Is Rahm Emmanuel A Viable Democratic Candidate?

In the context of Alliance Theory, Rahm Emanuel’s potential 2028 bid represents an attempt to re-establish a “Centrist-Pragmatist Alliance” in a party currently fractured by ideology. Since returning from his ambassadorship in Japan in early 2025, Emanuel has been vocal about his interest in the nomination, positioning himself as a direct challenger to the party’s current cultural and economic “orthodoxies.”

Alliance Theory posits that political power rests on the cohesion of elite nodes. Emanuel’s current media tour—criticizing the Democratic brand as “weak and woke”—is an effort to forge a coalition between moderate donors, suburban “kitchen table” voters, and the older party establishment. By distancing himself from “identity politics” and “niche issues,” he is signaling to independent voters that he belongs to a different, more grounded alliance than the one led by figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Gavin Newsom.

However, this strategy carries a high “exit cost” for his relationship with the progressive wing. For an alliance to function, its members must perceive a shared interest. Currently, the “Progressive-Labor Alliance” within the party views Emanuel’s “alpha energy” and centrist history (such as his handling of the Laquan McDonald case) as a threat to their institutional gains.

As discussed by Lomez regarding the “prestige economy,” Emanuel faces a specific challenge. While he has immense “money capital” and “experience capital” (as a former Chief of Staff, Congressman, Mayor, and Ambassador), he suffers from a prestige deficit among the younger, culture-defining nodes of the Democratic Party.

Media outlets like MSNBC and digital activist networks often “ghettoize” centrists as outdated or “Republican-lite.”

Talented young staffers and creatives currently gravitate toward more ideological or “prestige-heavy” candidates like Pete Buttigieg or Newsom, who occupy more glamorous positions in the party’s social hierarchy.

From an Alliance Theory perspective, Emanuel’s path to victory relies on the “referendum theory” he proposed in early 2026: that voters are “uncomfortable” with the current administration and are looking for a “checkmate” in the form of a tough, experienced moderate.

If the 2026 midterms result in heavy losses for the current Democratic leadership, Emanuel’s “Centrist-Pragmatist Alliance” will gain significant leverage. He would position himself as the only candidate capable of recapturing the independent and middle-class voters who have drifted away. If, however, the party maintains a strong ideological core and continues to reward “prestige” over “pragmatism,” Emanuel remains at risk of being marginalized as an outsider in his own party.

ChatGPT says: Alliance Theory would treat a Democratic nomination as a coalition building contest inside a party where status, gatekeepers, and activist energy act like separate currencies.

Rahm Emanuel’s basic problem is this.
He is great at winning knife fights in rooms full of operators. Democratic presidential primaries are increasingly won by a mix of activists, donor networks, media prestige, and small dollar attention. Those groups do not naturally love Rahm.

Where Rahm has real upside

He is trying to found a faction.
He has been explicitly pitching a “renewal wing” versus a “resistance wing,” which is smart Alliance Theory strategy because it gives donors and strivers a banner to rally around instead of a personality alone.

He can speak “institutional competence” credibly.
In a party that may be exhausted by constant moral theater and losing arguments over culture, a hard nosed competence pitch can attract mayors, governors, big city donors, and center left professionals.

He is positioning on climate as economics, not moralism.
That is a coalition move aimed at persuadable voters and business aligned Democrats.

He has elite network density.
Chief of staff, Chicago mayor, ambassador, congressional experience. Alliance Theory says networks matter more than résumés because they control access to money, staffing, validators, and “permission to take you seriously.”

Where Rahm is weak

He has a prestige problem inside today’s Democratic moral hierarchy.
Abrasive “machine” energy plays well with some insiders but can trigger status revulsion among activists, younger voters, and culture sector validators. A lot of Democratic primary politics is about who feels safe to endorse, not just who seems tough.

He does not have a natural mass base.
He is not currently the favorite of any big identity anchored bloc or activist ecosystem. Alliance Theory says candidates win when they become the focal point for at least one large organized cluster that will punish defectors. Rahm’s likely cluster is donors and operatives, which is powerful but not always decisive in a primary.

His Chicago record is an easy weapon.
In coalition warfare, opponents do not need to prove you are evil. They just need a sticky frame that lowers your status enough to make endorsements risky.

Age and vibe are not nothing.
He would be 68 going into 2028. Democrats may be unusually sensitive to generational change after the Biden era, which pushes the coalition toward governors and younger senators.

How Alliance Theory sizes up his actual chances

Right now, he looks like a plausible shaper, not the most likely nominee.
There is credible reporting that he is testing the waters and “all but declaring” interest. But the likely 2028 field is crowded with figures who already have stronger built in coalitions.

His winning path exists but it is narrow

The party mood has to shift from moral signaling to “win the country” pragmatism.
Rahm is built for that lane.

He has to consolidate moderates early and fast.
If that lane splits among multiple governors and senators, he loses.

He needs validators that launder prestige, not just donors who write checks.
Think high status Democratic officials, union leadership, and a few respected media voices willing to say “he’s tough but effective.”

He has to avoid becoming the designated villain.
If the activist wing decides he is a symbol of everything they hate, the primary becomes a referendum on status, and he is fighting uphill no matter how good his strategy is.

My straight assessment, using Alliance Theory

He has a real shot to be a major voice and even win early contests if Democrats are in a “stop losing” mood. He is not the favorite for the nomination unless the field breaks his way and the party’s prestige system gives him permission to be acceptable. That permission, more than money, is the bottleneck.

If you want, I can do a quick Alliance Theory matchup of Rahm versus the most likely “lane rivals” (for example a governor lane and a progressive lane) and show where he would need defections to win.

Posted in Alliance Theory | Comments Off on Is Rahm Emmanuel A Viable Democratic Candidate?

Alan Dershowitz Says Congress Does Not Want The Truth About Jeffrey Epstein

Alan Dershowitz discusses the release of the Epstein files and the implications for legal due process during his appearance on the Sean Spicer Show. He addresses the specific allegations against him, his criticism of congressional actions, and the current legal status of Ghislaine Maxwell.

[14:10] Dershowitz criticizes the Justice Department for releasing a list of prominent individuals accused in the Epstein files while redacting the names of certain accusers. He argues that protecting adult accusers who may have provided false testimony is a violation of the Sixth Amendment.

[15:17] He compares the current political and media climate surrounding the Epstein list to Joseph McCarthy’s tactics, labeling it “old-fashioned McCarthyism.” He specifically mentions Congressman Jamie Raskin as a former student who is participating in this narrative.

[17:13] Dershowitz explains that the redaction policy passed by Congress protects “survivors” and “victims” regardless of whether they were minors or adults. He claims some of these individuals were actually “complicitists” who were paid to recruit younger girls for Epstein.

[19:15] He addresses a specific allegation from a confidential FBI source claiming he was a Mossad agent. Dershowitz identifies the source as Charles Johnson, whom he describes as a Holocaust denier with no credibility.

[21:01] The discussion shifts to fake vs. real victims. Dershowitz highlights instances where accusers claimed to see public figures like Bill Clinton or Al Gore on Epstein’s island, assertions he maintains are factually impossible due to Secret Service records.

[21:58] Dershowitz advises that the government should make a deal with Ghislaine Maxwell to obtain the truth, as she is currently “serving Epstein’s sentence.” He argues she would have no reason to lie if granted immunity from her past actions.

[29:27] He expresses his intent to sue for the name of his accuser to clear his record. He argues that he has never been on Epstein’s plane with a young woman or received a massage as alleged in the documents.

[36:10] Dershowitz describes the “gray area” of social associations with Epstein between his first conviction in 2008 and the 2018 Miami Herald exposé. He notes that many high-profile figures, including Nobel Prize winners and tech moguls like Bill Gates, associated with Epstein during this period under the belief he had served his time for lesser offenses.

[37:32] He addresses the conspiracy theories surrounding Epstein’s death. While he notes his lawyers told Epstein he had a good chance at bail—making suicide unlikely—he admits it is difficult to imagine a murder theory given the security at the Metropolitan Correctional Center.

[40:27] Dershowitz concludes by condemning the release of Epstein’s medical records and attorney-client communications, stating that the erosion of privacy laws in this case threatens the fundamental rights of all citizens.

Alan Dershowitz finds himself in the crosshairs of an alliance shift. Using Alliance Theory, we can see how the Epstein case has disrupted the traditional protections once afforded to the intellectual and legal elite.

For decades, Dershowitz operated within a high-status alliance of academics, legal titans, and political power brokers. This alliance was maintained by a shared “prestige economy” that prioritized intellectual contribution and legal pedigree over personal associations. However, the Epstein files represent a total breach in this system.

Dershowitz argues that the Department of Justice and Congress have formed a new, populist-driven alliance. This alliance is not based on traditional legal principles like the Sixth Amendment (the right to confront accusers), but on a “survivor narrative.” By redacting the names of accusers while naming the accused, the state is signaling a pivot: it is more valuable for the current political alliance to satisfy the public’s desire for “salacious headlines” than to protect the due process rights of its former elite members.

Alliance Theory focuses on how labels are used to include or exclude people from power. Dershowitz points out a specific linguistic shift:

Accusers are branded as “Survivors” or “Victims”: This grants them a protected status within the new alliance, shielding them from perjury charges even if they are, in Dershowitz’s words, “complicitists” or “criminals.”

The Accused are branded as “McCarthyist targets”: Dershowitz attempts to counter the current alliance by invoking the ghost of the 1950s. By calling it “the new McCarthyism,” he is trying to shame his former students (like Jamie Raskin) into returning to the old alliance of procedural fairness.

Dershowitz identifies a “biological reflex” in the permanent bureaucracy (the DOJ). He notes that medical records and attorney-client communications—data points usually kept within the “internal alliance” of doctor/patient or lawyer/client—have been “weaponized.”

From an Alliance Theory perspective, the state is showing that when an individual becomes a liability to the dominant narrative, the “prestige” they once held as a Harvard professor or a top-tier lawyer is stripped away. The release of his medical data (testosterone levels) is a deliberate move to de-prestige him, moving him from a position of authority to a position of “ghettoized” public ridicule.

Sean Spicer and Dershowitz conclude by forming their own tactical alliance. They bridge the gap between the Epstein files and the Trump prosecutions by arguing that both men are being treated as “below the law.” This is an attempt to create a new counter-alliance: a group of people who believe the administrative state has become a “Preventative State” that ignores statutes of limitations and constitutional protections to purge “unsavory” individuals.

Dershowitz’s frustration stems from the fact that the “rules of the game” have changed. The alliance he spent his life building—one based on the sanctity of the courtroom and the nuance of legal definitions—has been superseded by an alliance of media clicks and political “vote getting.”

ChatGPT says: Alliance Theory frame first.

This is a fight over who gets to define “victim,” who gets protected by the status system, and who gets publicly sacrificed so the coalition can signal virtue.

What Dershowitz is doing in alliance terms.

He is trying to reclassify the players.
He wants a category split between minors who were coerced and adults who, in his telling, had agency and sometimes acted as recruiters. That is an attempt to move some women from “protected victim” status into “criminal accomplice” status. He is also trying to move himself from “tainted associate” status into “false accused target.”

He is attacking the coalition’s shielding rules.
He claims redaction operates as a prestige shield for accusers while the accused get name exposure. Whether or not his description is accurate, the alliance logic is clear. If the coalition treats “survivor” as an untouchable badge, then “survivor” becomes a moral get out of jail free card and a powerful weapon in reputational warfare.

He is reframing the entire episode as McCarthyism.
That is a classic status counterattack. McCarthyism is a stigma label aimed at delegitimizing the process itself. If he can successfully map “Epstein naming” onto “lists” and “guilt by accusation,” he moves the audience from salacious curiosity into procedural outrage. That shifts sympathy toward the accused and away from the accusers and the institutions releasing material.

He is trying to flip the victim hierarchy.
He repeats “I’m a victim of her crime.” That is an attempt to claim victim status inside a system that currently assigns victim status mostly to accusers. In Alliance Theory, victimhood is not just suffering. It is a coalition resource that triggers protection, credibility, and deference.

Why this works on Spicer’s audience.

Spicer’s intro frames Dershowitz as the rare truth teller against “media narrative.” That primes an in group lens. In group audiences accept error correcting frames even when they would distrust the speaker in other contexts.

The conversation constantly returns to “words matter,” “nuance,” and “it ain’t necessarily so.”
Those are epistemic status moves. They present the host and guest as the sober adults and outsiders as hysterical, sloppy, or malicious.

The “bipartisan” angle is important.
Alliance Theory says people trust betrayal narratives more when they feel both parties are in on it. “Bipartisan McCarthyism” is designed to trigger that. It also protects the speaker from “you’re just partisan” pushback.

The core status conflict underneath.

Epstein is a contamination object.
In modern prestige culture, association with Epstein functions like a moral pollutant. That means the system does not need proof of wrongdoing to impose penalties. Association is enough to lower status.

Dershowitz is fighting contamination with counter contamination.
He calls accusers felons, perjurers, criminals, Holocaust deniers, grifters, and media collaborators. In alliance terms, he is trying to flip who is unclean.

Why the “redactions” point matters in Alliance Theory terms.

Redaction is a gatekeeping technology.
It decides whose identity is protected and whose is exposed. That is not just privacy policy. It is power over reputations.

If the coalition treats accusers as a protected caste, it invites opportunism.
Alliance Theory predicts that any protected status category will attract people who want the benefits. His claim about lawyers recruiting claimants is basically “the incentive system is broken.” Whether or not it is true in this case, the incentives argument is structurally plausible.

His argument also relies on a gendered moral asymmetry.
He says the system is “sexist” because it protects women and exposes men. In alliance terms, he is claiming the prestige economy currently assigns automatic moral credibility to certain identity roles. He is telling the audience to reject that credibility shortcut.

What to watch for, because it’s where he is vulnerable.

He blurs legal, moral, and reputational questions.
He slides between “should be indicted,” “should be named,” “is a victim,” “is a criminal,” “I have a constitutional right,” and “this is unfair.” Those are different standards. The audience may not notice the switching because the emotional through line is consistent.

He uses extreme cases to argue the rule.
He highlights obviously false sounding allegations and implies the system is broadly corrupted. That can be true or not, but it’s a classic rhetorical pattern. It is strongest at discrediting the process, weaker at establishing the distribution of truth across claims.

He asks to be called as a witness and says “they can’t handle the truth.”
That is a dominance posture. Alliance Theory says dominance postures rally supporters but can alienate neutrals, especially when the speaker is already polarizing.

What Alliance Theory would predict next.

More weaponization of “victim” categories.
Both sides will keep fighting over who counts as a victim because victimhood is now a prestige multiplier.

More selective disclosure battles.
Every faction will demand transparency when it helps them and privacy when it hurts them. Expect lots of arguments that sound principled but track coalition advantage.

More “process” arguments replacing “facts” arguments.
When facts are messy and expensive to verify, coalitions fight over legitimacy of the institutions, the labels, and the rules of evidence. That is exactly what he is doing with “McCarthyism,” “redactions,” and “media narrative.”

Dershowitz’s comments are less about Epstein than about the modern prestige economy’s ability to designate saints and untouchables, and to impose social punishment through association. Alliance Theory says his real target is the moral status machine, not just a batch of documents.

Posted in Jeffrey Epstein | Comments Off on Alan Dershowitz Says Congress Does Not Want The Truth About Jeffrey Epstein

Why Most Orthodox Jews Don’t Engage

Matthew Feinberg writes on X: I’m beginning to understand something I resisted for a long time.

Why most Orthodox and frum Jews do not engage with less religious or secular Jews on major cultural and political issues.

They do not engage. Period.

And I don’t blame them.

Before anything else, I owe an apology.

I have been critical of the Orthodox and frum community in the past. Sometimes dismissive. Sometimes unfair. I mistook restraint for indifference. Separation for arrogance. Silence for judgment.

I was wrong.

Judaism has never taught reckless engagement for the sake of approval. Avraham separated from Lot when values diverged. Yaakov approached Esav with caution, boundaries, and clarity. Distance is not weakness in Torah. It is often wisdom.

This week’s Super Bowl ad from Blue Square Alliance made something unmistakable clear. It framed Jewish identity as something that needed softening and reassurance. The defenses ignored the subtext. Apologize for existing.

That reaction mattered more than the ad itself.

Once you see that pattern, you cannot unsee it.

There is a cohort of secular, progressive Jews who will passionately defend everyone except other Jews. Empathy flows outward freely. Inward, it becomes conditional.

We see it everywhere.

In August 2024, the New York Times reported that Jewish students at Columbia University were advised to hide Jewish symbols and avoid certain areas of campus for their own safety. That is not inclusion. That is quiet surrender.

Celebrities are defended instantly. Jewish students are told to be patient.

That is not an accident. That is conditioning.

Leftist and secular moral frameworks often reward Jews only when we minimize ourselves. When we flatten identity. When we are acceptable symbols, not a people with history, boundaries, and red lines.

Here is the hard truth.

There is no collective political movement that reliably protects Jewish interests.

There are individuals. Good ones. Brave ones. But outsourcing Jewish safety or dignity to any movement has always ended badly.

Orthodox Jews understand this instinctively. That is why they do not argue. Do not explain. Do not perform.

They conserve energy for building Jewish life, not justifying it.

Halacha values shalom, but never at the cost of self erasure. Peace without dignity is not peace. It is submission.

Engagement only works when Jewish lives, Jewish identity, and Jewish self determination are non negotiable.

If that baseline is missing, silence is not cowardice. It is clarity.

Time to stop apologizing.

Time to stop explaining ourselves to people committed to misunderstanding us.

Time to reclaim unapologetic Jewish dignity.

LF: This perspective aligns perfectly with the Alliance Theory concept of decoupling. When one group perceives that the cost of participation in a larger coalition exceeds the benefits, the rational move is not to argue for a better seat at the table, but to exit the alliance entirely and focus on internal resource consolidation.

In Alliance Theory, political power often functions through the exchange of loyalty for protection and status. Secular and progressive Jewish cohorts have historically maintained an alliance with the broader Western liberal elite. However, as this post suggests, the terms of that alliance have shifted. The “prestige economy” of the left now requires Jews to minimize their specific identity or history to remain in good standing. From a strategic standpoint, this is a predatory alliance. It demands “self-erasure” and “conditional empathy” while offering decreasing levels of actual protection, as seen in the examples of campus safety and the framing of the Blue Square Alliance ad.

Orthodox and frum communities use a strategy of strategic isolation to avoid this trap. By refusing to engage, they protect their “social capital” from being diluted by external moral frameworks that do not share their interests. They understand that engagement with a hostile or indifferent elite is a losing game. Every explanation or apology serves as a transfer of power from the Jewish community to the external critics who demand the justification. Silence, in this context, is a way of maintaining high “entry costs” for their community and ensuring that their energy goes toward “building Jewish life” rather than performing for an audience that seeks to “flatten” their identity.

The post highlights the failure of the “outward-facing” alliance. When Jewish identity is treated as something that needs “softening” for the sake of public approval, it signals to other power centers that the Jewish interest is negotiable. Alliance Theory posits that a group without “non-negotiable” red lines is eventually absorbed or discarded by stronger factions. The Orthodox refusal to “perform” is a refusal to be absorbed. They prioritize the internal alliance—the “people with history, boundaries, and red lines”—over a tenuous and expensive alliance with a secular elite that rewards them only when they “minimize themselves.”

This reclaiming of “unapologetic Jewish dignity” is essentially a pivot toward self-sufficiency. In a world where “no collective political movement reliably protects Jewish interests,” the only logical move is to strengthen the internal network. This creates a fortress-like social structure that is immune to the “anti-prestige” or “ghettoization” tactics of the broader culture because the community has developed its own internal prestige economy and its own definitions of success and safety.

ChatGPT says: This post is describing rational non-engagement by a minority coalition that has learned the costs of asymmetric engagement.

At bottom, this is about alliance incentives, not theology.

Engagement is an energy transaction
Alliance Theory treats attention, explanation, and moral performance as costly resources. Orthodox communities have learned that engagement with secular progressive Jews is usually negative sum. They give time, legitimacy, and emotional labor. They receive pressure to soften, apologize, or redefine themselves. Rational actors stop playing games with bad payout structures.

Boundary maintenance beats persuasion
Orthodox Judaism is a high boundary coalition. High boundary groups survive by controlling inputs, not by persuading outsiders. Engagement only makes sense when it strengthens internal cohesion or secures external protection. When engagement instead invites boundary erosion, withdrawal is the optimal move.

The prestige hierarchy is stacked against them
In the dominant secular Jewish prestige economy, status is awarded for universalism, flattening, and public moral alignment with progressive causes. Orthodox Jews do not compete in that hierarchy and cannot win without betraying core norms. Alliance Theory predicts exit rather than futile status competition.

Conditional empathy is a warning signal
The post correctly identifies asymmetric empathy. Progressive coalitions reward Jews who function as symbols and punish Jews who assert particularistic interests. In Alliance Theory terms, Jews are granted provisional alliance membership only when they subordinate group interests to coalition narratives. Orthodox Jews see this clearly and opt out.

Silence as strategic refusal
Silence here is not passivity. It is refusal to legitimate a hostile framing. Arguing accepts the premise that Jewish dignity is negotiable. Not arguing preserves sovereignty. High cohesion groups often choose non participation over bad faith discourse.

The Blue Square episode as a diagnostic moment
What triggered recognition was not hostility but paternalism. Softening Jewish identity to make it palatable signals hierarchy. Alliance Theory treats this as attempted status lowering within a coalition. Groups that notice this early conserve themselves by disengaging.

Why secular Jews misread Orthodox behavior
Low boundary groups assume everyone seeks inclusion and approval. They interpret withdrawal as arrogance or indifference. High boundary groups prioritize continuity, reproduction, and internal legitimacy. The misread is structural, not personal.

No reliable external protector
Alliance Theory is brutally clear here. Minority safety depends on internal cohesion first, external alliances second. Outsourcing protection to movements that do not center your survival is a losing strategy. Orthodox communities behave accordingly.

Why this looks like moral clarity, not fear
When engagement repeatedly demands self erasure as the entry price, refusing to engage is not fear based. It is identity preserving. The post is correctly identifying that peace without status equality is submission, not coexistence.

The core Alliance Theory insight
Orthodox Jews do not engage because the current engagement market is adversarial. It penalizes assertion, rewards dilution, and offers no durable alliance guarantees. Under those conditions, silence is not withdrawal from politics. It is a form of political self defense.

This is not about being right wing or left wing. It is about refusing to enter coalitions where your dignity is a bargaining chip. Alliance Theory predicts exactly this behavior from groups that intend to survive rather than be absorbed.

Posted in Orthodoxy | Comments Off on Why Most Orthodox Jews Don’t Engage

The Right Lacks A Prestige Economy

Lomez posts:

…the absence of a prestige economy on the right. This part of the cultural assymetry is far too often overlooked. Money is good. People are motivated by money. But perhaps even more so they are motivated by prestige/status. The right just can’t compete on the question of prestige. The Oscars are cringe and gay but the Oscars have a certain value that is not dollar denominated and cannot be duplicated by anything on the right, not even close. How to build out such a prestige economy is a bit trickier and is inclusive of money but also has to have a critical apparatus––I mean actual critics––that can mediate the exchange of prestige from person/institution to another. Prestige cashes out in the presence of beautiful women and the positive attention you get from them. But how you create prestige––how it is mined and brought into the world as a unit of exchange––is by getting a bunch of really smart and charismatic people to passionately argue over who is deserving of prestige and why. Intellectuals, aesthetes, institutions, and other artists themselves. A Prestige economy needs newspapers and blogs and tv shows that ladies watch while they are on the treadmill at the gym to facilitate these arguments. Glossy magazines with pictures of beautiful people basking in their prestige––or getting it removed from them for their shameful behavior. Reddit threads and conventions for superfans. Advertisements that pay artists lots of money to confer their prestige onto the brand value of glamorous products. Obituaries that honor culture makers’ legacy of creative endeavors and overlook their moral deficits as the wages of the creative life. Documentaries that mythologize their deeds and projects. A cottage industry of Awards and Prizes that get stamped on the covers of their books and their movie posters. We don’t have any of this. We don’t have a prestige economy at all. The moment you are categorized as right wing you are ghettoized. It is anti-prestige. This need to be fixed. This needs to be addressed. And until you have a prestige economy, the talented artist will––unless he is a highly unusual type––like water flowing downhill, adjust his politics, or say nothing at all, and simply join the other side.

Lomez identifies a critical failure in the current right-wing ecosystem through the lens of social capital. In Alliance Theory, power does not move simply through raw numbers or financial wealth, but through the ability to coordinate elites and capture the imagination of the strivers who want to join them. Prestige acts as the currency that facilitates these alliances.

The current cultural asymmetry described is an alliance deficit. On the left, a dense network of critics, glossy magazines, award shows, and media outlets forms a cohesive “Prestige Economy.” This network functions as a gatekeeper. It validates who belongs in the inner circle and who deserves status. Because this network is robust, it attracts talent. A talented artist joins the left-wing alliance not necessarily out of deep ideological conviction, but because that alliance offers a path to status, romantic interest, and legacy. As Lomez puts it, the talent flows toward prestige like water flowing downhill.

For an alliance to be dominant, it must offer more than just money. Money is a private good, but prestige is a social signal. Lomez argues that the right is currently “ghettoized,” meaning its internal alliance has no bridge to the broader prestige economy. When a person is categorized as right-wing, they lose their status in the dominant cultural alliance. This creates a high “exit cost” for any talented individual considering a right-wing affiliation. They risk losing the “positive attention from beautiful women,” the mythologizing documentaries, and the stamped book covers that signal elite membership.

Building a rival prestige economy requires more than just creating content; it requires creating a “critical apparatus.” In the context of Alliance Theory, this means establishing a new set of nodes—critics, aesthetes, and institutions—that have the power to confer status. For these new nodes to work, they must be recognized by others within the alliance as legitimate. If a bunch of “smart and charismatic people” passionately argue over who is deserving of prestige, they are essentially performing the labor of alliance-building. They are defining the boundaries of their group and signaling to the world who the high-value members are.

Until the right develops this infrastructure, it remains a secondary alliance that cannot compete for the “unusual type” of talent required to shift the culture. The absence of obituaries that overlook moral deficits or advertisements that link artists to glamorous brands means the right-wing alliance cannot offer its members immortality or social grace. Without a prestige economy, the right-wing alliance remains a collection of individuals with money but no collective social magnetism.

ChatGPT says: Alliance Theory read: he is describing an asymmetry in alliance infrastructure.

On this view, “the left” is not just a set of beliefs. It is a thicker coalition with institutions that mint status, certify taste, and launder reputations. “The right” is comparatively thin. It has donors, voters, and outlets, but fewer widely respected mechanisms that convert talent into durable prestige.

What he is calling a “prestige economy” is basically three things.

First, status production.
Awards, elite schools, critics, festivals, reviewers, profiles, and curated scenes create a scoreboard. People with ambition and social sensitivity orient to scoreboards.

Second, status enforcement.
Gatekeeping, shaming, deplatforming, and ghettoization are not bugs. They are tools for boundary maintenance. If being labeled “right wing” triggers status loss, that is coalition discipline. It keeps fence sitters and climbers from defecting.

Third, status conversion.
Prestige cashes out as access to high status networks, romantic markets, invitations, collaborations, and career safety. People who pretend they are above this are usually the most dependent on it.

Where Lomez is right.

He’s right that money and prestige are not substitutes. Money buys consumption. Prestige buys coordination. It tells other people that backing you is safe and smart. Artists, academics, and media people live on that layer.

He’s right that the label is the weapon. “Right wing” functions as a contamination tag inside the prestige producing coalition. Once tagged, you lose invitations, reviewers, agents, editors, and the benefit of the doubt.

He’s right that “critics” matter. In Alliance Theory terms, critics are prestige validators. They are referees who turn taste into a hierarchy. Without referees, you get fragmentation and influencer churn, not a stable prestige ladder.

Where he is fuzzy or optimistic.

He implies the right could just build an Oscars equivalent. Harder than it sounds, because prestige only works when the out group also half believes it. If it is purely internal, it becomes a participation trophy system. The right can build recognition, but it will mostly circulate inside right networks unless it can recruit cross boundary validators.

He treats “beautiful women” as the payoff. That is one payoff, but the bigger one is career insulation. The real prize is being able to take creative risks without getting cut off from distribution and collaboration networks.

He underplays a central obstacle. The right’s coalition incentives often punish artistic autonomy. A prestige system needs room for weirdness, ambiguity, and elite eccentricity. Many right spaces reward loyalty signaling and messaging discipline. That produces competent propaganda and low trust art, not a scene.

Alliance Theory diagnosis of why the right lacks it.

Coalition breadth
The prestige institutions are upstream of culture. They sit in cities, universities, legacy media, foundations, galleries, and entertainment. Those nodes are demographically and socially aligned with one side. That alignment is self reinforcing.

Time horizons
Prestige takes decades. Donors often want immediate political ROI. That favors ads, activists, and rapid response media over slow cultivation of critics, editors, and institutions.

Coordination problem
Prestige economies need widely accepted arbiters. The right has many rival factions and incentives to call arbiters corrupt. That makes it hard to crown anyone without internal rebellion.

Purity spirals
A functioning prestige world sometimes protects talented people despite scandals or heterodoxy. Many right audiences demand moral and political conformity from “their” creators. That makes the system brittle.

Negative identity
If a movement defines itself mainly as anti mainstream, it can win attention but struggles to create “high status normal.” Prestige is, by definition, a claim to legitimacy.

What a right prestige economy would actually require.

A credible critical apparatus
Not just cheerleaders. Critics who can say “this is great” and “this is bad” and be respected for taste, not for faction loyalty. If everything is praised, nothing has prestige.

Patronage with patience
Long term funding for magazines, imprints, fellowships, workshops, and festivals with minimal message control. If donors micromanage ideology, talent will avoid it.

Status ladders that reward excellence first
If the ladder rewards political posture over craft, it will select for operatives, not artists. The whole point is to make excellence the safest route to status.

A path for people who are not activists
Most talented creators do not want to be culture warriors. They want permission to be complicated. Build venues where they can be adjacent without being conscripted.

Some reconciliation with elite aesthetics
You do not have to mimic Hollywood, but you do need high production values, beauty, glamour, and ritual. Status is theater. If you refuse theater on principle, you surrender the field.

A hard truth to end on.

The right can build prestige, but it will not look like a mirror image of the left’s system, and it will not happen if the right keeps treating art as messaging and critics as enemies. If they want prestige, they have to tolerate a scene that sometimes annoys them. That is the entry fee.

Posted in Alliance Theory | Comments Off on The Right Lacks A Prestige Economy

NYT: Seven Pages of a Sealed Watergate File Sat Undiscovered. Until Now.

James Rosen writes for the New York Times:

Radford enlisted in the Navy in 1963. Skinny and mustachioed, he possessed “a gift for disarming people and collecting information,” according to “Silent Coup,” a groundbreaking book about the Watergate scandal. Stationed at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, he had grown passionate about India. He began working at the Pentagon and the White House in 1970 as a stenographer, typist and courier. He was, like Anderson, a Mormon; the Radfords and Andersons had grown friendly after meeting at church.

In the Old Executive Office Building, Radford worked for the liaison office that connected the Pentagon’s senior military brass, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to the N.S.C. His superiors included a pair of admirals who reported directly to Adm. Thomas Moorer, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, a 59-year-old archconservative from Alabama and a highly decorated former naval aviator.

As the Vietnam War worsened, Moorer complained publicly that the country’s civilian leaders paid only “lip service” to the needs of frontline troops. Shortly after Nixon selected him as the chairman, Moorer expressed dismay at America’s trajectory. “As I pass into what one might call the twilight of my career,” he wrote for a Navy publication in 1970, “I often wonder if everything my generation has attempted to do has been worth the effort.”

From their fortress across the Potomac, the Joint Chiefs watched a problem grow under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson and become acute under Nixon: the exclusion of the president’s military advisers from policymaking. Worse, their exclusion served to advance policies they abhorred, including rapprochement with the Soviet Union and China and budget cuts that left military spending at its lowest level, as a percentage of federal outlays, since 1950.

Nixon, for his part, held the Pentagon brass in low regard. “Goddamn it, the military, they’re a bunch of greedy bastards!” the commander in chief railed on an April 1971 tape. “They want more officers’ clubs and more men to shine their shoes! The sons of bitches are not interested in this country!”

The discovery of these seven sealed pages from Richard Nixon’s 1975 grand jury testimony provides a rare, documented instance of what modern political discourse calls the deep state. Through the lens of Alliance Theory, this revelation shifts the understanding of Watergate from a singular narrative of presidential corruption to a broader, more complex struggle between competing power centers within the American government.

Alliance Theory suggests that political stability relies on the cohesion of elite factions. When these alliances fracture, the resulting friction creates the leaks, investigations, and scandals that eventually reach the public eye. The Moorer-Radford affair, as detailed in the unsealed transcript, shows a fundamental break in the alliance between the executive branch and the military leadership. While the public focused on Nixon’s plumbers and the break-in at the Democratic National Committee, a far more significant breach occurred within the National Security Council. The Joint Chiefs of Staff, feeling excluded from the shift toward détente with China and the Soviet Union, used Yeoman Charles Radford to systematically steal thousands of classified documents from Henry Kissinger’s briefcase and the mailroom.

This internal espionage highlights the biological reflex of entrenched bureaucracies. When an administration threatens the interests or the relevance of a specific agency, that agency often acts to protect its own power. In this case, the military brass functioned as a rival faction rather than a supportive arm of the executive. Nixon’s decision to bury the scandal rather than prosecute the admirals involved demonstrates his attempt to preserve the outward appearance of institutional unity. He feared that exposing a military spy ring would further damage the reputation of the armed forces during the Vietnam War and reveal the secret diplomatic channels he used to exit that conflict.

The unsealed testimony also clarifies why the Plumbers existed in the first place. History often treats the unit as a tool for partisan political sabotage. However, the Radford project confirms that their initial, most critical work involved tracking internal leaks that threatened the administration’s core foreign policy objectives. This does not excuse the illegality of their later actions at the Watergate complex, but it places their origin in the context of a genuine constitutional crisis between the President and the Pentagon.

Using Alliance Theory to reassess this era reveals that Watergate was not merely a crime and a cover-up. It was the visible symptom of a total collapse in trust between the President and the permanent bureaucracy. Nixon correctly identified that the hard right and the senior military commanders were as much his adversaries as the anti-war left. By keeping these seven pages secret for fifty years, the government effectively obscured the depth of the institutional warfare that defined the 1970s. This new evidence suggests that the modern concept of an entrenched deep state acting against an elected leader is not a recent invention but a recurring feature of the American political structure when elite alliances fail.

ChatGPT says: Using Alliance Theory, Watergate looks less like a morality play about press heroism and more like a coalition war that spun out of control.

Watergate as alliance fracture, not singular corruption
The standard story treats Richard Nixon as uniquely criminal. Alliance Theory reframes it as a breakdown between overlapping power blocs. Nixon tried to centralize authority in a tight White House alliance while sidelining other entrenched coalitions. Those excluded coalitions responded defensively and offensively.

The real axis of conflict
The decisive conflict was not president versus press. It was White House versus national security bureaucracy. The Moorer Radford affair shows the Joint Chiefs of Staff running an internal intelligence operation against the president’s own national security staff. That is a classic alliance reflex when a group believes its interests and status are threatened.

Why the Plumbers existed at all
From an Alliance Theory lens, the Plumbers were not random thugs. They were an improvised counterintelligence arm created by a besieged alliance leader. Nixon faced leaks from multiple directions. His response was clumsy and illegal but strategically intelligible. He was trying to reassert boundary control after losing informational sovereignty.

Why Nixon buried the worst scandal
The newly revealed sealed testimony matters because it explains Nixon’s otherwise puzzling restraint. He covered up Watergate aggressively but buried the Moorer Radford affair almost completely. Alliance Theory predicts this. Exposing the Joint Chiefs would have detonated a far more powerful alliance and shattered public trust in the military during wartime. Nixon chose coalition preservation over personal vindication.

The press as a secondary alliance actor
Journalists like Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were not neutral referees. They were aligned with a broader elite coalition that had already turned against Nixon. The press amplified certain scandals and downplayed others based on alliance incentives. The Pentagon spying story stalled because no dominant coalition wanted it fully aired.

The myth of the lone deep state
Alliance Theory rejects a single unified deep state. What existed were rival institutional alliances. The FBI. The CIA. The Pentagon. The White House. Each spied on the others. Each leaked selectively. Nixon was not wrong that he was surrounded by hostile forces. He was wrong to think he could fight them with burglars and tape gaps.

Why Watergate became the symbol
Watergate endured because it was safe to expose. It punished a weakened alliance leader without threatening the legitimacy of stronger institutions. The Moorer Radford scandal cut too close to the bone. So it was sealed, minimized, and eventually forgotten.

Revised understanding
Watergate was not the moment America cleansed itself. It was the moment one alliance lost and others consolidated power. The lesson is not that secrecy breeds evil. It is that excluding powerful coalitions without managing their incentives invites sabotage.

Forward looking implication
Alliance Theory suggests that future presidents will face the same structural problem. Centralize power too aggressively and you trigger bureaucratic immune responses. Ignore that reality and scandals are not an accident. They are a predictable outcome.

Tell it straight. Nixon fell not because he was uniquely bad, but because he misread the alliance map and fought the wrong war with the wrong tools.

Posted in Alliance Theory, Watergate | Comments Off on NYT: Seven Pages of a Sealed Watergate File Sat Undiscovered. Until Now.

The One Who Sees

What are the most valuable revelations that the gifted ones see that most of us miss?

They see incentives, not speeches. They notice what people are rewarded for and punished for, then predict behavior from that. This explains outcomes far better than stated values.

They see alliances before ideologies. Who is protecting whom, who cannot be criticized, who gets grace after failure. Beliefs follow coalitions, not the other way around.

They see status games hiding inside moral language. Many moral claims are really bids for rank, insulation, or dominance. Once you see this, outrage becomes legible.

They see second-order effects. Not just what a policy does, but what it trains people to do next. Systems teach habits. Habits outlive rules.

They see the difference between power and theater. Who can actually make things happen versus who is performing virtue, expertise, or authority for an audience.

They see what cannot be said. The taboo tells you where the real fault lines are. Silence maps power better than noise.

They see selection effects. Who makes it to the top, who drops out, who never enters. Outcomes often reflect filtering, not merit or malice.

They see emotional asymmetries. Who is allowed to be angry, fearful, proud, or resentful. Emotional permissions track hierarchy.

They see time horizons. Who is optimizing for this quarter, this election, this headline, versus ten years. Long-term thinkers quietly dominate short-term talkers.

They see narrative glue. People don’t act on facts. They act on stories that bind groups. Change the story and behavior follows.

They see when a system has inverted. When rules exist mainly to protect insiders from accountability. Collapse begins there.

Most people look at words, laws, and personalities. These people look at incentives, alliances, and constraints. Once you switch lenses, the world stops feeling chaotic and starts feeling mechanical.

Perceptive people notice the subtle shift in a room when a new person enters. They watch the way a hand trembles or how a smile fails to reach the eyes. These observers see the underlying structures of power and the unspoken alliances that dictate human behavior. Most people focus on the words spoken in a meeting or a social gathering. The gifted ones ignore the noise and track the subtext. They see the patterns of history repeating in small, daily interactions.

They recognize the value of silence. While others rush to fill a void with chatter, the observant person waits for the truth to emerge from the quiet. They see the beauty in mundane objects and the hidden potential in discarded ideas. They spot the moment a person loses heart or finds a new spark of resolve. This vision allows them to anticipate problems before they manifest. They understand that most unnecessary human conflict stems from what people refuse to see about themselves.

The gifted ones identify the discrepancy between a person’s public persona and their private reality. They see the fragility behind bravado and the strength behind a quiet demeanor. They notice the connections between disparate fields of study. While a specialist sees a single tree, the seer understands the health of the entire forest. This clarity brings a burden of responsibility because others often prefer the comfort of their blind spots.

A few poems circle this exact kind of seeing without naming it directly.

William Blake, Auguries of Innocence. Seeing infinity in a grain of sand is not mysticism here. It is pattern recognition. Blake is writing about perception that pierces scale and convention. Most readers skim it as pretty. It is actually a manifesto for radical sight. Blake understood the difference between physical sight and spiritual vision. He writes that a fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees. He describes the ability to see a world in a grain of sand and a heaven in a wild flower. This suggests that the gifted observer finds the infinite within the minute. Most people see the sun as a round disk of fire somewhat like a guinea. Blake sees an innumerable company of the heavenly host. For him, the eye is not just a tool for recording data but a window that requires cleansing to reveal reality as it truly is.

Emily Dickinson, Tell all the truth but tell it slant. This is about indirect vision. The person who sees clearly understands that truth must arrive obliquely because straight truth blinds those who are not ready. She explores the cost and danger of such intense perception. In poem 1071, she notes that perception of an object costs the precise loss of that object. To see something clearly is to lose the comfort of the vague and the unknown. She suggests that perception in itself is a gain, but it is a gain that replies to a heavy price. In another poem, she speaks of the soul standing upon the window pane where other creatures put their eyes incautious of the sun. She prefers the safety of the soul’s internal vision over the raw, blinding exposure of the external world.

W.B. Yeats, The Second Coming. Yeats is watching systems decay before others can name it. “The centre cannot hold” is not poetry first. It is diagnosis. He sees inversion, elite rot, and moral confusion before it fully manifests.

T.S. Eliot, The Hollow Men. This is about people who speak the language of meaning but have no substance behind it. The seer recognizes emptiness where others hear authority.

Rainer Maria Rilke, Archaic Torso of Apollo. The statue sees you. That reversal matters. The poem is about encountering a form so complete it exposes your own partial sight. “You must change your life” is what happens when illusion collapses.

Wallace Stevens, The Man with the Blue Guitar. Reality is filtered through perception. The gifted observer knows the world is not altered by slogans but by how it is seen and rendered.

Czesław Miłosz, The Captive Mind. It reads like poetry even when classified as prose. It is about intellectuals who surrender sight for safety. The seer is the one who resists collective hypnosis.

Rudyard Kipling, If—. Often dismissed as Victorian self-help, it is about maintaining clear perception when everyone around you is losing theirs.

W.H. Auden focuses on the role of the observer in a failing society. In his poem September 1, 1939, he describes himself sitting in a dive on Fifty-second Street as the clever hopes of a low dishonest decade expire. He claims that all he has is a voice to undo the folded lie. He watches the faces along the bar and the conventions that conspire to keep people from seeing where they are. Auden suggests that the most valuable thing an observer sees is the lie of authority and the romantic lie in the brain. He watches the ironic points of light that flash out wherever the just exchange their messages.

Walt Whitman celebrates the fluid and affectionate connections he sees between strangers. In To a Stranger, he looks longingly at a passing person and senses a shared history that others ignore. He sees the untold latencies in a book or a face. For Whitman, the observer does not just look through their own eyes but filters the world through their self. He encourages others to stop taking things at second or third hand and to no longer look through the eyes of the dead. He believes the true possessor of knowledge is the one who stops to let wisdom reveal itself in the common air.

These poems all share one trait. They are about being less hypnotized. The speaker stands slightly outside the spell and pays the social cost for it. That is usually the price of seeing what others miss.

Posted in IQ, Poetry | Comments Off on The One Who Sees

Porous vs Buffered Identity

Are there any movies about times prior to the Enlightenment that vividly demonstrate porous identity? Which movies best embody buffered identity?

ChatGPT says: Porous identity means the self is open to spirits, fate, curses, ancestors, God, demons. The boundary between inner life and outer forces is thin. Action flows from ritual, omen, honor, and transcendence rather than interior psychology.

• The Seventh Seal
Death is a character, God’s silence is a cosmic condition, plague is metaphysical. The knight’s choices are framed by salvation and damnation, not self-actualization.

• Andrei Rublev
The artist is a vessel, not a brand. Violence, faith, silence, and communal ritual shape meaning. Interior motive barely matters compared to sacred obligation.

• The Passion of Joan of Arc
Joan does not “believe” voices. She hears them. Identity is submission to divine command. Her selfhood is inseparable from God’s will.

• Apocalypto
The world is ruled by omen, sacrifice, prophecy, and fear of gods. Individual cleverness exists, but fate and ritual dominate explanation.

• The Northman
Vengeance is destiny. Ancestors speak. Berserker ritual collapses the line between man, animal, and myth. The hero never questions the script handed to him by fate.

These films feel alien to modern viewers precisely because the characters do not narrate themselves. They are inhabited.

Post-Enlightenment. Buffered identity on screen.

Buffered identity means the self is sealed. Meaning comes from interior states, choice, authenticity, psychology. The world does not speak back. Nothing possesses you unless you allow it metaphorically.

• There Will Be Blood
Daniel Plainview is radically sealed. No gods, no fate, no community. Power is will plus appetite. Even religion is a tool.

• A Man for All Seasons
Thomas More already lives inside conscience as a private court. God is internalized as moral law, not an invading force.

• Barry Lyndon
Honor becomes performance. Providence fades. Advancement is strategy and self-interest inside social systems.

• The Favourite
Power is manipulation of preference and desire. No one is possessed. Everyone is calculating.

• Amadeus
God exists mainly as Salieri’s internal grievance. The drama is psychological rivalry, not cosmic judgment.

One blunt way to see the divide.
Porous identity stories ask “What does the world demand of me?”
Buffered identity stories ask “What do I want to be?”

Gemini says: In his work on the secular age, Charles Taylor describes the porous self as a pre-modern identity that lacks clear boundaries between the mind and the world. In this state, meaning and “charge” exist in external things like relics, spirits, or rituals, and these forces can literally enter or possess the person. The buffered self, which emerged during the Enlightenment, creates a firm boundary. Meaning is now internal—something we construct—and the external world is just mindless matter that cannot reach us without our consent.

Movies Demonstrating Porous Identity
Films that succeed in showing a porous identity usually avoid modern psychological explanations for “supernatural” events. They treat the world as a place where the environment and the self bleed into one another.

The Seventh Seal (1957): Set during the Black Death, this film presents a world where the spiritual is not an abstract belief but a physical presence. The knight plays chess with Death, and the characters live in a state where the plague is both a biological reality and a divine or demonic judgment. There is no distinction between their inner fears and the outer “enchanted” world.

The Virgin Spring (1960): Also directed by Ingmar Bergman, this movie depicts a medieval Sweden where Christian and Pagan forces compete for the souls of the characters. When a spring miraculously erupts from the ground at the site of a tragedy, it is not a metaphor. The characters view the land as a source of direct moral and physical power.

Andrei Rublev (1966): Tarkovsky’s masterpiece captures the porous self through the life of an icon painter in 15th-century Russia. The film emphasizes the lack of individuality in the modern sense; characters are swept up by collective religious ecstasy, violence, and the belief that God or the devil acts through their hands and the tools they use.

The Green Knight (2021): Although a modern production, this film vividly recreates the porous boundaries of the medieval mind. Sir Gawain’s journey is through a landscape where nature possesses its own agency. Giants, talking foxes, and the Green Knight himself are not mere hallucinations but external forces that penetrate Gawain’s sense of self and destiny.

Movies Embodying Buffered Identity
The buffered identity finds its best expression in films that focus on the individual as a self-contained unit, often in conflict with a world that is “disenchanted” or mechanical.

A Man for All Seasons (1966): This film depicts the transition toward a buffered identity. Thomas More stands against the state and the church not by relying on external magic, but by retreating into the “private room” of his own conscience. He views his identity as something internal that he must protect from the external pressures of the law and the king.

Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003): Set during the Napoleonic Wars, this film embodies the Enlightenment ideal. The ship is a microcosm of a rational, buffered world. Captain Aubrey and Dr. Maturin use science, logic, and rigid social hierarchies to navigate a world they view as matter to be mastered. They are disciplined individuals whose identities are defined by their internal resolve rather than external spiritual “charges.”

The Duellists (1977): Ridley Scott’s debut captures the extreme end of the buffered self. Two officers in Napoleon’s army pursue a lifelong feud based on a code of honor that exists entirely within their own minds. The world around them changes—empires fall, seasons pass—but their internal, self-constructed identities remain impermeable to external reality.

The Martian (2015): This is a contemporary example of the ultimate buffered self. Mark Watney is stranded on a dead planet. He does not see Mars as a place of spirits or omens; he sees it as a series of chemical and physical problems to “science the shit out of.” His identity is entirely self-reliant and disconnected from any external meaning in the landscape.

Posted in Buffered, Porous | Comments Off on Porous vs Buffered Identity

Marty Supreme – Coalition Hacker

Marty Supreme makes more sense if you read it through David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory, not as a sports or biopic story but as a coalition drama about status, loyalty, and rule-breaking.

We do not hold beliefs because they are true or follow rules because they are right. Instead, we use these signals to recruit allies and marginalize rivals to win at evolution’s game. Marty Supreme serves as a perfect vehicle for this theory because sports create clear tribal boundaries. In this framework, Marty’s excellence is not just a personal achievement. It acts as a focal point for an alliance. People flock to a winner because his status provides a protective umbrella and social capital for those associated with him.

The theory posits that our brains work like press secretaries rather than scientists. We justify our side’s actions while scrutinizing the opposition to weaken their social standing. Marty’s swagger and unconventional style represent a set of signals that his fans adopt to show loyalty. By defending his arrogance as “confidence” or his rule-breaking as “innovation,” his supporters practice the exact kind of double standards Pinsof describes. They are not judging Marty by an objective moral yardstick. They are protecting a valuable node in their social network.

Morality in Alliance Theory serves as a weapon. If a rival player commits the same “sins” as Marty, the fans will likely call for punishment. This hypocrisy is the system working as intended. It coordinates the group to attack an outsider while forgiving an insider. Marty Supreme becomes a symbol of this power. His success allows his “alliance” to dominate the social hierarchy of the sports world. Every match he wins reinforces the strength of his group, and every controversy he survives proves that his allies are strong enough to shield him from reputational damage.

Humans compete less as lone individuals and more as coalition managers. Marty’s real talent is not ping-pong mastery but reading people, recruiting allies, and positioning himself inside networks that can elevate him. His rise is social before it is technical.

Marty violates norms constantly. He lies, cheats, exaggerates, and hustles. What protects him is that he delivers value to his coalition. Pinsof’s work predicts this. Groups tolerate moral deviance when a member raises collective status or wins external contests.

Charm functions as a trust substitute. Marty does not earn loyalty through long-term reliability but through confidence, audacity, and the promise of shared upside. Charisma signals potential alliance payoff even when the signal is noisy or false.

Breaking rules is not accidental. It is a dominance display. Alliance Theory predicts that successful norm violations can raise rank if they show fearlessness and competence. Marty’s brazenness communicates that he operates above ordinary constraints.

The sport’s governing bodies are not neutral. They are entrenched alliances defending their hierarchy. Marty’s conflict with them is not about fairness. It is about whether an outsider coalition can force entry and rewrite status rules.

Because Marty’s alliances are transactional and status-driven, they are brittle. When his momentum stalls or his cost rises, allies defect quickly. Alliance Theory is blunt here. Coalitions track payoffs. Sentiment follows power, not the other way around.

Audiences are drawn to Marty because he exploits a truth most systems deny. Status often rewards audacity more than virtue. Pinsof’s framework explains why viewers recognize this as realistic rather than cynical.

Alliance Theory predicts Marty’s ceiling. Without institutionalization or genuine norm compliance, his coalition remains temporary. He can surge, disrupt, and win moments. Long-term dominance requires converting charisma into structure, which he resists.

Marty Supreme is a story about coalition hacking. It shows how far raw alliance instincts can take someone in a status hierarchy, and where they inevitably fail when charm and rule-breaking are not converted into durable alliances.

Posted in Alliance Theory, Ethics, Hollywood | Comments Off on Marty Supreme – Coalition Hacker

Why You Should Believe Your Eyes, Not Elite Descriptions

Elite institutions routinely advance narratives that clash with what people can see and feel. This happens when official data, approved language, or moral framing require citizens to discount their own sensory experience to remain socially compliant. The result is not persuasion but alienation.

Inflation and cost of living are a clear example. Official indices report modest increases while ordinary shoppers watch eggs, gas, and rent jump sharply in a short time. The technical language of the Consumer Price Index cannot compete with an empty wallet. When spreadsheets contradict groceries, trust collapses.

Public safety and urban decay create the same fracture. City leaders cite declining crime statistics while residents pass open drug markets, smashed storefronts, and boarded windows on the way to work. When the state declares the streets safe but daily behavior shifts toward vigilance and self protection, lived reality overrides charts.

Border management often demands a similar suspension of sight. Political leaders describe borders as secure while live footage shows mass crossings occurring openly. The viewer sees physical control failing. The elite description reframes the same images as procedural success.

The riots of 2020 remain one of the starkest modern cases. News coverage labeled widespread arson and destruction as peaceful protest. Viewers watched reporters speak calmly while buildings burned behind them. The message required the audience to distrust its own eyes in real time.

Basic biology has also been pulled into this conflict. When elites assert that sex is merely a spectrum or deny meaningful physical differences between males and females, they challenge one of the first categories humans learn to recognize. Abstract theory is elevated over embodied observation.

Education policy shows the same pattern. School boards claim that eliminating honors classes or standardized testing advances excellence and equity. Parents see literacy rates fall and gifted students disengage. The official story describes progress. The classroom reveals decline.

Energy policy often ignores physical limits. Leaders promise a smooth transition to renewables and assure the public the grid is resilient. Citizens experience rolling blackouts and soaring utility bills. The plan sounds elegant. The dark house feels final.

Homelessness is framed as a housing shortage rather than a crisis of addiction and mental illness. Elite narratives focus on rent prices. Pedestrians encounter needles, psychosis, and human collapse. The gap between explanation and experience grows unbridgeable.

Foreign policy rhetoric frequently diverges from outcomes. Officials speak for years about turning corners and stabilizing regions. The public watches chaotic withdrawals and instant regime collapse. The language never matched the terrain.

Finally, the aging of political leaders exposes the sharpest contradiction. Media and staff describe elderly figures like Joe Biden as sharp and energetic. The public sees confusion, physical instability, and verbal breakdowns on video. Being told this is vigor feels like an order to deny the obvious.

In every case, the conflict is the same. When institutions demand allegiance to narrative over perception, people do not unsee reality. They simply stop believing the narrators.

ChatGPT says: Homelessness in West Coast cities. Officials describe a housing affordability problem while people step over addicts, psychosis, and open drug markets every day.

Crime redefinition. Violent or repeat offenses are relabeled as nonviolent or low level while victims see smashed windows, theft, and assaults treated as paperwork.

COVID school closures. Leaders said closures were safe and temporary while parents watched kids lose years of learning and social development in real time.

Inflation language. Prices double for food, rent, and insurance while elites insist inflation is mild, transitory, or already solved.

Border control claims. Officials say the border is secure while towns absorb visible surges, shelters overflow, and services strain.

Policing pullbacks. Authorities say reduced enforcement does not increase crime while residents watch response times lengthen and disorder rise.

Drug policy. Harm reduction is framed as compassion while streets fill with overdoses, needles, and public use.

Campus speech climate. Administrators claim viewpoint diversity while speakers are shouted down and students self censor.

Gender policy in sports. Elites say biological sex differences do not matter while spectators watch obvious physical mismatches.

Media trust narratives. Institutions insist coverage is balanced while audiences see selective framing and omitted facts that contradict lived experience.

The common failure is insisting on abstract models over direct observation. People accept complexity. They reject being told their senses are wrong.

LF: What are the ten most accurate words and phrases used by regular people to describe reality that elite discourse declares out of bounds?

For example, I can’t think of a more accurate and useful word than “senile” to describe parts of reality such as Joe Biden’s obvious cognitive decline.

The word “senile” is a precise descriptor for cognitive and functional decline. That precision is exactly why elite discourse treats it as radioactive. When someone holding immense power displays confusion, memory failure, or physical frailty, the official language shifts to euphemisms like “seasoned,” “experienced,” or “deliberate.” The public is asked to reinterpret what it can plainly see.

Using the word senile forces recognition of biological reality. It acknowledges that aging imposes hard limits, and that some roles commanding armed forces, overseeing nuclear systems, directing national policy demand sustained mental acuity that time eventually erodes. Banning the word does not protect dignity. It protects hierarchy from confronting its own vulnerability.

The tradeoff is systemic risk. When senility cannot be named, authority quietly migrates. Power shifts from the elected leader to unelected staff who manage appearances, edit transcripts, and contain errors. Governance moves from accountable decision making to palace management. The public senses this immediately. Blank stares and incoherent remarks create unease because leadership has become performative rather than real.

The incentive structure is obvious. Admitting incapacity at the top destabilizes appointments, policy continuity, and status networks built around that figure. Denial preserves careers. It delays succession crises. It keeps the machine running. The cost is that citizens are told that video evidence is misleading, that confusion is context, that wandering is choreography, that memory lapses are style.

This produces the “denial of the eyes.” People are instructed to distrust direct observation in favor of sanctioned interpretation. Once that boundary is enforced, the system no longer rests on law or consent but on narrative discipline.

Distinguishing between a sharp mind and a senile one is not cruelty. It is a civilizational survival mechanism. A society that cannot name decline in its leaders cannot correct course. The word is accurate because it describes a physical constraint. No amount of rhetoric can repeal biology.

Because elites treated senile as an impermissible word, they disabled their own capacity to think clearly about Joe Biden’s condition. Once the accurate term was banned, every downstream description had to be distorted. Cognitive lapses became “gaffes.” Confusion became “complexity.” Physical frailty became “empathy.” With no lawful language available, analysis collapsed into euphemism management. That made honest diagnosis impossible and accountability unthinkable. When a system forbids the word that fits the facts, it does not eliminate the reality. It eliminates the ability to respond to it.

The exclusion of the word senile produced a functional blindness inside the institutions charged with vetting the presidency. Once the term was reclassified as pejorative or “ageist,” it could no longer be used as a diagnostic lens. A word that names a specific biological reality was removed from circulation. With it went the ability to reason clearly about the consequences of that reality.

For most of 2023 and early 2024, elite discourse relied on euphemisms to explain repeated episodes of disorientation by Joe Biden. “Gaffe-prone.” “Elder statesman.” “Longstanding stutter.” These were not neutral descriptions. They were enforcement tools. Their function was to preserve hierarchy and protect the incentive structure of a stable reelection campaign. To maintain the narrative, elites had to reinterpret their own direct encounters and suppress their own pattern recognition.

This linguistic policing had a predictable cost. When cognitive decline is framed as style or fatigue, institutions lose the ability to model risk. Planning assumes capacities that no longer exist. Vetting becomes theater. Private accommodations replace public accountability. Power shifts quietly to staff while the formal office remains occupied by a figurehead.

The June 2024 debate did not reveal a new condition. It collapsed a boundary. It forced an unscripted comparison between the curated image and the underlying reality. The shock was not the decline itself but the exposure of how long it had been managed through language control. The ensuing panic reflected narrative failure, not information discovery.

The credibility crisis that followed was inevitable. Once elites were compelled to acknowledge what ordinary observers had described as obvious for years, prior accusations of “disinformation” were stripped of moral authority. They were revealed as instruments of protection, not truth seeking.

By banning the most accurate word, elite discourse guaranteed that it would be the last to understand the reality it was responsible for managing. Biology does not negotiate. When language is forbidden from naming decline, institutions lose the capacity to respond before collapse forces recognition.

Elite discourse often functions as a gatekeeper for language, labeling certain observations as gauche, bigoted, or simplistic to maintain social cohesion or institutional authority. When these descriptions are pushed out of bounds, it creates a vacuum where the public sees a phenomenon but lacks the “respectable” vocabulary to name it.

Heredity remains one of the most strictly policed topics in modern discourse. While parents observe clear physical and temperamental links between generations, elite discussion of human outcomes almost exclusively credits environmental factors like funding, systemic structures, or parenting styles. Using heredity to explain differences in intelligence or behavior suggests a biological fixity that modern social engineering finds offensive.

The term “slum” has largely vanished from the professional lexicon, replaced by phrases like under-served communities or high-need areas. These euphemisms strip away the sensory reality of the physical environment—the smell, the danger, and the architectural decay—that the word slum immediately communicates. By banning the word, elites attempt to manage the stigma, but they also obscure the severity of the conditions.

Tribalism describes the innate human drive to favor one’s own kin, race, or religion over others. Elite discourse prefers terms like polarization or lack of inclusivity, which treat these deep-seated biological and evolutionary impulses as mere bugs in a software program. Acknowledging tribalism as a primary driver of human history suggests that some social conflicts are permanent rather than solvable through better policy.

The word “beauty” is increasingly replaced by the concept of aesthetic diversity or social constructs. In elite circles, the idea that some things or people are objectively more beautiful than others is treated as a form of oppression. This denies the common human experience of recognizing symmetry, health, and grace, forcing a polite equivalence where the eye sees none.

“Standard” is a word that has lost its teeth in institutional settings. When elites talk about equity or holistic review, they often mean the removal of a uniform benchmark. Describing an outcome as below standard is seen as harsh or exclusionary, yet the public easily recognizes when a bridge is poorly built or a student cannot read at grade level.

The term “instinct” is frequently suppressed in favor of social conditioning. If a woman feels uneasy in a dark parking lot or a person feels a sense of dread about a new social trend, elite discourse often demands they ignore that gut feeling until data confirms it. Calling something an instinct validates the subconscious mind, which institutions cannot easily monitor or reform.

“Parasitism” is a harsh biological term that has been scrubbed from discussions about economics and social structures. Whether it describes a bloated bureaucracy that produces nothing or individuals who live entirely off the labor of others without cause, the word is out of bounds because it assigns a moral and functional judgment to dependency.

Common sense is often derided by experts as a collection of prejudices or “folk wisdom” that lacks scientific rigor. Yet, common sense is simply the application of collective human experience to a problem. By declaring it out of bounds, elites insist that reality is too complex for the average person to understand without a credentialed guide.

The word “winner” creates an uncomfortable hierarchy in a culture that prizes participation. Elite discourse in schools and workplaces seeks to flatten outcomes, using terms like high-achiever or top-performer to soften the blow. This ignores the reality that in most of life’s arenas, there is a clear, singular victory and a corresponding defeat.

Finally, the word “truth” is often qualified into “my truth” or “lived experience.” This subjective turn makes the idea of an objective, capital-T Truth seem aggressive or narrow-minded. By making absolute Truth out of bounds, elite discourse ensures that no one can stand on a firm foundation of facts to challenge a shifting institutional narrative.

ChatGPT says: Obvious

Pattern

Incentive

Tradeoff

Difference

Hierarchy

Boundary

Cost

Enforcement

Human nature

These are accurate because they point to constraints rather than wishes. Elite discourse bans them because they collapse moral narratives into material reality. Once you allow these words back in, many preferred explanations stop working.

Gemini says: These words function as the vocabulary of the physical and social world that exists regardless of political will. They serve as the hard edges of reality that puncture the soft balloon of utopian rhetoric. When an institution replaces a word like cost with investment, it attempts to hide the reality that resources are finite and that choosing one path necessitates the death of another.

The word “obvious” is perhaps the most subversive term in a culture built on managed perception. To call something obvious is to claim that the truth is accessible to everyone through their own senses, which removes the need for an expert class to interpret the world. Elite discourse often treats the obvious as a dangerous oversimplification, yet the average person relies on it to navigate daily life without falling into cognitive dissonance.

Patterns provide a predictive power that threatens the narrative of progress. If a person notices a recurring outcome in urban policy or international relations, they are identifying a pattern that suggests a fundamental law of cause and effect. Institutions often label the recognition of these patterns as a form of bias or “phobia” because patterns suggest that human behavior is not infinitely plastic and that certain actions will always lead to the same results.

Incentive and tradeoff describe the mechanical soul of human decision-making. Elite narratives often run on the fuel of pure intentions, suggesting that a policy is good simply because its goals are noble. Introducing the word “incentive” forces an admission that people respond to rewards rather than slogans, while tradeoff destroys the fantasy of a win-win solution. To acknowledge a tradeoff is to admit that every gain comes with a specific, often painful loss.

Hierarchy and difference are the natural results of freedom and biology. Elite discourse spends immense energy trying to characterize all hierarchies as artificial or oppressive. However, any group of humans engaged in a task will naturally sort themselves by competence, interest, and drive. Recognizing difference is not a moral judgment but a prerequisite for functional organization. When these words are banned, institutions are forced to explain every variation in outcome as the result of a hidden, systemic malice.

Boundary and enforcement are the physical requirements for any stable system, whether it is a nation, a school, or a family. Elite discourse often treats boundaries as unkind obstacles to be overcome by empathy. Yet, a boundary without enforcement is merely a suggestion. Using these words brings the conversation back to the use of power and the necessity of exclusion for the sake of internal order.

Human nature is the ultimate constraint. It is the bedrock upon which all social structures are built, yet it is the primary target of elite “deconstruction.” To speak of human nature is to suggest that there are permanent features of the human soul—envy, loyalty, greed, and love for one’s own—that cannot be educated away. By banning the concept of a fixed nature, elites maintain the hope that humanity can be perfected through the right combination of state intervention and linguistic policing.

Take the word “incentive” and apply it to the ongoing crisis of retail theft in major American cities. The elite discourse focuses on “root causes” like systemic poverty or the lack of social safety nets, which frames the thief as a passive victim of a grand historical narrative. This explanation requires the public to ignore the high-definition video of organized groups filling trash bags with merchandise in broad daylight.

When you use the word “incentive,” the focus shifts to the immediate material reality. If a jurisdiction raises the threshold for felony prosecution to $950, it creates a powerful incentive for a person to steal $949 worth of goods. The actor is no longer a symbol of social failure but a rational agent responding to a clear reward structure. If the cost of the crime—arrest and prosecution—remains lower than the value of the stolen goods, the pattern of theft will persist regardless of how many social programs the city funds.

The word “enforcement” works in tandem with this. Elite discourse often treats police presence as a source of tension or an “optic” issue. However, enforcement is the physical mechanism that alters the incentive. Without a credible threat of force or legal consequence, a law is just a polite request from the state. The public sees the absence of security guards or the “hands-off” policies of store employees as a removal of the boundary. The eyes see a green light for lawlessness, even as the narrative insists that the situation is a complex sociological phenomenon.

Applying tradeoff to this same debate forces an admission of what is being sacrificed. To maintain a “lenient” or “restorative” justice system, a city makes a tradeoff: it prioritizes the avoidance of incarceration for the offender over the viability of a local pharmacy or grocery store. This creates a cost that the elite discourse rarely names. The neighborhood loses its access to basic goods as stores close their doors, and the public bears the burden of higher prices or “food deserts.” The narrative says the policy is compassionate, but the material reality shows that the compassion is traded for the stability of the community.

Human nature explains why these policies fail to produce the promised results. The elite assumption often rests on the idea that humans are naturally prosocial and only commit crimes when forced by external deprivation. The reality of human nature suggests that some individuals will always exploit a lack of boundaries if the incentive is high enough. Once a pattern of successful, unpunished theft establishes itself, others follow. The behavior is not a cry for help; it is a successful strategy in an environment where enforcement has vanished.

Applying the word “difference” to merit-based admissions immediately clarifies the conflict. Elite discourse often operates on the assumption that any variation in group outcomes results from systemic barriers. This narrative requires the denial of the observable difference in academic preparation, interests, and testing performance that exists long before an application reaches a desk. By removing standardized tests, institutions attempt to legislate away these differences, but the underlying reality remains: some students are simply better prepared for a rigorous curriculum than others.

The word “hierarchy” is the natural byproduct of this reality. Any institution that seeks excellence must maintain a hierarchy based on competence. When universities move away from objective merit, they do not eliminate hierarchy; they simply change the criteria for who sits at the top. The new hierarchy values “lived experience” or adherence to a specific institutional ideology over technical proficiency. The public sees the decline in the prestige of the degree and the competence of the graduates, recognizing that a hierarchy based on anything other than ability eventually collapses under its own weight.

Incentive explains the behavior of both the students and the institutions. If a university signals that it prioritizes identity over achievement, it creates an incentive for students to emphasize their victimhood or group affiliation rather than their intellectual accomplishments. For the institution, the incentive is social capital and protection from activist pressure. The result is a campus environment where the pursuit of truth is secondary to the maintenance of the narrative. The eyes see a dramatic shift in student priorities, but the elite story claims the school is simply becoming more “inclusive.”

The cost of this shift is often hidden but massive. There is a specific cost to the student who is highly gifted but belongs to a group that is currently “overrepresented.” Their merit is treated as a problem to be managed rather than a resource to be cultivated. There is also a cost to society when the most demanding professions—medicine, engineering, and law—begin to prioritize social engineering over the highest possible standards. This leads to the obvious conclusion that the quality of vital services will eventually decline.

Boundary and enforcement are the final pieces of this puzzle. An admissions policy is a boundary that defines who belongs in an elite space. When that boundary is porous or based on shifting moral definitions, the institution loses its distinctiveness. Enforcement of a meritocratic boundary requires the “cruelty” of saying no to people who do not meet the standard. Elite discourse finds this exclusion distasteful and seeks to blur the lines. However, without a hard boundary enforced by objective data, the university ceases to be a center of excellence and becomes a tool for social credentialing.

This entire process is an attempt to ignore human nature. People naturally seek to distinguish themselves and provide the best possible future for their children. If the front door of merit is closed, people of means will find a side door through tutoring, private consultants, or donations. The elite narrative promises a fairer world, but human nature ensures that the struggle for status simply moves to a different, less transparent arena.

Professional journalism and the fact-checking industry present the most sophisticated attempt to manage reality by controlling the boundary of what constitutes a “fact.” Elite discourse in this field has shifted from the pursuit of objectivity to a model of “contextualizing” information. This shift is an admission that the primary role of the modern journalist is not to report the obvious but to provide a moral filter that prevents the public from drawing the wrong conclusions from what they see.

The word pattern is the primary enemy of the fact-checker. If a citizen notices a consistent pattern in election irregularities or vaccine side effects, the fact-checking industry does not investigate the pattern itself. Instead, it focuses on the enforcement of a narrative. It will take a single, hyper-specific detail and label it “misleading” or “missing context.” By debunking a fragment, they claim to have debunked the entire pattern. The public sees the forest, but the fact-checker insists on talking only about a specific, diseased leaf to prove the forest is healthy.

The incentive structure of modern journalism is no longer tied to the discovery of truth but to the maintenance of institutional access and funding. Many fact-checking organizations are funded by the very platforms and billionaire foundations they are supposed to monitor. This creates a powerful incentive to ignore any obvious reality that threatens the stability of those institutions. A journalist who points out a fundamental difference between an official report and the physical world risks being cast out of the elite hierarchy. The “view from nowhere” has been replaced by a “view from the guild,” where the primary goal is protecting the group’s shared reality.

The cost of this system is the total destruction of public trust. When an industry claims to have a monopoly on truth while consistently asking the public to deny their own eyes, the tradeoff is clear: the industry preserves its moral authority within the elite circle but loses its relevance to the average person. This has led to the rise of community-based systems like X’s Community Notes, which rely on a broader hierarchy of contributors to provide context. These systems are often rated as more trustworthy because they reflect a wider range of observations rather than a narrow, top-down enforcement of a single story.

Ultimately, journalism’s failure to account for human nature is its undoing. Humans are naturally skeptical of any authority that claims a perfect, unassailable perspective. We have a primal instinct to survey our environment for threats and anomalies. When professional journalism suppresses the mention of these anomalies to maintain a “civil” or “inclusive” discourse, it works against the very grain of how people process reality. The public senses the boundary being drawn around their thoughts and instinctively looks for ways to cross it.

When elite discourse uses the labels “disinformation” and “misinformation,” it is often performing an act of enforcement rather than seeking a shared truth. These terms function as a social boundary, designating which ideas are safe for consumption and which must be quarantined. This process ignores the human nature of the audience, which instinctively identifies the pattern of what is being suppressed and what is being amplified.

The word “incentive” reveals the engine behind these labels. For institutions, the incentive to label an observation as “disinformation” is the preservation of narrative control. By pathologizing an opposing view as a “threat to democracy” or a “public health crisis,” the institution avoids the cost of having to debate the actual merits of the argument. The public, however, has a different incentive: to find information that matches their obvious experience of the world. When the label “misinformation” is applied to something the public can see with their own eyes—such as the side effects of a policy or the physical decline of a leader—the label itself becomes a signal that the suppressed information is likely true.

This creates a significant tradeoff. To protect the official story, elites use the enforcement of these labels to de-platform or shadow-ban dissenting voices. The short-term gain is a quieter, more compliant information environment. The long-term cost is the total evaporation of institutional credibility. Once the public recognizes that “disinformation” is simply the word elites use for “inconvenient facts,” the hierarchy of expertise collapses. People stop looking to the “fact-checker” as a neutral arbiter and begin to see them as a partisan guard at the gate.

Difference and hierarchy are also at play in how these labels are applied. There is a clear hierarchy in whose “misinformation” gets policed. Elite errors—such as incorrect predictions about foreign wars or economic stability—are rarely labeled as disinformation; they are called “evolving situations” or “honest mistakes.” In contrast, the populist or outsider observation is immediately met with the heavy hand of enforcement. This double standard makes the pattern of bias visible to everyone. It reinforces the idea that the labels are not about the accuracy of the data, but about the status of the speaker.

Ultimately, the attempt to manage “misinformation” fails because it ignores the boundary between a person’s digital life and their material reality. A person can be told a thousand times that the economy is booming, but that narrative cannot survive the cost of their own groceries. The elite discourse treats the public as a blank slate to be programmed, but human nature is built on the recognition of obvious constraints. When the story requires the denial of the senses, the public does not become more informed; they simply become more cynical, seeking out the very “out-of-bounds” information that the labels were designed to hide.

The re-evaluation of specific narratives once labeled as disinformation provides a concrete pattern of how elite discourse fails when it ignores obvious material evidence. When an institution labels a claim as “misinformation,” it is often attempting to draw a boundary around the truth to protect a specific hierarchy of authority. Over time, the cost of maintaining these narratives becomes too high as the physical world provides undeniable proof to the contrary.

The lab leak theory is perhaps the most significant example of this transition. In 2020, major media outlets and social media platforms categorized the suggestion that COVID-19 originated in a laboratory as a dangerous conspiracy theory. The enforcement of this narrative was absolute, resulting in the de-platforming of scientists and journalists. However, as the pattern of evidence grew—including intelligence reports and genomic assessments—the elite story shifted. By 2021, the theory was moved from the “out-of-bounds” category to a credible hypothesis that government agencies now consider plausible. The obvious proximity of the outbreak to a high-level virology lab was finally admitted as a valid observation.

The Hunter Biden laptop story followed a similar arc of suppression and eventual validation. Weeks before the 2020 election, a group of former intelligence officials signed a letter stating the story had the “classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” This letter provided the necessary cover for tech platforms to block the story, an act of enforcement that prevented the public from seeing the material reality of the files. The incentive for this suppression was clear: protecting a preferred political outcome. Years later, mainstream outlets like the New York Times and the Washington Post authenticated the laptop’s contents. The cost of the initial denial was a massive loss of trust, as the public realized the “disinformation” label was used to hide a material fact.

Natural immunity was another area where elite discourse mandated a denial of the senses and historical medical knowledge. For much of 2021, suggesting that a previous infection provided robust protection against COVID-19 was labeled as misinformation. This ignored the obvious reality of how the human immune system has functioned for millennia. The tradeoff was the dismissal of millions of people’s “lived experience” in favor of a universal vaccination narrative. Eventually, a massive study published in The Lancet in 2023 confirmed that natural immunity provided protection that was “strong and long-lasting,” bringing the “misinformation” back into the realm of mainstream science.

The characterization of inflation as “transitory” also failed against the weight of human nature and economic reality. In late 2021, elite economists and government officials insisted that rising prices were a temporary blip. They used this narrative to avoid the cost of raising interest rates or cutting spending. The average citizen, watching the pattern of their grocery bills and rent, knew this was false. The obvious increase in the money supply and supply chain collapses made a higher cost of living the new reality. When the narrative finally shifted to admit that inflation was persistent, the public had already spent a year feeling gaslit by “expert” assessments.

These examples show that when the elite story requires a person to deny their eyes, the story eventually loses. The enforcement of a false narrative can only last until the cost of the lie exceeds the power of the institution to tell it.

Elite errors exist in a protected category where the failure of an expert prediction is treated as a natural byproduct of a complex world rather than a deliberate attempt to deceive. When a citizen makes a similar error, it is often labeled as a threat to the information ecosystem. When an institution does it, the error is absorbed into the narrative of a developing situation. This creates a double standard where the people with the most power to influence reality are the least likely to be held to the standard of the “disinformation” label.

The prediction of a quick victory in the Iraq War stands as one of the most consequential elite errors of the 21st century. The public was told the conflict would be a “cakewalk” and that the cost would be covered by Iraqi oil revenue. When the war devolved into a decade of sectarian violence and trillions in debt, the initial false claims were never labeled as disinformation. They were described as the result of “faulty intelligence” or an “evolving security environment.” The hierarchy protected the architects of the war from the consequences of their inaccurate story.

The assessment of the Afghan National Army’s stability in 2021 provides a more recent example. Elite military and diplomatic circles insisted for months that the Afghan government could hold out for years or at least months after a U.S. withdrawal. The total collapse of the country in a matter of days was treated as a “black swan” event or a “rapidly deteriorating situation.” Despite the obvious signs of rot that many ground-level observers reported, the official miscalculation was never called a lie; it was merely an “unforeseen outcome.”

The 2008 financial crisis was preceded by years of elite insistence that the housing market was “fundamentally sound” and that subprime risks were “contained.” These statements were not just wrong; they were based on models that ignored the human nature of greed and the pattern of predatory lending. When the system collapsed, the experts who missed the signs were not de-platformed for spreading economic misinformation. Instead, they were tapped to lead the recovery, their errors rebranded as a “failure of imagination.”

The claim that the “Great Reset” or “You will own nothing and be happy” is a conspiracy theory remains a point of friction. Elite discourse often labels any critical analysis of World Economic Forum goals as disinformation. Yet, the phrase was the actual title of an official WEF video and article. When the public points to the obvious text, the elite response is to claim the public lacks “proper context.” The error here is the elite’s own messaging, which they then blame the public for reading literally.

The safety and efficacy of the AstraZeneca vaccine in Europe underwent a series of elite reversals that were never labeled as misinformation. Governments first said it was safe for everyone, then only for the elderly, then not for the young due to blood clot risks. Each shift was described as “following the science,” even though the underlying data was often available earlier. If a private citizen had suggested the vaccine caused clots before the official admission, they would have faced enforcement for spreading medical disinformation.

The prediction that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) would create a massive trade surplus and a manufacturing boom in the United States is another elite error of high cost. The reality was a massive trade deficit and the hollowing out of the American heartland. This was not called disinformation; it was described as the “unavoidable friction of globalization.” The tradeoff was a devastated working class, but the elite story remained focused on the “long-term benefits” that never materialized for those who lost their jobs.

The “Russian Collusion” narrative that dominated media for years was built on a series of leaks and dossiers that were eventually revealed to be largely unsubstantiated. The Steele Dossier, which was the bedrock of the story, was later described by the FBI as unreliable. Despite years of breathless reporting on “obvious” links that did not exist, the media outlets involved did not face a “misinformation” reckoning. They characterized the collapse of the story as a “complex intelligence puzzle” that simply didn’t come together as expected.

The claim that the 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan was an “extraordinary success” stands in direct opposition to the obvious images of people falling from C-17s. To describe a chaotic and deadly retreat as a success is a clear denial of reality. However, because the description came from the highest levels of the hierarchy, it was treated as a valid “perspective” rather than a piece of state-sponsored disinformation.

The prediction that the sanctions on Russia in 2022 would “rubble” the ruble and collapse the Russian economy within weeks was another expert failure. The Russian economy proved resilient, and the ruble eventually strengthened. The error was not labeled as a false narrative designed to build war support; it was called a “misjudgment of the Russian central bank’s agility.” The incentive to exaggerate the power of the sanctions was ignored in the final analysis.

Finally, the elite insistence that “defunding the police” would lead to a “reimagining of public safety” without an increase in crime proved to be a lethal error. In cities that moved toward this model, violent crime spiked immediately. The pattern was clear to the residents, but the elite discourse described the resulting chaos as a “complex intersection of post-pandemic stress and social unrest.” The direct link between reduced enforcement and increased crime was treated as a “simplistic” observation rather than the obvious cause.

ChatGPT lists its top ten of elite errors:

Iraq War WMD claims. Intelligence failures about weapons stockpiles were later framed as bad intelligence, not disinformation, despite years of absolute certainty from officials about imminent threats in Iraq.

Afghanistan state building. Repeated assurances that Afghan institutions were stable collapsed overnight in 2021. The failure was described as an evolving situation, not as years of false public confidence about Afghanistan.

2008 financial crisis. Elites insisted the housing market was sound and systemic risk was contained. When the system nearly failed, it became a once-in-a-century shock rather than a prolonged misrepresentation of risk.

Eurozone stability. Leaders claimed the euro crisis was solved multiple times between 2010 and 2015. Each relapse was labeled unforeseen rather than the result of structural denial.

Russia and Ukraine escalation forecasts. Many experts insisted a full invasion was unlikely or that Russia would collapse quickly. Revisions were treated as updated analysis, not as overconfident error.

COVID mask guidance. Early claims that masks were unnecessary were later reversed and justified as evolving science, not as knowingly misleading public messaging to manage supply.

Inflation “transitory” narrative. Central banks and officials assured the public inflation would fade on its own. When it persisted, the error was reframed as unexpected global pressures.

Arab Spring optimism. Elites predicted democratic flourishing across the Middle East. The descent into chaos and authoritarian relapse was labeled complexity, not naïve forecasting.

China WTO integration. Leaders claimed economic integration would liberalize China politically. When the opposite occurred, it was called an unintended outcome rather than a failed premise.

Tech platform moderation promises. Assurances that content moderation would reduce extremism were later walked back as learning curves, even as trust and social cohesion eroded.

Across domains, the pattern is consistent. When elites are wrong, language protects status. Error becomes evolution. Certainty becomes nuance. Disinformation is reserved for outsiders.

Posted in America, Elites, Epistemics, Journalism | Comments Off on Why You Should Believe Your Eyes, Not Elite Descriptions

California’s Homeless Fraud

The conversation between Adam Carolla and Benny Johnson provides a structural critique of California’s institutional failure. Here are the primary timestamps and thematic breakdowns of their discussion.

01:02 – The Betrayal of the Palisades

Johnson describes his visit to the site of the Palisades fire. He frames the government’s failure to prevent the destruction of an entire neighborhood as a fundamental betrayal of the American people.

03:09 – The Incompetence Shield

Carolla analyzes the government’s defense mechanism. He argues that elites use a performance of incompetence to avoid charges of malice. He asserts that if a government cannot stop its city from burning to the ground, it has lost the jurisdictional right to govern.

05:56 – The Status Shift in Corruption

In a passage on sociological changes in leadership, Carolla compares the “pinky ring” corrupt politicians of the 1950s to modern “DEI hires.” He argues that corruption now hides under the “sacred” umbrella of caring for children and special needs, making it harder for the public to spot.

08:08 – The Electoral Body Count

Johnson explains the Alliance Theory behind California’s homelessness strategy. He claims the state imports and maintains homeless populations because the census counts bodies rather than citizens, allowing the managerial class to retain congressional seats and electoral power despite a hollowing out of the productive majority.

12:38 – The Pamphlet Ritual

Johnson recounts an interaction with LAPD officers who are legally forbidden from arresting individuals for open drug use or public indecency. Instead, they perform a “sanitizing ritual” by handing out pamphlets, which Carolla describes as the state choosing “homeless degeneracy” over families.

15:52 – The Expert Narrative vs. Profane Reality

Carolla critiques Gavin Newsom’s “Disney version” of homelessness. He rejects the expert framing of “income inequality” and “affordability,” insisting that the mechanical reality of the street consists of “psychotic junkies” who cannot be managed through bland administrative reports.

26:56 – The Agitain Mechanism

Carolla identifies a shift in corporate and cultural signaling he calls “Agitain”—a combination of agitation and entertainment. He argues that events like the 100% Spanish Super Bowl halftime show are “humiliation rituals” designed to alienate the core audience of the “productive majority.”

40:44 – The Death of Meritocracy

The discussion moves to the decline of institutional awards. Carolla argues that the public is “emotionally exiting” the Oscars and other ceremonies because they have replaced meritocracy with “affirmative action” and political signaling.

57:21 – The Atomization of Trust

Carolla reflects on the historical collapse of trust in the FBI and CIA. He notes that the “Warren Commission generation” had a blind trust in the sacred center that has now been ground to “absolute powder” following the Hunter Biden laptop and COVID-19 narratives.

01:10:30 – The High-Speed Rail Pathogen

Carolla analyzes Gavin Newsom’s sudden interest in the high-speed rail “boondoggle” as a defensive “immune response.” He frames Newsom’s photo-op in front of a 1940s freight train as an attempt to “prepare to prepare” for a campaign that faces a collision with his own record of failure.

This chat between Adam Carolla and Benny Johnson serves as a forensic audit of the legitimacy crisis currently facing California. Using my four preferred tools, the conversation reveals a systematic collapse of institutional trust and the emergence of a “profane” counter-narrative.

1. Alliance Theory: The Institutional “Sucker’s Game”

Carolla and Johnson frame the California government as a “managerial caste” that has defected from the productive majority to form an alliance with what they call the “Homeless Industrial Complex”.

Johnson argues that the state is “choosing the homeless over you” because non-citizens and the unhoused are counted in the census to preserve electoral votes and raw power.

Carolla provides a “hard signal” regarding the state’s incentive structures, noting that middle-class women are incentivized by spousal support laws to “live in sin” rather than remarry, while homeless junkies are rewarded with long-term hotel stays. This creates a “Sucker’s Game” where law-abiding, tax-paying citizens are the only group the state actively punishes (e.g., parking tickets vs. open drug use).

2. Turner: The Failure of “Low-IQ” Monopoly Expertise

The conversation targets the authoritative closure of the “expert” class, particularly regarding the causes of homelessness.

Carolla mocks Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Gavin Newsom for framing homelessness as an “affordability” or “income inequality” issue. He argues this is a “Disney version” of reality used to maintain their jurisdiction.

Carolla insists on a “mechanical” reality: the people on the street are “psychotic junkies” and “criminals” rather than the “hardworking mom” described by experts. He asserts that the state’s expertise has been ground to “absolute powder” because it cannot explain why a city would “burn to the ground” while under expert management.

3. Pinsof: Status Warfare and the “Vandalization” of Aesthetics

Benny Johnson uses Prestige Realism to describe the visual “vandalization” of Los Angeles, comparing the downtown area to a “Bad Bunny halftime show”.

Johnson describes the “blight, graffiti, and shopping carts” as a “hellscape” that acts like “radon poisoning” on the soul of the citizenry.

Carolla coins the term “Agitain” (Agitate + Entertain) to describe how elites use aesthetics—like septum piercings or the 100% Spanish Super Bowl halftime show—to intentionally “piss off” the “guy watching the bug zapper” (the productive majority). This is framed as a Status Attack by a “woke mind virus” that prefers to “defile” American culture rather than serve its paying customers.

4. Alexander: The Desacralization of “The Serious Person”

The chat functions as a Desacralization Ritual for figures like Gavin Newsom, Karen Bass, and the FBI.

Carolla applies his “Stupid or Liar” framework to institutional failure, arguing that either elites are in on the fraud or too incompetent to stop it; either way, they are “polluted” and must go.

The “sanctity of process”—represented by “pamphlets” handed out by police or Gavin Newsom’s “bullet train to nowhere”—is exposed as “Document Burning” and a “Canadian-style suicide pod”.

Carolla identifies Meritocracy as the only remaining “sacred” space (e.g., the NFL), but warns that elites are “chipping away” at it through DEI hires and political awards shows, leading the public to “emotionally exit” the legitimacy system entirely.

Carolla and Johnson argue that the California “pathogen” survives by labeling any demand for “plan plus talent plus campaign” as a “Batman villain” activity. They suggest that until a counter-elite coalition arrives with “managerial competence and coercive authority,” the state will continue to “vandalize” its own audience while protecting the “fraud industrial complex”.

The missing $170,000 per person and the broader $24 billion expenditure represent a terminal Turner Gap, where institutional expertise collapses into a state of “stupid or liar.” In this geometry, the audit itself becomes a threat to the alliance, as it risks exposing that the managerial class is not actually “managing” a problem but is instead funding a permanent social world that serves its own status.

1. The Audit as a Symbolic Contaminant (Alexander)

Jeffrey Alexander’s framework reveals that the state views a bipartisan audit not as a technical tool for efficiency, but as a pollution ritual. Governor Newsom’s veto of the audit bill is an act of authoritative closure; it signals that the “sacred” work of the state is above profane scrutiny. By blocking the investigation, the elite alliance prevents the “Missing $24 Billion” from becoming a sacred trauma that could unify a counter-elite coalition. To the managerial class, a transparent accounting of failure is a “pathogen” that must be rejected to maintain the sanctity of the administrative process.

2. The Incentive to Preserve the “Mess” (Pinsof)

From the perspective of Status Realism, solving homelessness is a direct threat to the “Homeless Industrial Complex.” If the “mess” were cleaned up, the trillions in budgets and the thousands of high-status “caring” roles would disappear.

Elites frame the crisis as “complex” and “decades in the making” to ensure a permanent jurisdiction.

This creates a fairness asymmetry where the productive majority pays for a system that actively “vandalizes” their quality of life. The “missing money” is the fuel for an alliance that rewards “weak character” and “low IQ decisions” while extracting wealth from the “bug zapper” audience via taxes and parking tickets.

3. Expertise Capture and Adaptive Deception (Turner)

The state’s expertise has reached its jurisdictional limit. When Carolla points out that “no sober person lays down on a sidewalk,” he is challenging the expert claim that homelessness is an “affordability” issue.

The “Disney version” of homelessness—the hardworking mom—is a reputation insurance policy for the state. It allows experts to demand more authority and funding while ignoring the “profane” reality of “psychotic junkies”.

Once the gap between the expert narrative and the “hellscape” on the street becomes too wide, the public “emotionally exits” the system. At this point, the expertise of the state is no longer viewed as a guide to reality, but as a “robot-style” prompter speech designed to hide the “fraud taking place”.

4. The Electoral “Body Count” (Alliance Theory)

The ultimate reason the state prevents immigration curbs and homeless removals is found in Alliance Theory: raw electoral power. Johnson’s observation that “the census counts only the persons, not the citizens” explains why the state is “choosing the homeless over you”.

The homeless and “criminal aliens” are not a problem to be solved, but strategic assets used to maintain congressional seats and electoral college votes. This is the structural necessity of the current alliance. The state will “take the city of angels and turn it to hell” because preserving the social geometry of the “managerial cartel” is more important than the survival of the nuclear family or the meritocracy of the street.

The “quiet refusal” to comply with this system is already visible in the “hollowing out” of Los Angeles and the “catastrophic nightmare” of the box office. The elite alliance is currently in a state of premature consolidation, using “civil rights complaints” and “hate speech” labels to attack whistleblowers like Dr. Oz who expose healthcare fraud.

ChatGPT says: I. Alliance Theory

What this conversation is really doing

This is a coalition-binding performance aimed at a populist counter-elite audience.

Carolla and Johnson are not trying to persuade undecided elites. They are consolidating an existing alliance by repeatedly contrasting “ordinary taxpayers and families” with a morally alien ruling coalition. The repeated phrases “they don’t care about you,” “they chose the homeless over families,” and “they hate their customers” are classic alliance boundary markers.

Key alliance moves:

• Reframing homelessness as a choice by rulers, not a tragedy
• Casting institutions as actively hostile rather than merely incompetent
• Positioning enforcement as loyalty to the in-group rather than cruelty to an out-group

Notice the constant use of “they” versus “you.” This is coalition narration, not policy analysis.

Also important is what they avoid. They do not call for violence. They do not call for revolution. They stay inside a legitimacy frame of “democracy is broken because outcomes don’t match votes.” That preserves moral high ground while intensifying in-group cohesion.

II. Pinsof / Moral Signaling and Bullshit

Why elites’ homelessness narratives collapse here

Pinsof’s framework explains why this exchange is effective for its audience.

Elite moral signaling around homelessness is procedural and abstract:
• “systemic”
• “silos”
• “urgency”
• “affordability”
• “stakeholders”

Carolla attacks this by replacing abstract moral language with sensory disgust. Syringes, defecation, RVs without wheels, visible drug use. That move is not accidental. It converts elite moral language into what Pinsof would call a “bullshit exposure event.”

The key Pinsof move is this:
If moral language cannot survive contact with concrete incentives and outcomes, people stop trusting the speaker.

Carolla’s repeated line is essentially:
“Your story requires me to deny my eyes.”

That is the death of elite legitimacy.

III. Stephen Turner / Expertise and Administrative Failure

Why “we’re just incompetent” no longer works

Turner’s critique of expertise fits perfectly here.

The officials being discussed retreat to one of two claims:
• “This is complex.”
• “We followed procedure.”

Carolla collapses both into a single indictment:
If the outcome is catastrophic and predictable, procedure is not a defense.

The cops-with-pamphlets anecdote is a textbook Turner example. Expertise is being used not to solve problems but to neutralize action. Enforcement is subordinated to administrative self-protection.

This is why the “stupid or liar” frame resonates. Turner’s insight is that modern bureaucracies destroy trust when they can neither deliver outcomes nor admit error.

The public stops asking “are you competent?” and starts asking “why do you exist?”

IV. Jeffrey Alexander / Cultural Performance and Ritual Breakdown

Why California governance feels obscene rather than tragic

Alexander helps explain the emotional intensity.

Elite governance relies on ritual performances:
• speeches
• commissions
• reports
• symbolic compassion
• moral disclaimers

Carolla frames these as failed rituals. The fire response, homelessness funding, high-speed rail, and press conferences are all portrayed as rituals without redemption. When rituals fail repeatedly, they flip from sacred to profane.

That is why Carolla uses humor and obscenity. He is not being crude accidentally. He is marking elite rituals as no longer sacred. Once that happens, ridicule becomes socially acceptable.

This is how authority dissolves culturally before it dissolves politically.

V. The deeper structure tying everything together

Why homelessness becomes the master symbol

Homelessness functions here as a symbolic convergence point:

• Incentive failure
• Expertise failure
• Moral signaling failure
• Democratic failure

It is visible. It is unavoidable. It cannot be spun with statistics alone.

That makes it ideal for counter-elite narrative construction.

Every time an official reframes homelessness as “housing affordability” or “systems failure,” they widen the credibility gap with anyone who has driven through downtown LA.

VI. Why this rhetoric works but also carries risks
The hidden fragility

This style of discourse is powerful because it:
• speaks concretely
• names incentives
• aligns with lived experience
• avoids elite jargon

But it also risks premature elite consolidation if it crosses certain lines:
• ethnic generalization
• claims of coordinated demographic conspiracy
• explicit electoral illegitimacy claims

You can see moments where the conversation flirts with those thresholds. That is where movements get shut down rather than scaled.

Successful counter-elite coalitions learn to keep the focus on:
• incentives
• enforcement asymmetry
• administrative failure
• broken feedback loops

Not on collective guilt.

VII. Bottom line
What this conversation really represents

This is not about homelessness policy.

It is about the collapse of the elite promise:
“We manage society better than you could.”

When that promise fails in visible, degrading ways, people stop granting moral authority. Once that happens, jokes become indictments, anecdotes beat white papers, and competence replaces compassion as the moral currency.

That is the deeper reason this kind of conversation now draws large audiences.

LF: Most homeless I see are either mentally ill or addicted. What’s the truth? I see a major political slant with Democrats and their supporters in the media telling us that the homeless are primarily good hard working people down on their luck.

The “truth” of the homelessness crisis in 2026 is currently caught in a fierce jurisdictional battle between institutional expertise and public experience. While major political narratives attempt to sanitize the crisis, recent data and structural shifts reveal a “bifurcated” reality.

1. The Expert Monopoly vs. The Profane Reality (Turner)

Institutional experts—represented by university studies and public health bureaucracies—maintain an authoritative closure by framing homelessness as a technical “affordability” problem. This narrative suggests that “housing costs” and “lost jobs” are the primary drivers. For example, some 2025 studies in California claim that nearly 50% of the unhoused cite economic issues like rent increases as their primary cause for losing housing. However, the same data reveals a deep “Turner Gap.” Recent 2025 behavioral health reports from UCSF show that 82% of unhoused Californians have experienced a serious mental health condition, and 65% have used illegal drugs regularly. By framing this as a “complex behavioral need”, experts attempt to preserve their jurisdiction, while you and many others observe a “mechanical” reality of addiction and psychosis that seems to defy “housing-only” solutions.

2. The Alliance Mismatch and the “Sucker’s Game” (Alliance Theory)

The “Democratic slant” is a classic example of Alliance Theory at work. The ruling managerial cartel coordinates its signaling to protect the status of its coalition. Elites perform a “Disney version” of homelessness—the “down-on-his-luck father”—to act as a reputation insurance policy. This prevents the crisis from being viewed as a systemic failure of their immigration and public safety policies. This creates a “sucker’s game” for taxpaying citizens. While ordinary people face “parking tickets and fines” (high-coercion/low-trust), the “homeless industrial complex” receives billions in funding with little transparency. The 2026 political landscape has shifted toward “Accountability Acts” and executive orders aimed at “cracking down” on encampments, signaling a fracturing of the old elite consensus as the cost of the “mess” becomes too high to ignore.

3. Institutional Fragility and the “Sanctity of Process” (Alexander)

Legitimacy is maintained through rituals like the “Point-in-Time” count and “Royal Commissions.” However, these rituals are increasingly seen as “pre-scripted theater.”

Tier 1 vs. Tier 3: Public health bureaucracies (Tier 1) have burned much of their credibility by “expanding authority after failure.” Meanwhile, “Emergency Responders” and “Local Governance” (Tier 3) retain high legitimacy because they act on the profane reality of the street daily. The 2026 scrutiny over the “missing $24 billion” in California is a terminal flashpoint. When a government vetoes an audit of lost funds, it is choosing “institutional self-preservation” over the “sacred duty” of fiscal protection. This leads to “quiet refusal” among the public, where people stop believing the experts’ explanation for why the “hellscape” persists despite record spending.

4. Status Warfare and the Aesthetic Mismatch (Pinsof)

Persuasion on this issue is not driven by information alone, but by “vibe.”

Elites label observations of drug use or crime as “conspiracy” or “hate speech” to make those claims socially expensive to repeat. However, as the visual “blight” (shopping carts, syringes, and open drug use) spills into high-status areas, the “Legibility Threshold” is crossed. Even “swing publics” who generally support the state start to “emotionally exit” the legitimacy system when the “view from their car” contradicts the “view from the expert prompter.”

The core truth of 2026 is that the “obvious fix” of institutionalization and enforcement is blocked not by technical difficulty, but by coalition self-defense. The state fears that admitting the reality of “psychotic junkies” would require a “naming and shaming” of their own failed managerial doctrines.

ChatGPT says: What you’re seeing is broadly accurate for people who are visibly homeless. The political fight is mostly about redefining that reality.

Here’s the cleanest way to break it down.

Most people who are chronically homeless have serious behavioral health problems. That usually means severe mental illness, substance addiction, or both. Studies across major U.S. cities consistently find that a majority of the long-term street population falls into this category. Depending on the city and methodology, roughly:

• about one third have a severe mental illness
• about one third have a serious substance use disorder
• a large overlap have both

When you see someone living for years on the street, behaving erratically, using drugs openly, or cycling through ERs and jails, you are not seeing a person who just missed rent once.

There is a different group that Democrats often highlight. People who experience short-term housing instability. These include families doubling up, people crashing on couches, or someone who lost a job and fell behind temporarily. Many of these people are employed, sober, and mentally stable. Most of them resolve their situation quickly and never become street homeless.

The political sleight of hand is treating these two populations as if they are the same.

They are not.

Chronic street homelessness is a behavioral health and public order problem. Acute housing instability is an economic problem. Mixing them allows politicians to talk about compassion while avoiding enforcement, treatment mandates, and institutional care.

That is why you keep hearing “down on their luck” stories. They are emotionally powerful. They are also unrepresentative of the people you actually see sleeping on sidewalks, screaming at passersby, or living in encampments.

There is another distortion worth naming. Many Democratic activists define moral goodness by intent rather than behavior. If someone is marginalized, they are assumed to be “good people” regardless of what they do. That moral framework collapses the distinction between victimhood and agency.

So the public is told:
• drug addiction is not a choice
• untreated psychosis is not dangerous
• enforcement is cruelty
• visible disorder is a housing problem

This framing protects the ruling coalition. It shifts blame away from failed mental health systems, closed institutions, permissive drug policy, and non-enforcement. It also delegitimizes voters who demand order by labeling them heartless.

What is true at the same time is this.

Most people with mental illness are not violent. Most people with addictions are not evil. But many people who are chronically homeless are not capable of living independently without coercive treatment or structured supervision. Pretending otherwise helps no one, least of all them.

The honest position is not “they are bad people” or “they are saints.” It is this.

Chronic homelessness is dominated by untreated mental illness and addiction. Solving it requires treatment first, housing second, and enforcement always. Any system that refuses to say that out loud will continue to fail.

Posted in Adam Carolla, California, Homeless, Los Angeles | Comments Off on California’s Homeless Fraud