Decoding Try That In A Small Town (7-21-23)

01:00 Try That In A Small Town
03:00 WP: The outrage over Jason Aldean’s ‘Try That in a Small Town,’ explained, https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/music/2023/07/20/jason-aldean-song-video-pulled-cmt-controversy/
27:00 What is a secular guru? https://www.patreon.com/DecodingTheGurus/posts
https://www.npr.org/2023/07/20/1188966935/jason-aldean-try-that-in-a-small-town-song-video
35:35 Public intellectuals vs gurus

Posted in America | Comments Off on Decoding Try That In A Small Town (7-21-23)

Shiksas Running Sci-ops In 90210 (7-20-23)

Posted in Beverly Hills | Comments Off on Shiksas Running Sci-ops In 90210 (7-20-23)

Bondi Badlands: The definitive story of Sydney’s gay hate murders

Here are some highlights from this 2007 book by Greg Callaghan:

* [T]his cliff-top walkway and park was a popular homosexual ‘beat’ for decades. At a time when gay bars or venues were few, or too risky to visit, and when most gay or bisexual men married out of social pressure, closeted gay men would come to beats such as this—and Marks Park was among Sydney’s most famous—to meet others, soak up the seaside view, and, if the conditions were right, engage in casual, anonymous sex out of view or go back to one of their homes if it were available… Some attracted to the social aspects of mixing with like minded souls; others to the sheer sexual danger. One theory has it that men prowl or ‘cruise’ beats because the heterosexual world has taught them to associate homosexuality with guilt, repression and disguise.

Here is an after-midnight world that offers them a clandestine sexual escape—albeit a highly risky one. The gay beat drew international headlines back in April 1998 when British singer George Michael was arrested at a toilet block in a Los Angeles park by an undercover cop, who charged him with performing a ‘lewd act’.

‘Poofter bashing’ at beats such as this—and they exist in public parks, public toilets and beaches—was epidemic throughout Australian cities in the 1960s and 70s. Only a small fraction of these bashings was ever reported, their victims gagged by a blistering sense of shame, and a suspicion that the police, if they weren’t openly hostile, wouldn’t do much about it.

But something different happened on the Bondi headland between 1989 and 1990. The popular trysting spot turned into a playground for killers. It was here that gay men were dragged kicking and screaming to the cliff edge, where they were hurled over in wide-eyed terror like helpless animals. The area became so notorious for screams ringing into the night and the snaking pathway so frequently bloodstained that some locals dubbed it the Bondi Badlands. From nearby apartment blocks, dim figures were often seen scurrying across Marks Park, vanishing as quickly as they came.

* The onset of the AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s—and the flush of social paranoia caused by the Grim Reaper television campaign—pushed some of this prejudice to the surface, with gays being branded AIDS carriers and spreaders. Homosexuality only became legal in NSW in 1984, and then by only a slender margin, and it took until 1997 for it to be decriminalised in Tasmania.

* Even today, some in our society think that beating up gays, if not justifiable under normal circumstances, is at least understandable when it happens at an unsavoury place such as a beat. The victims have no-one to blame but themselves for taking such stupid risks. Besides, what are they thinking, having sex in a public place anyway . . . isn’t it against the law? Yes, in most states it is illegal, and yes, in anyone’s language it’s sleazy and distasteful.

* Back in the late 1980s, most Bondi locals considered the cliff tops a no-go zone at night because of what went on there.

* Ross understood that in a town like Wollongong, if you were gay and wanted to get ahead, you had to keep the closet door firmly locked. He had no better example of this than the mayor himself, Frank Arkell, who maintained a charade of heterosexuality during his entire seventeen-year tenure, after being elected to office in 1975. ‘I’m married to Wollongong,’ Arkell evasively quipped whenever he was queried about his marital status.

* Two decades later, in June 1998, Arkell was gruesomely slain in his home in the beachside suburb of Albion Park by 21-year-old double murderer Mark Valera, who strangled his victim before stabbing him in the eye with his Rotary Club badge. The 67-year-old Arkell was later named in the Wood Royal Commission for making advances to teenage boys.)

Since he had started at WIN, Ross made a habit every second weekend or so of doing the 82 km drive north up to Sydney, where he could soak up the vibrant gay scene of Oxford Street, the ‘Golden Gay Mile’.

* It was here, above the cliff tops at Marks Park 14 months before, that Ross had met the 21-year-old Craig Ellis, who had not long arrived from Auckland. Four years earlier, in 1985, Ross had been arrested for lewd behaviour at a toilet block in Southport, Queensland, with another male in his twenties. Mercifully for Ross, who was just starting out in his career, the embarrassing incident was kept out of the newspapers, in large part
thanks to the efforts of his mother. But sexual hunger is a powerful thing, and although he avoided beats for a time, Ross was drawn back to them by the time he had moved to Wollongong.

* Shortly afterwards—in February 1989—Ross drove Greg to a quiet spot and told him it was over, only minutes after they had had sex.

* Ross, who had come of age during the first major wave of the AIDS crisis and the fear-invoking Grim Reaper television campaign, kept condoms in his glove box and was always scrupulous about safe sex. At beats, his sexual repertoire rarely included penetration; tonight he left the condom packet unopened.

* He’d fallen in love with Australia, he gushed to his mother and sister in frequent letters back home. What he didn’t tell them was that as a gay man, he found the lifestyle refreshingly open; this was a place where he could breathe more easily, at last be himself. Where he came from, it was better to keep such matters hidden.

* Where to go? There were no gay bars or venues in Bondi, so he strolled off to the Bondi cliff tops, having heard that gay men hung out there, especially on a weekend night. As he crossed into the darkness of the pathway, his pulse began to quicken; sexually charged situations like these made him feel apprehensive and nervous. So he was partly relieved, partly disappointed, to discover that no-one was about.

* ‘Bondi is where all the faggots hang out. Me and me mates have been showing the gays who’s boss.’

* Steve Page was hitting the phones. He knew there are only three ways you can crack a murder case: by physical evidence, eyewitnesses or a direct confession. In most cases, the first two lead to the third.

* Thompson began reciting a long list of brutal crimes against gay men and lesbians—stories of murder, of lives ruined, of victims being left with lifelong injuries. ‘Heterosexual men are usually attacked by one offender; gay men by three to five,’ she said bluntly. ‘And those three to five attackers are usually teenagers or men
in their twenties.’

* more than one in five gay homicides happen at beats…

* [Why the poofter bashing?] ‘To prove their masculinity to their mates—the old alpha male syndrome. To show they are not gay, to steal, or simply because they enjoy bashing people up.’

‘Beats are usually about quick anonymous sex, but they can vary—some are more about socialising, others have their own rituals, such as at truck stops,’ she explained. ‘Marks Park at Bondi was a particular kind of beat because it operated only at night. The area is dotted by areas of scrub and caves in the rock face that men would go in after they had picked someone up on the pathway. A gay male would “cruise” another one by looking him straight in the eye and holding his gaze for a second too long, or nodding. Sometimes they might rattle keys to let someone know they are there and interested.’

‘I’ve heard numerous reports about gay men being led off the pathway on the Bondi headland by a decoy, only to be set upon by a gang.’

* Sydney’s gay heartland is in the grip of an unprecedented wave of violent murders and bashings. Teenage gangs, straight from the nightmare world of A Clockwork Orange, are terrorising the yuppie eastern and inner-city suburbs.

* ‘How come the media were on to it, but the police weren’t?’

* ‘Poofter bashing or first degree murder?’ ran a headline in the Star on 17 November 1989—only six days before John Russell’s body was found at the bottom of the Bondi cliffs. ‘In Australia, poofter bashing has long been regarded as an amusing, essentially innocent sport,’ opined journalist Paul Paech. ‘But now, after AIDS, it has turned into something more sinister, something that leaves people with more than a few bruises and broken bones. Today, poofter bashing amounts to first degree wilful murder.’

In the first six months of 1990, according to another story, more than 90 gay bashings were reported in Sydney, and there had been three gruesome, wellpublicised gay murders (Kritchikorn Rattanajurathaporn, Richard Johnson and school teacher Wayne Tonks). One young man quoted in another article admitted to being involved in more than 50 gang assaults and robberies of gay men.

* Some blamed the violence on the increased profile of the gay community in Sydney—as if, by being more open about their sexuality, gay men had no-one to blame but themselves for unleashing the furies of violence.

* Steve Page smiled to himself. He knew from long experience that there are few real murder mysteries: only guilty people with dark secrets, witnesses who won’t come forward out of fear or misguided loyalty to the killer, or maybe a case that remains unsolved because of a mis-step or two by the investigators, who misread
a critical piece of evidence. The unvarnished truth is always out there.

* [Former teacher William Allen] stood, unsteadily, only three or four metres from the toilet block in Alexandria Park where he had been brutally bashed… Did Allen meet his killers at Alexandria Park, while cruising the beat late at night? He was, after all, a regular at the park, more often than not taking his dogs for a walk there. Or was he lured to his death, as he had unwisely left his phone number on a cubicle wall in the toilet block?

* Page came across other far less saintly stories, however. There was Allen’s predilection for teenage boys, his habit of haunting beats, and a neighbour’s report of occasional visitors late at night. Allen was also being investigated for having sex with an under-age boy.

* In the park opposite, during the winter months, they played footy with many of their mates and knew all about the toilet block situated on the northern side. After nightfall it became a poofters’ hang-out. A gay beat. After the game they ambled across the road to the park, and headed straight for the toilet block. One selected a telephone number scribbled on the cubicle door and proceeded to call it from a public phone box nearby, while his mates listened in, sniggering. The number belonged to Richard Johnson, a slim, darkly handsome 33-year-old New Zealander who lived in Coogee; the boy invited him to come to the park for sex, enticing him with statements such as ‘I like to give head jobs’.

Johnson took the bait, arriving at the agreed time— 10 p.m.—after parking nearby, and walking across the same thatch of grass where William Allen was felled only a year before. Perhaps sensing danger, Johnson had no sooner stepped into the toilet block than he attempted to leave. Alas, it was already too late.

* Some of his attackers mocked him with ‘why be a fucking poofter?’ and ‘there’s no point being a poof’, laughing as their helpless victim desperately pleaded with them to ‘leave me alone, I’m sorry I’m gay’.

* Wayne Tonks, 32, school teacher. “Tonks didn’t go to the bars of Oxford Street, largely for fear of being spotted on the strip by colleagues or students. Paradoxically, though, he frequented beats, and had got into the reckless habit of leaving his phone number on toilet walls and doors. To reduce the obvious dangers of running into any of his students, he only did this in areas well away from where he worked, avoiding the high-risk inner city and Eastern Suburbs.”

[16yo Andrew claimed Tonks plied him with alcohol, played pornographic videos, offered him a massage—and then sexually assaulted him.

* Friends testified that Tonks had a predilection for young men—early twenties down to late teens—but there was no suggestion he ever had sex with anyone under sixteen.

* Tall and leanly muscular, Raymond Keam had the kind of body most men envy. Around his neck he wore a silver medallion, declaring him to be a member of the Zen Chi Ryu group, an elite band of black-belt karate experts specialising in full-contact, no-holds-barred sparring, arguably the most street-savvy martial art of all.

On a clear night in January 1987, outside a toilet block in Alison Park, Randwick, Keam was savagely beaten and left to die. Nearby residents, long accustomed to seeing and hearing assaults in the park—there had been at least eight attacks there in the previous twelve months—heard a commotion at about 2 a.m., but failed to call police because it had happened so many times before.

A Department of Main Roads technician, Keam was intending to drive down to Canberra a few days later to join his de facto wife and two-year-old son… Sometime after midnight he drove his Holden Jackaroo to Alison Park and parked it near the toilet block. Although Keam had been known to frequent gay beats, he didn’t identify as homosexual or lead a gay lifestyle.

* No-one will probably ever know what Maurice McCarty was discussing with his rough-looking young guest only minutes before he was murdered in his backyard. McCarty, a solid, unfit man with a thatch of wild grey hair, may have been shooting the breeze about the rugby…

* McKinnon claimed in court that McCarty had lured him to his Newtown home with the promise of selling him some cheap marijuana. Instead, he poured him a glass of wine and made a pass. The sexual overture was too much for McKinnon, who simply ‘snapped’.

* While it may not be a legally recognised term, the ‘homosexual panic defence’—the argument that men can be excused of carrying out even horrific violence if it’s in response to another man trying to fondle or kiss them— has a long and ignoble tradition in the Australian courts…

* The criminal class—both inside and outside prison—is ruled by a brutal code of silence. Even the toughest thugs are often afraid of what will happen to them if they inform on mates or enemies.

* he was not dealing with a single serial monster but a multi-headed hydra, a diffuse group of men (and maybe women) who had made it their hobby to kill gays… Killers don’t tend to come out of nowhere. In most cases, they have a history—and in this case it would have been bashing gays. Perhaps, having got away with thrashing gay men again and again, they became so emboldened they thought nothing of throwing someone off a cliff. In short, serial bashers who had morphed into serial killers.

* some members of the Alexandria Eight were bashing gay men in other parts of Sydney, including Bondi. French admitted in subsequent police statements to bashing hundreds of gay men, including at Bondi…

* ‘I know that poofter, man. I’ve seen him before, I’ve belted him before.’ They’d belted him at Moore Park, when they was up the Cross before and took his wig.

* She recalled a troubling conversation with her flatmate’s friend, a woman called Merlyn McGrath, in August 1989, who claimed she went ‘poofter bashing’ with male friends. Constable O’Brien asked her why she did this and McGrath replied, ‘to teach them a lesson not to be f*** poofters.’

* “Occasionally I would hang around in the hope that I might meet someone for casual sex. So in ’89 I met up with this chap who I called Red because of his henna-red hair. He was someone, a gay man, who went to the rocks area pretty regularly. So I’d just pass the time of day with him and ask him, what’s been happening, just to get a bit of an idea if there’d been any trouble. I’d been assaulted myself in 1986…‘Red’ showed me knife scars on his upper body from when he’d been assaulted but managed to fight them off… I suggested a Sunday night because that’s usually the busiest night at the rocks.”

* Rick knew what went on there—he’d been to the cliff tops several times before—and had even hooked up with a couple of young men who he’d invited back to his tiny one-bedroom flat. One had even become a friend. Truth be told, he found a run or stroll around these cliff tops so much easier than fronting up to one of Oxford Street’s gay bars. That first step into the darkness of a bar or club was always so intimidating. The hungry eyes checking you out. The attitude—real or imagined—from the goodlooking ones. The preening gym bunnies. The leather queens. He always had to gird himself for those first five or ten minutes. Only after the warm glow of those first couple of beers sank in could he start to relax and enjoy…

* Rick looked up beseechingly at the twentysomething man now standing on his balcony. He yelled out that he’d been bashed.

‘I’m not going to help you,’ the man shouted back. ‘I don’t help poofters.’

* ‘But a lot of people thought the beat at Marks Park was the small toilet block on the Tamarama side; this wasn’t really the case. The toilets are too open and people can always walk in on you.’ Rather, it was the rocky area on the perimeter of Marks Park and the bushes on top of the flat area of the park that were the favoured cruising spots because they were so private, Jones added. ‘When I lived in Bondi I came here nearly every night, but not necessarily for sex. Sometimes just for company.’

* He now had a clear sense of the principal gangs in the late 1980s targeting gay men. They were the Alexandria Eight (who killed Richard Johnson, and possibly William Allen); the Tamarama Three (who murdered Kritchikorn Rattanajurathaporn); and the Bondi Boys (who allegedly attempted to kill Rick, among a host of other crimes at the cliff tops). Under the Bondi Boys, Page had a list of ten names, corroborated by witness statements and police reports of the time. All these gangs were prolific in gay bashings, the murders representing the mere peak of their hardknuckled attacks.

* Matthew Davis, one of Kritchikorn Rattanajurathaporn’s killers, was among the first persons of interest to take the box. As a teenager, he told the packed courtroom, he was ‘filthy on the world’. He described how he was sexually abused as a child by a friend of the family, a paedophile. ‘Because I was raped and bashed by this
man for years, I thought, okay this bloke was a man, he had sex with another male, so me not having the social skills or the education back then, or the mentality or whatever to differentiate, I couldn’t differentiate between paedophilia and homosexuality.’

The net result, he explained, was that he ‘hated [homosexuals] with a passion’.

* One witness, a gay man, declared to the court: “the days of going and doing beats, searching for partners, is dangerous, risky business… I believe that we need to look at these things and say okay these are the problems, right, we shouldn’t be going down to these parks because they are too dangerous.”

Posted in Australia, Homosexuality | Comments Off on Bondi Badlands: The definitive story of Sydney’s gay hate murders

Social Media

From the Washington Post: “Real human connections create a virtuous cycle. Burnett explains that face-to-face interactions typically are more rewarding than online conversations because they activate more parts of the brain. “You’re looking at someone’s facial expression; you’re getting empathy from [their] emotional cues,” he said. Empathy, the antidote to schadenfreude, delivers higher-quality hits of dopamine.”

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on Social Media

Soylent

I find that the more Soylent I drink, the more multicultural I feel. I think there is a resurgence of anti-Semitism because Europe and America not yet learned how to be multicultural. And I think we Soylent drinkers are going to be part of the throes of that transformation, which must take place. Europe is not going to be the monolithic societies they once were in the last century. Soylent drinkers are going to be at the centre of that. It’s a huge transformation for Europe to make. They are now going into a multicultural mode and Soylent will be resented because of its leading role. But without that leading role and without that transformation, Europe will not survive.

Posted in America | Comments Off on Soylent

Struggle With God

July 17, 2023, Dennis said to Julie Hartman: "I realized at an early age what I was going to bring differently to the religious-secular discussion. I am quite religious but I don't wear it heavily. It drove me crazy that most religious people smack you in the face with their religiosity. It's not good for religion and it is not good for them. On one of my first trips to Israel, I was about 20 years old, I was at the army headquarters in Tel Aviv, and all these soldiers were my age, and we were talking and this female soldier said to me, 'Are you religious?' In Israel, [asking] if you are religious means are you Orthodox. I said, I don't know if I am religious, I only know that I am not secular. She said, 'If you are religious, why aren't you wearing a kipa?' I said, I don't think religion needs a uniform. That’s why I didn’t become a rabbi. I could’ve gotten religious ordination… I learned more than most rabbis do."

Many identities benefit from wearing a uniform. Why not religion?

There are many behavioral restrictions that come with wearing a uniform that freedom-lovers like Dennis Prager might not enjoy.

Posted in Dennis Prager | Comments Off on Struggle With God

Decoding Bronze Age Pervert

01:00 Luke’s vision for humanity
03:00 BAP’s secret decoder ring for the ancients
18:00 Mencius Moldbug aka Curtis Yarvin
21:00 Against the New Paganism, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk1su1lt7bE
49:00 Bronze Age Pervert is explicitly anti-Christian
1:03:00 Bronze Age Pervert’s Fascist Philosophy – ANALYSIS, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0mb8TnTQ_8
1:07:00 Submit to Freedom: Geoffrey & Justin talk about Bronze Age Mindset, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqOxU7bXlpg

The Bronze Age Mindset (6-22-18):

From Tabletmag.com:

Should aristocrats of the spirit have sex with each other or seize power in a military coup?

Whatever passes for conservative thought in the American academy usually passes through the influence of Leo Strauss. In his teaching, the political philosopher combined an outward respect for liberal democracy with concern that this regime neutralizes the higher types of human beings, those capable of free thinking. Strauss, however, developed his ideas in an elliptical fashion meant to evoke the kind of thought he held to be the privilege of this type.

Out of the Straussian fold sometimes emerge singular thinkers who galvanize public opinion. One was Strauss’ student Allan Bloom… On the surface, Bloom offered Reagan’s America a defense of the literary canon and old-fashioned morality against the “relativism” of the post-’60s left. But perspicacious readers—including Bloom’s former student, the queer theorist Eve Sedgwick—would notice he argued that the true pedagogue awakens intelligent young men to free thinking by inculcating contempt for democracy and mass culture, and that this awakening includes a (homo)erotic element. Closing of the American Mind was misrecognized by ordinary readers in something of the way that the Village People’s ode to gay cruising, “YMCA,” became the anthem of dorky straight people at sporting events. For all the absurdity of this situation, however, Bloom’s bestseller served a philosophical aim, directing a minority of readers to his studies of Plato’s Republic and Symposium, which are pinnacles of philosophical and political insight.

Bloom might have remained an isolated monument of reactionary homoeroticism, but our era has its own Closing of the American Mind and its own Bloom: Bronze Age Mindset and Costin Alamariu, who is widely understood to have been its author. Bronze Age Mindset, a campy, fascistic “exhortation” written half in internet slang, has by now been reviewed by every would-be intellectual trying to demonstrate his daring proximity to the limits of acceptable opinion. Alamariu, however, is no basement-dwelling “incel,” as some of his sneering critics would have it. He is an Ivy-educated political philosopher, trained in the Straussian tradition. His doctoral dissertation, The Problem of Tyranny and Philosophy in Plato and Nietzsche, deserves recognition as one of the most lucid reformulations Strauss’ teaching, and most bracing revivals of Bloom’s practice.
Alamariu lays out with great clarity what he takes to be Strauss’ views. Strauss, he argues, held that Plato took from Athens’ execution of Socrates the lesson that political life—perhaps particularly in a democracy—threatens philosophy, i.e., the free exercise of reason in search of truth. Because truly thinking people challenge convention, they appear wicked to their less-intelligent neighbors, who persecute them. A society, like that of classical Athens, in which public opinion finds ready expression in law, requires such thinkers to disguise themselves. To evade persecution, or perhaps even to rule the beguiled multitude, Plato secretly enjoined philosophers to wear a mask of virtue, conforming in appearance with—but quietly influencing—their neighbor’s beliefs.

Alamariu deserves credit for divining, and insisting upon, this aspect of Strauss’ thought—that Strauss was only a friend to our liberal democracy in an ironic, unstraightforward way, and that his praise or blame of our regime and its enemies must be interpreted with great hermeneutic finesse. Alamariu is a careful, thoughtful exegete—when it suits him to be. For this reason the superficial crudeness, even stupidity, of Bronze Age Mindset and Alamariu’s persona on Twitter (@bronzeagemantis), appear as a strategic dumbing-down of certain of the points made in his dissertation, as a tactic for generating interest in his work, or as a means of acting, in a peculiar fashion, on another, non-philosophical audience. In fact, his dissertation outlines, quite openly, the rationale for such an approach, which shows Alamariu to be a rogue disciple of Bloom.

Like many closeted gay men, and indeed many uncloseted ones, Bloom seems to have enjoyed little more than speculating on who else was secretly gay. As his friend Saul Bellow reports in Ravelstein, his novelized version of Bloom’s last days, the philosopher spent much of their conversations speculating about the sexuality of his students—and thus, potentially, their sexual availability. He had a passion for bringing young male minds to philosophy and young male bodies to his bed. Indeed, Closing of the American Mind and Bloom’s final essay in his less-read but far more brilliant Love and Friendship are semi-clandestine justifications for a postmodern version of the original “Socratic method” of combining erotic and intellectual approaches to pedagogy.
Recognizing kindred spirits was the core of Bloom’s pedagogy, and not only in the sexual sense. Bloom inherited from his mentor Leo Strauss a vision of teaching and writing that aimed at separating a handful of potential philosophers who could be awakened into original thinking from the vulgar mass of ordinary mortals. There was a gradation of human types, with people like themselves at the top; the primary purpose of education, as of eros, is of finding one’s type.

This was true not only in the libidinally charged space of the classroom, but also in the public sphere, where Bloom, through his bestselling Closing of the American Mind, could address two audiences. On the one hand were the conservative masses willing to pay for Bloom’s diatribes against the Rolling Stones, blue jeans, and oral sex, and his defense of traditional liberal arts education; on the other were the unbelieving few who, seeing through his moralizing bromides, could detect the transgressive sexual and intellectual exhortation at the heart of his teaching. The latter types would learn, ideally, not only this teaching, but how to conceal it from the former, following the political prudence inculcated by Strauss.

Great people must be produced and perfected through an erotic education that aims at making young men more vigorous, physically perfect, and hostile to our supposedly feminized, egalitarian society (Alamariu, like Bloom, is frankly uninterested in women). Alamariu’s project involves a combination of erotic pedagogy, in the vein of the ancient Greeks and of Bloom, along with a program of eugenics, the outlines of which he only sketches but which resemble no less the ideal city of Plato’s Republic than the biopolitics of the Third Reich.

Alamariu forces us to recall how little distance separates the teachings of Strauss—on which much of modern American conservative intellectual life is based—from outright totalitarianism. Indeed, Plato, the cornerstone of Western philosophy, has often appeared to readers as a guide to utterly illiberal government.

Our regime needs protection, they sensed, from its most dangerous enemies—those who imagine themselves as exceptionally intelligent and worthy, and unfairly restrained by the rules and standards of ordinary people. This type, which rebels against the conformism and mediocrity of democratic life, has to be coaxed back into the fold of convention, or at least into an outward, ironic acceptance of public norms. Such people can be made safe for, and perhaps even useful to, democracy, on the condition that they be convinced that they are in fact superior to the rest of us—so dangerously superior that they cannot even make their superiority known. Strauss’ and Bloom’s analysis of human types, by these lights, is to be read not as the self-affirmation of a philosophical elite, but as a ploy by which readers who take themselves to be stifled by the democratic herd can be reconciled to our society. The real esoteric teaching would be that the very idea of an “esoteric teaching,” and of a philosophical few who alone can divine it, is not addressed to genuine free-thinkers but to the “gentlemen” who naively take themselves to be intellectual elites. These are the enemies of democracy.

Posted in Guru | Comments Off on Decoding Bronze Age Pervert

Decoding Ben Shapiro (7-16-23)

01:00 Ben Shapiro and The Tragedy of Political Commentary, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoNE63_nYT4
17:10 NYP: RFK Jr. says COVID may have been ‘ethnically targeted’ to spare Jews, https://nypost.com/2023/07/15/rfk-jr-says-covid-was-ethnically-targeted-to-spare-jews/
19:00 Colin: RFK JR, BAD MEMES, BIOLABS, AND THE “PARANOIA MAPS” OF THE 2024 ELECTION, https://neokrat.blogspot.com/2023/07/rfk-jr-bad-memes-biolabs-and-paranoia.html
24:00 Nathan Robinson: Ben Shapiro Is Scared Of Real Debate, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beDyZfLIYk4
35:00 Ben Shapiro’s bullying techniques, https://thepowermoves.com/ben-shapiro-debate-techniques/
38:45 Ben Shapiro’s Guide To Dominate Any Argument, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HS6RDCtgDSI
58:10 I paid for Ben Shapiro’s video about atheism and all I got was disappointment, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZjnS1mp88E
1:15:00 Jordan joins the show
2:17:00 Ranking Ben Shapiro on the gurometer, https://docs.google.com/document/d/19PKXFn3qrzWr6nx622g9cEzyNBow0svQs_dN4fP3hjY/edit
2:46:30 How to Spot Logical Fallacies (Featuring Joe Rogan and Ben Shapiro), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3w6LTkRCZQ
3:00:00 Perhaps Ben Shapiro Shouldn’t Be Taken Seriously By Anyone About Anything – SOME MORE NEWS, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDMjgOYOcDw
3:07:30 Deconstructing Ben Shapiro on Religion, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nvwpVoBgLQ
https://www.currentaffairs.org/2021/06/everything-ben-shapiro-says-is-still-worthless

Posted in America, Ben Shapiro | Comments Off on Decoding Ben Shapiro (7-16-23)

NYT: If Loneliness Is an Epidemic, How Do We Treat It?

The more connected I am with other people, the better I feel. Almost all of my good memories are with other people. When I walk with other people, the miles fly by. When I walk alone, they don’t fly by. I have often avoided negotiating relationships, so I walked alone more than I should.

I’ve found that when I get isolated, I act increasingly weird, perhaps to get attention. This tends to compound my loneliness. When I get connected, however, my need for attention diminishes and I act more appropriately.

People who know me well remark on my lack of social flexibility. I really like things my way. Perhaps that is why I do so much blogging and vlogging? I can have interactions on my terms.

I think 12-step programs and psycho-therapy have helped me grow up.

I rarely feel lonely these days, but when I do, it’s an important signal that’s something not right with my choices.

Everything in the following article rings true to me.

From the New York Times June 14:

* Neuroscientists have found that brain signals that should trigger someone to seek social connection are the same ones that, under different circumstances, can turn people defensive and vigilant — more apt to hunker down instead of reach out. Under this rubric, loneliness isn’t simply a symptom of societal failure to foster deep relationships but rather a wariness that takes root, steadily snowballs and reshapes the brain.

* Social isolation is an objective state: Are you interacting regularly with other people or not? Loneliness, by contrast, is a paradoxical puzzle — an entirely subjective experience of distress at one’s perceived lack of social connection. That can be true whether you’re alone most of the time or at the center of a dance floor.

* Many lonely people not only feel sad; they also feel endangered. Social situations are perceived as a threat, not an invitation. Over the past decade, those who study loneliness have begun to better understand why. Although loneliness is usually understood as an experience of mental anguish, in reality it is “a whole-body affliction,” as the historian Fay Bound Alberti writes in “A Biography of Loneliness.” Research suggests chronic loneliness is related to a range of physical and neurological problems, including increased susceptibility to infections and cognitive decline.

In other words, loneliness is more than just a mental struggle. Dr. Cacioppo explains it as a “biological signal that tells us that there is something wrong in our social environment.” Compounded over months and years, loneliness can gradually become a self-fulfilling prophecy. And when the emergency sirens are already blaring, it can be difficult to make the changes necessary for a more fulfilling life.

* Dr. Cacioppo found that lonely people detect negative or threatening pictures and words in under 400 milliseconds. This might explain not only the sadness that accompanies loneliness but also the palpable sense of danger.

Such changes in the brain may help to explain why lonely individuals perceive their social environment as threatening. “We cannot perceive the world for what it is,” Dr. Bzdok says.

Depression, grief, social anxiety — a full-body cascade of what might be termed symptoms of a lonely life — can follow. Dr. Alberti calls loneliness an “emotion ‘cluster,’” in which feelings ranging from “anger, resentment and sorrow to jealousy, shame and self-pity” can take hold. For some people, loneliness becomes a self-perpetuating feedback loop and turns chronic. The neuroplastic nature of the brain, its ability to create different structural pathways, can reinforce these changes. But what’s important to know is that the brain can also snap back.

Posted in Loneliness | Comments Off on NYT: If Loneliness Is an Epidemic, How Do We Treat It?

My Principles For Understanding The World

These are my rules for life and these are my principles for decoding reality:

* We live in a post-modern world. There’s no one narrative that adequately explains reality.

* Personalities are usually less powerful than situations. The news media focuses on personalities because that is a more compelling story than focusing on structure, but structure shapes the world more than individual whims. For example, as I write this in April of 2024, Bibi Netanyahu is Israel’s Prime Minister and his personality gets a lot of media coverage. If someone else were Israel’s prime minister at this time, Israel’s conduct toward its enemies wouldn’t change much. For example, if Bibi decided to support an independent Palestinian state, he would simply be removed from power because the majority of Israelis are not in a mood to give the Palestinians anything. If a Haredi Gadol came out in favor of Zionism, he would no longer be a Haredi Gadol.

A structuralist understands that what happens in Ukraine or Israel or Nigeria has nothing to do with America’s vital interests. To adopt a lesson from Stephen Covey’s Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, don’t confuse the urgent for the important.

Sometimes, however, individuals are more important than situations. If anyone but Hitler had led Germany during WWII, there would not have been a Holocaust.

* We’re all locked in an iron cage together and nobody is coming to save us. To survive, you as an individual and as a nation want to become as strong as possible because you never know what might happen and possessing strength is the best way to survive.

* (Almost) nobody cares about out-groups.

* The stronger your in-group identity, the more negatively you feel about out-groups. “Ties bind and blind.” (Jonathan Haidt)

* The more stable and cohesive you are, the better. The more divided and unstable your competitors, the better for you.

* Everybody has a hero system. Most people get it from their community, noted Ernest Becker. Liberalism and leftism are the hero systems that thinks they have transcended hero systems. Most people seem unaware that their hero system is a product of contingent circumstances, and it is this subjective hero system that drives liberals to condemn imaginary sins such as racism, bigotry, xenophobia, Islamophobia, homophobia and the like while people on the right condemn sins that are imaginary from a liberal perspective such as gay sex and trans identity and drug experimentation.

* For the normal person embedded in a group, his purported racism, sexism, Islamophobia, homophobia, prejudice and the like are not the opposite of morality, but the proper foundation for morality. This bloke loves specific people and is loved by them and thus he has an in-group and a hero system and everything he needs for meaning and morality. Such a person is less likely to engage in reckless behaviors than those who are unmoored.

* “Anti-Semitism is as natural to Western civilization as anti-Christianity is to Jewish civilization, Islamic civilization and Japanese civilization.” (Maj. Kong)

* You could do worse than the TV show Yellowstone for wisdom about life:

* “Until they find a cure for human nature, a man must stand with his people.”

* “Mister, I don’t know you, but if you’re wearin’ that brand, you must be a bad man.”

* “Should is a useless word, almost as useless as hope.”

* “A man who puts a hand on a member of my family never puts a hand on anything else.”

* “No one has a right. You have to take a right, or stop it from being taken from you.”

* “Lawyers are the swords of this century. Words are weapons now.”

* “It’s the one constant in life. You build something worth having, someone’s gonna try to take it.”

* “All men are bad, but some of us try really hard to be good.”

* In a 2006 lecture, Tom Wolfe said: “Each individual adopts a set of values which, if truly absolute in the world – so ordained by some almighty force – would make not that individual but his group…the best of all possible groups, the best of all inner circles.”

* Almost nothing we think and feel is ours alone. Instead, we depend upon cues from our group. We experience reality through our group identity. Christians, Jews, Japanese, gays and members of other groups see the world primarily through their primary group identity. 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.

* Marginalized movements attract marginalized people. Nothing great can be built by losers.

* There are no solutions. Only tradeoffs. (Tom Sowell)

* Crime and other anti-social behavior waxes or wanes depending upon our willingness to punish it.

* Much of what is considered expertise is an expertise at playing the game of expertise. Much of education is learning to play the game of education. I broke many stories (such as an HIV outbreak in porn and LA’s first latino mayor was getting divorced after an affair) as a blogger because regular journalists were not incentivized to report them.

* What will determine the success of an administration? Events, my dear boy, events. Situations will shape us as much as we shape situations. If an election takes place in a time of great threat, the right-wing candidate will likely be better positioned to win. On the other hand, if people are relatively safe and prosperous, the left-wing candidate will likely be better positioned to win.

* If you want to preserve native life, you have to restrict invasive species.

* The common denominator in all punditry is self-importance aka I see things you don’t see and therefore you need to listen to me. Do your favorite commentators optimize for truth or for some other value, such as success? I have no interests in the Biblical views of those who can’t read the Bible in its original languages and I have no interest in the Middle East views of pundits who can’t read Arabic.

* Our problems are rarely our problems, they are just symptoms of deeper problems. We usually prefer to think about symptoms rather than the disease because symptoms seem so fixable while the disease seems too challenging for comfort. For example, I sometimes obsess about why I am not married and I blame it on bad luck and other external factors, but inside I know my bachelorhood is just a symptom of my deeper issue with connecting with others, which in turn is just a symptom of my ultimate disease – my troubled relationship with myself and with reality (religious people might call reality “God”).

The 4-22-24 New Yorker points out:

That’s why thoughtful scholars—including the philosopher Daniel Williams and the experimental psychologist Sacha Altay—encourage us to see misinformation more as a symptom than as a disease. Unless we address issues of polarization and institutional trust, they say, we’ll make little headway against an endless supply of alluring fabrications.

* Democracy dominates our rhetoric, but most of life runs on hierarchy.

* Democracy and dictatorship are not mutually exclusive. All functioning democracies contains considerable elements of dictatorship, socialism, capitalism, and oligopoly. For example, the president of the United States has the same foreign policy powers as King George III. On the other hand, dictatorships such as Nikita Kruschev‘s Soviet Union often contain elements of democracy (witness the removal of Kruschev from power after the Cuban missile crisis). When dictator Joseph Stalin was fighting the second world war, he re-opened churches and allowed his people many things that they wanted in exchange for their efforts against the Germans.

Who’s the boss? The situation is the boss.

* There’s no magic key to unlocking how the world works. The closest thing we have to a magic key to reality is the predictive power of IQ for large groups. Kindness, for example, requires empathy, which is a form of abstract thought, and the capacity for abstract thought is measured by IQ. If a thousand 80 IQ people spill a drink on the floor of a public gathering, a thousand 100 IQ people spill the same amount of liquid, and a thousand 120 IQ people spill the same amount, the higher IQ groups will be more diligent about cleaning up the spill.

* Left and Right politics are evolutionary adaptations that enabled our ancestors to survive challenging environments and to pass on their genes. In some circumstances, a left-wing approach to reality will be more adaptive. In other circumstances, a right-wing approach will be more adaptive. As the 2013 book Predisposed: Liberals, Conservatives, and the Biology of Political Differences notes: “[T]he political left has been associated with support for equality and tolerance of departures from tradition, while the right is more supportive of authority, hierarchy, and order.”

* When almost all of our institutions are dominated by the left, it makes sense for non-leftists to have a kneejerk suspicion of the establishment. When the left controls the cultural means of production, discussion is often a sham. Stephen Turner noted in 1989: “For Hobbes and Schmitt, one might say, discussion is always an illusion or an instrument of authority, not its basis.”

When the left decides the “real issues” and the “real experts,” it makes sense for those not of the left to rebel against these proclamations. When science funding is largely determined by the left, why would non-leftists not suspect the claims of science? When those who determine and award expertise are on the left, does it not make sense for those not on the left to harbor suspicion about this expertise? Who decides who gets tenure at a university? Dominantly, it is leftists. Those out of power are more likely to believe that the world is not right than those in power. Given that most American institutions are dominated by the left, why would non-leftists be at ease with the current power structure?

* Our political, cultural, and personal tendencies are strongly influenced by our genes.

* Religion, from a secular perspective, is a subset of culture, which comes from genes and environment. African Christianity, for example, is very different from Scandinavian Christianity.

* As long as tens of millions of people such as the Japanese are more decent than the most committed nations of monotheists, I’m not sure how one can argue that God is necessary for ethics (something I’ve believed almost all of my life). Our behavior is shaped by who we love more than by our beliefs, texts, and practices.

* There’s no reason you should pay attention to politics unless it gives you pleasure. For the average person 99% of the time, it doesn’t matter much who’s president of the United States. Most people don’t get their meaning in life from anything as abstract as politics. Most people get their meaning from family. If they have room in their life after family, they get their meaning from their work, friends, and interests. You can accurately assess people by their closest connections. We can only date and relate to people like us.

* In reality as opposed to liberal theory, nobody has the right to anything unless you are lucky enough to live in a society that is strong and enforces your rights, but rights can still all be taken away at any time by elites due to a real or putative emergency. The sovereign decides the state of exception, notes Carl Schmitt. There is no objective enforcement of the law because law is operated by human beings who react in unique ways due to their genes, imprinting and situation.

* If it becomes socially acceptable for minority groups to pursue their own interests without regard to the majority’s interests, majorities will start acting in their own interests without regard for minorities.

* You are judged by the company you keep. We attract people like ourselves. If you want to figure out someone, look at their ancestors and look at their closest friends.

* Much of human behavior can be understood by simply asking — what’s easiest? Most people most of the time will do what is easiest. The reasons people give for their behavior usually have nothing to do with their real reasons. People almost never say what they mean nor mean what they say.

* Most people primarily want approval from a small group such as their family or their profession and this desire usually outweighs their yearning for truth. You can never persuade anyone to believe anything if their income and status depend upon not understanding.

* Everyone tries to adapt to their circumstance to best insure their survival. Why do people act the way they do? They’re trying to insure their survival. Some people do this through violence, other people through litigation, and other people by sucking in a maximum of welfare. Some people try to insure their survival by expressing love and other people try to do it through selfishness. Every organism tries to create an environment around it that is most conducive to its thriving. Every organism has a strong reaction against anyone trying to hurt it.

* “Two subspecies of the same species do not occur in the same geographic area.” (E. Raymond Hall, a professor of biology at the University of Kansas and the author of The Mammals of North America)

* “The degree of cooperation between organisms can be expected to be a direct function of the proportion of genes they share.” (University of Washington anthropologist Pierre L. van den Berghe)

* Diversity and proximity often lead to conflict and tragedy. The more united a people, the stronger (usually).

* Most of us aren’t significant (beyond the handful of people who love us). If somebody does not get their primary source of meaning from family and friends, then they either have extraordinary talents or they are deluded. People seeking meaning are usually lonely and neurotic.

* We weren’t born yesterday. We did not evolve to be gullible. The left dominates academia and media but that doesn’t turn people into leftists. We all tend to do a good job detecting when other people are seeking to manipulate us against our best interests. We tend to do a bad job detecting our own faulty thinking.

* Left and right politics are ultimately different strategies for dealing with Darwinian selection pressures. In some cases, a left-wing approach will be more adaptive (more welcoming to strangers, more innovative in how you organize family and communal life, more egalitarian, more lenient in punishing criminals, more freedom for sexual expression), while in other cases, a right-wing approach will be more adaptive (more suspicious of strangers, more traditional, more hierarchical, more severely punishing of violations of group norms).

* Predisposed: “People who support greater military spending, harsher punishment for criminals, and restrictive immigration are not doing so just to infuriate liberals but because they are more physiologically and psychologically attuned to negative eventualities.”

* Predisposed: “[E]thnocentrics do not give a fig for individual rights.”

* Predisposed: “The connection between conservatism and free market principles as a relatively recent development.”

* The battle doesn’t always go to the strong and the swift and the powerful, but that’s the way to bet. Experts aren’t always right, but expertise in a particular area will usually be more right than the opinions of the less informed.

* I’ve never found generational critiques compelling. Compared to group differences, the differences between Boomers and Zoomers are trivial.

* Any rando can say anything. We think more clearly when we think socially. If you want me to read a dissident perspective on public health matters, show me a meta-analysis published in a prestigious journal.

* You can’t understand anything outside of its situation.

* Much of what we think about the world comes from the emotional payoff we receive from that type of thinking. In the most profound things beyond the strictly physical objects around us, we don’t usually see the world as it is. Instead, we see it as we are. If you think a lot about the world coming to an end, for example, the chances are that it makes you feel important. You see through the BS! If you believe that salvation is only through Jesus or Torah or Mohammed or Marx, that similarly makes you feel important.

* When Israel is accused in the UK parliament of war crimes, it is a perverse compliment. A normal human reaction to high-achieving people is to tear them down. Nobody berates the Arabs for being savage because nobody expects much from them. When whites are accused of every evil under the sun, it is similarly a perverse compliment.

* Most people look at the world in terms of what is good for their group. Only WASPs consistently argue in terms of one universal morality.

* We did not evolve to be happy. We evolved to survive. We have a negativity bias. Wikipedia: “Evolutionary mismatch (also “mismatch theory” or “evolutionary trap”) is the evolutionary biology concept that a previously advantageous trait may become maladaptive due to change in the environment, especially when change is rapid.”

* People will say and do almost anything to augment their status. Status is the most powerful force in life that’s rarely discussed. We don’t like strivers and yet we’re all strivers. Professions (such as law, medicine, clergy, accounting, dentistry) strive to increase prestige and income by doing things that hurt the majority, such as psychiatrists diagnosing ordinary human sadness as the medical illness of depression and then prescribing pills that have no more efficacy than the placebo effect. As Adam Smith wrote in his 1776 book, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations: “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.”

* Different people have different gifts. Different plants and animals have different gifts. Life evolved differently in different situations.

Posted in Philosophy | Comments Off on My Principles For Understanding The World