The Jewish Angle To Rony Guldman’s Story

In his work in progress, A Critical Theory of Academia, Rony Guldmann writes:

* Barbara [Fried] had remarked to someone in the faculty lounge at the outset of our December 2008 meeting (with Joe) that here was a meeting of Jews. While I chalked up that remark to insignificant small talk at the time, that the tensions expressed and disagreements voiced in that meeting should have then culminated in a conflagration of Jews a mere nine months later is hardly surprising given the astonishing scope of Barbara demonstrable prescience—which I am prepared to describe as prophetic even at the risk of sounding superstitious. My Gaither experience can be articulated in the political terms that I outlined in the last chapter. But it also admits of a religious interpretation, which is only fitting given that it was Joe and Barbara who suggested that I turn my attention to law and religion, the only significant recommendation that I accepted. While the events which I have here related may strike the reader as anomalous and peculiar, if not downright incredible, the truth is that our respective machinations embodied advanced Jewish thought at the very highest level. If this claim seems incredible to some, this is simply testimony to the sublimity and sophistication of those machinations, which we will now examine from a religious perspective.

* What, after all, was Barbara’s vengefulness—her pursuit of a double-revenge that would entrap me in a self-enclosed world from which I could never escape—but the sublime vengefulness of Israel? That vengefulness suspended me in semantic and existential indeterminacy, Stanford’s unofficial reality, which dragged on for a year before its disappointing meaning became clarified. And what was this other than a “truly grand politics of revenge… a farseeing, subterranean, slowly advancing, and premeditated revenge”? What was the “evidence” being broadcast by the homepage and Set I other than the “bait” through which this revenge would be expedited, the incentive that would induce me to acquiesce in the indeterminacy and then be drawn further and further into it? And if I was prepared to “swallow just this bait,” to accept this evidence in compensation for the risk of Interpretation II, was this not excusable, given that there was nothing “equal to the enticing, intoxicating, overwhelming, and undermining power” of the bait being held out? After all, that bait was nothing less than the prospect of a job at Stanford, and in a situation where there could be no other opportunity to advance the research into which I had already invested years of my life and the entirety of my being. The homepage and Set I were the “real instrument” of Barbara’s revenge, which could be readily denied before “all the world,” before anyone who saw Set I but was unfamiliar with the policy of allusion, insinuation, and double-meaning upon which we had all embarked.

* Law school faculties endeavor to “place” their graduates and fellows in tenure-track jobs at law schools. Larry Solum’s Entry Level Hiring Report was a “placement” survey. Correlatively, teaching candidates seek to be “placed,” to obtain employment through the support and connections of their law school faculties. But given the circumstances in which I found myself in August 2009, I had little hope of ever being placed. And so did I not instead attempt to place myself, to procure employment, not by currying the favor of mentors or submitting to the judgments of faculties and hiring committees, but through the cause of action generated by my application materials? Did I not, furthermore, seek to place myself, not just anywhere and in any old role, but at “the head of all décadence movements”? After all, this was Stanford, one of the greatest universities in the world and therefore also one of the greatest embodiments of the cultural pathologies diagnosed in the preceding chapters. Indeed, Stanford is home to CASBS itself. Moreover, it seems clear that I endeavored to place myself at Stanford, not just in any old fashion, but with a “non plus ultra of histrionic genius,” acting as though engaged in business as usual while in truth always operating in the shadow of the semantic and existential indeterminacy into which I had been cast. I attempted to place myself, not by openly displaying the true nature of my aspirations, but through a surreptitious quid pro quo, the system of allusions, insinuations, and double-meanings that ensued from the events of September 2009. And what was this system but a non plus ultra of histrionic genius, a histrionic genius of the very highest order?

This was a form of genius to which Joe, Barbara, Larry and Dick had been repeatedly subject, a form of genius that was deployed again and again and in myriad ways, from the Legal Theory presentation to our December 2008 meeting to the distribution of the Overview, and then in even more interesting and consequential ways. It was, moreover, a form of genius in which all of them would eventually come to participate themselves, and to their great credit, so contagious was it and so appealing did I make it. This skill set was never listed on my CV. Yet it is key to understanding the emergence and development of Stanford’s unofficial reality. That this reality should have provoked the reader’s incredulity is no great surprise. For the unofficial reality was the product of a liberal conspiracy, and this liberal conspiracy was also a Jewish conspiracy, bearing all the characteristic markers thereof. My struggle against Stanford was in its essence a Jew on Jew battle, with each side embodying a characteristically Jewish impulse that was then expressed in the manner possible under the circumstances at hand. On Barbara’s side was the sublime vengefulness of Israel. On my own was the desire to, with a non plus ultra of histrionic genius, place oneself at the head of all decadence movements. Each of these impulses sought to use the other as the medium of its own realization, and thereby collaborated to generate the unofficial reality.

* Nietzsche describes Judaism as engaged in a project of revenge against the entire world and identifies Christianity as the instrument of that revenge.

* Nietzsche’s crucial starting point is that Jewish history is the history of reaction to political decline. The history of Israel, he writes, is “invaluable as a typical history of the denaturalization of natural values.” For the Jewish religion was not always what it would eventually become. In the beginning, the period of the united, Davidic Kingdom, “Israel too stood in a correct, that is to say natural relationship to all things. Their Yaweh was the expression of their consciousness of power, of their delight in themselves, their hopes of themselves: in him they anticipated victory and salvation, with him they trusted that nature would provide what the people needed – above all rain. Yaweh was the God of Israel and consequently the God of justice: the logic of every nation that is in power and has a good conscience about it.”
The Israel of this period embraced an ethos and value system that were not in their essentials all so different from the pagan cultures from which a later form of Hebraic religion would rigorously distinguish itself. Indeed, Nietzsche ranks these ancient Israelites along with the Greeks and Romans as paragons of ancient vitality and life-affirmation. Israel’s God represented an affirmation of Israel, the source and symbol of its self-confidence and sense of superiority. Yaweh was the power that cleared the path for victory in battle, vanquishing the lesser gods of lesser peoples… The history of Israel is a history of the denaturalization of natural values because that history proceeds in response to developments that made this life-affirming conception of divinity unsustainable. With the Jews facing repeated conquest, dispossession, and exile, the conditions under which the old ideals had once been plausible were becoming progressively eroded. Yaweh could no longer be reconciled with what seemed like Israel’s inescapable misfortune. With defeat following upon defeat and indignity following upon indignity, the old God was losing all credibility as Israel’s vanguard and defender.
One response to this dissonance would have been for the Jews to simply relinquish their God and, with him, their former sense of national greatness. They would then have gone down by the wayside just like any number of now extinct ancient peoples, melting away into the forgotten recesses of history. But refusing to just melt away, the Jews instead opted to transform the character of their God, and therefore their own values, in order to reestablish his credibility on different terms…

* Whereas the old God helped and affirmed, the new God judged and dictated. No longer an expression of Israel’s self-confidence, he became raised above Israel as a chief magistrate and disciplinarian, as a God who demands and condemns rather than a God who aids and inspires. The values held out by the old God were “the expression of the conditions under which a nation lives and grows.” But the values demanded by the new one expressed conditions under which a nation was just barely surviving, conditions under which a nation must rationalize its misfortune in order to reconcile it to its exalted yet precariously maintained self-image. Israel could persevere in its exalted self-image only by moralizing it, by rooting their self-esteem, not in natural values like health, vitality, and conquest, but in obedience to a God who, having been raised on high above ordinary human nature and human flourishing, condemns these as selfishness, vanity, or sin. No longer able to act on the old ideals, Israel required a religion that could rationalize the ideals on which it could act under the degraded conditions of conquest and exile. These were ideals of humility, caution, submission, self-effacement. And a strict, censorious God offered just this, provided an ideology wherein the inability to affirm life on life’s terms could be rationalized as the Jews’ participation in a holy dispensation that raised them above their sullied and benighted pagan conquerors. If the Jews suffered, this reflected not national inferiority but moral superiority, the Jews’ special status as the chosen people who are therefore subject to God’s stringent standards and exacting punishments. Suffering and misfortune were no longer natural phenomena without higher meaning, but rather indicia of Jewish specialness.
Defenders of the Judeo-Christian tradition celebrate Judaism as having initiated a process of ever-expanding moral enlightenment that would eventually be transmitted to the rest of humanity through Christianity. But for Nietzsche, Judaism develops as the price which the Jews had to pay for their own national preservation…

* The transformations initiated by Judaism were not merely theological, but rather represented the radical inversion of an entire range of values away from their natural default settings. To achieve this, Judaism propagated a basic distortion in human beings’ understanding of their relationship to the natural world, the conviction that life requires some justification outside itself in the will of God. This distortion would come to pervade every sphere of life, as one natural human impulse after another became discredited as falling short of holiness. With life no longer accepted on its own terms, every act, thought, and encounter would become defined as an occasion for moral self-exertion, which now replaces the old pagan ideals of human flourishing.
The beginnings the Jewish value revolution are detailed in first essay of Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morals, which chronicles what Nietzsche calls the “slave revolt in morality,” the Judeo-Christian overthrow of pagan morality as it developed in reaction to the overwhelming power of ancient Judea’s foreign overlords.

* How did the most inoffensive and therefore unimpressive human being become celebrated as the most “good”? How did the virtues of humility and submission become the paramount values around which Judeo-Christianity would have us organize our lives? What could have made these ideals so uncontroversial that they could displace the pagans’ “affirmative” virtues of pride, strength, and courage? Nietzsche’s crucial starting point is the observation that life prior to the slave revolt in morality carried on without resort to the “good and evil” dichotomy. For it was rather the “good and bad” dichotomy that provided the language and values by which people judged themselves and one another. The “good” originally referred to those whom Nietzsche designates as the “masters,” the wielders of political and military power who were most distinguished by their self-confidence, optimism, and exuberance. The “bad,” by contrast, designated the “slaves.” The slaves did not necessarily live in literal bondage, but Nietzsche employs the term to evoke a picture of individuals who were generally downtrodden and disadvantaged along all the important human measures. The slaves were bad people, not in the contemporary moral sense, but in that same way that an athlete or automobile might be judged bad—that is, “low quality.”
Quite naturally, this antithesis generated considerable resentment among the slaves, who wished to be “good” but could not be. The slaves resented the masters, not only for what they did, but most importantly, for what they were. They were, as Maudemarie Clark observes, offended by the masters’ “easy sense of superiority.”6 But in and of itself this resentment only serve to confirm the slaves’ badness. With the slaves being too impotent to act on this resentment, this emotion could only highlight their own humiliation. Such was the fate of slaves the world over. But it was only the Jewish slaves, who had been masters in an earlier period, who discovered a creative solution to the problem. Ingeniously resorting to what Nietzsche calls a “spiritual revenge,” the Jews attempting to eliminate their overlords’ superiority symbolically, through a revaluation of values.

* The slaves’ resentment could become “creative” because it spawned values that, in turning the masters’ goodness into something very different—“evil,” an object of moral opprobrium—allowed the slaves to distract themselves from their own badness. Since the slaves could not affirm themselves on the masters’ terms, they affirmed themselves in opposition to the masters. And this involved a fundamental revision in the image of the master.

* Seen accurately in the light of natural values, the masters’ goodness consisted in “a desire to overcome, a desire to throw down, a desire to become master, a thirst for enemies, resistances and triumphs.”9 These values originated in an “enthusiastic impulsiveness in anger, love, reverence, gratitude, and revenge.”10 But the slaves were committed to the proposition that “health, well-constitutedness, strength, pride, and the sense of power [are] necessarily vicious things for which one must one day pay.”11 And so the venomous eye of ressentiment recast the masters’ overflowing energy as the eruption of a diabolical force and recast their pagan virtues as empty conceits. What the masters held up as courage and tenacity, the slaves dismissed as obtuseness and insensitivity. What the masters considered rightful pride in their victories, the slaves dismissed as smug self-satisfaction. The masters’ celebration of life became a rebellion against a higher realm in whose light the unselfconscious athleticism of the Greco-Roman warrior became transformed into the image of sneering gargoyles in obtuse rebellion against God’s order—just as the masters in Israel’s own history became “pathetic cringing bigots or ‘godless men.’” These judgments were to be ultimately vindicated in a “higher world” in which the masters’ natural superiority would be declared null and void. For Judaism, this higher world was God’s law and the eventual arrival of the messiah. For Christianity, the higher world would become heaven and hell, the prospect of eternal damnation or salvation. But in either iteration, the high ideal was driven by the imperative to establish a dichotomy that would profoundly falsify the nature of the masters, and through this the nature of life itself.
The masters had to be falsified because the slaves’ erected their entire self-esteem on their difference from, and opposition to, “evil.” This falsification permitted the slaves to recast their ineluctable weakness as admirable self-restraint, a willed virtue embraced in recognition of their place in the order of things and in reaction to evil. The ideal of goodness qua duty and self-effacement, the foundation of the slaves’ self-esteem, achieved its appeal by being presented as an alternative to precisely this, to a malign, endlessly insidious desire to reject God’s order and, with this, the slaves’ value within that order. Judaism thereby inaugurated an ethos and value system that, in elevating moral categories to hegemonic status, tamed and disciplined amoral human nature.

* “On a soil falsified in this way, where all nature, all natural value, all reality had the profoundest instincts of the ruling class against it, there arose Christianity, a form of moral hostility to reality as yet unsurpassed. The ‘holy people’, which had retained only priestly values, priestly words, for all things, and with a consistency capable of inspiring fear had separated itself from everything else powerful on earth, calling it ‘unholy’, ‘world’, ‘sin’ – this people produced for itself an instinct which was logical to the point of self-negation: as Christianity it negated the last remaining form of reality, the ‘holy people’, the ‘chosen people’, the Jewish reality itself…. [Christianity] was a revolt against ‘the good and the just’, against the ‘saints of Israel’, against the social hierarchy –not against a corruption of these but against caste, privilege, the order, the social form; it was disbelief in ‘higher men’, a No uttered toward everything that was priest and theologian. But the hierarchy which was thus called in question, even if only momentarily, was the pile-work upon which the Jewish nation [continued] to exist at all in the midst of the ‘waters’ – the laboriously-achieved last possibility of remaining in being, the residuum of its separate political existence: an attack on this was an attack on the profoundest national instinct, on the toughest national will to life which has ever existed on earth. This holy anarchist [Jesus] who roused up the lowly, the outcasts and ‘sinners’, the Chandala within Judaism to oppose the ruling order…was a political criminal, in so far as political criminals were possible in an absurdly unpolitical society.”

Christianity is both the extension and negation of Judaism. It is an extension of Judaism inasmuch as it continues Judaism’s war against aristocratic master morality, introducing the prospect of eternal damnation and the pain of hellfire to the slave revolt’s ideological arsenal. But Christianity is the negation of Judaism inasmuch as it was also directed against the residual elements of master morality within Judaism itself. Christianity was a slave revolt within a slave revolt. For while the Jews rejected the political and military hierarchies of their Roman overlords, they nevertheless retained the ideal of hierarchy, and therefore of higher men, within the confines of their priestly institutions and practices, and it was these that became Christianity’s target.
Even priestly Judaism retained a national God and thereby preserved an element of the older self-affirmation. But this was precisely the target of Christian universalism, which was incompatible with the Jews’ ingrained sense of their exceptionalism. This exceptionalism was the last relic of Jewish national health, which had to be translated into priestly terms in order to survive at all. The older aristocratic values of pre-prophetic and pre-priestly Israel lived on in the Jews’ conception of themselves as the “chosen people,” notwithstanding that this claim could no longer be substantiated in the old ways, through national political vitality and military prowess. We might say that whereas Judaism represents a “slave morality” vis-à-vis Israel’s various conquerors—the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Greeks, the Romans—it represents a “master morality” vis-à-vis its universalistic offshoot, Christianity. Unlike Christianity, Judaism was no prepared to take the slave revolt to its logical conclusion. The Jews retained priestly words and priestly values. But they did not permit these to degenerate into a “moral hostility to reality as yet unsurpassed.” Notwithstanding their many falsifications, Jewish values retained an attenuated connection to the embodied, this-worldly flourishing that Nietzsche believes Christianity repudiates categorically.

* This is the sense in which Christianity is at once an expression of Jewish values and Judaism’s revenge upon the rest of the world for the degradation which befell “a nation of the toughest vital energy.” The Jews had engaged in what was a simulacrum of décadence because their values were ultimately working in the service of national self-preservation in the face of “impossible circumstances.” But they could, from out of this simulacrum, then produce the genuine article in the form of Christianity. It is because Christianity is both the antithesis and the logical terminus of Judaism that Israel could deny the real instrument of its revenge before “all the world.” In nailing God to the cross, the Jews could make appealing as the opposite of Judaism what was in fact the hypertrophying of Judaism’s worst tendencies. And this is how all the enemies of Israel could “swallow the bait.” As a slave revolt within a slave revolt, Christianity permitted the Jews an opportunity to reassert their masterly status. The paradox that one should be avenging oneself upon others through the imposition of one’s own values is resolved one we recognize that values that served a merely instrumental function in the hands of Judaism—and were therefore restrained and tempered by virtue of this instrumental status—would assume an unhinged and self-perpetuating life of their own once exported abroad through Christianity.

The Jews, then, came to occupy a kind of no man’s land. On the one hand, they were no longer capable of the physicality, vitality, self-confidence, and unashamed ambition associated with the old ways. To attempt to live by these values under the inimical conditions at hand would have spelled the destruction of the Jewish nation, as it would have gone by the wayside of history just like any number of other once prosperous but eventually conquered people in the ancient world. Self-preservation meant taking the side of all décadence instincts, the development of a human constitution wherein basic human energy no longer had to channeled outward, openly and directly, as it could not be under the new conditions. On the other hand, the Jews did not allow the repressions that circumstance had imposed upon them to devolve into genuine decadence—the devitalization of the caged animal, as it were—and instead deployed décadence values as the vehicles through which to provide Israel original will to affirm itself with spiritualized and intellectualized expression. The Jews “took the side of all décadence instincts” but “not as being dominated by them” because the power-drive which found normal and exuberant expression during the “great epoch” of Israel remained fundamentally intact, having been creatively sublimated into the new ideals. The Jews had no choice but to identify with these ideals under the new conditions if they were to preserve themselves as a
nation. But far from submitting to these ideals wholesale—as does Christianity—they used them in the service of power, cultivating them in order to effect a revolution of consciousness wherein they could once again enjoy preeminence as the most “good.”
The Jews are what Nietzsche calls the “counterparts of décadents” because they always retained a certain distance from the values which they themselves invented. And it was precisely this distance that allowed the Jews to “prevail against ‘the world.’” No longer able to prevail according to the original rules—according to natural values—the Jews reinvented the rules, a new game within which their supremacy could be established anew in a different way, by reasserting their aristocratic status in the context of the anti-aristocratic, décadence values which they had themselves spawned. Identifying with décadence values only superficially, the Jews became positioned to provide the décadents with a leadership, direction, and ideology which the décadents could not, being décadents, generate out of their own resources. Whether by means of priestcraft, moralism, liberalism, or scholarship, the Jews would place themselves “at the head of all décadence movements,” at the leadership of all the institutions that would, through the bypath of Christianity, grow out of the Jewish revolution in moral consciousness.

* The suspicion that Jews are fundamentally outsiders who manipulatively aggrandize themselves at others’ expense is a crude articulation of the awareness that Jews have not actually submitted to the décadence instincts with which they superficially identify and which they urged upon others historically. What is condemned as Jewish deceitfulness is in fact the Jews’ non plus ultra of histrionic genius.

* “Nietzsche thus assigned a major role to the Jews as Jews within his new Europe. If the Nazis considered the Jews as untermenschen, to Nietzsche they were a possibly catalyst of the Úbermensch. Of course, for this to happen, European society must open up to the Jews and welcome them, as Nietzsche forcefully demanded. He opposed a nationalist (or Zionist) solution, because he wanted the Jews to mingle with the other European peoples. At the same time he opposed the usual, passive, and imitative Jewish assimilation. His solution was creative assimilation, in which the Jews would be secularized, excel in all European matters, and serve as catalysts in a new revolution of values—this time a curative, Dionysian revolution that would overcome the Christian culture and the “modern ideas” born of it.”

* The Jews were at the origin of “the Christian culture and the ‘modern ideas’ born of it,” because it was they who, in reflection of their “impossible circumstances” first raised God above human nature in a way that would inevitably devalue that human nature as falling sinfully short of “holiness.” On the other hand, the basic impulses that underpinned this revolution of moral consciousness were not themselves renunciatory, but rather expressions of, as Nietzsche says, “the toughest national will to life which has ever existed on earth”—which had to assume the particular shape it did in reflection of a highly specific set of conditions. And this tension, Nietzsche believed, held out the possibility that modern Jews might see past the official content of the values which they had brought into being—now embodied in Christianity and its secularized cultural offshoots—in order to resurrect the creative, life-affirming impulses which engendered them.

Why would the Jews be disposed to do this when they were not before? Nietzsche’s reasoning is, I believe, that, having achieved its final, secularized fruition in the modern, liberal culture, the slave revolt in morality has now lost its original raison d’être. For that against which it was first initiated no longer exists. With Western culture having been reduced to decadence, the Jews are no longer oppressed by any kind of master morality. And this positions them to reassert a modernized, secularized version of that morality themselves, thereby reviving the very beginnings of their national past. There can be a “creative” as opposed to “passive” assimilation of Jews in the midst of secularization because the Jews can abandon their formal Jewish precepts while retaining a consciousness of the ancient, pre-modern power-drive that is, in Nietzsche’s view, more basic to the Jewish identity than those precepts—which were just pragmatic adaptations to contingent historical circumstances. That drive could therefore serve as a basis for reviving ancient, life-affirming values in the midst of modern decadence, a vantage point from which the renunciatory asceticism that permeates modern culture could be critiqued and discredited. The true history of the monotheistic revolution remains in the Jewish cultural DNA at some level, and this permits the Jews to reverse falsifications for which their ancestors bear responsibility and which others today may be incapable of recognizing.

* The James C. Gaither fellowship, 2008-2010 should be understood in the context of this philosophical history. For I had assumed the role of the modern Jew who was, in furtherance of Nietzsche’s vision, seeking to pay my debt to European culture from what my priestly ancestors had done to it. The repayment was, of course, my assault against the CASBS Ideology, one of the modern, “enlightened” ideas which the Jews must help European culture overcome. The Jews can be of such assistance precisely because, lying as they do at the earliest origins of these ideas, they are positioned to recognize their historical contingency and cultural artificiality. While Jews are at the vanguard of modern ideas, they also enjoy a certain distance from these that is unavailable to those whose ancestors unthinkingly swallowed the bait of Christianity. And it was precisely this distance that I was endeavoring to articulate through Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression. For it was by means of this project that I was endeavoring to step outside the buffered identity, the ultimate consequence of the monotheistic revolution in the West. And this would, as I have explained, permit a critique of the CASBS Ideology, the rationalization of intellectual life, from whose spiritual foundations I had extricated myself after August 2009. The August epiphany was, in a sense, the point at which I ceased acting as a décadent in order to instead challenge academia’s décadence values. While I was indeed seeking to “mingle with other European peoples,” as Yovel says, involving myself in European affairs “as my own,” I was endeavoring to do so through the “creative assimilation” that challenged modern ideas rather than through “the usual, passive, and imitative Jewish assimilation” that unreflectively embraced them.
This was the root of all my difficulties at Stanford. For my mentors, on the other hand, were precisely these kinds of Jews, and so would urge the usual, passive and imitative assimilation upon me. This was the meaning of Joe’s and Barbara’s advice, the object of which was to assimilate me into academia by turning me into yet another “highly intelligent, productive, provocative scholar.” And so I was, just like my ancestors, “placed in impossible circumstances.” I wanted an academic career but also wanted to achieve it on my own terms, when the truth was that I would have to acquiesce in the CASBS Ideology in order to obtain its rewards. The very thing that made an academic career attractive—thinking for oneself—also posed what appeared like an insurmountable obstacle to its attainment.
This being my predicament, I resorted to the only tools that were at my disposal, the only tools which have ever been at the Jews’ disposal. I would have to, just like my priestly ancestors, take the side of all décadence instincts without being dominated by them, in order to divine in them a power by means of which I could prevail against ‘the world—against the CASBS Ideology, against the law school view of what ‘prejudices’ must be stamped out, against Stanford. This power would, if all went according to plan, permit me to act as a décadent to the point of illusion and thereby place myself, with a non plus ultra of histrionic genius, at the head of all décadence movements—that is, at Stanford. Having achieved this, I would then be positioned to introduce my dissenting paradigm intellectual rigor. By exposing and then combating the cultural pathologies of academia, I would thereby help make of Stanford “something stronger than any party affirmative of life.” This would be my “creative assimilation.” And the surreptitious quid pro quo arrangement was my attempt to achieve just this, to assimilate to academia by revising rather than submitting to its mores, which is precisely why a non plus ultra of histrionic genius would be required.
The foundations of my later histrionics were in fact being laid well before I received the fellowship, over the winter term of 2008 and then over the following summer. Let us recall that it was Barbara who reached out to me about pursuing an academic career after being impressed by my Freedom and Resentment class presentation, just as it was Joe who shortly after I graduated went out of his way to email me that I was positioned to put together “a writing package that would get you a top-flight job at a law school,” assuming I was “still interested in pursuing this kind of life.” Likewise, I was awarded the Gaither fellowship without applying for it, inquiring about it, or even knowing of its existence, during what was supposed to be nothing more than a general brainstorming session about long-term career strategies. Most serendipitously, Barbara’s rather spontaneous disbursement of the Gaither only weeks before I was set to depart the Bay Area for New York fulfilled the vague and seemingly outlandish premonition that I had been entertaining the whole summer, that I would somehow be spending the fall working full time on Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression rather than toiling in a New York law firm.
In all these instances and many others, Joe and Barbara were reinforced in their sense of their own agency and of my ostensible passivity. Generating this impression was in fact indispensable to my career goals. While Joe, Larry, and Barbara were impressed by what Barbara lauded as the “brilliance” of Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression, that brilliance was neither sufficient nor necessary for career success. For this supposed brilliance was in truth but the flipside of my alienation from the CASBS Ideology. It therefore had as its corollary a degree of intellectual independence that could prove to be a serious liability, something that raised serious questions about whether I could be smoothly integrated into the intellectual magistrature of the sacred college of masters. And so I had to compensate for that vulnerability by projecting a persona of passivity and pliability. Rather than apprising Joe, Larry, and Barbara of my longstanding interest in the critical theory of academia—that is, my long-held reservations about their most fundamental values—I presented myself, rather disingenuously, as someone who was “a little lost.” This would, in reinforcing my advisors’ own sense of agency, help persuade them that I could eventually be molded to their specifications, that I was a tabula rasa upon which the dominant paradigm of intellectual rigor could be inscribed with a just a few words of advice here and there. One might think that, with philosophy graduate school having failed to properly socialize me into the mores and pieties of academia, there was little hope that Joe, Larry, or Barbara would now succeed where so many others had failed. But my mentors wanted to believe that they could succeed notwithstanding what their own instincts told them, and I went out of my way to encourage that impression. Truth be told, they were always on some level attuned to my disingenuousness here. Hence their perennial ambivalence toward me, their sense that I was never really absorbing anything they had to say, and was merely going through the motions of doing so. They knew this, but they were also helped to repress what they knew. Unpleasant though this charade was, it also represented “the profoundest shrewdness in self-preservation,” my last chance to obtain an academic position after the defeats on the philosophy teaching market several years before. I was “compelled to act as a décadent” if I was to have any chance whatsoever of advancing my academic career, and that chance arrived with the fellowship offer.

* This dilemma called for new kind of histrionics, a new persona premised, not on passivity and pliability, but aloofness, elusiveness, and evasiveness. I had to once again act as a décadent, though in a new way, because only this would generate the social distance from Joe, Barbara, and Stanford without which my research could not proceed. I was once again successful. My failure to act on most of Joe’s and Barbara’s recommendations, when combined with my lack of visible productivity, merely sporadic appearances at Stanford, and unrealistically optimistic predictions about upcoming progress “just around the corner” served to alienate Joe and Barbara in ways they would not acknowledge. This in turn permitted me the freedom to think in accordance with my own inclinations, in a manner appropriate to my mind’s nature and present mood. From their perspective, of course, they could not but conclude that I had taken the side of all décadence instincts. At first, this amounted only to the concern that I was squandering my time writing on and on in the absence of a clear thesis, as worried Barbara, or that I was wasting it contemplating the pronouncements of an “imbecile” like Robert Bork, as worried Joe. But as time went on and the same patterns persisted, the basic intuition that I had “taken the side of all décadence instincts” came to admit of more troubling interpretations, which was that what Joe and Barbara had originally judged to be a student “of the toughest vital energy” was perhaps loafing about and not doing much of anything.

* Joe and Barbara can be forgiven for surmising as they did in December 2008 that I was just digging myself into a great big hole. Given my inability to articulate anything close to a clear thesis, they concluded, and reasonably enough, that I had, propelled along by nothing more than my own hubris, ascended a ladder of abstractions which could perhaps never be reconnected with anything that any normal human being could possibly care about. This was the problem from the very outset, or at least from the conclusion of my Legal Theory presentation, which everyone, including myself, concurred was inadequate and disconnected. So it wasn’t at all surprising that that they would have come to conceive of most everything from December 2008 onward as but a descending spiral fueled by tendencies of mine which they had the good sense to discern but the recklessness to disregard. That gap between scope of claims and ability to defend—or even just articulate, explain, and relate—was there from the beginning. And so they could not but conclude that the problem had only worsened and that I was hiding away in shame at the same time as I remained obstinately and irrationally unrepentant about my overconfidence and ungrateful to them for their gracious attempts to deflate it. Being so completely inside my own head, I furthermore exuded a certain exhaustion in our December 2008 meeting, as I would continue to do throughout the year at the same time that I was becoming ever more aloof from all manner of practical realities. So it was only natural that they would conclude that I had taken the side of all décadence instincts and that the project had gone nowhere at all after all this time.
But that these conclusions were all the same utterly false has already been established in too many ways to count. The rapid coalescence of my job-talk paper over the summer of 2009 and all the praise which it subsequently garnered belies any impression that I was somehow going nowhere. Much more significantly, the fact that my research agenda should have become three-dimensional, unconcealing the surreptitious sectarianism of Templar culture—by exposing me to a radiance that streams inextinguishably from the gateway of the Law—is irrefutable evidence of that agenda’s underlying fecundity. How, then, are we to explain what was a very wide discrepancy between perception and reality and, even more interestingly, the fact that the perception was just as reasonable as it was mistaken?

* My surreptitious cause of action against Stanford was the concrete legal embodiment of conservative claims of cultural oppression, because it was my investigation of those claims which engendered both Barbara’s misinterpretations and my ability to exploit those misinterpretations. I could divine in conservative claims of cultural oppression a power by means of which one can prevail against ‘the world’ because I had by their means achieved a perspective external to the disciplines and repressions of the buffered identity—as is enjoyed by the claimants—while also developing the ability to articulate its meaning—as is not. I thereby realized a dialectical synthesis of the modern and pre-modern. It was precisely that synthesis, first announced by the Overview, that permitted me to outmaneuver Barbara on the phone and then be there to greet Bob Weisberg right on time a week later. I could outmaneuver Barbara because I had come to understand her own hero-system better than she did. And I could achieve this because I had, by means of conservative claims of cultural oppression, attained a perspective external to it. This was the meaning of my August epiphany, whereby Israel’s oldest, most powerful instincts reemerged from out of the shell in which they had been buried by the many accretions of history.

* One reason it could do so was that I assumed that, with Joe, Larry, and Barbara being Jews, they would have some sympathy for my objectives. After all, it was they who had, without any instructions from me, extended the invitation to self-placement and had moreover done so with a non plus ultra of histrionic genius—through the tour de force of Set I and the homepage. And this suggested to me that they remained well rooted in the ancient Jewish instincts. They weren’t Nietzsche specialists, of course. Indeed, Barbara had once confessed to me in responding to one of my essays that she hadn’t “read Nietzsche seriously since college a million years ago.” But one need hardly be a Nietzsche specialist, or even have read him seriously, to comprehend an imperative which arises out of one’s own being and which Nietzsche was merely documenting.

* Refusing to recognize the irony, moral ambiguity, and comic value of the events of September 2009, they responded with a “humorless determination to castigate sin and disorder, a denial of ambiguity and complexity in unmixed condemnation.”

* Joe, Larry, and Barbara are Jewish academics, and my fellowship’s disappointing denouement conclusively established that they are academics before they are Jews.

* …that Joe, Barbara, and Larry should have derived such satisfaction from the betrayal of their own heritage is to say the least disconcerting. Equally disconcerting is that my own alma mater could have countenanced the level of latent, institutionalized anti-Semitism that brought my academic aspirations to such an abrupt halt. Not satisfied to preempt my application for fellowship renewal on the basis of a false premise, Barbara proceeded to mock and manipulate what she surely understood deep-down—in her gut even if not on the level of high theory—is the most primal impulse throbbing in the heart of every Jew, an ancient yearning, not to just be placed anywhere by just anyone and in any old fashion, but, more fastidiously, to place oneself at no less than the head of all décadence movements, and to moreover do so with a non plus ultra of histrionic genius. Barbara dangled that possibility and raised that hope only in order to dash the dream, because this was my Achilles’ Heel, I’ll freely admit.
Barbara sees both everything and nothing. But she knew me well enough to understand that I would be irresistibly drawn to the prospect of self-placement, irrespective of the actual odds, out of both instinct and first principle, because this is what it means to operate a level up. That’s just how devious Barbara can be sometimes, for her actions indicated a precise knowledge of my vulnerabilities.

* I won’t go so far as to call Barbara a self-hating Jew. But she was surely a cognitive elite before she was a Jew. And so she could never countenance a situation in which I was operating a level up at her arguable expense, even in the name Judaism itself.

* The great irony was that while the ultimate end of the liberal conspiracy—the manipulation of my Judaism—was anti-Semitic, at least metaphysically, the means through which that end was realized were profoundly Jewish. For as we noted at the outset, Barbara’s vengefulness was in fact the sublime vengefulness of Israel, a “farseeing, subterranean, slowly advancing, and premeditated revenge” whose instrument could be denied before “all the world.”

* This reality was a higher world that became separated from everything else on earth, one more Jewish revolt against everything that it normal and natural, yet another illustration of the fear-inspiring consistency with which Jews can define themselves counter to the conditions under which life must be lived.

* “Secularization” is, on the mutation counter-narrative, not the lopping off of religion, but the “thorough molding and interpenetration of the secular world” by religion. The secular is necessarily the secularization of something that is not itself secular, the reinterpretation and internalization by consciousness of certain religious ideals, to the point that their origin, and so also their contemporary significance, can no longer be recognized. Whereas secular, naturalistic attitudes are, on the subtraction account, coterminous with psychological and epistemic liberation from the illusions of pre-modern religious cosmologies, they are, on the mutation counter-narrative, the final articulations of understandings that were implicit in, but not fully grasped and realized by, those cosmologies. In insisting that we distinguish “between a principle as such and its application, its introduction and execution in the actuality of life and spirit” Hegel permits us to recognize that while secularization may involve the widespread discarding of many traditional religious beliefs, it is also the emergence of a form of consciousness that was progressively inculcated by the cultural practices of which these religious beliefs were manifestations.
This “thorough molding and interpenetration” of the secular by the religious is, I submit, precisely what were produced through my efforts to place myself, because it was thereby that I caused an ancient religious ideal to be physically and digitally instantiated in my secular daily world. I unearthed the sedimentation of the past in the present by causing that sedimentation to be articulated in such a way as to become publicly displayed, enter the email record, and so become amenable to empirical verification by disinterested third-parties.

* Ontogeny does indeed recapitulate phylogeny, at least in my case, because nearly the entire history and spirit of Israel would appear to have been born again and then relived in my own person, and in the span of just a few years, in the span of just one law school fellowship.

* Barbara, that “ostensible opponent and disintegrator of Israel,” was merely the unknown and unknowing “bypath” to that end—to the revaluation of her own values, to the supersession of her own culture, to what I suspect is the first ever self-consecrating academic job-talk paper, not only at Stanford, but in the history of the world.

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One Simple Trick For Avoiding Monkeypox (7-8-22)

00:25 Tucker Carlson on the origins of Covid
20:00 The U.S. May Be Losing the Fight Against Monkeypox, Scientists Say, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/08/health/monkeypox-vaccine-treatment.html
22:00 As monkeypox cases grow, so do fears of a return of gay blame and stigma, https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2022-05-26/monkeypox-cases-grow-fears-gay-blame-stigmatization
38:00 Former Japanese prime minister assassinated
41:00 Antifa harasses U.S. Supreme Court justice
56:00 IS THERE A WAR ON MEN? Nick Fuentes, Hake, Stein99 & Brittany Vs Hunter Avallone, Dooby, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMP58OwmF9c
1:37:00 EMJ v Greg Johnson, https://www.bitchute.com/video/N3RR8ZloGOMO/
1:48:00 White Supremacist Richard Spencer Now Calls Himself a ‘Moderate’ Democrat

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REACTION: The Star Chamber of Stanford: On the Secret Trial and Invisible Persecution of a Stanford Law Fellow

Author Rony Guldmann responds to my inquiries:

Dear Luke,

Thanks so much for reading my book and publicizing it on your blog. I’m truly grateful. As to the question of whether any part of the book reflects mental illness, I will just say that an affirmative answer would have to involve a radical redefinition of mental illness, which, as a philosopher, I certainly can’t rule out.

Still, I have to disagree with some of the suggestions in your review. You say that some people will interpret my claims as “delusions of grandeur,” such as the “Belief that you are a famous or important figure, such as Jesus Christ or Napoleon.” However, I consistently describe myself in the memoir as one “most lacking in symbolic capital” (a phrase I borrow from Bourdieu), thus evincing that I was, and am, fully cognizant of my actual place in the world. Did I entertain an outsized conception of my potential? Perhaps. That all depends on what becomes of the memoir and my other writings (hence my discussion of “moral luck”). But even if I did, that’s just human, not mental illness. I’m not ascribing the “delusions of grandeur” judgment to you. You are indeed correct that some people will view me that way, as is confirmed by responses to my Facebook advertising. But it’s important to acknowledge that this interpretation is belied by what I actually say.

Also in connection with the mental illness hypothesis, you write that “[m]any people will read this book and diagnose the author with schizophrenia.” Fleshing out this diagnosis, you cite Liah Greenfeld’s Mind, Modernity, Madness: The Impact of Culture on Human Experience, where the author observes that the schizophrenic’s mind is “completely deindividualized” and that his will is “completely incapacitated,” making the schizophrenic a passive vessel for “culture in general.”

As to the alleged incapacitation of my will, that is belied by the very existence of the memoir (approximately 135,000 words). It is further belied by the memoir’s companion volumes, Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression (almost 300,000 words) and The Critical Theory of Academia (about 97,000 words). I note that much of this was scribed as I was pursuing a high-pressure career as a class action attorney.

As to the alleged deindividualization of my mind, that is belied by the singular intellectual stimulation and entertainment value that you acknowledge having derived from the memoir. Your own accolades for the book suggest that my mind is, to the contrary, completely individualized (perhaps so individualized as to be deemed pathological by a pathological culture).

On both counts, your own review indicates that I am the very opposite of a schizophrenic, based on Greenfield’s criteria. In light of this, I would simply repeat Cosmo Kramer’s famous riposte to Seinfeld’s charge that “you’re crazy”: “Am I? Or am I so sane that you just blew your mind?” For precisely this reason, I don’t fault anyone for forming an erroneous first impression, especially given the superficial outlandishness of some of my claims, of which I am keenly aware. But, as chronicled in the memoir, smart people who have been quick to dismiss these claims as absurd have found themselves hard-pressed to actually rebut the myriad arguments I forward in their defense.

You also suggest that there may be something immoral about reproducing communications that are ordinarily kept private. If that’s the case, then perhaps the entire literary genre of memoir is immoral. I would highlight that I reproduce these communications only to make sense of my own experience and to advance my philosophical claims. I’m certainly not delving into anyone’s overall private life (which I wouldn’t know how to do even if I wanted to). As I argue in the first Memorandum of Law, nothing I say supports any inferences about what my antagonists are like generally as people, which lies outside the scope of the memoir.

As to “discursive violence,” I mean verbal violence. I actually speak of “latent discursive violence,” by which I mean the potential backlash that I risk incurring by voicing the ideas in the memoir. The concept of “discursive violence” originates in Left critical theory, and my point is that it can be appropriated and turned around against the Left—in my criticisms of the New Class of liberal elites.

Given your interest in things Jewish, you may be interested in Chapter 6 of my companion manuscript, The Critical Theory of Academia — “A Jew Who Would Seek to Place Himself” — which employs Nietzsche’s interpretation of Judaism to illuminate my Stanford experience (through, as I disclaim, this manuscript is still somewhat crude compared to the memoir and Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression).

Lastly, I would like to address the responses you solicited from Josh Cohen and Martha Nussbaum. Josh’s recollection that he thought well enough of me generally but wasn’t particularly enthusiastic about my project comports fully with my own memories. Indeed, I specifically highlight this contrast in Chapter Two (the “A Downward Spiral” section). This congruity is only one data point, but it surely speaks to the fairness and accuracy of my characterizations and militates against the “mental illness” hypothesis.

I also agree with Josh on the subject of microaggressions. There’s probably no consensus definition of a “literal microaggression,” but I will say that the term as I use it should be understood through the politico-philosophical theory advanced in The Star Chamber of Stanford and the companion volumes, where it need not connote conscious malice—which is what Josh is denying. As I clearly state in Chapter 8, “[m]y advisers were unconscious conduits of the academic habitus, not disembodied agents of evil” (“habitus” is another concept I borrow from Bourdieu).

I actually have corresponded with Professor Nussbaum. She contacted me because she had been given the impression that my memoir related an anonymous accusation that she had committed some form of intellectual theft. I clarified to her satisfaction that this was a misinterpretation. The memoir relates the story of a professor who told me that he had proposed to Nussbaum that they collaborate to explore the affinities between the pre-Socratics and postmodernism and seemed aggrieved that Nussbaum then took up this topic on her own, without involving him (on his version of events). Even if true, this hardly constitutes intellectual theft, since his only contribution was to suggest a general research area. But he was speaking of it as though it was intellectual theft, and that’s what the memoir is mocking.

Nussbaum stated that the events in question did not happen and could not have happened, given her low opinion of postmodernism, but we agreed that, at any rate, the matter was too trivial to merit further attention. I would not have published unverified hearsay from an anonymous source had the matter been anything other than trivial.

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The Paranoid Style In American Politics (7-7-22)

00:20 Tucker Carlson on Jose Alba, https://nypost.com/2022/07/06/nyc-bodega-worker-jose-alba-charged-in-fatal-stabbing-feared-for-his-life-family-says/
24:00 Death of a nationalist at age 29, https://radixjournal.substack.com/p/a-cautionary-tale#details
25:00 He was one of the nation’s most revered gay cops. His arrest changed everything., https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/interactive/2022/gay-dc-cop-parson-teen-florida-arrest/?itid=hp-top-table-main-t-4
48:00 Mind, Modernity, Madness: The Impact of Culture on Human Experience, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=143670
52:00 Boris Johnson resigns as British PM
1:04:00 Hunter Biden has been at the White House all week
1:25:00 Kenneth Brown on Internet Friendship Pornography, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXrZuqyXPDY
1:44:00 Who are we? By Samuel Huntington
1:47:00 Josh Neal on the state of American nationalism, https://youtu.be/iqWXoxA7BgM?t=2337
1:49:00 Abby Shapiro Nationalism, https://youtu.be/Y4JkrKqaiUM?t=350
1:51:00 REVIEW: The Star Chamber of Stanford: On the Secret Trial and Invisible Persecution of a Stanford Law Fellow, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=143937
2:08:00 EMJ v Greg Johnson, https://www.bitchute.com/video/N3RR8ZloGOMO/
2:15:00 Laura Ingraham on globalism

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REVIEW: The Star Chamber of Stanford: On the Secret Trial and Invisible Persecution of a Stanford Law Fellow

This challenging new book is based on conservative victimology.

In my experience, most people are better off with a lower level of victimology in their life. I know I am.

Feeling like a victim of circumstance has dominated my life, and when I’ve been in that mode, it has made me ineffective, immoral, and unhappy. Even when I was a victim, it usually didn’t serve me to embrace my victimhood. I feel happier and more effective the more I focus on the things I can influence (such as my reactions) rather than on what’s outside of my control.

When I emerged from six years of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome at age 27, I wanted to grab everything I could to make up for what had been robbed from me. This made me a menace to society and to myself. I oscillated from the thrill of new sexual conquests to a growing depression based on my realization that I’m a bad person.

As I read The Star Chamber of Stanford: On the Secret Trial and Invisible Persecution of a Stanford Law Fellow by lawyer and philosopher Rony Guldmann, I see the protagonist become increasingly unhappy, immoral (memorializing and publishing interactions normally thought to be private), and ineffective the more he sees himself as a victim of the liberal elite.

If he hadn’t gone on this journey to print, however, I would not have had the pleasure of devouring this book and wanting to be mates with the author. (Rony reacts to my review.)

In the world around me, I see that the more intense your sense of victimhood, the less moral accountability you feel to the wider society that has screwed you over. I am thinking about those blacks, whites, and gays who do horrible things when they are convinced that America has screwed them over. When certain Republicans, for instance, became convinced that they were cheated out of the 2020 American presidential election, the less constrained they felt, and this lack of constraint led to the January 6 riot on Capitol Hill.

At the same time, I recognize that every in-group identity has a sense of victimhood, and that this builds one’s identity, and one’s nationalism, and one’s capacity for genocide and madness in addition to magnificent achievement. A mild to moderate sense of grievance may serve you in many circumstances up to the point where you needlessly antagonize others. Due to my vulnerabilities, resentment rarely serves me. Just as I abstain from alcohol (I may have a sip on social occasions, but I never drink cups of alcoholic beverages) due to my awareness of my self-destructive and addictive tendencies, so too I wish to abstain from anger that lasts beyond the fleeting (if getting angry helps you get something important done, then it may well serve you in the moment, but it rarely serves you to nurse it for weeks, months, and years).

When I step aside from moralizing, however, I have to tell you that I loved this new book. It might be mad, bad and dangerous to know, but I want to read more from this author. Sure, the book is ponderous at times, it has too many typos, and its central argument that Stanford Law for 18 months maintained an internet home page primarily designed to send the author a message strikes me as absurd, but I kept getting valuable new insights and tremendous entertainment value as I read and reread (see the book’s highlights here). Within 20 minutes of opening my Kindle, I had received joy that greatly exceeded the $8.49 purchase price.

I expect I’ll be wrestling with arguments in this book for many months to come. I plan to read his other works such as Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression and The Critical Theory of Academia.

Over the past month, I’ve been reading sociologist Liah Greenfeld and it struck me that her thesis that the more freedom you have, the more likely you are to go mad, may apply to Rony’s story. When he received a two year fellowship from Stanford Law (including a yearly stipend of $60,000), he had an unprecedented amount of freedom and that may well have unhinged him. But free from hinges, he produced a book unlike any I have ever read.

Many people will read this book and diagnose the author with schizophrenia based on the following delusions:

Delusions of persecution – Belief that others, often a vague “they,” are out to get you. These harassing delusions often involve bizarre ideas and plots (e.g. “Martians are trying to poison me with radioactive particles delivered through my tap water”).

Delusions of reference – A neutral environmental event is believed to have a special and personal meaning. For example, you might believe a billboard or a person on TV is sending a message meant specifically for you.

Delusions of grandeur – Belief that you are a famous or important figure, such as Jesus Christ or Napoleon. Alternately, delusions of grandeur may involve the belief that you have unusual powers, such as the ability to fly.

Some critics will point out these common early warning signs of schizophrenia in Rony’s story:

* Depression, social withdrawal
* Hostility or suspiciousness, extreme reaction to criticism
* Deterioration of personal hygiene
* Flat, expressionless gaze
* Inability to cry or express joy or inappropriate laughter or crying
* Oversleeping or insomnia; forgetful, unable to concentrate
* Odd or irrational statements; strange use of words or way of speaking

Liah Greenfeld noted in her 2013 book Mind, Modernity, Madness: The Impact of Culture on Human Experience:

Because of its secularism, egalitarianism, and insistence on popular sovereignty…[nationalism] makes people activist. It follows logically from the explicit or implicit recognition that man has only one life, that social reality, at least, is a thing of his making, and that all men are equal—that nothing can justify this one life falling short of giving full satisfaction, that men are responsible for all its disappointments, and that everyone has the right to change reality that disappoints. It becomes relatively easy to mobilize national populations in causes of social reform and civil society comes into being…

Ideological politics is a specific form of politics brought about by nationalism. They are irrational in the sense of being motivated by a dedication (passionate, if not fanatic) to causes which in the large majority of cases lack the remotest connection to the personal experience—and therefore objective interests—of the participants, but are characterized by their capacity to justify and explain the discomfort these participants feel with their self and social environment. At their core invariably lie visions that bear the most distinctive mark of a schizophrenic delusion: the loss of the understanding of the symbolic nature of human social reality and the confusion between symbols and their referents, when the symbols themselves become objective reality…

The majority of [activists] are activated not by specific, pragmatic interests, but by a desire to change the society radically on the basis of some vaguely defined ideal. The change is predicated on the destruction of what the ideal is to replace. Thus, while the ideal is vague, the destructive, violent impulse is clearly focused and, with symbols and their referents confused, actual people are killed because of what they represent, rather than because of what they do.

The core ideal and the enemy which the revolutionary movement targets are delusions and are very likely to emerge in the disordered minds of, and offered by, actual schizophrenics. However, the overwhelming majority of those who accept and carry on the message, i.e., of the revolutionaries, participants in the revolution, must be of necessity recruited from among the mildly mentally ill, those suffering from the general anomic malaise, neuroses or neurasthenia, from what we refer to today as spectrum disorders. In effect, they use the schizophrenic’s delusions as therapy for their minor ills. Their presentation of these minor personal ills under the cover of a general cause serves to conceal their mental illness from themselves and from others. Their recognition of a schizophrenic’s delusion as a general cause conceals his/her major mental disease, presents him/her (and allows him/her to self-represent) as a prophet, a genius, etc., and may elevate him/her to the position of the revolutionary leader…

Schizophrenics are singularly attuned to the surrounding culture. I have characterized the schizophrenic mental process as free-ranging culture in the individual brain; their mind being completely deindividualized, and their will completely incapacitated, it is culture in general that processes itself in their healthy brain and language itself that speaks through them.

In Star Chamber, Rony anticipates this mental health analysis:

* Early June was also when I embarked on the much-ballyhooed Alaska cruise with my mother and brother. Maintaining good relations with Mom had become vital, as she was coming under the influence of my brother and others who imagined I was descending into some heretofore undocumented mental disorder.

Indeed, they had organized conference calls around my condition and run my interpretation of the home page past lawyer friends. As I would later learn, I had been caricatured as contending that set 1 constituted a legally cognizable offer. One needn’t be an attorney, or even a high school graduate, to recognize the absurdity absurdity of the idea. Yet just such beliefs were now being imputed to me. The home page did facilitate a certain “meeting of minds,” as they say in contracts. I was being asked to sit tight and not sue in exchange for either a job or evidence for the existence of an underlying controversy one interpretation of which might have moved Stanford to give me a job but ultimately wouldn’t. Obviously, I would have been more pleased with the former. But fanciful or not, that preference wasn’t equivalent to the ludicrous suggestion that a legally cognizable agreement had been formed. The conspirators’ supreme creativity was now being misread as my lunacy. I had been pathologized, and so no one was much concerned with the pesky details of what exactly I believed and why.

As I was to learn on the cruise, these discourses had upset my mother, who now demanded an accounting of why I had thus far in life failed to secure permanent employment—first in philosophy, then at a law firm, and now at a law school.

…But how to explain this latest debacle at Stanford? Was I going to tell my mom that I’d reaped the whirlwind after mounting an ideological insurrection against the New Class and its technocratic antipathy to the sovereign intellect and thought for thought’s sake? Like most everyone in my San Francisco circle, she lacked the capacity for abstraction and integrative complexity required to comprehend the intricate chains of causation and webs of meaning that I have been charting. My rhetorical impotence only reinforced her emerging conviction that I had lost my wits and that this latest misadventure merely consummated a recurring logic of folly and ruin…

Which of the following scenarios is more improbable?

Scenario 1—My sensory perceptions and inferences therefrom were largely sound, at least in their general outlines if not in all the details. I was indeed in the crosshairs of a liberal conspiracy bent on gaslighting me as payback for my own manipulations, which had been necessitated by my resistance to the academic habitus and the modern disciplinary society that helps sustain it.

Scenario 2—I was a stressed-out Stanford fellow who had taken leave of his senses and descended into delirium. Waking up one fine morning, I began to fancy myself a Spartacus of academia but really was only its Don Quixote, tilting at windmills in a delusional crusade against the sublimated and intellectualized conservatism conservatism of the liberal elites. Desperately trying to weave my sundry paranoid imaginings into a coherent narrative, I concluded that my employer’s home page was communicating a coded message to me.

* I am not a licensed mental health practitioner, but I also hope my tribulations contribute useful fodder for the academic study of gaslighting, which is perhaps still in its infancy.

* …the liberals in my midst harbored greater reverence for prestigious institutions like Stanford, which they admired as embodiments of their own highest virtues. As a result, they would respond not just with skepticism but by pathologizing my beliefs as symptoms of some mental disturbance.

* I was in fact “working for it.” But the it at this juncture consisted of hundreds upon hundreds of pages of disjointed notes, a byzantine mental labyrinth that only proliferated with every attempt at containment. As a living rebuke to the prevailing ideology, my immersion in the tacit dimension could only draw ire and suspicion.

* Mistaking our articulated intelligence for the entirety of our mental life, academia’s prevailing technocratic vision prejudices its devotees against all that is merely unconscious, semiconscious, intuitive, and visceral, which is subtly anathematized as a departure from scholarly seriousness and sign of ingratitude for the contributions of scholarly forebears. Inveterately hostile to the tacit dimension, the dominant dispensation leaves its devotees insensible to the mind’s ability to create order out of chaos and, indeed, to generate chaos for the very purpose of imposing order on it.

* I wrote Two Orientations Toward Human Nature, which argues that contemporary Western culture entertains a schizophrenic view of human nature. One stream of that culture assigns a vital explanatory role to egoism, setting forth a tough-minded account of human motivation wherein self-interest only rarely yields to altruism. However, another cultural current discounts the egoism-altruism dichotomy and instead dichotomizes wholeness and alienation, authenticity and inauthenticity, or self-awareness and self-oblivion. These distinct orientations toward human nature, respectively embodied in the Anglo-American and Continental philosophical traditions, yield ostensibly incongruous portraits of the social status quo. Where the first, tough-minded, orientation highlights robust individualism, the second, more “countercultural,” orientation shines a light on depersonalization by mass culture, discerning a frenzied “escape from freedom” where the first orientation sees atomistic self-absorption. I wanted to get to the bottom of this intellectual rift and determine whether these facially incongruous vocabularies were genuinely at odds or merely underscored different facets of the same human condition.

* My advisers and I were ostensibly on opposing wavelengths, but our relations had always been Janus-faced if not downright schizophrenic, and there was another level on which we were uncannily in sync.

* Barbara [Fried]’s abrupt decision to respond illustrated the schizophrenic character of our relationship as it had by then evolved. The pique stoked by my research habits didn’t suddenly disappear. But since her true sentiments had never been formally aired but only vented passive-aggressively through sullen looks and unanswered emails, she now had no choice but to concede something to the official pretense that our relations were something other than dysfunctional.

* This incongruity was merely the latest manifestation of the larger contradiction I had been living since September and earlier. I was in revolt against the intellectual magistrature of the sacred college of masters. But because I had never announced that insurgency in express terms, its suppression proceeded tacitly as well, in the tension between the official and unofficial realities. That explained the contradiction between the knockout email and Barbara’s flattery on the phone and rave review of my paper. This latest inconsistency was another iteration of the same schizophrenic logic. Such wouldn’t be apparent to the casual onlooker glancing at these email exchanges. But that was because our relationship was unfolding at one level up, as in truth it always had.

And yet the deeper meaning of this truth remained murky. Enmeshed in ambiguity and indeterminacy, our relationship occupied a gray zone that straddled the line between truth and falsehood.

* For a year I had played the prophet, absconding from ordered society to wander in a mental wilderness of my own making, and that trek had now been redeemed by this new dispensation of meaning. All this was thanks to Joe. His law-and-religion suggestion had set me on my road to Damascus by forcing me to grapple with the historical forces against which religious conservatives’ sense of besiegement makes sense, allowing me to recognize modern secularism as part and parcel of a disciplinary regime hostile to human nature’s ancestral default settings. Conservative claims of cultural oppression weren’t mere posturing and histrionics but flawed articulations of this truth, in whose light I now walked. I wasn’t privy to the full implications of these realizations. But it was clear that, in pursuing the truth of those claims, I had also been pursuing the truth of myself, wrestling to liberate something that had been suppressed by the dominant order but yearned to live.

* Liberalism is a particularistic cultural dispensation that celebrates certain human types as civilized, reflective, and rational while stigmatizing others as barbarous, unthinking, and fearful. This was the lens through which liberals routinely viewed my situation. “Stanford Law professor = humanistic and enlightened” and “people who think websites are transmitting coded messages to them = nuts” were these skeptics’ axioms of thought, in whose light my cool and dispassionate dialectic had to be dismissed as hollow mental gymnastics. I held to my claims only because they survived the test of falsifiability.

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