NYT: ‘‘People Are Going Silent’: Fearing Retribution, Trump Critics Muzzle Themselves’

You can imagine my dismay when I read in the New York Times March 6, 2025: “People say they are intimidated by online attacks from the president, concerned about harm to their businesses or worried about the safety of their families.”

Sad! Apparently liberals now experience what American conservatives have suffered for decades.

Elisabeth Bumiller reports:

People say they are intimidated by online attacks from the president, concerned about harm to their businesses or worried about the safety of their families.

The silence grows louder every day.

Fired federal workers who are worried about losing their homes ask not to be quoted by name. University presidents fearing that millions of dollars in federal funding could disappear are holding their fire. Chief executives alarmed by tariffs that could hurt their businesses are on mute.

Even longtime Republican hawks on Capitol Hill, stunned by President Trump’s revisionist history that Ukraine is to blame for its invasion by Russia, and his Oval Office blowup at President Volodymyr Zelensky, have either muzzled themselves, tiptoed up to criticism without naming Mr. Trump or completely reversed their positions.

More than six weeks into the second Trump administration, there is a chill spreading over political debate in Washington and beyond.

People on both sides of the aisle who would normally be part of the public dialogue about the big issues of the day say they are intimidated by the prospect of online attacks from Mr. Trump and Elon Musk, concerned about harm to their companies and frightened for the safety of their families. Politicians fear banishment by a party remade in Mr. Trump’s image and the prospect of primary opponents financed by Mr. Musk, the president’s all-powerful partner and the world’s richest man.

“When you see important societal actors — be it university presidents, media outlets, C.E.O.s, mayors, governors — changing their behavior in order to avoid the wrath of the government, that’s a sign that we’ve crossed the line into some form of authoritarianism,” said Steven Levitsky, a professor of government at Harvard and the co-author of the influential 2018 book “How Democracies Die.”

Maura Judkis writes for the Washington Post Mar. 9, 2025:

The level of late-night dread in Washington right now cannot be squashed by all the weighted blankets in the world, or drowned out by the most powerful white noise machine. There is no eyeshade or blackout curtain that can block it; no meditation app or deep-breathing exercise that can push it away. A Jupiter-sized dose of melatonin isn’t strong enough to fix Washington’s collective insomnia…

Every night since Election Day, a 40-year-old office administrator named Jordan — who spoke on the condition of anonymity because her D.C. architecture firm doesn’t allow her to speak to media — wakes up multiple times each night despite taking sleep medication. In the predawn quiet, her mind keeps wandering to a bad place. First, she might worry about work drying up for her firm, then about her friends who were laid off in Elon Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service, short for Department of Government Efficiency, sweeps. Then her thoughts might spiral into ruminations about the rule of law, or about women’s bodily autonomy. And then her mind accelerates toward visions of “The Handmaid’s Tale,” and 1930s Germany, and, and, and …

“I wake up with chest pain and terror and dread,” she says.

The best book on the topic of conservative claims of cultural oppression is a work-in-progress by attorney and philosopher Rony Guldmann. It’s called Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression: On the Nature and Origins of Conservaphobia.

Here are some excerpts:

* Liberals have successfully pegged conservatism as authoritarian in the public mind, conservatives insist that the authoritarian tendencies of so-called liberals run much deeper than theirs. Diagnosing the roots of liberal hostility to home-schooling, Kevin Williamson observes: “The Left’s organizing principle is control, and the possibility that children might commonly be raised outside of its control matrix is an existential threat from the progressive point of view. Institutions such as free markets and free speech terrify progressives, because they are the result of arrangements in which nobody is in control… Home-schooling isn’t for everybody, but every home-school student, like every firearm in private hands, is a quiet little declaration of independence. It’s no accident that the people who want to seize your guns are also the ones who want to seize your children.”

* Conservatives confront what they believe is an iniquitous social hierarchy that always credits liberals with reflectiveness, discernment, and empathy while branding them as smug, mean-spirited, and authoritarian.

* a conservative politics of recognition, demanding that conservatives be understood on their own terms, rather than dismissed as authoritarian, bigoted, benighted, or misogynistic.

* the modus operandi is now the slander and intimidation of conservatives.

* Liberals ask us to put ourselves in the shoes of the less fortunate, so [Alan Charles] Kors proposes the following thought-experiment: “Imagine secular, skeptical, or leftist faculty and students confronted by a religious harassment code that prohibited “denigration” of evangelical or Catholic beliefs, or that made the classroom or campus a space where evangelical or Catholic students must be protected against feeling “intimidated,” offended,” or, by their own subjective experience, victims of a “hostile environment. Imagine a university of patriotic “loyalty oaths” where leftists were deemed responsible for the tens of millions of victims of communism, and where free minds were prohibited from creating a hostile environment for patriots, or from offending that “minority” of individuals who are descended from Korean or Vietnam War veterans. Imagine, as well, that for every “case” that became public, there were scores or hundreds of cases in which the “offender” or “victimizer,” desperate to preserve a job or gain a degree, accepted a confidential plea bargain that included a semester’s or a year’s reeducation in “religious sensitivity” or “patriotic sensitivity” seminars run by the university’s “Evangelical Center, “Patriotic Center,” or “Office of Religious and Patriotic Compliance.”

* Where conservatives seek the truth, liberals cultivate “rhetorical firepower,” a hollow verbal dexterousness that aims, not to persuade, but to bewilder, intimidate, and humiliate. …Using their empty verbal acrobatics, liberals have bewildered the superior intuitive wisdom of the ordinary American, which is effective in the real world but ill-suited to the artificial rules through which liberals maintain their dominion.

* Since the vision of the anointed can at most enjoy the passive acquiescence, and never the lucid assent, of the great majority, it must be promoted and defended by an unaccountable intellectual class. Having captured America’s most influential institutions, including the media, Hollywood, the universities, public education, foundations, government bureaucracies, and, perhaps most importantly, the courts, the liberal elites employ their privileged position to foist their parochial values upon a silent and largely powerless majority of ordinary Americans. Even where democracy has not been legally disabled by the courts and the administrative state, this residue of freedom comes too late when informal coercion can achieve unofficially whatever cannot be achieved officially.

* Laura Ingraham observes: “They think we’re stupid. They think our patriotism is stupid. They think our churchgoing is stupid. They think our flag-waving is stupid. They think having big families is stupid. They think where we live—anywhere but near or in a few major cities—is stupid. They think our SUVs are stupid. They think owning a gun is stupid. They think our abiding belief in the goodness of America and its founding principles is stupid. They think the choices we make at the ballot box are stupid. They think George W. Bush is stupid. And without a doubt, they will think this book is stupid.”

Where liberals see stupidity, conservative claimants of cultural oppression see the silent heroism of a beleaguered and colonized people, who resist the encroachments of a coterie of cloistered elites, uprooted rationalists and cosmopolitans with nothing but contempt for the indigenous culture of the less eloquent but more wholesome ordinary American.

* Robert Bork warns: “Persons capable of high achievement in one field or another may find meaning in work, may find community among colleagues, and may not particularly mind social and moral separation otherwise. Such people are unlikely to need the more sordid distractions that popular culture now offers. But very large segments of the population do not fall into that category. For them, the drives of liberalism are catastrophic.”

It is no coincidence that the liberal vision is advanced by those whose professional stature provides their lives with a meaning and coherence that the assault on traditional values undermines for the silent majority—which is consequently left susceptible to debilitating social ills that the elites are privileged to avoid.

* Even as it subverts old inequalities, the New Class “silently inaugurates a new hierarchy of the knowing, the knowledgeable, the reflexive and insightful.”

* The “cognitive elites,” argues Harris, cannot entertain opposing arguments because “they do not see them as arguments in the first place.” Instead, they dismiss the fears and grievances of conservatives as “prejudices that have been programmed into them, requiring not logical rebuttal but open derision.” Angelo Codevilla observes that “the notion that the common people’s words are, like grunts, mere signs of pain, pleasure, and frustration, is now axiomatic among our Ruling Class.”

* When a progressive tells a conservative “You can’t possibly mean that,” the point, charges Kahane, “is to stop the argument in its tracks,” to assert the progressive’s “higher reality.” “Everyone knows that” is likewise “[a]nother all-purpose put-down,” intended to broadcast that the conservative is a “complete idiot,” just as “You’re not really…” is meant to suggest that the conservative interlocutor “is little better than a cave-dweller, a superstitious moron whose walnut-size brain is probably stuffed with religious ‘dogma.’” Here is the censorship of fashion in all its insidiousness. A liberal asking a conservative “You can’t possibly mean…” is like a man admonishing a woman to “calm down”—something which may not be terribly offensive in the abstract but assumes a more nefarious meaning in the context of a long history of negative stereotypes functioning to reinforce the position of the dominant class… Though feigning that he is engaged in a thoughtful exchange between inquiring minds, the liberal quietly invokes a presumed social consensus before which the conservative is expected to cower in fear.

* when a conservative looks in the mirror, he sees only “a coward, a weakling, a quivering mass of protoplasm, a spineless jellyfish, a neutered creature stripped of dignity and cowering in fear.” Not content to simply present their side of the argument, liberals have moreover de-centered conservatives’ very sense of themselves, undermining their basic agency powers.

* In fearing for our physical safety, we are responding to a situation that can be described scientifically in terms of causal forces with the potential to impinge on us in specified ways. Fear remains “subjective” inasmuch as it is an element of human experience.

* Being fearful and anxious before the unknown and untried, conservatives exhibit a higher need for order, closure, and structure…

* Feminism is just another form of liberal elitism, one more arena on which the anointed mock, scold, and intimidate the benighted under the deceptive veneer of enlightenment, progress, and liberation.

* Whether or not the liberal in question has personally slandered any given conservative, he benefits from the general practice of slandering conservatives, because the social hierarchy which these slanders have engendered has now been built into the liberal identity and the broader social space it inhabits. Even if the liberal has not have personally slandered a non-racist conservative as racist, he has almost certainly participated in the general discourse of Social Darwinism in some fashion or other, thereby contributing to a cultural environment in which it becomes possible to associate free markets with slavery or genocide. This rhetorical environment harms conservatives even if it does not do so in a “one-at-a-time” sense, to borrow again from MacKinnon. Even where liberals do not directly accuse conservatives of racism, the latter know they are socially vulnerable to the charge, which gives liberals a power-advantage that they wield irrespective of their conscious designs. And this is enough to implicate them in conservatives’ cultural oppression, and hence liberal privilege. If the grievances of conservatives seem downright hallucinatory to liberals, this is for the same reason the grievances of feminists seem hallucinatory to many men (and some women), because a standard of atomistic causality is deployed to obscure the essentially collective, totalistic, and contextual nature of the injury. In permitting liberals to insinuate without stating, this background simply immunizes liberals to confrontation and argument, making their conservaphobia invisible to their rationalist epistemology.

* Much of the legislation that liberals would veto under the harm-principle as unduly coercive can be defended as a response to the “psychic harm” and “communal harm” which the targeted conduct obviously causes. After all, “psychic distress is a kind of mental pain” and “is plainly something that people prefer to avoid.” There is thus an obvious sense in which conduct that causes it—like the consumption or dissemination of pornography—is “harmful” and falls within the ambit of the harm-principle, irrespective of secondary effects. The same holds true of communal harm: “If people get satisfaction or happiness from living in a particular kind of community, then conduct that subverts that kind of community and thus reduces such happiness inflicts a kind of ‘harm.’”

Yet liberals will greet such claims with “peremptory dismissal” and “dismissive indignation.”

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Jews in the American Academy, 1900-1940: The Dynamics of Intellectual Assimilation (1991)

Susanne Klingenstein wrote:

Being a transnational philologist was for [Leo] Wiener‘s mind what being a farmer was for his body: it eased tension. And it rooted the self — in the soil and in humanity… He did not belong [at Harvard]…

Wiener’s loving, romantic view of the Russian people stands in sharp contrast to his distanced, occasionally negative attitude toward his own people. …Wiener was an advocate of assimilation on the national as well as the international level…

Wiener’s political stance and his psychological needs are hardly separable. He was restless, discontent, and he lacked patience with those surrounding him… Just as Wiener was opposed to the separate existence of Jews within another nation, he was opposed to their forming a separate state…

Leo Wiener tried hard to overcome his descent in the “freedom” of America. He did not recognize that in some parts…”America” was merely an idea… It is hard to say how much he was aware of his failure to bridge the gap between them [Harvard’s WASP establishment] and himself. It is obvious that he reacted to the psychological pressures that his displacement created. He tried to root himself firmly in the ground, in America’s welcoming soil, and simultaneously in the realm he shared with all mankind — language.

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The Danger Of Online Feuds

Ezra Klein told Mark Leibovitch in 2022:

And something about the back-and-forth of stepping out for Trump a bit, then getting this blowback, then stepping out a bit more and getting this blowback. And soon your friends are totally different, your enemies are totally different, who likes you is different. And I’ve watched this in politicians before as a psychological dynamic. And I’ve actually seen it in pundits too. As a psychological dynamic, this is often a pathway to a very different politics in three years. You can look at a Glenn Greenwald…

Aaron Renn writes Nov. 14, 2022:

Imagine David French back in 2019. He’s minding his own business, standing in line for his caffe latte at Starbucks. His phone beeps and it’s a Google Alert, or perhaps a friend texting him to say “check this out.” The subject is an article in First Things, the leading conservative religious journal in the country, called “Against David French-ism,” written by fellow conservative Sohrab Ahmari. Then thousands of people pile on saying how much they agree with Sohrab Ahmari about French and his approach being what’s wrong with the world.

Do you really think you’d respond any differently than he did? We’d probably all respond basically the same. Nothing is more natural than to want to defend your honor when attacked, especially if you are a man…

Add to this mix an additional ingredient, where a group of people start sending us messages and tweets of support, taking our side and saying what a great guy we were. Wouldn’t that incline us to want to align ourselves with the people who had our back? Undoubtedly it would, even if we hadn’t historically been that friendly with them.

This is especially the case for people who were “cancelled.” They often fall into more extreme or radical politics simply because those are the only people who will still accept them. So keep in mind that if we throw a friend under the cancel mob bus, we may not like the people who don’t abandon them.

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Feuds & Reconciliation

Aaron Renn writes Oct. 22, 2024:

These disputes not only affect us psychologically, they also affect our intellectual positions, political positions, the tribes we associate with, etc. Seldom are the results for the better. As someone once told me of the David French-Sohrab Ahmari feud, “It turned both of them into worse versions of themselves.”…

Have you ever noticed that many alpha male types often, after a very public conflict with someone, get it settled and and move on? Sometimes they even strangely end up as friends. Republican megadonor Paul Singer was a Never Trumper in 2016. I sat at a gala and personally listened to him say that neither Trump nor Clinton were the right choice. But after Trump won, Singer went to Trump and made up with him. Why? Because he’s a smart, tough businessman who deals in reality. He didn’t let his pride marginalize him inside of a Trump administration. Similarly, we just watched Trump and Chuck Schumer getting along at the Al Smith Dinner in New York. That doesn’t mean Singer and Schumer are capitulating to everything Trump wants. They are going to keep fighting for what they want. But they see the value in not letting feuds compromise that.

The higher you go in society, the more likely people are to end feuds and work productively with – and even be somewhat friendly with – people on the other side.

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The Bug Out Mindset

Aaron Renn writes Oct. 3, 2024:

The rich are first in line here. They are building bunkers, and also acquiring massive ranches and other amounts of rural land. They are also among the people acquiring multiple passports. CNBC did an article earlier this year about the rich acquiring “passport portfolios.”

Another more mass market phenomenon is the large amount of interest in “prepping” (disaster preparation) is in line with this.

…the huge number of people preparing for a major social collapse is notable. Nobody did this when I was younger.

We also see a related interest in primitive or survival skills. There are lots of places you can take classes to learn this stuff, TV shows oriented around them, etc.

Some people are pre-deploying these skills by moving to rural areas and homesteading, often trying to do so using pre-industrial techniques.

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Why Men Hate Going to Church

Aaron Renn writes Oct. 1, 2024:

young men could become the new “customer” of the church. David Murrow wrote a great book called Why Men Hate Going to Church. He noted that since there was such a female gender skew in the church, and an even greater skew in the consumption of Christian media, Christian organizations de facto treated women as their main customer base. Even for married couples, it was usually the wife who determined where the family attended church, and thus where the tithe money went. As a result the culture of the evangelical world was oriented around female preferences.

If the church becomes more male, and those men are the assertive type I describe above, this will put pressure on churches to be oriented more towards their preferences. Religion in the US is fundamentally a marketplace, as many people have noted. If men start being the ones making the decision about where to go to church, either as singles or families, that could have profound implications for the way things are done. And which churches succeed or fail in an era of religious decline.

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Christian Provacateurs

Aaron Renn writes Nov. 12, 2024:

The left’s bogeyman du jour is Elon Musk, not someone like Pat Robertson.

However, various Christian provocateurs are going to keep saying and doing things intentionally designed to anger secular society. For example, Indiana just elected a pastor and podcaster to be Lieutenant Governor. This guy undoubtedly craves attention, and is already mixing it up with the press on social media. Late in the campaign he stirred controversy by saying Democrats have the “Jezebel spirit.” I’d expect more like that not just from him, but many other people. This will keep ginning up a negative view of Christians in some quarters. There’s not much that can be done about that…

Christians have often tended to favor non-Christian right wing governments as offering them protection. For example, secular dictators in the Middle East have often been perceived as protecting Christian minorities against hostile Islamist factions. The toppling of Saddam Hussein led to the near total destruction of Iraq’s Christian community for example. The Christians of Syria seem to support Bashir al-Assad, who protects them in return for support. Even in the Shia theocracy of Iran, Christianity is flourishing.

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How Protestants Made The West Great

The Social Pathologist, a Roman Catholic, blogs Dec. 24, 2021 (hat tip to Aaron Renn):

Protestantism gets a bad rap among many on the right and I think some of the traditional criticisms of it are justified. However, as I’ve mentioned before most analysis of Protestantism lack quite a bit of nuance and I don’t think that Protestantism is as much of a bogeyman as some traditionalists make out. Many Catholic traditionalists tend to draw a straight line from Protestantism to liberalism and while this may be theoretically plausible real world observations are a bit more complicated.

Most of the readers of this blog know that I am a Catholic, so it may surprise many of you when I say that the main reason why the West is imploding in the moment is primarily due to the numerical collapse of “sound” Protestantism, Catholicism largely being irrelevant in the West’s fate. And the reason why I have come to this view is based up my reflections on modernity and how each religion handled it.

Executive Summary: Protestantism was able to tame modernity, Catholicism wasn’t able to engage it at all. The “slouch to Gomorrah” happened when sound Protestantism collapsed.

Richard Weaver was famous for advocating that ideas have consequences but he neglected to mention that so do have material circumstances. The problem with most approaches to understanding modernity is in thinking that modernity is primarily an intellectual phenomenon. This ignores the “carnal” dimension of it. Modernity isn’t simply the habit of thinking according to certain ideas, it’s also the mode of existence that is generated when the practical application of technology transforms life from an agrarian mode of living to that of an industrial one. What destroyed the old world wasn’t just “enlightenment ideas” but fertilizer, the electric motor, railways, radio waves, sewerage etc. Modernity is just as much about “things” and services as it is about ideas.

Modernity’s ability to provide goods which satisfy human nature are what powers it. Modernity’s ability to deliver carnal goods such as better foods, pharmaceuticals, comfort and transport make pushing back against it a fools errand, because in the end human nature wins. Even the Amish go to “modern” doctors. The Taliban use AK-47’s and mobile/cell phones. No matter how “traditional” there’s always the concession to modernity.

The human demand, and reward, for technological advancement which provides benefit to human nature is limitless and given the more two centuries since the beginning of the industrial revolution an incredibly vast and complex logistical, economic, academic and legal infrastructure exists to provide the “fruits of modernity” All of this is staffed by hundreds of millions of highly specialized individuals who need to be trained for their tasks. These people and the institutions they man are the infrastructure of modernity.

The key point here is that modernity can’t happen without this infrastructure, and who controls this infrastructure controls modernity.

When Max Weber wrote his, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism it was well recognised that Protestant led countries were richer and technologically more advanced than the Catholic ones, they were effectively more modern, they still are. Interesting too, was the fact that the flow of immigrants were from Catholic to Protestant lands and not in the other direction.

Weber felt that religious reasons were the main drivers of this divergence in economic performance and I agree. Weber dwelt a lot on the Protestant virtues, I want to dwell a bit on the Catholic vices.

Charles Peguy felt that one of the reasons that the Catholic Church had lost its grip on the modern world is because the clergy “had reversed the operation of the Incarnation”. Whereas God wanted to bring himself into the world, the Clergy reversed this operation and was trying to keep God out of it. And I think the Peguy was right. The issue is how each church viewed holiness.

Holiness, particularly in the Catholic Church is strongly tinged with a sense of asceticism, clericalism and monasticism. As Catholics materially understand it, the practice of a deepening of the relationship with God involves a “renunciation” of this world: a turning away from it. More asceticism, more poverty, more prayers and the assumption of holy orders: monasticism and it quasi equivalents. There even a ranking system, with the saints and martyrs on top, clergy in the middle and laity-those involved in the day to day operations of the world–on the bottom. The conception of holiness, as Peguy correctly sensed, was an operation away from the day to day affairs of the world.

Culturally, this produced a society which was strong in reasoned argument, great art, deep philosophy but with poor roads, minimal industrial infrastructure, widespread grinding poverty and lessening real world influence.

Contrast this with the Protestant world, which emphasised the role of the laity and holiness of a honest vocation, be that in plumbing or philosophy. Protestantism where it was honestly practiced, sought to bring a Christian spirit, be it to education, science, engineering or banking. Protestantism christianised the carnal world. It kept alive the operation of the Incarnation, the bringing of God’s love into the material being of day to day life. The result was the world that Max Weber noted.

Protestantism ended up being the custodian of modernity and subjugated it to it’s version of Christianity, Catholicism was left in the lurch because its theology made it unable to do so.

Which brings me to the movie It’s a Wonderful Life. I’ve always enjoyed the movie but only recently have seen some of its deeper theological significance. While Catholicism has been a factory of saints, Protestantism has been a factory of George Bailey’s. (Casting Jimmy Stewart was perfect) It is true that he is fictional character, but he is also an archetype of the a type of man that we all know, and the type of high minded Protestant man who is slowly disappearing due to the cultural forces that have been unleashed since the sixties. Although the movie is fictional it, unnervingly, is beginning to resemble real life. Bedford Falls may be a fictional town but I remember the world I grew up in strongly resembling it, the world I live in now is slowly turning to Pottersville. The genius of the movie is the depiction of what world would have looked like without Protestant George Bailey. The irony of it is that is was made by a Catholic.

Now I do have disagreements with Protestantism, but my intention here is to praise one of its strengths. And its strength was to produce thousands of George Bailey’s, who in various fields and in their own small way were able to transform the world. Catholicism may have a great theology of the Incarnation but Protestantism, at its best, produced the goods, and bought Christianity to the day to day affairs of men.

Unfortunately, Protestantism, like Catholicism was gutted in the sixties and its drift toward radical liberalism is far more catastrophic since it controlled the infrastructure of modernity, the mantle of leadership has now been past to men who see George Bailey as a quaint anachronism, not someone to emulate. Catholicism is unable to fill the void.

Aaron Renn writes:

What’s key to Bailey is his institutional orientation and civic mindset. Bailey takes over the Building and Loan after his father’s death and treats it as his personal responsibility to sustain that institution through depression, war, and relentless outside attacks by Potter…

Without his civic minded and institutional spirit, the town would have turned into a slum, something we’ve seen happen all too many times in today’s world, one with precious few George Baileys.

sometimes you choose your duties, sometimes your duties choose you.

George Bailey didn’t want to run the Building and Loan. He wanted to go to college. He wanted to travel the world. He wanted to have a honeymoon. In every case, he could have folded and pursued his own dreams.

But he didn’t. George Bailey saw a need and stepped into the gap.

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The Hidden Costs of Defending Others Online

Aaron Renn writes Jan. 9:

You should think twice before rushing to the defense of someone online.

What I’m talking about here specifically is defending someone who others are attempting to cancel online, especially when it is powerful people attempting to destroy a weak person.

I don’t say never come to someone’s defense, but rather to think carefully about when to do it. This is for three key reasons.

1. You may make enemies out of powerful people. …moral influence is a finite resource. Spend it defending strangers online, and you may find yourself bankrupt when it truly matters. We have to be wise and judicious in how we deploy our influence. Where are we investing our talents such that they will generate a return?

We’ve only got so many bullets we can shoot. Before using one, we need to make sure it’s the right place by asking questions like: Is this aligned with my mission?

2. You expose yourself to the risk of publicly supporting a dodgy person.

…The stories that most inflame our sense of justice are often the ones we understand the least.

3. The person you defend probably won’t even appreciate it – and may not even want you speak up.

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Public Intellectuals Have Short Shelf Lives—But Why?

Aaron Renn writes Feb. 11:

Tanner Greer wrote a great piece about [Tom] Friedman’s story arc that explores what happened. Friedman studied the Middle East, then ended up as a New York Times correspondent in Beirut and Jerusalem. This gave him profound insights into the globalizing world that he used to write multiple influential books like The Lexus and the Olive Tree and The World is Flat. It’s hard to overstate the extent to which the latter book made Friedman into a prophet like figure for corporate America.

Fifteen years later, Friedman was something of an internet joke. People would write parody columns in which he explained the world through a conversation with his cab driver. As a superstar columnist, he spent his days doing things like hobnobbing with other elites at the Aspen Ideas Festival. He wasn’t on the streets of Beirut anymore gaining insight into what was coming next. Those elite conversations are important, but they are also one dimensional. Perhaps Friedman overly relied on his proverbial cab driver because riding in a cab became one of the few times he interacted with the kinds of people he used to talk to daily when he was a foreign correspondent.

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