Heather Mac Donald: Defector from Theory, Guardian of Standards, Theorist of Elite Self-Sabotage

“I wasted a huge portion of my time at Yale on something that was a fiction, a self-indulgent pastime of a few professors who had lost interest in conveying the beauties of literature.” — Heather Mac Donald, in conversation with Luke Ford, 2003

I. The Conversion Narrative

Heather Lynn Mac Donald’s (b. 1956) career is a right-wing intellectual conversion story.
She grew up in Bel Air, spent childhood afternoons in the Santa Monica Mountains among chaparral and wild mustard, and arrived at Yale in the late 1970s already steeped in the Western canon. For a time deconstruction seized her. Paul de Man and Geoffrey Hartman were close readers, rigorous with texts, and for a young woman in love with language the enterprise seemed daring. Within a semester of returning to Yale’s PhD program in 1980, she saw it for what it was: a rote machine that arrived at the same conclusion for every text it examined, that meaning fails and the human subject dissolves into language. She walked out and never walked back in.
That revulsion is the emotional engine of everything she has written since. When she attacks diversity bureaucracies, welfare romanticism, or the delegitimation of police, she extends an argument she first encountered in seminar rooms. The core claim is always the same: reality has been subordinated to narrative, and that substitution produces institutional decay.

II. The Sensory and Aesthetic Foundation

Mac Donald’s worldview has a sensory foundation. She grew up against the Santa Monica Mountains, with deer on the porch at night and raccoons in the garden, and she describes the light of Southern California the way a painter might: brilliant, white, bouncing off the ocean and the open hills, filling what she calls a big bowl of light. When she returned to Los Angeles after fourteen years in New York she walked her Hollywood neighborhood in sensory ecstasy, naming the plants as she went — star jasmine, bougainvillea, honeysuckle, Italian cypress, agapanthus, lantana. She catalogs specific, named things with evident pleasure. She finds New York’s aging brick and rusting infrastructure spirit-killing. She finds the East Coast’s humidity monolithic, its light never producing clarity or sharpness of outline.
This aesthetic sensibility runs straight through her politics. Order, for Mac Donald, is not purely instrumental. Disorder offends not only because it produces harm but because it represents a collapse of form, discipline, and structure. The defense of policing, the critique of the academy, the attachment to the Western canon all stem from a shared commitment to structured excellence. She is, in this respect, a cultural classicist writing about modern institutions. When she walked Nickerson Gardens in Watts and described the darling white cottages and charming black trim masking a gang-infested reality, she was reaching for her characteristic metaphor: the aesthetically pleasing facade that conceals deep, unaddressed rot.

III. The Literary Method Repurposed

One good thing, she said, came from deconstruction: the skill of close reading, which she called a curse. She learned to take texts seriously and attend to every word. She now applies that curse to police reports, DEI mission statements, and government data the way a classicist might apply it to Milton, looking for the moment the logic breaks down. A City Journal essay on a welfare program or a university admissions policy is structured like a textual explication. She finds the internal contradiction, traces the premise to its origin, and shows how the stated goal produces the opposite result. The method is literary even when the subject is not.
This gives her work a distinctive texture among conservative policy writers. Thomas Sowell operates as a technical economist; Charles Murray as a social scientist constructing models; James Q. Wilson as a theorist of bureaucratic order. Mac Donald’s comparative advantage is turning policy disputes into moral and intellectual struggles over reality. She is less interested in the mechanics of a program than in the worldview that produced it, and less interested in the worldview than in what it reveals about the people who hold it. Her subject, finally, is elite culture: what it has decided to see, what it has decided to ignore, and what it rewards.

IV. Three Domains, One Argument

Her work develops three interlocking areas of critique that share a single underlying structure. In policing, her argument in Are Cops Racist? (2002) and The War on Cops (2016) is that claims of systemic police bias are empirically unsupported and that the delegitimation of policing harms most the communities it claims to champion. In higher education, her argument in The Diversity Delusion (2018) and When Race Trumps Merit (2023) is that universities have replaced the pursuit of truth and excellence with a bureaucratized system organized around identity, grievance, and administrative enforcement. In immigration and welfare, her argument is that permissive policies sustain patterns of dependency that undermine social cohesion. The specific domains differ but the structure is constant: an elite institution has abandoned its founding criteria of excellence, replaced them with a therapeutic or politically driven alternative, and produced harm it refuses to name.
Her first book, The Burden of Bad Ideas (2000), set the template. It argued that elite intellectuals since the 1960s have reshaped institutions through ideas that romanticize dysfunction and erode norms of responsibility. The book is less a technical policy analysis than a moral diagnosis of elite culture. Social disorder, in her account, is not an accident but the downstream effect of intellectual trends that reject discipline, hierarchy, and accountability.

V. A Theorist of Elite Self-Sabotage

Mac Donald is a theorist of elite self-sabotage. A recurring theme across her work is that elite institutions have inverted their own criteria for legitimacy. Where they once rewarded excellence and competence, they now reward grievance and representation. She describes a shift in how prestige is allocated and justified: the language of equity and inclusion as a new currency of status, one that displaces older meritocratic standards while claiming to fulfill them.
Her critique of the humanities lands with particular force because it carries an elegiac quality. She is not attacking the academy from the outside. She once aspired to it. She knows what the older humanistic ideal looked like and can contrast it against the newer regime of identity, safety, and lived experience. The criticism has force partly because it is a lament. Something she valued was destroyed by the people entrusted to preserve it, and she watched it happen.
Her primary audience is the educated, institutionally invested reader who suspects that elite discourse has become detached from reality but still wants arguments dressed in cultivated prose and empirical authority. She offers moral reassurance to people who want to think of themselves as defending civilization without sounding crude. She provides the same service a serious book review once provided: a demonstration that rigor and clarity remain possible, that someone is still applying them, and that the standards are worth defending.

VI. The Secular Conservative

Mac Donald occupies a rare position as a secular conservative in a movement often built on religious scaffolding. She finds the idea of a benevolent God irreconcilable with what she sees as constant evidence of divine indifference to human outcomes. Her only bridge to the religious impulse is the desire to give thanks for a privileged life, a desire she acknowledges without believing she can discharge it toward any particular being. Otherwise she is satisfied with what she calls the evolutionary complexity of the natural world and views the psychological yearning for religion as a part of the brain that bypasses empirical reasoning.
Her heterodox votes — she supported Obama in 2008 as a protest against the selection of Sarah Palin — underscore her commitment to intellectual merit over tribal loyalty. She argues that conservative principles stand on their own intellectual merits without religious scaffolding, and she argues this by demonstration, building her case from data and observation rather than from revealed authority. The consistency of that approach across three decades is part of what makes her a recognizable type rather than merely a partisan voice.

VII. The Internal Tension

Mac Donald presents herself as a defender of empirical reality against ideological distortion, but the selection of which data sets, pathologies, and institutional failures deserve close attention is guided by a broader moral vision. Her focus on crime, disorder, and elite failure reflects a commitment to a particular model of social order rooted in discipline and hierarchy. This does not negate her empirical claims, but it situates them within a larger worldview. She is not a neutral technician correcting errors. She is an advocate for a specific model of civilization, one she absorbed at Yale even as she was rejecting what Yale was doing with it.
She is, finally, a failed academic in the narrow sense and a transformed one in the broader sense. She carries forward the habits of literary judgment into new domains, using them to challenge what she takes to be the moral and intellectual failures of contemporary institutions. Her significance lies in that synthesis: a defector from the high humanities who redirected the sensibility of canon defense, close reading, and anti-relativism into the gritty terrain of urban policy, policing, and cultural criticism. She stands as a defender of standards in a cultural environment increasingly suspicious of the very idea.

VIII. Mac Donald

According to Wikipedia: “Her original family name was MacDonald; she later added the space to her surname, but recalled that it was a “bad idea”.”
The space between “Mac” and “Donald” reads as a refinement, a slight elevation of the name’s appearance on the page. It looks more bookish, more European, less common than MacDonald.
That she now calls it a bad idea matters because of who she became. She built a career criticizing affectation, credentialism, and the cultural drift away from plain standards. The name change sits in tension with that posture.
The space is a fossil of an earlier self trying to look the part, and she is candid enough to call it what it was.
I find the name change annoying because every other “MacDonald” I know is a “MacDonald.” I have my differences with Kevin MacDonald but at least he was man enough not to become “Kevin Mac Donald” or “Kendra Stacey Donald.” I really don’t need this stress. I’m a very respectable man. People expect me to get things right. I’m shaping a generation. The youth look up to me. As if I don’t have enough to worry about. Every extra moment I spent typing “Mac Donald” instead of “MacDonald” is a moment I’m not studying Torah and redeeming the world.
These name changes add friction to normal interactions and they give somebody on the margin another reason to avoid others and just watch more TV. This type of diversity is not our strength.
Conventional spellings, conventional pronunciations, conventional forms of address, these reduce the cognitive load of social interaction. Every idiosyncratic departure adds a small tax. The tax is small per instance. Across a life it accumulates.
The marginal person, the shy person, the person with social anxiety, the person who just wants to get through the encounter without a mistake, all of them notice the tax. Some respond by avoiding the encounter. The friction does not deter the confident social operator. It deters the person already inclined to withdraw.
The official slogan says diversity strengthens institutions, communities, social life. The empirical literature is more mixed. Robert Putnam (b. 1941) found in his 2007 paper “E Pluribus Unum” that ethnic diversity reduces social trust in the short and medium term. Putnam sat on the finding for years before publishing it. He did not like what his own data said. The reason he did not like it tells you where the consensus sat.
The Mac Donald name case is a microcosm. A small voluntary departure from convention by a high-status writer. No one tells her to undo it. No one tells the MacDonald family in Glasgow that she has insulted them. The departure persists because no one in her professional world has any incentive to enforce the older standard. The older standard erodes one preference at a time.
The case is trivial. The pattern is not. Strong shared conventions lower the cost of social life. Weak shared conventions raise it. The person who pays the cost is the person who already pays too much.
The pattern shows up in the early twenties. The young person decides her given name does not match who she wants to be. She tries on something new. An accent mark, a dropped letter, a doubled letter, an unusual spelling. The change feels like self-creation. The future costs do not appear at the moment of choice.
The costs arrive across decades. Every introduction requires a small correction. Every form, every business card, every email signature requires attention to the accent. Every official document either keeps the accent or drops it, and the paper trail forks. The drain on attention and on patience accumulates. The change that felt like self-creation begins to feel like a self-imposed tax.
Reversing is also a public act. It admits the earlier choice was wrong. It requires explanation to everyone who learned the new name. It requires more paperwork. Most people who regret a name change keep the regretted name.
The early twenties is when these choices get made because the young woman is still figuring out who she is and has not learned that small public commitments are hard to walk back. The brain at twenty-one does not weigh the lifetime cost of a daily friction. It weighs the feeling of becoming someone new.
Those who change their names in their twenties are often reveling in their buffered identity. She believes she can author her identity through an act of will. The name belongs to her. The lineage does not own her. The buffered self is most confident here, at the moment of self-authorization.
The porous reality follows. The forms refuse the change. The relatives forget it. The friction comes through every small encounter where the world pushes back, refusing the buffered move. The accumulated refusals reveal that the name was not hers alone, that the name was held in place by a thick web of recognition.
The regret is the closest the modern self gets to the porous mode. The buffered self at twenty-one cannot see the porous reality. The buffered self at forty has felt it in a thousand small encounters and cannot pretend the pressure is not there. The regret is the report of that pressure.
Roland Fryer (b. 1977) and Steven Levitt (b. 1967) published “The Causes and Consequences of Distinctively Black Names” in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 2004. They found the distinctively Black name pattern took off around 1970, that within Black America the names correlate with class, and that the names carry small but persistent labor-market costs when other factors are held constant. Marianne Bertrand (b. 1970) and Sendhil Mullainathan (b. 1972) found in 2003 that resumes with names like Lakisha and Jamal received fewer callbacks than identical resumes with Emily and Greg.
The within-group meaning of the name is one thing. The name marks belonging, distinctiveness, refusal of inherited Anglo conventions, a small assertion of cultural autonomy. The out-of-group reading is the other thing. The non-Black reader who has to write the name in a database, pronounce it at a meeting, fit it into a form, experiences friction. The friction does not produce joy. The friction produces a small private wish that the parent had chosen Michael.

IX. NYT: ‘Excoriating the Enablers, in 12 Chapters’ (Nov. 28, 2000)

Robin Finn writes:

SO this is how a bastion of conservative brainstorming — the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, across the street from Grand Central Terminal and next to the Yale Club — looks and sounds on the inside. Books doing double duty as wallpaper. Chunky furniture in that serious shade of leather, legal maroon. Murmurs from behind closed doors, even some modulated chuckling. Folks, aren’t you supposed to be busy turning intellect into influence, the way your motto states? Perhaps the process is funnier than we assumed.
Not so, says Heather L. Mac Donald, the influential institute thinker who risks being stereotyped as a right-leaning academic curmudgeon in her new collection of essays, ”The Burden of Bad Ideas: How Modern Intellectuals Misshape Our Society” (Ivan R. Dee). Throughout a dozen chapters, she argues that the nation, steered by liberal ideologues with 60’s hangovers and led by New York City’s bad example, is metamorphosing into a dysfunction enabler. Caseworkers on every corner. Individual responsibility a bygone virtue.
Ms. Mac Donald, 44, is more congenial in person (she’s sniffling through the nonpartisan symptoms of the common cold) than on the page (no sniffling there).
”I don’t consider myself a rock-ribbed conservative,” notes Ms. Mac Donald, who originally wrote about ”the idiocies of academia and the art world,” then found public policy more compelling. Her ideas have found their way onto Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani’s policy agenda, even winning her a place on his City University of New York task force after she condemned CUNY’s remedial programs.
She is a displaced Californian, but New York is where the cerebral action is. She says it’s ”ground zero in elite ideology, a breeding ground for lots of really awful ideas.” Teaching hip-hop in schools? Insanity! In the same class with putting day care centers in schools to simplify life for teenage moms. Idiotic!
NEW YORK is in the social uplift business: advocates sort of control the discourse, and the city’s policies reward dysfunction,” she says. ”A lot of this progressive nonsense, done in the name of helping the poor, does just the opposite. There’s a caseworker for every social ill.” How about affirmative action? ”I’ve always loathed it.” Feminism? ”For white women to go around nurturing this victim complex is ridiculous.” Racism? ”Most claims of racism are smoke screens for a different set of problems.” Student empowerment through pop culture curriculums? Allow her to echo her mayor on that: ”Education is not about self-esteem, it’s about knowledge.”
Ms. Mac Donald grew up a car-hating contrarian in Los Angeles, the kind of girl who rode her bicycle on Sunset Boulevard. Now she is a regular on the city’s subways. She goes in-line skating in Central Park. Regarding the spacing of her surname, an innovation that made her father huffy (he’s a MacDonald), she calls it a bad idea. Even Ms. Mac Donald has them sometimes.
”I don’t ever think deep thoughts — I just do my research,” she insists, not convincingly.

That last quote is the standard polemicist’s disavowal. Theory belongs to the opposition. Research belongs to me. The line preempts the charge of ideology by claiming only facts.
The line falls apart on its face. Mac Donald writes essays that argue large theses about welfare, education, race, and policing. Those are deep thoughts. The choice not to call them deep thoughts is a position.
The line works because it tells her audience what they want to hear. City Journal readers, Manhattan Institute donors, Wall Street Journal op-ed subscribers, these people are tired of theory. They distrust academics. They want ammunition that looks like reporting. Mac Donald gives them reporting that carries the weight of theory without admitting it does. The disavowal of deep thinking becomes part of the product.
A woman writer in 2000 saying “I don’t think deep thoughts” deflects a charge that gets aimed harder at female intellectuals. The female academic gets caricatured as the pretentious overreader of texts. Mac Donald positions herself against that figure. She is the woman in the trenches reading court documents, not the woman in the seminar room theorizing oppression. The line maintains the position.
But there may be something true in it. Mac Donald is not a theorist. She does not build systems. Compare her to Allan Bloom (1930-1992) or Roger Scruton (1944-2020) or anyone who tried to articulate an explicit framework. Mac Donald produces case studies. The case studies accumulate into a worldview, but she does not try to name it. The worldview lives in the choice of targets and the consistency of the prose, not in any elaborated theory. When she says she just does her research, she admits that she does not do the other work. That other work, articulating first principles, defending them, situating them in a tradition. She does not do it. She writes essays.
The polemicist’s economy depends on the disavowal. If you elaborate your principles, you can be argued with at the level of principles. If you stay at the level of cases, your opponent has to refute each case. The case-by-case method resists dismissal because it always has a particular fact pattern in front of it. Mac Donald has stayed at this level for decades. The method has aged well because the cases keep arriving.
There is also the question of whether she believes the line. Finn says “not convincingly.” That reads right. Mac Donald knows she thinks deep thoughts. The performance of modesty does not exist for her own benefit. It exists for the reader. The reader who hates theory wants to be told that the writer hates theory too. The writer obliges. The transaction completes.
What the line cannot account for is the consistency of the thought across her essays. If she were just doing her research, the research might lead her in different directions on different topics. It does not. The same suspicions show up in the welfare essays, the education essays, the policing essays, the homelessness essays. The thought is there. It just goes unannounced. Calling it “research” rather than “thought” is a marketing decision, not an epistemic one.
The piece tells you more about how the New York Times handled conservative subjects in 2000 than it does about Mac Donald. Finn opens with set decoration, leather furniture, book-lined walls, chuckling from behind closed doors, as if visiting a zoo. The framing line lands in the second paragraph: Mac Donald “risks being stereotyped as a right-leaning academic curmudgeon.” That sentence tells readers how to receive her before she speaks. Finn does not engage the arguments. She lets the quotes stand as evidence of temperament.
The class certification arrives in paragraph three with the George F. Will (b. 1941) blurb. An institutional outlet hedges that way. The Times will not endorse the views but it can confirm that other respectable people take her seriously. The Yale-Cambridge-Stanford line gets one sentence. The “Reagan Busters” T-shirt gets a fuller treatment. The message: she used to be normal, then something happened.
Mac Donald’s quotes are the strongest part of the piece. “Ground zero in elite ideology, a breeding ground for lots of really awful ideas” compresses a thesis into a sentence. The Ford Foundation line, calling it “the first, but far from the last, foundation to conceive of itself as a laboratory for the federal welfare state,” does real work in a small space. You can disagree with the claim and still notice the prose.
The most revealing moment comes when Finn pushes Mac Donald on her anti-divorce position and gets the admission that her parents divorced when she was 12. Mac Donald says “children are very conservative little creatures” and then notes she is childless because she never married. That sequence is the one place where the piece touches something the subject might rather skip. Finn does not press further. The reader does the work.
The piece has aged. The think-tank apparatus Finn treats as a curiosity has since become a recognized part of the landscape. The 2000 Mac Donald writes about welfare and CUNY remediation. The policing beat that becomes her main subject emerges here through the “How to Train Cops” article she previews.
What the profile cannot show: Mac Donald turns out to have staying power. Most of the people on the City Journal masthead in 2000 are forgotten. She still publishes, still argues, still works the same beats with the same voice. The “rock-ribbed conservative” label she rejects in the interview has become harder to dodge in the years since, but the prose is here already, dry, certain, allergic to therapeutic language.
The Finn profile catches Mac Donald at the moment when an institutional gatekeeper decides someone is interesting enough to feature but not yet established enough to challenge. The piece treats her as a discovery. The Will blurb, the Giuliani task force placement, the City Journal byline, all of it points to someone the establishment has noticed and decided to elevate.
Then the elevator stops.
She keeps writing the same beats with the same prose. The Manhattan Institute keeps publishing her. City Journal keeps running her essays. She gets the books, the panels, the C-SPAN appearances. But the trajectory implied by a 2000 NYT profile, the one where Finn is half-suggesting Mac Donald might become a major public intellectual, never quite arrives. She remains a known quantity within a known circle. The audience she has at 44 is the audience she has at 69. The arguments she makes about policing and remediation and elite ideology stay arguments inside conservative magazines. They do not break through to a wider readership. They do not get her on the Sunday shows.

X. ‘The Defenestration of Domingo: Domingo’s entrepreneurial drive has been as untiring as his stage career’ (Oct. 18, 2019)

Heather Mac Donald writes for Quillete:

As the object of so much sexual attention, Domingo could have been forgiven for thinking that his own advances were part of the mix. He clearly belongs to the “Latin Lover” prototype, a good-natured, charming seducer from the old Hollywood era. Learning to deal with such types used to be part of a woman’s skill set. The instigator of a sexual advance does not know beforehand whether it will be wanted or not; he (or she) is taking a chance. It is up to the target of that advance to signal how it has been received. If the would-be seducer does not back off, the seducee needs to escalate to whatever level of explicitness is required, however uncomfortable it may be to elevate what is unspoken and ambiguous into the realm of language and clarity. Rebuffing an advance from a superior is particularly difficult. But, as noted, Domingo appears to have dropped his petitions when told to do so and did not exert quid pro quo pressure. If all else fails, avoidance is the fallback strategy: turning one’s head to avoid a kiss, or staying far enough away to avoid charged interaction.

Heather Mac Donald writes a strong polemic.
The best part of her piece concerns institutional behavior. The Philadelphia Orchestra, the Met, LA Opera, Dallas Opera, and Chapman all moved the same direction within days. Mac Donald calls this cowardice. Cowardice is part of it. The deeper truth is that the modern arts institution no longer treats artistic excellence as its top priority. It treats donor maintenance, staff pacification, and reputational risk management as its top priorities. Those three now outrank the singer on stage. Once you see that, the cascade of cancellations stops looking like a moral panic and starts looking like the system working as designed. The boards do not ask whether the treatment of Placido Domingo (b. 1941) is fair. They ask what their donors need from them and what their staff will tolerate.
Her mockery of the “safety” rhetoric is earned. A man pushing eighty under press scrutiny poses no threat to anyone. The hand-wringing about feeling “queasy” in the pit reads as performance. But Mac Donald misses why the rhetoric works. The cost of challenging it is too high. To say “the cellist’s nausea is not a serious moral consideration” sounds, in the current vocabulary, like minimizing harm. So nobody says it. The rhetoric does not aim at truth. It aims to be unanswerable. That is its function.
Her handling of the accusers is too fast. The shape of the AP investigation, with one named accuser and most anonymous, and a feminist critic who tried first and failed for lack of cooperating witnesses, suggests a story constructed rather than reported. Fair enough. But Domingo is a married man who pursued subordinate singers in institutions he controlled. By his own Catholic background, by the standards of traditional ethics, that conduct is wrong. Mac Donald defends him as a “Latin Lover” type from “the old Hollywood era.” The phrase does a lot of work she has not earned. It romanticizes a married man hitting on chorus girls.
The public/private distinction sits at the heart of her argument, and it is the most contestable part. She writes that civilization rests on public achievement and that private behavior should remain subordinate. The James Madison (1751-1836) example is meant to seal the point. But Madison did not employ his bedroom partners. Domingo did. He decided casting. He ran the company. The chorus member who told him no was telling no to the man who decided whether she got cast next season. No line separates Domingo the artist from Domingo the impresario. Mac Donald’s distinction holds for the pure private case. It collapses when private behavior occurs inside a hierarchy a powerful man controls.
The piece has aged well in one respect. Mac Donald predicted that European houses might not cave. They did not. Domingo kept singing in Vienna, Milan, Madrid, Salzburg. The affliction has stayed Anglo-American. That tells you something about which culture runs the most intense purity contests right now.
The piece has aged poorly in another respect. The institutions she calls on to defend “our musical inheritance” have not reversed. They have only added more cases. Mac Donald wrote as if someone at the Met might still be persuaded. Nobody at the Met read Quillette and changed course. The writing is for the converted.
Mac Donald has a habit of attacking female accusers as a class. She calls them “the resentment brigades.” She mocks Nancy Hopkins (b. 1943) for fleeing the Summers lecture. She concedes that “rebuffing an advance from a superior is particularly difficult,” and then waves the difficulty away. The “but” is the move. The difficulty is real. She knows it is real. She wants it not to count, so she names it and moves on. A more honest version of her piece might sit with the difficulty longer.

XII. ‘The Guardians in Retreat’ (Winter, 2022)

Heather Mac Donald writes:

At that time, the Art Institute was still seeking to expand its docent corps. “We Want You! (To Become a Docent),” announced a contemporaneous article in the museum’s newsletter. The article emphasized the program’s rigor: becoming a docent “was no small task,” the museum advised, involving a competitive admissions process and written, supervised research on the museum’s collections.

Less than a decade later, in September 2021, the Art Institute shut down its docent program entirely and told its participants that they would no longer be allowed to serve the Institute in a volunteer capacity. Henceforth, six salaried part-time employees would replace the 82 unpaid educators. The docents were told to clean out their lockers; as a consolation prize, they were offered a two-year complimentary membership in the museum.

Had the docents been delivering subpar performances? Had the Institute discovered an incurable flaw in their training? No, it had noticed that they were overwhelmingly white. And that, in 2021, constituted a sin almost beyond redemption, whether found in an individual or in an institution….

Meantime, universities had started “problematizing” art museums and their contents as means by which white males maintain their alleged privilege. In 1992, the dean of the Institute’s affiliated art school wrote that art raises questions about “who gets to write, to speak, . . . to frame and interpret reality, [and] to position their text as part of the cultural mastertext.” Academic theorists cast museums as tools of exclusion and art as a mask for power. It took a while for this demystifying reflex to migrate from academia into the very bloodstream of art museums, but by the second decade of the new century, curators and museum directors nationwide had become fluent in deconstructive rhetoric, which they directed at their own institutions. The death of George Floyd only accelerated the trend.

The Art Institute is emblematic of this conversion, by which the impulse to share culture becomes culpable and tainted by whiteness. In good show-trial fashion, Institute leaders confess to the “biases and inequities of our history and the present.” They are particularly exercised by the failure of their predecessors to embrace Black Lives Matter values. “Firmly rooted in Eurocentric tradition, the founding objectives of our institutional history did not consider gender, ethnic, and racial equity,” laments the Institute’s website. But no museum founder at the time was considering “gender, ethnic, and racial equity,” beyond a generalized aim to make beauty widely available to a democratic citizenry.

Not good enough. Today’s Art Institute accuses itself of sins of commission, not just of omission. The museum has long “centered certain stories while marginalizing and suppressing others.” The Institute, in this telling, did not just focus initially on those artists and traditions that its founders knew best and that they viewed as central to America’s cultural legacy: it actively sought to silence other artists and traditions out of a racist, colonialist impulse. Despite the Institute’s assertions, there is no evidence of such malign intent or unintended effect on the part of the founders or their successors…

The new antiracism mission of museums is not an outgrowth of the democratic impulse that inspired those institutions—it is its repudiation. In 2018, Alice Walton, art benefactor and heiress to the Walmart fortune, told Rondeau that she wanted to give him a “ton of money,” by his recounting, to loan some of the Institute’s unexhibited holdings to poor rural communities in America. Rondeau was contemptuous. “I don’t want to get into your business, Alice,” he told her, with a sneering emphasis, “but I’m not sure poor rural communities in America need Toulouse-Lautrec. I’m not sure that that’s what they’re asking for. But this kind of art for the people, like, eat your Shakespeare, look at beautiful paintings, you will be ennobled, not so much. I don’t, you know, I don’t think that that methodology is sufficiently sophisticated even though we’re seeing it still operable.” Rondeau then hit Walton up for a contribution to Chicago’s ethnic museums that “struggle to keep their doors open.” What is the difference between the poor rural communities that don’t need the Art Institute’s art and the hoped-for audiences of Chicago’s ethnic museums that deserve Walton’s money? The former are white, the latter are not…

Female artists have been more numerous, and much effort has gone into elevating them to the creative pantheon. The Baroque painter Artemisia Gentileschi is a particular target for promotion. But however accomplished her work, only gender equity could justify inducting her into the highest ranks.

Identity, however, is now the driving force in the Institute’s collecting practices. Rondeau bragged in his 2019 speech, delivered at the Des Moines Art Center, that the first two trans artists had now entered the collection, as well as an indigenous artist who addresses “non-binary, gender, and sexual identity” in his work.

The Alice Walton anecdote alone is worth the piece. A museum director sneering at the idea of loaning Toulouse-Lautrec to rural America, then turning around to ask the same donor for money to support Chicago’s ethnic museums, tells you what the new criteria are without anyone having to spell it out. Her quoted Rondeau passage about “weird concentration of capital” and “I got a lot of gold, you know, it’s just stuff” is the kind of self-incrimination no opponent could invent.
She also catches a real asymmetry. No one in elite cultural circles will say a Black educator cannot reach White students. The reverse claim passes without comment.
And the basic story is true. The Art Institute did dismiss 82 trained volunteers and replace them with six paid part-timers. The volume of tours has to drop. The depth has to drop. Whatever else the change accomplishes, it shrinks the thing the museum says it values most.
Now the weaknesses.
MacDonald treats the founders’ Eurocentrism as natural and the current expansion as ideological. Both are choices. Henry Field’s widow gifting Barbizon canvases was a statement about Chicago’s claim to European inheritance. Martin Ryerson adding Asian art in 1933 was a statement too. Museums have always been instruments of cultural self-definition for the societies that build them. Pretending there was once an apolitical custodial past makes the critique easier but weaker. The stronger version is that the new politics has displaced the old politics, and one can argue the old politics produced better art education without claiming the old politics was no politics at all.
Her swipe at Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1654) is the kind of line that loses readers who know the paintings. The Judith canvases stand up to any comparison she wants to make. Putting Gentileschi forward as a case of mere equity bingo is the move of a writer who already knows her audience agrees.
The “by that logic African art should be condemned for tribal warfare” line is a tu quoque that does no work. Nobody is arguing that art carries the moral weight of every society it emerged from. The Institute’s claim is narrower and weaker than the one she swats at.
The comparison of inner-city Black students in 2021 to European immigrants in 1910 is glib. The immigrants were being assimilated into a culture that, however foreign at first, accepted them within a generation.
The strongest part of her argument is the one she does not fully draw out. The Institute has redefined its core function. It no longer says its job is to acquire, conserve, and teach. It says its job is to advance racial justice. That is a categorical shift, and institutions that make such shifts tend to deny they are making them. Mac Donald sees this. She could push harder on what follows, which is that an institution funded for one purpose and operated for another has a governance problem its donors should care about. She gestures toward the donor-revolt angle at the end but leaves it underdeveloped.
Her best paragraphs are the descriptive ones. The history of the docent program, the curriculum Barbara Wriston (1916-2000) built, the eighteen-month training, the curatorial lectures and written papers. She is at her weakest when she reaches for civilizational stakes and at her strongest when she tells you what the Institute used to do and what it does now. The story carries itself. She might trust it more.

XIII. The Polemical Essayist

Heather Mac Donald is an essayist who has produced books, not a book writer in the sustained monographic sense. Her career runs through City Journal at the Manhattan Institute, and her books consolidate that output into thematic packages with longer shelf life. To read her work in chronological order is to watch a magazine writer harvest her own beat at intervals of three to seven years, with the books standing as periodic markers of where the argument has reached.
The early collections announce themselves as such. The Burden of Bad Ideas and Are Cops Racist? bundle her City Journal pieces with light editorial work. The middle-period co-authored book, The Immigration Solution, written with Victor Davis Hanson (b. 1953) and Steven Malanga (b. 1950), shows the think tank pooling resources for a policy statement. Her recent solo books, The Diversity Delusion and When Race Trumps Merit, present integrated arguments with deliberate architecture, but the building blocks still come from her standing journalism beat.
The repetition across her books is not a flaw but a feature of the form. She has a single diagnostic lens and applies it across domains: policing, universities, museums, medicine, homelessness, classical music, immigration. The lens has stable parts. Meritocratic standards existed. Activist ideology displaced them. Performance fell. Elites covered the decline with moral language. Ordinary people pay the costs. Once a reader knows the template, he can predict the next chapter before reading it.
The cost of the form shows when the books stretch. At essay length she is sharp. The City Journal pieces find a vivid case, set the scene, hit the rhetorical beats, and exit. At book length the cases pile up without a deepening argument. The fifth example of museum DEI capture reads much like the second. The reader finishes with confirmed prior beliefs but few new conceptual tools. She is good at her register and rarely tries to escape it.
What she does well comes from outside the academy. She catches things academics miss because academics live inside the institutions she critiques. A tenured sociologist studying policing has reasons to soften his findings. Mac Donald has reasons to harden hers. The asymmetry of incentives produces useful reporting from her end even when the framing tilts. Her work on the Ferguson Effect, on bail reform outcomes, on the operational reality of community policing reforms, has held up better than the academic counter-literature published at the same time. Her training at Yale, Cambridge, and Stanford Law gives her the equipment to read court records, statute language, and administrative regulations with care, and she uses it.
The think tank apparatus around her does real work. The Manhattan Institute provides the institutional home, donor base, and reputational floor. City Journal provides the regular publishing slot and the editorial discipline. The books consolidate. The speaking circuit, Fox appearances, and podcast tours monetize the persona. The whole circuit functions as one system, and her books should be read as nodes in it rather than as freestanding works. The older mass-magazine version of this arrangement once carried writers like H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) and later Irving Kristol (1920-2009) and Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011). The think tank has replaced the mass magazine, but the underlying form is continuous.
A question worth pressing: how long does this model run. The City Journal reader is a particular type. Educated, bourgeois, suspicious of elite institutional drift, willing to read polished argumentative prose with footnotes. He is aging. The younger conservative audience reads differently, often on video, often in shorter forms, often less patient with the careful institutionalist register Mac Donald uses. Her style assumes a reader who shares the cultural assumptions of an older liberal-arts education even as he rejects the politics that captured those institutions. He is a shrinking demographic.
A second question concerns her prose. She writes well at the magazine length. The sentences are clean, the indignation is controlled, the diction is upper-middlebrow. But the prose carries no idiosyncrasy. She does not have a voice the way Joan Didion (1934-2021) or Hitchens had a voice. The writing is competent and consistent, but a Mac Donald paragraph pulled from context could not be identified as hers the way a Didion or Hitchens paragraph could. The form she works in does not reward that kind of style, and she does not push against the form to develop one.
A third question concerns the choice of essayist over monographer. She had the credentials to attempt the longer form. She chose not to. The reasons are partly institutional, since the think tank ecology pays her for the essayist version. The choice also reflects intellectual temperament. The essay rewards quick framing and rhetorical pace. The monograph rewards patience with counter-evidence and the willingness to spend chapters inside a position the author might end up abandoning. Mac Donald’s books rarely show that second kind of work. The conclusions arrive intact from the opening pages.
The fair summary: she is a polemical chronicler of institutional capture, working at the magazine length and consolidating into books that function as ideological packages rather than developing arguments. She is good at her form. The form has limits she does not try to escape, and her standing inside conservative journalism depends on her not trying.

XIV. Google Scholar

There are 1210 results as of May 19, 2026, and almost all of the top results are direct links to her work.
The academic world ignores her. She is not a citation target. To engage her in print would grant her standing.
Her influence runs through public channels: Fox News, Wall Street Journal op-eds, the Bradley Prize circuit, congressional testimony, New York Times bestseller lists. None produce Scholar citations. Manhattan Institute fellows can sustain a career without academic engagement because the think tank funds the work and the media circuit amplifies it. Academic invisibility costs her nothing with her donors or readers.
She critiques the academy in nearly every book. The academy does not return the favor.

XV. Group Differences

Heather Mac Donald has built a career attacking the doctrine of disparate impact. She does this well. She documents the gaps in test scores, crime rates, professional licensing exams, medical board scores, and institutional performance after diversity mandates. She defends policing and standardized testing. She names the costs of lowered standards. Then she stops.
A reader who knows the cognitive literature notices what she leaves out. She accepts that disparities exist. She rejects the systemic racism explanation. She gestures at differences in achievement and behavior. She does not say what produces those differences at the scale and persistence the data show.
This is the missing causal layer. Without it her argument has a hole at the center. Disparate impact doctrine requires a causal theory. If outcomes differ across groups and the differences do not come from unequal competence or unequal conduct, then the institution producing those outcomes becomes presumptively discriminatory. Mac Donald spends hundreds of pages attacking that inference. She rarely articulates the alternative model the data point toward.
The alternative is well documented. General intelligence is the strongest predictor of academic achievement and job performance. Group average differences in measured intelligence are among the most replicated findings in psychometrics. Heritability of intelligence within populations runs between fifty and eighty percent in adulthood. The achievement gap is heavily g-loaded. None of this sits at the fringe. Arthur Jensen (1923-2012), Richard Lynn (1930-2023), and Charles Murray have written about it for decades. The work draws fire but the underlying data have not been overturned.
Mac Donald knows this material. She references The Bell Curve in passing. She cites Murray on occasion. She defends the right to discuss the subject without taboo. She does not endorse the strong hereditarian account. She leans on environmental counterexamples and subgroup variation when the question comes up. Then she steers back to behavior, family structure, and norms.
The institutional logic is not hidden. Once a writer attributes part of group disparities to heritable cognitive distributions, the status of the argument shifts inside elite institutions. The writer moves from criticizing policy to challenging a foundational premise of postwar liberalism. The sanction rises. Murray paid the cost. Steve Sailer (b. 1958) spent decades shut out of prestige journalism. Nathan Cofnas (b. 1986) lost his post at Emmanuel College over a hereditarian blog post. James Watson (b. 1928) lost his honors. The line is clear and the cost is known.
Mac Donald appears to have studied the cases. Her strategy depends on implication rather than declaration. She assembles evidence that disparities persist despite anti-bias interventions. She attacks the inflation of racism as an explanatory variable. She highlights places where institutions lowered standards and produced dysfunction. She lets the reader complete the syllogism.
This makes her books feel both fearless and cautious. Fearless in attacking affirmative action, diversity bureaucracies, the campaign against policing, and disparate impact jurisprudence. Cautious in refusing to finish the argument she started.
The strategy serves a coalition function. The opposition to disparate impact contains several incompatible factions. Libertarian proceduralists oppose race-conscious administration on principle. Old civil-rights liberals believe equality means formal neutrality. Cultural conservatives blame family structure and norms. Hereditarian realists treat psychometric distributions as central. Mac Donald holds these factions together by staying ambiguous on causation. A Murray-style commitment fractures the audience. Her ambiguity gives each faction room to project its own causal model onto her data.
Her emphasis on behavior serves a bridging function. Crime rates, classroom disruption, delayed gratification, impulse control, and verbal performance can all be discussed in language that gestures toward stable group differences without making explicit biological claims. This creates a gray zone where environmentalists and hereditarians read the same paragraph and find what they want.
The strategy is rational. It is not the same as a complete account of the evidence. The reader who has read Jensen, Murray, Linda Gottfredson (b. 1947), and the heritability literature notices the gap. The reader who has not read that material reads Mac Donald and assumes her behavioral and cultural framing exhausts the explanation. Both readers use her work. Only one of them gets the full picture.
That is the cost of the strategy. Mac Donald maximizes institutional reach by leaving the causal model underspecified. She trades completeness for survival. The trade is rational at the individual level and corrosive at the collective level. The mainstream conservative position on group disparities now consists largely of attacking the racism explanation without naming the alternative. The left holds a positive theory. The right holds a negation. Negations do not win arguments over time. They delay the demand for an answer.
There is a deeper problem in the position. If group disparities come mainly from culture and behavior, and if culture and behavior change through better norms and family structure, then the disparities should narrow when the relevant cultural variables shift. The Asian American case suggests culture moves outcomes. The persistence of Black-White test score gaps across decades of changing family structure, schooling investment, and policy intervention suggests culture is not the whole story. Mac Donald rarely engages this tension. She presents culture as the lever. She does not explain why the lever has produced so little movement on the gap she documents.
A complete account says something like the following. Group averages on cognitive and behavioral traits differ. Within-group variation dwarfs between-group variation. Individuals are not their group means. Heritability is high within populations. The relative contribution of genes and environment to between-group differences remains contested but cannot be assumed to be zero given what is known about within-group heritability. Cultural factors are real and powerful and amplify or moderate underlying distributions. Policy built on the assumption that all groups have identical means on relevant traits produces destructive consequences. Color-blind standards and individual assessment are the only non-delusional approach.
That argument has been available since Jensen wrote in 1969. The institutional cost of stating it remains high. Mac Donald has chosen to operate under the ceiling rather than push against it. Murray has chosen the opposite. Both choices have a logic. Neither is cowardly. Mac Donald reaches a larger audience by staying inside the line. Murray reaches a smaller audience but states the full case. The conservative movement needs both kinds of writers. It does not need to pretend that one writer is doing the work of the other.
The reader who notices the silence is reading well. The silence is the most informative part of the text. It tells the reader where the line currently sits. It tells the reader what costs a writer is willing to pay. It tells the reader that the empirical question Mac Donald has spent a career circling has an answer she has chosen not to give.

XVI. The Burden of Bad Ideas at Twenty-Six

The Burden of Bad Ideas, published in 2000, gathers twelve essays Heather Mac Donald wrote for City Journal during the late 1990s. The argument is direct. A cluster of ideas produced and circulated by universities, philanthropic foundations, schools of public health, legal academia, media institutions, and advocacy organizations weakened the norms of responsibility, merit, discipline, literacy, and civic integration that had governed American public life. These ideas did not merely shape intellectual discourse. They reshaped institutions, public policy, educational practice, welfare administration, and criminal justice in ways that damaged the poor first and shielded the credentialed elite from the consequences of the systems they built.
The book belongs to a tradition of American neoconservative institutional criticism that includes Nathan Glazer (1923-2019), James Q. Wilson (1931-2012), and Thomas Sowell (b. 1930). Mac Donald differs from these writers in method and temperament. She is not a social scientist, a political theorist, or a quantitative policy analyst. She writes as a prosecutorial investigative journalist. Her strength lies in institutional excavation. She visits welfare offices, foster-care courts, public schools, museums, legal conferences, homeless shelters, and nonprofit bureaucracies. She reads archives closely. She reconstructs the moral language institutions use to justify themselves. Most important, she lets elite actors explain themselves in their own words. The institutions convict themselves through their own rhetoric.
Mac Donald frames the story not as one of economic decline or bureaucratic incompetence but as one of elite moral imagination gone wrong. The actors she studies are not cynical conspirators. They are credentialed professionals whose desire to appear compassionate leads them to deny the role of agency, conduct, family structure, discipline, and culture in producing social disorder. Intellectuals redescribe social failure as victimization. Institutions reorganize around those theories. The resulting policies intensify the pathologies they claim to solve.
The introduction sets the governing motif. Mac Donald recalls an editor who refused to publish a welfare recipient’s remark that without welfare she would “get a husband,” because the statement would “stigmatize the poor.” The episode operates as an origin scene for her theory of elite knowledge production. The trouble is not absence of evidence. The trouble is filtration. Institutions suppress observations that threaten the moral legitimacy of prevailing frameworks. This pattern recurs across the book. Elite institutions do not merely misread social reality. They edit it to preserve flattering narratives about poverty, race, education, and responsibility.
Her underlying anthropology is bourgeois. Self-restraint, delayed gratification, stable family formation, literacy, punctuality, lawfulness, and work discipline appear as fragile cultural achievements rather than natural human defaults. The therapeutic and multicultural ideologies that emerged after the 1960s eroded these norms by redescribing destructive behavior as the product of oppression, trauma, or structural disadvantage. Welfare dependency became evidence of economic injustice rather than behavioral breakdown. Crime became social protest. Educational failure became institutional racism. The family became an arbitrary social construction rather than a precondition for social order.
The strongest section concerns the transformation of American philanthropy. Mac Donald contrasts Andrew Carnegie’s (1835-1919) scientific philanthropy with the activist foundations that emerged after the 1960s. Carnegie represents an older bourgeois ethic that linked giving to self-help, institutional competence, and moral discipline. The early foundations funded libraries, universities, public-health research, and the Flexner reforms of medical education. Philanthropy aimed to build institutions that cultivated self-command and upward mobility.
By contrast, Mac Donald shows Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie after the 1960s as engines of adversarial politics, identity mobilization, and bureaucratic dependency. The foundations stopped regarding themselves as neutral patrons of knowledge and became ideological actors trying to reshape American consciousness. Community-action programs, welfare-rights litigation, multicultural education, racial separatism, and therapeutic administration became the new frontier of elite giving. She treats the community-action programs of the War on Poverty as pivotal. They institutionalized permanent grievance politics while creating bureaucratic layers whose survival depended on the persistence of social crisis.
This section remains historically important. It anticipated later debates about nonprofit governance, NGO activism, and philanthropic influence over policy. Mac Donald saw earlier than most observers that the nonprofit sector was becoming managerial and ideological rather than charitable. The foundations no longer funded institutions alone. They funded vocabularies, categories, administrative systems, and professional classes.
Yet this section also exposes the central limit of the book. Mac Donald documents institutional drift brilliantly and explains it only partly. Her implicit account is psychological and moral. Elite actors seek prestige. They want to appear compassionate, enlightened, progressive. They stand insulated from the consequences of their theories because the costs fall on the poor. The account is partly true and insufficient.
The deeper story is class formation and institutional reproduction. The ideas she critiques did not spread because intellectuals were vain or sentimental. They spread because they served as the professional property of a rising managerial stratum. Alvin Gouldner’s (1920-1980) New Class and Barbara Ehrenreich’s (1941-2022) Professional-Managerial Class supply the frame Mac Donald never builds. Therapeutic governance, diversity administration, nonprofit advocacy, multicultural pedagogy, and public-health managerialism created thousands of jobs requiring specialized credentials and moral vocabularies. By redefining social problems as structural or psychological conditions requiring expert intervention, this emerging class secured both market dominance and moral authority.
The expansion of the therapeutic state cannot be read as ideological drift alone. It represented the growth of a credentialed administrative stratum whose authority depended on the persistence of the problems only it claimed competence to interpret. Bad ideas were profitable institutional assets for the people who held them. Diversity offices, equity bureaucracies, victim-advocacy systems, public-health interventions, and legal activist networks generated careers, grant pipelines, conferences, publishing markets, and administrative jurisdictions. What Mac Donald saw as moral confusion also functioned as institutional self-expansion. The ideas were not held. They were owned.
This omission explains why her theory of change failed. She assumed exposure should produce reform. If the absurdity of institutional behavior became sufficiently visible, the institution would correct itself. Bureaucratic systems rarely work that way. In therapeutic governance, failure produces expansion rather than contraction. If a progressive reading program fails to teach literacy, the conclusion is not that the theory was wrong. The conclusion is that the program was underfunded, badly implemented, or obstructed by deeper structural inequalities. Failure becomes evidence for the necessity of further intervention.
The pattern now seems obvious in retrospect. It remained underdeveloped in much late-twentieth-century neoconservative criticism. Mac Donald assumed institutions still optimized for coherence, legitimacy, and measurable success. Many institutions had already begun optimizing for symbolic moral positioning, bureaucratic growth, and coalition maintenance. The institution did not collapse when exposed. It absorbed the criticism and grew.
Her treatment of universities follows the same logic. Ethnic studies, women’s studies, multiculturalism, and diversity programs appear as centrifugal forces dissolving the idea of a common national culture. Universities become credentialing and legitimizing devices for elite ideology rather than truth-seeking institutions. Her critique overlaps with Allan Bloom’s (1930-1992) attack on relativism, Roger Kimball’s (b. 1953) account of academic politicization, and later institutional analyses by Mark Lilla (b. 1956) and John Searle (b. 1932).
Here too the analysis benefits from a broader frame of institutional self-reproduction. Universities did not embrace multicultural administration because professors had become irrational radicals. Identity-based administration produced new departments, new funding streams, new professional niches, and new bureaucratic authority. The university became ideological and managerial at once. Multiculturalism functioned as doctrine and as administrative technology.
Method remains the book’s greatest strength. The reporting is concrete, archival, institutional. Mac Donald does not theorize from abstraction alone. She reconstructs how institutions speak about themselves. The chapter on the New York Times Neediest Cases campaign is the model case. She tracks the moral vocabulary of charitable representation across eighty years. In 1912 the Times distinguishes the deserving from the undeserving poor and treats relief as an act of public generosity. By 1949 the paper announces it will no longer make that distinction. By the late 1990s the same charity celebrates therapy for freeing a Guyanese boy from his mother’s rigid dress code, so that he may wear baggy pants and an earring. The archive performs the argument without extended polemic.
The Smithsonian chapter shows how elite cultural institutions abandoned the transmission of civilizational inheritance for therapeutic multiculturalism. Robert Sullivan, brought in as director of public programs at the Natural History Museum in 1990, calls the museum’s charging elephant a symbol of White capitalist aggression. He shuts down the Africa Hall to “build trust” with a local Afrocentric advocacy group. He wants visitors to a redesigned cultural anthropology hall to find “themselves” rather than the exotic other, which means erasing the geographic and ethnographic specificity that had defined natural history as a discipline. Mac Donald lets him speak. The transcript does the work.
The Amadou Diallo chapter ages best because it leans on statistical comparison rather than moral rhetoric. Mac Donald compares police shootings across cities, analyzes stop-and-frisk hit rates, and dismantles the press construction of the Diallo case as evidence of systemic racist policing. The analysis anticipated later debates around Ferguson, Black Lives Matter, and the statistical reading of police violence. Even readers hostile to her broader view often concede that her empirical treatment of policing was more careful than the contemporary press coverage around her.
Selection bias runs through the book. Mac Donald reports from welfare hotels, foster-care courts, homeless shelters, ed schools, and failing urban institutions. She pays less attention to suburban neighborhoods, intact working-class communities, religious institutions, immigrant networks, or regions where bourgeois norms retained their force. The picture is half a picture. The therapeutic culture she opposes did not arise in a vacuum. Traditional structures of authority, family stability, local association, and religious cohesion were weakening before the institutions she critiques expanded to fill the resulting space.
She also tends to minimize structural-economic explanation too aggressively. Deindustrialization, labor-market bifurcation, regional decline, housing policy, demographic shifts, and mass incarceration appear weakly next to her emphasis on moral and behavioral disorder. Her analysis sometimes collapses institutional complexity into moral anthropology. Intellectuals shape society. They do not engineer it. The welfare state, educational decline, and racial polarization emerged through interactions among economic transformation, bureaucratic expansion, electoral incentives, urbanization, demographic change, and the evolution of mass media. Elite institutions rationalized and managed these processes. They did not invent them out of nothing.
A counterpoint Mac Donald might offer deserves a hearing. Out-of-wedlock births rose fastest during the economic expansion of the 1960s, not during industrial collapse. The behavioral changes preceded the worst of the structural decline rather than followed it. So the structural-economic story has its own limits, and she might be right to weight institutional incentives over labor-market trends for the populations she profiled. The honest position is that both stories operate at once, with different weights for different populations.
The book also illuminates a central asymmetry of late-twentieth-century elite culture. The upper-middle-class professionals who promoted expressive individualism, therapeutic liberation, and anti-bourgeois cultural norms in public policy continued to practice traditional bourgeois discipline in private. They married, stayed married, invested heavily in their children’s education, delayed childbirth, kept professional ambition, and enforced behavioral standards in their own homes. The burden of bad ideas was asymmetric. The elite shielded themselves from the behavioral patterns they normalized, subsidized, or therapeutically rationalized in others.
This asymmetry helps explain the system’s durability. Elite actors could advocate social experimentation without bearing its costs because their class position buffered them. The same professionals who criticized bourgeois norms in public continued reproducing bourgeois life at home. Mac Donald notices the pattern repeatedly without theorizing it. Charles Murray developed the same insight at book length in Coming Apart in 2012, with neighborhood-level data. Mac Donald arrived at the qualitative version twelve years earlier. On that point her instinct ran ahead of the sociology.
A further weakness sits in plain view across the chapters. She catches each institution alone. She does not draw the circuit. The Times sets cultural priorities. The foundations fund the priorities. The universities credential the people. The credentialed people staff the museums and the public-health schools. The schools and museums produce the events the Times covers. The system runs as a loop. Identifying the circuit, rather than the components, is the step a successor book would need to take.
A final weakness has nothing to do with what is in the book and everything to do with the political situation around it. Even if Mac Donald had built the stronger explanatory frame, no organized force was positioned to convert her diagnosis into institutional change. Conservatism inc. ran on the same donor circuits and the same think-tank model as the credentialing apparatus she described, only smaller and weaker. Manhattan Institute, AEI, Heritage, and Hoover are credentialing institutions too. They reproduce a different stratum on the same logic. So even if exposure had been a workable theory of change, the receiving side lacked the institutional weight to act on it. That goes some distance toward explaining why thirty years of conservative documentation has produced little institutional reform.
What makes The Burden of Bad Ideas historically important is that it appeared in 2000, before many of the institutional tendencies it described became dominant public controversies. In retrospect the book reads partly as forecast. Diversity bureaucracies expanded. Therapeutic governance grew more entrenched. Public-health administration became more politicized. Universities intensified identity-based management. Media institutions adopted more moralized vocabularies of race and equity. Mac Donald saw the trajectory earlier than most centrist observers.
Yet her own frame stayed tied to an older neoconservative assumption that elite institutions remained reformable through exposure, criticism, and renewed confidence in bourgeois norms. Later populist, dissident, and postliberal critics grew far more pessimistic. They came to view managerial institutions not as temporarily misguided but as structurally committed to self-expansion through moralized administration.
Mac Donald embodies the tensions. Her long tenure at the Manhattan Institute produced both strengths and limits. She held intellectual consistency, institutional discipline, and thematic focus across decades. The same consistency hardened into rigidity. Her worldview arrived early and changed little. The cost shows after 2014, when the policing debates moved past the framework of her Diallo chapter, and her tone hardened into defense rather than analysis. The early-career strength of confident, declarative, fact-marshaled prose became a late-career limit. She could have refined or complicated her view. She did not.
The Burden of Bad Ideas works best now as a transitional document. It captures the moment when post-1960s cultural radicalism turned from opposition into administrative orthodoxy. Its enduring value lies less in any single policy argument than in its attempt to map how moral prestige, institutional authority, and elite self-conception interact to shape public life.
The book offers a method. Visit the institution. Read the archive. Track one institutional product across decades. Quote the actors. Let the documents reveal the transformation. The theory may remain incomplete. The method established a model that later critics of elite governance would follow.
The journalism holds. The frame is incomplete. The frame’s incompleteness is its own historical evidence. The right could see the patterns and still lacked the theoretical and institutional equipment to act on what it saw. That is the deeper story the book tells without meaning to.

XVII. When Race Trumps Merit (2023)

Mac Donald has written the same book three times. The War on Cops covered policing. The Diversity Delusion covered higher education. When Race Trumps Merit extends the brief to medicine, science administration, classical music, opera, ballet, museums, and criminal justice. The structure repeats. Pick an institution. Document the equity push. Name the casualties. End on civilizational decline. By chapter twelve the rhythm telegraphs each beat before it lands.
That said, the book gets more right than wrong, and what it gets right almost no major outlet will print.
The organizing concept is what Mac Donald calls the bias fallacy. Modern institutions assume that absent discrimination, every profession would mirror national demographic proportions. Any deviation registers as proof of racism. The doctrine traces back to Griggs v. Duke Power Co., which held that color-blind hiring criteria could still violate the 1964 Civil Rights Act if they produced disparate impact on minorities without business necessity. The Supreme Court’s holding has since escaped its legal origins to become a generalized moral framework governing elite culture. Even if courts repudiated disparate-impact doctrine tomorrow, the cultural version would survive.
Mac Donald’s empirical case rests on numbers that elite institutions refuse to discuss in plain terms. In 2021, the average total SAT score for Black students was 934, for White students 1112, for Asian students 1239. On the GRE quantitative section, Black test takers averaged 144.6, White 151.1, Asian 154.9. These are the gaps that disparate-impact reasoning either ignores or attributes to test bias. Mac Donald cites them at the top of her medicine and law chapters because every selection problem she covers downstream depends on whether you can name them.
The medicine chapters carry the book’s policy weight. The conversion of the USMLE Step One exam from numerical grading to pass-fail status stands as the cleanest example. Black students, on average, scored substantially lower than White and Asian students. Rather than treat the gap as a preparation problem requiring intervention, the testing authority eliminated the grades. The same logic appears in the American Medical Association’s strategic plan, in medical school diversity mandates, and in the growing requirement that physicians display anti-racist credentials. The standards do not get raised for everyone. The standards get abolished.
The John Kormendy retraction reads even better. An astronomer builds a model that predicts long-term research impact from citation history. He tests it against twenty-two senior raters and finds his model tracks their judgments. Critics on Twitter argue that the conclusions might hurt equity hiring. He gets shouted off the preprint server. He apologizes for causing pain. His book on the algorithm gets pulled by the publisher and the printed copies presumably destroyed. Mac Donald reports each step and lets the reader feel the cost.
The Asmeret Asefaw Berhe nomination has the same texture. A soil geologist gets the directorship of the Department of Energy Office of Science. The office runs nuclear physics, x-ray synchrotrons, fusion research. Her managerial experience consists of an interim associate dean post starting 2020. Her first major act in office is to require diversity statements with all grant applications. An electrical engineer at a top California university tells Mac Donald that putting her in charge is like putting a newspaper delivery boy in charge of Google.
The classical music and arts chapters carry the book’s heart. Mac Donald loves the art form and her loss feels personal. The June 2020 League of American Orchestras statement. The Hartford Symphony apology. The Metropolitan Opera trombonist’s claim that the absence of Black orchestra members reflects racism. The campaign to recast Beethoven as a cipher for White supremacy. The Swan Lake essay. The museums apologizing for their own art. She has the taste to back the polemic, and these chapters do work the policy chapters cannot do alone. Without them the book would read like an extended City Journal special issue.
The crime section covers ground she has worked before. The strongest chapter is on Robert Aaron Long and the Atlanta spa shootings. Long told police his motive was sex addiction. Customer reviews attested to prostitution at all three targeted spas. He had frequented at least two. He had no recorded animus toward Asians as a group. The press fixed on anti-Asian Trump-era hate within hours and held the line after the facts came in. Long told investigators his next intended target was a Florida pornography business whose employees would not have been Asian. Mac Donald is one of the few writers who walked the case back five pages later with citations.
Mac Donald does not examine her own coalition. Daily Wire, Manhattan Institute, City Journal, conservative philanthropy. These publish her because the argument serves their audience. That does not make the argument wrong, but it shapes which examples make the cut and which never appear. The book reads like a closing argument, not an inquiry.
She treats ideology as cause where she might treat it as rationalization. Corporate DEI departments grew because HR wanted defensive cover, because federal contractors needed compliance posture, because counsel insisted, because reputation management required it. Mac Donald names the ideological piece. The material piece runs underneath and she touches it lightly.
The book will sell well to readers who already agree and will be ignored by the institutions it names. That was the fate of her last three books. She knows this. She writes anyway. The catalogue of damage from 2020 to 2022 now sits in one place, and a generation from now somebody will need it.
The prose is clean. She writes like a litigator. Subject, verb, object. Names and dates. Few adverbs. The structural weakness is anecdote-stacking. By the end you can predict the shape of the next paragraph before reading it. A shorter book with three deep chapters might hit harder than 269 pages with eighteen.

XVIII. Cultural Trauma

Yale sociologist Jeffrey C. Alexander (b. 1947) argues that trauma is not what happens but what a carrier group successfully imposes as the meaning of what happened. This maps onto David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory: the coalition does not simply respond to real injuries; it constructs injury claims that consolidate membership, signal virtue, and punish defectors. Alexander calls the agents of this process carrier groups, and his account of how they work — broadcasting claims, seeking audience identification, attributing responsibility to an antagonist — is a cleaner sociological description of what Pinsof calls coalition enforcement. The carrier group is the coalition’s meaning-making apparatus.
His four-part schema for trauma narrative construction says that a successful trauma claim must establish the nature of the pain, the identity of the victim, the relation of that victim to the wider audience, and the identity of the perpetrator. Applied to institutions like Harvard or the DEI apparatus, this explains how grievance narratives circulate and harden into policy. The NYT does not simply report on racial injustice; it performs carrier group functions, progressively widening audience identification with the victim category while narrowing the range of acceptable perpetrator attributions.
What Alexander adds that Pinsof does not fully develop is the institutional mediation of trauma claims. He notes that the same claim unfolds differently depending on whether it passes through religious, aesthetic, legal, or media arenas. Each arena has its own genre conventions and legitimacy criteria. This helps explain why a coalition grievance that fails in a legal arena might succeed in an aesthetic one, or why claims that cannot survive empirical scrutiny still gain traction through film, memoir, or survivor testimony. The Becker connection is also latent here: the trauma narrative functions as a hero system, organizing collective immortality projects around the suffering body of the victim group.
Alexander writes as a constructivist who brackets the question of whether the underlying event actually happened or was harmful at scale. Mac Donald would find this maddening, and rightly so. The framework can describe the construction of a trauma claim around genuine mass murder and an equally constructed claim around a microaggression with identical analytical vocabulary. That symmetry is a feature for Alexander and a bug for anyone who thinks the reality of the underlying harm matters.
Alexander helps explain what Mac Donald fights against. His carrier group framework describes the institutional process she attacks across her three domains. The post-Ferguson narrative of systemic police racism is not, in Alexander’s terms, a straightforward response to police violence. It is a trauma claim constructed by carrier groups — activist organizations, journalism schools, legal advocacy bodies, university administrations — that worked through his four-part schema with considerable skill. They established the nature of the pain (systemic racism embedded in every police encounter), identified the victim (Black men as a categorical group), widened audience identification (white liberals persuaded that the trauma of Black Americans is their trauma too), and fixed the perpetrator (not individual bad officers but the institution of policing itself). Mac Donald’s empirical counter-arguments — that disparities in police encounters reflect disparities in crime rates, that inner-city residents want more policing not less — fail to dislodge the narrative not because her data is wrong but because she is fighting a trauma claim with crime statistics. Trauma narratives, once successfully installed, do not yield to counter-evidence. They yield only to rival carrier groups with comparable institutional reach, and Mac Donald writes for City Journal, not the New York Times.
The second direction is more uncomfortable for Mac Donald. Alexander’s framework, applied reflexively, reveals that she operates as a carrier group constructing a rival trauma claim. Her subject is elite self-sabotage, the destruction of meritocratic institutions by ideologues who replaced standards with grievance performance. But consider the four-part schema applied to her own project. The nature of the pain: the destruction of the Western humanistic tradition and the civilizational standards that made ordered urban life possible. The identity of the victim: not a racial group but a civilizational inheritance, and by extension the inner-city residents who are harmed most by de-policing and the students who receive a degraded education. The relation of victim to audience: Mac Donald works to persuade educated readers that the destruction of standards at Harvard or the LAPD is their loss too, that they are implicated in the injury even if they live far from Watts or the Yale English department. The perpetrator: the progressive intellectual class that captured elite institutions and inverted their criteria for legitimacy.
This does not make her wrong. Alexander says his framework applies equally to trauma claims about genuine mass atrocities and manufactured grievances, and he brackets the question of which is which. Mac Donald presents herself as someone who simply reads the data correctly. Alexander’s framework shows that she is also doing meaning work, constructing a master narrative of civilizational injury, widening audience identification with the victim, and fixing the perpetrator. The elegiac quality of her writing — mourning the Yale she might have had, the humanistic tradition that the deconstructionists destroyed from within — is precisely the aesthetic dimension of trauma claim-making that Alexander identifies as central to carrier group success.
Alexander’s distinction between the enlightenment and psychoanalytic versions of lay trauma theory maps onto a distinction Mac Donald implicitly makes but never theorizes. The progressive trauma claims she attacks tend to operate in psychoanalytic mode: the injury is real but unconscious, repressed through systemic denial, and only recoverable through institutional work, commemoration, and public acknowledgment. This is why data cannot dislodge the claim. Mac Donald operates in enlightenment mode: she treats policy failures as rational responses to bad ideas, correctable through better evidence and clearer thinking. Alexander’s point is that the psychoanalytic mode is more culturally powerful precisely because it is insulated from empirical challenge. The trauma is always already deeper than any data set can reach. Understanding this helps explain one of the central puzzles her work raises: why does rigorous empirical argument so consistently fail to move elite institutional opinion? The answer is not that her opponents are stupid. It is that they are operating in a different epistemological register, one where the proof of the trauma’s reality is the resistance to acknowledging it.
Mac Donald senses this without quite naming it. Her frustration at the persistence of narratives she considers empirically demolished points directly at this loop. She keeps producing better data and the institutions keep moving in the opposite direction. Alexander’s framework explains why. She is bringing a methodology suited to enlightenment claims against a set of claims that have been constructed in psychoanalytic terms, where the demand for evidence is itself a form of resistance to be overcome rather than a legitimate challenge to be answered.

XIX. The Tacit

Stephen Turner’s critique of tacit knowledge cuts at the foundations of the psychoanalytic trauma framework in a way that Alexander’s own constructivism cannot.
The standard defense of tacit knowledge claims — and the psychoanalytic trauma narrative is essentially a tacit knowledge claim — is that some things are known without being articulable, felt without being nameable, real without being measurable. White privilege, systemic racism, implicit bias: these are presented as tacit structures that competent members of the culture carry without knowing they carry them. The expert — the DEI trainer, the trauma therapist, the critical race theorist — has special access to this tacit dimension that the ordinary actor lacks. They can see what you cannot see about yourself.
Turner’s argument, developed in The Social Theory of Practices, is that there is no coherent account of how tacit knowledge could be shared across persons. The philosophical tradition from Polanyi onward assumes that tacit knowledge is transmitted through practice, apprenticeship, immersion. But Turner shows that this transmission story never actually closes. You cannot verify that what one person carries tacitly is the same thing another person carries tacitly, because the whole point of tacit knowledge is that it cannot be made explicit enough to check. The sharing assumption is doing enormous work and is never justified. What gets called shared tacit knowledge is better understood as a post-hoc interpretation imposed by observers onto behavioral regularities that might have entirely different individual causes.
Applied to the psychoanalytic trauma framework, this is devastating. The claim that systemic racism operates as a kind of cultural unconscious shared across institutions and persons requires exactly the transmission story Turner dismantles. How does the tacit racial bias get from one actor to another? How do we know it is the same bias, operating the same way, producing the same effects? The trauma theorist has no answer that survives Turner’s scrutiny. What they have instead is a narrative that attributes a hidden shared structure to a set of observable disparities, and then insulates that attribution from challenge by classifying challenges as symptoms of the hidden structure.
This is where Turner connects directly to Mac Donald’s project. Her close reading method — treating a DEI mission statement or a policing reform proposal the way a classicist treats a text, looking for the moment the logic breaks down — is implicitly a Turnerian operation. She is refusing to grant the tacit. She insists on making the claim explicit enough to evaluate, and when she does, it collapses. The carrier group’s power depends on keeping the foundational claim in the register of the felt and the known-without-being-said. Mac Donald drags it into the light and asks it to justify itself in plain language. That is why her opponents find her not merely wrong but somehow indecent. She is violating the epistemological contract on which the trauma claim depends.
Turner also helps with the status dimension of Mac Donald’s work. The experts who administer tacit knowledge claims — who certify that you have or have not adequately confronted your implicit bias, who determine whether an institution has achieved sufficient equity — derive their authority entirely from the unverifiability of what they claim to know. If the tacit could be made fully explicit, the expert would become redundant. The DEI apparatus, in Turner’s terms, is a guild organized around the maintenance of a knowledge claim that must remain partially opaque to survive. Mac Donald’s empiricism threatens not just the claim but the guild, which is why the institutional response to her work is rarely engagement with her data and almost always an attempt to place her outside the boundaries of legitimate discourse. Turner’s framework explains that response as rational self-defense by people whose authority depends on keeping certain questions unasked.

XX. Charisma & Social Paradoxes

David Pinsof’s social paradoxes paper and his charisma essay apply to Mac Donald in ways that both clarify and complicate her self-presentation.
Start with the charisma essay. Pinsof defines charisma not as personal magnetism but as skill at social paradoxes: the charismatic person pursues status while appearing indifferent to it, influences while appearing merely to inform, signals exceptional quality while presenting as a humble servant of the evidence. Mac Donald executes several of these paradoxes at a high level, and her effectiveness as a public intellectual depends on their concealment.
The most important paradox she runs is the one Pinsof calls not seeking status while gaining it. Her entire self-presentation is organized around having abandoned the prestige track. She left Yale’s PhD program, walked away from the academy, clerked for a liberal judge she now criticizes, wrote for small magazines nobody in her former world read. The persona is that of someone too committed to the truth to care about standing. But the effect of that persona, inside her coalition, is enormous status accumulation. She is the woman who gave up Yale for Watts, who walked Nickerson Gardens when she could have been publishing in PMLA. That sacrifice narrative is itself a high-status posture, and it works precisely because it appears to be the opposite of status-seeking. If she presented openly as a conservative intellectual building influence and a Manhattan Institute platform, the spell would weaken. Framed as someone following the evidence wherever it leads regardless of social cost, the status gain reads as a byproduct of integrity.
The second paradox is the authentic rebel who nonetheless represents the group. Mac Donald presents as a defector: from Yale, from deconstruction, from the liberal legal world she inhabited when she clerked for Reinhardt. Her authenticity is not fabricated. She did walk away from a world that would have rewarded her for staying. But the defection also makes her the perfect carrier of her coalition’s values precisely because she appears to have arrived at them through personal cost rather than tribal inheritance. The person who converts is always more persuasive than the person who was born in the faith. She is the intellectual equivalent of the convert, and her coalition prizes her for it.
The third paradox is unpopular opinions shared with the group. Pinsof notes that charismatic figures often hold opinions that are unpopular with the wrong people but secretly celebrated by their actual audience. Mac Donald’s positions on policing, immigration, and the academy are genuinely costly in elite institutional contexts. She has been disinvited, protested, dismissed. But inside her coalition those costs read as bravery, and the bravery reads as a valid signal of commitment. The willingness to pay the cost is itself the credential. This is why her atheism and her 2008 Obama vote, far from undermining her credibility with conservatives, actually enhance it. They demonstrate that her conservatism is not tribal but arrived at through independent judgment, which is exactly the posture her coalition most rewards.
Now apply the social paradoxes paper more specifically. Pinsof’s key claim there is that the social paradoxes only work when the performer is not fully aware of performing them. If Mac Donald understood her defection narrative as a status-maximizing posture, the narrative would lose its power. The signal works because it is sincere. This creates a peculiar analytical situation. The framework that best explains her rhetorical effectiveness is one she would find insulting and would reject, and her rejection of it is itself evidence that the framework applies. This is the same self-sealing structure that Alexander identifies in the psychoanalytic trauma claim, but running in a different direction. There it protects progressive narratives from empirical challenge. Here it protects Mac Donald’s self-understanding from sociological reduction.
The most uncomfortable implication is this. Mac Donald’s deepest argument is that elite institutions now reward grievance performance over genuine excellence, and that the language of equity functions as a status currency that displaces merit. Pinsof’s framework suggests that her own project operates by analogous logic inside her own coalition. The performed indifference to elite approval, the willingness to name what others will not name, the defector biography, the elegiac attachment to standards nobody else will defend — these are social paradoxes that accumulate status inside the Manhattan Institute world, the City Journal world, the educated conservative reader world, just as efficiently as DEI credentials accumulate status inside the progressive institutional world. This does not make her arguments wrong. Her data on policing or university admissions stands or falls independently of her coalition position. But it does mean she is not simply the person outside the status game pointing at the game. She is a player in a rival status game pointing at the rival.

XXI. Alliance Theory

Alliance Theory reframes Mac Donald’s entire project from a truth-telling enterprise into a coalition operation.
Pinsof’s central claim is that belief systems are not coherent moral philosophies derived from first principles. They are collections of signals that mark coalition membership. The specific content of any given belief matters less than its function as a membership credential. What looks like a principled position on policing or university admissions is also, and perhaps primarily, a signal that tells other coalition members who you are and where you stand. The beliefs cluster not because they follow logically from each other but because they travel together as a package that identifies you to allies and enemies simultaneously.
Mac Donald is remarkably consistent across three decades and across domains that seem analytically distinct: policing, higher education, immigration, welfare, the arts. The surface explanation is that she has a coherent worldview grounded in empiricism and meritocracy. Pinsof’s framework suggests that the consistency is coalition consistency. The positions she holds are exactly the positions that mark membership in a specific alliance of educated, institutionally skeptical, meritocracy-defending conservatives. Taken together they form a package that is legible to allies and provocative to enemies, which is precisely what coalition signals are supposed to do.
Coalitions enforce belief discipline by rewarding conformity and punishing deviation. Mac Donald’s own argument about elite institutions is essentially an Alliance Theory argument: DEI bureaucracies enforce coalition signals, reward grievance performance, and punish those who refuse to display the required credentials. She sees this clearly when she looks at progressive institutions. Alliance Theory asks whether the same logic applies to her own position.
Mac Donald’s coalition is smaller, institutionally weaker, and less able to enforce discipline through material sanctions. The progressive coalition she attacks can end careers; her coalition cannot. This asymmetry matters because Alliance Theory predicts that the stronger coalition will be more successful at installing its signals as default, as the thing everyone knows without having to argue for it, which is exactly what Turner means by tacit knowledge. Mac Donald fights from a weaker coalition against a stronger one that has successfully made its signals invisible as signals. That structural disadvantage explains more about her rhetorical situation than any assessment of whose arguments are better.
Mac Donald presents herself as someone who goes where the evidence leads. Alliance Theory predicts that even sincere empiricists select which questions to ask, which datasets to foreground, and which anomalies to treat as central rather than marginal in ways that systematically align with their coalition’s interests. Her focus on Black out-of-wedlock birth rates, on Hispanic crime statistics across generations, on the failures of progressive policing policy: these are all real numbers and real patterns. But the equivalent attention she does not pay to White institutional failures, to conservative policy disasters, to the costs imposed on minority communities by the very order she defends: that asymmetry is also real. The coalition does not instruct her to ignore those things. It simply makes them feel less urgent, less central, less like the thing that needs explaining right now. That is how coalition rationality operates: not through censorship but through the quiet shaping of what feels important.
Alliance Theory explains why Mac Donald’s project is self-limiting in a way she cannot see from inside it. Alexander explains the construction of rival trauma narratives. Turner explains the vulnerability of tacit knowledge claims to close reading. Neither explains why the close reading, however devastating, fails to produce institutional change. Pinsof does. The progressive coalition is not persuaded by her arguments because persuasion is not the primary function of the beliefs she is attacking. Those beliefs are coalition signals, and coalition signals are not abandoned because someone produced a better argument. They are abandoned when the coalition loses power or when the costs of holding them outweigh the benefits of membership. Mac Donald’s work strengthens her own coalition and may contribute to that power shift over time. But it will not persuade the people it targets.

XXII. ‘A Big Misunderstanding

Pinsof’s central argument in his essay “A Big Misunderstanding” is that intellectuals systematically misidentify the source of human problems as misunderstanding rather than bad motives or clear-eyed self-interest, because that misidentification serves their own interests. It flatters them as the remedy to ignorance. It positions them as the people who can correct the confusion if only others would listen. And it avoids the more uncomfortable conclusion that people generally understand what they are doing and do it anyway because it serves them.
Applied to Mac Donald, this cuts in two directions.
The first direction runs in her favor. Mac Donald’s opponents, in Pinsof’s terms, are not misunderstanding the effects of their policies. The administrators who run DEI bureaucracies are not confused about whether equity-based hiring produces better institutional outcomes by traditional meritocratic measures. They know it does not, at least not by those measures. They have simply decided that those measures are no longer the relevant criteria. The progressive coalition that delegitimized policing after Ferguson was not operating on a misunderstanding of crime statistics. It understood, at some level, what the statistics showed. It made a coalition calculation that the political and moral costs of acknowledging those statistics exceeded the benefits. Mac Donald keeps presenting better data as though the problem is informational. Pinsof predicts this will fail, and it does fail, because the people she targets are not holding their positions out of ignorance. They hold them because those positions pay: in status, in institutional advancement, in coalition solidarity, in the particular moral satisfaction that comes from being on the right side of a civilizational struggle as their coalition defines it.
This is actually the sharpest analytical contribution Pinsof makes to understanding why Mac Donald’s career has the shape it does. She has spent thirty years producing better evidence, closer reading, more rigorous analysis, and the institutions she targets have moved consistently in the opposite direction. The misunderstanding framework, which she implicitly operates within, predicts this should not happen: better information should produce better outcomes. The problem was never informational. It is structural and coalitional, and no quantity of City Journal essays will resolve a structural problem.
The second direction cuts against Mac Donald. Her own project rests on a version of the misunderstanding myth she cannot fully see from inside it. Her implicit theory of change is that if people understood what elite institutions are actually doing — replacing merit with grievance, standards with representation, empirical reality with therapeutic narrative — they would demand reform. Pinsof’s point applies. The people running Harvard’s admissions office or the LAPD reform process are not confused about what they are doing. They are executing a coalition strategy that serves their interests with considerable sophistication. More close reading from Mac Donald will not change their behavior because their behavior was never caused by insufficient information or analytical failure.
Intellectuals favor the misunderstanding framework not just because it flatters them but because it makes their work feel causally important. If the problem is misunderstanding, then the intellectual who corrects the misunderstanding is doing something that matters. If the problem is coalition competition in which beliefs are signals rather than conclusions, then the intellectual’s arguments are weapons in a fight already underway rather than torches illuminating a dark room. Mac Donald’s self-understanding is clearly of the first kind. She writes as though her close reading of crime statistics or DEI mission statements could, in principle, change minds at the institutional level if only the evidence were confronted honestly. Pinsof’s framework says that self-understanding is itself a coalition-serving illusion: it keeps her producing the work, which strengthens her coalition’s vocabulary and rhetorical arsenal, which is its actual function regardless of what it claims to do.

XXIII. The Four Questions

What coalition does she depend on for status and income? Second, who does she risk angering if she speaks plainly? Third, who benefits if her framing wins? Fourth, what truths would cost Mac Donald her position?

The Manhattan Institute funds her position. City Journal publishes her work. The Bradley Foundation, the Wednesday Morning Club, the network of educated conservative donors who believe elite institutions have been captured by the left: these are her material base. Her audience is the institutionally invested but institutionally alienated reader, the person who went to a good university, works in a professional setting, watches elite culture move left, and wants someone to articulate the discomfort with empirical authority and literary seriousness. That audience is largely White, largely male, largely older, largely successful by the older meritocratic standards Mac Donald defends. They are not the inner-city residents she invokes as the ultimate victims of progressive policy failure. They are the people who feel that progressive policy failure reflects badly on them and their civilization. She gives them a vocabulary for that feeling that does not sound like grievance because it is dressed in data and prose style.
On the second question, the people she risks angering if she speaks too plainly fall into two groups, and the second group is more interesting than the first. The obvious group is the progressive institutional class: university administrators, foundation officers, journalists at prestige outlets, the DEI apparatus. She already angers them and has made a career of it. The costs there are real but they are also her brand. Being protested at Claremont McKenna is a credential inside her coalition, not a penalty. The less obvious group is her own donors and readers. The Manhattan Institute depends on Wall Street money and business class support. Her work on policing, immigration, and the academy serves that base well. But a full application of her own meritocratic standard to, say, corporate lobbying, financial sector regulatory capture, the way business elites use immigration to suppress wages, the role of conservative donors in shaping which questions get asked and which do not: that would cost her the platform. She does not go there. The omission is not random.
On the third question, the beneficiaries of her framing. If the primary driver of urban disorder is behavioral and cultural rather than structural and economic, then the solutions are individual and moral rather than redistributive and institutional. That conclusion serves the interests of people who do not want redistribution, who do not want stronger labor protections, who do not want an account of how markets and property regimes produce the concentrated poverty she walks through in Watts and finds so disturbing. Her framing of the problem as elite bad ideas trickling down to produce cultural decay is, whatever its empirical merits, also a framing that relieves the economic and political structures her donors benefit from of any serious explanatory role. The Becker connection is worth pressing here: her hero system, the civilization of order and merit and standards, naturalizes a set of property relations and institutional arrangements that are as historically contingent as the progressive hero system she attacks.
On the fourth question, the truths that would cost Mac Donald her position:
She could say that the meritocracy she defends never worked as her elegiac account implies, that the pre-1960s academy she contrasts with the current DEI regime was also a machine for excluding Jews, women, Catholics, and non-Anglo-Saxons through criteria that presented themselves as standards while functioning as coalition markers. She knows this, and her 2003 conversation with Luke Ford where she jokes about being a Gentile in the world of letters and says she assumed being called a shiksa was affectionate suggests she has thought about it. But a sustained account of how the old meritocracy was also a coalition operation would undermine the elegiac contrast her entire project depends on.
She could say that the behavioral patterns she documents among Black and Hispanic populations in the United States are not separable from the institutional and economic conditions that produced them, that out-of-wedlock birth rates and crime statistics among second-generation Hispanic immigrants are not simply a matter of cultural choice detached from labor market conditions, housing policy, school funding structures, and the specific ways American institutions have processed those populations. She gestures toward this occasionally but retreats from it because following it fully would complicate her account of bad ideas as the primary causal driver.
She could say that her own coalition enforces belief discipline and rewards coalition signals just as efficiently as the progressive coalition she attacks, that the consistency of her positions across thirty years reflects not just intellectual honesty but the specific incentive structure of the Manhattan Institute world, and that the questions she does not ask are as shaped by coalition rationality as the questions progressive intellectuals do not ask.
She could say that policing, even effective meritocratic policing of the kind she defends, is a mechanism by which a propertied class secures its property, and that the inner-city residents she invokes as the primary victims of de-policing are also the primary subjects of the carceral apparatus she defends, and that those two facts sit in genuine tension rather than resolving neatly into a unified argument for more and better policing.
She could say that her secular conservatism has no account of what replaces the religious and communal structures whose decline she implicitly mourns, that the meritocratic individualism she defends is itself corrosive of the social fabric she wants to preserve, and that the civilization of standards and order she elegizes depended on religious and communal institutions that her Enlightenment empiricism gives her no tools to rebuild.
None of these would destroy her arguments on policing or university admissions. Some of them would strengthen her work by making it more honest about its own conditions. But all of them would cost her something with the coalition that funds and reads her, because all of them complicate the clean contrast between clear-eyed empiricism and ideological capture on which her brand depends. That contrast is her product. Complicating it is the one thing she cannot afford to do.

XXIV. Convenient Beliefs

Stephen Turner’s convenient beliefs framework applies to Mac Donald because her self-presentation as a pure empiricist obscures that the beliefs she holds most firmly are also the ones most convenient for the coalition that sustains her.
Start with the coalition structure. Mac Donald’s material base is the Manhattan Institute, City Journal, the Bradley Foundation network, and the broader ecosystem of educated conservative donors who believe elite institutions have been captured by the left. Her audience is the institutionally invested but institutionally alienated professional: the person who went to a good university, works in a successful career, watches elite culture move in directions he finds incoherent, and wants someone to articulate his discomfort with empirical authority and literary seriousness. That audience is largely White, largely older, largely successful by the meritocratic standards Mac Donald defends.
The first convenient belief is that elite institutional failure is primarily ideological rather than structural. Mac Donald’s career is organized around the claim that universities, police departments, foundations, and cultural institutions are failing because progressive ideology has captured them. DEI is the problem with higher education. The Ferguson effect is the problem with policing. Anti-canon relativism is the problem with the humanities. In each case, the diagnosis is that bad ideas have corrupted good institutions.
This belief is convenient because it makes an intellectual the solution. If institutional failure stems from ideological capture, then the person who identifies and critiques the ideology is performing an essential service. If institutional failure stems from structural forces that operate independently of anyone’s ideology, from demographic shifts, from economic incentives, from organizational dynamics that would produce similar outcomes regardless of the ideas in circulation, then close reading of mission statements and crime statistics is a satisfying but insufficient response.
The second convenient belief is that empirical honesty is the bottleneck. Mac Donald presents herself as someone who goes where the data leads. Her signature move is to present statistics that progressive institutions suppress or ignore: crime rates by race, the costs of illegal immigration, the measurable failures of diversity programs. The implicit claim is that if people saw the numbers clearly, they would reach the right conclusions. The problem is misunderstanding. The solution is the person who corrects it.
Turner would note that this is a convenient belief for exactly the reason Pinsof’s misunderstanding essay identifies. If the problem is that people do not know the facts, then the person who presents the facts is indispensable. If the problem is that people know the facts and hold their positions anyway because those positions serve coalition functions that have nothing to do with empirical accuracy, then Mac Donald’s entire project operates at the wrong level of explanation. She is providing better data to people whose beliefs are not data-driven.
The third convenient belief is that the meritocratic order she defends was once functional and can be restored. Mac Donald’s critique assumes a baseline: there was a time when universities taught the canon, police enforced the law without apology, immigration was controlled, and standards were maintained. The project is restoration. The convenient aspect of this belief is that it allows her to critique the present without examining whether the baseline was itself sustained by conditions that no longer obtain, whether mid-century meritocracy depended on exclusions, subsidies, and demographic configurations that cannot be recreated through better arguments.
The world Mac Donald wants to restore was sustained by habits of the heart, by unreflective norms, by social density and institutional confidence that were themselves products of historical conditions rather than philosophical positions. Her project treats the loss of those conditions as an ideological problem. Turner’s framework suggests it is a structural one. The habits cannot be restored by critique because they were never produced by argument in the first place. They were produced by the kind of tacit transmission that operates through proximity, shared practice, and social density, all of which have eroded for reasons that have little to do with the ideas Mac Donald attacks.
The fourth convenient belief is that her defection from the academy gives her a clear view that insiders lack. Her conversion narrative, from Yale literary studies to Manhattan Institute empiricism, functions as a credentials claim. She saw the corruption from inside. She left. Now she can describe it with the authority of an apostate. That narrative is enormously convenient because it makes her personal biography into evidence. She does not just argue that the humanities collapsed. She experienced the collapse. She does not just claim that elite institutions are self-sabotaging. She watched them do it.
Turner would note that the apostate’s “clear sight” is a convenient belief. The defector from one coalition does not arrive at a viewpoint free of coalition influence. She arrives at a viewpoint shaped by the new coalition that receives her. The Manhattan Institute network rewards certain kinds of observation and discourages others. The conservative donor class that funds her work has its own convenient beliefs about markets, meritocracy, and social order. Her “empiricism” is real, but it operates within a selection frame that determines which data sets get foregrounded and which anomalies get treated as central. The focus on Black crime rates, on Hispanic immigration costs, on DEI administrative bloat: these are real numbers and real patterns. The equivalent attention she does not pay to White institutional failures, to conservative policy disasters, to the costs imposed on minority communities by the very order she defends: that asymmetry is also real.
The coalition does not instruct her to ignore certain things. It makes them feel less urgent, less central, less like the thing that needs explaining right now. That is how convenient beliefs operate. Not through censorship but through the quiet shaping of what feels important.
The beliefs that would be inconvenient for Mac Donald to hold are the ones that would fracture her coalition.
That biological explanations of group differences in outcomes might be partially correct, which would undermine the premise that better policy can close every gap. Her coalition includes people who suspect this but cannot say it and people who would be appalled by it. She stays silent on the question, which is itself a convenient position. It allows her to critique progressive blank-slatism without embracing the hereditarian position that would alienate a different segment of her base.
That the meritocratic order she defends was never as meritocratic as its mythology suggests, that it depended on exclusions and privileges that are not easily separated from its virtues. That conclusion would complicate her restoration narrative beyond repair.
That conservative institutional failures, from the Iraq War to financial deregulation to the opioid crisis, represent the same kind of elite self-sabotage she documents on the progressive side, just wearing a different costume. That symmetry would alienate the donors and readers who need the failure to be one-directional.
That her own empiricism is coalition-shaped, that the questions she asks, the data she foregrounds, and the conclusions she draws are influenced by the same social forces she identifies in progressive institutions. That reflexive observation would not destroy her work. Much of it would survive. But it would alter her self-understanding from truth-teller to coalition intellectual, and that is a demotion she has no incentive to accept.
Mac Donald’s empiricism, which she experiences as her most distinctive and most independent trait, is the most convenient belief she holds. The belief that careful data analysis reveals the truth is the belief that makes a careful data analyst the most important person in the room. It is the intellectual’s version of the misunderstanding diagnosis: the world is broken because people do not look at the numbers, and I am the person who looks at the numbers.

XXV. Stephen Turner on Essentialism and the Normative

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) argues in Explaining the Normative that normative facts form no separate ontological domain. When someone says “the norm requires X,” Turner asks what the norm is, where it lives, and who validates it. The answer dissolves into a particular person’s habits, a particular institution’s practices, or a pattern of agreement among a sociologically locatable group. Norms get explained by non-norms. His parallel critique of essentialism targets the move in social theory where categories like “the West,” “capitalism,” “whiteness,” or “patriarchy” get treated as coherent essences with their own causal powers and intentions. Turner says these are aggregations dressed up as agents. The social world is built from particular embodied practices, not from essences floating above them.
Heather Mac Donald writes from the Manhattan Institute and City Journal. She defends policing against disparate-impact critique. She defends testing and academic standards against DEI-driven revision. She defends classical music and the Western canon against decolonization. She works with statistics on crime, use of force, test scores, and admissions. Her vocabulary runs normative: merit, standards, civilization, the rule of law, objective truth, fairness, achievement, excellence.
Turner’s first question to her work is: where does the normative force of these terms come from? Mac Donald does not often answer in philosophical-normative terms. She does two things. She points to consequences. Meritocratic selection produces better surgeons, safer flights, more competent engineering. Test-based admissions track later performance. These claims are naturalistic. They do not require normative essentialism. They claim only that certain practices have certain effects.
Then she points to tradition and history. This is how American police departments built their effectiveness in the 1990s. This is how Western universities transmitted their scholarship. This is how classical music has been taught. This too is naturalistic. It picks out particular practices and shows their results.
When Mac Donald stays in this empirical-consequentialist register, she fits inside Turner’s program. She explains the value of practices by pointing to what they do and how they work. She does not need to posit free-standing normative entities. The argument moves from particular practice to particular result.
Mac Donald weakens when she ascends. When merit, civilization, or Western achievement get treated as standing entities under siege, she takes on the burden Turner thinks no one can carry. What is merit, in the singular? The merit of a violinist is not the merit of a neurosurgeon, which is not the merit of a detective, which is not the merit of a philologist. Each is a particular tacit-knowledge tradition with its own internal criteria, learned by long apprenticeship, defended by people who have absorbed those criteria into habit. The Mac Donald who defends the audition behind a screen, the LSAT, or a particular algebra test makes a strong argument about a particular practice. The Mac Donald who defends “merit” in the abstract makes an argument the philosophy cannot quite cash.
The essentialism point cuts harder. Her master categories — “the West,” “merit,” “civilization,” “the diversity bureaucracy,” “the police,” “the academic left” — function as agents in her prose. The West produced X. The diversity bureaucracy attacks Y. The police protect Z. Turner says each of these is a heterogeneous aggregation given a false unity.
Take “the West.” Mac Donald uses it to cover classical music, the great books, the scientific revolution, the rule of law, and a tradition of high culture. The particulars do not cohere. Mozart’s Vienna (Mozart, 1756-1791) and Schoenberg’s Vienna (Schoenberg, 1874-1951) are different cultural worlds. English common law and French civil law work from different premises. German philosophy after Kant (1724-1804) runs in directions American jurisprudence has no use for. “The West” is shorthand. As a causal category, it explains little. When she says the West is under attack, she treats an aggregate as a target.
“The diversity bureaucracy” works the same way. A real network of Title IX offices, chief diversity officers, EEOC enforcers, training consultants, and HR pipelines exists. Each operates by different habits. The university DEI office at Berkeley does not run on the same logic as a corporate DEI shop in Atlanta or a federal agency in Washington. Treating them as a single will pursuing a single program is rhetorical efficiency at the cost of analytical accuracy. The same caution applies to “the academic left.”
“The police” face the same problem. American policing is many institutions. Chicago is not New York. New York under William Bratton (b. 1947) is not New York twenty years later. Albuquerque has its own history. Mac Donald’s defense of “the police” sometimes flattens these differences. Her stronger work names departments, names commanders, names tactics, names neighborhoods, names cases. The closer she gets to particulars, the more her argument carries.
“Merit” is the most consequential case. Mac Donald treats merit as a stable standard the diversity push violates. Turner says merit is a family of overlapping practices, not an essence. Mac Donald is strongest when she identifies a particular standard in a particular field and shows what happens when it gets lowered or replaced. Cut the algebra requirement, see what happens in calculus. Drop the audition screen, see what happens in the orchestra. Lower the bar score, see what happens in the courts. Each is a precise empirical claim about a precise practice. When she rolls these up into a defense of “merit” against “mediocrity,” she lets her opponents reply at the same level of abstraction, and the argument runs into rhetorical mud.
Mac Donald’s opponents make the symmetrical mistake. They speak of Whiteness, White supremacy, the carceral state, structural racism, and patriarchy as unified essences with unified wills. Each of these terms picks out real patterns of practice, but each also overreaches as a causal agent. Turner’s critique applies to both sides. The debate runs best at the level of particular institutions, particular procedures, particular outcomes, not at the level of competing civilizational essences.
Mac Donald sometimes writes as if her side speaks for reason itself, against the unreason of her opponents. The “we” of “we used to know how to police cities” or “we used to demand standards” is a sociologically locatable group: Yale-and-Stanford-Law-trained, Manhattan-Institute-affiliated, classical-music-listening, certain magazines, certain neighborhoods, certain dinner parties. This is not a debunking. Turner thinks all normative communities are locatable. He objects when Mac Donald treats her “we” as a universal rational subject rather than a particular tradition with its own habits. The habits of that tradition include respect for hard tests, respect for the police, respect for high culture, suspicion of bureaucratic overreach. These habits are not nothing. They are also not the voice of reason from nowhere.
A biographical irony. Mac Donald took a Yale Ph.D. in English during the high deconstruction period. She repudiated that training. But the training left her sensitive to language as a site of power, which is part of what makes her so effective at noticing when DEI advocates retreat into vague abstractions. The same sensitivity, turned on her own prose, might notice that “the West,” “merit,” and “civilization” do similar work for her.
Mac Donald’s work is stronger than her framing. The empirical reportage on crime statistics, on test results, on academic standards, on policing tactics, on the diversity bureaucracy’s particular procedures, is the part that holds. The civilizational framing is the part that invites the same essentialist objection she would press against her opponents. Strip the framing, keep the reportage, and most of what she argues survives. Her opponents pull the same trick from the other side. The argument they are having is about particular institutional practices and their effects. The argument they say they are having is about competing essences. The first argument is the one Turner thinks can be settled. The second is the one neither side can win.

The Set

Heather Mac Donald sits at the center of a small, dense world that runs through the Manhattan Institute and its magazine, City Journal. She holds the Thomas W. Smith Fellowship there. Reihan Salam (b. 1979) runs the Institute as its president, the fifth in its history, after a stint editing National Review. Brian C. Anderson edits City Journal and has done so since 2006, after Myron Magnet (b. 1944), who stays on as editor-at-large. Around them sit the fellows and editors who supply the copy: Steven Malanga, Kay Hymowitz, Nicole Gelinas, Charles Fain Lehman, Rafael Mangual, Robert VerBruggen, Park MacDougald, Leor Sapir, James Piereson of the William E. Simon Foundation, and Theodore Dalrymple (b. 1949), the pen name of the British physician Anthony Daniels. Christopher Rufo (b. 1984) joined the set and gave its higher-education and DEI coverage a harder campaigning edge. Betsy DeVos (b. 1958) chairs the board. Paul Singer chaired it before her and remains a patron.

Out past the masthead lies a wider ring that shares the values without sharing the address. On race and meritocracy: Thomas Sowell (b. 1930), Glenn Loury (b. 1948), John McWhorter (b. 1965), Jason Riley (an MI fellow), Roland Fryer (b. 1977) on the policing numbers, Coleman Hughes (b. 1996), and Wilfred Reilly. On the harder hereditarian flank, treated with some wariness: Charles Murray (b. 1943) and Amy Wax (b. 1953). The intellectual fathers are James Q. Wilson (1931-2012) and George Kelling (1935-2019) for broken-windows policing, and the old The Public Interest neoconservatives behind them. On the culture side, Roger Kimball (b. 1953) and The New Criterion, which gave Mac Donald its 2025 Edmund Burke Award. Victor Davis Hanson (b. 1953) co-authored her book on immigration.

What they value comes down to a few commitments. They value data over sentiment, and they treat the willingness to read an uncomfortable statistic aloud as the test of a serious mind. They value the individual against the group, the colorblind standard against the racial preference. They value merit, by which they mean a thing you can measure and rank, and they value the standards that protect it. They value public order and the men who keep it, the patrol officer and the prosecutor above all. They value the city as the place where governance succeeds or fails in plain view. And Mac Donald in particular carries a second love that runs through the whole set as a marker of seriousness: the Western high canon, Bach and the Latin classics and the orchestra, defended as a real inheritance worth guarding from both the philistine and the egalitarian.

The hero of this world is the truth-teller who pays a price. He reads the numbers, says the thing the room does not want said, and takes the consequences without flinching. Mac Donald models the part herself. When students shut down her 2017 talk at Claremont McKenna College, the episode became a credential. The cop is a hero of a humbler kind, a working man who goes where the crime is and gets blamed for the pattern he did not create. The immigrant who climbs by effort is a hero. The student who masters a hard subject is a hero. The dissenting professor who refuses the loyalty oath is a hero. The system rewards a particular posture: composure under attack, command of evidence, and contempt for flattery. Sentiment is the enemy of the hero, and the set treats compassion unmoored from facts as a vice dressed as a virtue.

The status games run on those same currencies. A byline in the City Journal print edition carries weight; Anderson calls it a luxury product, and placement there signals arrival. The Bradley Prize, which Mac Donald won in 2005, The New Criterion's Burke Award, the City Journal Awards named for the magazine, op-ed real estate in The Wall Street Journal, a book from Encounter Books or Regnery Publishing or Daily Wire, a seat on the Fox News panel and the podcast circuit: these are the visible chips. Higher still is the moment when a Supreme Court justice or an attorney general quotes your argument into the public record. Inside the set, the coin is fearlessness joined to mastery of evidence. You rise by saying the brave thing first and backing it with a citation. You fall by going soft, by hedging for an audience, by mistaking your feelings for a finding. A second status ladder runs alongside the first and sorts the merely political from the cultivated: who knows the canon, who plays an instrument, who can tell a good performance from a fashionable one. That ladder lets the set mark itself off from a coarser populist right as much as from the left.

Their normative claims follow from the values. Standards should be uniform and colorblind, applied the same to every applicant and every officer. Disparate-impact reasoning corrupts whatever it touches, in hiring, in medicine, in police deployment, in the concert hall and the museum. Proactive policing in high-crime neighborhoods protects the Black residents who suffer most when it withdraws, so the retreat from it after 2020 cost lives. The university owes its students a canon and a search for truth, not a program of redress. Immigration should be lawful and weighted toward skill. Beauty and excellence are real and can be ranked, and a culture that refuses to rank them decays. Men and women differ, and a public campaign against the masculine harms boys and families.

Underneath the shoulds lie the harder claims about what things are. Merit exists and you can measure it; a surgeon and a violinist can be better or worse, and the difference is not a social construction. Group disparities in outcome trace to behavior, ability, and home culture more than to present White racism. The racial pattern of crime is a fact about offending, not a libel about a people. Human nature holds steady enough that deterrence and incentive work, which is why policing and consequences change behavior. Sex differences are biological and durable. Beauty answers to standards rooted in the Western tradition that outlast fashion. And the officer, taken as a class, is a rational actor who goes toward danger, not a predator. These are not policy preferences for the set. They are claims about reality, and the members hold them as the ground their politics stands on.

Detractors argue that the colorblind standard launders an existing hierarchy by freezing it in place and calling the result merit, that inherited advantage gets mistaken for individual desert. They argue that the crime figures Mac Donald cites reflect where police choose to look as much as where crime occurs, so the numbers carry the bias they claim to escape. They argue that the canon the set defends is narrower than the civilization it claims to speak for. And some on the right find the whole project too lawyerly and elite, a defense of order and standards that never grapples with why so many people lost faith in both. The set would answer each charge with more data, which is the move the whole world is built to make.

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Steve Sailer: ‘A former SPLC enforcer writes a book about how he inflicted Brimelow Derangement Syndrome upon his own fragile mental health.’

With some effort, I can feel empathy for all the characters in this story. I know what it is like to find some things (such as trans identity and gay marriage) upsetting that others valorize. If VDARE moves to your town and buys a castle, it’s not hard to feel empathy for those who feel horror as well as for the VDARE crowd who just want a safe space.
Steve Sailer’s piece is sharp and funny but it does what polemicists do: it treats the opponent’s distress as evidence of bad faith or weakness rather than as data about how the conflict feels from inside a different hero system. The SPLC researcher who spent a decade immersed in material he experienced as threatening, and who ended up with suicidal ideation, was not necessarily performing. He was broken by something. The question is what that something tells us.
From inside the SPLC formation, VDare represents an existential threat to a moral order built around the premise that demographic diversity is the telos of American civilization and that any resistance to it is not a policy disagreement but a recurrence of history’s worst chapters. If you have organized your sense of meaning around fighting that recurrence, then Peter Brimelow is not a eccentric British immigration restrictionist with a castle in West Virginia. He is a harbinger. The FBI call about an assassination threat is real. The stakes feel ultimate because the hero system says they are.
From inside the VDare formation, the SPLC is a well-funded coalition enforcement operation that destroyed careers, deplatformed speakers, and pressured hotels to cancel contracts, not to fight actual Nazis but to make the Overton window on immigration permanent and to label anyone who questioned it a white nationalist. That experience of suppression is also real. The castle in Berkeley Springs exists because public venues became unavailable.
Both sides experienced the other as a threat to something worth defending. The Michael Edison Hayden breakdown and the Sailer mockery of it are mirror images of the same thing: each side finds the other’s distress illegible because the hero systems are incommensurable. Sailer cannot see why anyone would crack up over VDare holding conferences. Hayden cannot see why anyone would find the SPLC’s tactics more troubling than the people it targets.

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Judy Blume: A Life (2026)

Here are some highlights from Mark Oppenheimer’s new book:

* Library Journal may have been sour on Judy, but its readers, the country’s librarians, were not. When parents and activists began to challenge Judy’s books and ask that they be taken off libraries’ shelves, librarians were her chief defenders — and not just because they valued free speech and easy access to books. As a guild, librarians liked her work. And they’d been among the first to notice it. In the early 1970s, librarians, even those clueless about the attention Judy was getting from The New York Times, were attuned to what was being reviewed in Library Journal and other trade publications. They kept seeing her name pop up, so, naturally, they ordered copies of her first books.
Once they discovered her appeal, as children queued to check out her books, librarians kept ordering her work. The library market can bring huge sales, especially to children’s books, because an author like Judy is acquired not just by public libraries but also by school libraries, of which there are thousands. And when a book has a high circulation rate, librarians order second or third copies.
Also, children could read books in libraries that they might not ask their parents to buy for them. Librarians, as well as critics, were aware that Judy was seen as a leader in a new school of writing: books called “problem novels,” or sometimes just “realistic.” One Michigan newspaper writer quipped, “Move over, Hardy Boys,” in a 1974 article about this trend. “Children’s novels today are talking about broken homes, divorce, alcoholic problems, drug abuse and youth gangs in the inner cities.”
That same year, in an upstate New York newspaper, a journalist documented the nascent popularity of children’s books with “rough language and discussions of sex,” among other adult themes. The most significant example was Go Ask Alice, the 1971 “diary” (later shown to be a fabrication) of a heroin – addicted fifteen-year-old. But the article cited Judy as another example of the trend and “the author most often praised by the children and the librarians,” journalist Judy Burke wrote. She quoted school librarian Vivian Robbins summing up the age: “‘Kids want realism.’”

* Judy didn’t create the new realism, but she produced her best work at a propitious moment. Several recent bestsellers — The Outsiders, The Pigman, Go Ask Alice — had proven there was a huge market for this kind of literature. And the success had acclimated parents and librarians to the idea that children could handle, and might even benefit from, grittier stories. These books were the core of the emerging canon of “young adult” literature, a new genre.
Categories are created as much as they’re discovered. Before radio programmers in the 1980s invented a category called classic rock, there was no reason to think that a hard – rock band like AC/DC should be played alongside the mellow sounds of Kansas, or Aerosmith up against Billy Joel. But just as the “classic rock” category helped fill a market niche — music for Baby Boomers feeling nostalgia for the recent musical past — “young adult” solved a marketing, and pedagogical, problem that had been around for decades: What exactly should we be urging teenagers to read (and buy)?

* for a reading public startled by the violence of The Outsiders and the nihilism of Go Ask Alice, Judy’s books could seem rather tame. It’s a common misconception that her books scandalized readers (or, rather, their parents). While it’s true that her works have been challenged more than almost anyone’s (in part because they are extremely popular, so tend to draw fire), to focus on the would – be censors is to obscure the far greater number of adults for whom Judy’s books were a safer, less radical alternative to what was out there.

* Feminism “gave me courage to do a lot of things, to think about a lot of things, and ultimately, probably to end my marriage,” Judy said in a 2013 documentary. “I realized that I wanted more. I wanted to be free. I wanted to be out on the streets. I wanted to be part of what these brave women were part of. It was my own little feminist movement inside me.”
When the movement finally arrived at Judy’s house, it entered through the mail slot: Judy got the first issue of Ms. in December 1971, when it was published as an insert in New York magazine, to which she and John subscribed; she took out a separate subscription to Ms. right away. The articles in Ms. gave her a sense of community, one enhanced by the fiction she was reading, too. In 1973, she read Erica Jong’s (b. 1942) Fear of Flying, the story of Isadora Wing, a woman in an unsatisfying marriage who seeks company in the arms of another man. The book resonated with millions of the women who bought it, including Judy, who must have been pleasantly surprised to find a novel about a thirtyish female Jewish writer from New York with a solid but uninspiring husband and, literally, a fear of flying. When Judy finally asked John for a divorce, he “blamed Fear of Flying for the end of our marriage.”

* Meanwhile, there was the hope, or fantasy, that outside of marriage women were frolicking, like Isadora in Fear of Flying. “Oh my god, how I wanted zipless fucks,” she said (using Jong’s somewhat confusing term for casual sex). “Why couldn’t I have zipless fucks?” But still, the issue wasn’t sex, not really. “Had I had an intimate and loving marriage, I wouldn’t have craved zipless fucks.”
Beginning in about 1974, with her marriage failing, she was open to those zipless fucks. After all, she said, “It was the seventies. There was a lot going on.” At a conference, a married editor of children’s books came on to her, and she went to bed with him (although they did not have intercourse). And on a vacation she took without John or the children, she had sex with “a very young guy at the beach.” Her period of infidelity was brief, but formative. “I wanted to be bad,” she said. Soon, she got the full post – pill, pre – AIDS experience of cheating: her second extramarital lover, the young guy at the beach, called to say he had a venereal disease. When Judy went to her doctor, he seemed unconcerned — he prescribed penicillin and told her she’d be fine — but insisted she tell her other partners. So she told John.

* Had Judy never begun writing, she might not have discovered how unhappy she was in her marriage.

* And therein lay a problem: such a book, about teens having consequence – free intercourse, could not be for teens, at least not in 1975. Bradbury Press was scrupulous about marketing Forever… as an adult book. This was a disingenuous claim, but it was one that editor Dick Jackson felt obligated to make. Responding to a reader who found the book inappropriate for his daughter, Jackson replied, “We regret that you have found the book unwholesome, and a betrayal by Ms. Blume of the high place she holds in the regard of so many American children. We did take particular care to label Forever… as a book for adults on both the front and back flaps of the jacket because of course we realized the book was not one for this writer’s regular audience…. It is not a work that Ms. Blume feels ashamed of — neither is it a book for your 12 – year – old daughter.” The point is reinforced by the cover illustration, a gorgeous rendering, by the notable jacket designer Janet Halverson, of a large bed, its linens, pillows, and blanket in a state of delightfully suggestive dishevelment.

* Judy said she imagined a fourteen – year – old reader for the book but not a ten – or twelve – year – old reader. In 1988, she was upset to learn that a school book club was marketing Forever… to elementary schools. “I had no idea you were including my book Forever on a list for grades 5 – 8,” Judy wrote. “I don’t think Forever belongs with my children’s books. And I don’t think it’s a book to be ordered through a school book club by fifth and sixth graders.”

* But Judy, and Dick Jackson, and everyone, knew that young children were reading it. “I bought Forever… at a school fair when I was probably ten,” the novelist Curtis Sittenfeld said in 2015. “There was a used – book sale, and I picked it up and remember being in this big crowded gym and being like, ‘Uh, does anyone have any idea what this book contains?’ I had stumbled upon this incredible raciness in this wholesome setting. I thought, like, holy smoke! It was very enthralling and very informative. I probably shouldn’t admit this, but I don’t remember the boyfriend’s name, but I remember the name of his penis. Do you remember its name? Isn’t his penis named Ralph?”

* as a novel about shifting sexual mores, sex outside of marriage, the liberatory promise of the birth control pill, and a woman finding the courage to leave a man she had once loved, Forever… is, like so many of her novels, telling the story of Judy Blume. During the months she was conceiving, writing, and revising the book, Judy was stepping beyond the confines of her marriage, first in her imagination and then in fact. She was entering a second adolescence that, in more than one way, would resemble Katherine’s, filled with the promise of giddy exploration, new bodies, and the freedom to leave them behind.

* Judy would be with Tom, off and on, until 1979, arguably the worst four years of her life.

* In this season of change and reinvention, Judy had got a new nose to go with her new life.

* First, there was the comparison to a bestselling adult author: Judy Blume was the “Harold Robbins of children’s literature”…

* Judy wrote what she knew. The near – total absence in her books of black characters or of gay characters (save the plausibly queer Artie in Forever), the absence of the sublimely rich or the desperately poor, of the southern US or the foreign or the highly religious — these reflect the limits of her experience. All writers have such limits. Some make it their business to transcend them; they are researchers. But like Philip Roth — or William Faulkner, James Baldwin, or Alice Munro — Judy isn’t a researcher. She is a psychologist and a channeler, giving voice to the kind of person she has been or the people she has known, in times, places, and settings familiar to her. As her assistant wrote to a fan in 1988, “Judy has read your letter and she wanted me to tell you that although the subject of gay parenting is an interesting one, she only writes about things with which she is familiar. (Well — usually!)” She had neither the skills nor the temerity to write about a family affected by AIDS.

* Judy is a wife, mother, and grandmother, but I do not, despite my best efforts, understand what kind of wife, mother, and grandmother she has been.

Until 1977, child porn was freely available in adult book stores across America. Clubs in San Francisco and LA put on live sex shows (between adults).
The Blume phenomenon makes more sense when you see it as a product of a specific cultural moment rather than a timeless contribution to children’s literature. The early 1970s were the peak of the belief that sexual liberation was therapeutic, that repression was the enemy and openness the cure. Blume absorbed that completely and transmitted it to millions of adolescent readers who had no reason to push back.
The custodian problem appears here too. Children’s literature had its own Protestant formation, not in a heavy-handed moralistic sense, but in the sense that stories were expected to form character, to transmit a moral vocabulary, to prepare children for a world with consequences. Blume replaced that formation with the therapeutic premise that children’s feelings are the primary moral datum and that adults who constrain those feelings are the problem. Forever is not a book about teenagers having sex. It is a book about the idea that teenage sexual experience is inherently self-actualizing and that the main obstacle to flourishing is adult interference.
Judy absorbed the feminist movement through Ms. magazine and Erica Jong and it gave her permission to leave a marriage and pursue zipless fucks. She then wrote books that transmitted a version of that permission structure to children, some young. The throughline from her own formation to her fiction to the school book clubs marketing Forever to fifth graders is direct. Nobody planned it. The logic of the thing carried it there.
For a traditionalist parent, the horror is not just the sex. It is that the books present an entire moral architecture in which desire is self-validating, consequences are manageable, and the adults who worry are the ones with the problem. A child formed by that architecture has been given a hero system, in Becker’s sense, that is hostile to the hero systems of every tradition. The book does not just describe sex. It installs assumptions.
I wonder what the author thinks Blume understood what she was doing at the level of moral formation, or whether she thought she was simply being honest about teenage experience. The two positions have different implications.
The early 1970s were the high-water mark of a specific libertarian argument about sexuality, that the primary harm was repression rather than exploitation, that consenting adults (and the definition of who counted as capable of consent was applied loosely) had the right to whatever materials they sought, and that moral objections were essentially vestigial Puritanism. The 1970 Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, appointed by Johnson and reporting to Nixon, actually recommended decriminalizing most obscenity, including material involving minors. Nixon rejected the report, but it reflects how far the liberationist premise had traveled into mainstream institutional thinking.
The child pornography case is the reductio that the libertarian argument could not survive. Once Congress acted in 1977 and the Supreme Court upheld the legislation, the consensus shifted fast, and it has held. What is interesting from a David Pinsof Alliance Theory perspective is that the shift required no argument. The harm was legible in a way that cut across coalitions. The libertarian premise collapsed the moment it was applied to children because the exploitation was too visible to be reframed as liberation.
The Blume case is harder precisely because the harm is less legible. A twelve-year-old reading Forever is not being exploited in any direct sense. The harm is architectural, a slow installation of assumptions about desire, consequence, and adult authority, and architectural harm is always easier to dismiss as Puritan anxiety than direct exploitation is. The traditional parent’s instinct that something real is at stake is correct, but the case is harder to make in public, which is why Blume won and the protesters lost.
Blume’s porous opposition lost, but for how many was this defeat the beginning of voting Republican and distrusting America’s elite institutions that saw nothing wrong selling such books? Did an anger begin here that led to the election of Trump twice?
This is one of the more underrated threads in the realignment story. The standard account of working-class White Republican voting traces the shift through economic dislocation, trade, deindustrialization, the opioid crisis. Those factors are real. But the cultural betrayal narrative runs deeper and earlier, and it is not primarily about economics.
The parents who showed up to school board meetings in the 1970s and 1980s to object to Blume, to sex education curricula, to values clarification programs, were not making an abstract political argument. They were responding to a concrete experience: institutions they trusted with their children, schools, libraries, publishers, federal courts, had adopted a set of assumptions about childhood, sexuality, and adult authority that were alien and threatening to them. And when they objected, the institutions did not engage their argument. They pathologized it. The objecting parent became the stock villain of the liberal imagination, the book-banner, the Puritan, the repressed hysteric. That experience of being dismissed and caricatured by people who controlled the institutions affecting their children is politically formative in a way that a factory closing is not. A factory closing is a loss. Being told your moral concerns are symptoms of your own dysfunction is a status attack.
Thomas Frank’s What’s the Matter with Kansas gets the phenomenon half right. He sees working-class voters choosing cultural issues over economic interests and treats this as false consciousness. But the cultural issues were not a distraction from their real interests. For many of these parents, the question of what their children were being formed into was their real interest, more urgent than marginal tax rates.
The Trump coalition includes many people whose political consciousness formed in exactly these school board battles. The specific grievance mutated over decades, from Blume to condom distribution to comprehensive sex ed to gender ideology in elementary schools, but the structure of the grievance remained constant. Elite institutions had decided that traditional parents were the problem, that children needed liberation from their families as much as from ignorance, and that professional expertise trumped parental authority. Each cycle of that conflict sent more people toward whoever seemed willing to say that the experts were wrong.
What Trump understood, or intuited, was that this accumulated resentment was available and had no adequate political vehicle. The Republican establishment had gestured at cultural conservatism for decades while delivering little, because its donor class shared more assumptions with the liberal elite than with the school board parents. Trump had no such donor constraints and no investment in elite respectability. He could say directly what the school board parents had felt for thirty years: that the people running the institutions despise you and have been using your children to prove it.
The Blume battles were not the cause of Trump. But they were an early chapter in the formation of a political identity built around the perception that America’s cultural institutions had been captured by people with values hostile to ordinary family life, and that the capture was being enforced through the children.
Liberals don’t understand that we would rather feel good inside rather than disturbed, uncomfortable and get free healthcare. I want to feel pride in my country, in our ways of doing things, in our standards for raising kids, and this liberal project as embodied in Blume’s commerce and elite status, horrifies me.
The liberal framework treats political preferences as primarily instrumental, as bids for material outcomes, healthcare, wages, environmental protection. From inside that framework, a working-class voter who chooses cultural solidarity over healthcare looks irrational. But the framework is wrong about what politics is for.
Becker’s insight is relevant here. People do not primarily want comfort and security. They want a coherent account of what their lives mean and what kind of world their children will inherit. A hero system is not a luxury added on top of material interests. It is the thing that makes material life bearable. The conservative parent who rejects free healthcare from a government whose schools distribute Blume to ten-year-olds is not making a bad trade. He is refusing to accept material benefits from an institution that has declared his entire moral world illegitimate. That refusal has dignity.
The liberal project as embodied in Blume is not just permissive about sex. It carries a complete anthropology: the self is prior to its formation, desire is self-validating, inherited moral frameworks are obstacles to authenticity, and the role of institutions is to liberate children from their parents’ assumptions rather than transmit those assumptions. If you believe, as traditional religious communities do, that the self is not prior to its formation but is constituted by it, that desire requires ordering rather than validation, and that the transmission of inherited moral frameworks is the central task of education, then the Blume project is not a minor disagreement about appropriate reading material. It is a direct attack on everything you are trying to build.
The elite dismissal of that perception as bigotry confirms the perception. When the people who run the institutions tell you that your horror at what they are offering your children is a symptom of your own pathology, you have learned something true and important about those institutions.

Judy Blume’s career is inseparable from the same cultural moment Thomas B. Edsall describes in his Sep. 15, 2021 column on abortion. Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret came out in 1970, Forever in 1975, right in the middle of the period when the religious right was consolidating around abortion, sex education, and the control of what children read. Blume became a primary target of the book-banning campaigns that Falwell and Weyrich’s coalition energized, not incidentally but centrally. She was exactly what they were mobilizing against: a Jewish woman from New Jersey writing frankly about adolescent sexuality, menstruation, masturbation, and premarital sex for the children of the Southern Baptist and evangelical families they were organizing.
Edsall’s key insight, drawn from Leege, is that the hated people were the same across issues. The elites pushing racial integration were the same elites pushing permissive abortion laws and, Leege might have added, the same elites putting frank books about puberty in school libraries. Blume fit the profile perfectly. Secular, Jewish, Northern, educated, urban, sexually candid. She was a coalition-building gift to the religious right because she made the abstraction concrete. Parents could hold up Deenie or Forever and say: this is what they want to put in front of your twelve year old daughter.
What Oppenheimer gestures at but never fully argues is that Blume’s championing of free speech and her battles against book banning were not separable from her identity as a writer. She wrote the books she wrote because she believed children deserved honest access to their own experience. The religious right banned them for exactly the same reason they opposed abortion: the transmission of civilization depends on the formation of the young, and formation requires that children not be handed adult sexual knowledge. Blume intuited this even if she never quite theorized it.

A twelve-year-old girl who reads Forever learns that premarital sex can be navigated without consequence, that desire is its own justification, and that the adults who might counsel otherwise are simply repressed. From the trad perspective this defends a developmental sequence that took centuries to build and can be destroyed in a generation.

From a traditional perspective, the sexual revolution did not liberate women. It liberated men from obligation. The old order required men to marry before they had sexual access, which gave women leverage and children fathers. The new order, of which Blume’s books were both symptom and instrument, taught girls to want what boys had always wanted without asking what girls would lose in the exchange. The abortion debate sits exactly here. The trad sees abortion not as the control of female sexuality but as the consequence of its prior liberation, the cleanup operation for a revolution whose costs fall primarily on women and children.

From this angle Blume is not a liberator but a recruiter, bringing the next generation of girls into a sexual economy that was never designed with their long term interests in mind. The frank talk about menstruation and masturbation and first intercourse looks like honesty but functions, the trad argues, as normalization. It moves the threshold. What required transgression in 1965 requires no courage at all by 1985, and what requires no courage by 1985 has become compulsory by 2005.

The trad case is not simply about control. At its most serious it is about what a culture owes its children, which is not maximum information and minimum judgment but a structured initiation into the adult world at a pace the young person can actually integrate. Blume believed children could handle the truth. The trad believes the truth without wisdom is not liberation but abandonment.

Forever is not a prurient book. It treats adolescent sexuality with more seriousness and consequence than most adult fiction of the period. But once the religious right moralized the issue of what children should read, the content of the book became almost irrelevant. It was a symbol in a coalition war, the same way abortion functioned less as a considered moral position than as a marker of which team you were on.

Oppenheimer covers the censorship battles but, characteristically, stays on the surface. He notes that Blume fought back, that she worked with libraries, that she became a free speech advocate. He does not connect this to the deeper political story Edsall tells, the story about how sexuality, race, religion, and partisan identity fused in the late 1970s into a coalition that targeted people exactly like Judy Blume. That connection would have given the biography a spine it currently lacks.

Blume’s books were, among other things, a delivery system for the sexual revolution into the lives of twelve year olds. She believed children deserved honest information about desire and bodies, and she was not wrong that the sanitized alternatives left young people alone with confusion and shame. But the Mac Donald analysis suggests that the revolution whose early grammar Blume helped teach had consequences nobody in 1975 was willing to follow to their conclusion.

The trad case against Blume is that you cannot tell a generation of girls that desire is its own justification, that adult caution is merely repression, that the body’s experience is the truest form of knowledge, and then be surprised when those girls arrive at college without the interior resources to navigate a sexual culture that was built primarily to serve male appetite. Blume gave her readers emotional honesty about puberty. She did not give them, because she did not have, a framework for what comes after desire is liberated but commitment remains optional.

Heather Mac Donald observes that the campus rape bureaucracy arose precisely because the sexual revolution destroyed the informal rules that previously governed male and female interaction, and nothing coherent replaced them. The old regime was paternalistic, and it created friction that protected women by making casual sex difficult. The new regime removed the friction and then discovered, two generations later, that friction had been doing real work. What replaced it was not freedom but a byzantine legal apparatus staffed by ideologues who could not acknowledge the problem’s source because doing so would implicate the revolution they had built their careers defending.

Blume sits upstream of all this. She is not responsible for campus Title IX tribunals, but she is part of the cultural current that made them necessary. The books taught a generation that frankness about sex was liberation. Mac Donald shows where that frankness landed when it hit institutional reality without wisdom or structure to contain it.

The deeper irony is that Blume’s own life, the three marriages, the affairs, the emotional opacity Oppenheimer could not penetrate, suggests she knew at some level that sexual frankness and relational flourishing are not the same thing. She gave her readers the first and withheld, perhaps because she did not possess it herself, the second. Her fiction is honest about desire and almost silent about its costs. That silence is where the Mac Donald critique begins.

What does greatness in literary biography look like? Richard Ellmann (1918-1987) comes to mind. His work on James Joyce is great, and his book on Oscar Wilde is good. Mark Oppenheimer is no Richard Ellmann, but nobody is. Leon Edel’s (1907-1997) five-volume biography of Henry James is the other great monument of 20th century literary biography. Edel brought psychoanalytic depth to James that Ellmann might not have managed, partly because James’s inner life was so thoroughly concealed behind his prose that you needed a different set of tools. Edel spent decades on the project and the result is comparable in ambition and achievement to the Joyce biography, if less readable.
Walter Jackson Bate (1918-1999) wrote biographies of Keats and Samuel Johnson that many scholars rank with Ellmann. The Johnson in particular is a masterpiece of empathy. Bate understood melancholy, creative paralysis, and the gap between ambition and output in a way that made Johnson’s life feel urgent rather than historical.
What Ellmann did better than almost anyone is combine three things that rarely appear together: total command of the primary texts, massive archival research, and commanding prose style. Most scholarly biographers can manage one or two. Edel had the critical intelligence and the research but his prose is denser. Bate had the empathy and the prose but worked on subjects where the archives were thinner. Ellmann had all three, and he had them on subjects, Joyce especially, where the difficulty of the material would have defeated a lesser critic.
So the fairest thing to say is that Ellmann is the name you reach for first when someone asks who did it best, but the conversation doesn’t end there.
Jeffrey Meyers (b. 1939) wrote biographies of Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Conrad, Orwell, Edmund Wilson, Robert Frost, Edgar Allan Poe, D.H. Lawrence, and many others. The output is remarkable in volume.
The knock on Meyers is that quantity came at some cost to depth. He is a competent researcher and a clear writer, but critics have noted that the biographies tend to sit on the surface of the literary work rather than penetrating it the way Ellmann did. He tells you what happened and places the writer in context, but the critical intelligence that makes Ellmann indispensable is not consistently present in Meyers. The Hemingway biography is probably his best known and is solid, but scholars who specialize in Hemingway tend to reach for Michael Reynolds’s (1937-2000) multi-volume life first, which is more exhaustive and more critically rigorous.
Meyers is better understood as a man of letters in the older sense, someone who keeps the tradition of serious literary biography alive through sheer commitment and range, rather than as a critic who transforms how we read a particular writer. That is not nothing. But it puts him in a different category from Ellmann or Bate.
Meyers comes to his subjects as a literary critic. He has read the work seriously, has views about it, and can place a writer like Hemingway or Orwell within a tradition. The biographies are sometimes thin critically and reviewers have caught him in factual errors, but there is a baseline of literary engagement. He knows why Hemingway matters as a prose stylist even if he cannot always show you the machinery the way Reynolds can. He has a thesis about each writer, even when the thesis is not fully developed.
Oppenheimer does not have that. His training is in religious studies, and his previous books deal with Jewish communal life and a synagogue shooting. He came to Blume as a longtime fan rather than as a literary critic with a developed view of children’s literature or the YA form. The Blume biography can tell you that Blume brought realism to children’s fiction and that this mattered, but it cannot go much further than that. It lacks the critical framework to explain why the prose works, what Blume’s relationship to her predecessors and contemporaries was at the level of craft, or where she sits in the longer history of American fiction for young readers.
Oppenheimer demonstrates little understanding of the tacit, which is key to understanding Blume’s gift.
Ellmann understood that the most important things about a man are rarely stated. Joyce did not explain Ulysses and Wilde did not explain the paradox at the center of his self-destruction. Ellmann did not wait for his subjects to hand him the interpretation. He read the work, read the letters, read the testimony of people around them, and then made an argument about what was operating beneath the surface that the subject himself could not or would not articulate.
The tacit in Joyce’s case is the relationship between shame and art. Joyce left Ireland, rejected the Church, broke with family and language and tradition, and spent the rest of his life writing about almost nothing else. The exile was the wound and the wound was the subject. Ellmann does not simply report this. He shows how it operates at the level of the sentences, how the guilt and the irony and the liturgical cadences are all doing the same psychological work from different angles. He makes you see that Ulysses is not just set in Dublin but is an attempt to possess Dublin by recreating it completely, the colonization of a city by a man who could not live there. That is a tacit argument Joyce never made about himself and might have denied.
With Wilde the tacit is the death wish. Ellmann argues that Wilde at some level engineered his own destruction, that the prosecution of Queensberry was a provocation Wilde did not have to accept and pursued anyway. The man who made epigrams about masks and surfaces was unable to sustain the distance between his public self and his private life, and the collapse was not entirely unwilled. Ellmann does not say Wilde wanted to go to prison. He shows you the sequence of decisions and lets the argument build tacitly, the way the best criticism works.
What made this possible is that Ellmann trusted inference. He was willing to say: given everything we know about this man, the most plausible explanation of this behavior is this. That requires confidence and it requires a critical framework strong enough to bear the weight of the inference. Ellmann had both.
Oppenheimer by contrast stays close to the surface of what Blume told him or what the documents confirm. The tacit in Blume’s life, the pattern of emotional attunement with strangers combined with opacity in her closest relationships, the recurring fictional mothers who fail their children, the three marriages and what they suggest about her capacity for intimacy, all of this requires exactly the kind of inference Ellmann practiced and Oppenheimer avoided. The 40-page memo made inference dangerous. Ellmann’s subjects could not send memos. That structural difference goes a long way toward explaining why one body of work endures and the other will be a useful reference.
Another difference is independence. Meyers, whatever his faults, wrote about dead subjects and went where the evidence took him. The Blume biography carries the weight of that 40-page memo Blume sent after reading the manuscript. You can feel the warmth throughout, and warmth is the enemy of judgment. Meyers could be harsh. His Hemingway does not flinch from the cruelty and the self-destruction. Oppenheimer’s Blume, as Kirkus noted, stays relentlessly upbeat.
So Meyers, at his ordinary level, still brings more critical seriousness to the form than Oppenheimer does. The Blume book is better understood as an authorized portrait by an admiring journalist than as a literary biography in the tradition Ellmann established and Meyers, imperfectly, continued.
Ellmann brought literary criticism to his subjects. His Joyce biography remains the gold standard because he understood Modernism from the inside and could show exactly how life became art. The Wilde biography was less triumphant but still carried that same capacity for critical penetration. Ellmann treated his subjects as intellectual problems worth solving.
Oppenheimer is a different kind of writer. He is a journalist. He traces Blume’s life chronologically in chapters that connect events she lived through to the plots of her novels, which is solid but not ambitious. He had access to Blume herself, hours of interviews and hundreds of email responses, and she connected him with family members and friends. After he sent her a draft, she responded with a 40-page memo of suggestions, some of which he accepted and others not. That kind of subject cooperation tends to soften a biography.
The reviews reflect this. Kirkus called it “relentlessly upbeat,” noting that Blume’s battles with censorious parents and librarians get little space. One Goodreads reviewer put it bluntly: at nearly 500 pages it was mostly surface-level, going deep into topics that weren’t important while failing to get anything personal about Blume’s inner life. Even Oppenheimer’s own epilogue registers regret: “What is frustrating, for the biographer, is the nagging sense that I am missing a lot.”
That self-awareness is honest, but it also points to the book’s limits. Ellmann would not have written an epilogue confessing he missed his subject. The Blume biography reads like the work of an admiring fan who got extraordinary access but couldn’t deliver the full reckoning. Competent and thorough, but not in the same league as the greats of the form such as Ellmann, who wrote as a critic first and a chronicler second. He didn’t just track what happened in Joyce’s life and then note which novel it fed into. He understood Ulysses and Dubliners at a level where he could show the precise alchemy by which experience became art. The biography of Joyce works because Ellmann could read the fiction as well as Joyce could, and sometimes better. He brought a mind equal to the subject.
That kind of equality between biographer and subject is rare and almost never announced. You feel it in the quality of the literary judgments. When Ellmann explains what Joyce was doing with the Nighttown episode or why the ending of “The Dead” lands the way it does, he is not summarizing scholarly consensus. He is thinking. The biography of Wilde is slightly less successful because Wilde is harder to pin down, but even there Ellmann understood the paradox at the center of Wilde’s career: that a man who made an art of surfaces was destroyed by the one thing he could not keep on the surface.
Oppenheimer lacks that. His training is in religious studies and journalism, and nothing in the Blume book suggests he has thought about children’s literature or the YA form at the level the subject deserves. He can tell you what happened in Blume’s life and point to which novel it fed. That is the chapter-by-chapter template reviewers noticed. But he cannot tell you, with any depth, why Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret works as a piece of writing rather than as a cultural artifact. The critical intelligence is not there.
There is also the problem of access. Ellmann’s subjects were dead. He could follow the evidence wherever it went, interview enemies as freely as admirers, and reach conclusions Wilde or Joyce could not protest. Oppenheimer had Blume sitting across from him, cooperative but also sending 40-page memos about the manuscript. That kind of proximity tends to produce warmth at the cost of clarity. The biographer who owes his subject gratitude for access is not the biographer best positioned to deliver an honest judgment.
Ellmann also understood that a great biography has to take a position about its subject’s place in literary history. He argued, implicitly and explicitly, that Joyce was the central figure of Modernist fiction. Everything in the biography orients around that claim. Oppenheimer never argues anything comparable about Blume. He gestures at her cultural importance, notes that she received 2,000 letters a month at her peak, tracks the censorship battles, but the book never commits to a thesis. It remains a chronicle rather than an argument.
What you felt reading both books is the difference between a biographer who has something to say and one who has a lot to report.

Oppenheimer concludes: “Judy is a wife, mother, and grandmother, but I do not, despite my best efforts, understand what kind of wife, mother, and grandmother she has been.” Several readers noted that Blume’s relationships come across as, in one reviewer’s words, “a hot mess,” but Oppenheimer never examines why. She had three marriages, two divorces, affairs during her first marriage, and a chaotic second marriage to Tom Kitchens that collapsed quickly. That pattern across decades suggests something persistent in how she attaches to people and what she needs from intimacy. A biographer willing to press on that might have found the key to the whole life. Oppenheimer registers the facts but pulls back from the interpretation.
There is also the question of her children. Blume built her career writing about the inner lives of children with unusual precision and empathy, yet her own children remain largely offstage in the biography. That gap is striking. A woman who could articulate adolescent experience for tens of millions of readers but whose relationship with her actual children stays opaque in her own biography suggests either that Oppenheimer could not get access to that material or chose not to push for it.
The 40-page memo is probably the key to what he refused to see. When a subject responds to a draft manuscript with 40 pages of suggestions, the biographer faces a choice between gratitude and honesty. Oppenheimer clearly leaned toward gratitude. The access that made the book possible also made it safe. Blume gave him her papers and her time, and in return he gave her a portrait she could live with.
What Ellmann understood, and what Oppenheimer did not fully reckon with, is that the most important things about a writer are often the things the writer least wants examined. The gap between Blume’s public warmth, her legendary responsiveness to young readers, her championing of free speech, and whatever she was like as a mother and wife, is precisely where the interesting biography lives. Oppenheimer stood at the edge of that gap, acknowledged it in his epilogue, and stepped back.

Blume’s books are unusually autobiographical.
The mothers in her fiction are frequently absent in the ways that matter. They are physically present but emotionally elsewhere, preoccupied with their own needs, their marriages, their social standing. Margaret’s mother in Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret is well-meaning but useless to her daughter on the questions that matter. The mother in Blubber fails to see what is happening to her child entirely. This is a consistent pattern across the work, not an occasional feature. Blume returns again and again to children who are navigating the hardest experiences of their lives largely alone, reaching toward adults who cannot meet them. That is not an accident of plot. It is a worldview.
Her adult novels are more revealing still. Wifey is about a suburban housewife whose marriage is sexually dead and who pursues affairs with a mixture of excitement and self-contempt. Smart Women features divorced mothers whose romantic lives crowd out their parenting. Oppenheimer noted that everybody in Smart Women has the emotional age of about twenty. That is a sharp observation but he did not follow it far enough. A writer who repeatedly populates her adult fiction with women who cannot grow up, who remain oriented toward their own desires and wounds rather than toward their children, is telling you something about her own experience of motherhood, whether as a child or as a parent.
The letters she received, 2,000 a month at her peak, are also suggestive. Children wrote to her because she understood them in ways their own parents did not. She became a surrogate confidante for millions of young readers precisely because she could articulate what adults in those children’s lives refused to see or say. That capacity for emotional attunement with children she had never met, combined with the persistent opacity about her relationships with her own children, points toward a woman who might have been easier to know at a distance than up close.
The reasonable surmise is that Blume was a better mother to her readers than to her children, not necessarily out of coldness but out of the particular way her gifts were arranged. The empathy that produced the books required a kind of imaginative remove. The daily work of motherhood, its obligations and its frictions, sat uneasily with that. Her fiction keeps circling this without naming it. Oppenheimer saw the circle but could not bring himself to name what was at the center.

Erica Jong and Jude Blume belong to the same cultural moment and share certain preoccupations, even though they wrote for different audiences.
Jong’s Fear of Flying came out in 1973, the same period when Blume was hitting her stride. Both women were liberal secular Jews, suburban-raised, products of the postwar middle class, and both made their careers by saying publicly what women were supposed to keep private. Jong’s “zipless fuck” and Blume’s frank treatment of adolescent sexuality in Forever are different in degree but not in kind. Both represented a generation of women who experienced the feminine mystique as a trap and who used writing as escape and as revenge.
What Jong’s life reveals is the cost of that particular freedom. She had four marriages, wrote extensively about her own romantic and sexual life, and was candid in interviews and memoirs about being a difficult person to live with, self-absorbed, hungry for admiration, constitutionally unsuited to domestic life. Her daughter Molly Jong-Fast has written about this with considerable honesty, describing a childhood in which her mother’s needs and appetites dominated the household. Jong was more famous for her candor than for her reliability as a parent.
The parallel with Blume is not exact but it is suggestive. Both women built careers on a kind of radical emotional honesty about desire and selfhood that sat in tension with the self-subordination traditional motherhood demands. The writer who insists on her own inner life as primary material, who treats her own feelings and needs as the most important subject in the room, tends to struggle with the specific requirement of parenting, which is sustained attention to someone else’s inner life at the expense of your own.
Sylvia Plath is the darker version of this story. Anne Sexton darker still. Both were mothers whose creative and psychological needs overwhelmed their capacity for the ordinary sustaining work of raising children. Neither survived long enough to be a grandmother. But the pattern they represent, the woman writer of mid-century America for whom selfhood and motherhood existed in conflict rather than complementarity, runs through the whole generation.
What Blume shares with Jong and to a lesser extent with the confessional poets is that her writing is most alive when it is closest to her own experience and most generic when it moves away from it. That writing tends to come from people who are more interesting to themselves than to the people around them. Oppenheimer sensed this but wouldn’t or couldn’t say so plainly.

Grok says:

Blume and her family are protective and emotionally guarded. Interviews with her kids and husband showed them “protecting one another, as loving families do.” Blume herself has long been private about her domestic life; she’s open in interviews about bodies, sex, and puberty (the stuff her books made famous), but far less so about feelings, conflicts, or the day-to-day emotional texture of marriage and parenting. Her son Larry has called her “the least analytical person” he’s ever met.

Her own upbringing set the pattern. Blume’s parents (especially her mother, Essie) were sexually frank but emotionally withholding—feelings were not discussed, crying was discouraged (“We’re not going to give anybody a show here”), and Blume learned to tell her parents only what they wanted to hear. Reviewers note this parallel: she had an emotionally distant relationship with her mother, and the biography alludes to (but doesn’t deeply excavate) tensions with her own teenage children. Oppenheimer senses this history shaped how she parents and grandparents, but he can’t get past the “messiness at bay” approach she and her family maintain.

The book covers the broad strokes: her stifling first marriage (to John Blume, which gave her the name and two kids but left her bored and unfulfilled); a brief, painful second marriage (during which she had two abortions); and her happy third marriage to Cooper since the early 1980s. It touches on her kids’ teenage rebellions and some “questionable” parenting decisions, her role as a grandmother (including one grandson encouraging later Fudge books), and even lighter moments like her daughter Randy reading and critiquing manuscripts as a child. But the emotional how—what kind of wife, mother, or grandmother she was in the daily, complicated sense—remains elusive. He treats big personal events (infidelity at the end of the first marriage, cancer/mastectomy) relatively lightly.

What he “missed” was the deeper, messier emotional interior of her family life—largely because Blume, her husband, and her kids kept it shielded (consistent with how she has always presented herself publicly). He ran into the limits of what she and her family were willing to reveal, even to a sympathetic biographer they had invited in. The quote is Oppenheimer’s graceful way of saying: I got as close as I could, but some doors stayed closed. That tension is part of why the biography feels honest rather than hagiographic—and why Blume ultimately stepped back.

Posted in Biography, Children, Mark Oppenheimer | Comments Off on Judy Blume: A Life (2026)

Rony Guldmann on Hero Systems & Their Competing Claims of Oppression (4-12-26)

01:00 Is the “heritage Americans” construct racist?
04:00 Star Chamber of Stanford, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=181479
11:00 Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression, https://ronyguldmann.com/conservative-claims-cultural-oppression/
15:00 Rony Guldmann, https://ronyguldmann.com
18:00 My writings on Rony Guldmann: https://lukeford.net/blog/?cat=42933
22:00 Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression: On the Nature and Origins of ‘Conservaphobia’, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=181477

Posted in America, Rony Guldmann | Comments Off on Rony Guldmann on Hero Systems & Their Competing Claims of Oppression (4-12-26)

The Man Who Named the Pain: Mike Benz and the Censorship Complex

Mike Benz, born around 1984, runs the Foundation for Freedom Online from a position few of his contemporaries can claim. He speaks the bureaucratic dialect of the State Department, the legal vocabulary of the corporate bar, and the rapid idiom of a man who spent years posting anonymously on the early internet. He has testified at congressional briefings, drawn retweets from Elon Musk, shaped two House Judiciary Committee reports on European speech regulation, and built a second career out of mapping what he calls the censorship industrial complex. He did all this after a pseudonymous stretch in the alt-right ecosystem that most men would would find career-ending.

The Penn Years and the Law

Benz studied psychology at the University of Pennsylvania and graduated magna cum laude. The psychology training shows up later in how he thinks about persuasion, framing, and the capture of attention.
After Penn he practiced corporate law, representing technology and financial firms. He likely sat across the table from platform companies and banks and learned the architecture of digital commerce from the inside. He saw how terms of service get written. He saw how contracts with government agencies get structured. He saw the revolving door between private counsel and federal regulators. By the time Benz enters government, he has already watched the private side of the public-private partnership model up close.

The Frame Game Period

Between 2016 and 2018, Benz posted under the handle Frame Game. He never showed his face. He produced videos and sat for podcasts and livestreams in the ecosystem that then styled itself the alt-right. He engaged directly with white nationalists. He talked about the Great Replacement Theory. He discussed Jewish influence in media and politics. He cut montages urging racial unity among Whites. He treated the subculture as a place where forbidden questions could be worked over.
When NBC News identified him as the voice behind the handle in 2023, Benz confirmed the connection and described the project as a deradicalization effort by Jews aimed at moving antisemites away from destructive fixations. Critics have called this retcon. Friends have called it accurate. Whatever Frame Game was, he was a man running experiments in how narratives attach themselves to audiences. He watched which frames stuck. He watched which dissolved. He learned the muscle memory of internet persuasion at its most raw.
I hosted Frame Game on my YT show several times in 2018. I remember a man who cared about effectiveness more than about truth, who believed you said what worked and worried later about whether it was strictly accurate, and who had the sharpest instinct for framing I had encountered in a conservative commentator. I also remembered that Frame Game’s Jewish literacy was thin.

HUD and the State Department

Around 2018 Benz stopped posting as Frame Game. He joined the Trump administration as a speechwriter and policy aide to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson. In late 2020 he moved to the State Department as Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Communications and Information Policy, working in the Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs. The portfolio covered cyber issues, big tech, subsea cables, satellites, multilateral tech forums, and the digital side of American foreign policy.
The stint was brief. He served a few months before Trump left office. He left with the usual political appointees. He watched the permanent foreign policy establishment from a desk that was close enough to see the paperwork. He saw how internet freedom programs got funded. He saw how the National Endowment for Democracy and USAID routed money through civil society groups abroad. He saw how the Atlantic Council and RAND and the Global Engagement Center fit into the larger apparatus. He called this permanent establishment the Blob, borrowing the term from foreign policy critics like Ben Rhodes.
What Benz claims to have witnessed at State is not the existence of censorship programs. Those are a matter of public record. What he claims to have witnessed is a pivot. The apparatus built during the Cold War to promote internet freedom against Soviet and later Chinese information control, he argues, turned inward after 2016. Brexit and Trump’s election rattled the foreign policy establishment. Populism at home started to look, to men who had spent their careers fighting Russian influence operations abroad, like an influence operation on domestic soil. The response, Benz argues, was to take the foreign counter-disinformation toolkit and aim it at American citizens.

The Birth of the Foundation for Freedom Online

Benz registered the Foundation for Freedom Online in April 2022. The organization, from the outside, looks like a vehicle for Benz. He produces most of the output. He appears as the public face. The board and staff are minimal. The group raises modest sums and describes itself as a nonpartisan watchdog. Whatever one makes of the scale, the output has been prodigious. Benz generates long written reports, longer video threads on X, and hours of podcast appearances. He has become a reliable expert witness for House Republicans and an endlessly cited source in the Twitter Files era of reporting on content moderation.
His first breakthrough came during the Twitter Files period of 2022 and 2023. Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenberger, the journalists Elon Musk had chosen to publish Twitter’s internal documents, needed help understanding the landscape. The Files showed coordination between Twitter, federal agencies, universities, and NGOs, but the raw documents did not explain the coordination. Benz did. He appeared on Twitter Spaces, briefed the journalists, and provided the institutional map that turned a pile of internal emails into a coherent story. His framing of the Election Integrity Partnership as a government-adjacent censorship consortium shaped Shellenberger’s congressional testimony in March 2023. Benz sat in the row behind the witnesses.
He briefed the House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. He contributed to the House Judiciary Committee’s reports on the European Union’s Digital Services Act, released in February 2026. He appeared with Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan, and Shawn Ryan. He spoke at the National Conservatism Conference in July 2024. He returned to CPAC in March 2026, where he sat on a panel with Robert Malone and Daily Caller editor Amber Duke on exported European censorship.

The Core Thesis

The tools of influence operations crossed the border. They were not invented in 2016. They were developed over decades to fight foreign adversaries, and they turned inward when the foreign policy establishment concluded that domestic populism posed the same kind of threat to the post-war order that Russian information warfare posed abroad.
The thesis has several working parts. The first is redefinition. Benz argues that the word democracy has been quietly stretched from its old meaning, the will of voters, to a new meaning, the consensus of institutions. When current officials say they are defending democracy, Benz hears them saying they are defending the permanent government and its allied nonprofits from electoral outcomes the public might produce. The second part is laundering. Because the First Amendment bars direct federal censorship, the censorship must be routed through third parties. DHS flags content. NGOs receive the flags. Platforms act on them. The government never legally touches the speech. The third part is euphemism. The vocabulary hides the function. What gets called media literacy is psychological inoculation. What gets called civic integrity is narrative control. What gets called malinformation is factually accurate speech deemed harmful to institutional trust.
The power of the thesis is that it explains a great deal with a small number of moves. It makes sense of why conservatives feel throttled on platforms without being able to point to any specific First Amendment violation. It makes sense of why the same university centers keep appearing in different roles across different controversies. It makes sense of why trust in institutions collapsed so fast after 2016.
The thesis explains too much. A man with a single skeleton key can open every door, and a man who can open every door tends to assume every door was locked by the same hand.

The Method

Benz does not work the way most conservative pundits work. He does not lead with outrage. He leads with documents. His videos and threads are dense with agency names, grant numbers, funding flows, personnel overlaps, and organizational charts. He traces lines between DHS, CISA, NSF-funded research initiatives, NATO-linked projects, the Atlantic Council, Stanford’s Internet Observatory, the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, and major technology platforms. He treats the public record as a mine he has not finished working. He cites grant papers the way a Talmudist cites sugyot.
A normal listener who suspects something is wrong with the information environment arrives with a feeling. Benz replaces the feeling with a circuit diagram. He converts inchoate discontent into structured understanding. The audience does not walk away with an emotion. They walk away with a map.
Benz writes in long, clause-stacked sentences. He piles premise on qualifier on motive. The cadence mimics a prosecutor delivering a closing argument after the evidence is all in. He builds. Step one. Step two. Step three. The listener who stays with him to the end feels he has been walked through a case, not harangued into a conclusion.
This style lands on some listeners with great force. Men raised on the apologetics of evangelical Protestantism or Catholic Thomism or Adventist reason-giving recognize the accumulative style. It is the method of C. S. Lewis and G. K. Chesterton and Desmond Ford. The preacher as logician rather than the preacher as exhorter. The promise is the same: stay with me and clarity arrives. The anchor differs. Christian apologetics submits to scripture. Benz submits to his own reconstruction of incentives and institutions.

The Appeal

The Benz audience is not confused about the facts. The audience feels acted upon by large, opaque structures. They feel that their Google searches are curated, their posts are throttled, their news feeds are sorted by someone with an agenda, and their platforms hesitate in ways that track political outcomes rather than platform rules. Benz does not create this sensation. He names it. He gives the villain a name, the process a diagram, and the audience a vocabulary for saying what they already suspect.
Before Benz, the conservative voter knew something was wrong and could not say what. After Benz, he can point to USAID funding of the Global Disinformation Index, to the revolving door between CISA and Stanford, to the specific contract numbers. Whether each connection does the explanatory work Benz says it does is a separate question. The relief of having a map at all is independent of whether the map is accurate at every point.
Benz’s audience also rewards him for doing what their institutions refuse to do. The legacy press treats the censorship story as either overblown or as a legitimate response to real misinformation. The universities that staff the partnerships defend them as research. The agencies that fund them describe them as routine cybersecurity work. Benz tells the audience that their suspicions were not delusions. Even if he overreaches, the overreach pushes in a direction they find credible, which the alternatives do not.
The Critiques
The most serious critique of Benz comes from Renée DiResta, formerly of Stanford Internet Observatory, who has pointed out that Benz often misreads documents, conflates distinct programs, and flattens differences that matter. She has shown, with receipts, that specific claims he has made are wrong in their specifics. Her corrections have been careful and patient. The odd thing is that they have not damaged Benz with his audience. Each correction seems to make him stronger rather than weaker.
Part of the reason is structural. DiResta works at institutions the Benz audience distrusts. When a Stanford researcher corrects a populist critic, the correction lands for Benz’s audience as institutional self-defense rather than as neutral fact-finding. Part of the reason is scale mismatch. DiResta operates at the micro level, arguing over timelines, grant specifics, and organizational charts. Benz operates at the macro level, arguing that an ecosystem of coordination exists. A man can lose every small skirmish and still hold the field if the larger claim keeps fitting what the audience sees around them.
Benz built his public voice in a subculture that rewarded pattern-matching without falsification, where every surprise could be folded into the theory. That habit of thought does not vanish because the targets change. When he says the censorship complex is coordinated, he means something more ambitious than that the relevant actors share assumptions and funding streams. He means they are running a program. The more coordinated the claim, the more it requires documentation that Benz, for all his archival work, has not always produced.
Benz’s world rarely contains accidents. Things happen because someone wanted them to happen. When a platform changes a rule, it is because an agency pressured it. When a researcher publishes a paper, it is because a grant required the conclusion. The model is elegant. It also leaves no room for incompetence, mission drift, internal disagreement, or sheer stupidity. A more accurate account of bureaucratic life has all of those things.

The Status Question

The Benz who emerged in 2022 had a problem Frame Game did not have. Frame Game operated under a handle and owed nothing to anyone. Benz operates under his own name and now has donors, a nonprofit, congressional allies, and a public he needs to keep persuaded. He also has a past that NBC News surfaced in October 2023 and that will not go away.
His response to the NBC story was self-pitying, hyperbolic, and larded with an assertion of Jewish pride that read, to those living in traditional Jewish communities, like compensation. A cleaner response was available. Richard Hanania, outed the same year for similar old posts, simply said he had written things he regretted and moved on. Hanania took no real career hit. Benz chose a more defensive posture and has taken more damage from the revelation than he might have otherwise.
What Benz has not done is what Al Sharpton did. Sharpton rejoined polite society by narrowing his claims, slowing his rhetoric, and accepting constraints he once treated as corrupt. He still does not apologize for Tawana Brawley. He does appear on MSNBC. The deal was straightforward. Stay loud. Become legible. Benz has taken the first step of that trade. He has not taken the second. He remains insurgent in posture even as his work grows more influential. Whether he chooses legibility later is the open question of his career.

The International Phase

With the Trump administration dismantling the domestic side of what Benz calls the censorship apparatus, his attention has shifted abroad. The February 2026 House Judiciary Committee reports on the European Union’s Digital Services Act draw heavily on his analysis. The argument is that the DSA lets European regulators export speech rules into American platforms by forcing global policy changes. A platform that faces fines of 6 percent of global revenue in Brussels cannot run separate rule sets for different jurisdictions. The cheapest option is to apply European rules worldwide, which means American users see American speech moderated by European standards.
At CPAC 2026, Benz put it directly. The censorship class in exile is not out of work. It has gotten jobs in Europe with the EU. That is the new theater. He is working with the Trump administration, he said, on a transparency push about the NGOs American money helped build so Americans can see what they paid for.
This move is shrewd. The domestic phase was about documenting an apparatus that was actively censoring American speech. With that apparatus shrunken, the threat level drops, and with it the urgency of the story. By pivoting to Brussels, Benz finds a new adversary with the same architecture. The agencies differ. The method does not.

Where He Sits

Benz operates at the intersection of national security analysis, administrative law, and populist media. He translates bureaucratic process into moral narrative without abandoning the technical detail. That combination is rare. It explains why he can appear on Rogan-length podcasts and still sound like a man running a graduate seminar on interagency coordination.
He has the credentials of the establishment and the posture of the outsider. He speaks the language of the agencies he attacks. He has read their documents. He knows their acronyms. The foreign policy establishment finds defectors more dangerous than critics because defectors violate the unspoken rule that insider knowledge stays within the insider class. Benz violates that rule with every video.
The censorship story is harder to tell now that the Trump administration has taken a chainsaw to the domestic apparatus. Benz’s European pivot buys him time. It does not answer the question of what happens when the story runs out. Men who build careers on being outside the system rarely handle the transition into the system gracefully. The posture that made them credible depended on being excluded. Inclusion dissolves it.
For now he has the attention of a second Trump administration, an audience that trusts his maps more than it trusts the press, and enough forensic material to keep producing for years. He has also built something rare in the conservative media ecosystem: a synthetic explanation for the post-2016 order that a substantial portion of the country finds more accurate than the one the legacy institutions have offered. Whether the explanation holds up in its grand form or only in its local observations will be argued over for a long time.
Mike Benz gave a diffuse public its most effective map of how it has been governed since 2016. He did it with the methods of a man who once worked the fringes and then crossed into the offices where the real paperwork lives. His work, taken as a whole, is the most sustained attempt by any figure on the right to render the administrative state legible to the people it claims to serve. That the map has errors does not settle the question of whether it is more accurate than the alternatives. For the audience he reaches, the comparison has already been decided.

Cultural Trauma

Yale sociologist Jeffrey Alexander argues that trauma does not exist until someone does the representational work of naming it, narrating it, and finding an audience for it. Mike Benz has made a career of doing exactly that. He identified a pain that millions of people felt but could not articulate: the sense that their speech was being managed, their platforms throttled, their political options quietly narrowed. He gave that inchoate feeling a name, a villain, and a causal story. The event alone, in this case censorship and deplatforming, does not create the trauma. The meaning-work does.
Benz is the right’s most effective theorist of elite driven censorship. He operates inside a carrier group that includes Elon Musk, Republican committee chairs, the House Judiciary Committee’s censorship investigations, and a substantial portion of the populist right media ecosystem. Benz built the conceptual architecture, the vocabulary of the censorship complex, the NGO network diagrams, the DHS contractor chains, that the larger coalition then adopted. He was the theorist before he became the spokesman.
Alexander’s four questions map cleanly onto what Benz does. What is the nature of the pain? Systematic state-adjacent suppression of dissent through NGOs, DHS contractors, and academic censorship infrastructure. Who are the victims? Initially conservatives and populists, but Benz is smart enough to expand the victim category to include heterodox leftists, civil libertarians, and anyone who values open discourse. Alexander says the carrier group must broaden the audience’s sense of identification with the victim, and Benz works hard to make the censorship story bipartisan enough to survive the objection that it is just Republican grievance. Who is the perpetrator? The national security state fused with Silicon Valley and foundation-funded NGOs. That attribution is specific enough to be credible and sweeping enough to feel total.
Benz traces institutional networks with what looks like forensic care, the kind of documented connection-drawing that Alexander says is essential to making a trauma claim stick beyond the carrier group’s immediate followers. But Alexander also notes that trauma narratives depend on simplification. The line between rigorous institutional analysis and conspiratorial pattern-matching is one Benz walks constantly, and his audience rewards him for crossing it because the crossing feels like revelation.
What Alexander adds that most Benz critics miss is this: that trauma is constructed does not mean the underlying pain is fake. Alexander is explicit that constructivism does not equal dismissal. The censorship infrastructure Benz documents is real. The question is what story gets built around it and who benefits from that story. Benz has built a narrative that serves a specific coalition, the anti-globalist right and its funding networks, while capturing an institutional reality.
Benz speaks in a register that has quasi-prophetic qualities. He frames the censorship complex not just as a policy problem but as a civilizational threat, a sacred violation of something essential to American identity.

Alliance Theory

Mike Benz’s public career has moved through positions fast enough that the coalition logic is easier to see than it is with subjects whose trajectories are slower. He appears first as Frame Game Radio, an anonymous YouTube account producing alt-right-adjacent content in the late 2010s that attracted a specific audience through videos on Jewish influence in media, academia, and finance. He appears next as a Trump State Department official, serving briefly in 2020 as Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Communications and Information Policy before the administration ended. He appears then as the founder of the Foundation for Freedom Online, which positions itself as a researcher of censorship by the American national security apparatus against American citizens. He has become, in the last three years, a prominent figure in the intersecting networks of Tucker Carlson’s audience, the broader Trump-aligned right, the Elon Musk-adjacent tech-libertarian formation, and the specific anti-censorship coalition that treats the Censorship Industrial Complex as the primary threat to American self-government.
Benz has acknowledged the Frame Game identity, has characterized the earlier work as youthful mistake or provocative exploration, and has distanced himself from its content while not fully disavowing the persona. His current allies have either ignored the earlier work, treated it as irrelevant to his current contributions, or incorporated it into a redemption narrative in which the earlier period represents honest engagement with questions others are afraid to address. His current critics point to the Frame Game work as evidence that his current positions should be read through the continuity of his earlier commitments. The Alliance Theory reading holds both responses as instances of coalition function. The allies minimize because the earlier work is a coalition liability. The critics emphasize because the earlier work is a coalition weapon. Neither side is engaging with the specific question of what the continuity actually is, because engaging with the specific question would require the analytical distance neither coalition wants to grant.
What does the earlier Frame Game material and the current Foundation for Freedom Online material have in common at the level of coalition function? Both identify a specific hidden apparatus manipulating public discourse. Both locate the apparatus in specific institutional formations with specific personnel. Both promise to expose what the apparatus does not want exposed. Both produce content that functions as revelation for an audience that experiences the revelation as liberation from prior deception. The subjects differ: Frame Game located the hidden apparatus in Jewish coalition influence, Foundation for Freedom Online locates it in national security state coordination with tech platforms. The form is similar. The form is what sells. The subject is interchangeable within limits set by what the current coalition can absorb. Frame Game’s subject was toxic in the coalition Benz now inhabits. FFO’s subject is congenial. The shift tracks the coalition migration, not a change in the underlying mode of analysis.
Pinsof’s four criteria for ally choice describe Benz’s current coalition.
Similarity. Opposition to what the coalition calls the regime, meaning the interlocking set of federal agencies, prestige media, academic institutions, and NGO networks that coordinated around specific positions during the Trump years and the pandemic. Sympathy for Trump as the political figure most damaged by regime coordination. Suspicion of all major American institutions except the ones the coalition has built for itself. Fluency in the specific vocabulary the coalition uses: regime, censorship industrial complex, legacy media, captured institutions, weaponized bureaucracy. Comfort with rapid pivot on specific claims when coalition consensus shifts. A presentation style that emphasizes information warfare framings: your enemies have been doing psychological operations on you, the truth has been hidden, the revelation is ongoing. Benz exhibits all of these markers cleanly. His YouTube appearances, his Joe Rogan appearance, his Tucker Carlson appearances, his X presence, and his Foundation for Freedom Online output all deploy the same signals.
Transitivity. Tucker Carlson platforms him. Elon Musk amplifies him. Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenberger operate adjacent to him on the censorship beat. Joe Rogan has hosted him. Lee Fang covers overlapping territory. The Schellenberger-Taibbi-Benz cluster around the Twitter Files and subsequent censorship investigations is tight. All of these figures share rivals: NPR, the Atlantic, the Washington Post, the Stanford Internet Observatory, the Global Engagement Center, the Aspen Digital program, academics like Renée DiResta, and the broader network of researchers studying disinformation and online manipulation from within the university-adjacent foundation-funded ecosystem. The rivalry pattern is consistent across the cluster.
Interdependence is visible in how benefits flow. Benz provides the coalition with a former State Department credential, a specific research product in the form of FFO reports, and a steady flow of content optimized for the coalition’s platforms. He receives in return podcast bookings, amplification from major accounts, audience for his Substack and YouTube channel, credibility transfers from Carlson and Musk, and the specific form of income that comes from becoming a recognized figure inside a coalition with audience reach. The interdependence is direct. His income and visibility depend on the coalition’s continued elevation of him. The coalition’s credibility on censorship issues depends on having a former State Department official who can speak to how the apparatus works from inside. The mutual benefit holds both parties in place.
Stochasticity. The specific coalition that now platforms him did not have to exist in its current form. Had Twitter not been purchased by Musk, the Twitter Files would not have happened, the censorship beat would not have developed into a mass audience topic, and Benz might still be a niche figure inside the post-Frame Game, post-State Department professional transition. Had Carlson remained at Fox rather than moving to X, his platforming capacity would have been different. Had the specific sequence of pandemic content moderation, Hunter Biden laptop suppression, and 2020 election aftermath not produced the specific narrative structure the coalition now deploys, the material Benz works on would not have the audience it has. The coalition that supports him is a product of a specific sequence of institutional ruptures that could have gone differently. The feeling of inevitability the coalition projects is retrospective. The path-dependence is visible.
The three propagandistic biases run through Benz’s work.
Perpetrator biases protect allies. When figures in the coalition produce claims that turn out to be overstated, the overstatement gets framed as reasonable inference from limited evidence, as necessary correction against regime propaganda, or as minor imprecision in the context of larger truth-telling. When figures outside the coalition produce comparable overstatements, the overstatements get framed as deliberate deception, evidence of institutional capture, or proof of the regime’s indifference to accuracy. The asymmetry is consistent. Specific examples include the treatment of various censorship claims that have been contested by researchers on specific factual grounds. Some of the claims have held up. Some have been overstated. The coalition treats the overstatements as acceptable imperfection in service of a larger truth. The same coalition treats comparable overstatements by disinformation researchers as evidence of the disinformation researchers’ own propagandistic function. The standard is not applied symmetrically because symmetric application would damage coalition credibility.
The bias also protects Benz from self-audit on his own trajectory. The relationship between Frame Game and FFO, the specific rhetorical habits that carried forward from one to the other, the question of whether his current analytical framework inherits structural features from the earlier one, have not received serious public attention from Benz himself. The coalition does not require this audit of him and in fact discourages it, because the audit would produce a narrative the coalition cannot absorb. T
Victim biases saturate the FFO work and the broader coalition. Americans have been censored by their own government. Dissidents have been deplatformed, demonetized, shadowbanned, and otherwise silenced by an apparatus acting in secret. The apparatus continues to operate. The extent of the harm is much greater than the public knows. The coalition bearing this message has itself been targeted by the same apparatus that targeted the broader public. Speaking out carries personal risk. The narrative is not empty. Some instances have occurred. Some of them match what the coalition describes. The function, however, is support mobilization, and the intensity of deployment exceeds what specific instances support. Benz’s role in the coalition is partly to supply the documentary weight that turns general suspicion into specific institutional case. The documents exist. The interpretation of the documents is shaped by coalition needs. Documents that complicate the narrative receive less attention than documents that confirm it.
Competitive victimhood operates across coalitions in the expected way. The disinformation research coalition narrates its own harassment, doxxing, and professional marginalization by the anti-censorship coalition. The anti-censorship coalition narrates its own suppression by the apparatus the disinformation research coalition is alleged to serve. Both describe real events. Both amplify.
Attributional biases govern the treatment of specific figures and institutions. Benz’s prose treats the personnel of the Censorship Industrial Complex as acting from internal disposition: ideological commitment, institutional self-interest, career ambition inside a captured system, personal hostility to the Americans they regulate. The same prose treats the coalition’s own personnel as acting from external constraint: they would do more if they could but they face retaliation, they are outgunned by the apparatus, they are doing what they can under difficult circumstances. When a disinformation researcher makes a mistake, the mistake reflects her character. When an anti-censorship researcher makes a mistake, the mistake reflects the difficulty of operating against a well-resourced opponent. Successes of the opposing coalition receive external attribution. Successes of the home coalition receive internal attribution. Failures reverse. The pattern is consistent across Benz’s output once you look for it.
The Mike Benz coalition contains libertarians who oppose government regulation of speech, traditional conservatives who support government regulation of obscenity and pornography, tech-accelerationists who want platforms to have absolute authority over their sites, tech-skeptics who want platforms broken up, Trump-aligned nationalists who want government pressure against platforms that censor Trump-adjacent speech, and principled First Amendment absolutists who oppose government pressure against platforms in all directions. No consistent principle unites these positions. Shared opposition to the specific apparatus the coalition calls the Censorship Industrial Complex holds the coalition together. When the coalition wins specific victories, the internal differences surface, because the victories require choices the coalition cannot make without some members feeling betrayed. The coalition manages this through keeping the focus on the external enemy rather than on the internal disagreements. Benz’s work supports this management. His framing emphasizes the enemy’s unity and downplays the coalition’s own internal divisions.
A figure who held the views Frame Game held in 2017 does not usually hold the views Benz now articulates without a specific coalition migration producing the shift. The shift is narratable in principled terms. Benz can say, and has said, that he discovered the real apparatus of power was not the one his earlier work identified, that his time inside the State Department showed him how the national security state functions, and that his current work reflects updated understanding of where the threats actually come from. This narrative is available to him. It may be sincere. It is also a coalition-serving narrative that permits him to carry audience and skill from one coalition into another while leaving behind the coalition positions that would have foreclosed his current platforming. Pinsof’s framework treats the narrative as the expected output of someone whose coalition has shifted, regardless of what the person sincerely believes about the shift. Sincerity is not inconsistent with coalition-shaped thinking. It is the condition under which coalition-shaped thinking operates most effectively.
What would Benz have to give up if his current coalition shifted? The answer is specific and substantial. His income depends on continued platforming by Carlson, Rogan, Musk, and the broader X ecosystem. His research product depends on an audience that wants to receive it. His credibility depends on the coalition’s continued investment in him as the former State Department official who can explain the apparatus. If the coalition moved, or if he moved against the coalition, the income, audience, and credibility would erode together. He would find himself in the position he was in during the Frame Game to State Department transition, which was a specific kind of professional limbo between coalitions. The cost of audit is return to that limbo. He has not paid it. Writers and researchers inside coalitions do not audit the coalitions that fund them, regardless of their self-image as independent thinkers.
The specific truths Benz cannot say, without damaging his coalition standing, include several that are worth naming for the analytical value. He cannot say that the Censorship Industrial Complex frame, while pointing at real phenomena, also functions as coalition infrastructure that motivates donations and clicks regardless of whether any specific claim under the frame holds up. He cannot say that some of the disinformation researchers he targets are producing work that, on its own methodological terms, is more careful than some of the work in his coalition. He cannot say that the platforming he receives from Carlson and Rogan rewards specific framings over others and shapes what he can produce. He cannot fully address the continuity between Frame Game’s analytical structure and FFO’s analytical structure, because addressing it would invite questions he cannot answer without damaging his current position. He cannot say that the coalition around him has interests that diverge from the interests of the Americans the coalition claims to defend. These are the costly truths. Writers do not tell them. Benz will not tell them. His not telling them is not evidence of dishonesty. It is evidence of operating inside a coalition whose continued support requires specific silences.
Mike Benz prose is fluent, confident, and dense with specific names, agencies, and documents. The specificity functions as credibility signal. The confidence functions as coalition reassurance, because uncertainty would weaken the coalition’s claim to having exposed the apparatus. The density of names allows the audience to feel that the analysis is grounded in research rather than in speculation. The actual relationship between the names and the analytical conclusions is sometimes loose. Specific connections that the prose implies often rest on weaker evidence than the prose suggests. This is characteristic of coalition intellectual work in which the signal of seriousness is more important to the audience than the rigor of the specific connections.
The Foundation for Freedom Online presents itself as a research organization. It operates without the normal structures of research institutions: peer review, external editorial constraint, institutional accountability for errors. Its output bears Benz’s name and reflects his choices. This is common in the post-institutional research landscape that has emerged alongside the coalition Benz inhabits. Substacks, podcasts, YouTube channels, and single-founder foundations now occupy functional space that was previously occupied by think tanks, journals, and academic centers. The new form has advantages. It produces faster, reaches audiences more directly, and escapes the specific coalition constraints of the older institutional forms. It has costs. The absence of editorial constraint produces a specific kind of drift. Claims that would have been challenged at a think tank do not get challenged at a substack. Errors that would have been corrected in a journal do not get corrected on a podcast. The audience, which is selecting for the content the institution produces, cannot easily distinguish between well-supported and weakly-supported claims because the claims arrive in the same format with the same confidence. Benz operates inside this post-institutional form. His work carries its characteristic features. The features are not specific to Benz. They are the features of the form.
Benz’s expertise, such as it is, depends on tacit knowledge acquired through his State Department tenure, his earlier research, and his immersion in the censorship beat. The tacit knowledge is real. Benz knows things about how the apparatus functions that an outside observer would not know. The tacit knowledge also cannot be verified by his audience. His audience takes his representations on trust, grounded in the credential, the confidence, and the coalition’s endorsement of him. This structure is inherently vulnerable to the specific failure mode where the expert’s tacit knowledge is colored by coalition interests without the audience being able to detect the coloring.
Both Benz and the disinformation researchers he targets have institutional positions that depend on coalition support. Both frame their work as public service against powerful opponents. Both produce output shaped by what their specific audiences reward. The symmetry is not total. The specific institutional settings differ. The specific coalitions differ. The audiences differ. But the structural features are closer than either side would acknowledge. The disinformation researchers are not neutral scholars whose work is being misrepresented by Benz. Some of their work displays the same coalition-shaped features that Benz’s displays. Benz is not a neutral observer exposing a captured apparatus. His work displays the same coalition-shaped features that the apparatus he targets displays.
The implication for readers of Benz’s work, and of the disinformation research he targets, is that careful consumption requires a skepticism that neither coalition will supply. The reader has to do the work of asking what each specific claim would need to show to be credible, which claims pass that test, which claims fail it, and which claims are being offered with more confidence than the evidence supports. This is difficult work that most readers do not do, which is why coalition intellectual work operates at all. If readers did the work, the coalition would not be able to sustain the claims at the intensity it currently supports. The readers’ failure to do the work is not a defect of the readers. It is a function of the cognitive economics of modern information consumption.

Actor-Network Theory

Actor-Network Theory, as developed by Bruno Latour (1947-2022), Michel Callon (b. 1945), and John Law (b. 1946), gives an unusual angle on Mike Benz because Benz already does something resembling ANT in his own work. He follows actants. He traces grants from DARPA to Stanford’s Internet Observatory to the Election Integrity Partnership to platform trust and safety teams to White House liaisons. He treats the linkages as constituting an entity he calls the censorship industrial complex. ANT recognizes the move. It is what Latour called following the actors.
Applied to Benz himself, the theory produces a different picture than Benz’s admirers or critics tend to draw.
The figure called Mike Benz emerges from an assembly of human and non-human actants. The State Department line credentials him. The Foundation for Freedom Online gives him an institutional address. Tucker Carlson multiplies him to one audience. Joe Rogan multiplies him to another. Congressional Republicans translate him into oversight ammunition. Twitter compresses his arguments into clips. None of these alone produces Benz. The Benz who circulates publicly is the network’s output.
Non-human actants do heavy work here. The org chart format performs enrollment that prose cannot. When Benz shows a network diagram during a livestream, the diagram itself acts. Viewers feel they have seen connections rather than merely heard claims. PDFs of grants and contracts function as actants because they can be screenshotted and circulated. The screenshot is a small machine for compressing ambiguous documents into apparent proof. The platform algorithm rewards the visual form. The form selects the content.
Translation, in Callon’s sense, fits Benz’s account well. Government agencies cannot legally censor most political speech. They translate their interests through NGOs and academic partners. Those partners translate the interests into trust and safety recommendations. Platforms translate the recommendations into terms-of-service enforcement. Each step transforms the original interest while keeping the chain intact. Latour and Callon described this as the chain of translation. Benz calls it laundering. The descriptive content overlaps. The moral coloring differs.
Obligatory passage points also fit. Benz argues that platform content moderation became an obligatory passage point for political speech between roughly 2018 and 2022. To reach an audience, speech had to pass the gate. The gate was shaped by partnerships among government, academic, and NGO actants. Whoever shapes the passage point shapes the field.
Here ANT pushes back on Benz in a useful way. The symmetry principle says do not pre-decide which network is the conspiracy and which is the public interest. Trace associations on both sides. Applied symmetrically, the network Benz opposes and the network now producing Benz look structurally similar. Both link government actors, NGOs, academic centers, media figures, and funders. Both translate interests through chains of allied actants. Both produce black-boxed entities that function as single agents in public argument. The censorship industrial complex is one such black box. Russian disinformation is another. ANT treats both with suspicion, not because the underlying associations are imaginary but because the unified agency attributed to them is usually an artifact of polemic.
The serious question is not whether the network Benz describes exists. It exists. ANT expects such networks around any contested policy domain. The question is whether the network has the unified will Benz often imputes to it, or whether it is a looser assemblage of partial alignments, careerist incentives, ideological convergences, and bureaucratic momentum. ANT tends toward the second answer for almost every network it examines. Coordination is real. Coordination is rarely as tight as opponents claim.
Stability is an achievement in ANT, not a default. Networks dissolve when their translations stop working. The censorship network Benz describes peaked around 2020-2022 and has lost ground since. Musk’s purchase of Twitter broke a passage point. The Murthy v. Missouri litigation pressured another. The 2024 election broke several more. Stanford Internet Observatory wound down. The Election Integrity Partnership ended. ANT predicts this fragility. Networks that look monolithic at peak often fragment quickly when key actants defect or platforms change hands.
Benz’s own rise tracks the fragmentation of the network he opposes. He became visible because the network that excluded him lost its passage points. New passage points opened. Carlson became one. X became another. Rogan became another. Benz now occupies a node in a network that benefits from his framing, funds his work, amplifies his clips, and constrains what he can say. The constraint is not censorious. It is associational. Audiences enroll the speaker as much as the speaker enrolls them. The Benz who survives in this network is the one the network can use.
If you wanted to write Benz from inside ANT, you would write him as an effect rather than a cause. The State Department alumnus, the foundation, the diagrams, the platforms, the hosts, the audiences, the litigation, the political cycle, the documents – these collaborate to produce a figure who can credibly say what he says. Remove any one of them and the figure dissolves or shifts shape. He is the network speaking.

Alliance Theory v Actor-Network Theory

Overall, Alliance Theory (AT) yields more for Benz. ANT yields more on some aspects of Benz.
The Benz case turns on a coalition migration. Frame Game to State Department to FFO. AT was built for this question. Same analytical form across the migration, different subject, different audience, different coalition, different income source. AT names the migration and predicts what the new coalition rewards and forbids. ANT can describe the assembly producing the current Benz but lacks native vocabulary for why an actant transits between assemblies and carries skill while shedding positions. ANT brackets motivation. AT addresses it.
AT also names the asymmetric standards across Benz’s output: perpetrator, victim, and attributional biases applied differently to allies and enemies. The asymmetry is a distinctive feature of his prose. ANT’s symmetry principle refuses to take sides on which network tells the truth, which protects the method against polemic but blunts it on this point.
AT generates a list of costly truths Benz cannot say. Either he says them or he does not. The current record is that he does not. ANT does not generate that list.
ANT captures the non-human actants the AT essay underweights. The diagram performing enrollment work that prose cannot. The screenshot as a small machine for compressing ambiguous documents into apparent proof. The algorithm as a selector of forms. These features account for a lot of Benz’s traction and AT acknowledges them only in passing.
ANT also predicts network fragility better. The censorship network Benz opposes peaked around 2020-2022 and has weakened sharply since Musk, Murthy, and 2024. ANT expects this kind of collapse. Stable-looking networks dissolve when key actants defect or platforms change hands. AT has a strong theory of coalition formation and a weaker theory of coalition collapse.
The third ANT advantage is methodological discipline against an AT failure mode. AT can slide into pure motive attribution in which every silence becomes evidence of coalition pressure. Paul Bloom raised this exact concern with Pinsof. The unfalsifiability risk is real. ANT’s neutrality is a check. If you write Benz using only AT, the prose tends to assume the analyst knows what Benz cannot say and why he cannot say it. ANT keeps you closer to the associations and makes you trust the description.
The frames complement each other in a particular way. AT explains why Benz produces what he produces and what he cannot say. ANT explains what gives the output traction once produced: the platforms, the visual forms, the chains of amplification. AT is the logic of coalition. ANT is the materialization of that logic in a network with its own grip on him.

The Tacit

The censorship infrastructure he describes, the DHS contractors, the academic disinformation researchers, the content moderation teams, all claim a form of expertise. They say they can identify disinformation, coordinated inauthentic behavior, and state-sponsored manipulation in ways that require specialized training and access to data that the public cannot see. That is a tacit knowledge claim. It asks for trust on the basis of credentials and process rather than transparent evidence.
He argues that the expertise is a cover, that the real function of the censorship infrastructure is political rather than epistemic. He cannot fully refute the tacit knowledge claim from the outside, because by definition he lacks the insider access to do so. But he does not need to refute it. He only needs to generate enough documented anomalies, enough cases where the censorship decisions track political outcomes rather than disinformation, to make the trust relationship untenable. Turner would recognize this as the standard way outsiders attack expert authority. You cannot beat tacit knowledge on its own terms. You can only show that the institution’s behavior is inconsistent with the values it claims to serve.
Turner also argues that tacit knowledge communities reproduce themselves through socialization rather than explicit transmission. You become a disinformation researcher by entering a network of practitioners, funders, conferences, and publications that shape your intuitions about what counts as a threat. That socialization process is invisible from outside. It looks like expertise but functions more like enculturation into a coalition’s worldview. Benz’s NGO diagrams are, among other things, maps of that socialization network. He is showing his audience the infrastructure through which a particular set of intuitions about political danger gets produced and legitimated.
If expertise cannot be made fully explicit, it cannot be fully accountable to democratic publics. That is a structural feature of how complex institutions operate. Benz treats it as a conspiracy, which is where he overreaches. But the underlying tension Turner identifies is real. Institutions that claim expert authority over public discourse while remaining opaque about their methods and criteria are difficult to square with democratic self-governance. Benz’s audience feels that difficulty without being able to name it. Turner names it precisely, though he would not draw Benz’s conclusions from it.
The censorship debate is not primarily about whether specific pieces of content were correctly or incorrectly moderated. It is about whether tacit expert authority over public discourse is compatible with democratic legitimacy at all. That is a harder and more important question than either Benz’s critics or his supporters usually engage with. Benz wins audiences partly because he is gesturing at that harder question even when his specific claims are contestable.

A Big Misunderstanding

Benz operates on a version of the misunderstanding myth even while exposing what he frames as deliberate institutional deception. His implicit argument is: if people understood the censorship infrastructure as clearly as he does, they would demand its dismantling. Pinsof predicts it will fail, not because Benz’s evidence is weak, but because the people who run and fund the censorship infrastructure understand what they are doing perfectly well. They are not confused. They are winning a coalition competition and they know it. More documentation from Benz will not change their behavior because their behavior was never caused by insufficient information.
The millions of people who follow Benz and feel vindicated by his diagrams are not people who lacked information about censorship and now have it. They are people who were already in a coalition competition with the professional class that runs these institutions. Benz gave them a better weapon, a more legible vocabulary for a fight already underway. Pinsof would say the audience’s prior sense of threat was accurate, not a misunderstanding, and that Benz’s contribution was rhetorical and coalitional rather than epistemic.
Benz presents as a truth-teller exposing hidden coordination. Pinsof asks: what coalition does Benz serve, what are his material and status interests, and how do those interests shape what he chooses to document and what he leaves out? This is a question about selection. Every network diagram Benz draws has a frame around it, and the frame excludes as much as it includes. The right-wing funding networks, the nationalist coalitions, the institutional interests of the people platforming Benz, those do not appear in the diagrams. Pinsof would say that omission is not accidental and not a misunderstanding. It is coalition rationality operating exactly as natural selection designed it to.
Benz’s stated motive is defending free speech and democratic self-governance. Those are real values and he probably holds them. But his coalition position means that free speech protection applies selectively, that the speech most urgently defended happens to be the speech that serves his coalition’s interests. Pinsof would not call this hypocrisy exactly. He would call it the normal condition of moral vocabulary operating as a coalition technology. Everyone does this. The professional class running the censorship infrastructure also believes it is defending democracy. Both sides have sincere stated motives. Both sides have coalition interests that shape what those motives cash out to in practice.
The censorship infrastructure will not be dismantled because its operators came to understand Benz’s critique. It might shrink if the coalition that funds it loses power, which is a political outcome, not an epistemic one. Benz’s work accelerates that political outcome by strengthening his coalition.

Charisma & Social Paradoxes

Benz says he is just following the documents, tracing the funding flows, reading the contracts. He presents as an archivist rather than an advocate. But the effect is enormous status accumulation inside his coalition, a platform that now includes Musk and congressional committees, and a moral vocabulary that frames his coalition’s interests as the defense of civilization itself. If Benz presented openly as a right-wing coalition intellectual building influence, the spell would break. Framed as a lone researcher following the evidence wherever it leads, the status gain feels like a byproduct of integrity rather than its goal.
Benz came from relative obscurity as Frame Game Radio, a pseudonymous YouTube presence, and built influence by presenting as someone too busy with the documents to care about fame. The persona of the obsessive researcher who cannot stop because the findings are too important is itself a status-maximizing posture, but it conceals the maximization behind apparent indifference to it.
Benz presents as a truth-teller alienated from the professional class he once belonged to, a former State Department official who saw the machine from inside and cannot unsee it. That biography is real, which is what makes the paradox work. His authenticity is not fabricated. But the self he presents as authentic happens to map precisely onto what his coalition wants: someone credentialed enough to be credible, alienated enough to be trustworthy, and technically fluent enough to make the network diagrams feel like proof rather than argument.
Benz says things about the national security state and its domestic operations that career journalists and academics will not say, partly from institutional loyalty and partly from career self-preservation. Within his coalition those violations read as courage. Outside it they read as recklessness or bad faith.
Benz’s audience is not just passively receiving his performance. They are actively inferring that he is the kind of person who would not perform, and that inference is what produces the experience of authenticity. The more fluently Benz executes the not-performing posture, the more certain the audience becomes that no posture is present. This is symbiotic deception. The audience benefits from an analyst who has done real work. Benz benefits from trust that accrues precisely because it does not appear to be solicited. Both parties gain from the arrangement, which is why neither party has much incentive to examine it closely.
Benz is charismatic for one coalition and actively anti-charismatic for another, and the reason is structural rather than personal. For the populist right and heterodox dissident audience, his social paradoxes are legible and credible. His unpopular opinions are unpopular with the right targets. His not-caring is believable because he has paid real costs for it. His technical fluency reads as competence rather than credentialism. For the professional class his work targets, the same performances read as bad faith, selective presentation, and coalition motivated reasoning. The charisma is in the fit between his performances and the specific detection systems of specific audiences.
The social paradoxes that make Benz compelling inside his coalition are exactly what make him unpersuasive outside it. His performed authenticity reads as manipulation to the audience most resistant to his argument.

Watergate As Democratic Ritual

Jeffrey Alexander says modern rituals are never automatic. They are contingent achievements dependent on five conditions: consensus, threat to the center, institutional social control, elite defection, ritual process. Three of the five conditions are in place for Benz’s coalition. Internal consensus on the right has formed. Elite defection has occurred, with Benz himself as the leading case. The rituals have been produced through Twitter Files, congressional testimony, and the House Judiciary reports. The two missing conditions are the killer ones. National consensus across polarized camps has not formed and cannot form in current conditions. Most institutional social control organs outside the Trump administration remain on the other side. Without those two, Benz gets a coalition ritual, not a national one. He can produce a Watergate for half the country. He cannot produce one for the country.
Third, the scandal-manufacturing point. Alexander’s closing line, that scandals are not born but made, reframes Benz entirely. He is not primarily an investigator or a pundit. He is a scandal entrepreneur. Success is not getting the facts right. Success is achieving generalization. Alexander lets you see him as a maker of pollution, an attempt to transfer the sacred-evil classification from old conservative targets like communism and crime onto new ones like the censorship apparatus. His network diagrams are not metaphors. They are symbolic classification systems of the kind Alexander tabulates, and Benz builds them for the same reason.
The internet changes the ritual calculus in ways the 1972 case cannot address. Watergate required three national networks delivering a liminal televised experience to a largely unified audience. Benz’s rituals run on podcasts and X, where liminality is tribe-specific. You can create a sacred space for twenty million listeners without the rest of the country ever entering it. Coalition rituals may be the only kind now available. The national ritual might be a mid-century artifact that no cultural entrepreneur can reconstruct regardless of skill.
Alexander also assumes generalization pulls attention upward toward sacred civic values most citizens share. Benz’s harder problem is that the sacred center has split. What the right treats as sacred — free speech absolutism, the First Amendment as civic religion — the left does not. Each side has its own altar. Watergate worked because Americans still had one civic religion to which the ritual could appeal. Benz has no shared altar to pull his audience toward.

Benz Under Hugo Mercier and John M. Doris

The censorship-industrial complex must have substantial influence over public belief for it to be worth the investment and coordination Benz documents. Benz treats the apparatus as powerful, a system that shaped Covid discourse, Ukraine discourse, election discourse, and the Hunter Biden laptop story with decisive effects on what the public thinks. The implicit model is that speech suppression combined with narrative promotion moves populations. Remove the suppression and the narratives collapse. Install the suppression and the narratives stabilize.
Mercier’s evidence cuts against this at the reception level. For the populations whose vital interests were touched by Covid policy, and for the populations whose stakes were raised by the specific controversies the suppression targeted, vigilance ran hard. Parents of school-age children ran vigilance on school closure policies because the stakes affected their daily lives. Workers whose jobs required vaccination ran vigilance on vaccine safety claims because the stakes affected their bodies and livelihoods. Voters with strong prior commitments about the 2020 election ran vigilance on election integrity claims because the stakes affected their political identification. In these populations, the suppression did not produce acceptance of the promoted narratives. It produced skepticism, workarounds, alternative information networks, and the substantial bloc of the electorate that now distrusts most institutional sources. The apparatus did not succeed against these populations. It failed against them, and failed in ways that generated the backlash Mercier would predict.
For populations whose vital interests were not directly touched by the specific controversies, the narratives the apparatus promoted reached as reflective belief. These populations professed acceptance of the official Covid story, the official Ukraine story, the official Hunter Biden story, without the beliefs driving behavior in the ways Benz’s framework requires. They complied with mandates because the situations rewarded compliance, not because they had been persuaded. They supported Ukraine policy because affiliation with their side required supporting it, not because they had processed arguments for the policy. They dismissed the laptop story because dismissing it was the low-cost option in their social networks, not because they had examined evidence and found the story false. The apparatus did not penetrate their vigilance because vigilance was not engaged. The apparatus supplied the framing their reflective beliefs could absorb without cost.
The apparatus Benz describes is therefore working at a different level than his framework claims. It is not producing intuitive belief in populations with stakes. Those populations are running vigilance that resists. It is not producing behavioral compliance through belief change in populations without stakes. Those populations are complying because situations reward compliance, and the belief framings are incidental to the situations doing the behavioral work. The apparatus exists. Its effect on mass opinion is smaller than Benz credits. What the apparatus actually does is manage the discourse of populations already aligned with official institutions, supplying them with framings their prior commitments can ratify, while failing to reach the populations whose stakes activated vigilance against it.
Doris extends the analysis. Even granting, for argument, that the apparatus shifted beliefs at the margin in some populations, whether those belief shifts produced the behavioral outcomes Benz attributes to them depends on situational features the apparatus does not control. Voting behavior, consumer behavior, compliance behavior, and political mobilization all track situational features of employment, community, peer networks, and local institutions more tightly than they track belief. A population that absorbed what the apparatus wanted it to absorb and still lost jobs, watched neighborhoods deteriorate, or saw peer networks shift would change behavior regardless of what the apparatus accomplished at the level of narrative. The behavioral outcomes of the Covid period, vaccine resistance, shifts in trust of public health, political realignment among working-class voters, emerged from situations the apparatus did not engineer. The apparatus supplied vocabulary for some of the outcomes but did not cause them.
This reading explains a pattern Benz’s framework handles poorly. The apparatus has become less effective over time, not more. The Covid suppression produced substantial public backlash. The election suppression efforts produced the Twitter Files and subsequent litigation that forced much of the apparatus into retreat. The Biden administration’s Disinformation Governance Board collapsed within weeks. The populations the apparatus most wanted to manage have become more skeptical, better organized, and more legally protected.
His presentations have a specific shape. They begin with documented institutional relationships, move to claims about the effects of those relationships on public discourse, and end with implications about the scale of the threat and the urgency of dismantling the apparatus. The documented relationships are the strongest part. The claims about effects are where the overreach occurs. The implications about threat scale depend on the claims about effects, and therefore inherit the overreach.
Benz’s audience runs vigilance in proportion to its stakes. The audience that finds Benz most compelling is the audience whose vital interests are touched by the controversies he describes. Covid policy touched their lives. Election rules touched their political identification. Platform moderation touched their ability to communicate politically. This audience runs vigilance on Benz’s claims and accepts those that fit prior commitments and match the documented institutional reality. The audience’s acceptance is intuitive belief that drives behavior: subscribing to Benz’s Foundation, supporting his legal efforts, voting for candidates who promise to dismantle the apparatus, demanding institutional reform.
For audiences without stakes in the controversies, Benz’s claims reach as reflective belief. These audiences accept the documented institutional reality, profess concern about censorship in abstract terms, and largely do not behave differently because of the acceptance. The apparatus’s defenders are largely in this population, professing commitment to democratic norms and free expression while accepting the apparatus’s operations as reasonable responses to specific threats the apparatus identifies. The commitment and the acceptance coexist without contradiction because both are reflective beliefs that do not require behavioral consistency to be maintained.
Benz’s audience’s behavior is produced principally by situations, not by his arguments. The audience that supports Benz exists in situations that reward support. Independent media ecosystems, specific political networks, professional positions that benefit from the critique of mainstream institutions. The audience’s intuitive beliefs about the apparatus are real, but the behaviors that express those beliefs, donations, citations, legal actions, political votes, are produced by situations that make those behaviors salient and low-cost. The audience that does not support Benz exists in situations where support would be costly. Professional networks that penalize dissent from institutional positions, career paths that require not antagonizing the apparatus’s defenders, social circles that treat Benz’s concerns as conspiratorial. The non-support is produced by situations, not by considered rejection of his arguments.
Benz’s rise required the apparatus to remain visible and controversial. His funding, his audience, his political alliances, his institutional position at the Foundation for Freedom Online all depend on the apparatus functioning as his framework describes. If the apparatus collapsed or turned out to be less effective than his framework requires, his career would collapse with it. If the apparatus expanded and succeeded at the scale his framework claims, his warnings would be vindicated but his capacity to operate would also be suppressed. His position requires a specific middle ground in which the apparatus is documentable, threatening, and still possible to describe. The situation rewards producing content that maintains this middle ground.
Benz’s public statements have grown more sweeping over time, the claims more categorical, the scope of the alleged conspiracy broader. A framework that treats this as revelation of what was always there assumes a dispositional constant in Benz that situational features cannot alter. A Mercier-Doris reading sees the intensification as the predictable effect of audience stakes and algorithmic situational reward. The audience that rewards the most sweeping version of the thesis is the audience most engaged. The algorithmic and financial incentives of the platforms Benz uses reward sharper framings. Benz’s career situation therefore selects for intensification. The intensification runs ahead of what the documentation supports.
If the apparatus is as powerful as Benz claims, why has his critique of it flourished? A genuinely effective censorship-industrial complex would have suppressed Benz. The fact that Benz reaches millions of viewers through platforms the apparatus supposedly controls, that he appears on Tucker Carlson and Joe Rogan, that his Foundation receives substantial traffic, all suggest the apparatus is less effective than he describes or that it tolerates critics of a certain kind because the tolerance serves its own legitimation. Either reading weakens the framework. Benz addresses this by describing himself as a rare exception the apparatus has not yet succeeded in suppressing. The Mercier-Doris reading says the apparatus is not capable of the systematic suppression the framework requires, and the coalitions that oppose the apparatus have alternative media, legal resources, and political alliances sufficient to route around its efforts.
The policy implications diverge sharply between Benz’s framework and the Mercier-Doris reading. If the apparatus is effective, the urgent task is dismantling it. Benz’s recommendations follow: defund the programs, prosecute the coordination, shut down the institutional nodes. If the apparatus is less effective than Benz credits, the urgent task is different. The populations whose stakes activated vigilance have already accomplished most of what dismantling would accomplish. Their vigilance is now engaged against the apparatus, their alternative media networks are established, their political representation has shifted accordingly. Further dismantling may be justified on principle, but the behavioral effects will be smaller than Benz’s framing suggests. The public is not waiting for the apparatus to release them into accurate belief. The public has largely already routed around the apparatus through alternative media, stakes-proportional vigilance that rejected the apparatus’s framings, and situational shifts that reward skepticism.
This reading does not deflate the apparatus’s existence or importance. The apparatus is real and worth documenting. The institutional relationships Benz maps are worth public attention. The legal and political responses to the apparatus are worth pursuing. The deflation concerns only the claim that the apparatus substantially shapes mass opinion. That claim runs against the cognitive evidence on how populations with stakes process institutional messaging, and against the behavioral evidence on what actually produces the political outcomes Benz’s framework attributes to apparatus effectiveness.
The descriptive work Benz does, mapping the relationships, tracking the personnel, documenting the funding, has independent value regardless of what one concludes about apparatus effectiveness. Anyone studying the postwar security state’s relationship to information flow, the specific architecture of post-9/11 expansion into domestic discourse management, or the Covid-era attempt to institutionalize content moderation across platforms and agencies, benefits from Benz’s research. The overreach in his causal claims does not contaminate the descriptive value of what he has gathered.
Benz will continue producing the framework the situation rewards. His audience will continue to find him compelling because their stakes and prior commitments align with his framing. His critics will continue to dismiss him because their situations make dismissal low-cost. The apparatus will continue to decline in effectiveness because stakes-proportional vigilance has engaged against it and situations have shifted to impose costs on its operators. Benz will interpret the decline as evidence that the apparatus is regrouping under pressure. The decline is better explained as the predictable outcome once populations with stakes activated their vigilance against the apparatus’s operations. Benz’s framework cannot name this explanation because his career depends on the apparatus remaining a present threat. The situation selects for the framing.
What survives the combined critique is a smaller but genuinely useful Benz. The small Benz is a careful documenter of institutional relationships between government, NGOs, universities, and platforms. His research on the mechanics of content moderation, the funding architecture of disinformation studies, and the personnel movements between agencies and platforms provides material that would not otherwise be publicly available in accessible form. This work has real value for researchers, journalists, and legal advocates. The small Benz also signals reliably to an audience whose prior commitments and stakes make his framing useful, providing vocabulary for concerns these audiences already held.
The larger Benz, the theorist whose censorship-industrial complex shapes public belief with decisive effectiveness and requires urgent dismantling to restore free discourse, rests on the inflated estimate of apparatus effectiveness that the cognitive and behavioral evidence together dismantles. Populations with stakes resisted the apparatus. Populations without stakes absorbed its framings as reflective belief that did not drive behavior. Behavior was produced by situations the apparatus did not engineer. The apparatus existed. It existed as a coordinated institutional effort. It did not produce the effects the framework requires.
The deepest irony in Benz’s position is that his own career existence falsifies his framework’s central claim. Benz has built a substantial public profile critiquing an apparatus he describes as capable of suppressing dissent. The profile exists. The apparatus is presumably aware of it. The apparatus has not suppressed it. Benz’s success is therefore evidence against the apparatus effectiveness his framework requires. A framework that cannot account for its own proponent’s public presence has a structural problem. The Mercier-Doris reading resolves this by specifying that the apparatus operates within the cognitive and behavioral limits both frameworks describe. Benz succeeds because the apparatus cannot do what his framework says it does. The framework therefore cannot be fully correct. The success is the evidence against the thesis the success is built on.
This does not diminish Benz’s actual contribution, which is the documentary work. It relocates the contribution to its proper domain. Benz is a researcher who has mapped important institutional relationships and a signaler who supplies useful vocabulary to audiences whose stakes align with his framing. He is not the prophet of a suppressive apparatus whose scale and effectiveness require the comprehensive response his framework recommends. The actual situation, in which populations with stakes have engaged their vigilance and situations have shifted toward skepticism of institutional information flow, is better than the situation Benz’s framework describes, and the response that situation requires is smaller and more targeted than the response Benz’s framework recommends. The honest assessment distinguishes the contribution from the overreach, preserves the contribution, and notes the overreach without treating Benz as dishonest. He produces what his situation rewards. What the situation rewards does not fully match what the evidence supports.

Benz as Pseudoargument: A Pinsof Reading

Benz writes long X threads, gives podcast and YouTube interviews, and publishes reports and articles through the Foundation for Freedom Online. The X threads are the distinctive feature of his output. A typical Benz thread runs forty or fifty posts, presents a sequence of documents or quotations or organizational charts with brief commentary, and develops a narrative about how some institutional actor, typically a government agency or a non-governmental organization receiving government funding, is engaged in censorship or influence operations. The threads are visually documented. Screenshots of grant applications, organizational structures, contract documents, and public statements appear throughout. The format performs the appearance of evidence-based argument at unusual length for the platform.
The first thing Pinsof’s framework registers is that the format does substantial work for the audience that examination on the merits would not necessarily support. The screenshots are real. The documents are real. The organizational connections are real in the sense that the entities Benz describes do exist and do receive the funding he documents. The work the framework’s diagnostic has to perform is identifying what Benz then does with the documented material, because the documentation itself does not establish the conclusions the threads draw from it. Funding flows from government agencies to academic researchers and to non-governmental organizations are public record, and the existence of those flows does not establish the existence of the coordinated censorship apparatus Benz describes.
This is the central analytical move, and it requires careful articulation. Benz’s threads typically follow a pattern. A document or organizational chart is presented. The document shows that some entity received funding from some source, or that some entity participated in some meeting, or that some entity was structured in some particular way. The thread then connects the documented fact to a broader claim about the coordinated operation of a censorship industrial complex. The connection is typically presented as if it follows from the documented fact, but the inference is doing work the documentation does not support. Public funding for research on online misinformation does not establish that the funded researchers are engaged in censorship at the direction of the funding agency. Participation in a meeting on platform governance does not establish that the participants are coordinating to suppress political speech. Organizational connections among entities working on related questions do not establish a unified operation with the strategic intent Benz attributes to it.
Pinsof’s framework reads this kind of inferential leap as a structural feature of the format. The X thread cannot perform the kind of careful inference that would distinguish documented connections from coordinated operations. The format requires sharp framings and rapid movement through documentary material, and the framings supply the inferential connections that the documentation alone does not establish. The reader who follows the thread typically does not pause to evaluate whether each inferential step is warranted. The format does not invite that kind of pause. It invites accumulation of impressions, and the impressions accumulate toward the conclusion the thread is built to deliver.
The diagnostic check produces several findings.
Benz does not engage the strongest versions of opposing analyses. The strongest versions of opposing analyses on the questions he addresses include serious academic work on platform governance, on the development of content moderation policies after 2016, on the genuine problems of foreign influence operations that the institutions Benz attacks were created to address, and on the analytical literature distinguishing legitimate research on misinformation from the coordinated censorship operation Benz describes. The threads do not engage this literature at its strongest. They engage caricatures of the literature or its weakest practitioners, and the caricatures are presented as if they were the analyses serious defenders of the institutional response would offer.
This is the pattern Pinsof’s framework identifies as pseudoargument. The form does not engage the strongest opposing case, and the failure to engage is structural rather than incidental. A serious response to Benz would have to take his documented material seriously and explain what the documented connections actually establish and what they do not establish. The serious response would also have to acknowledge that some of what Benz documents is real, that institutional responses to misinformation have sometimes overreached, and that the legitimate concerns about platform governance have produced apparatuses that deserve scrutiny. A response that engaged at this level would complicate Benz’s framings without dismissing them. The mainstream institutional response to Benz has not engaged at this level, and the failure to engage has left Benz’s framings substantially uncontested in the registers his audience consumes.
The chant function operates with unusual visibility in Benz’s output. The phrases “censorship industrial complex,” “blob,” “permanent state,” “color revolution,” “USAID,” and a small set of others recur across thread after thread, interview after interview. The phrases do work that the underlying analyses do not have to perform on each occasion. By the hundredth iteration, the phrases have acquired the feel of established analytical categories for readers who have followed the work, regardless of whether any individual usage has supplied the warrant the categories assume. The repetition is the chant function Pinsof identifies, and it operates in Benz’s output at higher intensity than in most of the cases the framework has examined.
The rallying function operates clearly. Benz’s audience is a coalition of populist-right viewers, libertarian skeptics of the security state, anti-establishment progressives concerned about civil liberties, and a broader heterodox readership that experiences the post-2016 institutional response to online misinformation as evidence of a coordinated suppression of dissent. The work creates common knowledge for this coalition. It establishes shared references, shared villains, shared analytical reflexes, and a shared vocabulary that the coalition uses for its internal communication. Benz has done as much as any single figure to give this coalition a usable analytical framework, and the framework has been adopted by writers and politicians who have not credited Benz directly but who have absorbed his framings and his vocabulary.
The rationalization function operates through the documentary apparatus. The screenshots, the organizational charts, the contract documents, and the grant filings give the audience the materials it would use to defend the framings against challenge. A viewer who has absorbed Benz’s analyses can cite the underlying documents when the analyses are challenged, and the citations carry a kind of weight that purely rhetorical claims would not carry. Pinsof’s framework reads this as a sophisticated form of the rationalization function. The function is not simply to confirm priors but to give the audience the empirical materials that allow them to defend their priors against opponents who would challenge them on empirical grounds. The function is real, and it is part of why Benz’s influence has reached so far so quickly.
The status-attack function dominates the output. The targets are typically institutions and the figures who staff them. The State Department’s Global Engagement Center, the Stanford Internet Observatory, the Election Integrity Partnership, USAID, the National Endowment for Democracy, and a range of other entities receive sustained negative treatment across the body of work. The treatment is often substantively warranted on particular points. These entities have made decisions that deserve criticism, and the criticism Benz offers sometimes lands. The treatment is also sometimes excessive in ways that the documentary material does not support. The cumulative effect is the lowering of the targeted entities’ standing in the eyes of the audience, and the lowering is achieved through the demonstration of patterns the targets cannot easily refute in the registers the audience consumes.
The status-defense function for the coalition operates through Benz’s positioning of his work as exposure of suppressed truth. The threads regularly emphasize that mainstream institutions cannot or will not engage the material Benz documents, that journalists who should be investigating the censorship apparatus are themselves implicated in it, and that the audience is receiving information through Benz that no mainstream source would supply. The framing positions the audience as the participants in a counter-establishment that has access to honest analysis the mainstream cannot provide. Pinsof’s framework reads this as a coalition status operation. The audience’s standing rises through its access to Benz’s analyses, and the rising standing is part of what the operation provides.
The concealment function operates with unusual subtlety. Benz presents himself as a former State Department official applying his institutional knowledge to expose what the institutions are actually doing. The presentation supplies credentialing that the audience would not otherwise have access to. The presentation also obscures the earlier Frame Game identity and the racial-nationalist content that identity produced. The current public persona has been carefully constructed to present a particular kind of authority, and the construction is the concealment function operating at the level of the author’s identity. Pinsof’s framework reads sustained concealment of this kind as a marker that the work is performing operations the operations themselves cannot openly acknowledge. An author whose previous identity included racial-nationalist content and who now presents himself as an analyst of institutional capture has reasons to manage the relationship between the previous identity and the current one, and the management is part of what the framework’s diagnostic has to register.
A complication is worth dwelling on, because it bears on whether the framework’s verdict is fair. Benz’s work has identified real patterns. The post-2016 institutional response to online misinformation did produce coordination among government agencies, academic researchers, and platform companies that was not fully transparent at the time and that has subsequently been documented through litigation, congressional investigations, and the release of internal documents. The “Twitter Files” releases by Matt Taibbi, Michael Shellenberger, Bari Weiss, and others documented some of the same patterns Benz had been describing. Court decisions in Missouri v. Biden and related cases have found that some of the coordination Benz documented did cross constitutional lines. The pattern recognition is sometimes accurate, and the accuracy has built Benz’s credibility with audiences who have watched the patterns be confirmed by subsequent developments.
Pinsof’s framework does not classify accurate pattern recognition as pseudoargument. The framework’s diagnostic operates on whether the form fits the function of inquiry, and accurate pattern recognition can occur within either the inquiry function or the pseudoargument function. The relevant question is what Benz then does with the patterns, and the answer is that he extends them into framings that the patterns themselves do not establish. The existence of post-2016 coordination on misinformation does not establish that the coordination is the totalizing censorship industrial complex Benz describes. The existence of color revolution playbooks at NGOs that received government funding does not establish that those playbooks are being deployed against domestic American political dissent in the coordinated fashion Benz attributes to them. The inferences from documented patterns to totalizing operations are doing work the documentation cannot support, and the inferences are presented as if they followed from the documentation rather than as the additional analytical claims they actually are.
This is the same pattern the framework identified in Sailer’s work, and the comparison is illuminating. Both writers identify real patterns that the mainstream press has been slow to address. Both writers extend the patterns into framings that the patterns themselves do not establish. Both writers operate in formats that do not require the inferential work to be carefully performed. Both writers have built coalitions around their framings, and both writers have influenced ecosystems of subsequent writers who have absorbed the framings without crediting them. The framework’s verdict on both writers is similar. The pattern recognition is real and sometimes valuable. The structural function of the work is coalition consolidation rather than inquiry, and the function is what the framework’s diagnostic identifies regardless of whether the underlying patterns are accurate.
What distinguishes Benz from Sailer is the speed of the operation and the institutional credentialing that supports it. Sailer built his readership over thirty years through cumulative output. Benz built his over three years through coordinated deployment across X, podcasts, and major media platforms. Sailer’s credentialing is the cumulative force of his pattern recognition over decades. Benz’s credentialing includes a State Department title and the institutional weight of the Foundation for Freedom Online. The credentialing supplies authority the audience uses to evaluate the work, and the authority is doing work the analytical content alone would not support. Pinsof’s framework reads this as a more developed form of the rationalization function than Sailer’s case involves. The audience does not have to evaluate the inferences on the merits because the credentialing supplies a substitute for the evaluation.
Several Pinsof diagnostics check out across the body of work.
The work treats opposition as confirmation. When mainstream institutions or academic researchers respond to Benz’s framings, the responses are folded into the work as evidence that the institutions cannot address the patterns honestly. The structure closes the system. A critic who challenges Benz’s inferences is treated as confirming Benz’s broader thesis that the institutional apparatus is unable to engage the censorship operation honestly, and the treatment is a status-defense operation that the framework can identify as such.
The work shows little curiosity about counterexamples that would complicate the framings. The cases where post-2016 institutional responses to misinformation were warranted, where coordination among researchers and platforms was legitimate, where the entities Benz attacks were addressing genuine problems the censorship industrial complex framing cannot accommodate, receive little attention. The asymmetric treatment is structural rather than incidental. The format does not require engagement with counterexamples, and the body of work proceeds without the engagement.
The work is overconfident. The framings are presented as obvious to anyone who is willing to examine the documents honestly, even when the framings rest on inferences that reasonable people examining the same documents could draw differently. The overconfidence is partly a feature of Benz’s style and partly a feature of the format. An X thread that hedged extensively would lose the rhetorical force the format requires. The format rewards confident framing, and the cumulative body of work has the confidence the format produces.
The work engages in deflection. When pressure points emerge on one set of framings, the discussion shifts to another. The breadth of Benz’s range, from State Department operations to NGO funding to platform governance to specific personnel decisions at particular agencies, allows the work to keep moving. A reader following the daily output can see the topics shift in ways that prevent any individual framing from being tested at length. Pinsof’s framework reads sustained motion of this kind as the verbal-sparring function. The motion is not confusion. It is the operation of a body of work that does not require any individual framing to be settled because the body of work as a whole produces the conviction the individual framings are designed to support.
A point of contrast with the cases that have come before clarifies what is distinctive about Benz. His operation differs from Sailer’s in its speed, its multimedia reach, and its institutional credentialing. It differs from Goldberg’s in its anti-establishment positioning rather than its establishment positioning. It differs from Marantz’s in the absence of the prestige magazine apparatus, even as it has acquired functional equivalents in the dissident media ecosystem. It differs from Napolitano’s in the documentary apparatus that the X thread format permits, which Napolitano’s interview format does not support.
What is distinctive about Benz’s case is the combination of features that the framework’s previous applications have not seen combined. The volume of Sailer’s output, the documentary apparatus of Goldberg’s reporting, the institutional credentialing of Marantz’s writing, the coalition-mobilization function of Duke’s autobiography, and the rapid platform deployment of contemporary online journalism are all present in Benz’s operation. The combination produces a kind of pseudoargument that the framework’s previous applications have not had to evaluate, because the combination is itself a new form that has emerged in the post-2020 information environment.
The framework’s diagnostic identifies the operation despite the novelty of the combination. The form does not engage opposing analyses at their strongest. The form does not display the markers of inquiry the inquiry standard requires. The form does not produce accountability to revision when framings are complicated by subsequent evidence. The form does not examine its own categories at their roots. The form performs coalition consolidation, rationalization, status attack, status defense, and concealment under the costume of documentary analysis. The structural pseudoargument character of the work is present despite the documentary apparatus, the institutional credentialing, and the genuine accuracy of some of the pattern recognition.
The framework also illuminates why mainstream responses to Benz have been so unsuccessful. The responses have typically attacked Benz’s earlier identity, his political associations, or the coalition he serves, rather than engaging the documentary material at the level the documents require. The strategy fails because Benz’s influence does not depend primarily on his current credentialing or on the absence of his earlier identity. It depends on the documents themselves, which the responses have not engaged carefully, and on the cumulative force of the body of work, which the responses have not addressed structurally. A reader who comes to Benz through the documents finds the documents intact regardless of what the responses say about the author. The framework predicts this kind of failure when responses attack the author rather than the structural function of the work. To engage Benz’s work effectively, a critic would have to engage the documentary material at its strongest and supply the inquiry-standard analysis the format does not perform. The mainstream press has not done this systematically, and Benz’s influence has accordingly continued to grow within the coalitions his work serves.
A point worth making about the previous identity. The Frame Game material is relevant to the framework’s diagnostic in a particular way. It is not primarily relevant as a moral disqualification of the current work, because the framework does not classify by author morality. It is relevant as evidence about the structural features of the operation. An author who has constructed a current public identity that does not acknowledge a substantial earlier identity is performing the concealment function at the level of identity, and the concealment is part of the operation the framework is examining. The audience that consumes the current work does not generally know about the earlier identity, and the not-knowing is a structural feature of the audience’s relationship to the work. Pinsof’s framework reads structural concealment of this kind as a marker that the operation is performing functions the operation cannot openly acknowledge, and the marker holds regardless of the moral evaluation of either the earlier or the current identity.
The qualification that has applied to the previous cases applies here as well. Pinsof’s framework does not require that pseudoargument be conscious. Benz might believe he is engaged in honest analysis of patterns the mainstream cannot address. The function of an activity is not always transparent to the actor. What the framework requires is that the form fail to fit the claimed function and that the actual function become visible when the form is examined. Benz’s work passes that test. Whatever his subjective experience while producing it, the work performs the operations Pinsof describes, and it performs them with a craft that explains the work’s standing in its target audiences.
The applied verdict is that Benz’s body of work is pseudoargument operating at unusual speed, scale, and influence in a combination of formats that the framework’s previous applications have not had to evaluate together. The documentary apparatus, the institutional credentialing, the cumulative coalition mobilization, and the genuine accuracy of some of the pattern recognition are all parts of an operation that performs coalition consolidation rather than inquiry. The structural diagnostic identifies the work as pseudoargument because the form does not fit the function of persuasion of skeptics. The diagnostic does not deny the work’s accuracy on particular patterns or its influence in the coalitions it serves. It identifies the function the work performs for the audiences it reaches, and the function is the function of coalition consolidation that the framework predicts pseudoargument to perform when the structural features of the form support that function rather than the function of inquiry.

Wikipedia Page

This page is recent, short and reads as written by editors hostile to him. It leads with USAID dismantlement and Stephen Miller speechwriting, gives FFO a short paragraph, and devotes substantial attention to the Frame Game material, Proud Boys self-description, and the Mein Kampf and Great Replacement quotations. The 2020 election denial line appears in the lead. For someone with Benz’s reach across Rogan, Carlson, Musk amplification, congressional testimony, and federal employment under two Trump terms, the page is thin and the framing is one-sided. The relative emptiness is itself the artifact.
Wikipedia’s notability thresholds for political figures are contested ground. Pages on figures the editorial coalition disfavors tend to get nominated for deletion, get rewritten down to stub status, or get larded with the most damaging available sourcing. Pages on figures the coalition favors expand, soften, and accumulate context. The Benz page reads like the first pattern. Most of his work is absent. The biographical material that exists is the material critics want known. The Frame Game disclosure from NBC and the Times sits prominently because Wikipedia’s reliable-sources policy weights mainstream legacy outlets and those outlets covered the disclosure. The censorship work that drives his audience reach is barely described, because the outlets Wikipedia treats as reliable have not covered that work sympathetically.
A figure can have considerable cultural reach and still have a thin or hostile Wikipedia presence if the legacy press coverage available to Wikipedia editors is uniformly hostile. Wikipedia’s neutrality policy in principle weights all reliable sources. In practice it weights the sources its editorial coalition finds congenial. Benz is one of the figures where the gap between reach and Wikipedia presence is widest.
There is a second-order point here that fits the analytical project. Wikipedia is one of the institutions Benz includes in the network he opposes. The volunteer editor coalition, the Wikimedia Foundation’s funders, the reliable-sources policy, and the legacy outlets that policy elevates form a system that produces the public encyclopedia entry on him. The system produces what the system produces. Critics of Benz get the page they want because the system selects their sources. Benz’s allies, if they wanted to change the page, would have to either change the policy or change which outlets count as reliable. Neither is available in the short run. So the page sits as it sits.
Grokipedia, the Musk-backed alternative, runs a much fuller and more flattering Benz entry. This is also a coalition artifact. Musk built an encyclopedia his coalition controls, and Benz is one of the figures it elevates. The pair of pages, English Wikipedia and Grokipedia, gives you a useful side-by-side of the two networks producing him. The legacy Wikipedia page is the page his opponents write. The Grokipedia page is the page his allies write. Neither is the page a careful outside analyst would produce. Both are coalition outputs.
The interesting analytical move is not to ask which page is accurate. It is to read both pages as evidence of the network. The Wikipedia page is what AT predicts an opposing coalition produces about him. The Grokipedia page is what AT predicts a home coalition produces about him. The absence of a careful page is what the post-institutional research environment looks like at the encyclopedia layer.

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The Empathy Myth: Literature, Status, and the American English Department

Teaching literature gets sold as expanding our empathy. But empathy did not evolve to reach strangers. It evolved to manage coalitions. When English professors claim their discipline makes students more ethical, they are making a resource argument dressed as a moral one. The honest version is simpler: we want funding, we want students, and this is the story that gets us both.

English literary study has always served two functions: transmitting knowledge of difficult texts, and reproducing a professional class that signals its values through the interpretation of those texts. For most of the discipline’s history, the second function has driven the first without anyone saying so. This book argues that honesty about the signaling does not destroy the enterprise. It might save it.

The first chapter establishes the central argument above.

The second chapter goes historical. English as a university discipline was always partly about class formation. In Britain it began as a subject for women and working-class students, considered too soft for the men doing classics and mathematics. In America it consolidated around a genteel Protestant culture that used canonical literature to define what counted as civilization. The Jewish and immigrant entry into English departments from the 1940s onward disrupted that culture but did not dissolve the signaling function. It shifted who was signaling and what values they displayed.

The third chapter examines the theory revolution of the 1970s and 1980s. Deconstruction, New Historicism, and cultural studies arrived partly as genuine intellectual imports from France and partly as a solution to a professional problem. English departments needed to justify graduate training and produce publishable scholarship at scale. Close reading alone cannot support hundreds of doctoral programs. Theory provided a methodology that could generate unlimited new readings of existing texts. The chapter argues this was less a revolution in understanding literature than a revolution in credentialing and publication.

The fourth chapter looks at the canon wars. The debate over which texts belong in university curricula was real, but the chapter argues that both sides were primarily fighting about something else: who gets to define the cultural center, which groups get moral recognition, and which professors get to teach the courses with the largest enrollments. The expansion of the canon was partly justice and partly a turf war conducted in the language of justice.

The fifth chapter examines the empathy claim. English departments have long justified themselves by arguing that reading literature makes people more ethical. The chapter surveys the evidence, which is thin and contested, and asks why the claim persists despite this. The answer it proposes is that the empathy narrative is load-bearing for the profession’s self-image. Without it, literary study becomes aesthetics plus history, which is defensible but not morally urgent. The empathy claim converts a taste culture into an ethical project, which is a significant status upgrade.

The sixth chapter takes up the question of which pain counts. Literary scholarship does not treat all historical suffering equally. The chapter examines how professional incentives, theoretical frameworks, and coalition politics determine which forms of suffering get foregrounded in scholarship and syllabi and which get contextualized, minimized, or absorbed into larger categories. It uses antisemitism in the canonical tradition as a case study, partly because it sits in an awkward position relative to the dominant frameworks, and partly because the asymmetric treatment is well documented enough to analyze without being purely anecdotal.

The seventh chapter looks at the student. If the signaling is primarily professional, what happens to the undergraduate who arrives wanting to understand literature? The chapter argues that students are recruited into the signaling system through the curriculum and rewarded for demonstrating the right interpretive moves. Students do learn things. But they also learn that certain readings are safe and certain ones are career-limiting, and they learn to perform the former regardless of what the text says to them.

The eighth chapter examines the post-2015 acceleration. The combination of social media, adjunctification, the collapse of the academic job market, and the political polarization after 2016 intensified the signaling. With fewer jobs available, the ability to signal correct values became a survival tool. The chapter looks at specific controversies, not to relitigate them, but to show how the institutional pressure to perform loyalty to coalition positions has made disagreement increasingly dangerous.

The ninth chapter asks what English departments produce that matters and cannot be dismissed as signaling. It argues that close reading is a real and transferable skill. That the preservation of difficult traditions requires institutional support. That the study of how language constructs reality is not trivial. The chapter tries to identify the core that the signaling apparatus has obscured.

The final chapter asks what a reformed English department might look like. Not a nostalgic return to New Criticism or genteel humanism, but a discipline that takes the sociological critique seriously and builds it into its own self-understanding. One that teaches students about the difference between aesthetic response and status performance. One that is honest about the empathy evidence rather than relying on a claim that flatters the profession. One that can hold the goods of literary study without requiring the in-group theater that sustains them.

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Omar Sultan Haque – Physician, Psychiatrist, Philosopher

Omar Sultan Haque holds an Sc.B. in neuroscience and A.B. in religious studies from Brown University, an M.T.S. from Harvard Divinity School, an S.T.M. from Yale, and an M.D. from Harvard Medical School. He completed his Ph.D. in cognition and culture at Brown in 2013 and a postdoctoral fellowship in Harvard’s Department of Psychology under Steven Pinker. He is board-certified in psychiatry and obesity medicine, a researcher at the Human Flourishing Program at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and writes at The Pursuit of Truth on Substack.

I. Coalition Shifts

Omar Sultan Haque’s intellectual career is a sequence of coalition shifts within the modern knowledge order. What looks like interdisciplinary integration is, at each stage, a repositioning in relation to competing regimes of truth, authority, and moral language.
He begins inside the late twentieth-century consilience project. At Brown University, trained in neuroscience and religious studies, he absorbs the ambition associated with E.O. Wilson: that scientific explanation can, in principle, unify all domains of knowledge. This is a status position. It aligns him with a high-prestige coalition centered in cognitive science and evolutionary psychology, later reinforced during his postdoctoral work under Steven Pinker. In this formation, explanation flows downward. Moral claims get redescribed as adaptive strategies, religious beliefs as cognitive byproducts, and human dignity as a convenient fiction layered atop neural processes.
The cracks appear early. Exposure to philosophy of religion does not simply add content; it destabilizes the hierarchy. Questions of personhood, rights, and moral equality resist reduction. They cannot be cleanly derived from physical descriptions without importing normative premises from elsewhere. This is the first inflection point: not a rejection of science, but a recognition that science is not self-sufficient.
His subsequent training across Harvard Divinity School, Yale, and Harvard Medical School deepens rather than resolves this tension. The key move is not eclecticism. It is a reframing of theology and medicine as complementary modes of inquiry into human flourishing. Clinical experience forces confrontation with suffering, stigma, and moral decision-making under constraint. These are not edge cases. They are the core of medicine. And they expose the limits of a purely mechanistic account of the human person.

II. The Central Thesis

His early bioethical work, including attempts to reconcile contemporary neuroscience with Islamic conceptions of personhood, shows the emerging method. Empirical findings get taken seriously. But they are treated as inputs into normative reasoning, not substitutes for it. This is the beginning of his central thesis: that empirical accounts of human behavior inevitably depend on unacknowledged normative assumptions, and that clarity requires making those assumptions explicit rather than pretending they do not exist.
That thesis is most clearly operationalized during his doctoral and postdoctoral period. His co-authored paper on dehumanization in medicine, written with Adam Waytz and published in Perspectives on Psychological Science in 2012, is often read as a critique of clinical practice. It is more interesting than that. It identifies a structural trade-off. Medical systems require forms of distancing, categorization, and emotional attenuation to function at scale. Dehumanization is not simply a moral failure; it is, in part, an adaptive response to institutional demands.
At the same time, these responses carry predictable costs. Patients get reduced to cases. Agency is obscured. Moral responsibility becomes diffuse. The clinician’s coping strategy becomes the patient’s experience of neglect. The key insight is not that dehumanization exists. It is that systems built on partial dehumanization tend to forget that this is what they are doing. A local adaptation becomes a global ontology.
This insight generalizes. In his work on religious prosociality and coordination, empirical methods test how worldviews shape behavior. But the deeper implication is that worldview itself cannot be reduced to a set of causal variables without losing what makes it normatively binding. The experimental apparatus depends on background assumptions about value, meaning, and agency that it cannot itself justify.

III. Institutional Critique

From here, his trajectory enters a second, more visible coalition shift. As a faculty member and lecturer within Harvard’s ecosystem, he participates in a high-status institutional network that increasingly organizes around a different set of moral commitments: identity-based frameworks of justice, administrative expansion around diversity and inclusion, and a growing tendency to moralize empirical disagreement.
His later public critiques of Harvard do not emerge from nowhere. They are continuous with his earlier work on dehumanization and normative opacity. The claim is not merely that the institution has become ideological. It is that a specific moral framework has achieved dominance while presenting itself as neutral, scientific, or morally self-evident. After twenty-three years at Harvard, moving from graduate student to faculty, he described the university publicly in 2025 as functioning more like a secular church than an institution committed to open inquiry.
The structural logic is concrete. Hiring and promotion increasingly reward alignment with prevailing narratives over discovery. Administrative structures expand their authority over speech and conduct. Disagreement gets recoded as harm. Categories meant to track injustice become totalizing descriptors of identity. In effect, a new form of dehumanization emerges: individuals seen less as agents and more as instances of group membership.
Haque now aligns with a heterodox network that emphasizes academic freedom, viewpoint diversity, and the distinction between empirical claims and moral commitments. He serves on the Harvard Council on Academic Freedom. He is Senior Advisor to the Open Therapy Institute, which promotes pluralistic, worldview-respecting mental health care. This is a different synthesis: empirical rigor retained, but coupled with a form of moral realism that resists both reductionism and relativism.

IV. Philosophical Lineage

His turn toward Christianity is not merely a personal conversion. It reflects a shift in how he understands the grounding of moral claims. Meaning is no longer treated as constructed or illusory; it is treated as real, though not fully accessible through empirical methods alone. This allows him to reject two opposing tendencies: reductive naturalism, which dissolves moral language into description, and identity-based moralism, which asserts moral claims without argumentative grounding.
Intellectually, this places him in proximity to a set of thinkers grappling with the limits of modern secular reason. Alasdair MacIntyre emphasizes the dependence of rationality on moral traditions. Charles Taylor analyzes the conditions of belief within the modern immanent frame. Jürgen Habermas argues for post-secular dialogue between religious and secular reasoning. Haque’s work can be read as an empirical-normative instantiation of these concerns within medicine and psychology.
Against Michel Foucault as a partial negative reference, he accepts institutional critique but rejects the slide into epistemic relativism. The point is not that all frameworks are equally suspect. It is that dominant frameworks must be subject to the same scrutiny they apply to others.

V. Procedural Pluralism

Against this backdrop, his concept of pluralism takes on sharper definition. It is not the claim that all views are equally valid. It is a procedural commitment with three parts. Empirical claims must be tested and revised in light of evidence. Normative claims must be argued explicitly rather than smuggled in under the guise of science. Institutions must permit sustained contestation between frameworks rather than enforcing a single moral vocabulary.
This pluralism is demanding. It rejects the comfort of both technocratic consensus and moral certainty. It requires individuals and institutions to tolerate unresolved disagreement while maintaining standards of reasoning and evidence.
The unifying thread across his work is the management of trade-offs. Dehumanization enables action but erodes dignity. Institutional standardization enables scale but suppresses individuality. Moral frameworks enable coordination but risk becoming totalizing. The problem is not the existence of these forces. It is their invisibility. When a provisional tool is mistaken for a complete account of reality, distortion follows.

VI. Forward Trajectory

His career can be read as an attempt to keep multiple levels of analysis in view simultaneously. The empirical without the normative becomes blind. The normative without the empirical becomes unmoored. Institutions that deny this dual dependence drift toward either technocratic reductionism or ideological capture.
The forward trajectory of this project is uncertain. One possibility is marginalization: positions that resist dominant coalitions often remain outside the centers of institutional power. Another is partial absorption. The language of human flourishing is already compatible with existing academic and policy frameworks, and elements of his approach might get incorporated without the deeper critique. A third is broader realignment: as tensions between empirical rigor and moral polarization intensify, there might be increasing demand for frameworks that can hold both without collapsing one into the other.
What is clear is that his work is not simply about medicine, religion, or academia. It is about the conditions under which truth-seeking remains possible in complex institutions. By insisting that empirical inquiry and moral reasoning are mutually dependent yet irreducible to each other, he challenges both the legacy of scientism and the rise of ideological orthodoxy. The result is a position that is structurally unstable but intellectually generative, situated at the fault line between competing visions of what knowledge is for and how human beings ought to be understood.

Alliance Theory

The official biography presents Haque’s career as principled intellectual development. He moves from consilience to bioethics to heterodox Christian academic freedom work because each stage exposes a deeper limitation of the last. Coalition intellectuals get narrated by coalition insiders as truth-seekers. The principles they articulate get treated as the driver, not the vocabulary. That is the standard shape of within-coalition hagiography. Read Haque’s biography against his current alliances and the order inverts.
The Pinker postdoc places Haque inside late-twentieth-century evolutionary psychology. That coalition has a specific moral vocabulary: parsimony, adaptationism, moral naturalism, deflation of religious claims as cognitive byproducts. Haque writes early work consistent with this vocabulary. When he co-authors with Adam Waytz on dehumanization in medicine, the empirical apparatus is recognizably Pinker-adjacent, though the normative cut drifts.
His divinity and medical training expose him to a different coalition: bioethicists, theologians, philosophers of personhood. That coalition has its own moral vocabulary: dignity, agency, moral realism, the irreducibility of the normative. Haque begins articulating this vocabulary too. The biographer presents this as interdisciplinary synthesis. Pinsof might call it transitivity. Haque moves through adjacent institutional networks, and the moral concepts he deploys shift to match the company he keeps.
His early attempt to reconcile neuroscience with Islamic conceptions of personhood signals an intermediate coalition. Muslim bioethicists at Harvard and Yale ran a specific operation in the post-9/11 American academy. They bridged Western scientific credentials to Islamic normative categories, serving as translators for two audiences that needed legitimacy from each other. Haque writes in this register during that period. When he converts to Christianity later, the bridging operation changes clients but keeps its structure. The vocabulary of moral realism and irreducible personhood migrates from Islamic to Christian framing without fundamental revision.
His current alignment is most revealing. The Harvard Council on Academic Freedom, the Open Therapy Institute, the Human Flourishing Program, the Substack called The Pursuit of Truth. These are coalition nodes, not ideologically homogeneous ones. The Council on Academic Freedom includes secular libertarians, classical liberals, heterodox progressives, religious conservatives of several varieties, and a scattering of scientists unhappy with administrative capture. Pinsof’s paper predicts this composition. Coalitions form around common opposition. The Harvard faculty who want tenure protections, the evangelical psychiatrist who wants to practice conversion-adjacent therapy, the evolutionary biologist who wants to publish on sex differences, and the Catholic medical ethicist who wants to refuse abortion training do not share a moral philosophy. They share a rival.
Haque’s procedural pluralism is the coalition’s patchwork vocabulary. It lets the Council members coordinate without agreeing on what flourishing requires, what truth is, or whether religious claims have cognitive content. Pinsof calls this coalition technology. The vocabulary papers over substantive disagreements so the alliance can present a unified face to the dominant regime. Framework originalism did the same work for the liberal legal coalition Balkin writes for. Procedural pluralism does the same work for the Harvard heterodox alliance.
The paper’s title Strange Bedfellows” applies. Haque’s current network includes figures who cannot coexist in a stable philosophical system. Steven Pinker, a Council on Academic Freedom signatory, holds a deflationary evolutionary account of religion that collides with Haque’s current moral realism at the foundation. Jeffrey Flier, the former Harvard Medical School dean on the same Council, holds a secular bioethical framework that conflicts with Christian virtue ethics at several load-bearing points. Harvey Mansfield and Alan Dershowitz, also Council-adjacent, sit on opposite sides of nearly every first-order political question. The Council works because its members share a rival. When the shared rival weakens, the Council fragments.
The Open Therapy Institute compounds the point. Worldview-respecting mental health care sounds principled. In practice the coalition contains Christian counselors who want to affirm traditional sexual ethics, secular therapists who reject the diagnostic imperialism of the DSM, Buddhist-influenced practitioners who reject both, and public health researchers like Tyler VanderWeele who want flourishing metrics inserted into medical epidemiology. These worldviews do not respect each other in any substantive sense. The coalition respects a procedural commitment to not using state or administrative power to enforce one worldview against the others.
Haque’s critique of Harvard as a secular church applies a scrutiny to the progressive moral consensus that his own coalition’s institutions do not apply to themselves. The Human Flourishing Program at the Chan School embeds specific moral commitments into its measurement instruments. VanderWeele’s flourishing metrics assume particular accounts of meaning, purpose, and character that are not empirically derivable. When progressive DEI offices do the same move, embedding contested moral commitments into administrative instruments, Haque calls it ideological capture. When his own program does it, he calls it empirical-normative synthesis.
Double standards are structural. Each coalition sees its own normative commitments as load-bearing and its rivals’ commitments as ideological imposition. The asymmetry is not correctable within the coalition because correcting it might require dissolving the coalition.
Haque’s earlier Islamic bioethics and his later Christian moral realism use structurally similar arguments against reductive naturalism. The arguments were available in both traditions. The coalition determines which tradition’s versions get cited, which authors get invoked, and which historical thinkers count as the deep genealogy. MacIntyre and Taylor did not become more valid between Haque’s Islamic and Christian periods. His coalition changed, and the appropriate lineage changed with it.
This is the transitivity principle operating at the biographical scale. Haque’s Harvard network during his postdoc period included figures who took Christianity seriously as a Western intellectual tradition, Tyler VanderWeele among them. His Islamic bioethics network included figures whose institutional gravity weakened as post-9/11 funding streams contracted and as Islamist political coalitions lost elite academic legitimacy. The coalition mobility of Islamic bioethics declined. The coalition mobility of Christian moral realism rose inside the heterodox academic freedom alliance. Haque moved accordingly.
Strange Bedfellows generates specific predictions about Haque’s forward trajectory. His coalition might fragment along its internal fault lines as the shared rival weakens. If progressive administrative capture at Harvard recedes, the Council on Academic Freedom might lose its cohesion. The evangelical psychiatrist and the secular libertarian biologist might find they have nothing in common. Haque might have to pick a sub-coalition. His Christianity pushes him toward the religious conservative sub-coalition. His Harvard employment pulls him toward a centrist classical liberal sub-coalition. That tension is already visible in his Substack, where the voice shifts between secular procedural arguments and explicitly Christian ones.
His procedural pluralism faces the Balkin problem. Balkin’s framework originalism worked as long as the liberal legal coalition held together. When the coalition fractured after 2016, the framework lost its force because it could no longer paper over the substantive disagreements. Procedural pluralism faces the same test. It works while Haque’s coalition faces a unified rival. When the rival weakens or when intra-coalition disagreement intensifies, the procedural vocabulary stops doing enough work, and Haque has to articulate substantive first-order commitments. Pinsof’s paper predicts these commitments track whichever sub-coalition offers him the strongest status position at the moment he has to choose.
The flourishing vocabulary at the Chan School either gets captured by one of its internal factions or hollows out into a measurement industry with no substantive content. VanderWeele’s program has the ingredients for both outcomes. The Pinsof framework predicts capture over hollowing, because capture produces a more stable coalition than hollowing does.
None of this diminishes Haque as a thinker. Pinsof’s paper argues that alliance-driven moral vocabulary is how all political and moral thought works. There is no escape from coalitions. The charge against Haque is not that he is unusually coalition-bound but that his self-presentation, and his biographer’s presentation, treat him as unusually coalition-free. Procedural pluralism, empirical-normative synthesis, human flourishing, worldview-respecting care. Each is a coalition vocabulary presented as a transcendence of coalition. The intellectual who insists he has risen above partisan alignment is almost always aligned with a specific partisan configuration that profits from the non-partisan label.
Haque’s current coalition benefits when others describe it as the one that believes in open inquiry rather than as the one that enforces a contested moral framework. That self-description does work for his coalition in donor conversations, faculty hiring, and media coverage. Strange Bedfellows predicts the description, predicts its usefulness, and predicts that the coalition’s moral commitments become visible only when the rival weakens and the internal disagreements surface.

Four Questions

1. Who does Haque rely on for status, income, and protection?
Harvard is the base. Twenty-three years inside the institution gives him faculty standing at the Medical School, research affiliation at the Chan School through the Human Flourishing Program, and the credential stack that makes his Substack readable in heterodox circles. The Harvard name protects him the way it protects its dissenters. Insiders can criticize the institution in ways outsiders cannot, because the institution’s prestige underwrites the critique.
His income comes from three streams. Clinical psychiatry and obesity medicine practice generate the baseline. Board certifications in two specialties create durable market value regardless of academic politics. Research affiliation with Tyler VanderWeele’s Human Flourishing Program provides grant-adjacent support, almost certainly routed through Templeton Foundation money or similar religiously sympathetic philanthropic streams. Substack subscriptions add direct reader revenue that scales with his heterodox visibility.
Protection is more complicated. He sits inside Harvard at a moment when heterodox faculty have become targets. The Council on Academic Freedom functions as mutual defense. Steven Pinker, Jeffrey Flier, Harvey Mansfield, and others provide reciprocal cover. When administrative power comes for any one member, the others organize response, media attention, and legal resources. Templeton and adjacent donors provide a financial backstop if academic sanctions cost him his Harvard role. The Free Press, Quillette, The American Mind, and similar platforms give him alternative audience infrastructure if he loses Harvard entirely. His clinical credentials give him a landing pad outside academia altogether.
2. Who must he attract and retain as allies?
His coalition contains five key constituencies. First, the tenured Harvard heterodox network. Pinker, Flier, Mansfield, Dershowitz, and Pinker-adjacent cognitive scientists. These are the people whose public association with Haque normalizes his position inside Harvard and signals that his critique comes from inside the institution rather than from the right-wing fringe.
Second, the Templeton ecosystem and Christian intellectual philanthropy. This includes Tyler VanderWeele, whose Human Flourishing Program at Chan holds Haque’s research affiliation. It includes Templeton officers who fund the flourishing research, Catholic and Protestant intellectual donors who support the Open Therapy Institute, and the donor-adjacent networks around institutions like the Thomistic Institute, the Pascal Institute, and the Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture. These are the people who pay for the infrastructure his post-conversion work requires.
Third, the broader heterodox media ecosystem. Bari Weiss, Nellie Bowles, Claire Lehmann, Christopher Rufo’s adjacent but not identical networks, the Compact crowd, First Things, Public Discourse. These are the platforms that amplify his Substack, invite him onto podcasts, and translate his academic-register critique into broader public consumption.
Fourth, the Substack audience. Several thousand paying subscribers across a disparate mix: disaffected Jewish liberals, heterodox progressives, religious conservatives of multiple denominations, post-liberal Catholics, heterodox psychiatrists suspicious of the DSM apparatus. This audience funds him and supplies the cultural capital that makes his voice audible beyond academia.
Fifth, Christian intellectual fellow travelers. MacIntyre-lineage Thomists, Taylor-lineage communitarians, Catholic bioethicists at Georgetown and Notre Dame, Protestant virtue ethicists at Wheaton and Baylor, Eastern Orthodox scholars. These are the people who ratify his Christian turn as intellectually serious rather than as a convenient career pivot.
He has to keep these groups from turning on each other in ways that force him to choose. The Pinker wing and the MacIntyre wing do not share first principles. The Jewish Substack readers and the Catholic donors do not share eschatology. The secular libertarian Council members and the Christian psychiatrists at Open Therapy do not share sexual ethics. Haque’s vocabulary has to register equally well in each room.
3. What beliefs and signals mark membership in his coalition?
The markers come in layers. At the surface, lexical signals. Human flourishing. Viewpoint diversity. Open inquiry. Procedural pluralism. Empirical-normative synthesis. Worldview-respecting care. The phrase “secular church” to describe Harvard. Invocation of MacIntyre, Taylor, Habermas. Polite but unmistakable distance from DEI vocabulary. Use of “meaning” and “purpose” rather than “identity” and “equity.”
Beneath the lexicon, institutional signals. Public affiliation with the Council on Academic Freedom. Citation of Jonathan Haidt’s Heterodox Academy work, though not necessarily endorsement of everything Haidt says. Publication venues that include Substack, Public Discourse, The Free Press, Persuasion, and the academic journals that still accept heterodox submissions. Avoidance of pure partisan venues on both sides. No Jacobin. No Breitbart. The platform pattern signals the coalition.
Deeper, substantive commitments. Moral realism without theocracy. Critique of reductive naturalism without reversion to naive religious foundationalism. Critique of DEI administration without alignment with the right-wing populist attack on higher education as such. Defense of religious reasoning as cognitive rather than merely expressive, without claiming any particular religious tradition has exclusive access to moral truth. Christian conversion narrated as intellectual development rather than as tribal identification.
The signals work together. Someone who uses the lexicon but signs an open letter defending critical race theory fails the test. Someone who shares the substantive commitments but publishes in American Greatness fails the test. Someone who converts to Christianity and then starts quoting Patrick Deneen approvingly on integralism fails the test. Coalition membership requires threading all three layers at once.
4. What would he give up if he changed his public position?
The answer depends on direction. Four scenarios.
If he drifts back toward consensus progressive Harvard, he loses the Council, the Open Therapy role, his Substack audience, the Templeton-adjacent funding streams, and the heterodox media appearances. He gains little because the progressive Harvard coalition does not reward returning prodigals with the same prestige it gives to lifelong loyalists. He becomes a slightly tarnished mid-tier faculty member with an awkward paper trail. The status loss is severe. The income loss is moderate because clinical work continues. The belonging loss is the hardest because his current coalition treats defections as betrayal, and the progressive coalition treats returnees as convenient but not trusted.
If he drifts toward hard-right Christian nationalism, he loses the secular Council allies, the Jewish and libertarian members of his coalition, his public health research credibility, and probably the Chan School affiliation. He gains access to a larger but lower-prestige ecosystem: First Things at its most aggressive, the integralist wing of post-liberal Catholicism, the Claremont network. The income picture depends on whether Templeton-style money follows him or stays with the more centrist coalition. The status trade cuts deep because hard-right Christian nationalism carries stigma inside the academic spaces that still credential him.
If he abandons Christianity, he loses the MacIntyre and Taylor lineage claim, much of his Substack audience, the Christian donor networks, the Open Therapy position as currently constituted, and the normative realist vocabulary that holds his current synthesis together. He could return to a Pinker-style secular moral naturalism, but he has spent years arguing against it publicly. The reputational cost of that reversal is steep. His intellectual biography becomes a story of serial recantation rather than of principled development.
If he turns on VanderWeele or on the Human Flourishing Program, he loses his primary research platform, his coauthor network, the Templeton-routed funding, and the academic-empirical cover that makes his heterodox writing look like more than opinion journalism. The flourishing program is the load-bearing beam connecting his Harvard affiliation to his Substack voice. Remove it and the whole structure sags.
The asymmetry across scenarios shapes the forecast. The costs of changing position are heavy in every direction. As long as the heterodox coalition holds, staying in place costs him little. Pinsof’s framework predicts he stays until exogenous shocks force the coalition to fracture. Then he moves toward whichever sub-coalition offers him the softest landing. His Christian conversion gives him an option the secular heterodox faculty do not have. If the Council fragments, he can fall back on the religious intellectual network. Pinker cannot. Flier cannot. Dershowitz has his own fallback into Jewish communal life. Mansfield has Claremont and the Straussians. Each member of the Council has a different exit coalition.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Haque’s public description of Harvard as a secular church is structurally identical to the progressive critique of Republican voters as misinformed. Both claim the other side has fallen into epistemic error. Both assume a proper diagnosis restores sanity. Neither treats the target as a rational coalition executing a rational strategy.
The Harvard DEI apparatus is not confused about the difference between empirical and normative claims. It knows. It conflates them deliberately because the conflation serves the coalition that runs Harvard. Administrators who distinguish empirical from normative carefully lose authority to administrators who do not. Faculty who insist on the distinction get marginalized. In Pinsof’s reading, the system works as designed. The design is coalition capture, not epistemic confusion.
Haque’s framing treats the apparatus as broken. In Pinsof’s reading, the apparatus works. It just does not work for Haque’s coalition. The two diagnoses suggest different remedies. If the problem is misunderstanding, you correct with better education and procedural reforms. If the problem is coalition capture, you need a stronger counter-coalition. Haque’s writing gestures at the first remedy while the Council on Academic Freedom executes the second.
VanderWeele’s flourishing research operates on the misunderstanding model at its purest. The research assumes people fail to flourish because they lack proper metrics, proper frameworks, and proper worldview-respecting care. Measure flourishing correctly, disseminate the measures into medical and public health settings, and flourishing increases.
Pinsof’s essay destroys this picture. People do not fail to flourish because they misunderstand flourishing. They do what their coalitions, incentives, and status competitions require them to do. Instagram comparison is not a bug in human psychology. It is status-tracking by creatures who have tracked status their entire evolutionary history. Gratitude journaling does not fix it because the problem is not a psychological error. Status competition produces winners and losers, and most people are not winners.
The flourishing research is in business because it flatters a particular coalition. It flatters educated elites who want to believe their better outcomes reflect better choices rather than better positions in the competition. It flatters religious donors who want empirical confirmation that traditional practice produces measurable benefits. It flatters public health researchers who want the soft cultural authority that comes from translating moral life into numbers. Haque’s affiliation with this program is a coalition position. It requires him to treat the misunderstanding myth as operational.
Procedural pluralism is the misunderstanding myth refined. It concedes that different coalitions hold different substantive commitments. It refuses to arbitrate among them. It proposes that institutions commit to procedures that allow sustained contestation among frameworks.
The framing sounds like humility about coalition structure. The substance assumes that if everyone committed to proper procedures, truth would emerge through contestation. That assumption is the misunderstanding myth wearing procedural clothes. The coalitions competing inside an institution are not failing to contest properly. They contest very well, according to the rules their coalition strength allows them to enforce. When the progressive coalition controls Harvard, it enforces procedures that serve its position. When a heterodox coalition controls an institution, it enforces procedures that serve its position. Both coalitions instrumentalize whatever proceduralism their strength permits.
Pinsof’s point is harsher. There is no neutral procedure. Procedures are weapons, and the coalition that can enforce its preferred procedures wins the local contest until a stronger coalition displaces it. Haque’s procedural pluralism is the weapon his coalition prefers because his coalition is weaker than the one currently holding Harvard. If his coalition gained power, it might enforce different procedures, and the procedural pluralism rhetoric might quietly recede.
Haque has strong coalition reasons to stay in the misunderstanding frame. Four of them.
First, the Human Flourishing Program requires the myth. Its research agenda assumes flourishing can be measured and promoted. Pinsof’s position implies flourishing is whatever the winning coalition says it is, which makes the whole measurement enterprise a coalition-credentialing exercise rather than an empirical science. Haque cannot adopt that view and keep his Chan School affiliation.
Second, his Christian turn requires the myth. Conversion narratives depend on the idea that one has come to see something more clearly. Pinsof’s framework treats the conversion as coalition mobility. Haque can hold his Christian commitments sincerely and still find the framing humiliating. The conversion is supposed to be about truth. Pinsof says it is about position.
Third, his Substack audience requires the myth. Readers pay for analysis that implies the world can be corrected through better understanding. A Substack that said the coalitions do what coalitions do and there is nothing you or I can do about it would lose subscribers. Paid Substacks depend on the reader’s residual hope that reading produces improvement.
Fourth, the Council on Academic Freedom requires the myth. The Council’s premise is that Harvard could return to proper academic inquiry if its procedures were reformed. Pinsof’s framework says Harvard does whatever the dominant coalition inside Harvard makes it do, and procedural reform only follows coalition displacement. The Council exists because its members still believe reform is possible. Haque cannot publicly reject that belief without leaving the Council.
Subtract the misunderstanding myth and Haque becomes a different intellectual. He stops diagnosing Harvard’s administrators as confused and starts describing them as rational coalition actors executing a coherent strategy. He stops proposing procedural pluralism as a fix and starts describing it as the weapon his coalition needs to deploy because stronger weapons are not yet available. He stops writing about flourishing as an outcome that better worldview-respect produces and starts writing about flourishing research as coalition-credentialing infrastructure.
That version of Haque has few places to publish. First Things does not want it because Christian intellectuals want the misunderstanding myth to apply to secular progressives and to stop short of their own tradition. Public Discourse does not want it because natural law conservatives depend on the idea that moral reasoning is a correctable enterprise. The Free Press does not want it because heterodox media wants the enemy diagnosed as ideological and confused rather than as strategically competent. Substack will take it, but the audience shrinks.
The coalition tax on Pinsofian honesty is steep. Haque pays it only at the margins. His early paper on dehumanization with Waytz paid some of it. That paper treats dehumanization as functional and adaptive rather than as a correctable moral failure. Pinsof reads that paper as Haque at his most honest. Everything after it drifts back toward the misunderstanding frame, because the frame is where his coalitions live.

Buffered & Porous Selves

Haque is not cleanly buffered in the way Welch is. He is not cleanly a buffered reworker of porous materials in the way Myers is. Haque is both porous and buffered in his actual intellectual operation, and the hybridity is what makes him distinctive. He retains porous theological commitments (the Islamic tradition he grew up in, the moral realism he defends through natural law frameworks, the belief in objective human flourishing that has metaphysical content) while operating within buffered institutional locations (Harvard Medical School, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, psychiatric practice, peer-reviewed cognitive science publications). The hybridity is the interesting feature.

Most Harvard-affiliated cognitive scientists are buffered. They may have private religious commitments but their professional work brackets those commitments. Pinker is buffered. Most of Haque’s postdoctoral cohort was buffered. Haque is not. He writes in First Things about porous topics (the sacred, divine purpose, transcendent moral order) and publishes in cognitive science journals about buffered topics (dehumanization mechanisms, cognitive biases, empirical correlates of flourishing). The same scholar produces both outputs. The outputs operate in different registers for different audiences.

Haque is attempting what most modern academics consider impossible or illegitimate. He is refusing the buffered-porous separation that modernity institutionalizes. Taylor’s framework would treat this refusal as interesting. Most modern believers are buffered selves who hold religious commitments as private choices that do not fully penetrate their professional cognition. Haque is not this. His porous commitments are intended to inform his professional work rather than to be bracketed from it. The Human Flourishing Program itself is an attempt to reintroduce porous categories (human flourishing as morally laden, not merely empirically measurable) into buffered institutional spaces (public health research, psychiatric practice).

The buffered institutional spaces will not accept porous commitments operating openly within them. They will accept porous commitments operating as private motivation or as topic of empirical study, but not as legitimate epistemic inputs to the professional work itself. Haque’s career requires him to navigate this by translating his porous commitments into buffered vocabulary when he operates in institutional spaces, while writing in porous vocabulary when he operates in First Things or Public Discourse. The translation is skilled. The translation also costs something. The porous original is not available in the buffered translation. The buffered translation is not satisfying to porous audiences who can detect that something has been lost.

Haque cannot be fully himself in either register. In the buffered register he cannot fully articulate why the empirical questions he studies matter (because the reasons are porous, involving metaphysical commitments the buffered register brackets). In the porous register he cannot fully deploy the rigorous empirical methods that give his work authority (because porous audiences find detailed methodological discussion beside the point). The bifurcation is not accidental. It is structural to the condition of porous believers operating within buffered institutional spaces. Haque is skilled at managing the bifurcation. The bifurcation remains unresolved at the level of intellectual coherence. The work reads as coherent only because the two registers address different audiences that do not overlap.

Buffered readers (secular academics, most Harvard colleagues, most New York Times readers) will encounter Haque’s buffered work and find it competent. They will encounter his porous work and find it embarrassing or ideologically suspect. They will conclude that Haque is a good researcher whose religious commitments are private eccentricities best ignored. Porous readers (First Things audience, Public Discourse audience, traditional Catholics and Muslims) will encounter his porous work and find it meaningful. They will encounter his buffered work and find it necessary as credentialing but not nourishing. They will conclude that Haque is one of them operating behind enemy lines. Both audiences are half-right. Neither is wrong. The actual Haque is both things, and neither audience can see the whole.

The contrast with Myers and Welch is instructive. Myers operates as buffered self on porous materials. Welch operates as buffered self defending buffered materials against porous return. Haque operates as porous self operating within buffered institutional spaces while attempting to translate buffered empirical findings into porous normative frameworks that provide the goods (meaning, moral orientation, sacred significance) that buffered selfhood cannot provide on its own. The three men face different strategic problems. The three men use different solutions. Haque’s solution is the most difficult to sustain because it refuses the buffered-porous separation that the other two accept.

Can a porous self operate within buffered institutions without becoming buffered himself through professional socialization? Taylor’s framework is ambiguous here. On one hand, the buffered-porous distinction is historical and phenomenological, and strong institutional conditioning might shift phenomenology over time. On the other hand, committed religious practice (daily prayer, regular fasting, observant community life) maintains porous conditions in ways that professional conditioning cannot erase. Haque by his writing is a practicing observant Muslim. The practice maintains porous conditions. The professional work proceeds within buffered frameworks. The tension is held rather than resolved. Whether the tension is sustainable across a full career is uncertain. Some figures (Alasdair MacIntyre, Charles Taylor himself) have sustained similar hybridity. Many figures have drifted toward one pole or the other under sustained institutional pressure.

Haque is attempting to demonstrate that porous commitments are empirically defensible and empirically consequential. This is different from both Myers and Welch. Myers accepts that buffered conditions are the modern condition and attempts to make the tradition work under those conditions. Welch accepts that buffered rationality is the proper norm and attempts to defend it against porous drift. Haque rejects both framings. He argues that porous commitments about human flourishing are empirically correct in ways that buffered alternatives cannot match. His empirical work is designed to show this. The dehumanization research. The flourishing research. The work on religious practice and health outcomes. Each empirical finding is marshaled to show that porous commitments are not merely subjective preferences but track something real that buffered frameworks miss.

This is a bolder intellectual move than Myers or Welch make. Both Myers and Welch accept modernity’s buffered framework as the framework within which their work operates. Haque challenges the framework itself. He argues that the buffered framework produces systematically worse human outcomes than porous frameworks would produce, and that the empirical evidence supports this claim. The claim is contestable. It is also serious. Taylor himself makes a related claim in A Secular Age. Haque is operating in Taylor’s actual theoretical neighborhood rather than just being analyzed through Taylor’s framework.

The previous analysis established that Haque operates the misunderstanding myth, treating Harvard administrators as confused rather than as coalition actors. The Taylor addition deepens this. Haque is committed to treating opponents as confused because his project requires that porous commitments be rationally defensible. If opponents are executing coalition strategy that happens to exclude porous commitments for reasons unrelated to rational assessment, then the rational argument Haque is making cannot reach them. The misunderstanding myth is necessary for Haque’s project to be possible. Without it, the project collapses into partisan advocacy for one coalition against another. With it, the project maintains the self-understanding as rational inquiry that buffered institutions can recognize if only they stop being confused.

This is poignant. Haque’s porous project depends on maintaining buffered self-understanding about its own operation. He must present himself as engaged in rational inquiry even when his porous commitments exceed what rational inquiry can adjudicate. The buffered presentation is required by the institutional space in which he operates. The porous content is what the institutional space excludes. The bifurcation operates at every level of his work simultaneously.

Haque’s audience is smaller than his influence suggests because few readers can hold both registers simultaneously. Most buffered readers read only his buffered work. Most porous readers read only his porous work. The readers who read both and integrate them are a narrow band of educated religious believers who operate professionally within buffered institutions while maintaining porous personal commitments. This band is real but small. Haque’s meaningful reach is this band. The band is under-served by most intellectual production, which defaults to one register or the other. Haque serves this band by operating both registers. The valuable work is legible to the narrow band that needs it.

Taylor’s framework suggests that porous religious commitments are under sustained pressure from structural conditions of modern life. The buffered self is what modern conditions produce. Porous selves persist but against institutional pressures that erode them over time. Haque’s Muslim commitments persist because strong community practices (daily prayer, fasting, religious community) maintain porous phenomenology. American Muslim communities are under pressure from American assimilation forces. Second and third generation American Muslims face erosion of porous commitments that their parents and grandparents retained. Haque’s project requires that these commitments persist in sufficient numbers to constitute an audience. Whether they will persist is empirically uncertain. The Myers project faces a parallel question about whether buffered American Jewish community can sustain the audience for Myers’s buffered Jewish reworkings. Both projects depend on religious communities continuing to exist in forms that Taylor’s framework suggests are under pressure.

Haque embodies something that buffered modernity cannot quite theorize: the self-aware porous self operating within buffered institutional spaces while refusing both the buffered reduction of porous commitments to private preferences and the porous retreat from rigorous institutional engagement. The position is unstable. The position is also necessary if porous traditions are going to have institutional voices in modern life. Someone has to do this work. Haque is doing it. The doing is difficult, ambiguous in its outcomes, and valuable for the narrow population that can recognize what it is.

My previous analysis has Haque as coalition actor, as misunderstanding-myth operator, as interdisciplinary synthesizer, as Council on Academic Freedom member, as First Things and Public Discourse contributor, as Human Flourishing Program researcher. Taylor’s framework adds that Haque is a porous self in buffered institutional spaces, and that the hybrid operation is what generates both the distinctive value and the specific difficulties of his work. The hybridity is not a failure. It is the attempt to keep porous commitments institutionally available under conditions that work against their institutional availability. Whether the attempt succeeds long-term depends on conditions Haque cannot control. The attempt itself is substantial and deserves the analytical attention your framework has given it.

Haque has something Myers and Welch lack. He has porous commitments that retain their phenomenological force for him. His daily prayer is not buffered reworking of porous tradition. It is porous encounter with God that the prayer form was designed to enable. His Muslim observance is not cultural continuity exercise. It is faithful response to divine claims on his life. This makes him different from buffered Jewish or Christian intellectuals who engage their traditions without sharing the porous phenomenology the traditions presuppose. Haque has what the traditions promised. This is rare among Harvard academics. It is what his work draws on even when the work operates in buffered registers. The porous source is what makes the buffered translation meaningful. The translation works because there is something being translated rather than only the form of the thing. Myers’s buffered Judaism has lost most of what Haque’s porous Islam retains. The difference is substantial even though both men operate at Harvard-equivalent institutions doing structurally similar work.

Posted in Christianity, Harvard, Philosophy, Psychiatry | Comments Off on Omar Sultan Haque – Physician, Psychiatrist, Philosopher

The Genetic Component Of The Tacit

Stephen Turner’s critique of tacit knowledge is primarily epistemological and sociological. He is concerned with the impossibility of collective transmission, with the ideological functions of tacit knowledge claims, and with the way appeals to shared background naturalize what are contested social arrangements. His target is the sociological tradition, Wittgenstein on rule-following, Polanyi on personal knowledge, the practice theorists from Bourdieu onward, and his argument is that they all presuppose a transmission of background that cannot occur in the way they describe. But when he asks what is happening when people seem to share a practice or a sensibility, his answer stays at the level of explicit learning, socialization, repeated exposure, and individual habit formation.
His forthcoming work moves closer to the gap. There he confronts what he calls causal blending: the fact that outcomes in social and cognitive life are produced by multiple overlapping causes, genetic, developmental, experiential, and situational, that cannot be cleanly separated. He acknowledges the bias against biological reductionism in social science and works around it carefully, which itself tells you something. The taboo is real enough that a philosopher of his range and candor handles the territory with deliberate indirection. He cites Turkheimer’s three laws of behavioral genetics and their implication that psychological traits show substantial heritability, that shared family environment contributes less than genes, and that much variance comes from non-shared experience. He treats this not as a settled answer but as a constraint on what any adequate causal account must accommodate.
That framing is useful but leaves a significant gap in the tacit knowledge argument. The reason a skilled literary reader cannot fully articulate what he perceives and transmit it through explicit instruction may not be only that the knowledge is ineffable or that the social conditions for transmission have eroded. It may partly be that what he is perceiving depends on cognitive and perceptual capacities that vary across individuals for reasons that have nothing to do with training or socialization. Robert Alter’s ear for Hebrew rhythm may be inseparable from capacities that no amount of formation can fully install in someone who does not already have the underlying architecture.
Turner is aware in a general way that individuals differ and that not everyone can be trained to the same level of competence in any domain. His new work acknowledges psychic heterogeneity explicitly and treats the variable brain as central rather than incidental. But his framework remains committed to a broadly social constructionist account of competence formation even as it dismantles the social constructionist account of tacit knowledge transmission. That combination creates a tension he does not fully resolve. He describes causal blending as the key to understanding how genetic, developmental, and social causes converge and interfere, but he does not press the genetic question into the specific domain of literary and aesthetic competence, which is where it would be most illuminating and most uncomfortable.
The behavioral genetics literature would push the question in productive directions. Heritability estimates for musical ability, language aptitude, various dimensions of aesthetic sensitivity, and the capacity to hold and manipulate complex syntactic structures are not negligible. Twin studies consistently find substantial genetic contributions to cognitive and perceptual abilities directly relevant to the kind of literary competence Alter exemplifies. If literary sensitivity has a heritable component, then the guild structure of humanistic training, where the master’s perceptions are validated by appeal to shared formation, conceals something important about why some people end up with the relevant capacities and others do not. The formation story is not false, but it is incomplete in a way that has real consequences for how we understand both the authority of critics and the limits of that authority’s transmissibility.
Turner’s concept of substitutability, multiple paths to the same cognitive outcome, partially addresses this. Different individuals with different cognitive architectures might arrive at similar competences through different routes. But substitutability cuts the other way as well: some people may find no available path to certain competences because the underlying architecture that any path requires is simply absent. This is the dimension Turner acknowledges in general terms through psychic heterogeneity and causal blending but does not follow into the literary domain.
The reason is partly disciplinary. Turner works primarily with philosophers and sociologists rather than behavioral geneticists or evolutionary psychologists, and the genetic question does not appear on the map of debates he navigates. But it is also partly the taboo he names directly in his forthcoming book. Charges of racism attach quickly to any argument that links heritable individual variation to differential competence, even when the argument says nothing about group averages and concerns only the individual variation that Turner’s own framework already treats as central. The indirection he practices is intellectually costly. It produces a framework that acknowledges causal blending as a principle while leaving one of its most significant components underspecified in the domains where it most matters.
There is also the question of what behavioral genetics implies for Turner’s core claim about the impossibility of collective tacit knowledge. If individuals share not just a social environment but a biological architecture, some of what looks like shared tacit perception may rest on a common substrate, not socially transmitted but genetically instantiated. This does not rescue the Wittgensteinian or Polanyian accounts that Turner criticizes, because those accounts make strong claims about social transmission that the genetic angle does not support. But it suggests that the impossibility of collective tacit knowledge may be less absolute than Turner’s argument implies. People who share relevant genetic architecture may share perceptual capacities in a way that is not reducible to shared socialization and is not merely the ideological function of appealing to common background.
The Alter case is a particularly important test because what makes him exceptional is not straightforwardly separable into what his formation gave him and what he arrived with. The twenty-two years of solitary translation required both. Turner’s framework, for all its power in exposing the ideological functions of tacit knowledge claims, cannot fully account for why one scholar could do what Alter did and most others could not, even with equivalent training and equivalent access to the relevant texts. His new work on causal blending and psychic heterogeneity moves toward that question without quite reaching it.

Turner throwing caution to the wind would not look like a conversion to hereditarianism. It would look like the logical extension of arguments he already makes, pushed past the point where professional caution currently stops him.
The first move would be to take the substitutability argument and run it in both directions simultaneously. He currently uses substitutability to dissolve strong claims about shared tacit knowledge: different people reach similar competences through different routes, which means the competence is not evidence of shared transmission. But substitutability has a harder implication he does not press. If there are multiple paths to a given cognitive outcome, the question becomes which people can access which paths, and why. Some paths require underlying capacities that training can develop but cannot install. Turner already says this in general terms. The bolder move is to say it specifically: that the distribution of people who can access the paths relevant to high literary competence, or mathematical intuition, or musical discrimination, is not random, and that the non-randomness has a partly genetic explanation that socialization accounts cannot capture.
The second move would be to take his treatment of Weber’s Protestant Ethic argument and press the genetic question into it directly. Turner reconstructs the Ethic as a scaffolding process: the theology creates affordances that transform capacities, which create new affordances, and so on. He treats the starting capacities as given. But Weber’s argument has always had a puzzle at its center. Why did the specific populations that produced and sustained intense Calvinist practice show particular cognitive and behavioral profiles? Turner gestures at this through his discussion of how sustained cultural formation might select for certain capacities over time. The bolder version would follow Gregory Cochran’s logic, without necessarily endorsing his specific conclusions, and ask whether intensive text-based religious cultures maintained across many generations leave any trace in the gene pools that carried them. Not as a claim about superiority but as a claim about fit: the capacities a particular cultural formation rewards might, over sufficient time, become partially heritable in the populations that maintained it most intensively.
The third move would be to engage directly with Robert Plomin’s (b. 1948)) work on gene-environment correlation, which Turner cites through Turkheimer but does not develop. Plomin’s finding that environments are partly selected and created by genotypes over time is directly relevant to the transmission problem. If the environments that produce tacit literary or aesthetic competence are partly chosen by people with the relevant genetic predispositions, then the standard socialization account conflates cause and effect. The formation story describes a real process but misidentifies what is doing the primary causal work. Turner’s causal blending framework is perfectly suited to accommodate this without collapsing into genetic determinism. The bolder version would say so explicitly: that in domains requiring high aesthetic or symbolic competence, the genetic and environmental contributions are so intertwined that treating formation as the primary explanation is a category error, one that the humanistic guild perpetuates because it serves their institutional interest in the transmissibility of their own authority.
The fourth and sharpest move would be to turn the tacit knowledge argument back on the academy itself. Turner already argues that appeals to tacit knowledge function ideologically, naturalizing what are contested social arrangements. The bolder version applies this to the contemporary university’s commitment to demographic representation as the primary criterion for selection into humanistic training. If the relevant competences are substantially heritable and unevenly distributed, then selection criteria oriented toward demographic representation rather than individual capacity will systematically reduce the pool of people capable of receiving and carrying forward the tacit knowledge that defines the practice. Turner could say this without making any claim about which groups have more or less of the relevant capacities, because the argument holds at the level of individual variation regardless of group averages. The point is that any selection criterion other than individual capacity for the relevant competences will degrade the transmission of those competences over time, and that the degradation will be masked by the very ideological function that tacit knowledge claims perform, the appearance of shared background concealing the distribution of real competences.
The fifth move would be the most philosophically interesting. Turner’s causal blending framework acknowledges that genetic, developmental, experiential, and situational causes converge and interfere in ways that cannot be cleanly separated. The bolder version would use this to dissolve the political charge that attaches to genetic arguments in this domain. The charge assumes that identifying a genetic contribution to competence distribution implies determinism, group essentialism, or the futility of formation. Turner’s own framework shows why none of those implications follow. Causal blending means that genetic predispositions are neither sufficient nor fixed. They set conditions of possibility rather than outcomes. Formation can substantially enhance capacities where the underlying architecture is present. The practical implication is not that training is useless but that selection for training should identify individual capacity rather than treat demographic representation as a proxy for it.
What Turner would find intellectually if he pressed this far is that the argument strengthens his core critique of the practice theorists rather than contradicting it. Bourdieu’s habitus, Polanyi’s personal knowledge, Wittgenstein on rule-following: all of these presuppose that what matters is the social formation of competence. Turner has always argued they are wrong about transmission. The genetic angle shows they are wrong about origins as well. The competence that looks like the product of the right education, the right milieu, the right apprenticeship, is partly the product of capacities the person brought to that formation. The formation gets credit for what the individual’s architecture made possible. That is not an argument against formation. It is an argument for honesty about what formation can and cannot do, and for selection criteria that identify who can benefit from it rather than assuming the benefit is uniformly available.
What stops Turner is not intellectual incapacity. He has the tools. It is the professional cost, which he names honestly. The charges of racism attach regardless of the precision of the argument, and a philosopher working in a university cannot absorb those charges without institutional damage. The indirection he practices is a rational response to an irrational taboo structure. The essay he would write if the taboo were lifted would not be a polemic. It would be a careful, heavily qualified extension of arguments he already makes, pushed past the point where caution currently stops him. It would be recognizable as Turner. It would just be Turner with the last two moves of the argument included rather than gestured at and withdrawn.

Posted in Genetics, Tacit | Comments Off on The Genetic Component Of The Tacit

FT: The market failure beneath the manosphere

The FT says: “Confronting the misogyny and get-rich-quick schemes of influencers means talking openly to young men about success.”
The writer Simon van Teutem resists the lazy framing that treats manosphere appeal as pure ideology, and his market-failure argument cuts closer to the truth than most commentary on the subject. The Davey Verbeek opening works well precisely because it complicates the promised villain. A boy grieving his father and wanting to provide for his children is not a fascist; he is a human being who got there by a comprehensible path.
The strongest passage is Richard Reeves’s summary: society has given young men a long list of don’ts and almost no do’s, then blamed them for looking elsewhere. That is accurate and underappreciated.
Instead of saying young men are simply becoming more right wing, the article argues that the manosphere wins because it offers a map of agency, success, and direction in a setting where respectable institutions mostly offer warnings, shame, and abstraction. That core claim is the live one.
The best line of argument is the simple one that “a crude map beats no map.” That gets at something real. Boys and young men are being told constantly what not to be, while the manosphere speaks directly, concretely, and relentlessly to ambition, competition, money, dating, and self-making. Even when the advice is garbage, it is still advice. That matters.
The article is also smart when it says the manosphere is not mainly ideological in the usual left-right sense, but a struggle over who gets to define success for boys. That is much sharper than the standard “online extremism” frame. It sees that the draw is not just misogyny. It is status, competence, agency, and a script for becoming someone.
The article skirts the hardest part of the problem. Van Teutem cites data showing young men value income as a romantic credential at a rate two and a half times higher than women with equivalent credentials. He then quotes Cordelia Fine to say these preferences are socially constructed. Fine is probably right in some sense, but as he himself acknowledges, explaining the physics of a wall does not help you walk through it. The social constructionist move functions here as a way of acknowledging the pressure without having to take it seriously. Young men live inside those preferences right now including the use of misogyny as a cheap way to feel high status.
It also leaves some status logic underdeveloped. The manosphere does not just sell a path to success. It sells rank ordering. It tells boys who is above them, who is below them, who humiliated them, and how to reverse the humiliation. That is why the appeal is so emotional. It is not merely “here is how to improve your life.” It is “here is why you have been denied your proper place.” The article gets close to this with the language of insecurity, competition, and rejection, but it could go further.
That gets to the hardest point. The article asks, “where is the competition?” That is exactly right. But real competition would require more than better arguments. It would require institutions, mentors, male exemplars, repeated practices, and a language that does not sound like a lecture from someone embarrassed by ambition.
The article has a significant tension it never resolves. Van Teutem argues the manosphere succeeds because it shows up with a map when polite society refuses to draw one, and he is right. But then his own alternative map turns out to be: get a degree from a top university, build a company that creates value for others, find meaning in contribution. This is the vision of a 28-year-old Oxford PhD candidate who writes for De Correspondent. It is not obviously more accessible to Davey than what Andrew Tate offers, and it carries the same structural problem he diagnoses in polite society, namely that it assumes a world where merit and virtue reliably converge.
The piece would be stronger if it grappled with Pinsof-style coalition logic. The manosphere is not just filling an informational vacuum. It is offering young men a coalition with a moral vocabulary, a clear friend-enemy distinction, shared symbols, and an account of why their struggles are not their fault. That is a much harder thing to compete with than bad financial advice. Van Teutem’s alternative vision, that your flourishing and someone else’s should point in the same direction, is better ethics, but it offers no coalition, no clear in-group, and no satisfying villain. It is the vision of an autonomous liberal individual, which is precisely what many of these young men feel they cannot afford to be.
Society talks about success constantly, but almost always in one of two registers that avoid the hard questions.
The first register is therapeutic. Success means finding your authentic self, doing what you love, prioritizing mental health, and not measuring your worth by external achievement. This is well-intentioned and contains real wisdom, but it sidesteps the material reality that young men face. You cannot pay rent with authenticity, and the dating market does not reward emotional availability the way it rewards income.
The second register is structural critique. Success as conventionally defined is a product of privilege, luck, and inherited advantage. The meritocracy is largely a myth. This is also partly true and also largely useless as practical guidance. It explains why the race is rigged without telling you how to run it.
What society avoids is the practical, morally serious middle ground: yes, external achievement matters and here is how to pursue it; yes, status hierarchies are real and here is how to navigate them without losing your soul; yes, women on average respond to male success in ways that create real pressure, and here is how to think about that without becoming bitter or predatory.
The people who do speak in this register tend to come from either religious traditions or from figures like Jordan Peterson, who got enormously rich precisely because he occupied that vacuum before anyone else noticed it was there. Peterson’s advice, make your bed, take responsibility, defer gratification, is banal. The audience was not there for original ideas. They were there because someone was finally speaking directly to young men about how to live without either moralizing at them or pretending the pressures they feel do not exist.
Van Teutem is right that this is a market failure. But it is a market failure with ideological roots. The professional-managerial class that dominates elite media and academia has discomfort with success talk because it sits uneasily alongside commitments to equality and structural critique. That discomfort is not hypocritical exactly, but it is a luxury. The people who can afford not to talk about success are precisely the people who have already achieved it.
The most important practical difference between young men and women is that time pressure runs on different schedules. A man’s attractiveness to potential partners rises through his twenties and into his thirties as his status, income, and confidence increase. A woman’s romantic market position peaks earlier and is more tied to youth and appearance, at least in the short run. This is uncomfortable to say. It is also empirically robust across cultures, however much social construction shapes the margins. A 28-year-old man who is broke but building something real still has time. A 28-year-old woman who has spent her twenties climbing a career ladder may find the romantic landscape has shifted in ways she did not anticipate.
For young men, the practical advice is to get serious about income earlier than feels necessary. Not because money is the point, but because financial instability at 25 closes options, narrows relationships, and compounds anxiety in ways that are hard to recover from. Learn a skill the market pays for. Build a network before you need one. Understand that status in male peer groups often runs on different currency than status in the broader world, and that optimizing for the former can actively harm the latter.
For young women, the practical advice runs in a somewhat different direction. The credentialing instinct, the accumulation of degrees and titles, serves women well in institutional environments but can become a substitute for building leverage, which means clients, capital, or skills that transfer outside a single employer. Many high-achieving women in their late twenties are more dependent on institutional approval than they realize. The smart move is to develop something portable.
Both sexes underestimate how much of success is relational rather than meritocratic. The person who hires you, funds you, or promotes you almost always does so partly because they know you, trust you, or feel some loyalty to you. Young men often treat networking as vaguely corrupt and avoid it. Young women often network well within institutions but less well across them, particularly with older men who might serve as mentors or sponsors, partly because those relationships carry social awkwardness that did not exist a generation ago when they were more common.
Young men tend to suffer most from a lack of direction, from not knowing what game they are playing or whether they are allowed to compete seriously. Young women tend to suffer most from conflicting demands, from being told they can have everything while absorbing the implicit message that wanting too much of any one thing, too much ambition, too much domesticity, too much sexuality, too much reserve, is somehow wrong. The manosphere offers young men a direction, however crude. No equivalent cultural product offers young women a coherent way to navigate their specific contradictions. That is its own kind of market failure.

Talk show host Dennis Prager is 77 years old and paralyzed below the neck. Last month, he filed a lawsuit against three hospitals for medical malpractice. How might Prager’s situation illuminate this discussion?
The obvious connection is the hero system. Prager built his entire public identity around a coherent account of how to live: gratitude, faith, personal responsibility, the rejection of victimhood. The lawsuit complicates this because it is structurally a victimhood claim. Three institutions failed him and he wants them to pay. He can hold both positions, and legally they are perfectly compatible, but the tension reveals something important. Even a man who has spent forty years teaching that attitude determines outcomes, that suffering is a test of your philosophy rather than evidence of injustice, reaches for institutional accountability when the harm is severe enough. The manosphere teaches young men a version of the same stoic self-reliance framework, that the system is rigged but you can transcend it through discipline and will. Prager’s lawsuit suggests that this framework, however valuable as a daily operating posture, has limits that even its most committed practitioners acknowledge under pressure.
The less obvious connection is about what happens when a moral authority’s coalition needs are in tension with his stated beliefs. Prager cannot perform the standard redemptive pivot, cannot say that paralysis taught him his priorities were wrong, because his entire audience came to him precisely because he told them their priorities were already correct. His stress test narrative, suffering confirmed my wisdom rather than revised it, serves his coalition’s needs more than it serves honest self-examination. The manosphere operates the same logic at a cruder level. Influencers cannot tell their audiences that the dating market is complex and that women’s choices are reasonable responses to their own incentives, because that would dissolve the coalition. The audience needs a villain.
What this suggests is that moral frameworks aimed at young men tend to calcify around whatever coalition the framework initially attracts, and then serve that coalition’s emotional needs rather than the truth. Prager started with some insight and ended defending positions he cannot revise without losing his audience and reputation. The manosphere starts with the cruder version and never had the insight to begin with. The young man looking for guidance deserves a framework honest enough to say: here is what we know, here is what remains uncertain, and here is what the evidence suggests even when it is uncomfortable for both of us.

How much wisdom is there in viewing your own suffering as a stress test of your philosophy? It feels grandiose.
The stress test framing does contain a kernel of real wisdom. Stoic philosophy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and most serious religious traditions all argue that your response to suffering reveals your character more than your response to ease does. There is nothing false about that. Viktor Frankl built something on a related insight. The question is what you do with the gap between how you thought you would respond and how you do.
What makes the framing grandiose is that it converts suffering into a performance of prior correctness rather than an encounter with something new. Real suffering tends to produce revision, not confirmation. It finds the places where your map did not match the territory. The people who come through serious catastrophe with something worth saying usually say: I thought I understood this and I did not, or I valued the wrong things, or I was wrong about how much control I had. Prager’s framing produces none of that. It produces a man who already knew everything the suffering had to teach.
There is also something theologically suspicious about it, even on Prager’s own terms. The Jewish tradition he draws on is full of men who argued with God, who found their frameworks shattered by what happened to them, who did not emerge from catastrophe confirmed but broken and then rebuilt differently. Job is the obvious example. Job’s friends are the ones who insist the existing framework explains everything. God rebukes the friends, not Job.
The deeper problem is that the stress test framing is most available to people whose identity is most invested in the framework being tested. A man whose entire public life rests on the correctness of his philosophy cannot afford to have the philosophy fail the test. So the test gets graded accordingly. This is not necessarily conscious dishonesty. It is what happens when the need to maintain a coherent self runs up against evidence that might threaten it. Robert Trivers would call it self-deception in the service of social presentation. You believe the test was passed because the alternative is too costly to contemplate.
For a young man or woman under thirty, this is useful negative instruction. The philosophies worth holding are the ones you are willing to let suffering revise. If you find yourself in a hard season and your main interpretive move is to confirm that you were right all along, that is a sign the philosophy is serving you rather than the other way around.

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The Star Chamber of Stanford

David Pinsof’s misunderstanding essay applies to Rony Guldmann’s memoir, and in ways that cut against Guldmann more sharply than they do against his faculty antagonists.
Start with Stanford Law professor Joe Bankman’s early response to the draft of Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression. Bankman calls it a “tour de force” dripping with irony, reassures Guldmann that law school audiences will understand he is not “truly of their ilk,” and speculates that Guldmann’s solicitude for conservatives is essentially ironic rather than sincere. Pinsof would recognize this immediately. Bankman was not confused about what Guldmann was doing. He was performing coalition maintenance in real time, signaling to Guldmann the terms on which his project was acceptable: as a liberal studying conservatives from a position of amused superiority, not as someone who might vindicate them. The tolerance was conditional on ironic distance. That is not a misunderstanding. That is a coalition boundary stated plainly, if politely.
When the relationship later soured, when the “discreet polemics of academic hatred” Bourdieu describes began in earnest, Guldmann’s memoir interprets the shift as a response to his transgression of the liberal elite’s “covert religiosity.” He believes he provoked a disgust-based reaction by taking conservative claims seriously rather than ironically. That is almost certainly correct as a description. But Guldmann draws from it a conclusion Pinsof would reject: that if only the elites understood their own behavior, if only the philosophical argument were made clearly enough, something might change. Guldmann tells us he “does not advance a victim-villain narrative” and that “to understand all is to forgive all.” He frames the whole affair as philosophically instructive rather than as a simple power conflict. That framing is itself a version of the misunderstanding myth. The Stanford faculty did not gaslight Guldmann because they failed to grasp the higher truth of conservative claims of cultural oppression. They did it because he stopped being useful to their coalition and started being a liability.
Where Pinsof most illuminates the memoir is in the scene Guldmann reconstructs around Bankman’s later advice that Guldmann “wrap up the book by rebutting his apologetics for conservatism.” Guldmann reads this as evidence of liberal bad faith, proof that the academy predetermined the acceptable conclusion before the argument was made. He is right. But Pinsof’s framework strips the moral charge from it. Bankman was not being dishonest in the sense of suppressing a position he secretly knew to be true. He was being a coalition member, enforcing a boundary the way coalition members always do, through advice framed as mentorship, through concern framed as collegial guidance. The propagandistic bias Pinsof describes operates precisely here: the behavior of rivals is read dispositionally rather than situationally, the conservative grievance is a symptom, a character flaw, an apologia rather than an argument. Bankman’s suggestion was not a lapse. It was the system working as designed.
The one place the memoir escapes Pinsof’s reach is in its core philosophical claim, which Guldmann states explicitly: that liberal hero-systems conceal their religious character behind a secular facade, and that this concealment gives liberal elites “unearned rhetorical advantages” over conservatives whose hero-systems operate nakedly in public view. Pinsof’s account of coalition politics does not address whether that argument is true. He could say Guldmann advances it for coalition purposes of his own, to gain status as the maverick insider who saw through his own tribe. That may be. But the argument either holds or it does not, and Pinsof’s framework, which dissolves stated motives into actual ones, cannot evaluate the argument on its own terms. Guldmann’s memoir is, among other things, a claim that the system Pinsof describes has a specific asymmetry, that the liberal version of it is harder to see and therefore harder to resist. That is a claim Pinsof never addresses, and the memoir exists to press it.

I was first alerted to Rony Guldmann’s memoir by an email from Stephen Turner shortly after the book was self-published in 2022.

The Tacit

Turner’s tacit knowledge critique adds something to the Guldmann memoir that none of the other frameworks we applied to it quite reached, and it does so by naming the precise mechanism through which the Stanford law faculty enforced coalition boundaries without ever stating them explicitly.

Guldmann’s central complaint, stated across hundreds of pages with considerable philosophical sophistication, is that the enforcement he experienced operated entirely through channels that could not be formally contested. Nobody told him his research agenda was ideologically impermissible. Nobody said his book on conservative cultural oppression was unacceptable. What happened instead was a series of conversations in which the content of his work was never directly engaged, in which the objections took the form of scholarly advice about concreteness and insularity and relevance, in which the acceptable conclusion was communicated before the argument was examined, in which the coalition’s judgment was delivered through the accumulated texture of who invited whom to lunch and whose recommendation arrived promptly and whose door stayed open. Turner’s framework names this precisely. What was being enforced was tacit knowledge about what counts as legitimate scholarly work, knowledge so deeply embedded in the shared formation of the Stanford law faculty that its bearers did not need to articulate it and may have been unable to do so.

This is the specific form of ideological enforcement that is hardest to contest and hardest to even identify clearly as enforcement. When Guldmann’s colleagues told him his work lacked concreteness, they were applying a criterion that they experienced as an intellectual judgment rather than as a coalition filter. From inside their formation, work that took conservative complaints about cultural oppression seriously as a philosophical object probably did look somehow off, not well formed, not engaging the right questions in the right way. The criterion of concreteness was not a pretext cynically deployed to suppress heterodoxy. It was the authentic expression of a trained perception that had been formed to find certain kinds of questions worth asking and others not. Turner would say this is exactly what tacit knowledge claims do in institutional settings: they naturalize coalition preferences as intellectual standards, making it impossible to distinguish scholarly judgment from motivated enforcement because from inside the formation there is no such distinction to make.

The specific problem this creates for Guldmann is one that Turner’s framework illuminates. Guldmann could not contest the judgments because they were never stated as judgments. You cannot argue against a criterion of concreteness that is applied through implication rather than specification. You cannot appeal against a perception of insularity that is communicated through the texture of social interaction rather than through any formal evaluation process. The enforcement mechanism has no explicit form that could be contested, which is precisely what makes tacit knowledge claims so effective as authority shields in exactly Turner’s sense. The faculty members who found Guldmann’s work unacceptable were exercising the authority of a trained perception that by definition cannot be fully articulated, which means it cannot be evaluated from outside, which means it cannot be challenged on its own terms.

The Bankman suggestion that Guldmann conclude his book by rebutting his own apologetics for conservatism is the most compressed illustration of this dynamic in the memoir. What Bankman was communicating, through the form of collegial advice, was that the tacit knowledge standards of the Stanford formation required a specific kind of conclusion, that a work which did not reach that conclusion was by definition incomplete or poorly formed in a way that the formation could feel but could not fully specify. The criterion was not arbitrary. From inside the formation, it probably felt like the obvious requirement of scholarly honesty and intellectual rigor. Taking conservative cultural complaints seriously as a philosophical object and then not concluding that they were wrong would strike a member of that community as a failure to follow the argument where it leads, as a kind of intellectual cowardice or confusion. The tacit knowledge standard was the standard of what a properly formed scholar would obviously conclude, and Guldmann’s refusal to reach that conclusion was what made him look not primarily ideologically deviant but intellectually deficient.

Turner’s account of how expertise communities use tacit knowledge claims to police their boundaries without acknowledging that they are doing so illuminates why Guldmann experienced the process as gaslighting rather than as straightforward ideological enforcement. Gaslighting is precisely what happens when an institution applies tacit standards that it cannot articulate without compromising its claim to be exercising disinterested scholarly judgment, and when the target of that application cannot identify the standards being applied because they are tacit. The institution does not know it is gaslighting because from inside the formation the standards feel like intellectual criteria. The target does not know quite what is happening because the standards are never stated and therefore cannot be directly contested. The result is the specific form of epistemic disorientation Guldmann describes: the sense that one’s perceptions are being systematically denied not through explicit argument but through the accumulated weight of small social signals that individually seem innocent and collectively amount to a verdict.

The memoir’s most philosophically interesting feature, from Turner’s perspective, is Guldmann’s attempt to contest the tacit knowledge claims of the Stanford formation by making them explicit. His book is precisely an attempt to articulate what the formation treats as unarticulable, to state as an explicit philosophical position the assumptions about liberal rationality and conservative irrationality that the formation treats as obvious background, to contest from outside the formation’s tacit standards for what counts as legitimate intellectual inquiry. Turner would predict that this attempt to make tacit knowledge explicit would be received not as philosophical clarification but as evidence of the contestant’s failure to understand how scholarship works. And this is precisely what Guldmann documents: his attempt to contest the implicit standards through explicit philosophical argument is processed by the formation as further evidence that he does not quite grasp what serious legal scholarship requires.

Turner’s distinction between causal mechanisms and compelling descriptions that fit a selection of cases generates one further observation about the memoir that none of the other frameworks produce. Guldmann’s account is, by his own acknowledgment, a partial and interested account of events that could be narrated differently by the people who processed him. He does not deny this. He claims that the narrative he tells is more accurate than the alternative narratives available. But Turner would press on what evidence could in principle adjudicate between Guldmann’s account and the account that his Stanford colleagues would give. Guldmann says he was processed through tacit knowledge enforcement that operated as ideology beneath the appearance of scholarly judgment. His colleagues would say he produced work that did not meet the standards of serious legal scholarship and that the feedback he received was honest professional advice. Both accounts are consistent with the observable evidence because the enforcement mechanism is tacit, which means by definition it does not leave the kind of evidentiary trace that would allow the two accounts to be cleanly separated.

This is not a reason to dismiss Guldmann’s account. Turner’s framework supports his central claim: that institutions enforce coalition boundaries through tacit knowledge claims that cannot be externally audited, and that the impossibility of external audit is a structural feature of tacit knowledge enforcement rather than evidence that no enforcement occurred. But it does mean that Guldmann’s memoir, for all its philosophical sophistication and autobiographical detail, cannot definitively establish what it claims to establish about the specific intentions and judgments of specific individuals. What it can establish, and what Turner’s framework confirms, is that the institution was organized in a way that made tacit knowledge enforcement possible, routine, and invisible to the people doing it. That is a structural claim about how the institution works rather than a psychological claim about what specific individuals intended, and it is the claim that Turner’s framework is best positioned to support.

What Turner adds to the Guldmann memoir that none of the other frameworks provide is therefore a precise account of why the enforcement Guldmann describes was both real and invisible to its agents, why contesting it through explicit argument was structurally impossible rather than merely difficult, and why the specific form of epistemic disorientation he experienced, the gaslighting quality of an enforcement mechanism that denied its own existence while operating continuously, was not a product of exceptional bad faith on anyone’s part but of the normal functioning of tacit knowledge claims in institutions where coalition preferences have been successfully naturalized as intellectual standards. Turner’s framework does not vindicate Guldmann entirely. It does vindicate his structural diagnosis while leaving the psychological and intentional dimensions of his account as indeterminate as the evidence requires them to be.

Charisma & Social Paradoxes

Star Chamber is a narrative about what it feels like to be inside a social paradox that you can see clearly enough to be destroyed by but not clearly enough to escape.
Pinsof defines charisma as skill at social paradoxes, the ability to pursue status without appearing to seek it, to signal coalition membership while appearing merely to perceive reality honestly, to enforce boundaries while appearing merely to apply standards. The Stanford law faculty that processed Guldmann was collectively charismatic in exactly this technical sense, and the memoir is a document of what it feels like to be on the receiving end of that collective charisma without having the formation required to recognize it as performance.
The faculty members Guldmann describes were not consciously performing. They experienced their discomfort with his research agenda as scholarly judgment, their advice to redirect his energy as mentorship, their signals of non-belonging as the natural expression of professional assessment. This is the social paradox at maximum effectiveness: the signal is concealed from both the signaler and the recipient. The faculty member who suggests Guldmann wrap up his book by rebutting his own apologetics for conservatism is not consciously enforcing a coalition boundary. He is experiencing what feels like scholarly advice about how to complete an argument honestly. The charisma of the formation is precisely its ability to make coalition enforcement feel like rational perception to the people doing it, which is what makes it impossible to contest directly and what makes the target’s attempts at contestation look like further evidence of the problem being diagnosed.
Guldmann experiences the receiving end of this charisma as gaslighting, which is the precise phenomenological consequence Pinsof’s framework predicts. When a social paradox is operating at full strength, the target who perceives the paradox cannot make that perception legible to the paradox’s participants, because the participants do not experience themselves as performing. The target who says you are enforcing coalition boundaries while presenting it as scholarly judgment will be heard, by the formation’s participants, as someone who cannot distinguish scholarly judgment from coalition enforcement, which confirms the formation’s existing assessment that something is epistemically wrong with the target’s perception. The paradox converts the exposure attempt into confirmation of the diagnosis. This is not bad faith on anyone’s part. It is the structural logic of a social paradox operating through perceptions rather than through strategic deception.
The memoir’s most philosophically interesting passages are the ones where Guldmann almost names this dynamic but cannot quite complete the description because he lacks Pinsof’s vocabulary. He knows something is being performed. He can document the specific moments where the performance is visible to him: the way objections take the form of scholarly advice, the way coalition enforcement operates through the texture of social interaction rather than through explicit evaluation, the way his perceptions are denied not through argument but through the accumulated weight of small signals that individually seem innocent. What he cannot fully articulate is why the performance is so difficult to expose, why his attempts to name what is happening produce not engagement but further evidence of his own deficiency. The social paradoxes paper provides the missing vocabulary: the performance is a social paradox whose effectiveness depends on remaining a social paradox, and any exposure attempt that can be absorbed into the paradox’s logic will be absorbed rather than acknowledged.
What Guldmann’s memoir documents, in detail that the social paradoxes paper illuminates, is his attempt to navigate this recursive structure without fully understanding what he is navigating. He knows the first level: he can see that his research agenda is triggering adverse responses. He partially grasps the second level: he can see that the adverse responses are being delivered through the language of scholarly advice rather than through explicit ideological objection. What he cannot fully see is the third level: that the adjustment is not just strategic, that the formation members are not consciously performing concern about concreteness and insularity while enforcing coalition boundaries, but are perceiving his work as lacking concreteness and insularity through a formation that has made coalition enforcement and scholarly judgment indistinguishable from the inside.
This third-level blindness is what makes the memoir so painful to read and so philosophically interesting. Guldmann oscillates between two explanations for what is happening to him that are both partially right and both insufficient. The first is that his colleagues are acting in bad faith, consciously suppressing his research agenda while presenting the suppression as scholarly judgment. The second is that he has produced deficient work that his colleagues are correctly identifying as inadequate by legitimate scholarly standards. Neither explanation is satisfying because neither captures the third-level reality: that the formation produces perceptions of inadequacy that are simultaneously accurate scholarly judgments by the formation’s standards and coalition enforcement by any external standard, and that these two descriptions are not distinguishable from inside the formation that produces them.
The sacred values section of the social paradoxes paper illuminates the specific form of authority the Stanford formation exercises over Guldmann. Pinsof argues that sacred values stabilize status games by disguising them as the pursuit of something entirely unrelated to status. The sacred value the Stanford law formation deploys is scholarly seriousness, specifically the commitment to rigorous, concrete, practically relevant legal scholarship that serves the interests of the communities whose legal situation it analyzes. This sacred value is maximally distant from coalition enforcement while tracking a intellectual commitment closely enough to be completely convincing. The faculty member who tells Guldmann his work lacks concreteness is not consciously protecting a status position. She is defending what she experiences as the sacred value of serious legal scholarship against what she perceives as philosophical self-indulgence.
What makes this sacred value so effective as a social paradox is that it is not entirely wrong. There are questions about whether Guldmann’s philosophical approach to conservative cultural complaints produces the kind of concrete, practically engaged scholarship that legal academia at its best is supposed to produce. The sacred value works precisely because it contains enough intellectual content to make coalition enforcement feel like principled scholarly judgment. The social paradox is symbiotic in Pinsof’s sense: the faculty members who enforce it believe they are defending something important, which makes their enforcement more effective than strategic deception would be, and the institutional environment rewards them for that belief in ways that reinforce the formation.
The status game volatility prediction generates the memoir’s most interesting forward-looking observation. Pinsof argues that status games collapse when they become common knowledge, and that collapse inverts the hierarchy: the winners look conniving and entitled while the losers look humble and principled. The memoir itself is an attempt to produce exactly this common knowledge collapse. By documenting in detail how the formation’s sacred value of scholarly seriousness functions as a social paradox that enforces coalition boundaries while appearing to apply neutral standards, Guldmann is trying to make the game visible in ways that would invert the hierarchy. The faculty members who processed him would look, in this inversion, like sophisticated coalition enforcers rather than principled scholars, while he would look like someone who paid a cost for intellectual honesty.
Whether this inversion occurs depends on whether Guldmann’s audience has the formation required to see through the paradox or whether they have the formation that makes the paradox invisible. For readers already skeptical of progressive institutional culture, the memoir confirms what they already suspect and generates the hierarchy inversion Pinsof describes. For readers inside the progressive academic formation, the memoir is likely to be absorbed as further evidence of Guldmann’s inability to distinguish scholarly judgment from coalition enforcement, which is exactly the diagnosis the formation had already applied to his work. The social paradox is robust enough to survive most exposure attempts because it can absorb them as confirmation rather than challenge.
The charisma essay’s account of what happens to people who are bad at social paradoxes is where the framework becomes most directly illuminating about Guldmann’s personal situation. Pinsof argues that people who are bad at social paradoxes look cringe, pretentious, thirsty, or fake. They pursue their goals in ways that make the pursuit visible, which is precisely what the social paradox requires to remain invisible. Guldmann’s memoir documents his progressive failure to manage the social paradoxes of the Stanford law environment. His attempts to contest the formation’s implicit judgments, his efforts to make explicit the tacit standards being applied to his work, his insistence on pursuing a research agenda that the formation had coded as inappropriate: all of these make his status-seeking visible in ways that violate the social paradox norms of the formation.
This is not a criticism of Guldmann. It is a description of what happens to someone with intellectual integrity when they encounter a social paradox they cannot perform. The formation rewards those who pursue their intellectual agendas while appearing not to pursue them, who absorb the formation’s values while appearing to discover them independently, who signal coalition membership while appearing to reach their conclusions through disinterested inquiry. Guldmann cannot perform these paradoxes because his intellectual agenda is at odds with the formation’s starting points, which means that any attempt to conceal his agenda would require abandoning it. His honesty about his intellectual commitments, which is a virtue, makes him unable to manage the social paradoxes that the formation requires for successful membership.
The memoir’s title, Star Chamber, captures something important that the social paradoxes framework illuminates. The historical Star Chamber was a court that operated without the normal protections of common law, without the right to face accusers, without the ability to contest evidence whose nature was never specified. Guldmann’s title is apt because the social paradox enforcement he documents operates through exactly this structure. He cannot face his accusers because the accusation is never made explicit. He cannot contest the evidence because the evidence is the formation’s tacit perception of inadequacy, which cannot be specified without dissolving the social paradox that makes it authoritative. He cannot appeal the verdict because the verdict is delivered not through any formal process but through the accumulated texture of social interaction that carries no official weight and can therefore not be officially contested.
What the social paradoxes paper adds to understanding this dynamic is the recognition that the Star Chamber structure is not a deviation from the formation’s normal operation but its essential feature. The social paradox requires that the enforcement mechanism have no explicit form that could be contested. The moment the enforcement becomes explicit, the paradox collapses and the formation loses the authority that makes the enforcement effective. The Star Chamber quality of Guldmann’s experience is not a malfunction of the system. It is the system working as designed, maintaining the social paradox that gives the formation its authority by ensuring that the enforcement mechanism remains tacit, unacknowledged, and impossible to formally contest.
The deepest thing the charisma essay and social paradoxes paper add to the memoir is a way of understanding why Guldmann’s experience was both unjust and inevitable given the structure of the situation he was in. The formation was not acting in bad faith. It was operating through perceptions that were simultaneously coalition enforcement and scholarly judgment, and the impossibility of distinguishing these two descriptions from inside the formation is what made the enforcement both effective and impossible to contest. Guldmann was not simply unlucky or naive. He was in a situation where honesty about his intellectual commitments made him unable to perform the social paradoxes that the formation required for successful membership, and where his inability to perform those paradoxes produced perceptions of inadequacy in the formation’s members that could not be revised through philosophical argument because they were tacit rather than explicit.
The memoir is ultimately a document of what it costs to be bad at social paradoxes in an institution where social paradox mastery is the primary mechanism of success. Pinsof’s framework does not make that cost smaller. It makes it legible, which is a different and perhaps more honest form of help.

Cultural Trauma

In his essay on cultural trauma, Jeffrey Alexander argues that collective traumas are not self-interpreting events but constructed narratives through which communities define their identity, attribute responsibility for injury, and mobilize moral reckoning. The Stanford law faculty that processed Guldmann was not simply applying scholarly standards to his work. It was participating in a collective trauma narrative that gave his research agenda its specific meaning within the formation’s symbolic order, and that meaning determined how his work would be received before any explicit evaluation occurred.
The collective trauma organizing the progressive legal academy in the period Guldmann describes is the history of law’s complicity in racial hierarchy, gender subordination, and the systematic exclusion of marginalized groups from the protections the legal system formally promised. This trauma narrative is real in Alexander’s sense: it is constructed through sustained symbolic work by carrier groups, it has been successfully extended to generate identification across a broad audience, and it has produced a civil sphere code that classifies legal scholarship according to whether it advances or impedes the repair project the trauma demands. Within this code, scholarship that takes conservative cultural complaints seriously is not simply wrong or methodologically deficient. It is positioned on the wrong side of the trauma narrative’s fundamental moral distinction, which is the distinction between those who advance the repair of historical injury and those who rationalize or minimize it.
Guldmann’s research agenda triggered this coding automatically and before his work was examined on its merits. His project of taking conservative cultural complaints philosophically seriously placed him, within the trauma narrative’s binary code, on the side of those who minimize the injury rather than those who advance the repair. This coding is what Alexander would call the civil sphere classification that determines legitimate and illegitimate scholarly purposes. Guldmann was not classified as a conservative. He was classified as someone whose intellectual project served the wrong side of the formation’s fundamental moral distinction, which is a more serious and more difficult classification to contest because it operates at the level of sacred value rather than at the level of explicit political alignment.
Alexander’s carrier group analysis illuminates something about the specific people Guldmann encountered that the memoir’s narrative does not quite capture. The Stanford law faculty members who processed Guldmann were not simply exercising individual scholarly judgment. They were functioning as carrier groups for the trauma narrative that organized their formation, each in ways that reflected their specific position within the narrative’s institutional infrastructure. The colleague who suggested Guldmann rebut his apologetics for conservatism was performing the carrier group function of defining the nature of the scholarly obligation the trauma narrative imposes: serious legal scholarship must contribute to repair, not to rationalization. The colleague who emphasized concreteness and relevance was performing the carrier group function of defining the victim’s relation to the scholarly enterprise: the trauma narrative requires that scholarship be anchored in the concrete experience of those who suffered the historical injury, not in abstract philosophical analysis of those who complain about the repair project. Each intervention was a carrier group performance of a specific element of Alexander’s four questions, and together they constituted the formation’s collective response to Guldmann’s violation of the trauma narrative’s symbolic order.
The attribution of responsibility within the trauma narrative is where Alexander’s framework illuminates something particularly precise about Guldmann’s situation. Alexander argues that trauma narratives must successfully attribute responsibility for the injury to a clearly identified antagonist. The progressive legal academy’s trauma narrative attributes responsibility to a specific set of intellectual and political formations: originalism, colorblindness, meritocracy ideology, and the various forms of conservative legal thought that have been used to resist or reverse the repair project. Guldmann’s research agenda was read, within this attribution structure, as providing philosophical resources to these antagonist formations even though his explicit argument was that their complaints deserved serious philosophical engagement rather than endorsement. The trauma narrative’s attribution logic does not require that Guldmann explicitly endorse the antagonist formations. It requires only that his work be legible as serving their interests, which taking their cultural complaints seriously philosophically clearly was within the formation’s symbolic order.
This explains something about Guldmann’s experience that neither Turner’s tacit knowledge framework nor Pinsof’s social paradox framework fully captures: the moral intensity of the formation’s response to his work. Tacit knowledge enforcement and social paradox management explain the mechanism of the response. They do not fully explain why the response carried the specific quality of moral urgency that Guldmann documents, the sense that something important was being defended against something threatening. Alexander’s trauma framework explains this. Within the formation’s symbolic order, Guldmann’s project was not simply methodologically questionable. It was positioned within the trauma narrative’s attribution of responsibility as something that served the antagonist formations whose resistance to repair had perpetuated the historical injury. The moral intensity of the response reflects the sacred value being defended, not simply the coalition boundary being enforced.
The civil sphere’s binary code applies to Guldmann’s situation with unusual precision. Alexander argues that democratic culture classifies actors according to binary distinctions: rational versus irrational, autonomous versus dependent, open versus secretive, critical versus deferential. Within the progressive legal academy’s version of this code, scholarly work that takes conservative cultural complaints seriously is classified as deferring to the antagonist formations rather than critically analyzing them, as dependent on conservative cultural frameworks rather than autonomous from them, as rationalizing rather than illuminating. These classifications are not consciously applied through explicit evaluation. They are the tacit perceptions that Turner’s framework identifies as formation-specific, but Alexander’s framework shows that the tacit perceptions are organized by a binary code that is itself the product of the trauma narrative’s symbolic work.
Guldmann’s fundamental problem within this symbolic order is that his project required him to perform a kind of scholarly autonomy that the formation’s binary code had already classified as dependence. He was trying to show that taking conservative cultural complaints seriously was the expression of philosophical independence from progressive orthodoxy, a willingness to go where the argument leads rather than where the coalition requires. But within the formation’s binary code, scholarly autonomy means autonomy from the antagonist formations whose resistance to repair is coded as the fundamental threat. Autonomy from progressive orthodoxy, in this symbolic order, looks like dependence on conservative cultural frameworks, which is the code’s definition of the compromised scholarly position. Guldmann’s performance of philosophical independence was received as the binary opposite of what he intended because the formation’s code had already assigned the relevant symbolic positions before his argument was examined.
Alexander’s account of civil repair adds a dimension that is both illuminating and deeply uncomfortable for Guldmann’s self-understanding. He frames his memoir partly as an act of civil repair: exposing the injustice done to him, restoring the possibility of philosophical inquiry within legal academia, reconnecting the formation to its own stated values of open intellectual engagement. But Alexander’s framework shows that repair requires not just exposing the injury but successfully constructing a counter-narrative that can compete with the existing trauma narrative for the formation’s symbolic allegiance. Guldmann’s memoir is a carrier group performance in exactly Alexander’s sense: he is defining the nature of his pain, establishing himself as the victim of a symbolic order that cannot acknowledge its own enforcement mechanisms, and attributing responsibility to the formation that processed him.
Whether this repair project can succeed depends on Alexander’s four questions applied to Guldmann’s counter-narrative. On the nature of the pain, the memoir is specific and detailed: the gaslighting, the indirect communication of unacceptable verdicts, the impossibility of contesting implicit standards, the accumulated cost of being processed by a formation that cannot acknowledge what it is doing. On the nature of the victim, Guldmann presents himself as a scholar whose intellectual independence was penalized by a formation that claimed to value it, which is a legible and sympathetic victim position to readers who are not inside the progressive legal academy’s formation. On the relation of the victim to the wider audience, this is where the repair project faces its structural challenge. The wider audience that could identify with Guldmann’s position, readers who have experienced or can imagine experiencing the kind of formation-specific enforcement he documents, is significantly different from the formation whose symbolic order his counter-narrative is trying to disrupt. He can generate identification from outside the formation more easily than from inside it, which means his repair project is more likely to succeed at building a counter-coalition than at reforming the formation that processed him.
On the attribution of responsibility, Guldmann’s counter-narrative attributes responsibility to the progressive legal academy as a formation, to the specific individuals who delivered the formation’s implicit verdicts, and to the institutional arrangements that made tacit enforcement possible without accountability. This attribution is where his repair project is most vulnerable within Alexander’s framework. Successful trauma narratives, in Alexander’s account, require that the attributed responsibility be legible to the broader audience as a moral failure rather than as a political disagreement. For audiences inside the progressive formation, Guldmann’s attribution will be read as a political grievance dressed in the language of moral injury, which is precisely the progressive formation’s classification of conservative cultural complaints that his book tries to contest. The repair project is caught in the same recursive structure that his book identifies: the counter-narrative’s attribution of responsibility will be processed by the formation it targets through the same symbolic code that processed his original research agenda.
But Alexander’s framework predicts something about this backlash experience that Guldmann’s narrative does not quite acknowledge. The backlash experience is genuine: the symbolic strain produced by progressive frontlash is real, and the people who are processed by the formation’s enforcement mechanisms are experiencing something real and consequential. But the backlash narrative also has its own sacred values and its own binary codes that naturalize its starting points as neutral philosophical standards rather than as coalition positions. Guldmann’s counter-narrative presents philosophical independence and genuine intellectual inquiry as the sacred values being defended against the progressive formation’s enforcement mechanisms. But within Alexander’s framework, these sacred values are also the product of a specific symbolic order, also the expression of a specific formation’s starting points, also organized by a trauma narrative whose carrier groups have worked to establish philosophical independence as the fundamental value that progressive cultural dominance threatens.
The most honest and complete application of Alexander’s framework to Guldmann’s memoir is therefore this. The memoir documents a realinjury inflicted by a real social mechanism operating through the progressive legal academy’s collective trauma narrative and its associated binary codes and sacred values. The injury is real in Alexander’s sense: it damaged Guldmann’s career, his sense of belonging in the formation he had trained to join, and his ability to pursue the intellectual agenda he had organized his scholarly life around. The trauma narrative that inflicted the injury is also real in Alexander’s sense: it reflects historical injuries whose repair is important, it has been successfully constructed by carrier groups with real moral seriousness, and it organizes perceptions rather than merely strategic performances.
What Alexander’s framework adds that neither Turner nor Pinsof provides is the recognition that both the injury and the trauma narrative that produced it are operating within the same symbolic order, that Guldmann’s counter-narrative is itself a carrier group performance within that order, and that the repair he is attempting requires not just exposing the mechanism of enforcement but constructing a counter-narrative compelling enough to compete with the existing trauma narrative for the formation’s symbolic allegiance. That is a much harder task than philosophical argument, however sophisticated, can accomplish, because it requires the kind of sustained symbolic work across institutional arenas, aesthetic, legal, media, academic, that Alexander identifies as the condition of civil repair. Guldmann’s memoir is one carrier group performance within that larger project. Whether it contributes to repair or simply adds to the symbolic competition between rival trauma narratives without resolving it is the question that Alexander’s framework poses and that neither Guldmann nor his antagonists can answer from inside the symbolic order they both inhabit.

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