Avishai Margalit: The Philosopher of Humiliation

Avishai Margalit (b. 1939) is an Israeli philosopher and public intellectual whose work reshaped how moral and political philosophy treats dignity, humiliation, memory, compromise, and betrayal. He spent the core of his career at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and later held the George F. Kennan chair at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He trained inside the analytic tradition. Over time he moved past its focus on language and logic toward a moral and political philosophy rooted in history, literature, and the concrete textures of human life. His writing returns again and again to the question of how institutions, communities, and shared memory bear on human dignity and moral obligation.

Margalit was born in Afula during the British Mandate for Palestine and grew up in Jerusalem. He came of age with the Israeli state. He attended the Hebrew University Secondary School and served in the airborne Nahal of the Israel Defense Forces. In 1960 he entered the Hebrew University, where he read philosophy and economics. He earned a bachelor’s degree in 1963 and a master’s degree in philosophy in 1965. His master’s thesis examined Karl Marx (1818-1883) on labor, an early sign of his concern with the moral weight of social and economic life.

During his student years he worked for several years as a guide in a youth village for immigrant children. The work brought him close to questions of identity, integration, and belonging that later run through his philosophy. A British Council scholarship took him to Queen’s College, Oxford, from 1968 to 1970. He completed his doctorate under the logician and philosopher of language Yehoshua Bar-Hillel (1915-1975), examining the cognitive status of metaphor, and received his Ph.D. *summa cum laude* from the Hebrew University in 1970.

He joined the Hebrew University faculty soon after. He rose through the ranks to hold the Schulman Professorship of Philosophy and later became professor emeritus. He held visiting posts at Harvard, at Oxford, where he served as the first Bertelsmann Professor, at the Free University of Berlin, and at universities in Prague, Florence, and New York. From 2006 to 2011 he held the George F. Kennan chair at the Institute for Advanced Study, among the leading centers for advanced scholarship in the world.

His wife, the philosopher Edna Ullmann-Margalit (1946-2010), shaped his thinking across four decades. He married her in 1965. She worked on social conventions, norms, and collective choice, and the two shared projects and arguments until her death in 2010. They raised four children. After she died, Margalit went on living and working in Jerusalem.

Margalit’s earliest publications fall in the philosophy of language, logic, metaphor, and rationality. He edited the volume *Meaning and Use* (1979), a collection of essays on language and epistemology. His attention then shifted toward moral and political philosophy. Where many analytic philosophers lean on abstract thought experiments, Margalit built a method around what he calls exemplary cases. He prefers complex historical events, literary narratives, and political controversies to tidy hypotheticals. His arguments grow out of close attention to real human situations, on the conviction that moral understanding comes through concrete cases rather than detached abstraction. He often draws a line between explaining a concept and illuminating it. Explanation seeks formal definition and logical clarity. Illumination seeks understanding through rich examples that show how a concept lives in moral experience. He favors the second task throughout his career.

His international standing rests first on *The Decent Society* (1996). In years when political philosophers argued mostly about justice, equality, and rights, Margalit asked a different question. What makes a society decent? His answer: a decent society runs institutions that do not humiliate the men who depend on them. The book placed humiliation at the center of political thought. Honor turns on rank, reputation, and position. Dignity belongs to a man by his humanity. Institutions humiliate when they treat men as less than human, strip them of agency, reduce them to categories, or refuse to see them as persons. A welfare office, a prison, a bureaucracy, or a state can humiliate even while it keeps within the law. To prevent such treatment becomes a first political duty. The book marked Margalit as an original moral philosopher of his generation.

A second major contribution came with *The Ethics of Memory* (2002), where Margalit took up the moral force of shared remembrance. The book asks how societies remember historical events and what duties follow from those memories. Its organizing idea is a distinction between thick and thin relations. Thin relations hold among strangers joined only by a common humanity, and they carry universal claims such as fairness, respect, and justice. Thick relations grow from shared history, family ties, communal bonds, and national identity, and they carry loyalty, memory, solidarity, and mutual care. Margalit holds that ethics governs the thick relations while morality governs the thin. The distinction organizes much of his later thought and gives him a way to weigh the moral pull of communities, nations, and historical identities.

With the historian and journalist Ian Buruma (b. 1951), Margalit published *Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies* (2004). Written after the September 11 attacks, the book traces the intellectual roots of anti-Western thought. Margalit and Buruma argue that hostility toward the West rises not only outside it but inside it, from romantic, nationalist, and anti-modern currents born in Europe. The book entered debates about terrorism, modernity, and cultural conflict and shaped how readers thought about the sources of such hatred.

In *On Compromise and Rotten Compromises* (2009), Margalit took up one of the hard questions of political ethics. Political life often demands compromise, yet are there compromises a man should never accept? He argues that some agreements are rotten because they establish or preserve an inhuman regime. He draws on the Munich Agreement, the Yalta Conference, the slavery provisions of the United States Constitution, and Arab-Israeli negotiations, and he holds that certain accommodations cross a moral line whatever their practical gain. He writes that our compromises tell us who we are more than our ideals do. The book reflects his wider turn toward a negative ethics aimed at preventing evil rather than reaching perfection.

His interest in religion, identity, and exclusion runs through *Idolatry* (1992), written with the philosopher Moshe Halbertal (b. 1958) and published by Harvard University Press. The book treats idolatry not merely as a theological error but as a social and political matter. By tracing how communities mark insiders and outsiders through ideas of false worship and spiritual corruption, the authors show how exclusion and hostility find their justification.

*On Betrayal* (2017) returns to the distinction between thick and thin relations. Betrayal, Margalit argues, becomes possible only inside thick relationships built on trust, loyalty, and shared identity. A man cannot betray a stranger. The concept therefore lights up the moral structure of human attachment. The book ranges across personal relationships, religious communities, political movements, and national loyalties, and it shows how the experience of betrayal reveals the obligations folded into shared life.

Margalit has stayed close to Israeli public affairs across his career. In the early 1970s he took part in forming Moked, a left-wing party that sought dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians. He later helped found the Israeli Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace and aligned himself with Peace Now, among the most influential of Israel’s peace movements. He served on the board of B’Tselem, the Israeli human rights organization. These commitments reflect his view that philosophy should keep its ties to public life and political responsibility.

Beyond the academy he has become a respected public intellectual. For decades he has written essays for The New York Review of Books and other major publications on Israeli politics, Jewish thought, historical memory, and moral philosophy. The essays carry the marks of his scholarly work: conceptual care, historical depth, and a steady concern with human dignity.

His honors include the Spinoza Lens Prize in 2001, the Israel Prize in Philosophy in 2010, the EMET Prize, the Ernst Bloch Prize in 2012, and the Leopold Lucas Prize, along with election to the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities and membership in the American Philosophical Society.

Margalit’s lasting significance lies in his effort to turn moral and political philosophy toward neglected corners of human experience. Where many philosophers fix on justice, rights, or utility, he writes about humiliation, memory, loyalty, compromise, and betrayal. His work shows that we judge political institutions not only by their efficiency or fairness but by how they treat the men inside them. Across more than five decades he has argued that the first task of a decent society is not to build perfection but to prevent cruelty, degradation, and the ruin of human dignity. In that effort he has built an influential body of moral thought.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

David Pinsof opens “A Big Misunderstanding” with a charge against his own trade. Intellectuals blame the world’s troubles on misunderstanding, he writes, because the story flatters them. If every problem comes from ignorance, bias, and tribalism, then the men whose job is understanding become the men who save the world. Pinsof throws the story out. Humans are savvy coalitional primates who chase status, allies, and resources while telling themselves a kinder tale. The space between a man’s stated motive and his real one is the space between Starbucks’ mission statement and its drive for profit. Stupidity is strategic. Bad motives, not bad beliefs, run the world. Advice is mostly bullshit, and the world has no wish to be saved.

Put Avishai Margalit under this lens and the first surprise is how much he already concedes. Margalit does not preach the misunderstanding myth. He thinks evil is real and often clear-eyed. His negative ethics aims to prevent cruelty, not to perfect mankind, and the modesty of that aim sits close to Pinsof’s line that some things cannot be fixed. The man who wrote that we should be judged by our compromises more than by our ideals knows the distance between what people profess and what they do. On Compromise and Rotten Compromises is a book about that distance. So Margalit makes no easy mark for the charge that he expects education to cure the species.

Pinsof’s sharpest tool is the split between stated and real motives, and he aims it at the intellectual’s product itself. Margalit’s stated aim is to give the humiliated a moral language and to name the institutions that strip men of standing. Read through Pinsof, the work might serve a different end. Margalit writes for the New York Review of Books and the cosmopolitan moral class that reads it. His ideal of the decent society names that class’s code. To call a compromise rotten is a status move before it is a moral one. It lifts the speaker above the man who compromised and ties the rival to Munich and the men who made it, the most useful slander in political argument. Peace Now and B’Tselem mark a coalition. The frame might read the whole apparatus of dignity-talk as moral combat fought with a kindly vocabulary.

Humiliation carries the same double reading. Margalit treats it as a harm to prevent. Pinsof might treat the charge of humiliation as a weapon. To accuse an institution of degrading men derogates the men who run it, and derogating rivals is an old and profitable move for a coalitional animal. The bureaucrat, the prison, the state in Margalit’s pages do not blunder. On the cynical read they serve someone’s interest, and they humiliate because humiliation pays. Margalit wants better institutions. Pinsof might answer that degradation is the point more often than the error.

Pinsof’s evolutionary picture says we care for ourselves, our kin, and our allies, and that talk of the species or of universal love is mostly signaling. Margalit grants ethics to the thick relations of family, community, and nation, and grants the thin relations of common humanity a weaker pull. The two men describe the same shape. Margalit moralizes it and Pinsof naturalizes it. Where Margalit sees a structure of obligation, the frame sees a coalition wearing the mask of obligation. The ethics of memory reads the same way. A duty to remember the dead binds the living group, signals loyalty, and marks who belongs. The memory of catastrophe under Margalit’s negative ethics holds a people together. Margalit gives it moral weight. The frame gives it a coalition’s work.

The deepest collision sits at the center of Margalit’s whole corpus, and he built it, by accident, as the one idea made to resist Pinsof. Margalit splits honor from dignity. Honor rests on rank, reputation, and standing, the very stuff of status competition. Dignity belongs to a man by his humanity and answers to no rank at all. Pinsof’s frame reduces the moral world to honor games, to status and coalition and the chase for advantage. Margalit’s central claim holds that dignity is real and cannot be cashed out as honor. So the two positions face each other with no common floor. Pinsof says there is no dignity, only status dressed up. Margalit says dignity is the thing status can never reach. Margalit’s life work argues against the Pinsof worldview, and the Pinsof worldview argues that Margalit’s life work is a long and elegant status game.

Pinsof might be right that Margalit’s dignity is a flattering story, the moral philosopher’s version of the misunderstanding myth, a way to look like a sweetie while climbing. Margalit might be right that the cynic has mistaken the price of a thing for its nature, and that honor games run on top of a dignity they never touch. Neither man wins from inside his own frame. What Pinsof shows, applied here, is that Margalit’s gentlest concept and his fiercest opponent point at the same ground from opposite sides. The misunderstanding, if there is one, is the belief that the matter settles.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Margalit holds that dignity belongs to every man by his humanity, that no rank and no group membership grants or withdraws it, and that a decent society runs institutions that humiliate no one. This is the universal floor. It is the inalienable-rights claim in moral dress, the thing Mearsheimer says liberalism overrates. If Mearsheimer is right that reason is the weakest of our three guides, then the universal anti-humiliation norm cannot claim to bind all men as a finding of reason. It becomes a value infusion of one society. The decent society turns out to be the moral code of a particular tribe, the liberal West after the war, the human-rights culture that Samuel Moyn (b. 1972) describes, raised to the status of human nature by men who mistake their own socialization for the truth about everyone. Margalit thinks he is naming what all men owe each other. On Mearsheimer’s anthropology he is naming what his own people taught him to feel, and dressing a local code as a universal one.

His rotten-compromise doctrine takes the hardest hit. In On Compromise and Rotten Compromises Margalit argues that some agreements must be refused even for peace, because they establish or preserve an inhuman regime. This is the liberal moralism that The Great Delusion blames for ruin. Mearsheimer’s whole case is that universalist conviction in foreign policy ends in disaster, because it overrides the survival and security needs that group-bound creatures cannot ignore. The realist might read Margalit’s refusal of the rotten compromise as the luxury belief of a man whose reason has overruled the social imperative that keeps people alive. The two share their paradigm case. Margalit treats Munich as the rotten compromise that proves the rule. Mearsheimer reads appeasement through the cold ledger of the balance of power. Where Margalit hears a moral line that must not be crossed, Mearsheimer hears reason straining against the grain of a social animal, and snapping.

Margalit has a line of retreat, and it runs through his minimalism. His ethics is negative. It asks us to prevent cruelty, not to guarantee a full sheet of rights or to perfect mankind. The thinner the universal claim, the better its odds under Mearsheimer’s frame, because Mearsheimer grants innate sentiment as a real source of preference. Disgust at gratuitous suffering might sit closer to that inborn floor than any list of rights. So Margalit’s smallest claim, do not humiliate, do not degrade a man below the human, might rest on shared sentiment rather than on contested reason, and might survive where the larger liberal program does not. The weaker the demand, the harder it is for Mearsheimer to call it a mere infusion. Margalit’s modesty is his defense.

What then for Margalit, if Mearsheimer is right? His map of human attachment stands, because he drew most of it himself. His thick relations keep their force, and his account of memory and loyalty gains a backing in nature that he never sought. What shrinks is the reach of dignity. The universal floor loses its footing in reason and human nature and stands instead as the value of one society among many, strong in its own tribe and thin everywhere else. His rotten-compromise doctrine looks not merely parochial but hazardous, the kind of conviction Mearsheimer holds responsible for blood. And yet the decent society survives as an argument even after it loses its claim to speak for the species, because the truth of a moral demand and the strength of the urge behind it are two different things, and Mearsheimer’s anthropology answers only the second. Margalit ends up a liberal who can no longer say his ideal is written into man. He can still say it is good.

Turner on Essentialism

Stephen Turner is a nominalist about the things social theory loves to treat as real. In The Social Theory of Practices he denies that a shared practice passes between men as a common substance. What looks like one practice held in many heads is many men with similar-enough habits, and the sameness is an inference we draw, not an object we find. He carries the doubt across the whole family of collective and conceptual entities that explanation reaches for. Society, culture, the normative, shared frameworks, common meanings. Turner treats these as words that gather loosely similar cases, not as kinds with essences we uncover. Push hard enough and the collective dissolves into individuals, their dispositions, and the histories that shaped them. The essence was never there. We projected it.

Set Margalit beside this and he looks at first like an ally. His method runs against definition. He prefers to illuminate a concept rather than explain it, to work through exemplary cases rather than pin down necessary and sufficient conditions. He distrusts the tidy hypothetical and reaches for the messy historical event. A man who refuses to say what humiliation is in a formula, and instead shows you a welfare office, a prison, a camp, is not in the business of hunting essences. He treats his concepts the way Turner treats practices, as things known through instances and resistant to capture. So the frame seems to find a friend.

The friendship breaks where Margalit’s morality starts. His ethics needs the concepts to be more than words that gather cases. When he says an institution humiliates a man, he treats humiliation as one thing, a real harm that holds across the welfare office and the camp and the bureaucratic form, the same kind wearing different clothes. When he says dignity belongs to every man by his humanity, he posits a shared human essence and rests the whole universal floor on it. This is the move Turner blocks. There is no common humanity functioning as an object, on Turner’s account, only billions of men with overlapping traits and the inference of a shared nature laid over them. Margalit’s dignity hangs from the one hook the anti-essentialist refuses to drive into the wall. Take away the essence of the human and the claim that all men carry equal dignity loses the thing that made it universal. What remains is a word that does varied work in varied places.

His collective concepts take the same pressure. The Ethics of Memory leans on a community that shares a memory and owes a duty to remember. Turner might read the shared memory as a reification of the plainest kind. No memory-object sits between the members. There are many men with similar-enough recollections and dispositions, and the community of memory is the projection we throw over them. The duty to remember presupposes a collective bearer, and the bearer is the sort of entity Turner spends his work dissolving. Thick relations meet the same fate. Family, community, nation name real attachments among individuals, but Margalit treats them as kinds that ground kinds of obligation, and the anti-essentialist hears a noun pretending to be a thing.

Margalit has a defense, and it is the strongest a moral philosopher could mount against this frame. He never claimed essences. He built his whole style to live without them. Illumination over explanation is the refusal to treat dignity and humiliation as kinds with definable cores. He might say Turner attacks a position he abandoned at the start. You know humiliation when you meet it, case by case, the way you know cruelty, and you need no essence to feel the wrong. That answer holds for the method. It strains at the conclusion. A harm recognized case by case can still be a real harm, but the universal floor asks for more than recognition. The step from these cases of humiliation to every man is owed dignity by his shared humanity smuggles back the essence the method disavowed. The cases stay local and particular. The conclusion claims to bind the species. Somewhere between them the human essence slips back into the argument, and Turner’s frame catches it in the act.

What then for Margalit, if Turner is right about essences? He keeps the cases and loses the kinds. Humiliation survives as a recognizable wrong met one instance at a time, not as a single thing with a nature that institutions violate. The decent society survives as a description of places where such wrongs grow rare, not as a kind of society with an essence. Dignity survives as a word that does heavy and honorable work, not as a property every man carries by virtue of a shared humanity, because that shared humanity is the projection Turner will not grant. Margalit ends able to say that this man was humiliated and that this institution did it. He loses the right to say that every man, everywhere, is owed the same by the same essence, since the essence was the inference all along. The illumination was real. The thing it was supposed to illuminate may have been a word doing its work.

The Ought That Explains Nothing

In Explaining the Normative Stephen Turner takes aim at a word that does heavy lifting in philosophy and earns none of its keep. The normative. Theorists reach for it to explain why a rule binds us, why a reason carries authority, why we must and not merely do. Turner’s charge is that the reaching explains nothing. To say a norm binds because of its normativity relabels the thing in need of explanation and calls the relabel an answer. Press the normativist for the source of the bindingness and he posits the normative as basic, irreducible, a domain that cannot be cashed out in causal or empirical terms without loss. Turner reads the irreducibility claim as a confession. The posit stops a regress it cannot complete. What real work gets done, he argues, gets done by facts a social scientist can name. Habits, expectations, the sanctions men attach to breach, the beliefs each holds about what the others will do and punish. The ought floats above this factual substrate as a gloss. Normative theory, on his account, is bad social science wearing the robes of philosophy, smuggling claims about what people do and enforce under the cover of what they must.

Margalit is a normativist. His late work is a sequence of ought-claims. A decent society ought not humiliate the men who depend on it. Some compromises must be refused even when refusal costs peace. We owe a duty to remember. Betrayal wrongs the one betrayed. He does not try to naturalize these. He illuminates them through cases and treats them as standing moral facts, true whether or not anyone obeys them, grasped by attention rather than derived from anything below. He is the normativist Turner describes, and he writes as if the normative were a feature of the world as solid as the institutions it judges.

Margalit says some agreements must be refused regardless of the cost, because they establish an inhuman regime, and the must overrides every consequence. The word regardless is the tell Turner listens for. An unconditional ought that floats free of any account of why it binds is the normative posited as basic to halt the regress. It does not explain the refusal. It announces a place where Margalit will stop being asked. The duty to remember takes the same pressure. Margalit says the shared past generates the duty, and the verb does normative magic. What we can name is plainer. Men feel bound to commemorate, they sanction the one who forgets, they were raised inside the rite. The duty over and above these facts is a posit, and Margalit needs the posit, because a duty you merely feel might be a mistake and he wants the duty to hold whether felt or not. Turner hears in that whether or not the normativist’s refusal to let the facts be the whole story, and the refusal is the point where explanation stops and assertion begins.

His method invites the rest of the charge. Margalit illuminates rather than explains, and Turner might call illumination a courteous name for declining to explain. You set out cases, you produce agreement in the reader’s recoil, and you treat the agreement as a grasp of a normative truth. The recoil is a fact about trained men. We were taught to wince at the degraded prisoner and the broken petitioner. Margalit takes the wince, a social and psychological fact, and presents it as evidence of a norm, when the illumination manufactured the consensus it then cites. The honor and dignity split runs aground the same way. To say dignity is a normative status no rank can touch names the thing to be explained and offers it as the explanation. The status does no work that our reactions and our institutions do not already do.

Margalit has a reply, and it is the reply every normativist makes when pressed, which is both its strength and the reason Turner distrusts it. The normative justifies. It does not explain. Of course the ought adds nothing to a causal story of behavior, Margalit might say, because it was never offered as a causal story. To show that men recoil at humiliation never settles whether they are right to, and the gap between what men do and what they should do is the gap his whole enterprise sits inside. The demand that the normative earn its place as an explanation misreads what a norm is for. A norm is not a hypothesis about conduct. So the explanatory emptiness Turner exposes is no failure, because Margalit traded in justification all along. The frame lands with force only on a man who thinks every legitimate claim must explain something, and Margalit can decline that premise without flinching.

Turner has the comeback. The move from explanation to justification is the move the normativist always reaches for at the moment of pressure, and the retreat insulates the normative from any test. A claim that explains nothing, predicts nothing, and answers only to its own further normative claims has built a room with no door. Turner can add an asymmetry that catches Margalit on both flanks. His smallest claims reduce cleanest. Prevent cruelty sits close to a brute reaction at gratuitous suffering, a fact about trained men, so the normative posit there is plainly redundant. His grandest claim, the unconditional must of the rotten compromise, reduces to nothing at all and stands as bare assertion. The small oughts dissolve into facts and the big oughts hang in the air, and the normative as a working part of the world comes out empty at both ends.

What then for Margalit, if Turner is right about the normative? He keeps his oughts and loses their standing as features of the world. The duty to remember, the must of the refused compromise, the wrong of humiliation, survive as things he urges on men who already share his reactions, and bind no one who does not. The decent society remains a description of places where the trained recoil has been built into the institutions, not a verdict the institutions answer to from outside themselves. Margalit can still say humiliation is wrong and mean it with his whole weight. What he loses is the picture his prose keeps painting, of a moral order standing over us with an authority of its own, waiting to be illuminated. On Turner’s account there is the illumination, and there are the trained men it gathers, and the order it claims to reveal was the gathering all along.

The Memory That Had to Be Made

Jeffrey Alexander builds his theory of cultural trauma on a refusal. He rejects what he calls the naturalistic fallacy, the belief that an event carries its trauma inside it, that horror by its own weight stamps a mark on a people. Events do not do this. Trauma is an attribution a society makes. The work belongs to carrier groups who broadcast a claim about a wound, name the victim, name the one who caused it, and persuade an audience to take the suffering on board as its own. Four representations carry the claim. The nature of the pain, the nature of the victim, the relation of the victim to the wider audience, and the attribution of responsibility. The claim succeeds or it fails, and the success turns on the labor and the skill and the standing of the men who carry it rather than on the size of the original pain. His proof is the catalog of horrors that produced no trauma at all. The slaughter at Nanking, three hundred thousand dead under the eyes of the world press, stayed a regional memory and never branded the conscience of China or Japan. The Guatemalan army’s killing of two hundred thousand Maya, the comfort women of the Imperial army, the Cambodian killing fields, real beyond any question and for decades inert, because no carrier group with the resources and the authority built them into a story a wide audience would own. Trauma is made. The event is raw material.

Set The Ethics of Memory against this and the collision comes at once. Margalit grounds a duty to remember in a shared past. The community holds a memory, the memory makes a claim, and the men inside the community owe the dead their remembrance. Alexander moves the action upstream. The shared past is not the ground of the duty. It is the achievement, and a contingent one. Before a people can owe remembrance to a wound, carrier groups must first build the wound into a memory the people recognize as theirs, and most wounds never get built. Margalit writes as though the past obligates by its own reality. Nanking answers him. The reality was total and the obligation never came, because the trauma process failed. So Margalit’s ethics sits downstream of a sociology it cannot see. The duty he describes rides on a prior labor of construction, political and skilled and far from certain, and his account treats that labor as already done and out of view. He can tell a man what he owes a memory. He cannot tell him why this memory lives and binds while that one, equal in horror, sank without trace. Alexander can, and the answer has nothing to do with the weight of the suffering.

Humiliation takes the same pressure. Margalit treats it as a harm the institution inflicts, a property of the act, present in the welfare office and the prison even when the law is kept. Alexander’s refusal of the naturalistic fallacy reaches this too. Whether an act counts as humiliation is an attribution a culture makes, not a content the act contains. The same treatment reads as degradation in one civil sphere and as discipline or desert or plain order in another. The decent society measures institutions against a standard of humiliation, and the standard floats on a contingent code that some carrier group made to stick. Margalit hands us a ruler and calls it the shape of the human. Alexander shows the ruler was cut by men in a particular place and time, and could have been cut otherwise.

The fit grows tightest at Idolatry. Margalit and Halbertal study how a community marks its outsiders through the charge of false worship, how idolatry names the polluted other and draws the line of belonging. This is Alexander’s civil sphere in its religious ancestor. TheWatergate study lays out the secular form, a binary code that sorts the world into the pure and the impure, democracy and law and honesty and solidarity on one side, corruption and personalism and shadowy enemies and faction on the other, and then fights to fix particular men on the polluted pole. What Margalit and Halbertal find in the worship of idols, Alexander finds in the discourse of the modern republic. Here the frame illuminates more than it strikes. Margalit’s idolater and Alexander’s polluted enemy are the same figure in two costumes, the one a community must expel to know itself as clean. The rotten compromise joins them. Margalit calls a compromise rotten when it builds or keeps an inhuman regime, and the word rotten is a pollution code before it is a verdict. Munich does for him what Watergate did for Alexander’s America, hardening from an event into a durable metaphor that frames every later accommodation as a possible surrender, the way Watergate framed every later scandal down to the suffix men hung on Nixon’s heirs. Richard Nixon (1913-1994) became, in Alexander’s reading, the liquid impure, a man others feared to touch. Margalit’s rotten compromiser occupies the same seat. And the regardless in Margalit, the refusal that holds whatever the cost, is for Alexander the signature of the sacred, the value level above goals and norms where the civil religion keeps its absolutes.

His public life reads as carrier-group labor with no remainder. Peace Now and B’Tselem broadcast a claim, that the suffering of Palestinians is a wound the Israeli public and the watching world should own, and the claim moves through the four representations and meets the audience condition Alexander names. An audience joins a victim’s trauma only when it sees in the victim the valued qualities of its own collective self. That condition explains the pattern of Margalit’s reception with no appeal to the rightness of his cause. The readers of the New York Review take the suffering on board because the carrier work reaches them on shared ground. Other audiences refuse it, not from ignorance of the facts but from a code that does not place the victim inside the circle of the we. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) stands behind all of it, the sacred and the profane doing the sorting.

The cultural sociologist cares about how and under what conditions trauma claims are made and with what results. He does not care about the accuracy of the claims, and he cares less about their moral justification. Not ontology, not morality, but epistemology. That fence is the is and the ought in sociological dress, and everything Margalit values lives on the far side of it. Alexander can show how a humiliation claim or a duty to remember wins or loses as a construction. He says nothing, by his own rule, about whether the man was wronged or whether the duty is real. So the frame walks up to Margalit’s question and declines to enter. Margalit can grant the whole sociology of construction and lose nothing he meant to keep, because the making of a memory never tells a man whether he ought to hold it. That a wound was built by carrier groups leaves open whether the wound deserved building.

Alexander cannot stay neutral. He calls the trauma process normatively profound, says it lets a society define new forms of moral responsibility, expand the circle of the we, extend solidarity to the suffering of others. The man who brackets morality keeps reaching across his own fence to praise the widening of the we. And the widening of the we is Margalit’s own subject, the passage from thin relations among strangers to the thick bonds that carry obligation. Alexander approves the expansion, and the approval smuggles back the moral reality he ruled out of bounds, on the very ground Margalit mapped. So the two men meet on Margalit’s terrain after all, with Alexander committed to a good he claims not to judge.

What then for Margalit, if Alexander is right? He keeps the ought and loses the given. The shared past turns from a ground into an achievement, won by carrier groups or lost to silence. Humiliation turns from a property of the act into a coding a culture made. Idolatry turns from a sin into a civil binary that every solidarity needs to draw its outer line. The rotten compromise turns from a moral fact into a durable metaphor doing political work. His duty to remember survives, but only for the men whose carrier groups already won the fight to build the memory, and it falls silent over Nanking and the rest, where the horror was equal and the construction failed. What does not move is the question Margalit actually asks. Ought we remember. Is this humiliation. Is dignity real. Alexander reached that question, named it ontology and morality, and stepped back over his own fence. The memory had to be made. Whether it should have been is the one thing his theory was built not to say.

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The Cover Story: Joseph Kahn and Independence as Sacred Value

David Pinsof writes:

10. Status game collapse. When players of a status game gain common knowledge that they’re playing a status game. They suddenly see each other as vain, insecure, or self-absorbed, which sends them scrambling to play a different status game. This is one of the engines of cultural evolution.
11. Sacred value. A cover story for status-seeking designed to prevent a status game from collapsing. We deny we’re seeking dominance or superiority and instead pretend that we’re seeking honor, wisdom, beauty, authenticity, self-actualization, equality, morality, or the betterment of humankind.

David Pinsof’s eleventh concept arrives after the tenth, and the order is the argument. A status game collapses, he holds, when the players gain common knowledge that it is a status game; they suddenly see one another as vain and self-absorbed, the game becomes unplayable, and they scatter. A sacred value is what prevents the collapse. It is a cover story for status-seeking, a sincere-feeling conviction that we are not chasing dominance or superiority but serving honor, beauty, truth, justice, the betterment of humankind. The cover story holds the game together by hiding from the players what the game is. The crucial word is sincere. Pinsof is not describing liars who know they pursue status and dress it as service. He is describing people whose belief in the service is genuine and necessary, genuine because necessary, since a cover story the players saw through would no longer cover anything. The sacred value works by being believed, and it is believed because the alternative, common knowledge of the game, ends the game.

Independence is the sacred value of the New York Times.

Begin by naming the game. The newsroom runs a fierce status competition. The scoop is a status trophy; the byline on page one is a status display; the masthead is a status ladder climbed against rivals; the Pulitzer is the field’s supreme status object, pursued with an intensity the institution publicly disclaims and privately organizes desks around. The green-room invitation, the panel seat, the book deal, the followers, the returned call from a senator, these are the currencies, and they are real, and everyone in the building spends their working life acquiring them. This is what an elite institution staffed by ambitious people looks like from the inside, and Pinsof’s point is not that the striving is shameful but that it cannot be looked at directly without dissolving. A newsroom that admitted, in common knowledge, we are here to win status, and the journalism is the arena, would suffer the collapse the tenth concept describes: the players would see each other as careerists, the work as self-advancement, the whole enterprise as vanity, and the spell that lets them revere their own labor would break.

The sacred value prevents this. We do this for the public’s right to know. We serve democracy. Without fear or favor. These formulas are not decoration; they are the load-bearing cover story that converts status-seeking into service and lets the strivers experience their striving as duty. The reporter chasing the scoop that will make his name experiences himself as holding power accountable, and the experience is sincere, and the sincerity is what makes it work. Pinsof calls it the necessary architecture of any high-status moral institution: the value must be felt as sacred, must be placed beyond cost-benefit calculation, must be the thing one would suffer for, so that it can do the concealing work that keeps the game playable. Independence has every mark of the sacred. It is held as non-negotiable. It is invoked to end arguments rather than to begin them. It is the thing the institution claims it would lose money and friends to defend, and sometimes does, which is the sacred value’s most convincing proof and its most effective concealment.

Now place Kahn. He is the keeper of the sacred value. The executive editor’s deepest function, on this reading, is not running coverage, which deputies could do, but maintaining the cover story at full credibility, tending the conviction that holds the game together. And Kahn’s tenure, examined through this lens, is a continuous act of sacred-value maintenance. The doctrine speeches at Princeton and elsewhere. The credo recitations, without fear or favor invoked like scripture. The independence memos. The Semafor interview where he refused, as a matter of sacred principle, to make the paper an instrument of the resistance. Each act, read through the frame, is the high priest renewing the value before a congregation whose faith had begun to waver, and the wavering is the key, because it dates the priesthood’s urgency.

Here the frame makes its coldest move and its one testable prediction, the thing that lifts it above mere relabeling. Pinsof’s logic says sacred-value maintenance intensifies precisely when the status game underneath becomes visible, because that is when the cover story is failing and most needs reinforcement. A value invoked constantly is a value under threat; the volume of the sacred talk indexes the exposure of the game beneath it. So the frame predicts that independence rhetoric at the Times should spike when the institution’s status game has been most exposed, and the timeline is the test.

The independence doctrine became Kahn’s defining public theme in 2022 and after, in the immediate wake of the period when the game showed most nakedly in the institution’s history. The Twitter years had stripped the cover off. The world watched Times journalists chase status in real time, the public feuds, the follower counts, the visible prize-hunger, the moral preening, the staff revolts in which the striving wore the costume of conscience so thinly that critics on every side could see the careerism underneath. The 2020 convulsions were a status game in open view, common knowledge accumulating by the day, the tenth concept’s collapse beginning to happen live. And it was at that moment, not before, that the sacred value required a keeper who would talk about it without pause. Kahn’s elevation and his doctrine are the institution’s response to a cover story that had slipped, the priesthood re-staffed and the liturgy intensified because the congregation had glimpsed the machinery. Before the exposure, independence could be assumed and rarely spoken, the sacred value secure enough to stay quiet. After it, independence had to be preached, daily, at volume, which is what a sacred value under threat demands and what a secure one never needs. The frame predicted the spike and the history delivered it.

The reading also explains features of the era that other frames leave as loose ends. It explains why the institution reacts to the brand-strategy critique, the charge that independence is a marketing position, with an intensity out of all proportion to the criticism’s weight: naming the cover story as a cover story is the precise act that triggers collapse, so the accusation is not a debating point but an existential threat, and the institution defends against it the way a faith defends against blasphemy rather than the way a firm defends against a bad review. It explains the both-sides-attack-us proof, which is sacred-value confirmation in pure form, evidence offered to the believers that the service is real because it costs friends on every side, a demonstration of disinterest that doubles as the strongest possible reinforcement of the cover story. And it explains the otherwise puzzling fact that independence is invoked most fervently in the cases where it costs the institution its own coalition’s approval, the Biden-age coverage above all, because those are the cases that best prove the value sacred, the sacrifices that purchase the cover story’s credibility, the suffering that shows the service is not for sale.

Now the essay must turn the frame on itself. Three limits.

The first is unfalsifiability, the standing problem with all of Pinsof’s machinery. If Kahn preaches independence, that is sacred-value maintenance; if he fell silent about it, that would be a value so secure it needs no defense; there is no observation the frame cannot absorb. A tool that reads every possible data point as confirmation has predicted nothing, and the timeline fit, impressive as it looks, is the kind of fit an unfalsifiable frame always produces after the fact. The honest user concedes that the prediction was retrodiction, the pattern found once the lens was chosen.

The second is the genetic problem. That independence functions as a cover story for status-seeking says nothing about whether independence is also good.

The third is the sincerity defense. Kahn’s belief in independence is real. The sacred value works because the keeper believes it; a high priest who knew the rite was empty would perform it badly.

Kahn is the keeper of that value in a generation that saw, for a frightening few years, what lay beneath it, and his entire calm, doctrinal, credo-reciting tenure is the work of a man re-draping a cover that had slipped, doing it sincerely, doing it well, and doing it most loudly in the years when the game beneath showed most.

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The Man Without Appetite: Joseph Kahn Through Anti-Status

David Pinsof’s status concepts begin with an ordinary observation and end somewhere cold. We compete, all the time, to be smarter, cooler, braver, kinder, more virtuous than the people near us, and the competition runs as a game with points and ranks. The trouble is that open striving loses points. Visible hunger for status reads as vanity, insecurity, self-absorption, and these are demerits in the game itself, so the players learn to disguise the striving, and the disguise becomes its own move. Anti-status is the status you get from looking like you don’t care about status. Performative apathy is the active form, pretending you don’t care what others think, staged for the others whose opinion you are pretending not to want. The concepts have a built-in trap. The disclaimer is the claim. The man who announces he is above the game has made a move in it, and the more convincing his indifference, the stronger the move. Pinsof’s machinery converts every renunciation into a bid and leaves no exit, which is what makes it cruel and what makes it, applied to the right subject, devastating.

Joseph Kahn is the right subject, because he has built the most disciplined anti-status performance in American journalism, and the discipline is the tell.

Consider the position. The executive editorship of the New York Times is the most coveted chair in the trade, the summit of the most status-saturated institution in American media, an institution that runs on prizes, bylines, masthead rank, and the small daily currencies of whose call gets returned. Reaching it took Kahn forty years of climbing, the Dallas police beat, the Beijing bureau, the Pulitzers, the managing editorship, every rung a contest won against rivals who wanted it as badly. No one arrives at that chair without ferocious appetite; the climb selects for it ruthlessly, weeds out the indifferent in the first decade. And the man who completed the climb presents as a person without appetite. That is the configuration the frame exists to read, and it reads it in one line: the presentation is the appetite, matured into its highest form. You do not reach the summit of a status game by not wanting status. You reach it, at the very top, by wanting the one prize the open strivers cannot take, the prize for having transcended the wanting.

Now the performance, piece by piece, because each feature that I described elsewhere as temperament or stewardship reappears here as a move.

The flat affect. Kahn’s even delivery, the absence of rising intonation, the answers arriving as finished paragraphs with no reach for the laugh or the applause, all of it withholds the thing strivers display, the eagerness to land. A man working the room shows hunger in his face. Kahn shows nothing, and in a profession of performers the blank face reads as the face of a man who needs nothing from you, which is the highest-status face there is.

The unquotability. I have called this, in other frames, the dissolution of the man into the office. Anti-status names its competitive function. The quotable man is bidding, every bon mot a small request for admiration, and the bids can be counted and held against him. Kahn declines to bid. He generates no aphorisms, courts no virality, leaves no harvestable wit, and the refusal to compete for the small status of the clever line is itself a claim to the large status of the man beyond cleverness. He has removed himself from the quotation game the way the richest man in town removes himself from haggling.

The refusal of celebrity. Editors of his predecessors’ eras cultivated profiles, feuds, personae; the trade made stars of them. Kahn declines the star turn, and the decline is legible to everyone as a posture available only to someone who could have the star turn and judges it beneath the office. Performative apathy requires an audience that knows the apathy is chosen, and Kahn’s whole presentation broadcasts the choice: I could perform and I do not, which performs.

The institutional we. The pronoun does anti-status work the frame catches that the political-theology reading missed. By speaking always as the institution, Kahn forfeits personal credit for the paper’s triumphs, and the forfeiture is a flex. The man secure enough to hand every win to the corporate body, to take no bow, displays a surplus of status so large he can give the visible portion away, the way only the very high can afford conspicuous humility. Anti-status is purchased with renounced status, and the we is Kahn renouncing in public, daily, at scale.

Then the showcase, the floor photograph, which the frame turns into the performance’s defining exhibition. The 2022 New York magazine profile arranged him on the carpet in a pose the internet judged unserious and mocked without mercy. A striver would have answered, corrected the image, signaled the wound, fought for the lost dignity, and every such move would have conceded that the mockery reached him. Kahn answered with nothing. And the nothing was not absence; it was performative apathy executed at championship level, the visible demonstration that the judgment of the mocking crowd does not register on him, which is of course a demonstration staged for that crowd. Pinsof’s trap closes on the silence. The indifference is addressed to the people it claims not to notice. The more total the non-response, the louder the message that their opinion is beneath response, and beneath-response is a ranking, a placement of the mockers below the man, delivered by the one means that mockery cannot rebut, because any rebuttal would forfeit the height. Kahn won the exchange by saying nothing, and winning by silence is the purest anti-status victory available.

A profession of strivers is a room full of people visibly wanting, and visible wanting is the low-status condition, however high the wanter climbs. The man who has stopped visibly wanting stands outside the condition the others cannot escape, and every editor in the building reads the difference instantly, because they are all still in the game and he appears not to be. His calm is not the calm of a man without stakes; it is the calm that signals stakes already won, the repose at the top that the climbers below can recognize but not yet perform, because performing it requires the security they do not have. This is why his restraint commands rather than recedes. In the status grammar of the newsroom, the unbothered man is the high man, and Kahn is the most unbothered man in American journalism. The Munk stage, where his manner failed, becomes the exception that proves the reading: in a hall of three thousand who did not grant him the office’s status in advance, the anti-status performance had no foundation to stand on, the calm read as flat, the silence as no answer, because the room had not already placed him at the top, and anti-status only works among people who concede the status you are pretending to disdain.

Pinsof’s machinery is unfalsifiable, and that is its danger as much as its power. If Kahn performs hunger, that is striving; if he performs indifference, that is anti-status striving; there is no conduct the frame cannot read as a status move, which means the frame predicts nothing and forbids nothing, and a tool that explains every possible observation explains none of them in the strict sense.

Kahn’s modesty is not the opposite of the appetite that drove the forty-year climb. It is that appetite arrived at its destination and changed its clothes. The hunger that wins the chair cannot vanish on the day the chair is won; it can only mature into the one form available at the summit, the hunger to be seen as the man beyond hunger. He wears it well, better than anyone in his trade, so well that the performance has become the man.

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Seeing Like the Times: Joseph Kahn’s Newsroom Through James C. Scott

James C. Scott (1936-2024) published Seeing Like a State in 1998 and opened it with a forest. Eighteenth-century German foresters, needing timber yields the crown could count, replaced the chaotic old-growth woods with a scientific forest: Norway spruce in straight rows, same age, same species, underbrush cleared, the whole thing legible at a glance from the administrator’s window. The first rotation was a triumph. The second collapsed, because the grid had destroyed what it could not see, the soil fungi, the insect ecology, the deadwood and diversity that had quietly made the forest work, and German science had to coin a word, Waldsterben, for the death that followed. From the parable Scott built his apparatus. States simplify the world to administer it, rendering territory legible through maps, censuses, standard measures, and grids, and the simplifications serve the center’s vision, not the locality’s life. High modernism is the ideology that worships such simplification, confident, scientific, aesthetic in its love of straight lines, contemptuous of the practical local knowledge Scott called mētis, the uncodifiable skill of the pilot, the farmer, the old hand. His law follows: what the grid cannot see ceases to exist for the institution that rules through it. And his subtlest claim: maps do not merely describe territory, they remake it, because the institution acts on the map until the world resembles it.

The New York Times between 2014 and today is a legibility project of textbook purity, and Joseph Kahn was one of its chief surveyors before he became its sovereign administrator.

Start with the cadastral survey, because the transformation has a founding document. The 2014 Innovation Report did for the newsroom what the cadastral map did for the kingdom: it surveyed an old-growth institution and found it illegible, organized around print rhythms and editorial intuition, opaque to measurement, resistant to central direction, and it proposed the grid. What followed, with Kahn as managing editor from 2016 the operational architect, was the digital-first restructuring: the dashboards, the real-time traffic and engagement metrics, the subscriber-conversion funnels, the A/B-tested headlines, the standardized story formats, the push-notification analytics, the global production line through hubs in London and Seoul that rendered the report a continuous, measurable, twenty-four-hour flow. The old newsroom had been a Jane Jacobs street, messy, redundant, full of eyes and unplanned encounters, governed by the page-one meeting, which was a council of elders trading judgment. The new newsroom is a planned city, and its planners would not object to the description, since the plan worked: the first rotation of the scientific forest came in spectacularly, the subscription millions, the product empire, the only big newsroom in America that grew. Scott never denied that the scientific forest’s first rotation pays. His subject was the second rotation.

Consider first what the grid renders visible, because its resolution is astonishing. The institution now sees its subscribers as no newspaper has ever seen readers: what they open, how long they dwell, where they stop scrolling, what converts them, what churns them. It sees its own journalism as performance data, every story trailing its metrics like instrumentation. And Scott’s law operates on the other side of the ledger automatically: the populations off the grid dim toward nonexistence. The non-subscriber is fog. The lapsed local reader whose paper died is fog. The half of the country that consumes no Times product appears in the institution’s vision only as polling abstraction, never as the high-resolution human beings the dashboard makes of subscribers. The Times’s famous blind spots of the past decade map onto the grid’s edges with uncomfortable precision. The 2016 result blindsided the institution because the voters who produced it lived entirely off-grid, generating no signals in any system the newsroom watched. The new political and cultural formations that repeatedly arrive as surprises, the early populist waves, the podcast counterculture, the youth movements of the right, the religious revivals lived as practice rather than politics, all germinated in illegible territory and were discovered late, whereupon the institution responded as administrators always respond to discovered illegibility, by dispatching cartographic expeditions. The Trump-country diner story, that mocked genre, is legibility work in its exact Scott sense: the expedition sent to render the unmapped interior into the center’s categories, and its awkwardness is the awkwardness of every imperial survey team interviewing the natives through a translator.

Now the subtler operation, the map remaking the territory. The metrics do not merely measure the report; they select it. What performs gets produced, what gets produced trains the audience, the trained audience performs more reliably, and the feedback loop manufactures the very tastes it claims to be neutrally recording. This is Scott’s cadastral effect running at digital speed: the engagement grid replants the forest in rows of what engages, and the headline test, run thousands of times a day, is a small evolutionary pressure applied continuously to the institution’s language, breeding it toward whatever makes the needle move. The election needle deserves a sentence as the project’s perfect miniature, and Scott noted that high modernism adores miniatures, the model city, the showcase farm: an entire continental democracy, one hundred fifty million votes, rendered into a single quivering dial, legibility as an art object, complete with the 2016 night when the dial swung and the institution learned, live, what its grid had not seen.

The gravest Scott question is the underbrush, the invisible ecology the first rotation clears because no metric registers its contribution. In a newsroom the underbrush has names. The courts reporter sitting through dull hearings for years, generating nothing the dashboard can see, until the day the sitting becomes the scoop. The beat built on a decade of source dinners with no output. The metro desk’s institutional memory of who lied last time. The boring civic story, the water board, the zoning fight, that no one clicks and that constitutes the actual practice of accountability. All of this is mētis and ecology together, the practical knowledge and the unmeasured processes that made the visible journalism possible, and the industry-wide clearing of exactly this underbrush, the metro desks gutted, the beats consolidated, the apprenticeship structures dismantled as inefficient, tracks the grid’s blindness perfectly: the things cut were the things that showed no yield, because their yield was systemic and slow. The New York Times, richest of the survivors, cleared less than its peers. Scott’s parable does not ask whether the clearing was total. It asks whether the second rotation will find the soil alive, and the honest answer is that a generation of journalists is now being formed inside the dashboard, developing optimization instincts where their predecessors developed beat instincts, and no one yet knows what their forest will grow.

Kahn’s personal position in this machine is the irony the frame surfaces, and it ranks him below the machine only in the sense that the frame is about vision systems rather than men. His authority rests on the most cited phrase of his anointment, impeccable news judgment, and news judgment is mētis, uncodifiable, acquired the old way, on the Dallas police beat and in the Beijing bureau, exactly the knowledge the grid cannot represent. The chief administrator of the legible newsroom is a creature of the illegible one, formed entirely in the old forest he helped replant. And his doctrine, examined closely, contains a deliberate anti-grid clause: independence, in Kahn’s usage, means among other things that subscriber data does not dictate coverage, that the dashboard advises and the masthead decides, that reader fury registered in churn metrics will not move the report. In Scott’s terms, Kahn has fenced a mētis preserve at the top of the planned city, a small protected zone where decisions are made by uncodified judgment against the visible protest of the instruments. The Biden-age coverage was the preserve in operation, judgment overriding the grid’s screaming feedback. Whether the preserve outlives the men formed before the grid, whether mētis can reproduce in a newsroom whose young have never worked outside the dashboard’s light, is the long question, and Scott’s work suggests the default answer: practical knowledge dies not by decree but by the quiet disappearance of the conditions that taught it.

One boundary keeps the analysis honest, and Scott drew it. His catastrophes required four ingredients: legibility, high-modernist confidence, authoritarian power, and a prostrate civil society unable to resist. The Times holds the first two in abundance and the last two not at all. Its subjects can defect, and did, by the hundreds of thousands when coverage displeased them; its territory talks back, mocks the diner safaris, builds rival maps. So the failure mode is not the Soviet harvest or the dead German forest entire. It is softer and slower: an institution of growing internal precision and shrinking external sight, ever more exquisitely informed about the mapped and ever more structurally surprised by the unmapped, mistaking, as every administrator at every window eventually does, the legible for the real. The grid will keep improving. That has never once, in the history Scott told, been the same thing as seeing.

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The Editor’s Two Bodies: Joseph Kahn Through Ernst Kantorowicz

Ernst Kantorowicz (1895-1963) published The King’s Two Bodies in 1957, a study in what he called medieval political theology. The Tudor jurists he quotes, Edmund Plowden (1518-1585) foremost, held that the king possesses two bodies. The body natural is mortal flesh, subject to infancy, infirmity, folly, and death. The body politic is invisible and immortal, incapable of error, never a minor, never sick, never dead, and the two are conjoined in one person such that the greater wipes away every imperfection of the lesser. From this doctrine flowed the constitutional machinery of continuity: the king never dies, the demise of the man being merely the transfer of the Dignity; le roi est mort, vive le roi in a single breath; dignitas non moritur, the Dignity does not die. Kantorowicz traced the doctrine’s genealogy backward into Christology, the two natures in one person, and the migration of the corpus mysticum, the mystical body, from the Church to the state, until the realm itself became a mystical body of which the king was head but never owner, guardian of a patrimony he could not alienate. And he showed the doctrine’s dramatic life: royal funerals where the mortal body lay in the coffin while the effigy above it displayed the undying Dignity, and the deposition scene in Richard II, the tragedy of the two bodies coming apart, the man calling for a mirror to find the face left over when the kingship has been poured out of it.

Applied to the executive editorship of the New York Times, the frame cuts to the bone because the office runs on a two-bodies doctrine, and Joseph Kahn is its most doctrinally correct occupant in the institution’s modern history.

Begin with the grammar, because the doctrine lives in a pronoun. Kahn’s public speech runs in the institutional we, the first person singular appearing only for biography, and the pattern is not modesty or media training. It is the duplex persona speaking in its proper voice. When Kahn says *we stand by our reporting*, the speaker is the body politic, the Editor, the corporate person who has issued that sentence in substantially identical form for a century through a succession of mortal mouths. The sentence has the standing of a writ because no individual utters it; an I could be wrong, could be biased, could be sued into retraction, but the we that speaks has the body politic’s attributes, continuity beyond the man, authority beyond his person, and the curious legal-theological property Plowden assigned the king, that in his politic capacity he is not subject to the defects of the natural body. Kahn’s celebrated unquotability completes the doctrine. A quotable editor generates text from the body natural, wit, temper, personality, material that belongs to the man and can be held against him. Kahn has arranged his entire communicative life so that text issues only from the office. There is no corpus of Joe to attack, because Joe, as a speaking person, has been administratively dissolved into the Editor.

Now the feature the frame was commissioned to explain: why attacks slide off him. The two-bodies doctrine sorts every attack into one of two categories, and both categories fail. Attacks on the body natural strike home and cost nothing. The mocked photograph from the 2022 profile, the man arranged awkwardly on a carpet, the jeering verdict that this is not a serious person, all of it landed squarely on Joe Kahn, mortal, and bounced off the institution entirely, because the Dignity was never in the picture; you cannot wound the office by photographing the man badly, any more than the king’s gout impeached the Crown. Kahn’s response, which was no response, was doctrinally perfect: the body natural absorbs its humiliations in silence because they are constitutionally irrelevant. Attacks on the body politic, meanwhile, the coverage critiques, the open letters, the cancel-my-subscription campaigns, strike an entity that has no flesh to bruise. The Editor cannot be embarrassed, has no feelings, holds no grudges, and answers, when it answers at all, in the corporate voice that concedes nothing personal because nothing personal exists. Critics of the Times keep discovering the frustration medieval rebels knew: there is no single neck. Strike the man and you have missed the office; strike the office and you have struck a ghost.

The succession machinery runs the doctrine in its constitutional mode. The Editor never dies. Executive editors undergo demise, in the old legal sense, the transfer of the Dignity from one body natural to the next, and the institution has ritualized the transfer into bloodlessness: the announcement, the white-smoke jokes that know exactly what they are joking about, the anointing memo, the customary retirement age that schedules each demise in advance so that no man’s mortality ever surprises the office. Abe Rosenthal (1922-2006) is dead; the Editor is not. And the institution possesses the precise equivalent of the funeral effigy that Kantorowicz made famous, the wax Dignity displayed above the coffin to show the realm that the kingship lives while the king lies dead. The effigy is the next morning’s paper. On the day an executive editor departs, the front page appears, unchanged in form, voice, and authority, the undying body displayed above the mortal transition, and the realm, reassured, goes about its business.

The corpus mysticum migrated once in Kantorowicz’s telling, from Church to state, and The New York Times represents a second migration, from state to press. The institution is a mystical body in working fact: a communion of newsroom and readership bound by daily observance, possessing a creed, feast days, relics on the lobby wall, and a strong doctrine of its own perpetuity. The Editor heads this body without owning it, and the inalienability rules that medieval jurists wrapped around the Crown’s patrimony reappear around his office almost clause for clause. The king could not alienate Crown lands because he held them in his politic capacity, as guardian; the Editor cannot trade coverage, sell standards, or spend the institution’s credibility on personal account, because the patrimony belongs to the Dignity, and the man merely keeps it. Kahn’s habitual framing of hard decisions, *the story holds, the standards require*, follows the doctrine: the office’s duty speaks, never the man’s preference, because the man has no rightful preferences in his politic capacity.

The doctrine also illuminates the newsroom wars, through the maneuver Kantorowicz traced in the English Civil War. Parliament fought Charles I (1600-1649) in the name of the king, the body politic invoked against the body natural, the rebels claiming to defend the Crown from the man who wore it. The staff insurgencies of 2020 ran the identical maneuver: the revolts were conducted in the name of the Times, its true values, its real mission, against the mortal men then holding its offices, and the maneuver worked then for the same reason it worked in 1642, because the institution’s leadership conceded the premise that the body politic might be located somewhere other than in its officers. Kahn’s restoration, read through this frame, was a re-fusion of the two bodies: the 2023 memo and the discipline around it asserted, as constitutional doctrine, that the institution speaks through its current officers and not through whichever faction claims its spirit, that you cannot invoke the Times against the Times’s editors. Every settled monarchy rests on that assertion. So does every settled masthead.

And the frame supplies the institution’s tragedies, which are all Richard II. The executive editors who fell, fell when the two bodies came apart, and the falls run both directions. Howell Raines (b. 1943) let the body natural swell into the office, the personal enthusiasms, the favorites, the star system, the man’s appetites wearing the Editor’s authority, and when the Blair scandal cracked the fusion, the institution survived by the classic operation: it deposed the man to save the Dignity, demonstrating to a watching realm that the office and its occupant were separable after all. Jill Abramson‘s fall was a deposition scene conducted by the crown above her, and James Bennet‘s the same conducted under siege. Each ended at Richard’s mirror: the man holding the glass, studying the face that remains when the office has been poured out of it, discovering what the doctrine had quietly held all along, that the power was never personal, that the flattering attention, the returned calls, the deference of senators and staff belonged to the body politic and departed with it. Bennet’s long public reckoning afterward, the interviews, the lawsuit, the wounded essays, is the post-deposition search Kantorowicz’s Richard performs in verse, the body natural asking where the rest of it went. Kahn, by contrast, conducts himself as a man who has read the play. He keeps the body natural so small, so unquotable, so absent from the office’s operations, that there is almost nothing of Joe positioned to swell, and therefore almost nothing for a deposition to find.

Kantorowicz wrote his book as more than admiration; he had fled a regime that ran on mystical bodies, and the study carries a standing warning about political theologies, which the essay owes to its subject. The two-bodies doctrine that protects the Times’s independence also insulates its errors, and by the same operation. The office that cannot be embarrassed is the office that never apologizes in the first person; the corrections issue from the body politic, passive constructions in small type, *errors that occurred, standards that were not met*, and no mortal I was ever wrong. Accountability requires a body that can feel shame, and the doctrine’s whole achievement is to put the institution’s voice beyond the reach of shame. Critics sense this and rage at it without naming it: arguing with the Times feels like arguing with a ghost because, constitutionally, it is. The perfected two-bodies editor, and Kahn is the nearest the office has come, secures the Dignity against every assault, the mockery, the letters, the subpoenas, the photographs, and the price of the security is paid in a currency the doctrine renders invisible, the missing mortal who might have said, in the first person singular, that he was sorry.

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The Fifth Generation: The Sulzbergers and Joseph Kahn Through Ibn Khaldun

Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) built the Muqaddimah around one engine, asabiyyah, the group feeling that binds men into a force capable of taking and holding power. Asabiyyah is born in the desert, in hardship and scarcity, where survival requires absolute mutual reliance, and it dies in the city, where luxury and security dissolve the need for it. From that engine he derived his famous cycle. A hardened group from the periphery, rich in solidarity, conquers the soft sedentary civilization. It rules. Rule brings wealth, wealth brings luxury, luxury dissolves the group feeling that won the throne, and within three or four generations, about a hundred and twenty years, the dynasty falls to the next hungry tribe out of the desert. He even sketched the generations. The founder builds glory through his own toil and knows what it cost. The second generation had contact with the founder and preserves the qualities by imitation. The third merely inherits the forms, relying on tradition. The fourth believes the glory is owed to it by birth, despises the toil that built it, and loses everything. Dynastic senility, he concluded, is natural and incurable, though it can be deferred by those who understand its causes.

The Ochs-Sulzberger dynasty is now in its fifth generation and its hundred-thirtieth year, which places it past Khaldun’s limit, and that makes the New York Times the test case the frame demands: either an exception that needs explaining or a dynasty whose decay has been masked by means Khaldun himself catalogued. The answer, worked through, turns out to be both, and Joseph Kahn stands at the exact point where the two answers meet.

Start with the founder, because the pattern opens classically. Adolph Ochs (1858-1935) came from the periphery in the full Khaldunian sense, a printer’s apprentice from Knoxville and Chattanooga, an outsider to New York and its press establishment, who took over a dying paper in 1896 with borrowed money and built its glory through toil he never forgot. He issued the dynasty’s creed at the founding, without fear or favor, and Khaldun would note the move at once, because he wrote that religion multiplies a dynasty’s power beyond its numbers: a group bound by creed as well as kinship fights with doubled solidarity. The credo functions as the dynasty’s religion to this day, recited at successions, invoked in crises, the da’wa that converts employees into believers.

The generations then ran their sequence. Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1891-1968), the son-in-law who governed through depression and world war, had contact with the founder and preserved the qualities. Orvil Dryfoos (1912-1963) held the throne briefly; Punch Sulzberger (1926-2012), the third generation proper, made the dynasty’s great honor-stand with the Pentagon Papers, tradition risen to the founder’s level for one decisive moment. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. was the fourth generation, the one Khaldun marks for destruction, and the era’s record shows the cycle straining: the strategic stumbles of the 2000s, the debt crisis that drove the family to a Mexican billionaire’s loan in 2009, the moment the dynasty stood a quarter-inch from the fate Khaldun assigns the fourth generation. It did not fall. And the fifth generation, A.G. Sulzberger (b. 1980), governs today a dominion richer and more powerful than at any point in the dynasty’s history. Khaldun’s schedule has been beaten by two generations, and the interesting question is the machinery.

The machinery comes in four parts, and every part is a device Khaldun himself identified as a deferral of senility.

The first is the trust. Khaldun’s fourth generation destroys the dynasty by cashing in the patrimony for luxury, and American press history ran his experiment a half-dozen times on schedule: the Binghams of Louisville collapsed in the third generation, the Chandlers of Los Angeles sold in the fourth, the Bancrofts surrendered Dow Jones in 2007, the Grahams sold Washington in 2013. Each fall came exactly as the Muqaddimah predicts, heirs multiplying, conviction diluting, the soft generation trading glory for liquidity. The Sulzberger trust is engineering aimed at this failure mode: the family cannot easily sell, the luxury exit is barred by document, and the heirs are chained to the patrimony whether their conviction survives or not. It is the rarest of things, a legal instrument that forbids the fourth-generation move.

The second is simulated desert. Khaldun is explicit that asabiyyah and its virtues are produced by hardship and cannot be produced by exhortation, which is why sedentary dynasties cannot regenerate themselves from within. The Sulzbergers’ answer is to manufacture hardship for the heirs: the apprenticeship system that sent A.G. to the Providence Journal and the Oregonian to labor in the provinces under his own byline, and that ran his cousins Sam Dolnick and David Perpich through years in the ranks before any elevation. The dynasty sends its princes to a constructed badawa, a desert of night cops shifts and city council meetings, to instill by simulation what the founder got from necessity. Whether simulated hardship produces real asabiyyah is the deepest open question in the dynasty’s design, but the intent is purely Khaldunian, and the fifth generation’s conduct under fire, of which more below, suggests the simulation took.

The third is the creed, already noted, doing the religion’s work of binding beyond kinship, with one modern refinement: the creed binds the employees as well as the family, converting a workforce into something closer to a faith community and lending the dynasty a solidarity it no longer needs to supply from its own blood.

The fourth is hired vigor, and here the frame reaches Kahn. Khaldun devoted some of his sharpest chapters to the clients and mercenaries, the mawali, the wazirs, the slave soldiers, whom dynasties import as their own kin grow soft or scarce. The executive editors of the Times are the dynasty’s wazirs in nearly perfect form: drawn from outside the blood, selected for vigor proven in the hard country, the foreign bureaus that function as the institution’s desert, given command of the realm’s whole fighting force, and never given the throne. Kahn’s formation reads like a wazir’s résumé composed for the purpose, the Dallas police beat, the Beijing years, the Pulitzers won in the field, decades of service before elevation. Khaldun’s warning about hired vigor was that it works and then it doesn’t: the clients eventually develop asabiyyah of their own and usurp, or the dynasty behind them hollows out entirely. The Times has constitutionalized against the first danger, the customary decade, the retirement norm, the wazir’s structural inability to own what he commands, and no executive editor has ever attempted the throne. The second danger cannot be ruled out by structure, and it is the heart of the mask thesis.

Because here is the cold reading. A dynasty whose vigor is supplied by hired men, while the family provides legitimacy, ceremony, and creed, is not an exception to Khaldun’s cycle. It is a known late stage of it. The Abbasid caliphs of Baghdad reigned for three centuries after their real power passed to Buyid and Seljuk soldiers, sacred figureheads above governments of hired swords, and Khaldun analyzed the arrangement at length: the caliphal solution, the dynasty surviving its own senility by exchanging rule for reign. On this reading the Sulzberger dynasty passed its Khaldunian death date around the fourth generation, when the family’s own operational capacity faltered and the debt crisis nearly took the house, and what persists since is the caliphate phase, a revered family supplying continuity and creed while the wazir class, of which Kahn is the current and ablest specimen, supplies the force. The reading is not a debunking. The Abbasid arrangement lasted longer than most dynasties’ entire lives, and a caliphate with good wazirs and an entrenched creed is among the most durable forms power takes. But it relocates the institution’s true vitality from the blood to the hired men, and it makes the quality of each generation’s wazirs, rather than each generation’s heirs, the variable on which everything turns.

The frame’s second assignment is the newsroom’s asabiyyah, and Khaldun handles it in two movements. Shared danger breeds group feeling; the Trump years were the institution’s desert raids, a decade of siege that re-toughened a softening tribe, fused the ranks, and bound the warriors with booty in the form of the subscription surge, spoils distributed after victories. But Khaldun also teaches that asabiyyah is plural, that houses contain rival solidarities, and that dynasties fall to groups whose group feeling is fresher than their own. The newsroom convulsions of the early 2020s read as a war of asabiyyahs: a younger cohort, formed in the genuine scarcity of the collapsing digital sector, carrying the fierce solidarity of a generation hardened together, moved on the soft institution from within and briefly held much of it. Kahn’s restoration, in Khaldunian terms, was the rallying of the old asabiyyah, institutional loyalty, the creed, the honor culture, against the newer one, and it prevailed when the rival tribe’s home territory, the insurgent media economy that fed and could receive them, turned to true desert, no longer hard country that breeds strength but waste that supports no one. A tribe whose hinterland dies must take service with the city it besieged. Many did.

Which sets up the question the frame was commissioned to ask. Khaldun is unsentimental about what happens to group feeling when the siege lifts: luxury and security dissolve it, always, and no creed or memo prevents the dissolution, because asabiyyah answers to conditions, not exhortation. A newsroom at peace, paid from bundle money, secure in a tower, its enemies defeated or departed, is hadara, sedentary life, and its solidarity will soften on Khaldun’s schedule whatever its leaders say at town halls. The institution’s group feeling is currently maintained by a sustaining external pressure, a hostile administration whose subpoenas and access wars supply the shared danger that does what the creed alone cannot. The cold Khaldunian forecast follows: the Times’s cohesion is rented from its enemies, the rent is paid in siege, and a long peace would do to the newsroom what no rival ever has. Leaders of guarded states have understood this since before the Muqaddimah, which is why the frame’s final, coldest implication must be stated: an institution whose internal order depends on external threat acquires an interest, unconscious and structural, in the threat’s continuation, and the keeper of such an institution should be watched, by others and by himself, for the moment when the trumpet that summons the garrison has become the instrument he cannot afford to put down.

The last Khaldunian question is the horizon. Dynasties fall to the periphery, to groups hardened in scarcity with asabiyyah the city cannot match, and the periphery is where he would tell us to look: the creator economy, the podcast networks, the new newsletter and video institutions, formations born in genuine hardship, bound by intense loyalties between makers and audiences, currently raiding the city’s edges and carrying off its talent and its young. Khaldun would find their group feeling impressive and their prospects undetermined, because raiders become dynasts only when they learn to hold cities, to build the boring apparatus of succession, standards, and continuity that converts conquest into rule. Whether any of them will is the next cycle’s question. The current cycle’s answer stands at the top of the Eighth Avenue tower: a fifth-generation caliphate, its creed intact, its desert simulated, its luxury fenced by trust law, and its sword carried, as the Muqaddimah says late dynasties’ swords always are, by a hired man of formidable vigor who can never, and would never, sit on the throne he defends.

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The Cathedral and the Gift Shop: Joseph Kahn’s Times Through Jane Jacobs’s Systems of Survival

Jane Jacobs (1916-2006) published Systems of Survival in 1992, a Platonic dialogue hiding a hard thesis. Human livelihoods divide into two kinds, taking and trading, and each kind has evolved its own complete moral system, which she called syndromes. The commercial syndrome serves people who live by trading: shun force, come to voluntary agreements, be honest, collaborate with strangers, compete, respect contracts, innovate, be efficient, be thrifty, dissent for the sake of the task. The guardian syndrome serves people who live by protecting territory, the lineage of the hunter, the soldier, the government: shun trading, exert prowess, be obedient and disciplined, respect hierarchy, be loyal, adhere to tradition, be exclusive, be ostentatious, dispense largesse, deceive for the sake of the task, treasure honor. Her thesis is that each syndrome is internally coherent and functional, that neither is morally superior, and that the road to systemic corruption runs through mixing them. Take precepts from both and you breed what she called monstrous moral hybrids: police who trade (bribery), merchants who take (the Mafia), guardians running commerce (the Soviet economy), commerce buying guardians (the procurement scandal). Her practical counsel followed: institutions that must host both syndromes survive only through deliberate, knowledgeable segregation, a caste separation maintained by people who understand what they are keeping apart.

The New York Times Company is a textbook Jacobs case, because it hosts both syndromes at full strength under one roof, and the Kahn era is best understood as a period of self-conscious syndrome management.

The newsroom is a guardian order, and the fit is precept-by-precept. Shun trading: the foundational rule of the place is that coverage is never for sale, reporters take no gifts, accept no payments from subjects, trade no favorable mentions, and the historic name for the boundary, the separation of church and state, concedes the religious register of the thing. Exert prowess: the scoop is a raid, the investigation a campaign, and the institution honors its hunters. Discipline, obedience, hierarchy: the masthead is a chain of command and the desk system a regimental structure. Loyalty: the institution defends its own under fire and expects fidelity in return. Tradition: the credo of 1896 is recited like a regimental motto. Exclusivity: the hiring funnel is a vetting ritual, and membership confers caste. Ostentation and largesse: the Pulitzer wall, the prize submissions, the anniversary self-celebrations, guardian display in its classic form. Fortitude: the war correspondents and the security details. Honor above all: the institution’s strongest sentence, *we stand by our reporting*, is an honor formula, and its gravest crises are honor crises. The syndrome even illuminates the rule that seems to contradict it. Jacobs’s guardian deceives for the sake of the task, the spy and the undercover officer, yet the Times forbids its reporters nearly all deception, no false identities, no hidden recorders by default. The prohibition marks the newsroom as a priestly sub-type of guardian, one that renounces the syndrome’s license to deceive in exchange for a higher claim of purity, the guardian order that fights with clean hands because its authority is its weapon.

The other half of the company runs the commercial syndrome. Games, Cooking, Wirecutter, The Athletic, the advertising operation, the subscription machine under Meredith Kopit Levien (b. 1971): this is the trading world, and properly so. It collaborates with strangers, strikes deals, optimizes funnels, A/B tests, prices, bundles, competes, and innovates, and by the only measures that apply to commerce it has succeeded brilliantly, building the subscription business that made the company rich while the rest of the industry starved. Jacobs would insist on saying this without a sneer: the commercial syndrome is not the guardian syndrome’s corruption, it is a complete and honorable ethics of its own, and the people who run the Times’s trading floor practice it well.

The Jacobs problem is never either syndrome. It is the seams, and the company’s seams are where every ethics controversy of the era actually lives.

Take Wirecutter first, the cleanest specimen. A product review is a guardian act, disinterested judgment exercised on the reader’s behalf, protection from the merchant. Affiliate revenue is a commercial fact: the reviewer’s employer collects a commission on every purchase the review produces. The two are fused in a single page, the guardian’s voice wired to the merchant’s till, and Jacobs’s framework names what disclosure rhetoric obscures: this is a hybrid by construction, and its integrity depends on an internal wall, between the recommenders and the revenue, that the incentive gradient erodes every day. The drift shows in the product itself, the deals coverage, the Prime Day liveblogs, the guardian voice gradually conscripted into the festival of trading. Nothing scandalous has happened, which is the point; with hybrids nothing has to happen, the corruption arrives as a slope, not a cliff.

T Brand Studio, the native-advertising shop, is the bolder hybrid: commercial matter manufactured to wear the guardian’s uniform, paid content styled to resemble the report, managed by labels whose entire commercial value lies in being unobtrusive. Jacobs’s category for this is unkind and exact, the merchant in the guard’s livery, and the institution’s own discomfort shows in the elaborate typographic etiquette that surrounds it.

The Athletic supplies the newest case. Sports journalism is guardian work, and the company attached to it a sports-betting partnership, odds integration and a bookmaker’s money flowing through the same pages that cover the games being bet on. The newsroom drew internal lines, news staff segregated from betting content, and the lines are real, but Jacobs’s analysis says what the lines concede: the enterprise now holds a commercial stake in the activity its guardians cover, the referee’s employer has a concession stand at the stadium, and the arrangement is a hybrid whose costs will be invisible until the day a story about gambling’s damage to sport must run beside the partner’s odds widget.

Even the subscription model, the company’s great purification, reads as a syndrome exchange rather than an escape. Moving from advertising to subscriptions cleansed the old hybrid, the advertiser’s hand near the report, and created a subtler one. The subscriber who pays as a patron expects what patrons of guardians have always expected, loyalty, the syndrome’s own precept turned outward: I fund the legion, the legion fights for me. The Trump-era resistance subscriber was a patron, and the rage that greets unwelcome coverage is the rage of largesse betrayed. Joseph Kahn’s independence doctrine, in Jacobs’s terms, is the refusal of the patronage relation, the guardian insisting that the taxes buy protection of the realm and not service to the donor, and it is an expensive refusal because the commercial side’s revenue logic runs the other way.

Which brings the analysis to its structural finding. The New York Times survives its hybrids better than the rest of the industry for the reason Jacobs prescribed: caste separation, deliberately maintained. The newsroom answers to Kahn, the trading floor to Kopit Levien, the two chains of command meet only at the publisher, business staff hold no authority over the report, and the arrangement is enforced by people who can articulate what it is for. The comparative experiment ran in public in 2024: at The Washington Post and in Los Angeles, merchant princes who owned guardian institutions exercised direct command over them, the proprietor’s commercial person issuing guardian orders, and the institutions hemorrhaged trust and subscribers within days. Monstrous hybrid is a strong term, and Jacobs coined it for exactly that configuration. The Times’s constitutional separation of the syndromes, dynasty above, guardian and merchant below in parallel, is why it absorbed the same era’s pressures without the same collapse.

Jacobs would close with two warnings. The first is that guardian virtues corrupt in their own direction without any commercial help. Exclusivity curdles into caste arrogance, loyalty into cover-up, honor into vanity, tradition into blindness, ostentation into self-worship, and a guardian order as secure as Kahn’s newsroom is exposed to every one of these internal rots. The institution’s familiar sins, the certainty, the self-veneration, the slowness to admit error until the great rite forces it, are guardian pathologies, native to the syndrome, and no wall against commerce prevents them. The second warning cuts deeper. A guardian order that does not trade must be fed, and the feeding hand acquires, slowly and without conspiracy, the power of the purse. The bundle finances the report; the games and the recipes pay for the Baghdad bureau; the cathedral is maintained by the gift shop. Today the arrangement runs in the guardian’s favor, a publisher committed to the report and a commercial machine profitable enough to fund it without conditions. But the company’s center of gravity has been migrating for a decade, the typical new subscriber arrives for the puzzles, and the long-run Jacobs question about the Times is the question her dialogue asks about every guardian order on a merchant’s purse. The merchant’s money is clean, the merchant’s intentions are friendly, and the merchant keeps the accounts. Guardians who forget which syndrome holds the ledger have, in her telling, always discovered it eventually, and never on a date of their choosing.

One biographical coda. Joseph Kahn is the son of a merchant prince; Leo Kahn built supermarkets and co-founded an office-supply empire, commercial syndrome incarnate, optimistic, efficient, enterprising. The son took the fortune and crossed over, into boarding school, the Crimson, the foreign bureaus, the masthead, a life conducted within the guardian syndrome, trading nothing, holding territory, treasuring honor. Jacobs knew the pattern well; it is among the oldest in class history, the trader’s wealth purchasing the family’s passage into guardianship, the counting house endowing the priesthood. The Times’s current arrangement, a guardian order funded by commerce it declines to think about, has at its head a man whose own life is the same settlement, executed perfectly, one generation up.

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The Steward: Joseph Kahn Through Philip Selznick’s Leadership in Administration

Philip Selznick (1919-2010) published Leadership in Administration in 1957, a short book built on one distinction. An organization is a technical instrument, a tool for doing a job, expendable the moment a better tool appears. An institution is something else. An institution has been infused with value beyond the technical requirements of the task at hand. People prize it. The character, formed by history, determines what it can do, what it cannot do, and what would count as its betrayal. Selznick’s famous sentence carries the whole argument: to institutionalize is to infuse with value beyond the technical requirements of the task at hand.

The New York Times is the most heavily value-infused enterprise in American life outside the churches and the military. Nobody grieves when a logistics company changes its methods. People grieve when the Times changes its crossword. Subscribers carry the tote bag as an identity claim. Employees speak of the mission with a reverence that embarrasses outsiders. By Selznick’s test, the gap between what the organization technically does, assembling and selling information, and what people invest in it, is the measure of institutionalization, and at the Times the gap is a canyon. Which means the man who runs its newsroom holds the job Selznick spent the book defining: institutional leadership, a role he distinguished sharply from administrative management. The manager handles routine decisions, the allocation of resources against given goals. The leader handles critical decisions, the ones that form or threaten character, and his work consists of four functions: defining the institutional mission, embodying purpose in the structure, defending institutional integrity, and ordering internal conflict. Joseph Kahn’s tenure since June 2022 can be read as a Selznick casebook, function by function, and the reading explains both his successes and the one large question his stewardship has not answered.

Take mission definition first. Selznick insists that mission is not given; it must be defined and redefined by leadership against the pressures of the moment, and the definition must be specific enough to guide action. Kahn inherited a newsroom whose mission had blurred. The Trump years had offered the paper a new and intoxicating purpose, opposition, and a large faction of staff and subscribers had accepted it. Kahn’s first and most repeated act as leader has been a definition: the Times exists to report independently, for the persuadable as well as the converted, and it is not the resistance. He has said this in memos, in the Semafor interview of May 2024 where he refused on the record to make the paper an instrument of anti-Trump politics, at Princeton this spring, and in a vocabulary so compressed and repetitive, independent, ambitious, rigorous, fair, that the repetition is method. Selznick would recognize the method. He wrote that statesmanship includes the deliberate construction of socially integrating myths, the efficient communication of purpose in forms the rank and file can absorb. Kahn’s four adjectives are doctrine reduced to catechism, and the Ochs credo he and the publisher invoke, without fear or favor, is the founding myth doing its integrating work a hundred and thirty years on. The myth-tending extends to the building, the lobby wall of Pulitzers, the photographs of the old presses outside the conference rooms. Kahn conducts visitors past them. Selznick would call that the institutional embodiment of purpose performed as ritual.

Mission definition has two characteristic failures in Selznick’s scheme, and naming them shows what Kahn has steered between. The first is opportunism, the pursuit of short-run advantage in ways that compromise character. The opportunist path stood wide open in 2022: the Trump-era subscription surge had proved that rage pays, and a leader maximizing near-term revenue might have leaned the report toward the audience’s appetite. The second failure is utopianism, the flight into purposes so large and vague they cannot discipline action. That path stood open too, and half the industry took it: the mission inflated into saving democracy, a purpose under which any coverage decision can be justified and none can be evaluated. Kahn refused both. His insistence that the paper is not the resistance is anti-opportunism and anti-utopianism in a single sentence: it declines the profitable partisan identity and it shrinks the mission back to a concrete, criticizable task, getting the report right. Selznick’s leader is defined by exactly this, holding the mission specific against the twin temptations of expediency and grandeur.

The second function, embodying purpose in structure, Selznick considered the real test, because a purpose that lives only in speeches dies with the speaker. Policy must be built into the social structure of the enterprise, into recruitment, training, promotion, and the design of units, until the desired conduct becomes self-maintaining. Here Kahn’s record is substantial. The standards apparatus under Philip Corbett operates as a structural conscience, purpose embodied in a desk with veto power. The wall between news and opinion is purpose embodied in organization, two staffs, two chains of command, so that independence does not depend on anyone’s daily virtue. The social media guidelines tightened under Kahn convert a value, the editor’s restraint, into a rule with consequences. Promotion patterns do the quiet structural work: the editors who rose under Kahn, the Laceys and Ryans, are institutionalists by temperament, and Selznick wrote that the selection of personnel is among the most consequential of character-forming decisions, since every promotion teaches the organization what kind of person it rewards. Even the company’s acquisition strategy reads structurally: the commercial enterprises, the games, the product reviews, the sports site, were bought and kept as separate units rather than blended into the newsroom, which quarantines commercial logic away from the value-bearing core. Selznick devoted much of his earlier work to how structure protects or corrupts values; the Times under Kahn is an essay in protection by partition.

The third function, the defense of institutional integrity, is where Kahn’s tenure earns its chapter. Selznick’s subtlest concept sits here: the precarious value. A value is precarious when no powerful internal group’s self-interest secures it, when it survives only if leadership deliberately protects it. Independence at the Times is the textbook precarious value. The staff’s interest, for a large faction formed in movement culture, ran toward advocacy and the status it confers. The market’s interest ran toward partisan intensity, which sells. Even the audience’s stated interest, measured by the fury that greets unwelcome coverage, ran against it. No constituency inside or outside the building spontaneously defends independence; it persists only because the leadership elite, Kahn, Kingsbury on the opinion side, and the publisher above them, treats its defense as the core of the job. Selznick argued that precarious values require protected elites with the autonomy to guard them, a conclusion that sits uncomfortably with democratic instincts and describes the Times masthead exactly. The critical decisions of Kahn’s tenure are all integrity defenses. The February 2023 memo answering the trans-coverage letter, rebuking staff who joined an external campaign against their own colleagues, was a character-defining choice: it established that the institution, and not its most mobilized faction, judges the report. The Biden-age coverage of 2024, sustained against White House pressure and subscriber rage, was integrity defense conducted in public, the paper demonstrating that it would cost itself comfort on its own side of the aisle. The 2025 defense of the Mamdani admissions story against internal and external attack ran the same pattern. Each episode, examined singly, looks like crisis management. Read through Selznick they are one continuous act, the protection of a precarious value by a leader who has correctly identified its precariousness.

The fourth function, the ordering of internal conflict, Selznick treats as the management of rival interests so that no faction’s victory deforms the whole. Kahn’s newsroom contains a permanent conflict between the guild of institutionalists and the residue of the movement generation, and his ordering of it has been neither suppression nor surrender. The movement faction lost its veto, the lesson of 2023, but kept its place; nobody was purged for signing the letter. The discipline restored a boundary, participation in campaigns against colleagues, while leaving the underlying disagreement about coverage alive and arguable inside the institution’s procedures. Selznick would approve the form: internal conflict ordered into channels the institution can survive, rather than resolved by the destruction of one side.

Selznick’s framework also supplies the concept for what Kahn inherited. His predecessor era had practiced what Selznick, in the TVA study that made his name, called cooptation: the absorption of potentially threatening elements into the structure to neutralize the threat. The Times of the 2010s coopted the digital insurgency, hiring its writers, adopting its forms, and Selznick’s analysis predicts the price, which the paper duly paid: the coopted do not merely join, they shape. The newsroom’s character drifted toward the movement culture of its new members, and the crises of 2020 were the bill arriving. Kahn’s tenure, in this light, is the post-cooptation correction, the reassertion of institutional character over the character of the absorbed. The frame thus gives the whole arc one vocabulary: cooptation, drift, integrity crisis, restoration.

Now the unanswered question, because Selznick supplies that too. His hardest test of leadership is not whether the leader defends values but whether he institutionalizes the defense, embeds it so deeply in structure and personnel that it no longer needs him. A value protected by a man is precarious still; a value protected by an institution has been secured. Some of Kahn’s work passes this test, the standards desk, the guidelines, the promotion pattern. But the core of the restoration has run on personal authority backed by the publisher, on memos signed Joe, on a particular man’s willingness to absorb fury without flinching. The Selznick question for the Times is what happens at succession. If the next executive editor inherits a structure in which independence enforces itself, Kahn will have completed the institutional leader’s full assignment. If the next editor inherits only the memory of a steady predecessor, then independence at the Times remains what it was in 2022, a precarious value awaiting its next guardian, and Kahn will have been a superb officer of the institution rather than its architect. Selznick’s book gives the criterion and history will supply the data, on the customary schedule, about a decade from now.

Selznick knew that the defense of institutional character shades, in time, into the worship of the institution, survival displacing purpose, the organism living in order to live. The Times’s deepest occupational hazard is exactly this self-veneration, the conviction of its own indispensability, and a steward as reverential as Kahn, the inside man devoted beyond the possibility of self-destruction, is constitutionally unlikely to see it. The man Selznick’s categories praise on every page is, by those same categories, the man least equipped to ask whether the church he keeps so faithfully has begun to confuse its candles with its God.

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Blocked Exits: Joseph Kahn’s Times Through Albert Hirschman’s Exit, Voice, and Loyalty

Albert Hirschman (1915-2012) published Exit, Voice, and Loyalty in 1970, and the book’s machinery fits in a paragraph. When an organization deteriorates, its members and customers have two recuperative responses. They can exit, taking their business or their labor elsewhere, the market’s response. Or they can use voice, complaining, agitating, organizing from within, the political response. The two interact. Voice carries force in proportion to the credibility of exit: the member who can walk gets listened to. And easy exit undermines voice from the other direction, because the most quality-sensitive members leave first, draining the organization of exactly the people with the standards and energy to reform it. The third term, loyalty, governs the choice between the two. Loyalty delays exit, holds the quality-conscious inside, and converts what would have been departures into argument. Management, for its part, is not a passive object of these forces; it designs the costs of exit and the channels of voice, and it yields to whichever response threatens it more.

Apply the machinery to the New York Times newsroom from 2020 to 2026 and the period’s politics, which read as a morality play in most tellings, resolve into a tight model with one variable doing most of the work. The variable is the labor market.

Start at peak voice. In the summer of 2020 the Times staff rose against the Tom Cotton op-ed in a coordinated public campaign, and management capitulated within days: the editorial page editor, James Bennet, was gone by the weekend. The episode is usually narrated in moral or generational terms. Hirschman’s terms explain the outcome better. Voice prevailed because it was backed by credible exit. The digital-media sector was hiring; BuzzFeed News, Vice, Vox, and the venture-funded constellation offered landing spots; Substack had just demonstrated that a writer with a following could convert it to income overnight. A newsroom revolt in that market was a strike with strike funds. Management, facing voice that could plausibly become mass exit, yielded to the more threatening response, exactly as the model predicts. The same calculation ran through the McNeil affair the following winter and the broader Slack-uprising era: every act of internal voice carried an implicit exit threat, and the threat was real.

Now run the exits through the machinery, because Hirschman’s subtlest point sits here. The conspicuous departures of 2020, Bari Weiss from the Times, Andrew Sullivan from New York, Glenn Greenwald from the Intercept, were exits of the connoisseur type, the quality-sensitive leaving first, where the quality dimension at issue was ideological breadth. And Hirschman tells you precisely what such exits cost the organization: they remove its internal reformers. After Weiss walked, who inside the Opinion section made her argument? The departure of the heterodox flank did not strengthen the institution’s center; it stripped the internal opposition of its most effective voices and left the field to the faction whose members stayed. Exit silenced the critique that voice had been carrying. Hirschman built a special concept for organizations that benefit from this dynamic, the lazy monopoly, the dominant firm that quietly welcomes the exit of its most demanding members because their departure purchases internal peace. The Times of 2020 and 2021 behaved as a lazy monopoly in exactly his sense: it let its most troublesome critics go, on both flanks, and bought quiet with the loss.

Then the variable moved. Between 2022 and 2024 the digital-media sector that had underwritten staff leverage collapsed: BuzzFeed News shut in 2023, Vice went bankrupt, the Messenger burned through its capital and died in a year, the Washington Post bled money and bought out hundreds. Substack matured into a stratified market where stars with portable audiences prospered and everyone else discovered that a newsletter is a small business with one employee and no health insurance. The exit option, for the ordinary Times journalist, simply evaporated. There is no rival paying Times salaries at Times scale. And with exit gone, Hirschman’s interaction term took over: voice without a credible exit threat is petition, and petitions can be answered with memos.

This is the structural fact beneath Joseph Kahn’s restoration. Kahn took the chair in June 2022 with a doctrine, independence, and a manner, the unflappable steward. Then the February 2023 trans-coverage letter, the closest thing his tenure has produced to a reprise of 2020, met a rebuke instead of a capitulation, and the signatories absorbed the rebuke and stayed, because the alternative to staying was leaving journalism. Same institution, same kind of revolt, opposite outcome, and the moral and generational variables had barely moved in three years. What moved was the labor market. Management yields to the more threatening response; by 2023 voice had been decoupled from exit, and a decoupled voice does not threaten. Kahn’s discipline succeeded on terrain that the sector’s collapse prepared for him. The steady nerve was his. The leverage was Hirschman’s.

Loyalty, the third term, explains the rest of the quiet. Hirschman observed that loyalty rises with the severity of initiation, and the Times has the most severe initiation in American journalism: years of credentialing, a brutal hiring funnel, the conferral of an identity that operates socially like a title. Members who paid that entrance fee do not exit lightly, and loyalty of that kind does double work in the model. It holds the quality-conscious inside, where their dissatisfaction becomes voice rather than departure, and it inclines the voice toward forms the institution can survive. Kahn’s era has also channeled the voice, a managerial art Hirschman explicitly anticipated: organizations design their voice channels, and the Times steered staff grievance away from coverage politics and into the NewsGuild, where it emerged as the December 2022 walkout, a one-day strike about compensation. Contract voice is voice the institution can price. Coverage voice claims a share of editorial sovereignty, which is the one asset the masthead will not negotiate. The redirection of newsroom energy from the second channel to the first ranks among the least noticed and most consequential achievements of the Kahn restoration.

The model also runs on the reader side, and there it returns a warning. Readers exercised voice all decade, the comment-section fury, the cancel-my-subscription campaigns over the Biden-age coverage and a dozen other offenses, and Kahn made refusal of reader voice on coverage a point of public doctrine. He could afford the refusal because reader exit had been dampened by the bundle. The subscriber who came for Wordle and the recipes does not cancel over a White House story; the journalism is one strand in a cable of habits. Hirschman would note the cost hiding in the comfort. Exit and voice are not nuisances to be engineered away; they are the organization’s information system, the signals through which it learns it is deteriorating. An institution that has muffled reader exit through bundling, devalued staff voice through the labor market, and trained itself to discount reader voice as activist pressure has insulated its management from nearly every feedback channel Hirschman thought kept organizations honest. Insulation enables independence, which is the doctrine’s promise. Insulation also enables undetected decline, which is the lazy monopoly’s fate. The same blocked signals that freed Kahn to be brave would hide it from him if the report went bad.

The frame’s last gift is its prediction. Kahn’s regime rests on converted structure and unconverted hearts: the movement faction lost its leverage, not its convictions. On Hirschman’s logic the discipline holds exactly as long as the exit market stays dead, and the exit market is showing signs of life. The Free Press sold for a nine-figure sum in 2025 and its founder, the Times’s most famous exit, now runs a broadcast news division with hiring power. Podcast and video money is assembling rival payrolls. Whatever the AI upheaval does to media economics, it will not leave the labor market where 2023 left it. The day a well-funded sector again offers Times journalists somewhere to go, every internal voice re-arms with an exit threat, and the masthead’s calculations revert toward the summer of 2020. The model says the restoration is not a settlement. It is a position, held while the opposing army lacks a paymaster, and the test of whether Kahn built loyalty or merely enjoyed blocked exits arrives with the next hiring boom. Hirschman’s machinery, having explained the past six years with one moving variable, hands the next executive editor the variable to watch.

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The Crown and the Premier: Joseph Kahn’s Times Through Walter Bagehot’s English Constitution

Walter Bagehot (1826-1877) published The English Constitution in 1867 to explain why the textbook account of British government was wrong. The textbooks described a balance of Crown, Lords, and Commons. Bagehot said the working constitution divided along a different line, between the dignified parts, those which excite and preserve the reverence of the population, and the efficient parts, those by which it in fact works and rules. The monarchy was dignified: it supplied continuity, legitimacy, intelligibility, and awe. The cabinet was efficient: it governed. The genius of the arrangement lay in the division. The masses gave their reverence to the Queen, and that reverence licensed the unglamorous men who actually ruled to rule. A republic, he wrote, had insinuated itself beneath the folds of a monarchy. And the arrangement had a maintenance requirement he stated in the book’s most famous sentence: the monarchy’s mystery is its life, and we must not let in daylight upon magic.

The New York Times Company is the last great constitutional monarchy in American media. The Ochs-Sulzberger family is the dignified part. The dynasty is in its fifth generation since Adolph Ochs (1858-1935) bought the paper in 1896 and issued the credo, without fear or favor, that functions as the realm’s coronation oath. The family reigns through an entrenchment device Bagehot would have admired, the dual-class share structure and the family trust, which together ensure that the public shareholders who supply the capital cannot depose the crown. Bagehot’s line inverts: at the Times, a monarchy has insinuated itself beneath the folds of a public company. Investors hold Class A stock and the rituals of quarterly capitalism proceed, while sovereignty sits where it has sat for a hundred and thirty years, in a family.

The efficient part is the government the crown appoints: the executive editor over the newsroom, the editorial page editor over Opinion, the chief executive over the business. The Times constitution, like the Victorian one, thus has its premier, and since June 2022 the premiership of the realm’s core territory, the report, has belonged to Joseph Kahn. Read his position constitutionally and its precise nature comes clear in a way no organizational chart conveys. Kahn governs. He commands the newsroom, sets doctrine, disciplines the estates, fights the foreign wars with hostile administrations. But he reigns over nothing. His power is held at pleasure, conferred by a memo from the sovereign and revocable by the same instrument, and the customary decade of an executive editor’s tenure resembles nothing so much as the life of a ministry, long enough to govern, short enough that the crown never fades behind its servant.

The succession rituals make the monarchy visible to anyone watching for it. When Kahn’s appointment came in April 2022, the newsroom joked about white smoke over Eighth Avenue, and the joke knew something: the form of the event was the announcement of a new government by a hereditary head of state. The sovereign’s memo performed the coronation liturgy, praising the new premier’s impeccable judgment and brave and principled leadership, the language not of a hiring but of an anointing. The outgoing premier, Dean Baquet (b. 1956), departed at the traditional age into a dignified sinecure, the realm’s equivalent of the Lords. Every transition since the mid-century has followed the form, and the form does Bagehot’s work: it dramatizes continuity, reminds the realm where legitimacy lives, and transfers the efficient power without disturbing the dignified surface.

Bagehot’s catalogue of the dignified part’s functions reads, item by item, as a description of what the Sulzbergers do for the Times. Intelligible government first: a family on the throne, he wrote, is an interesting idea that brings down the pride of sovereignty to the level of petty life. The mass of readers cannot evaluate editing philosophies, but they can understand a family that has kept a promise for five generations, and the family is therefore the brand’s guarantee in a way no hired executive could be. The humanizing apprenticeship of A.G. Sulzberger (b. 1980), his years as a working reporter in Providence and Portland before his elevation, served the same function as a prince’s military service, the heir submitting to the common discipline before assuming the throne. The cousins, Sam Dolnick and David Perpich, raised through the ranks beside him, are the princes of the blood, and the company’s practice of making heirs earn commoner credentials before promotion is dynastic statecraft of a high order. Continuity second, and this function has grown more valuable as the rest of the industry demonstrated its absence: every rival masthead has changed sovereigns within living memory, and the Times’s 130-year dynasty is the only continuity story left in the trade. The mystic element third. The Gray Lady, the credo, the lobby wall, the newspaper of record, these constitute a cult, and the family sits at its center as custodian rather than celebrant, which is the correct royal posture. And the moral headship last: Bagehot observed that the English had come to regard the Crown as the head of their morality, and the publisher’s office holds exactly that position in the realm of the Times, the place from which doctrine issues, the keeper of the credo, the conscience above the government.

Bagehot gave the constitutional monarch three rights, to be consulted, to encourage, and to warn, and the formula describes A.G. Sulzberger’s practice. He does not edit stories; the sovereign does not draft legislation. He consults, in the standing conversations with his premiers. He encourages, in the public celebrations of the newsroom’s ambitious and courageous work. And he warns, through the distinctive instrument he has made his own, the doctrinal essay: the long 2023 statement on journalistic independence and its successors are the crown’s warnings to the realm and the world, the sovereign defining the constitution’s spirit while leaving its administration to the government. The arrangement gives Kahn what every premier of a well-run constitutional monarchy enjoys, borrowed majesty. When Kahn disciplines the newsroom or refuses the resistance role, he acts under doctrine the crown has promulgated, and the crown’s legitimacy flows through him. His habitual institutional we is constitutionally exact: he speaks as the sovereign’s government, and attacks on his decisions break against the throne behind him.

The frame also explains the constitution’s recorded crises, which are precisely the moments the division of parts failed. The firing of Jill Abramson in 2014 was the crown governing in daylight, the sovereign of that era dismissing a premier visibly, personally, and messily, and the realm took the kind of damage Bagehot predicts when magic admits daylight: the mystique faltered, the family looked like management, and the succession lore still carries the scar. The lesson was evidently learned, because the two transitions since have been bloodless ceremonies. The deeper teaching of Bagehot, that the dignified part must never be seen to do efficient work, now operates at the Times as settled convention: the family’s interventions, whatever they are, occur behind the arras, and the public record shows only doctrine, ceremony, and the occasional warning essay.

Comparative constitutionalism sharpens the picture, because the industry has run the controlled experiment. The Washington Post under Jeff Bezos (b. 1964) and the Los Angeles Times under Patrick Soon-Shiong (b. 1952) are absolute monarchies, new-money thrones without a dignified-efficient division, and in the autumn of 2024 both sovereigns governed directly, killing endorsements by personal command. Daylight flooded in; the magic died on the spot; subscribers departed in six figures and newsroom legitimacy has not recovered. The episode is Bagehot’s whole argument staged as contemporary events: reverence cannot survive the sight of the sovereign’s hand on the controls, and a press monarchy that lacks the constitutional division will be ruined by its own crown. The Times’s stability through the same period, holding a harder line under heavier fire, is the dividend of the 1867 design. The dynasty reigned, the premier governed, and the realm absorbed blows that broke its absolutist neighbors.

Two questions remain that the frame raises and cannot settle. The first is Bagehot’s standing worry about hereditary systems: the throne is only as sound as the generation occupying it, and entrenchment that protects a wise dynasty protects a foolish one identically. The fifth generation has so far governed its constitution shrewdly, choosing premiers well and keeping daylight out. Whether the sixth will, no structure can guarantee, and the trust that makes the family undeposable makes a bad heir undeposable too. The second question is Kahn’s, and it is the premier’s eternal question. A ministry holds office while it holds the sovereign’s confidence, and confidence is weather. The premiership explains the strange combination his observers keep noting, the total command and the total self-effacement: a constitutional premier wields the realm’s whole efficient power on the strict condition that he never mistake it for his own. Kahn’s unquotability, his institutional pronoun, his refusal of celebrity, are the manners of a man who understands his constitution perfectly. The editors who forgot it, and the history of the paper holds several, discovered what every Victorian premier knew, that the magic belongs to the crown, and the crown lends it only to servants who never claim it.

One last extension, beyond the building. Bagehot’s categories describe not only the Times’s internal constitution but its position in the larger one. For a substantial fraction of the American professional class, The New York Times is a dignified institution of the Republic: it solemnizes marriages in the Vows pages, buries the dead in the obituaries, sets the day’s common text on the front page, supplies the crossword that orders the morning. These are reverence functions, and they generate the loyalty that the news report alone never could. The paper of record is a dignified title, and the realm Kahn governs draws its deepest strength from ceremonies that have nothing to do with news. Bagehot would have seen it at a glance: the institution survives its controversies for the same reason the monarchy survived its ministries, because the people’s attachment was never to the government, but to the crown.

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