The new religion of the Silicon Valley elite

Ed West writes:

One of the curious trends of recent years has been the rise of “the radical Rich” – billionaires devoted to progressive social movements, whether it’s same-sex marriage or open borders. A recent example is the effort to punish North Carolina for passing a law saying that anatomically male people who identify as female cannot use women’s toilets.

I try to imagine what my feminist grandmother in the 1920s would have said had she been told that the cutting-edge social cause in a century’s time would be the right of men to use women’s loos. “LOL,” probably.

First the soft drinks manufacturer Pepsi demanded that the state repeal the law. Then Bruce Springsteen cancelled a gig there, followed by Ringo Starr. Various large, sharp-elbowed corporations have since piled in to protest, and Deutsche Bank has cancelled plans to expand its office in the state; this is a company that has a large office in Saudi Arabia, where women aren’t even allowed to drive, let alone choose which loo to use.

Are executives really that heated up about this great toilet injustice, or is it that big businesses love social justice causes which distract from economic injustice and annoying questions about tax avoidance, low wages and predatory practices? This process, known as “pinkwashing”, has become particularly noticeable since our culture became dominated by northern California some 20 years ago. Silicon Valley, the epicentre of 21st-century politics, is painfully right-on when it comes to social issues but chillaxed about ruthless capitalism. Or as the Puritans used to say of the proto-leftist Quakers in colonial America: “They pray for you one day a week and prey on you the other six.”

Take Uber, the app that allows people to hire very cheap taxis, driven by random people in their own cars, at the touch of a button. Since its foundation six years ago Uber has sold itself as promoting women’s rights and racial justice, with adverts carrying catchphrases such as “employing women globally” and “While taxis often refuse people in minority neighbourhoods, Uber is there”. It also “pays” its drivers (in actual fact freelancers) a relative pittance, and in so doing undercuts traditional black cabs.

Similarly, Airbnb, the website through which people rent out their homes, has run campaigns celebrating America’s immigrant history at Ellis Island. Airbnb is to hotels what Uber is to taxi drivers, but it’s especially interesting because, unlike hotels or B&Bs, Airbnb providers are in practice able to ignore discrimination laws; if you don’t like the look of a person, you can refuse their request. To me, its business model seems to be based on the reality that house-swapping works very effectively if people are allowed to follow their own instincts (ie, prejudices). Airbnb admits it faces “significant challenges” with the issue.

Then there is Starbucks, which last year tried to get on the bandwagon by encouraging customers to talk about racism and social injustice with its baristas. The stunt backfired – could anything be more awkward? – and attention soon turned on the company’s own lack of diversity in its higher ranks (always a tricky issue).

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The Rise & Fall Of The West

Comments:

* Current Western liberalism is a condition I call empathobesity. Briefly, just like obesity is a result of a generally healthy affinity for food gone mad, emapthobesity is a suicidal excess of an otherwise useful instinct of empathy.

The ironic thing is that for a long time, the ascent of the West has been the consequence of an impulse towards empathy and egalitarianism. Thus we see a gradual trend in the West towards a broadening of the circle of political empowerment. In England, where this trend seems to start first, we have the Magna Carta in 1215, Habeas Corpus (formally in 1679 but a convention for centuries before), the English Civil War which ended with Charles I beheaded (and which included distinctly leftist egalitarian factions like the diggers and levellers), the various reform and representation acts of the 19th and 20th century culminating in universal adult franchise, feminism, the sexual revolution of the 60s, gay, animal, transgender rights, gay marriage, illegal migrant rights and possibly chimpanzee/cetacean personhood in the near future etc, etc.

Thus we see that power has been diffusing outwards from the king, to lords, to powerful commoners, to middle class commoner men, to all men, to all adults, sexual minorities, animals etc.

For the first few centuries, this trend helped expand the proportion of educated and empowered people able to push back the frontiers of science and technology. It is no coincidence that England, where this egalitarian trend first manifests, also underwent the industrial revolution before other nations. Thus for centuries, a leftward shift was both a cause and consequence of scientific and technological progress.

In my view, this egalitarianism has been a trend in the West for so long that it is now a reflex action, a secular religion.

However, around the early/mid 20th century, this impulse has run into diminishing or even negative returns as power/respectability has now started to diffuse to demographics whose participation is fraught with unintended consequences or who are wholly irrelevant to scientific/technological progress.

This hypothesis succinctly explains both the rise of the West over the past few centuries, and it’s decline in the past few decades.

See tarkmarg.blogspot.com especially here.

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Trump Breaks The Rules

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* One thing that Trump did in this campaign, that has been little noticed or remarked upon, was to break the polite gentleman’s rule that you don’t make an issue of the other candidate’s funding sources. Trump said, flat out, that Jeb Bush was “owned” by his donors. This could be huge, or rather “yuge”. Would he be willing to say to Hillary in a national debate: “You are George Soros’ favorite candidate. He has spent millions of dollars to get you elected. What is it that he expects to get in return for that? The American people have a right to know. Tell us.”

* Shorter Jim Vandehei: We need a third party to give a voice to voiceless disenfranchised destitute Jewish billionaires, because the two we have doing that aren’t enough.

* I can just imagine Mark Zuckerberg, America’s sweetheart, out there campaigning before crowds of 25,000 and more, telling them how he’s going to lay them off and replace them with cheaper immigrants from India and Pakistan. With his personal charm and that winning message, he’d be huuuge!

I’m listening to the audio of Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up Bubble, by Dan Lyons. He describes the Silicon Valley billionaires and wanna-be billionaires as people who saw the Aspergery, conniving, backstabbing little prick at the heart of Social Network and thought, “I want to be that guy.”

* A third world “West” will be a disaster, a disaster unparalleled in modern history, a true regression to a hellish mean. It would be horrible for the West, the World, Jews, Gentiles, Israel. Just thinking of a Muslim France controlling the French nuclear arsenal should horrify anyone. It should especially horrify Israel.

But as for Israel, comments like that of Ruth Marcus are par for the course in Israeli public life, and are meaningless. To an opposition party, Israel is always “verging” on a trajectory of a disaster and although Israel was “verging” on slipping to a third world economy (according to Marcus), somehow Israel never actually got on that trajectory. You will note that that article was written in 2012. Since then the Israeli economy has continued to grow nicely, and Kadima, Marcus’s party, has zero seats in the Knesset. And deep down the Israelis do not mind the incredibly high ultra birth rate, they simply want to turn the ultra Orthodox into working and fighting citizens. But the birth rate they like. The ultra Orthodox Ashkenazi population, once you shave their beards, has a high potential.

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Will Israel Survive Going Haredi?

From Ruth Marcus in 2012:

“We’re verging on a trajectory of Israel slipping toward a third-world economy, and a third-world economy can’t sustain a first-world military,” says Yohanan Plesner, a Kadima member who chaired a committee to rewrite the exemption. “I see this as no less than an existential threat.”

…The military exemption is contingent on ultra-Orthodox men continuing to study, making them unable to work legally. Meantime, their separate, state-funded schools offer scant preparation for decent jobs; secular subjects such as math and science are not taught to boys after eighth grade. Currently, 60 percent of Haredi families live in poverty.

This situation is unhealthy and unsustainable. Low workforce participation by Haredi men — and Arab women — “will not only result in a further increase in poverty but also undermine Israel’s overall growth potential and fiscal sustainability,” the International Monetary Fund warned recently. Bringing the ultra-Orthodox into the military would offer a glide path for integrating them into regular society.

This assimilation is, from the ultra-Orthodox perspective, precisely the problem: the threat of losing youth to the lure of secular life. Some extreme elements are anti-Zionist; others believe they serve the state, and protect troops, with Torah study and prayer. The more pragmatic recognize that more service is inevitable, but they want to postpone the day of reckoning as long as possible, to age 23 or even 26 instead of the usual 18.

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The Genius Of Moldbug (A Founder Of The Dark Enlightenment)

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Moldbug wrote extensively on the religious underpinnings of the modern progressive “mind”.

If you can deal with the baroque and self-indulgent writing style, it’s a thought provoking analysis.

* Some of his most valuable content is about explaining the progressive mind, because he has one. All of his stuff is very specifically written for those who were raised as good-thinking atheist Brahminate progressives who fully absorbed their received value system.

This quote comes not from his blog, but one of his random comment-thread-bombings elsewhere on the web. I think it elucidates the appeal of his writing to the right sort of reader:

“As for “K. Marx and F. Engels,” our perspectives differ in one critical regard. Because I was born in 1973 and graduated from Brown in 1992, I am completely marinated in your perspective. No intelligent person can pretend to be unaware of progressive doctrine, still less one whose zip code is 94114! You, however, appear to have only the sketchiest and most distorted knowledge of any perspective to the right of yours. If you lack the inclination to change this, I cannot make you drink.

My misfortune, I suppose, is that I took all the horseshit that was jammed up my young ass seriously. That is: I was told I was supposed to be tolerant, keep an open mind, and above all never hate anyone. Being foolish enough to take these principles seriously, I could not remain on the reservation. I still feel they are good principles, in theory. It is certainly never too late to apply them.”

So UR is very different from what you might read from writers who converged on similar ideas through different life trajectories. Somebody who, say, went to the same elite institutions but was a member of their college Republican group wouldn’t have cut it for me; my ideological immune system would have set off antibodies at seeing particular buzzwords, shibboleths, or just subtle stylistic flourishes that give off the wrong vibe. For instance, Ross Douthat. If you develop your traditionalist thinking within progressive institutions, you’ll acquire a noticeable Outer Party patina, which makes you easier to dismiss, even by people who like to think of themselves as open-minded.

Part of what makes UR such fascinating reading is the “OMG get out of my younger self’s head” moments — touching on a lot of things you remember from your school years that you always noticed were a little bit… off, little circles you couldn’t square. But you didn’t have time to figure it all out, so it was best to just write it off as “hey, the world is complicated” for the time being. As an adult, what really keeps me eager to explore outside the Overton window is filling in some of those missing pieces while being reminded of how I felt when I first noticed them, like teasing out the root of some trauma in a therapy session. There are dots that are hard to connect unless you see how somebody else followed a similar path. That’s what makes it worth slogging through some of his book-length blog posts.

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