The Alt-Right & The Classics

Comments at Steve Sailer:

* I’d argue that the more traditionalist sect of the alt-Right stems from the works of the Catholic French Counter-Enlightenment philosophers like Maistre and Bonald, and more recently, G.K. Chesterton while the atheist and neo-Paganist sects stem from the philosophy of Nietzsche (specifically, the idea that “God is dead” and it is up to man to create morality). Both are united in an honesty and clarity of purpose as well as a common enemy. Furthermore, both views are far more consistent than the Enlightenment doctrines asserting certain “truths to be self-evident” which are clearly not self-evident; the alt-Right rejects Rationalism (though not rationality nor science) and utilitarianism.

The greatest difference between the alt-Right and the Enlightenment philosophies is in the idea of “self-evident truths.” The traditionalist sect asserts morality derives only from God. The atheist/neo-Paganist view is that morality is man’s power over man. The philosophies stemming from the Enlightenment state that morality is “self-evident.” The alt-Right is concrete, the Enlightenment is not.

* Another possibility is that Dr. Zuckerberg finds herself unaccountably attracted to Aryan Richard Spencer-type men, just as her brother is attracted to feminine East Asian girls.

* The basic substance of her missive is that only scholars like her can interpret the classics for the masses. Because she was taught the “sophisticated” way to understand and apply the writings of our ancients, she retains the sole ability to accurately assess their historical significance. She may even be of the school that feels one should only read the classics in their original language.

Essentially she is arguing from a pre-Reformation clergy position on interpreting the Bible. The bible should be printed in Latin only and taught only by priests. It is only those men, the clergy, who can be a portal to God because they were taught by the sophisticated academics of their time.

I imagine she is incapable of this type of self-reflection.

* The alt-right is not a tightly led organization, it’s rather a loose conglomeration of several different strains of thought. Something like the Dark Enlightenment, which usually includes cultural absolutism (i.e. some cultures are worth more than others), Darwinism and HBD (the sexes are innately different for biological reasons, same thing for races, ethnic groups, social classes), some corrections of liberal retconning of history (e.g. how far to the right people like Lincoln or Churchill would be, were they still alive), discoveries or rediscoveries of some more esoteric earlier authors as well as some more esoteric or rightist contemporary authors (like Evola or Ezra Pound or Alain de Benoist), and only some of these reject the Enlightenment.

It’s also possible to reject some parts of the Enlightenment without rejecting the whole thing (the Enlightenment itself was just a loose conglomeration of several different strains of thought, some of whom were at each others’ throats all the time), and that’s precisely what many people are doing, so I’m not sure what your complaint is here.

Besides, of course race was seen by people before Darwin – racism is certainly possible without Darwinism or IQ studies. You can simply acknowledge that different races exist (based on your lying eyes), and then start from there. And some people are loosely sympathetic to the alt-right without much thinking about genetics research or modern science.

* Methinks Dr. Zuckerberg doth protest too much.

It seems to me that liberal academics have a guilty conscience. They are intellectual elitists par excellence who nevertheless increasingly find themselves leading a coalition of relatively downscale constituent blocs. Indeed, they don’t just lead those downscale constituencies; they ostentatiously venerate them. People with IQs well into the triple-digit range will hold up a Michael Brown as a victim-hero of our age.

There’s a lot of cognitive dissonance to this kind of faculty lounge elitism, and this psychic tension is resolved by attacking the Middlebrow Menace of generic white guys. As always, it’s about the Blue Tribe defending its cultural hegemony against the Red Tribe, with the minorities Dr. Z celebrates being essentially beside the point. They’re props to be used for bashing uppity young white men with higher-than-normal agency and intellect who are curious about their people’s heritage.

In the case of Dr. Zuckerberg, there may also be the old ethnic angle at play here. I recall Steve writing before about the awkward relationship Jewish intellectuals have to European (and particularly German) traditions. Jewish success in the arts and sciences is an outgrowth of the European Enlightenment. It’s not something that arose spontaneously on the shtetl or in the Holy Land.

So a Jewish classicist like Dr. Z obviously loves European civilization and its cultural patrimony, but at the same time has at least a vestigial sense of being victimized by that civilization. Again, there is psychic tension, and, again, it is taken out on middle-class Middle America.

* I’ve moved past the argument stage with these people. I want a divorce. We simply have incompatible views of the world. No amount of discussion will solve that.

Americans are stuck in a horrible marriage because we can’t get out of the mortgage and move to separate homes, so we grumble through the days with the occasional full-on screaming match. It can’t last. At some point, one side would rather burn the house down than spend another hour in this nightmare, especially if they feel as though they’re going to lose the house anyway.

* At first I bristled at the usual anti-white-male stuff, but by the end of the article I actually came to like this Zuckerburg sister. I sort of feel bad for her, I feel like at some level she gets it. She has moments of being fair to her enemies and sees merit in some of their arguments.

She’s cute too, and apparently a good cook.

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Genes & Intelligence

Comments at Unz.com:

* If intelligence doesn’t have some genetic component, then why do infertile couples pay money to acquire sperm from Ivy League men for artificial insemination? Why don’t women with infertile husbands just have sex with any willing local bum at no charge?

Also, why are sperm banks paying Ivy League men for donations? Why don’t they just go to Skid Row or group homes for the mentally challenged and get the sperm there?

The same goes for donating eggs — for which college women get big bucks. Here is an article from Slate titled “Couples want donors to be smart, athletic, and good-looking.” Notice the first word in that headline.

And yet I’ll bet if you asked any of these couples (or any Slate reader) about IQ and genetics when they were among friends at a party, they’d deny any connection.

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If America Is An Idea…

Comment: People on the Right reject the idea that ‘America’ is an idea… but I think I will dissent.

I now believe ‘America’ is an idea.

And because it is an idea, people around the world no longer need to come to America to have ‘America’ as an idea.

It’s like democracy as an idea. To have democracy, you don’t have to come to the US to practice democracy. You can implement the idea of democracy in your own country.

Ideas are portable and transferable. Ideas are not fixed in one place. It’s like some mountain in Tibet is fixed in that place, but Buddhism is an idea, and you don’t have to go to Tibet to be a Buddhist. You can be a Buddhist anywhere. You can even take that idea into outer-space.

So, let us say there is the United States as a fixed nation with its distinct history, heritage, and culture. It is about power and history within a fixed territory.

In contrast, there is ‘America’ as an idea, and it is universal and can be transported or transposed to anyone, anywhere, anytime.

So, our message to all the people around the world is that they don’t have to come to the United States to partake in the idea of America.

They can have it at home. And what is this big idea of ‘America’ they can have in their own home nation?

The American Idear is as follows: pig out on junk food, obsess over video games, twerk, listen to rap, worship black athletes, indulge in hedonism, promote slut culture, celebrate militarism, drink soda and burp, get tattoos on ass, push interracism, hail Zionism, watch trash TV, break down barrier between mainstream culture(even for kids) and pornography, praise homos and trannies, enforce PC, destabilize national borders, allow mass invasion, cook up hate hoaxes about KKK and neo-nazis, flip uit over micro-aggressions, spread fears of blonde rapists, promote cuck attitudes among the men, declare your folks to be ‘exceptional’ and ‘indispensable’, and blame ‘Russia’ for everything.

Yes, that is ‘America’ as an Idear in the Current Year. And any people in any nation can practice those ‘idears’ and be ‘American’ without coming to America.

So, save your money on that plane ticket.

Just stay in your country and embrace the IDEAR of ‘America’.

We should devise a American Idear Kit as universal formula for the world and sell it all over. Or even hand it out for free. It’d be like a Chemistry Kit. Ameristry Kit.

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Breitbart: ‘After Getting Everything Wrong in 2016, Stephen Hayes Elevated to Editor-in-Chief at the Weekly Standard’

Breitbart: The news that the Weekly Standard has appointed Stephen Hayes editor-in-chief has caused some to wonder if former editor and consistent Trump critic Bill Kristol all but made himself toxic for the publication’s masthead.

Whether that’s true, or not, may depend upon one’s view of all things Washington — and Trump; however, it’s difficult to see how Hayes represents much of a change in that regard given his long list of failed prognostications and analysis during the course of the 2016 presidential campaign. Take for example this gem of a Weekly Standard headline atop a Hayes’ item from July of 2016: Donald Trump Is Crazy, and So Is the GOP for Embracing Him. Wrote Hayes of Trump, “(T)his isn’t the behavior of a rational, stable individual. It should embarrass those who have endorsed him and disgrace those who have attempted to normalize him.”

As some will recall, it was the Weekly Standard that sought to undermine Trump right on through the Fall by embracing wannabe candidate Evan McMullin, who still continues to attack both Trump and the Republican Party as a whole as basically racist and corrupt.

It’s unclear how the lingering memory of exchanges like this one with Sean Hannity back in January of 2016, who called Hayes out directly for being “so consistently wrong” on Trump, will impact any potential relationship between Hayes in his role as editor and the incoming administration.

Sean Hannity calls out Stephen F. Hayes of The Weekly Standard for being consistently wrong about Donald Trump’s demise. The two argue Trump’s electability against Hillary Clinton on a special edition of FOX News’ Hannity after the FOX Business debate in Charleston, South Carolina. While Hayes concedes he has been wrong, he calls out other FOX News contributors who have been “Trump boosters.”

As late as September of this year Hayes almost looked as if he was rooting for Hillary Clinton during the presidential debate on September 26. From the article “Hayes Explains How Trump Walked Right Into Hillary’s Tax Return ‘Trap”:

“She set him up, and Trump walked right into her trap by saying that he was smart for not paying any taxes,” Hayes said.

He explained that Trump followed that admission with a series of internally contradictory responses, claiming that he couldn’t release his tax returns while he was being audited and that he would release them when Clinton released her 30,000 deleted emails.

“It was sort of this mish-mash of excuses,” Hayes said. “And rather than turning and pivoting and making an attack on her, he engaged that debate on her terms and I thought lost it badly.”

Earlier in May of 2016, Hayes appeared on Fox News pushing the notion that Trump would ban Islam and Muslims from the United States and all but withdraw the United States from world markets, while engaging in name calling of the now president-elect. Said Hayes, “If you have principles and believe we shouldn’t ban a religion? Don’t ban a religion? A country founded on freedom of religion—it’s not good idea to ban a religion. Republicans can’t just cast aside their principles, free trade, because Donald Trump comes around and this orange guy suggests that free trade is bad. We’re going to throw away 300 years of Adam Smith.”

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Predicting Trump

Jack* writes: Trump has done much to confound his critics since election. Now that he is President Elect, it is more difficult for the main stream media to quote him out of context. Trump’s thank you tour rallies also provides him with a way to bypass the mainstream media and get his message transmitted unfiltered. Trump’s aides and spokespersons also know how to push back when questioned in a hostile way and Trump’s interview last week with Matt Lauer highlights Trump’s facility with the interview process.

For many years, the attitude of high ranking and aspiring politicians was to speak guardedly since anything they would say could and would be used against them. Trump can be criticized for speaking in platitudes but he is remarkably effective. It is a truism that even when insincere, flattery works, and Trump is a master at this. This is revealed by the fact that so many persons who opposed Trump who met with him have good things to say about him. Trump must be masterful in one-on-one conversations in terms of relating in a “winning” way.

Trump is also self aggrandizing in a way which is so at odds with the false humility politicians assume when speaking, yet it doesn’t come off as offensive. It seems more honest than “humble bragging.” Trump’s way of answering questions when interviewed show that he is every bit as good a listener as Obama but then one who answers in what appears to be an unscripted way and a genuine response. This cannot help but be appealing to Americans who have heard so much blather to this date.

What comes across from Trump is that he is either a pathological liar and con-man without principles or a patriot and an economic nationalist. I was not sure whether he was a genuine patriot or whether that was a public relations position, but I am now persuaded that he loves the United States (and in particular the pre Vietnam war United States) and wants to make sure that America, while continuing to trade in the world, is never dependent upon any foreign power whether for raw materials, finished goods or technology. I think much of his appeal to the persons who agreed to join his cabinet, or just meet with him including Kanye West, Jim Brown, and the technology sector heads, is based on making a pitch to their patriotism.

This in itself is refreshing. Obama may love the United States, but he doesn’t have the same sort of unquestioning patriotism inculcated in him that is the case for Trump. Obama spent his younger years in Indonesia and when he returned to high school in Hawaii, he spent his time with his maternal grandfather and with Frank Marshall, both either fellow travelers or members of the Communist Party. He didn’t grow up in culture that had been involved in the Civil War since Hawaii was annexed by the United States after that war had ended. The history he was probably taught concerned U.S. imperialism taking Hawaii away from its rightful native monarchy. He didn’t grow up as Trump did during the 1950’s when the U.S. was the most powerful nation in the world, the leading manufacturer and a place where most people went to church on Sundays and where many states enforced blue laws. Trump came of age before the war in Vietnam showed the limits of U.S. military power. (If anyone had looked closely Korea would have shown that, but it really wasn’t widely accepted at the time. Instead WWII was the model.) The
second wave of decolonialization began when Trump was in his teens. Obama grew up after Vietnam had defeated the United States and when there were virtually no colonies left in the world. This is not to say that Trump’s world view is more accurate than Obama’s, only that his
world view and America’s place in it, is a better one for an optimistic leader to hold. Obama wanted to manage what he perceived as the inevitable decline of American influence. Trump wants to reassert American power it to the greatest extent possible.

And Trump and Obama have differing views on what are the most important problems facing us. Trump is a global warming skeptic and Obama’s rhetoric (but not his personal actions) promotes it as the greatest and most immediate problem facing humanity.

Trump believes in taking care of American citizens first and Obama believes that American’s have a duty to assist and encourage persons who come here both legally and illegally from other countries. Obama believes in a bureaucratic state administered by lawyers, public policy
graduates, professors, and activists and organizers. Trump doesn’t have much faith in this managerial state and has selected cabinet officers from business, the military and elected and appointed government officials sometimes at odds with the agencies they are hired to run.
It is hard to believe that Trump is President Elect. Obama seems to have dropped off the screen, and Trump is in fact doing things that are changing policies even though it is over a month until he is inaugurated. I read something that John Boehner said that I thought about before which was that Trump reminded him of Theodore Roosevelt who upon assuming power with the assasination of William McKinley, brought with him a great gush of energy powered by both the progressive and populist movements. Trump has been rightly identified by many as an economic populist and that view is certainly aligned with the public statements of his advisor Steve Bannon. He is also a progressive in that he wants to institute many measures that will have us move toward good governance, including his restrictions on administration employees becoming lobbyists and especially lobbyists for foreign governments.

He still has a few cabinet and other positions to fill, but some of who he has elected give us a pretty good idea of how he plans to govern. The care to which is putting his selection, can lead to one of two conclusions: He will be a pretty hands off chief executive and rely on his competent cabinet appointments to shape their own policy, or he is selecting them and will work with them carefully to implement his intended policies.

Concerning immigration which was in my view, the main thing that distinguished him from the Republican pack and from Hillary Clinton, his appointment of Sessions strongly signaled that he would enforce (rather than as has been the case on a bipartisan level) ignore enforcing existing immigration laws. His selection of General Kelly, although not as good a choice from the immigration hawk’s perspective as Kris Kobach, was probably made because the director of Homeland Security is more concerned about terrorism than about illegal immigration. It is not clear if Kobach will be his chief deputy, but if he does serve in that capacity, there really is nothing more that immigration restrictionist could hope for. Trump has made noise about doing something to accommodate the dreamers. My suspicion is that for them the path to legalization and then citizenship will require some committment to public service, not necessarily military service. There is also a real issue as to the cut off age for dreamers. It is one thing if someone was brought to the country as an infant, another if brought as an older teenager. If Trump does give the dreamers a pass, then it rewards the illegal activity of their parents in bringing them
across. Trump has been lobbied by all the big city mayors, and in particular DeBlasio, Garcetti and Emmanuel, not to enforce the immigration laws.

I think this is all to no avail and that cities (and universities) that provide sanctuary status will see their federal funds shut off. Assuming that Trump does not back down to the political pressure,
the cities and universities will have to cave, since their own constituents will not pony up the additional revenues to allow the cities to break the law. I don’t know how long this will take, but
it will be dependent upon how quickly the money can be shut off. If it is in the pipeline and can’t be interrupted for six months that is one thing.

However, if the administration actually begins to construct a wall, and institutes e-verify, and begins to prosecute employers who hire illegal aliens, you will see a significant number of persons here illegally self deport. The ones that brought dreamers with them on the way in, may take them out as well.

Assuming Trump appoints a very conservative justice to the Supreme court, they may see a case testing citizenship of anchor babies.
Trump sees himself as a deal maker and in one sense he doesn’t really care whether the deal is all that favorable as long as he can paint himself the winner. So any deals involving illegal immigration should be carefully scrutinized to see if they deliver what there are claimed to deliver.

Trump’s main interest to this point appears to be business. The Obama administration apologists are trying to show that the Ford and Carrier deals didn’t really save any jobs and that the Carrier deal is an inappropriate interference in the free market. Obama spokerspersons have shown his state of the union address in which asked for legislation approving many of the policies Trump wants to pursue (although not a reduction in the corporate income tax.) This just
shows how inept Obama was. These policies should be the bedrock of the Democratic party policies, but Obama wasted his executive orders and actions on immigration, social justice and environmental issues, instead of using them to keep business in the United States. Even Trump’s taking on Boing, perhaps the preeminent aerospace firm for the cost overruns on Air Force One is a huge public relations win. Obama pointed out he nixed the Marine Helicopter deal for the presidential fleet on similar grounds but I don’t remember any P.R. around that one. This looks like Trump is looking out for the little guy against unreasonable government pork even if it benefits Trump personally. Trump has criticized the cost of the F-35 program. Progressives
should applaud him for this, but they have ignored him. It is not clear whether Trump can take credit for it, but Softbank now plans to invest $50 billion in the U.S. and both U.S. Steel and IBM are talking about opening new facilities employing thousands.

So many financial pundits have pointed out the U.S. economy is weak and both the Federal Government and States have huge unfunded liabilities, primarily for pensions. It came out that the official government figures on the economy have been cooked so there has been essentially no growth. Since some areas of the country are booming, you can imagine how badly the rest of the country must be doing for it to average out to zero. Trump’s getting foreign countries to invest in U.S. factories is a big plus. However, this weakness on a worldwide basis may lead to a crash and subsequent major recession and possible depression in the United States. If Trump can avoid this and keep the economy going he certainly puts himself in strong position to be reelected in 2020. If he can’t then it really doesn’t matter how good a job he does I don’t know whether this is a ploy on the part of the foreign manufacturers to curry favor while they continue to try to steal American business in other ways, or because there are advantages to manufacturing here. As long as the U.S. is the largest consumer market, manufacturing here,
with the exception of labor costs and environmental compliance, holds many advantages.

There are often existing facilities that can be repurposed at a minimal cost. Energy costs and raw materials (especially for petroleum based products including plastics) are cheap, and the cost of moving those materials to a manufacturing plant and the completed product from the
manufacturing plant to the consumers is much cheaper than when located overseas. It’s pretty clear that he intends to leverage this economic advantage with foreign companies to get them to relocate here.

Appointing Tillerson give us a good idea that Trump will not take the neo-con line, but will instead seek a raproachment with Russia.
There is incredible fear of a Trump presidency coming from the liberal/progressive/Democrat Hillary supporters who literally think Trump will destroy records kept by the department of energy and/.or the EPA, that he will stage a major false flag event within a few months of taking office in order to seize dictatorial powers, that he is a racist and/or tool of Putin, etc.

To these persons Trump is such a risk to be president that we cannot even allow him to become president in order to evaluate whether what he wants to do is good or bad. Both Republican and Democrats have very sound reasons to fear Trump. Trump stands to make inroads with African American voters. Those inroads don’t have to go very far since Democrats have counted on a monolithic Black vote. A stronger immigration policy will drive up wages and in areas with many illegal immigrants, drive down both consumer spending and the housing
market. Many teachers will face layoffs as funding for schools is based on average daily attendance. If 20% of your students are here illegally and are deported along with their families or self deport as work dries up, employment of teachers should drastically decline.

Trump’s infrastructure plan will encroach on Democrat’s traditional territory, spending money on infrastructure to prime the pump for more jobs. Trump also is the peace candidate, cautioning against foreign interventions, and cutting military spending.

This will leave the Democrats with two issues that will self marginalize them. Increasing emphasis on environmental issues and on social justice issues based on identity politics. The Republicans don’t like him because he rejects the chamber of commerce, business round
table and country club shibolliths that have become the Republican mantra: Lower taxes, socially conservative policies, fewer regulations, and cutting entitlements.

If Trump succeeds it will be because he has imposed a fairer tax structure, spent money on things that benefit the ordinary American rather than on expensive foreign interventions. Just as Obama assumed office with so many in the public fantasizing about what he could
accomplish and projecting clearly unattainable expectations, Trump has certainly encouraged the same sort of faith among his most fervent supporters. Unlike Obama, Trump will take office with a hard core of Democratic voters opposed to him and demanding that Democratic office
holders impose the same sort of obstructionist tactics against him as they perceive the Republicans as having used against Obama. Trump also takes office with the avowed hostility of any social justice groups and the Central Intelligence Agency. Some sophisticated observers
believe that the CIA is planning a coup to prevent Trump from ever being sworn in as President – hence the unverified rumors of Russian involvement in the election with the inference that somehow or other Trump is a “ Manchurian Candidate” under the control of Vladimir Putin. Of course this is seconded by the neo-cons who want nothing less than a President who will “stand up to Putin.”

If Trump is actually inaugurated, look for him to purge the CIA of its political elements allied with the Democrats. In particular William Brennan will be the first to be fired and those who were brought in by Brennan and Mike Morrell will likewise be removed from positions of power and influence. In this sense Trump’s choice of General Mattis and General Flynn may be a way to keep the military on Trump’s side in the event of a post inauguration show down with the CIA. The things to watch for with the EPA, Department of Education, Department of Labor,
Department of Energy and the Justice Department are whether the Trump appointees will seek to depoliticize the departments or whether they will actively try to repoliticize them. It is inevitable that as liberal/progressive/ Democratic, appointees are removed this will be played up in the mainstream media as politicizing the departments when in fact it is a depoliticizing them. However, the temptation may be too great to prevent these departments from being politicized in a way
favoring traditional republican base including business and religious groups, to name two.

There are those who want to continue to fight culture wars, something Trump does not appear to care about at all, and those who think those wars have been lost and there is no point in fighting them. We shall see how the more religious members of Trump’s cabinet, Ben Carson at HUD and Betsy DuVos at Education shape their departments.

Regarding the EPA and Energy and Interior, only the most fearful environmentalists really believe that a Trump administration would roll back clear air and water regulations. What will happen is that much of the authority asserted by these agencies, is without legal support in the legislation creating the department. However, “true believers” working within the department have greatly expanded their jurisdiction. Often courts slap them down, but under Trump these sorts of efforts to regulate beyond the explicit authority will not be done.

Trump clearly believes that there is an effect that greater environmental regulation has on industry. To the extent that Trump wants to increase the private sector and especially manufacturing and mineral extractive industries in the U.S. he will favor industry.
Trump understands something that most environmentalists do not. The key to a first world country is inexpensive energy. This is the reason that Trump supports more drilling for oil, clean coal, more fracking and more nuclear energy. Renewable energy is currently economically
unsustainable without large government subsidies. Storage of energy generated by solar and wind is necessary because both provide only intermittent supplies. The storage problem has not been solved and current methods carry with them their own negative impact on the environment.

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