Just Who Are These People?

 

This is the first in a cluster of posts in which I will wrestle with the incredible departure from reason displayed by half of America and most of the human race, but mostly just vent. How in this world did they get that way? Who the %&##! are these people? A fundamental answer will have to wait a few days but be assured I have one.

Actually, I have several fundamental answers, which is something of a problem. There’s been a steady beat of posts here on R> trying to make some sense of the madness of the left. None of their explanations were convincing, and mine won’t be either.

Today all I have is a snapshot of the madness in progress. It might not offer great insight, but it does illustrate the sheer perverse weirdness of an individual leftist. Matt Yglesias offers up a paean to goofball Cory Booker’s recent fauxlibuster stunt. Of course he values the event for its spectacle of resissstanssse,

It was the symbolic resistance we’d been waiting for

but that’s nothing new. I guess it does illustrate how the degenerate mind values representation over substance, feeling over reason, and oxytocin over dopamine, but it isn’t a surprise. I’ll have more to say about two of those choices later, if I don’t run out of energy.

Are we all familiar with the rhetorical strategy of motte-and-bailey? Towns in the Middle Ages featured an open and lightly protected expanse, the motte, where the town conducted the business of life. When danger came, the people retreated to the fortified bailey, which they could more easily defend. The New York Times can insinuate the idea that the nation was founded and built on black bodies into every aspect of their considerable reach. When challenged, they claim that it is “nothing more than a historical look at racism in America,” as this article in American Thinker put it.

This probably dates me, but John Stewart is one of the foremost practitioners of the technique. Bill O’Reilly aptly called Stewart’s variant “clown nose on – clown nose off.”

So, the motte is where they push to end fossil fuels, pay endless reparations, open all the borders, trans all the kids… I didn’t know the motte had grown so large. When they’re called on it and lose an election, they retreat to safety where it’s all “protect Social Security for the children” until the storm passes. Right?

No, not right. Here’s Matt Yglesias’ vision of the motte and bailey (you can click it to read his post if you want):

Ohh kay. In his eyes, the loose and indefensible but good-to-have things in the motte are the issues that I once thought would matter most to the normal, sheeplike left. But this premier leftist considers them expendable. I mean, I thought entitlement programs and fair taxation were must-defend core ideas of the left. Don’t they belong in the bailey?

No. For this leftist, the bailey is where they keep and defend the precious: ending fossil fuels, killing the Boer, and preening each others’ moral superiority.

The first explanation that occurs to me is that Yglesias has a different vision of the forces he faces than I had supposed. For his application of the metaphor to make sense, I have to assume he’s not concerned about fending off criticism from the center but rather he fears attacks from the even-more-over-medicated far-left. He would have his fellow propagandists limit their open talk to easily defended vague soft-left platitudes. When they’re attacked by their more virulent compatriots, they switch to the more important extreme positions.

I’m unsure what this moral inversion implies.

Next time out I’ll blather and try to not misrepresent what Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Sowell had to say about the question. Just who the heck are these people?


  1. Petit verdot, Colterris, Grand Valley, CO 2020
Published in Religion and Philosophy
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  1. Addiction Is A Choice Member
    Addiction Is A Choice
    @AddictionIsAChoice

    A toast  –  to @barfly  –  *raises glass*

    Well done, sir.

    • #1
  2. Arahant Member
    Arahant
    @Arahant

    I take it this was why you wanted that information?


    I shared it in the other place.

    • #2
  3. namlliT noD Member
    namlliT noD
    @DonTillman

    Barfly: There’s been a steady beat of posts here on R> trying to make some sense of the madness of the left.

    Consider the possibility that these people are on a “team”.   They do stuff that they’re told will benefit the team.  And they do so with energy and exuberance.  The more the better.  Because energy and exuberance are linked to success.

    They’ll support others on the team.  And others on the team will support them, multiplying their efforts.   Which can certainly be rewarding.  

    It’s okay if it crosses the line into crazy.  Crazy is a form of exuberance that can get noticed.

    Oh, and the mainstream media is on the team.  They’ll support you all the way.

    The opposing team is the enemy, so it’s good to dump on them.   Call them poopyheads.  Or “racists”, “fascists”, “Nazis”, “deplorables”, whatever.   It doesn’t matter, it doesn’t have to be true,  or accurate, or… heck, it doesn’t have to even make sense.  It all works.  The point is to dump on them.

    Now… none of what I’ve described here has anything to do with making a coherent reasoned argument about an issue.  But it is consistent with what we observe.

    • #3
  4. E. Kent Golding Moderator
    E. Kent Golding
    @EKentGolding

    Navarro is a man of the Left.

    • #4
  5. Dr. Bastiat Member
    Dr. Bastiat
    @drbastiat

    Barfly: he fears attacks from the even-more-over-medicated far-left

    …or perhaps under-medicated…

    • #5
  6. Susan Quinn Member
    Susan Quinn
    @SusanQuinn

    E. Kent Golding (View Comment):

    Navarro is a man of the Left.

    I’m just curious. What makes you say that, Kent?

    • #6
  7. RufusRJones Member
    RufusRJones
    @RufusRJones

    Susan Quinn (View Comment):

    E. Kent Golding (View Comment):

    Navarro is a man of the Left.

    I’m just curious. What makes you say that, Kent?

    He ran as a politician at least twice, and both times as a Democrat. He loves central planning, and he can’t explain it. Harvard PhD in economics.

     

    • #7
  8. E. Kent Golding Moderator
    E. Kent Golding
    @EKentGolding

    RufusRJones (View Comment):

    Susan Quinn (View Comment):

    E. Kent Golding (View Comment):

    Navarro is a man of the Left.

    I’m just curious. What makes you say that, Kent?

    He ran as a politician at least twice, and both times as a Democrat. He loves central planning, and he can’t explain it. Harvard PhD in economics.

     

    Ran as a Progressive Woke Democrat in California.    Maybe he was faking it to get elected in California, or maybe he is a progressive.

    • #8
  9. EJHill Staff
    EJHill
    @EJHill

    There are two types of people in this world and they have many subsets.

    Type one accepts mankind for what it is and seeks to limit its excesses through constrained governance and ordered liberty.

    Type two believes that they can make everything better if you would just give them the power to reorganize society. There are subsets of these people on the left and subsets of these people on the right. Both have abandoned reason and believe the federal government is to be used as a cudgel. As a matter of tactics and power politics there is nothing different between advancing DEI through economic coercion and trying to retard it through economic coercion. Don’t like government policy? Sue and harass through the courts. Don’t like the press you’re getting? Sue and harass through the courts – and then threaten to use the power of the government to cripple the “offending” businesses. 

    • #9
  10. Orange Gerald Coolidge
    Orange Gerald
    @Jose

    Barfly: Today all I have is a snapshot of the madness in progress. It might not offer great insight, but it does illustrate the sheer perverse weirdness of an individual leftist. Matt Yglesias offers up a paean to goofball Cory Booker’s recent fauxlibuster stunt. Of course he values the event for its spectacle of resissstanssse,

    I was watching the Kavanaugh hearing when “Spartacus” made his dramatic exit.

    “I cannot sit here, I cannot participate…” 

    I’ve never seen anyone comment on this, but a minute or two later he can be seen re-entering the chamber and taking a seat.

    • #10
  11. Henry Castaigne Member
    Henry Castaigne
    @HenryCastaigne

    Think of leftism like a religion. Ending fossil fuels and and transing kids is religiously appealing. Working class issues don’t move the soul. 

    • #11
  12. BastiatJunior Member
    BastiatJunior
    @BastiatJunior

    Barfly: Next time out I’ll blather and try to not misrepresent what Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Sowell had to say about the question. Just who the heck are these people?

    I guess I’m ignorant.  What did Jefferson and Sowell have to say?

    • #12
  13. Barfly Member
    Barfly
    @Barfly

    BastiatJunior (View Comment):

    Barfly: Next time out I’ll blather and try to not misrepresent what Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Sowell had to say about the question. Just who the heck are these people?

    I guess I’m ignorant. What did Jefferson and Sowell have to say?

    Coming this weekend.

    • #13
  14. BastiatJunior Member
    BastiatJunior
    @BastiatJunior

    Barfly (View Comment):

    BastiatJunior (View Comment):

    Barfly: Next time out I’ll blather and try to not misrepresent what Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Sowell had to say about the question. Just who the heck are these people?

    I guess I’m ignorant. What did Jefferson and Sowell have to say?

    Coming this weekend.

    Ok.  I get it.  Looking forward to it.

    • #14
  15. Arahant Member
    Arahant
    @Arahant

    Barfly (View Comment):

    BastiatJunior (View Comment):

    Barfly: Next time out I’ll blather and try to not misrepresent what Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Sowell had to say about the question. Just who the heck are these people?

    I guess I’m ignorant. What did Jefferson and Sowell have to say?

    Coming this weekend.

    *Leans against lamppost and whistles.*

    • #15
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