pose. These attacks land differently inside different coalitions. Inside Welch’s coalition, they bounce. The audience does not want the paradox exposed. The defenses close around Welch. Inside rival coalitions, the attacks land and stick. The MAGA audience sees Welch through the attacks. The progressive audience sees him through different attacks.
Welch is the man who is exactly what he seems to be and, at the same time, exactly what his coalition needs him to be.
Watergate as Democratic Ritual & Cultural Trauma
Chris Kavanagh runs a trauma construction operation against charismatic anti-institutional figures. Welch runs the opposite operation. He spends his career watching trauma constructions unfold and pushing back against them. He is not a carrier group producing cultural trauma. He is closer to the sociologist analyzing carrier groups from outside, except he does the work in real time and without the academic distance Alexander maintains. The application reveals both what Welch sees and what he cannot see from his position.
Welch’s journalistic career has been largely devoted to the work Alexander’s framework describes as necessary for seeing trauma construction. He watches events move from the profane level of ordinary politics to the sacred level of civic crisis. He pushes back when the movement outruns the evidence. He tracks the carrier groups making the claims. He notices when the claims serve the carrier groups’ interests. He applies the skeptical tools Alexander’s framework formalizes, without naming them in Alexander’s language.
McCain: The Myth of a Maverick (2007) is the clean case. McCain by 2007 had been converted into a civil religion figure. His POW suffering, his willingness to break with his party on specific issues, his personal courage, had been assembled by a specific carrier group into a sacred biography. The carrier group included the legacy press (David Brooks, Jonathan Chait, the New York Times editorial page), the political class that valued McCain’s bipartisan gestures, and the foreign policy establishment that valued his hawkishness. The carrier group had material interests in McCain’s sacred status. Their continued cultural authority depended on having sacred figures whose consensus views they could translate into policy.
Welch’s book performed the opposite of trauma construction. Alexander would call it desacralization. Welch treated McCain as an ordinary political actor pursuing ordinary interests. The POW years got handled with respect but without sacralization. The maverick positioning got treated as political strategy rather than as spiritual testimony. The hawkish foreign policy got examined for its consequences rather than absorbed as heroic commitment. The book refused the ritual frame. It insisted on the profane level of goals, interests, and normal politics, which is the level Alexander identifies as the starting point that trauma construction has to leave behind.
The book was effective at what it attempted. McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign collapsed partly because the sacred biography could not sustain the pressure of an electoral contest. Welch’s desacralizing work contributed to the collapse by making the sacred biography harder to sustain among readers who encountered the book’s arguments. The contribution was not decisive. The campaign had other problems. But the contribution was real, and it was the contribution Alexander’s framework would recognize as the opposite of what carrier groups do.
Welch spent the Russiagate years tracking the claims and how they evolved when evidence failed to materialize. He noticed when the construction required increasingly elaborate theoretical scaffolding to absorb the inconvenient findings. He applied the symmetric-application test: the same evidentiary standard would have produced different conclusions if applied to Democratic figures. He noted the material interests of the carrier group members who were producing the construction. He identified the ritual elements in the coverage that substituted for evidence as the story unfolded.
The work was effective. Welch’s columns and podcast commentary across these years constitute a sustained record that looks better in retrospect than most of the legacy press coverage does. The Steele dossier got treated with skepticism that proved warranted. The FBI’s investigation got examined for its internal problems that later inspector general reports confirmed. The claim that Trump was a Russian agent, or that collusion had been proved, got held to standards the claim could not meet.
Welch refused the carrier group’s representational work. He was insisting on the profane level of goals, interests, and normal politics against the carrier group’s effort to generalize upward to sacred values the construction required to land. He was noticing, in real time, the symbolic work the carrier group was performing and treating that work as what it was rather than accepting its products as natural descriptions of reality.
COVID as Alexander Template
The COVID-era coverage provides a parallel case. A different carrier group operated. The public health establishment, the academic-medical complex, the legacy press, and the Democratic political class assembled claims (the virus required unprecedented response, certain interventions were proven effective, alternative views were dangerous misinformation) into a sacred civic framework. Dissent from the framework got classified as pollution. Adherence got sacralized.
Welch spent these years doing analogous work. He tracked the claims and how they evolved as evidence accumulated. He noticed when the framework required increasing theoretical scaffolding to absorb the inconvenient findings. He noted the material interests of the carrier group. He identified the ritual elements (masking requirements that exceeded the evidence, school closures that the evidence did not support, treatment of lab-leak hypotheses as taboo). He applied the symmetric-application test.
The work was effective. Welch’s COVID coverage looks substantially better in retrospect than the coverage of most legacy outlets. Specific predictions he made have been vindicated. Specific criticisms have been absorbed into the mainstream consensus. The lab-leak hypothesis moved from conspiracy theory to official possibility. The school-closure evidence got reassessed. The masking evidence got qualified.
Welch successfully desacralized many specific claims. He made the carrier group’s construction harder to sustain in its original form. He did not prevent the construction. The ritual continued through his criticism and produced its effects regardless of the criticism. The construction succeeds through the specific mechanisms Alexander identifies, and no amount of external criticism can block those mechanisms if the carrier group has sufficient institutional power. Welch’s criticism made the construction’s eventual unwinding happen somewhat faster than it would have happened without the criticism. It could not make the construction not happen at all.
The Carrier Group Welch Cannot Be
Trauma construction requires a carrier group. The group needs universities, legacy press, judiciary, and regulatory bureaucracies. It needs the capacity to reach the public at the level of civic ritual. It needs the ability to mobilize social control institutions. It needs elite countercenters that can legitimate its claims against the center it is attacking.
Welch’s libertarian-heterodox niche lacks these resources. Reason magazine is small. The Fifth Column podcast has an audience but not the scale of civic reach the legacy press still commands. The libertarian academy exists but does not possess the cultural authority of the institutions that produced Russiagate or COVID expertise. The libertarian judiciary includes specific figures but does not operate as an elite countercenter in Alexander’s sense. The libertarian regulatory presence is approximately nonexistent.
This means Welch can deconstruct trauma constructions but cannot construct his own. The tax revolt, which Alexander mentions as part of the post-Watergate aftershock, remains one of the rare cases where libertarian-adjacent forces successfully constructed a sacred civic claim. It succeeded because it borrowed antiauthoritarian energy from the larger Watergate effervescence. The borrowing was temporary. The libertarian position does not command the institutional resources that would allow it to sustain its own trauma constructions across time.
Alexander’s framework identifies this asymmetry as structural. Carrier groups that possess the institutional resources Alexander names can construct traumas that reorganize symbolic classification systems. Carrier groups that lack these resources can only respond to constructions produced by groups that have them. The response can be effective at local levels, in specific cases, over specific time frames. It cannot produce equivalent constructions running in the opposite direction. Welch can deflate. He cannot inflate. The position is the structural position of the critic rather than the carrier group.
This is where Alexander’s framework adds something the earlier frameworks did not quite reach. It specifies that Welch’s inability to construct sacred civic claims is not a personal limitation or a strategic choice. It is the structural condition of operating from his niche. The niche produces critics, not carriers. The critics perform real work but cannot produce the cultural effects the carrier groups produce. The asymmetry between what the carrier groups can build and what the critics can unbuild determines the long-term trajectory of specific civic arguments.
The Style the Position Requires
Welch’s style is deflationary, ironic, procedural. It does not sacralize. It does not build mythic narratives. It does not mobilize moral outrage in the register that trauma construction requires. The style corresponds to the work the position enables.
The Watergate essay describes how the senators and committee staff built sacred time through specific techniques: the hushed voices, the formal procedures, the invocation of founding documents, the dramatic juxtaposition of villains and heroes, the refusal of ordinary political framing. The hearings operated in a liminal register that required participants to maintain the sacred frame. Any participant who broke the frame by treating the hearings as ordinary politics would have undermined the construction.
Welch’s style refuses the sacred frame constantly. His columns do not invoke founding documents in the register that sacralizes them. His podcast conversations treat civic crises as occasions for analysis rather than as sacred time. His book on McCain refused the heroic biography and treated McCain as ordinary. The consistent refusal of sacred framing is the style’s organizing principle.
The Watergate Paradox
Watergate produced reforms that libertarians should have supported. It punished executive overreach. It strengthened institutional checks. It created social control mechanisms that reduced the presidency’s capacity for abuse. It constrained the imperial presidency that libertarians had criticized for decades.
Watergate also produced reforms Welch’s position should complicate. The special prosecutor’s office became a permanent feature of American government. The media gained authorities that it had not previously claimed. The congressional committees developed powers that later expanded beyond their Watergate origins. The legacy press solidified its position as the civic-religious authority translating institutional knowledge into public deference. Each of these developments created institutional structures that later produced the carrier group operations Welch has spent his career critiquing.
Watergate’s rituals built the infrastructure for subsequent ritual operations. The carrier groups that produced Russiagate, COVID-era sacralizations, and Trump-era trauma constructions learned their moves from Watergate. The hearings as liminal space. The media as civic-religious translator. The bipartisan committee as sacred authority. The slow accretion of polluting associations around the target. The eventual purification through expulsion. These techniques, developed during Watergate, became the standard repertoire of elite carrier group operations.
Welch’s position should make him ambivalent about Watergate. He benefits from the constraints on executive power that Watergate produced. He suffers from the institutional apparatus that Watergate established for subsequent ritual operations. The ambivalence is structurally required. It does not typically appear in Welch’s work because libertarian conventional wisdom treats Watergate as a success.
Matt Welch chases a specific immortality: the reputation of the journalist who saw through the cant of his age and wrote it down while his contemporaries got swept up. Left cant, right cant, establishment cant, populist cant. He earns standing by documenting other men’s capitulations.
Welch made his name in post-Communist Central Europe during the 1990s, reporting from Prague and Budapest through the transition. That period gave him a memory of state power and of what censorship produces. His libertarianism draws on witness more than theory.
Reason magazine supplies the coalition. The free-minds-and-free-markets network rewards contrarianism against both parties, anti-war commitments, drug-war skepticism, immigration liberalism, and free-trade loyalty. Reason pays him, publishes him, and gives him a readership that validates the posture. The Reason Foundation and its adjacent donor world supply the material base.
The Fifth Column podcast extends the script. Three journalists of different politics talk across tribal lines and refuse team discipline. The show rests on the promise that these men will say the true thing even when their side does not want to hear it. Welch’s project on the podcast is to serve as honest broker and archivist of elite hypocrisy, the man who keeps his notebook open when others close theirs.
The heroism requires symmetry. He must be hard on Trump and hard on the progressive left, document COVID-era civil liberties violations and MAGA authoritarian impulses, call the cancellers on campus and the book-banners in Florida. Tilt too far toward either side and the hero collapses into just another partisan.
Coalition signals stack up in a recognizable pattern: suspicion of state power in all forms, civil liberties maximalism, cosmopolitan immigration commitments, free trade, dismissal of tribal partisans, and a particular vocabulary of classical liberal, heterodox, independent journalism, adults in the room. He signals membership by naming the right enemies on both sides.
The costs of breaking ranks are real. A populist-right turn on immigration or trade alienates Reason and the libertarian donor world. A woke-left turn on speech or policing alienates The Fifth Column audience and the Bari Weiss-adjacent independent-media network that absorbs heterodox journalism refugees. Full conversion to either tribe costs him the platform that the coalition underwrites.
The contrarian needs an orthodoxy to oppose. When the center collapses, there is no fixed position from which to dissent, and the pose of the unfooled one looks different when partisans on both sides claim the same pose for themselves. Libertarianism has also aged. Reason’s cultural footprint is smaller than it was between 2005 and 2015. Koch institutional support has shifted. The ecosystem that rewarded the heterodox magazine journalist has been hollowed out by podcasts and Substacks. Welch has adapted by moving into those formats, but the hero system was built for a magazine world that no longer exists in the same form.
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.
Reason magazine stands for individualism, inalienable rights, universalism. These are the tenets of political liberalism Mearsheimer identifies. Welch’s output reads differently once you see him as a committed political liberal rather than a generic skeptic of state power. His anti-emergency-state writing, his anti-war writing, his concern with speech protections, his evaluations of Hungarian and Israeli politics by universalist standards, all coalesce around the inalienable-rights frame.
Welch professes atomism. His career demonstrates coalitional embeddedness. He lived in Prague with a peer group. He moved through a small libertarian ecosystem funded by a small donor network. He cohosts a podcast with two men who share his instincts. The beliefs that mark his coalition, skepticism of state power, pro-free-trade, anti-tariff, pro-speech, anti-war, suspicious of technocratic expertise, feel to him like conclusions he earned by looking at the world. Mearsheimer names them a value infusion. Pinsof reaches this by a different route. Mearsheimer targets the content of the ideology, not just the coalitional form.
Welch presents his views as earned through reporting, through the Central European decade, through the pandemic reversals. Mearsheimer reminds us that Welch’s reasoning faculty developed inside a value infusion set before he could assess it. The Prague experience did not teach him liberalism. It confirmed a liberalism he inherited. His family, his American Cold War upbringing, the journalistic culture he moved into, put the infusion in place.
Reason magazine cannot describe Orbán’s Hungary, Netanyahu’s Israel, Xi’s China, or Trump’s America except through universalist categories that miss what matters in those places. Welch treats illiberal politics as a departure from a baseline. Mearsheimer treats illiberal politics as the baseline and liberal politics as the brief anomaly.
Socialization infuses values before reason can evaluate them. Welch inherited his liberalism. If he is not just the product of his socialization and coalition, he has to demonstrate his reasoning. His reading list suggests he has not.
Welch Under Hugo Mercier & John M. Doris
Hans Freyer and his Weimar cohort were smart people who lost inherited faith and substituted faith in history, community, decision. They placed more load on their substitutes than the substitutes could bear. The catastrophic political consequences followed from the overload. Welch operates in a different structural position. He inherited no particular faith to lose. He did inherit an American civic vocabulary (small-r republican, procedural, constitutional) and has spent his career defending it against the accelerating pressures of emergency-governance, expert-deference, and tribal polarization. The question the Freyer parallel raises is whether Welch’s civic vocabulary can bear the load he places on it. Procedural libertarianism asks readers to accept the legitimacy of outcomes produced by fair processes even when the outcomes are bad. This is hard under current conditions. When the processes themselves are contested, when expert authority has collapsed, when tribal emotional energy has intensified, the procedural vocabulary Welch deploys may be asking more than most people can deliver.
Humans are tribal. The need for belonging, coherent in-group narrative, and shared purpose is real and evolved. Welch’s deflationary procedural skepticism asks readers to suspend tribal satisfaction in favor of proceduralist virtue. The ask is substantial. It may succeed with readers whose life circumstances make procedural virtue feel safer than tribal commitment. It fails with readers for whom tribal commitment feels like the only available meaning. This is not Welch’s failure. It is the structural limit of the procedural libertarian project under conditions of tribal intensification.
The Fifth Column audience is self-selected. Listeners arrive already disposed toward skepticism of institutional authority, free speech absolutism, opposition to forever wars, drug legalization. Welch’s documentation of expert reversals, selective enforcement, and media credulity lands with receptive readers whose vigilance is already deployed against the targets Welch attacks.
Every successful commentator operates under the same constraint. The question is what Welch’s project can accomplish given the constraint. Mercier’s answer might be modest. Welch reinforces existing commitments in his coalition. He provides language and evidence for positions readers already hold.
Welch’s coherence measures his success at finding a situational niche that allows his commitments to persist. The niche is narrow. Most journalists who held Welch’s 2003 positions on the Iraq war could not sustain them through the career pressures of subsequent decades. Welch could because he moved to Reason, because he co-founded the Fifth Column, because he built an audience that rewards the positions.
Welch’s commentary addresses low-stakes domains for most of his readers. Foreign policy decisions affect readers indirectly and diffusely. Pandemic restrictions affected them directly but are now in the rearview. Media credibility disputes are status contests for elites that most readers consume as entertainment rather than as practical guidance. The low stakes mean readers’ vigilance is relaxed. They accept Welch’s framings more readily than they might accept similar framings from commentators they disagreed with on topics of higher personal stakes.
This is structurally identical to what Myers does with his progressive Jewish audience on Israel-Palestine questions. The stakes for American Jewish readers are low in immediate practical terms. What Israel does is remote. The commentary is consumed as meaning-making rather than as practical guidance. Vigilance is relaxed because the stakes are low. Myers’s audience accepts his framings readily. Myers’s critics’ audiences accept their framings readily. Both audiences are doing what Mercier predicts. Vigilance proportional to stakes produces low-vigilance consumption of distant political commentary. The frameworks consumed are selected for coalition fit rather than for accuracy. Welch’s readership and Myers’s readership operate under the same general constraint. Both consume commentary at the level of vigilance the stakes warrant. Neither is engaged in rigorous truth-tracking. Both are engaged in coalition-maintaining sense-making.
Welch’s readers might believe Welch has character traits (contrarian, skeptical, fair-minded, procedurally committed). Doris might argue this belief is mostly a narrative construction readers impose on behavior that is substantially situationally determined. The provocative implication is that if readers met Welch in a different situation, they might not recognize the character they currently attribute to him. The Welch they experience is the Welch Reason and Fifth Column produce. A Welch without those institutional homes would be a different professional self.
The persona a professional commentator maintains across decades is constructed and sustained by his situations. Remove the situations and the persona does not survive unchanged. This is not hypocrisy on the commentator’s part. It is the structural condition of professional voice. The voice exists as situationally sustained performance. The person exists as whatever the person is when the voice is not on. Readers confuse the voice with the person. The confusion is inevitable given the medium. It is also misleading about what readers know about the commentators they consume.
In his Not Born Yesterday book, Mercier argued that we did not evolve to be gullible with regard to our vital interests. Welch does not make explicit claims about human gullibility as evolved psychology. He works at the level of institutional failures and instances of public credulity. His documentary mode is journalistic rather than theoretical. He does not cite Mercier or Doris or evolutionary psychology. What he does is document cases where the public accepted official claims that turned out to be wrong. The pattern of his cases implies a view of the public even though he does not theorize that view.
Welch’s repeated documentation of public acceptance of wrong official narratives (WMD in Iraq, initial mask guidance, Russiagate certainty, lockdown efficacy claims, Hunter Biden laptop dismissals as disinformation) implies that the public does accept false official claims with regularity. This is closer to a gullibility thesis than Welch typically acknowledges. If the public routinely accepts false official narratives on matters affecting their lives, the public is failing to deploy vigilance proportional to stakes. Mercier might say this is unusual and requires explanation. The Mercier framework holds that vigilance is deployed well on vital interests. Welch’s documentary record suggests vigilance is deployed poorly on vital interests. One of the two is wrong.
Welch’s cases are not quite what they appear. The public that accepted WMD claims was not a public whose vital interests were directly at stake. Iraq War was distant. Most Americans did not have sons or daughters deploying. The stakes were low enough that vigilance was relaxed. Mercier’s framework predicts this. Low stakes produce low vigilance. The public that accepted initial mask guidance did update when guidance changed. The updating was what Mercier predicts. People track epistemic authority. When authority shifts, they shift with it. This does not show gullibility. It shows responsiveness to expert consensus, which is adaptive under most conditions. Welch reads the shifting as failure. Mercier might read it as normal epistemic operation. The public that accepted lockdown efficacy claims had little capacity to independently assess the claims. Accepting expert consensus under uncertainty is what reasonable people do. The claims turned out to be more mixed than initial consensus suggested. The public’s acceptance was not gullible. It was conditional on the authority of the source, and the source’s authority has deteriorated since.
Does Welch treat the public as capable of the procedural-skeptical vigilance his commentary models? His writing implies that they should be so capable. His frustration implies that they are not. The combination suggests Welch holds a prescriptive rather than descriptive view of public cognition. He writes as if readers might be more like him if they tried, and as if their failure to be more like him is a moral failure on their part. This is not quite the Mercier view. Mercier might say the public is cognitively competent but deploys competence proportional to stakes. Welch writes as if the public’s deployment is systematically inadequate. The difference matters. Mercier treats current behavior as mostly adaptive. Welch treats it as mostly failing.
Libertarianism as a political philosophy depends on citizens capable of certain kinds of judgment. Self-government requires civic competence. Market operation requires consumer rationality. Voluntary institutions require associational competence. Welch’s commentary documents that citizens do not display the competencies libertarianism requires. If citizens can be this readily manipulated by institutional narrative construction, libertarianism’s assumptions about citizen capacity are wrong. This is the uncomfortable implication of Welch’s documentary record for his political commitments.
Welch has not quite resolved this tension in his writing. He continues to hold libertarian positions and continues to document facts that undermine libertarianism’s premises about citizen competence. The tension is visible in the gap between his descriptive reporting and his prescriptive politics. The descriptive reporting shows a public that fails its libertarian role. The prescriptive politics continues to assume the role is achievable. Either the public’s failures are contingent and correctable, in which case libertarianism remains viable with better information ecology, or the failures are structural and permanent, in which case libertarianism is unrealistic about human capacity.
Mercier might say Welch is partly wrong about the public’s gullibility. The public is not gullible. It is selective in where vigilance gets deployed. The public deploys high vigilance on face-to-face encounters, on immediate family matters, on direct financial transactions, on personal health decisions they can assess. The public deploys low vigilance on remote political events, on expert claims about complex systems, on media narratives about distant conflicts. This is not gullibility. It is rational allocation of cognitive resources. The public cannot afford to deploy high vigilance on every topic it encounters. It saves vigilance for topics where vigilance can produce useful action.
Welch’s project is about topics where vigilance cannot produce useful action for most readers. Whether the Iraq War was justified does not depend on the reader’s vigilance. The war happened regardless. Whether lockdowns were efficient does not depend on the reader’s vigilance. The lockdowns happened regardless. Welch’s commentary asks readers to deploy vigilance on topics where vigilance cannot produce action. Mercier might predict that most readers will not do this. The reason is not gullibility. The reason is that vigilance without the capacity for action is cognitively expensive and behaviorally unrewarding.
Under the Mercier framework, Welch is not informing a public that might otherwise be gullible. He is producing satisfying content for a subpopulation that has already decided to deploy high vigilance on political topics regardless of whether vigilance produces action. This subpopulation exists for reasons that are not rational. Some readers enjoy political vigilance as cognitive entertainment. Some readers find coalition belonging through shared vigilance with their preferred commentators. Some readers use political commentary as identity material. Welch serves this self-selected population. He does not rescue gullible masses from institutional manipulation. He supplies cognitive content to a niche audience that consumes political commentary for non-political reasons.
Welch probably does treat the public as disposed toward gullibility about vital interests, though he does not theorize this. His commentary implies it. The implication is partly correct (the public does accept many false official narratives) and partly misleading (the public’s acceptance is not gullibility but is appropriate epistemic deference under conditions where independent assessment is unavailable). Mercier might correct Welch here. The public is not gullible. The public is operating within the modest capacities that human cognition has. Welch expects more than the capacities permit. The expectation drives his frustration. The frustration animates his commentary. The commentary reaches an audience that shares the expectation and therefore shares the frustration. The audience is not representative of the public Welch thinks he is addressing. The public Welch addresses does not read him. The audience that reads him is the audience that already agrees with him. The gap between addressed public and audience is characteristic of deflationary political journalism.
Welch’s implicit anthropology is wrong. He treats gullibility as the public’s failure. Mercier might treat the same behavior as the public’s rational allocation of limited cognitive resources. The interesting consequence is that Welch’s commentary cannot achieve what his anthropology implies it should achieve. It cannot make citizens less gullible because citizens are not gullible. It cannot produce more vigilant public deliberation because the public is not underdeploying vigilance. It can reinforce the vigilance of readers who already deploy vigilance for non-political reasons. This is a smaller achievement than Welch’s commentary implies is possible. The smaller achievement is still valuable. It is just different from what the commentary rhetorically promises.
Freyer placed more load on history as a source of community than history could bear. Welch places more load on procedural vigilance as a source of civic virtue than procedural vigilance can bear. Both projects overestimate the human capacity for the cognitive operation the project requires. Freyer’s overestimate led to political catastrophe. Welch’s overestimate leads to a narrow audience rather than catastrophe. The difference is that Welch operates in a political ecology that makes his overestimate inconsequential. His audience is too small to matter politically. This is a feature of his niche rather than a criticism of his project. But the structural parallel holds. Both men ask more of human cognition than human cognition can consistently deliver. Both men therefore produce work that satisfies audiences who are already disposed to meet the cognitive demands the work makes. Neither man converts the uncommitted. Neither man produces the civic transformation the work’s premises imply is achievable.
Welch’s work is valuable within its audience. Its audience is smaller than Welch’s commentary implies is the public. The gap between actual audience and implied audience is unbridgeable because human cognition does not work the way Welch’s commentary implies it should work. The public is not gullible about its vital interests. The public is appropriately selective about where to deploy vigilance.
Welch is further along the buffered spectrum than David Myers. His commentary operates within buffered assumptions. Politics is procedural. Truth is empirical. Institutions are accountable or they are not. Meaning is individually constructed through choices about what to value and how to live. The enchanted cosmos that animated pre-modern political life (kingly legitimacy as divine appointment, national community as organic spiritual unity, political authority as partaking in transcendent order) is absent from Welch’s vocabulary. He does not argue against enchanted politics. He does not register it as an available option. His commentary assumes buffered readers engaging buffered political questions through buffered analytical methods.
This is standard for modern journalism. Most political commentary operates within buffered assumptions. Welch’s opponents increasingly do not share the buffered assumptions. The porous return in contemporary American politics is visible on multiple fronts. Trump’s appeal operates partly through porous categories (the nation as organic entity, the leader as charismatic vehicle of popular will, the enemies as contaminating agents). The integralist and post-liberal right operates explicitly through porous categories (natural law as metaphysical order, common good as transcendent rather than aggregate, authority as legitimate through its relation to truth rather than through procedural fairness). The progressive activist left operates through porous categories that its buffered adherents often do not recognize as porous (Whiteness as spiritual contamination requiring confession and purgation, structural racism as supernatural causal force affecting interior disposition, social justice work as redemptive activity).
Welch responds to these developments with buffered analytical tools. He treats Trump as bad procedure rather than as re-enchantment. He treats the integralist project as bad constitutional theory rather than as porous metaphysical commitment. He treats social justice discourse as bad epistemics rather than as religious phenomenology. The buffered analytical response registers what buffered tools can register. It cannot register what porous categories do phenomenologically for porous adherents.
Welch’s commentary is unable to reach the porous populations that are reshaping American politics. He addresses them as if they were buffered selves making bad buffered arguments. They are not buffered selves making bad buffered arguments. They are porous selves operating within enchanted frameworks that buffered critique cannot touch. The buffered critique lands with buffered readers who already share Welch’s buffered orientation. It does not land with porous readers for whom the buffered critique is irrelevant to what they care about.
This is the structural condition of buffered commentary engaging porous political formations. Buffered tools cannot disenchant the enchanted because the enchanted have already rejected buffered epistemics. The buffered tools work only on other buffered selves who have not yet traveled as far into re-enchantment as the populations Welch addresses. The audience that reads Welch is the audience that has not gone porous in the current American ways. This audience is shrinking as American politics becomes more porous across left and right.
Libertarianism is a buffered political philosophy. It assumes buffered selves making buffered choices within procedural institutions. Every libertarian premise requires buffered selfhood. Consent requires the buffered self capable of real choice rather than the porous self acted upon by forces outside itself. Property requires the buffered self capable of ownership as extension of interior sovereignty rather than the porous self embedded in webs of obligation that predate its individual existence. Procedural justice requires the buffered self capable of abstracting from particular claims to universal rules rather than the porous self whose justice is contextual and relational.
Welch’s sustained libertarian commentary presupposes buffered selfhood as the normal human condition. The commentary fails to account for the return of porous selfhood in contemporary American politics. When Welch documents that readers believe official narratives despite evidence of narrative manipulation, he reads their belief as cognitive failure. Taylor might read at least some of the belief as porous experience. The reader who accepts the expert narrative is not necessarily making a buffered decision to defer to authority. The reader may be experiencing the expert narrative as authoritative in the porous sense that buffered commentary cannot quite address. The authority is not chosen. It is felt. Buffered argument against it does not dislodge it because the experience is not subject to buffered argument.
Welch’s buffered commentary serves the small subset of Americans who maintain buffered political engagement against increasing porous pressures from multiple directions. The Fifth Column listeners are buffered selves seeking buffered company. They find it in the podcast. The podcast sustains their buffered orientation through buffered ritual (the three men performing analytical distance, empirical fidelity, and procedural skepticism together). The emotional energy Collins identified in the podcast is the emotional energy of buffered solidarity in an increasingly porous environment. The buffered selves feel less isolated when three successful buffered commentators perform buffered analysis together. The feeling is real. The political efficacy is limited to what buffered solidarity can accomplish, which is sustaining buffered orientation against porous drift, not reversing porous drift in others.
Welch’s project defends a historical moment that may have been brief. The American civic republican tradition Welch defends had a limited historical run. It depended on buffered selves of a particular kind (educated, property-holding, procedurally-minded, commercially engaged). This population was never universal. It was concentrated in certain classes and regions. The expansion of this population during the twentieth century may have been exceptional rather than normal. The current contraction of this population may be returning American politics to its historical baseline of substantially porous political engagement with buffered elites operating within porous majorities.
Welch writes as if the buffered political self is the normal American political self and current porous developments are aberrant departures from normality. Taylor’s framework suggests this may be wrong. The buffered political self may be the achievement of conditions that no longer obtain. Defending the buffered political self against porous return may be defending a historical formation rather than defending political normality. This is not a criticism of the defense. The buffered political self is valuable and worth defending. But the defense is harder than Welch’s commentary implies because it is defending a historical achievement rather than correcting recent deviations from a normal state.
If porous political formations are returning as the normal condition of American politics, libertarianism as a political philosophy is operating on assumptions that the relevant population no longer shares. The libertarian citizen is buffered. The contemporary American citizen is drifting porous. The gap between libertarianism’s assumed citizen and the actual citizen is widening. Welch’s project is aimed at readers who still fit the buffered citizen description. This population is shrinking as both left and right drift porous. Welch’s shrinking audience is what Taylor’s framework might predict. It is not that Welch has lost his touch or that his commentary has deteriorated. It is that the population capable of receiving his commentary has shrunk.
The buffered self Welch addresses and presupposes is not the dominant American self. The audience that reads Welch is the audience that has not yet drifted porous or that resists porous drift. This audience is shrinking because the conditions that produced buffered American selves are eroding. Welch is one of the last practitioners of a buffered political journalism that depends on a buffered readership that is decreasing.
This is poignant rather than tragic.
Welch’s commentary implicitly assumes that the public could be buffered if only the information environment were better. Taylor’s framework suggests this is wrong. The public is not becoming porous because of bad information. The public is becoming porous because modern conditions that produced buffered selves are weakening. Economic precarity. Community dissolution. Institutional distrust. Digital immersion in affective rather than analytical content. Class polarization. These conditions produce porous selves as the available psychological configuration for most people. Bad information does not produce this. The conditions produce this, and bad information is one of the symptoms rather than the cause.
Welch addresses symptoms. He cannot address causes because the causes are structural features of contemporary life that commentary cannot touch. His commentary is sometimes valuable for naming the symptoms. It is unable to address the conditions producing the symptoms.
