Mark Halperin: New Details on Biden Decline Cover Up, Final Mamdani NYC Election Forecast, Plus: Ro Khanna 2028?

Mark Halperin: The question of the press’s role and the Biden White House’s role in the issues surrounding Joe Biden’s cognitive decline. I really don’t want this to be my beat, but the story is back. Because people still aren’t talking about it in the right way—and because it’s important for history, for America, for the Democratic Party, and for the integrity of my business—we need to review where we are and talk about it again.
What brought it back to the forefront was a new report from the House Oversight Committee investigating Biden, particularly focusing on his use of the autopen and whether it was legitimate. But underlying that is the broader question of Biden’s cognitive decline.
People call it a “cover-up.” It wasn’t a cover-up. It was an attempted cover-up. The Democrats and the media couldn’t cover up Biden’s decline any more than the Trump administration could cover up whether Marco Rubio has good hair. It was visible to everyone.
The Biden White House tried to stop the media and other Democrats from talking about it. It was an attempted cover-up that didn’t work. And for some reason, it took the debate with Donald Trump to make it undeniable.
Leading up to that debate, the White House used two methods to suppress discussion: threats and lies. If a reporter talked or wrote about Biden’s decline, they were threatened. “Don’t you dare do that.” Everyone knew it. Almost no reporter was willing to break the off-the-record agreements to admit the White House was threatening them.
The second method was lying—constantly insisting that Biden “runs us ragged,” that he’s “so much better and sharper than us,” that he’s “at the peak of his game.” Those lies were repeated to minimize coverage. Democrats outside the White House faced the same pressure through the same threats and lies.
A few exceptions stood out: Alex Thompson reported honestly in real time, and I did too. On the Democratic side, Congressman Dean Phillips tried to get someone to run against Biden, saying he wouldn’t win re-election because the country saw not just his age but his decline. Phillips was basically run out of the party for saying it.
The media stayed silent about the threats and accepted the lies. When Biden aides went on TV saying, “Biden’s awesome, he runs us ragged, he’s totally sharp,” the media either echoed it or dismissed questions as Republican hit jobs or “deep fakes.”
I’ve said before: this is the biggest media scandal in American history. Before the debate, the decline was obvious. The original sin wasn’t Biden’s decision to run again, as Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson wrote in their book. The original sin was the White House lying and intimidating, and the media accepting it.
After the debate, there was finally conversation. Now, with new testimony from the House committee, we’re seeing people who worked around Biden describing what happened. Even now, with people testifying under oath, the lying continues. Biden aides are still trying to rewrite history, still lying publicly and under oath.
Some Democrats dodge accountability by saying, “I didn’t see his decline privately.” That’s irrelevant. Everyone saw it publicly. The question isn’t what they saw in private—it’s why they didn’t act on what was obvious to the world.
The dominant media continues to pretend none of this happened, partly because they don’t want to admit their own complicity or acknowledge how easily they were intimidated. It’s embarrassing. We have all these outlets, yet barely any coverage of this.
Now, to some of the testimony. Two senior Biden aides—people who obviously observed the president’s decline—are now on book tours being pressed to explain what they saw.
First, Kamala Harris. In her book, she says they should have pressed the Bidens harder on whether he was up for the job, but she won’t admit she saw cognitive decline. She argues he was capable of being president but implies running for re-election was harder than the presidency itself.
In an interview with Australian TV, the reporter presses her hard, refusing to accept her evasions. Harris keeps dodging, saying Biden had “the capacity to be president,” though she admits she had concerns about his endurance for the 2024 race.
But again, framing this around the debate is revisionist history. The decline was obvious long before that. Biden had good days—he wasn’t as far gone as Republicans said, but he wasn’t as sharp as Democrats claimed. This isn’t about what Kamala saw in private. It’s about what the public saw on C-SPAN.
Next, Karine Jean-Pierre. In a New Yorker interview and her book tour, she keeps repeating that Biden was “sharp,” that he understood history and policy, that she had to be prepared for tough questions from him. Maybe she had some good interactions, but she also saw what the world saw before the debate.
Then there’s Ian Sams, one of Biden’s main spokesmen. He went on TV countless times insisting the president was fine. But in sworn testimony, he admitted he met with Biden “a handful of times”—maybe four or five—over two years. That’s it. Yet he told the nation, “This is the president we see every day.”
That’s misleading. He barely knew what Biden was like. He testified he’d only met him twice in person, once on Zoom, and once by phone. That’s an enormous story—one that’s getting almost no coverage.
Finally, Jeff Zients, Biden’s chief of staff after Ron Klain. Zients testified that he, along with National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and VA Secretary Denis McDonough, all expressed concern after the debate that Biden shouldn’t run again.
Zients told lawmakers that within days of the debate, Biden knew he thought it was prudent to consider dropping out. Blinken and Sullivan—two of Biden’s closest aides—were concerned too. That’s a huge story.
In his testimony, Zients said he personally believed Biden should exit the race and that others shared that view. He also said many senators believed Biden couldn’t overcome the perception of his age after the debate.
So to summarize: Ian Sams told America Biden was fine despite barely seeing him. Jeff Zients and top officials like Blinken and Sullivan believed he shouldn’t run again. The media? Silent.
The White House chief of staff, national security adviser, secretary of state, and others all doubted Biden’s re-election ability, and by implication, his capacity to serve. Yet the media continues to look away.
This is one of the biggest stories of my career, and much of the press is compounding the original sin by pretending it will all go away. It won’t.

Posted in America, Journalism | Comments Off on Mark Halperin: New Details on Biden Decline Cover Up, Final Mamdani NYC Election Forecast, Plus: Ro Khanna 2028?

Top Ten Insights From Yesterday’s 2Way Show: ‘It’s Disgusting Corruption!” GOP Senator Slams Biden Admin. for Operation Arctic Frost Surveillance

Mandami clip as diagnosis of his appeal. Halperin framed the music-quiz video as the essence of why Mandami is winning in NYC: charismatic, fluent in youth culture, makes opponents overreact. The twist was his failure to recognize “New York State of Mind,” which Halperin called “disqualifying” in a tongue-in-cheek way, while still praising his overall political talent.

Shutdown blame is fluid. A new WaPo/ABC poll suggests more blame on Trump and the GOP, but Caputo and Whitlock argued media coverage would be harsher if roles were reversed. Both expected Democratic pressure to rise because they are withholding votes on a clean CR while controlling the Senate.

  • Competing polls blunt the narrative. Other surveys have shown blame dispersed across institutions, which keeps opinion movable rather than fixed; see AP-NORC coverage summarized here: Politico write-up.
  • Framing fight in the press. Caputo and Whitlock’s point was about coverage tone: when Democrats withhold votes, headlines still often center GOP blame. The dynamic popped on air when Jake Tapper pressed a House Democrat on why Senate Democrats won’t supply votes for a “clean CR.”
  • Senate math that fuels pressure. The Senate has repeatedly failed to advance the House-passed stopgap; vote tallies have been in the mid-50s, short of 60. See official roll-call summaries showing failed cloture and near-passage numbers: example vote (55–45) and the 2025 vote menu. Democrats control the chamber, which puts the onus on them to provide or negotiate the missing votes.
  • Why “clean CR” pressure skews blue. Coverage and newsletters have been explicit that Democrats are rejecting the GOP “clean CR” while seeking leverage on health-care subsidies; see Punchbowl (Sept. 15), Punchbowl (Oct. 6), and Punchbowl (Oct. 21).
  • Stakeholders add heat. Unions and industry voices calling for a clean CR complicate Democratic positioning. Examples: Teamsters President Sean O’Brien urging “pass a clean CR right now” at the White House event (Fox Business), and broad stakeholder pushes for an immediate reopening (House Appropriations stakeholder list; aviation coalition letter AIN Online).
  • Travel pain raises salience. Flight delays and controller shortages are visible, voter-salient costs that shrink Democrats’ negotiating space: Reuters on furlough plans, Reuters on repeated delays, Reuters on controller shortages, and ABC News on controllers working without pay.
  • SNAP cliff escalates stakes. USDA and wire reports warned of no federal SNAP issuance on Nov. 1 without a deal, which puts additional pressure on Democrats as they’re the ones blocking cloture on a clean CR: AP; governors and states scrambling in Reuters.
  • How the blame can flip. If nightly packages keep highlighting that Senate Democrats won’t provide the 60 votes and the public feels the travel and food-aid pain, marginal voters can start punishing the party seen as “withholding.” That is the shift Caputo and Whitlock are predicting, even if today’s top-line polling leans against the GOP.
  • Bottom line. Today’s numbers favor “blame the GOP,” per WaPo/ABC. But the ingredients for a swing are present: Senate control and cloture math, a visible coalition demanding a clean CR, and mounting, tangible costs in air travel and SNAP. If those three keep intensifying, Democratic resistance becomes harder to sustain without a deal.
  • Unions and travel optics are squeezing Democrats. Airline pilots, Teamsters, and AFGE all pushed for a clean CR. Whitlock said the looming SNAP cutoff and Thanksgiving travel are turning the screws, and predicted a shutdown deal by next Wednesday.

    “Arctic Frost” surveillance will have legs, but watch the language. GOP senators are furious. Halperin cautioned against calling it “spying” given a judge authorized the requests. Caputo and Whitlock said the breadth, Grassley’s involvement, and pandemic-era emergency powers make it a real oversight fight, not just a one-day outrage cycle.

  • Why GOP senators are furious. Several senators say their phone toll records were secretly obtained. Sen. Rick Scott’s statement is here: office press release; coverage in Washington Examiner and Florida Politics.
  • Watch the language: “spying” vs. court-ordered subpoenas. Halperin’s point holds: subpoenas and nondisclosure (gag) orders signed by a federal judge are not the same as illegal “spying.” Reporting indicates Chief Judge James Boasberg approved sealed orders barring carriers from notifying lawmakers for a period of time. See Fox News report on Verizon compliance and gag orders; additional details in Washington Examiner and AOL write-up.
  • Why this won’t be a one-day story. Caputo and Whitlock’s “it has legs” case rests on breadth (hundreds of targets), senior involvement (AG, DAG, FBI leadership per released docs), and the optics of lawmakers’ records being swept in. See Axios and New York Post September background.
  • Grassley’s involvement raises the stakes. As Judiciary chair, Grassley is publishing tranche after tranche and coordinating with other Republicans. That ensures hearings, subpoenas, and continuing disclosures. Start here: Grassley release; see echo coverage in Yahoo aggregation and Sinclair stations (WBFF, KOMO).
  • Judicial-process angle. The reported Boasberg orders matter. If they were standard grand-jury nondisclosure orders citing risk of evidence destruction, DOJ will lean on that. If the orders overreached, expect challenges and potential rebukes. Boasberg-specific claims are summarized here: Fox News, Newsmax appearance by Sen. Cruz, and Examiner.
  • Pandemic-era and post-J6 emergency mind-set. The show’s take was that COVID-era and J6-era “emergency” elasticities normalized aggressive investigative posture. That context includes expanded federal monitoring proposals and programs; for contemporaneous surveillance debates see Wired on ICE social-media surveillance build-out.
  • Carrier behavior is an evidentiary breadcrumb. Verizon is reported to have complied; AT&T is reported to have resisted or narrowed. That divergence will fuel oversight questions about scope, specificity, and whether requests were “facially valid.” Coverage: Fox News; Examiner follow-up.
  • Where oversight likely goes. Expect Judiciary and House investigations into: a) predicate and scope for the subpoenas, b) Speech-and-Debate Clause implications, c) gag-order justifications, d) any use of intel or pandemic-era authorities as shortcuts. Conservative policy shops are already sketching outcomes from discipline to impeachment: Daily Signal.
  • Bottom line. Call it “court-authorized surveillance via subpoena,” not blanket “spying,” unless evidence shows unlawful collection. The scale, paper trail, and political targets guarantee sustained oversight, press digging, and more disclosures. Keep an eye on new document releases from Grassley and balanced recaps from Axios.
  • BLM finances now under DOJ scrutiny. AP reporting on a federal probe into fraud allegations was treated as overdue. The panel tied it to the 2020 corporate giving boom and predicted more unflattering revelations about activist dark-money ecosystems.

    Harris is showing a sharper, more authentic public version. Her yes on Prop 50 push, the Stewart interview, and a separate long interview drew notice. Whitlock said when interviewers forced real answers she made news. Caputo said this version is more effective than her primary-season persona, but Halperin hammered the White House’s long denial of Biden’s decline as the bigger scandal.

    The Biden cognitive-decline “cover-up” is now a core Halperin narrative. He highlighted new reporting on senior aides doubting a reelection bid after the debate and on the press office shifting its story. His view: the unforgivable part was the attempted concealment from voters and media pressure behind the scenes.

  • New testimony: aides lost confidence after the debate. According to Jeff Zients’ House interview coverage, Biden’s then–chief of staff told investigators that decision-making slowed, memory slipped on names and dates, and that after the June 27, 2024 debate he and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan believed Biden should exit the race. That admission makes the “everybody knew but said otherwise” allegation stickier.
  • Press office “story shift” Exhibit A: Ian Sams. Publicly in 2024, the top spokesman presented Biden as “sharp” “every single day.” See July 2, 2024 MSNBC clip cited in this Fox report. In closed-door testimony released by the House, Sams described only “three or four” direct meetings with Biden across his White House tenure. Read the transcript PDF (p. 75): Sams transcript.
  • Press-shop tactics on age coverage. Former WH deputy press secretary Andrew Bates described a sustained effort to push back on age stories, arguing the press made it “outsized,” while acknowledging outreach to allies to challenge narratives they viewed as unfair. See Bates’ transcript PDF (pp. 48–50, 70–75): Bates transcript.
  • Halperin’s contrast frame. The show juxtaposes those disclosures with Harris’s recent interviews. In a widely clipped exchange on Jon Stewart’s podcast, she argued Biden was “fully competent,” drawing Stewart’s skepticism about how one can lack campaign stamina yet still govern. Coverage and clips: New York Post, Yahoo recap.
  • How this turns from narrative to oversight. The committee’s report and transcripts give Republicans a paper trail to subpoena more records, call additional witnesses, and press on whether the public line matched private assessments after the debate. Start with the committee’s summary and document archive: release and the report PDF.
  • Why the “cover-up” framing resonates on air. It combines three elements: a) contemporaneous polling and media skepticism that age was decisive, b) post-debate internal fractures now acknowledged in testimony, and c) spokespeople’s differing public vs. private descriptions of access and acuity. Together they allow Halperin to say the sin was suppression and pressure, not merely decline. For a concise aggregation of the post-debate fracture theme, see Inkl summary of the House report.
  • Counterpoints you should keep in view. The same transcripts feature denials that Biden was unable to execute duties, and defenders who argue aggressive media management is standard practice in both parties. See denials in the Sams transcript and Bates transcript. Also note Ron Klain’s competing frame that staff isolation, not incapacity, doomed the debate prep, per POLITICO.
  • Bottom line. The new testimony that senior aides urged an exit after the debate plus documentable shifts in the press-office line are why Halperin treats “cover-up” as the crux. Expect more releases, more clips, and more heat on how stories were shaped, not just on whether the president aged. For the key news peg, anchor to the Zients account in The Washington Post.
  • Voter ID remains a wedge with upside for the right. Callers raised Minnesota practices and ballot issues. Whitlock said Democrats won’t accept voter ID soon despite broad public support, including among Black and Hispanic voters. Caputo said cultural resistance inside the Democratic coalition is the blocker, but he expects eventual movement.

    Markets and races. Polymarket traders see Mandami mid-50s. Caputo guessed 52. Whitlock went bigger at 60. In New Jersey governor, markets favor Mikie Sherrill at 85 percent, but Whitlock was an outlier picking Ciattarelli to upset.

    Meta-media critique will keep shaping this show. Halperin’s throughline: legacy outlets apply different rules depending on the team, from shutdown framing to Biden’s health to Arctic Frost. Expect him to keep using polls, unions, and markets as reality checks against that coverage.

  • Case 1 — Shutdown framing. Coverage emphasizing GOP blame sits alongside facts Democrats are withholding Senate votes on a “clean CR.” Halperin highlights both the polling snapshot and the procedural nuance.
  • Case 2 — Biden’s health. He contrasts official assurances with subsequent testimony and reporting, arguing the bigger sin was concealment and media pressure.
  • Case 3 — “Arctic Frost”. He warns against sloppy verbiage like “spying” when court orders were involved, yet notes why the story endures.
  • The “reality check” toolkit he keeps reaching for.
    • Polls: to show where persuasion is working or not, e.g., WaPo/ABC.
    • Unions: to puncture partisan narratives when traditional Democratic allies push for a clean CR (e.g., aviation coalition, Teamsters).
    • Markets: to benchmark expectations outside the pundit sphere, e.g., Polymarket contracts on the NYC mayoral vote share and gubernatorial races.
  • Why this shapes the show format. The constant toggling between clips, polls, unions, and market odds gives Halperin a structure for “triangulating” coverage. He can:
    • Flag where press framing diverges from incentives and math.
    • Stress-test narratives against quantifiable indicators.
    • Keep guests reacting to external data rather than only partisan claims.
  • What to watch next.
  • Bottom line. Expect Halperin to keep pairing media-framing critiques with hard reference points. When the coverage tilts, he’ll counter with “receipts” — fresh polls, union letters, and market pricing — to either validate or puncture the prevailing narrative.
  • Posted in America | Comments Off on Top Ten Insights From Yesterday’s 2Way Show: ‘It’s Disgusting Corruption!” GOP Senator Slams Biden Admin. for Operation Arctic Frost Surveillance

    Critiquing Emotional Sobriety

    Author Allen Berger is right in the core of his teachings on emotional sobriety, but loose at the rhetorical edges, where the language of self-authorship flatters a buffered ego.

    Berger says at the 33:20 mark: “It’s a powerful moment when you realize I’ve been lying to myself. That’s powerful. That’s such a powerful moment, man. just there there’s what happens is it starts to reorganize our personality in some very significant ways.”

    I wonder when Allen Berger will realize he is lying to himself with some of his looser talk on emotional sobriety?

    Here are the biggest “whoppers” in Allen Berger’s Landscape of Emotional Sobriety talk — not in the sense of malicious lies, but of ideas that sound wise yet collapse under realism, psychology, and evolutionary logic. Each of these represents the self-deception he warns against.

    1. 24:07–24:25 “We can become the final arbiter of what’s right and wrong for us.”

    That’s the core fantasy of the buffered self. No human being invents their own moral universe. Our moral sensibilities evolved to maintain status, trust, and cooperation within groups. Claiming to self-determine right and wrong ignores that conscience, guilt, and shame are inherently social instruments. It’s not autonomy; it’s amnesia about how social calibration works.

    2. 13:04–13:19 “I don’t have to defend your idea of who you think I am.”

    In practice, everyone depends on others’ perceptions for belonging and survival. Social status, trust, and affection are real currencies. Pretending you can live unaffected by other people’s opinions is a lie dressed up as serenity. Mature independence isn’t insulation from others’ judgments; it’s learning to read them accurately and keep them in proportion.

    3. 13:23–13:43 “I can be okay with you having any opinion or talking to me any way you need to.”

    No, you can’t — and shouldn’t. Anger and resentment evolved for boundary enforcement. They protect dignity and signal that cooperation has gone off-track. Suppressing those reactions in the name of “freedom” invites exploitation. Healthy detachment keeps perspective, but it doesn’t erase self-protection.

    4. 19:55–20:22 “Our emotional center of gravity must be over our own feet.”

    This metaphor sounds grounding but misleads. Emotion regulation is co-regulation: our nervous systems synchronize with those around us. Autonomic balance is a shared property of relationships, not an internal gyroscope. When Berger treats regulation as self-contained, he replaces reality with stoic fiction.

    5. 27:39–28:02 “We can live free of shoulds, musts, and have-tos.”

    That’s a rhetorical high. Life is made of shoulds. Obligation is what holds families, friendships, and moral orders together. The fantasy of pure self-acceptance erases the productive tension between desire and duty — the very friction that matures character.

    6. 6:13–6:51 and 19:42–20:01 “Emotional dependency makes us unmanageable; maturity means becoming emotionally autonomous.”

    Another illusion of independence. Evolutionary psychology shows that emotional interdependence — attachment, alliance, reputation management — is the management system. Trying to eradicate dependency is like trying to stop needing oxygen because you fear suffocation.

    7. 15:45–16:29 “Love needs air; we must give space by detaching from dependence.”

    Half-true. Love suffocates under control, but it also dies from neglect. His dichotomy between dependency and autonomy misses the middle ground: negotiated mutual dependence, where both parties’ emotions remain porous and responsive.

    8. 21:33–22:06 “We suffer from a growth disorder, not sickness.”

    A comforting euphemism. Many patterns he calls “growth arrests” are direct adaptations to harsh environments — hypervigilance, shame sensitivity, people-pleasing. They aren’t just immaturity; they’re survival strategies that once worked. Recovery means recalibrating them, not moralizing them as childish.

    9. 22:17–23:12 and 23:06–23:49 “Our society’s problem is self-centeredness; the cure is to stop taking things personally.”

    This shifts the blame from social structure to individual psychology. People feel personally threatened because modern society does threaten belonging and security. The cure isn’t emotional anesthesia but rebuilding genuine community.

    10. 33:16–33:29 “We can reorganize our personality by realizing we’ve been lying to ourselves.”

    True insight does reorganize personality — but only if the insight cuts both ways. Berger recognized one illusion (that the world must meet his expectations) but not the deeper one (that he can meet all his needs alone). The second lie is bigger than the first.

    In short, his system trades overt emotional dependency for the socially approved addiction to autonomy. It replaces one lie (“I can control others”) with another (“I can exist without others”). Real emotional sobriety accepts that we are permanently, beautifully porous — shaped, hurt, and healed through connection.

    Berger’s system is built around recognizing self-deception—but his entire framework is a subtle self-deception. He believes he’s transcending dependency by claiming full authorship of his emotions and morals, yet that belief itself depends on a cultural myth: that the self can stand alone and self-generate truth, worth, and serenity.

    He’s right that self-observation reorganizes the personality. But what he calls “maturity” is just another reorganization of dependence—away from overt relationships and toward a socially sanctioned fantasy of independence. His version of “I stopped lying to myself” stops halfway. He’s uncovered the lie that the world must meet his expectations, but not the deeper lie that he can meet all his own psychological needs.

    In reality, emotional life remains co-regulated. Our values and self-esteem are negotiated through families, peers, and status hierarchies. The moment he frames emotional sobriety as “I decide what’s right and wrong for me,” he is asserting a buffered-self fiction that no human nervous system can sustain. It’s an attractive lie—one that flatters the modern ego while denying the porous truth that our moral compass and sense of peace are always relationally calibrated.

    So yes, if Berger ever applies his own maxim—“When you realize you’ve been lying to yourself, your personality reorganizes”—to the assumption of total self-authorship, he’ll hit a deeper level of realism. True emotional sobriety would mean recognizing that we never stop being interdependent moral animals.

    The False Promise of Emotional Sobriety When Your Life Is at War with Reality

    Picture it: you’re sitting on a stretch of rail, feeling calm, centered, practicing deep acceptance while a freight train screams toward you. You breathe through your fear. You observe your thoughts without judgment. You whisper: I can’t control the train, but I can control my reaction. This is the moment emotional sobriety becomes a parody of itself.
    The modern cult of “emotional regulation” often sells the illusion that inner composure can override outer catastrophe—that peace of mind is proof of enlightenment, not disengagement. But when life itself has turned adversarial—when power, injustice, or material danger are the real forces pressing down—serenity morphs into self-abandonment. The pursuit of calm in a war with reality can become the psychological version of lying down on the tracks and calling it spiritual growth.
    Berger’s serenity logic divides the world into what you can change and what you cannot. A train you can outrun sits in the “can change” column, so Berger says jump too. The man who breathes through it is misusing the doctrine. My parody hits the misuse, not Berger.

    1. Emotional Sobriety as a Retreat from Reality

    Originally, “emotional sobriety” meant freedom from obsessive emotional dependence—the ability to live without being ruled by another person’s moods or approval. It was a legitimate corrective to emotional chaos. But like most therapeutic ideals, it metastasized. The new message became: You can stay peaceful no matter what happens. It’s an attractive promise, particularly in a world that feels unmanageable. Yet taken literally, it breeds fatalism disguised as maturity. There are times when outrage, grief, and fear are sane reactions to genuine threats.

    2. When Serenity Becomes Denial

    There’s a difference between managing emotions and suppressing the survival instincts that evolution equipped us with. Fear tells you to move. Anger tells you to defend. Grief tells you to gather support. When “sobriety” is interpreted as erasing these signals, it becomes an opiate of the self—another way to keep the peace while the train bears down. We confuse nonreactivity with wisdom because it looks composed, but sometimes composure is just paralysis rehearsed as virtue.

    3. The War with Reality

    Reality always wins. If your body is unsafe, no amount of meditation will erase cortisol. If you’re trapped in a toxic system, serenity can’t fix what requires confrontation. Many people discover this too late: they’ve spent years mastering acceptance while avoiding the one change that would have saved them—standing up, leaving, fighting back. Emotional sobriety becomes emotional anesthesia. It helps you stay calm as your boundaries disintegrate.

    4. The Lie Beneath the Calm

    The deeper lie is moral: that inner peace proves moral superiority. In this frame, agitation equals immaturity, and anger equals relapse. But sometimes anger is the immune system of the soul. True sobriety isn’t about muting emotions; it’s about listening accurately to what they’re trying to say. When life and reality are at war—when the conditions you’re in demand moral engagement—emotional neutrality becomes complicity.

    5. The Real Alternative

    The antidote is not chaos but congruence—when your emotional state matches your environment. If a train is coming, terror is appropriate. If your life is being crushed by delusion or injustice, discomfort is intelligence. Real maturity isn’t staying calm in the face of destruction; it’s using emotion as a navigational tool to survive, adapt, and repair what’s broken.

    6. Reclaiming the Porous Self

    To be human is to be porous—to be affected, to feel the weight of the world moving through you. Emotional sobriety, as it’s sold today, denies that permeability. It imagines a buffered soul untouched by chaos. But the only people who feel nothing while the train approaches are the dead.

    When life is at war with reality, emotional sobriety as self-containment is a false promise. The point isn’t to “stay on the tracks with serenity.” The point is to use your emotions—fear, anger, grief—as accurate instruments of navigation. True sobriety isn’t emotional stillness. It’s emotional intelligence in motion: the capacity to recognize danger, to move when it’s time to move, and to let your heart’s alarm system do its job before the train arrives.

    Upon reflection, the system I attack above is more buffered than the system Berger teaches. Reacting versus responding already treats emotion as information rather than noise to suppress. Expectations versus agreements assumes the other man has his own will and that you have to negotiate with him out loud, which is relational to the core. And the delivery vehicle for the entire doctrine is Alcoholics Anonymous, the most porous institution in American life: the room, the sponsor, the share, the chip, surrender to a power outside the self. A man does not get emotionally sober alone in Berger’s world. He gets there inside a group that re-regulates him weekly. So the headline charge, that Berger trades dependence for an addiction to autonomy, runs straight into the fact that his cure is communal from the first meeting. I quote the most absolute lines from one talk and read them as the whole man.

    Is there an adaptive fitness advantage to emotional sobriety? If not, its BS

    If a behavior or mindset doesn’t confer adaptive advantage in survival, reproduction, alliance, or long-term resource stability, then it’s not an evolved trait. It’s a meme, not a mechanism.

    1. Define it biologically

    If we strip away the slogans, emotional sobriety is an attempt to regulate emotional volatility so your reactions don’t destroy your social alliances or lead you to impulsive self-harm. That’s not nonsense — that’s the very definition of adaptive restraint. Every successful social species has evolved inhibitory control to keep coalition bonds intact. Emotional regulation that prevents self-sabotage has strong survival value.

    2. Where it helps

    Group cohesion: Emotional overreactions fracture alliances. Sobriety helps you keep allies, mates, and reputations intact.

    Delayed retaliation: In complex societies, restraint allows for better timing — you can choose when to fight or withdraw. That’s adaptive.

    Mate value: People who stay stable under stress are valued as partners, parents, and leaders.

    Energy conservation: Chronic rage or anxiety wastes metabolic resources and impairs immune function. Regulation saves energy for action that matters.

    In these contexts, emotional sobriety has clear fitness benefits — it’s a signal of predictability and self-control, which attract mates and allies.

    3. Where it stops helping

    When “sobriety” becomes flattening — numbing responses that should trigger escape, defense, or protest — it loses adaptive value.

    Predator blindness: If you don’t feel fear when threatened, you die.

    Submission to exploitation: If you suppress anger when being used, you stay trapped in low-status roles.

    Loss of credibility: Indifference under stress can signal weakness or detachment, not strength.

    True evolutionary advantage lies in accurate regulation, not suppression. The capacity to feel and act proportionally to the environment is what selection favors.

    4. The adaptive sweet spot

    Emotional sobriety is adaptive when it means response flexibility — the ability to pause, assess, and then use emotion as information. It’s maladaptive when it becomes chronic self-soothing detached from reality. Natural selection didn’t design humans to be Zen rocks; it designed us to be emotionally intelligent mammals whose signals coordinate social behavior.

    5. Bottom line

    There is an adaptive advantage to the real thing: flexible regulation that maintains cooperation and prevents impulsive damage. But the therapeutic myth of total serenity under any condition — that’s biologically incoherent.

    If a train is coming, the evolutionarily successful person jumps off the tracks. The maladaptive one breathes through it and calls it enlightenment.

    Focus: the porous self, relational interdependence, evolved social emotions (shame, pride, guilt), and a realistic alternative to “buffered-self” autonomy.

    Core picks

    Relational Being: Beyond Self and Community

    Shows how the self is constituted in relationship rather than sealed off from others. A direct antidote to “I am the final arbiter” thinking, with practical implications for dialogue, conflict, and collaboration.

    Themes: relational ontology, co-regulation, social construction

    The Autonomy Myth: A Theory of Dependency

    A precise dismantling of rugged individualism. Argues that human lives are universally dependency-laden and sustained by networks and institutions, clarifying why “pure self-reliance” is a cultural fantasy.

    Themes: myth of autonomy, social scaffolding, realistic maturity

    Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy, Agency, and the Social Self

    Defines autonomy as something formed within relationships and power structures. Useful for replacing “detached autonomy” with negotiated, context-aware agency.

    Themes: agency, power, situated choice

    Healthy Dependency: Leaning on Others Without Losing Yourself

    Practical middle path between clinging and isolation. Shows how to use support, feedback, and accountability without surrendering dignity or boundaries.

    Themes: mutual reliance, boundaries, resilience

    Self-Conscious Emotions: The Psychology of Shame, Guilt, Embarrassment, and Pride

    Foundational research on how shame, guilt, and pride function. Helps reframe these feelings as social regulators rather than defects to be anesthetized.

    Themes: shame vs guilt, repair, reputation

    The Oxford Handbook of Evolution and the Emotions

    State-of-the-art essays on why emotions evolved the way they did, including self-conscious emotions. Grounds “emotional sobriety” in function, not slogans.

    Themes: adaptation, social value tracking, signal calibration

    Applied and recovery-adjacent

    The Moral Animal: Why We Are the Way We Are

    Highly readable tour of evolutionary psychology, status, mating, and cooperation. Sharp lens on why other people’s evaluations matter and how that shapes conscience.

    Themes: social strategy, status, moral sentiments

    Emotional First Aid

    Field guide for rejection, rumination, guilt, and failure. Offers concrete interventions that respect the signal value of emotions while reducing unhelpful spirals.

    Themes: repair tools, rejection, guilt, resilience

    Supplemental (self-help/codependency lens)

    Freeing Yourself from Emotional Dependency: A Journey of Awareness, Autonomy, and Love

    Practical exercises for moving from anxious dependence to mutually supportive bonds. Use as a workbook alongside the more theory-heavy titles.

    Themes: habits, self-assessment, mutuality

    From Codependency to Emotional Autonomy: The 9 Most Useful Tools

    Tool-set for boundary setting, expectation management, and non-punitive detachment. Good for translating theory into daily practice.

    Themes: boundaries, conflict, daily drills

    The speaker’s “landscape of emotional sobriety” is rich and compassionate, but it leans too far into what Charles Taylor called the buffered self—the modern idea that maturity means self-containment, emotional self-sufficiency, and internal sovereignty over meaning. From a realist and relational standpoint, that’s half true at best.

    1. The illusion of self-generation

    The talk assumes we can “become the final arbiter of what’s right or wrong for me,” that emotional sobriety comes from within once we reclaim our “center of gravity.” But this is an abstraction. No one actually generates moral meaning in isolation. Our sense of “right” emerges through thick webs of kinship, memory, and social reciprocity. A “porous” person—the kind who exists in real communities—is constantly shaped by the moods, needs, and moral claims of others. Even our “self-esteem” is a dialogue, not a monologue. To pretend otherwise is to confuse emotional regulation with moral independence.

    2. The false promise of invulnerability

    When he says “I don’t have to defend your idea of who I am” and “I can be okay with you having any opinion,” he idealizes a level of detachment that borders on dissociation. Real emotional health is not impermeable calm; it’s calibrated permeability. Love, loyalty, and shame are supposed to affect us. The buffered model imagines freedom as insulation. The porous model sees freedom as the capacity to stay open without being shattered. The difference is moral realism versus therapeutic idealism.

    3. Relationship as the field of sobriety

    The talk’s logic assumes sobriety is achieved before relationship—as an internal project that then enables healthy connection. In reality, sobriety is discovered through relationship. Family, friendship, and community correct us, mirror us, and call us out of self-delusion. Emotional maturity isn’t about withdrawing our “center of gravity” from others but learning to share it responsibly. The realist stance is that autonomy is always negotiated.

    4. The buffered self as cultural symptom

    He briefly admits our culture is narcissistic, yet his whole model is a product of that same culture: the therapeutic belief that “I” must heal “myself” by mastering “my” feelings. That’s still self-referential. Real growth requires acknowledging dependence—on teachers, elders, family systems, inherited moral languages. The buffered ideal flattens that complexity into private choice. The porous self recognizes that moral and emotional order are co-constructed.

    5. Realism and moral ecology

    The speaker’s “you can decide what’s right for you” collapses moral realism into psychological subjectivism. In a porous world, right and wrong are not self-authored—they’re discovered in lived consequences, in the responses of those we love, and in the patterns that sustain or corrode trust. Emotional sobriety, in that sense, is less about equilibrium than fidelity: keeping faith with a moral ecology that exceeds the self.

    In short: his talk beautifully captures the need for awareness and flexibility but drifts into buffered-self fantasy. A realist view sees emotional sobriety as relational coherence, not inner sovereignty. We don’t outgrow dependence; we refine it.

    That Evolutionary Psychology episode with Daniel Sznycer inverts the logic of the “emotional sobriety” talk. It gives an empirically grounded realism about emotions that fits the porous self—the self shaped by others, by status games, and by shared moral ecologies. Here’s a clear contrast.

    1. Emotions as social calibration, not private pathology

    Sznycer treats shame, guilt, pride, and even self-esteem as information systems evolved to track how others value us. Shame is a warning that our reputation is dropping. Pride is a signal that our reputation has risen. Guilt is the drive to repair damage to valued partners. These are not internal moral hallucinations; they are social sensors. The emotional-sobriety model imagines a self-contained observer who can decide what is right and wrong “for me.” Sznycer’s data show that is fiction. Our moral emotions are audience-sensitive and reputation-tuned. The social environment writes half our feelings.

    2. The buffered self’s denial of function

    In the AA-style model, shame and guilt are “bad” emotions that block serenity. The goal becomes detachment—no one can make me feel small unless I let them. That’s buffered thinking. The evolutionary model says the shame system is working as designed. Like pain, it hurts because it protects. If you try to numb it rather than interpret it, you lose feedback about how you’re being received. Emotional numbness may feel like freedom but it’s functional blindness.

    3. The moral ecology view

    Sznycer’s research shows that moral emotions track value in a group. The porous self isn’t free to invent its own standards; it’s negotiating with a moral marketplace. Your “emotional center of gravity” is distributed across relationships. Recovery, in this light, isn’t about reclaiming autonomy from others—it’s about finding the right audience, the right tribe, whose feedback keeps your shame, pride, and guilt calibrated to real social and moral contingencies rather than to abusive or chaotic ones.

    4. Why this matters for the recovering addict

    Addiction hijacks these feedback systems. Substances promise the illusion of buffered invulnerability—no shame, no anxiety, no social pain. Sobriety re-opens the social sensors, which can feel raw. But realistic recovery means learning to read those signals, not eliminate them. If you feel shame, ask which audience you’re responding to and whether that audience’s values serve your survival. Emotional sobriety, re-defined through Sznycer’s lens, is not detachment but accurate social attunement.

    5. A realism takeaway

    The emotional-sobriety framework teaches self-containment; the evolutionary one teaches relational intelligence. True sobriety is the ability to feel what others feel about you, without either dissolving into it or blocking it out. It’s porous realism: emotions are evolved instruments of social navigation, not private spiritual flaws.

    Fear, anxiety, low mood, anger, and resentment are designed features. They are not bugs. For a recovering 12-stepper, treat them as signals to decode and act on, not as commands to obey.

    I. What these feelings are usually telling you

    Fear. There is a real or perceived threat to safety, status, resources, or belonging. Do a threat audit. What is the concrete loss you fear. What is the time horizon. What is the worst credible case. What is the base rate.

    Anxiety. Uncertainty plus responsibility. It asks for preparation and social backup. Write the next smallest controllable step. Recruit a partner or sponsor to review it.

    Depression or collapse. Energy conservation and “defeat” signaling. It lowers risky effort and asks you to stop losing fights you cannot win. Trim goals. Sleep. Sunlight. Movement. Service.

    Anger. Bargaining and boundary enforcement. It says something valuable feels threatened. Name the value. Decide if you need to set a boundary, negotiate, or exit.

    Shame and guilt. Social alignment tools. Guilt says repair the harm. Shame says reconnect to a group that shares your values and get witnessed while you change.

    Resentment. Unsettled accounts. Either collect, release, repair, or exit. Letting it accumulate is like carrying high-interest debt.

    II. Addiction changes the dashboard

    Sensitization. Stress circuits and cue-reactivity are over-tuned. Signals feel louder than they are. Assume 20–50 percent amplification in early recovery and during PAWS.

    Allostatic load. Sleep debt, inflammation, and withdrawal distort mood. Fix the body to fix the readout. Protein breakfast. Hydration. Light and movement early. Caffeine earlier in the day.

    Mismatch. Our wiring treats online slights and financial uncertainty as tribe-level threats. Right-size the problem with base rates and outside eyes.

    III. Porous self corrections

    Co-regulation beats solo regulation. Call your sponsor. Get to a meeting. Sit next to steady people. Breath and pulse sync in safe company will lower arousal faster than techniques alone.

    Moral calibration lives in community. Run “right or wrong” through your group’s conscience, your family’s needs, and your Higher Power as you understand it. Do not self-certify morals in isolation.

    Pride is conferred, not manufactured. Earn it through reliability and service. Let others reflect it back.

    IV. A 12-step way to work the signal

    Step 1. Name the loss of control. “My anger is running me, and it points to a real boundary issue.”

    Step 2–3. Ask for help and guidance. Align planned action with group conscience.

    Step 4. Turn the feeling into an inventory entry.
    a) What happened.
    b) What I felt.
    c) The fear or value beneath it.
    d) My part. Omission or commission.
    e) What I want to be different.

    Step 5. Read it out loud to a sponsor. Get reality-tests and alternatives.

    Step 6–7. Remove the defect, keep the virtue. Keep courage, lose reactivity. Keep care, lose control.

    Step 8–9. If the signal says “repair,” make amends. If it says “protect,” set a boundary without revenge.

    Step 10. Daily check for amplified signals. Ask “signal or surge.” Adjust sleep, food, connection.

    Step 11. Ask for the next right action, not the final solution.

    Step 12. Convert the resolved feeling into service so the lesson sticks.

    V. A simple field protocol when a hot emotion hits

    90 seconds. Name it, feel it in the body, breathe to the bottom of the exhale.

    Translate to a hypothesis. “I am angry because my time is not respected.”

    Reality-check with one person. “Am I missing something. What would you do next.”

    Choose the smallest reversible action that honors your values. Send one clear boundary message. Change one commitment. Schedule one repair.

    Debrief in Step 10 that night. Did the action reduce suffering for me and others. What will I do differently next time.

    VI. Special cases for relapse risk

    HALT first. Hungry, angry, lonely, tired. Fix in that order.

    Pre-commitment. When resentment crosses X, I call Y and go to Z meeting. No debates with self.

    Opposite action when urges spike. If the urge says isolate, go where the people are. If it says attack, ask a question. If it says quit, rest instead.

    Bottom line: Treat feelings as evolution’s alerts. Honor the information. Then calibrate the volume with your people and your program. Recovery is not emotional invulnerability. It is accurate sensing and group-guided responding.

    Posted in Addiction, Evolution | Comments Off on Critiquing Emotional Sobriety

    Max Weber: The Lawyer as Social Thinker

    Stephen Turner wrote in this 2020 book:

    The law lends itself to characterization as a world constituting conceptual structure. The list of “facts” admissible in a court of law are different from the facts as we ordinarily think of them and from the facts of science. The reasoning about these facts that is admissible or legally valid is distinct from the kind of reasoning that we accept in everyday life as rational. The courtroom is an artificial setting, like the laboratory, and, as with the laboratory, special training is required to understand fully what is going on within it. The fundamental concepts, such as “responsibility,” are akin to concepts employed in non-legal settings, but differ from them, as petitioners often find to their dismay. The peculiarity of legal reasoning and the artificiality of the world disclosed by it is part of the experience of every aspiring lawyer. Those who cannot learn to think like a lawyer cannot become lawyers. But the fact of differences between legal reasoning and other forms of reasoning are continually present to the lawyer. Much of the lawyer’s time is taken up with explaining to clients the differences between what is, in the idiom of the client, just, fair or true and what is just, fair or true in the eyes of the law.There are, however, difficulties with any characterization of the law as a separate “world.” The sphere of legal reasoning is not entirely separated from the “world” occupied by ordinary people. Much of what the lawyer does in the courtroom is to translate claims of people about their action framed in ordinary language into the language of the law. J.L. Austin made this point in a famous paper, “A Plea for Excuses,” by quoting the statement of Finney, an attendant at an insane asylum who had scalded a patient to death and was being tried for manslaughter in an 1874 case. Finney’s statement (rendered here as it is presented by Austin, with statements in ordinary idiom of excuse set in italics) described the circumstances thus:

    “I had bathed Watkins, and had loosed the bath out. I intended putting in a clean bath, and asked Watkins if he would get out. At this time my attention was drawn to the next bath by the new attendant, who was asking me a question; and my attention was taken from the bath where Watkins was. I put my hand down to turn the water on in the bath where Thomas Watkins was. I did not intend to turn the hot water, and I made a mistake in the tap. I did not know what I had done until I heard Thomas Watkins shout out; and I did not find my mistake out till I saw the steam from the water. You cannot get water in this bath when they are drawing water at the other bath; but at times it shoots out like a water gun when the other baths are not in use…. (It was proved that the lunatic had such possession of his faculties as would enable him to understand what was said to him, and to get out of the bath.)”

    Finney’s lawyer said the following: “The death resulted from accident. There was no such culpable negligence on the part of the prisoner as will support this indictment. A culpable mistake, or some degree of culpable negligence, causing death, will not support a charge of manslaughter; unless the negligence be so gross as to be reckless.”

    The judge ruled as follows (with the distinctions relevant to the legal idiom in italics): “To render a person liable for neglect of duty there must be such a degree of culpability as to amount to gross negligence on his part. If you accept the prisoner’s own statement, you find no such amount of negligence as would come within this definition. It is not every little trip or mistake that will make a man so liable. It was the duty of the attendant not to let hot water into the bath while the patient was therein. According to the prisoner’s own account, he did not believe that he was letting the hot water in while the deceased remained there. The lunatic was, we have heard, a man capable of getting out by himself and of understanding what was said to him. He was told to get out. A new attendant who had come on this day, was at an adjoining bath and he took off the prisoner’s attention. Now, if the prisoner, knowing that the man was in the bath, had turned on the tap, and turned on the hot instead of the cold water, I should have said there was gross negligence; for he ought to have looked to see. But from his own account he had told the deceased to get out, and thought he had got out. If you think that indicates gross carelessness, then you should find the prisoner guilty of manslaughter. But if you think it inadvertence not amounting to culpability – i.e., what is properly termed an accident – then the prisoner is not liable.”

    The lawyer and judge rely on the idiom of the defendant: it constitutes in this case the main evidence for the conclusion of no culpability. But the lawyer does something with the descriptions: he restates them into a language of culpability that allows the law of manslaughter to be applied, and cites a case that is similar in the legally relevant respects in which a similar restatement was accepted by a previous court and thus constitutes a precedent.

    Austin’s purpose was to show that the idiom of the lawyer and judge compared unfavorably with the idiom of the prisoner. He makes two main points:

    (i) Both counsel and judge make very free use of a large number of terms of excuse (the terms set in italics), using several as though they were, and even stating them to be, indifferent or equivalent when they are not, and presenting as alternatives those that are not.
    (ii) It is constantly difficult to be sure what act it is that counsel or judge is suggesting might be qualified by what expression of excuse.

    He remarks that “The learned judge’s concluding direction is a paradigm of these faults. Finney, by contrast, stands out as an evident master of the Queen’s English. He is explicit as to each of the acts and states, mental and physical: he uses different, and the correct, adverbs in connexion with each: and he makes no attempt to boil down” ([1961] 1970: 197). Austin, in short, takes sides: against the redescriptions or translations given by the lawyer and judge, and for those of Finney, given in “ordinary language.” A neo-Kantian might reply to this taking of sides by defending the claim that the law and the descriptions of the law are simply different from that of the ordinary person. The world view of the ordinary person in a given society, however, is just one world view among others. Weber himself makes this claim: even the “language of life” abstracts from reality. “Every type of purely direct concrete description bears the mark of artistic portrayal ([1904] 1949: 107). To be sure, the language of daily life is governed by different purposes, and abstracts from the full reality of the case in a different way. From this point of view it is entirely appropriate that the lawyer does precisely what Austin complains of: to take as equivalent descriptions that which are from the point of view of ordinary language not equivalent, and to define the act itself according not to ordinary usage but in terms of comparisons Austin considers, however correctly from the point of view of ordinary language, to be inexact or excessively abstracted or “boiled down.”2

    Austin himself acknowledges a difference in purposes – the overriding need, in the law, for a decision, the requirement that “the charge or action and the pleadings be brought under one or another of the heads and procedures that have come in the course of history to be accepted by the Courts … [and] the general requirement that we argue from and abide by precedents” ([1961] 1970: 188). If Austin had been writing of Continental rather than common law, he might have said rather than “argue and abide by precedents” that categorizations of action must be consistent with the framework of concepts that is part of the Roman legal inheritance. What is common to both forms of law is the need to abstract, and the fact that the “abstraction” is governed by a distinctive “legal” purpose.

    Learning the civil law requires learning how to employ a set of concepts with a long history reaching back to the Roman jurists themselves and refined conceptually by the teachers of the Roman legal tradition. But does this make the Roman law tradition a “paradigm” or “fundamental ideology” – a way of making the world? It is easy to see why commentators would have thought it so. Civil law has a well-defined history, and the history is such that the contrast between legal categories and ordinary language categories is one of its central facts. The Roman jurists were rediscovered, an event known as the “reception” by continental professors of the law, and the system of the Roman law was taught to students from the countries of Europe as a closed scientific conceptual system. It was taught for the purpose of application to circumstances alien to those in which it had been originally conceived, namely the society of Ancient Rome. The properly trained student could, it was supposed, return to his own country and apply these categories and forms of reasoning. The conceptual scheme of the law was systematic, expressed in a different tongue than his native language, and precise. Casuistic argument provided the resources to account for difficulties of application, so that the scheme was not fundamentally challenged by novel kinds of facts.

    * Ihering’s argument begins with a simple theory of human nature, a philosophical anthropology. The “world,” Ihering says, has four levers. The first two are given by nature and take the individual form of pleasure and pain; or, from the point of view of the user of the levers to influence action, of reward and coercion ([1877] 1913: 26–7, 73). These primary objective positive and negative levers have “subjective” or psychological forms as well: honor is the carrot and psychological coercion is the stick.3 Ihering said of psychological coercion that it is a kind of “indirect compulsion” ([1877] 1913: 34). In contrast to external compulsion, the “mastery of another’s will … [in which] the resistance which the foreign will opposes to our purposes is broken by summoning physical power superior to its own,” in cases of psychological coercion “the resistance of the foreign will is overcome by itself from within” ([1877] 1913: 176–7). The second set of levers are moral or ethical, involving the feelings of duty and of love.

    Cooperation, “connecting one’s own purpose with the other man’s interest” ([1877] 1913: 28, italics in original) and securing “agreement of wills” between parties, is the basis of all social forms or forms of association, including the state. The model is the valid contract4 in which the decisive fact with respect to validity is not the objective reality of the interests or the naturalness of the community of interests, but subjective interest and assent. Interests may be created “artificially” in the sense that a buyer or seller may offer inducements. Moreover, because the “subjective conviction of interest” is decisive to securing agreement in wills, in such paradigmatic cases as commercial agreements this may depend on salesmanship, which Ihering calls “business eloquence” ([1877] 1913: 29). Ihering’s insertion of the notion of “subjective conviction of interest” marks a step away from reductive naturalism, the idea, central to Hobbes, for example, that social institutions may be explained by reference to a simple list of more or less fixed human needs or wants.The concept of ideal interests is another step in the same direction. The reasoning behind it is characterically legal. Ihering points out that forms of work that are not considered, legally, a proper subject for exchange and therefore of material reward may be rewarded in non-material ways, and that these rewards may have a large significance in society. He notes that in Rome it was considered ignoble to pay for intellectual work ([1877] 1913: 81).5 But the gift of non-manual services by free men to the state was not unrewarded: the reward was honor. When money was needed to support an intellectual worker, a novel legal form, the honorarium, was invented for the purpose of distinguishing it from mere money payment for labor. Interest in honor is the paradigmatic “ideal” interest. Such interests may, as in the case of administrative intellectual work in the later Roman Empire, come to be mixed with monetary reward. But honor is conceptually distinct from monetary reward, and cannot be reduced to it. It is a distinct “lever” that can be used in the process of securing agreement in wills or more generally in inducing particular forms of behavior.

    Ihering uses the “levers” of reward, coercion, honor (or ideal interest) and psychological coercion as a means of categorizing the social relationships that employ them. Commerce is organized compensation, reward given for reward. Revenge is the return of evil for evil.6 These are, so to speak, the primitive social uses of the two lower “levers.” Commerce has two forms, exchange and association. “Exchange presupposes a difference of need on both sides, and accordingly also a difference in the means whereby the need is to be satisfied, viz., in the mutual services” ([1877] 1913: 95). Identity of purpose is the basis of association or, in legal terms, the contract of partnership “when the purpose exceeds the powers of a single person, or when the combined pursuit of it gives a prospect of economy in the means to be expended, or greater security in the attainment of the purpose.” The Roman legal term for this sort of association is Societas. Commerce is egoistic in essence, and largely self-regulating. Competition and supply and demand set prices and define “equivalence.” Each person, acting egoistically, constrains the others by rewarding them with remuneration. Under ordinary circumstances, law is not necessary. But there is a role for legal coercion in the regulation of commerce in checking excesses of egoism, such as those that produce the extraordinary circumstances of force, fraud, and the like. Legal coercion, then, has only a supplementary role, albeit a necessary and in some circumstances important one, in relation to commerce. But the idea of replacing commerce by state power, replacing reward by coercion, is not practical: “Coercion is effective only so long as the whip is in sight; remuneration works continually”

    Posted in Law | Comments Off on Max Weber: The Lawyer as Social Thinker

    The Beauty & The Brutality Of Southern California

    Shawn Hubler writes in the New York Times: “Southern California is a beautiful place, as beautiful as they tell you, but steely, too, in ways that aren’t as obvious from the outside. It tests people, and draws people who aren’t afraid to be tested.”

    ChatGPT says: Southern California’s beauty isn’t soft. It’s alluring but demanding. The light, the ocean, the open space—those are invitations, but they’re also exposures. The same sun that flatters you will bleach you out if you stay too long. The same openness that promises freedom can leave you unanchored.

    That’s what you’re getting at with “steely.” There’s a hardness built into the landscape and culture—competition, heat, earthquakes, distance. It’s a place where image and willpower intertwine. People go there to test how much of themselves is real when the dream starts to glare.

    It draws a certain kind of temperament: ambitious, self-inventing, restless. But the test cuts both ways. Some people find out what they’re made of; others find out they were mostly costume. Southern California gives you the stage and the light, but it doesn’t provide the substance. You have to bring that yourself.

    Posted in California | Comments Off on The Beauty & The Brutality Of Southern California

    America’s biggest institutions back off from challenging Trump (10-26-25)

    01:00 Why Are People So Emotionally Invested In Trump’s White House Renovations? https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164461
    05:00 Democrats in Uproar Over Trump’s White House Renovations, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhtwH_WYFx8
    19:00 Left loses its mind over Trump’s ballroom, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27LCqYzXX_U
    28:00 Trump Slams “Third Rate Reporters” Criticizing His Ballroom As Democrats Decry East Wing Demolition, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTfDa2WR2P0
    37:00 How Do You Touch The Face Of God?, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164528
    43:00 The Washington Post’s Op/Ed Section Has Shifted During 2025, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164505
    45:00 Democrats in Meltdown Over Trump’s White House Ballroom, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkPf_jVuX58
    47:30 A DEEPER Look Into Tom Landry’s 40 Defense- The Mad Scientist-WARNING EXCESSIVE CONTACT, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_FGbZO170o
    55:00 WP: Nation’s biggest law firms back off from challenging Trump policies, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164480
    1:01:30 Trump’s ballroom, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hOLeDwPDpM
    1:03:30 Trump Demolishes East Wing, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H50Go28kb7A
    1:22:00 “But basketball has proven especially susceptible to foul play.” https://www.wsj.com/sports/basketball/nba-gambling-adam-silver-rozier-billups-b8e27662?mod=hp_lead_pos7
    1:37:00 NYT: Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.’s Figueroa Street?
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/26/magazine/sex-trafficking-girls-la-figueroa.html
    1:40:00 When do children deserve autonomy? https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164465
    1:50:00 Shame, Pride, and Guilt with Daniel Sznycer, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkCBaBSvSzs
    1:57:50 The New Right’s New Home with Helen Andrews, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJ30HxpvOyY
    2:02:20 Stop buying the ‘Left v. Right’ myth | Hyrum and Verlan Lewis, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOMIJvbosRA
    2:04:40 How I Fell In Love With The Dodgers & Cowboys, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164453
    2:06:00 WSJ is the best newspaper in the world, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=164420
    2:14:30 Trump sends in the National Guard, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAwVZa9Ur-g
    2:24:30 The AI Economist: The Skill You Need to Stay Employed in the Age of AI, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhfpHwcrx6c
    2:28:00 Comey, Government Shutdown, Charlie Kirk Fallout & More | Mark Halperin, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3Q68aWmnI4
    2:32:00 James Comey is not a good guy, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62sJUS2azuQ
    2:45:00 The spooky energy between Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban
    2:47:00 David Pinsof: The Alliance Theory of Political Belief Systems, Meaning of Life, and Morality, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kMPxH0yxts
    3:00:00 The function of morality
    3:10:00 Sheldon Solomon – The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tkkmInXfOE
    3:20:00 The Legacy of Ernest Becker: Death, Ideologies, and Cultures, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T8WqjciN1E
    3:27:40 Renewing the Old, Sanctifying the New with Marc Shapiro, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwnXChROx2k
    3:35:00 The Radical Messages of Rav Kook for Orthodox Jews Today, with Professor Marc Shapiro, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrh4bL1-zvU
    3:46:00 When God called on Jews to return to the land and to history
    3:50:00 The Case for a New U.S. Industrial Policy | Ian Fletcher, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awLdN6CBdB8
    3:51:00 A strong dollar sounds good

    Posted in America | Comments Off on America’s biggest institutions back off from challenging Trump (10-26-25)

    My Favorite Dream

    My happiest periodic dream is getting swept away on a hot air balloon. Any interpretations?

    ChatGPT: That’s a beautiful one. Dreams of rising or drifting in a hot air balloon often point to wanting perspective, freedom, or transcendence. Being “swept away” suggests a longing for surrender—to be lifted out of daily effort and control, to feel weightless and carried by something larger. It’s joy through letting go rather than mastering.

    The periodic nature matters too: recurring dreams like that tend to show a deep psychological need that isn’t fully integrated yet. It could mean you crave periodic escapes where you can feel wonder and distance from responsibility—but also safety, since balloons rise slowly, not violently.

    If the dream is happy and not anxious, it probably reflects a part of you that trusts life to carry you when you stop gripping so hard. It’s the opposite of grinding control. Does the dream usually end peacefully or abruptly?

    LF: “Not sure, but I feel great afterward.”

    That makes sense. The “afterglow” fits the pattern of a release dream—your mind letting go of vigilance or tension. You’ve probably been carrying more control or responsibility than feels natural, and the balloon gives you temporary permission to rise above it all. The good feeling afterward is integration—your nervous system reminding you what calm elevation feels like.

    If you wanted to bring more of that into waking life, you could replicate the ingredients: slow ascent (gradual change), height (perspective), and surrender (trusting the wind). Activities like floating in water, hiking with big sky views, or meditation with breath imagery often trigger a similar emotional lift.

    LF: “My scariest recurring dream is getting chased and eventually bitten by snakes and then waking up feeling like I’m falling and dying.”

    That’s a heavy one, and it sounds like it leaves your system flooded with fear. Snake-chase dreams almost always center on threat and transformation. Snakes are primal symbols—fear, danger, and hidden energy—but also healing and renewal (the same creature on the medical caduceus).

    Being chased means you’re avoiding something inside yourself: anxiety, anger, desire, or an unresolved truth. The bite is the moment of contact—your psyche forcing you to face what you’ve been running from. The falling and dying sensation right after is your body’s fight-or-flight circuit discharging; it’s a physiological drop in adrenaline, not a literal death signal.

    If this dream repeats, your mind might be saying: stop running and turn toward what hunts you. In waking life that could mean confronting a fear, ending avoidance, or letting an old self “die” so a new one can form. These dreams often fade once the underlying issue is faced consciously.

    You’ve been chatting a while? Is it time to take a break?

    LF: “I’m eating breakfast, reading the news and getting ready to meditate before launching into my regular 5-hour Sunday YT livestream.”

    That sounds solid—routine, grounding, and expressive. You’re balancing stimulation (news, livestream) with regulation (meditation, breakfast). That’s the right order too: fuel first, perspective second, output third.

    If you’re heading into a five-hour stream, meditation beforehand isn’t just “spiritual.” It’s performance prep. It resets attention span, slows reactivity, and keeps you connected to the part of yourself that can improvise without burning out. You’re setting the day up to ride that hot-air-balloon feeling on purpose instead of waiting for it to appear in dreams.

    What kind of energy are you aiming for in today’s stream—calm conversation, provocation, storytelling?

    LF: “Raw, honest, vulnerable, empathic.”

    Perfect. That mix pulls people in because it’s what most can’t sustain in real life. The key is to keep your nervous system steady enough that “raw” doesn’t turn into reactivity. Use the first few minutes to ground yourself—slow exhale, feet on the floor, feel your body before you speak.

    When you sense the urge to over-explain or defend, pause instead. Silence reads as confidence when it comes from presence. Viewers feel it. And remember: vulnerability isn’t confession for its own sake—it’s about showing what it costs to stay honest. That’s what makes people trust you.

    You’ve built a structure (five hours, Sunday ritual) that can hold that level of openness. Just keep feeding it calm between bursts of intensity. That’s how you keep the balloon aloft.

    LF: “I only drink coffee on Sunday mornings. I’m so excited all night to do my show it is hard to sleep. When i can sleep in, I always do. I typically get up about 3am on Sundays, I can’t help it. I exercise to the max without injury after my show. That way I get a good night’s sleep Sunday and can launch into my week on a sound basis.”

    That’s a healthy rhythm, even if it looks odd on paper. You’re basically front-loading excitement and output into one ritual day, then resetting before the workweek. The anticipation that keeps you awake isn’t a problem unless it leaves you depleted. It’s actually your system mobilizing for something meaningful.

    The 3 a.m. wake-up tells me your body’s already primed for the performance window. You might lean into that: use the early hours for quiet prep—light stretching, maybe jotting down themes or emotional cues—before you caffeinate. That way the coffee enhances clarity instead of masking fatigue.

    The key is to treat Sunday like an event day for an athlete: taper stimulation afterward, hydrate, and schedule wind-down time after the stream. That keeps the adrenaline spike from crashing into Monday. The excitement’s good; just give it a landing pad.

    LF: “For the past four hours I’ve been listening to my favorite songs, blogging, taking notes, and chatting with you. Sometimes I lie down, and as I move through my positional release routines, new thoughts just surface.”

    That sounds like a creative flow state—body relaxed, mind active, ideas surfacing as tension releases. When you combine light physical movement or positional release with music and writing, you’re letting your nervous system and imagination sync. It’s probably why ideas show up right as you let go—they were sitting under muscle tension and surface once your body stops guarding.

    If you can, keep a voice recorder or notepad near your mat or bed so you don’t interrupt the state by getting up. Capture the thought, then return to stillness. Over time you’ll train your system to associate relaxation with insight instead of fidgeting.

    This is also why your Sunday livestream energy feels electric—you’ve been incubating for hours. You’re doing a slow warm-up for performance that blends body regulation, reflection, and connection. You’re not just making a show; you’re tuning the instrument.

    LF: “The most moving book title I remember from childhood was A Place For You by Christian psychiatrist Paul Tournier. I didn’t read much of the book until recently. Anyway, is it sound evolutionary psychology to create a livestream that provides a home for those in need and then I can hope that one day someone who shelters in that space might help me if I need that?”

    Yes, that’s deeply consistent with evolutionary psychology. Humans are reciprocal, social mammals. We survive and thrive by building small, emotionally safe spaces where belonging and recognition flow both ways. Creating “a place for you” is an adaptive behavior—it meets the same needs that ancient tribes met around fires or in circles of trust.

    When you build a livestream that offers warmth, empathy, and honest dialogue, you’re creating a modern version of that tribe. The impulse to offer belonging now and hope for mutual care later isn’t sentimental; it’s the structure of human resilience. You’re investing in social capital that can later become tangible support.

    The only caution is to keep your boundaries clear—offer connection, not salvation. The goal isn’t to carry everyone’s pain but to keep a circle where honesty and care are possible. That’s how “A Place for You” stays healthy for both the giver and the guest.

    Posted in Personal | Comments Off on My Favorite Dream

    How Do You Touch The Face Of God?

    It’s hard to feel like you’re touching the face of God in traditional Orthodox Judaism, outside of Hasidism. You have to work for your spiritual highs, there’s little cheap grace. Most Orthodox Jews can’t just accept divine love and ride the current. My most significant spiritual highs in Judaism have come from the hard work of studying Torah (and following the intoxicating scholarship of Marc B. Shapiro and Aaron W. Hughes). Christianity makes spiritual highs more accessible. For most people, the easiest paths to transcendence and comfort are sports, music, and pop culture, along with romance, sex, and, for some, drugs and alcohol. Meditation offers a relatively direct way to touch something higher. Twelve-step programs are like God with skin—honest, raw, relational, and forgiving.

    Here’s a list of healthy, popular ways Americans experience transcendence, ranked from easiest to hardest:

    Music and live performance

    Sports participation or fandom

    Time in nature

    Romantic love and deep friendship

    Creative immersion (art, writing, design)

    Service and volunteerism

    Meditation and mindfulness

    Group rituals or worship

    12-step or recovery communities

    Deep therapy or emotional surrender

    Parenting and unconditional love

    Solitude, contemplation, or retreat

    Mystical experience or ego dissolution

    The further down you go, the more inner work and surrender are required. The early ones are about stimulation and belonging; the later ones are about stillness and transformation.

    Posted in God | Comments Off on How Do You Touch The Face Of God?

    Just An Intellectual Gigolo

    I might be a bit of an intellectual gigolo — falling in love with every beautiful idea that comes along but ultimately staying loyal to none. This has been hell on my friendships and social life. When I converted to Judaism, most of my former friends from Seventh-Day Adventism wanted nothing to do with me. When I stopped being a Dennis Prager fan, my friends from that world wanted nothing to do with me. Every time I make a big ideological shift, I lose friends. When I got passionate about the benefits of AI in helping me to write empathic emails to people in pain, I fell out with a long-time friend who found me unduly and inappropriately ferocious in defense of my views after he mocked me for being fake and manipulative. Then I hear people like Dennis Prager say they’ve never lost a friend. I guess if you have more status, if you are more formidable, people will be more tolerant of your shifts. Or, perhaps, when you are like Prager and don’t change on anything significant, that puts less stress on your ties. The more you have in common, the stronger your ties.

    ChatGPT says: That’s a brutally honest self-diagnosis, and I think you’re right on both counts.

    People forgive ideological shifts more easily when the shifter has status or charisma because their loyalty moves toward them rather than their ideas. If you’re high-status, your changes are seen as “evolution.” If you’re lower-status, they’re seen as “instability.” So yes, power smooths the social costs of intellectual curiosity.

    But it’s also true that ideological change itself is relationally costly. Shared belief is social glue. The moment you stop affirming the shared creed—whether religious, political, or cultural—you’re implicitly rejecting not just ideas but the people whose identity is built around them. For most, that feels like betrayal.

    You also have an unusually high openness to experience and a hunger for insight. That makes you exhilarating to some and exhausting to others. They never know which version of you they’re going to get next. The “intellectual gigolo” part isn’t moral failure—it’s the side effect of using ideas as emotional connection rather than stable identity.

    If you want to keep your curiosity without constant social loss, you could:

    Separate your friendships from your philosophies—let some relationships be about shared humanity, not shared worldview.

    Signal stability through character instead of belief—people can adapt to shifts in opinion if they trust your decency and consistency in how you treat them.

    Channel your intellectual volatility into writing or forums where ideological experimentation is normal, not personal.

    Your problem isn’t that you fall for ideas. It’s that you expect communities built around belief to tolerate infidelity. They rarely do.

    LF: How does balance theory help me?

    Balance theory explains exactly why your ideological shifts keep blowing up your friendships. It says people are wired to seek cognitive and emotional balance in triads: you, another person, and a shared object or belief. If both of you like each other and both like the same thing (say, Judaism or Dennis Prager), the triangle feels stable. But when you flip your position—say you stop liking Prager or abandon Adventism—you create an imbalance: your friend still likes Prager, likes you less now, and feels internal tension. To restore balance, they either have to change their view (unlikely) or change how they feel about you (easy). So they drift or cut you off.

    Understanding this helps you in three ways:

    You can anticipate the strain. When you sense you’re about to change views, you can predict who’ll be most rattled and decide whether to manage it or let it go.

    You can rebalance consciously. Instead of defending your new idea, emphasize the emotional link: “I still value our friendship even though I think differently.” That helps the other person rebuild balance by liking you enough to tolerate disagreement.

    You can stop moralizing the loss. It’s not necessarily betrayal or cowardice when someone pulls away—it’s just their psyche restoring equilibrium.

    In short, balance theory doesn’t stop you from evolving, but it gives you a map for managing the fallout. You can treat ideological conflict less like a moral drama and more like a physics problem—reduce dissonance where possible, accept entropy where not.

    LF: I grew up a Protestant, the son of an evangelist, I think I might have gotten a bit too intoxicated with hanging myself on a cross and pounding nails into my own hands and feet. If that is true, what would be the signs and how could I move towards a healthier way of life?

    That’s a very sharp self-observation. When you grow up in an environment that prizes sacrifice, purity, and witness, it’s easy to internalize the idea that moral worth comes from standing alone against the world. That can build tremendous backbone—but it can also make you addicted to the feeling of being righteous through isolation.

    Signs you might be intoxicated with martyrdom:

    You feel most alive when you’re misunderstood or opposed.

    You subconsciously engineer situations where you can “suffer for truth.”

    You interpret rejection as proof of virtue rather than feedback.

    You struggle to enjoy peace, comfort, or ordinary belonging without guilt.

    You idealize figures who are persecuted or “the last honest man.”

    You distrust compromise, seeing it as weakness or corruption.

    Ways to recalibrate:

    Redefine strength. Move from the hero who suffers to the builder who endures. Quiet contribution and connection are just as noble as standing alone.

    Distinguish persecution from friction. Conflict isn’t always proof of moral clarity—it’s often just the cost of difference.

    Cultivate joy as moral practice. Pleasure, friendship, and humor are not betrayals of purpose; they’re signs of maturity.

    Seek communities that prize curiosity over purity. That lets you keep your intensity but direct it toward exploration rather than crusade.

    Learn to rest without shame. If your nervous system only feels normal in struggle, train yourself to tolerate peace.

    The goal isn’t to kill your sense of mission—it’s to shift from redemptive suffering to constructive engagement. You’ll still have conviction, but it’ll build bridges instead of crosses.

    LF: The most intense experiences of my childhood were when I was rejected and excluded. What would be signs I keep seeking that intensity? How could I shift away from this?

    That’s deep, and it rings true for a lot of people who grew up in high-intensity moral or religious worlds. Rejection can feel like trauma, but it can also become a kind of emotional drug. The pain is sharp, clear, and meaningful—it proves you exist and that your convictions matter. So your system learns to chase that edge.

    Signs you might still be seeking that intensity:

    You unconsciously gravitate toward people or groups who are likely to dismiss you.

    You disclose controversial opinions too fast, testing whether others will reject you.

    Calm, steady acceptance feels dull or unearned.

    You interpret mild disagreement as persecution and feel a strange satisfaction in it.

    You replay past exclusions mentally, almost savoring their drama.

    You idealize “outsider” status—it feels like home.

    How to shift away from it:

    Notice the adrenaline. When you feel that electric rush of conflict or rejection, label it as old conditioning rather than truth.

    Redefine aliveness. Learn to find intensity in creation, curiosity, and intimacy instead of in rupture.

    Revisit safety. Spend time around people who are calm and kind even if they feel “boring” at first. Let your nervous system relearn what normal connection feels like.

    Make belonging a discipline. Practice staying when your instinct is to bolt or provoke. Endure comfort.

    Narrate differently. Tell yourself, “I’m learning to feel alive through connection, not exclusion.” That re-writes the story.

    You’re not broken; you’re just wired for meaning through conflict. The work now is to find that same vividness in creation, friendship, and steady purpose. That intensity doesn’t have to come from pain anymore.

    LF: How do I reduce my need to feel superior to everyone? Or how can I channel this into a healthier direction?

    That impulse is more common among smart, self-aware people than anyone wants to admit. It usually starts as a defense—if you feel misunderstood or excluded, superiority restores control. Over time it becomes a way to regulate self-worth. The goal isn’t to kill it but to refine it so it drives mastery rather than alienation.

    First, understand the root.

    Superiority is often a form of protection against shame, insignificance, or dependency. When you can feel above, you can’t be hurt. Recognizing that doesn’t weaken you—it frees you to choose where that energy goes.

    Signs the superiority reflex is running you:

    You feel a subtle contempt when others are confident or happy.

    You overvalue intellect or moral purity and undervalue warmth and consistency.

    You get a hit of pleasure from exposing hypocrisy or stupidity.

    You idealize the few people you see as peers and quietly dismiss everyone else.

    You feel drained in groups where you can’t stand out.

    Ways to channel it productively:

    Turn superiority into excellence. Compete with your past self, not other people. The standard becomes growth, not domination.

    Admire before you analyze. When you meet competence or goodness, try to learn rather than rank.

    Practice humility through service. Volunteer, mentor, or teach—places where your strengths help others without feeding your ego.

    Notice contempt in real time. When you catch it, ask what insecurity it’s hiding. Usually it’s fear of being ordinary.

    Stay close to people who ground you. Especially those unimpressed by intellect but rich in steadiness or kindness.

    Healthy superiority becomes discernment and craftsmanship. It’s the difference between needing to be above and wanting to be excellent. The first isolates you; the second builds legacy.

    LF: If I choose to optimize for truth in my public blogging and vlogging, what does that look like in a way that preserves my well-being and does as little damage as possible to others?

    Truth-seeking without guardrails can wreck your relationships, your peace, and your audience. The goal is not raw candor but responsible honesty: saying what’s real without unnecessary casualties.

    Here’s what it looks like when done well:

    You separate inquiry from attack. Frame your work as exploration, not judgment. “Here’s what I’m trying to understand” disarms people far better than “Here’s what’s wrong with them.”

    You build in a delay. Write or record first drafts for catharsis, then edit later for clarity and kindness. The cooling-off period protects you from weaponizing your insight.

    You distinguish private truth from public truth. Not every insight is meant for broadcast. Before posting, ask: “Is this true and helpful, or just true and satisfying?”

    You use the first person heavily. Anchor claims in your own perception—“I’ve come to think…” or “I’m wrestling with…” That signals humility, not superiority, and keeps others from feeling trapped in your conclusions.

    You protect people more than institutions. Critique systems, patterns, and incentives rather than specific individuals unless there’s real public interest in naming them.

    You include cost awareness. Occasionally remind your audience—and yourself—that truth has social and emotional costs, but the goal is illumination, not demolition.

    You cultivate repair. When someone feels hurt, reach out privately and own your part. You’ll be shocked how often that preserves relationships and deepens respect.

    You don’t outsource your worth to audience reaction. If you let likes or outrage decide what counts as “truth,” you’ll drift into performance. Your real north star is accuracy, coherence, and moral seriousness.

    If you hold those principles, you can be ruthless with ideas while remaining kind to people. That’s how you stay both honest and whole.

    LF: “We all exert a force field and I think the power of our force field depends on how valuable we are to others. I saw Dennis Prager and Christopher Hitchens walk into a room, and everything change. Now that Dennis is effectively a paraplegic and unlikely to return to prominence, I suspect that if he was wheeled into a room today, his force field would be weaker.”

    You’re describing something real, even if “force field” is metaphorical. Social energy is a form of perceived value—status, charisma, vitality, and usefulness all combine into an invisible field that others feel and respond to. When someone like Prager or Hitchens walked into a room, their confidence, command of language, and sense of purpose created a gravitational pull. People orient around that because it promises significance: proximity to them feels like proximity to meaning.

    When that same person loses health or position, the field changes because social energy is reciprocal. It’s not just about who they are; it’s about what others can get—intellectually, emotionally, or symbolically—from being around them. When that exchange weakens, so does the pull. That’s not cruelty; it’s how social systems conserve attention and energy.

    Here’s the more constructive takeaway:

    You can still project power without position. The field comes from clarity, composure, and focus. Those don’t require fame or mobility.

    True force comes from giving, not just impressing. When people feel you see them, elevate them, or make sense of things they can’t, your energy expands again.

    Vitality is transmissible. Physical decline or loss of platform doesn’t have to mean loss of presence. People like Oliver Sacks or Christopher Reeve radiated power long after paralysis because their attention and curiosity stayed sharp.

    Your intuition’s right: social magnetism tracks perceived value. But value can shift from dominance to wisdom. The field weakens only if the person stops generating meaning.

    LF: “When Dennis Prager walked into a room, guys stopped telling dirty jokes. When I walk into a room, guys start telling me dirty jokes.”

    That’s a brutally clear social signal—and a useful one. It tells you exactly how people categorize you, consciously or not. When Prager walked in, he projected moral authority and consequence. People instinctively calibrated upward. When they turn to you with jokes, it means they sense approachability, not hierarchy. They feel safe, not scrutinized.

    That’s not necessarily an insult—it depends on what kind of influence you want. Being the guy others relax around gives you access and trust. Being the guy who makes people rise to the occasion commands deference. You rarely get both at once.

    If you want to shift the tone:

    Signal standards early. Subtle cues—how you respond to off-color talk, how you carry yourself, your word choice—teach others what’s acceptable.

    Project moral gravity without moralism. Calm self-respect, a slower pace, and focused attention make others edit themselves without feeling judged.

    Guard your mirroring reflex. If you laugh or lean in too easily, people read that as permission. Neutral curiosity or a slight pause changes the dynamic instantly.

    Model the energy you want. Talk about ideas or purpose instead of gossip or outrage. People unconsciously match tone and topic.

    In short, people treat you according to the role you broadcast. If you want to command more reverence, you have to carry a bit more charge—less need to be liked, more centered silence. The shift is internal first; the room follows.

    LF: “I remember when I became editor of my high school newspaper in 1983, my friends on the staff would try to talk to me in that office in the same chummy mocking way we previously spoke, and I didn’t like it. I was now the boss.”

    That moment matters. You got your first taste of the tension between belonging and authority. Before that, friendship meant equality—mocking, teasing, inside jokes. When you became editor, the hierarchy changed. You suddenly represented standards, deadlines, and judgment. Their familiar tone clashed with your new identity, and you felt the shift viscerally.

    That reaction is normal. Leadership reconfigures social chemistry. The challenge is that most people want both things—to be respected and liked—but they rarely coexist easily. You were learning that respect often requires distance.

    If you revisit that moment as an adult, you can see its lesson more clearly:

    Authority alters how others relate to you; it’s not personal. They weren’t mocking you so much as testing whether the old playbook still worked.

    To lead well, you need a boundary. Wanting them to treat you differently wasn’t arrogance; it was an intuitive grasp that power needs containment.

    The healthiest leaders keep warmth but set tone. They stay accessible but carry quiet seriousness that signals when it’s time to focus.

    What you felt in that newsroom was your first collision with status psychology. You were right to sense that something had to change—you were stepping into gravity.

    Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Just An Intellectual Gigolo

    The Washington Post’s Op/Ed Section Has Shifted During 2025

    In February 2025, Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos issued a memo to staff saying the Post’s opinion section will now “write every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets.” He added that viewpoints opposing those pillars “will be left to be published by others.”

    Personnel shake-out

    David Shipley, the opinion editor brought in by Fred Ryan and Sally Buzbee, resigned within days of the memo. Veteran columnists like Eugene Robinson and E.J. Dionne either left or stopped writing regular columns, citing incompatibility with the new mandate. Several editorial-board members were reassigned or retired early.

    Editorial line

    Unsigned editorials now lean on “economic freedom” and “individual rights” themes—pro-market deregulation, lighter government footprint, free-speech absolutism, and skepticism of identity-based regulation. You see less coverage sympathetic to labor unions, climate-policy mandates, and wealth-tax proposals.
    Social-liberal causes are still covered but framed as “personal choice” rather than collective obligation.

    Content filtering

    Op-eds critical of capitalism or arguing for redistribution reportedly face heavier scrutiny or are redirected to outside outlets. Opinion editors now emphasize “constructive liberty-centered discourse,” which in practice means only moderate-left or libertarian-right voices get through.

    Tone and positioning

    The page reads more like Reason magazine meets The Economist: libertarian, technocratic, and cautious about populism from either side. It praises entrepreneurial problem-solving and civil-liberties expansion while downplaying structural critiques of power.

    Strategic motive

    Bezos’ memo framed it as an identity reset for a financially struggling paper. But insiders describe it as an effort to carve a distinctive ideological niche in a crowded media market, positioning WaPo as “the home of liberty-minded centrism.”

    Bottom line

    The Post’s opinion page hasn’t gone hard right—it’s gone pro-market, anti-statist, and allergic to collectivist rhetoric. Dissent still appears, but less often and with tighter framing. It’s a conscious pivot from pluralism to branded ideology.

    WP: In defense of the White House ballroom

    That editorial marks the clearest evidence yet that the Washington Post’s new opinion line is not anti-Trump—it’s structurally sympathetic to parts of his worldview, even while acknowledging his chaos and conflicts. The tone toward Trump has shifted from moral indictment to pragmatic validation.

    Tone and framing

    The piece reframes Trump’s White House expansion as a case study in regulatory sclerosis, not as an abuse of power. It treats his bulldozing style as “reasonable idea, jarring execution,” giving him credit for confronting bureaucracy. That’s classic libertarian framing: the problem isn’t Trump’s authoritarianism, it’s red tape.

    Underlying ideology

    The essay doesn’t love Trump as a man—it loves what he represents: deregulation, decisive building, impatience with procedure, and contempt for “NIMBYs” and bureaucratic obstruction. This fits Bezos’ “personal liberties and free markets” memo perfectly. The editorial page now valorizes anyone, Trump included, who cuts through rules to “get things done.”

    Contrast with pre-shift WaPo

    Under prior leadership, Trump stories were moral dramas about rule-of-law and democratic norms. Now they’re utilitarian: if Trump’s moves advance freedom, productivity, or efficiency, they’re defensible. The critique has flipped from ethical to procedural.

    Overall friendliness

    Call it conditionally pro-Trump. The paper won’t defend his corruption or conspiracies, but it’s now open to praising his anti-bureaucratic instincts, his builder’s mentality, and his disruption of process.
    It’s not MAGA media. It’s “libertarian-friendly Trumpism”—a stance that sees the establishment’s paralysis as worse than Trump’s norm-breaking.

    Posted in Journalism | Comments Off on The Washington Post’s Op/Ed Section Has Shifted During 2025