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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 31, 2023

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Richard Hanania is a man whom I do not always agree with but do appreciate for successfully pissing off people both on the left and the right. The ability to piss off people from both of those groups is, in my opinion, generally correlated with being right about things.

Well, Hanania has allegedly been linked to a pseudonym. The allegation is that about 10 years ago, he was routinely saying taboo things about race and gender issues under the name "Richard Hoste".

Some quotes:

It has been suggested that Sarah Palin is a sort of Rorschach test for Americans [...] The attractive, religious and fertile White woman drove the ugly, secular and barren White self-hating and Jewish elite absolutely mad well before there were any questions about her qualifications.

If they had decency, blacks would thank the white race for everything that they have.

Women simply didn’t evolve to be the decision makers in society [...] women’s liberation = the end of human civilization.

It's nothing very shocking for those of us who read dissident right stuff, and it's not even really that far away from Hanania's typical under-his-birth-name writing. But it may be a bridge too far for much of the more mainstream audience.

What I wonder is, which way shall Hanania go?

  1. Own it, say "yes I am Richard Hoste and I did write those things"? He would gain praise from some people for honesty, but he would also stand probably a pretty good chance of losing book deals, interviews with some mainstream figures, and so on.

  2. Deny deny deny?

  3. Ignore it?

I think that it is an interesting case study, the attempted take down of one of the more famous examples of what is now a pretty common sort of political writer: the Substacker whose views are just controversial and taboo enough to have a lot of appeal for non-mainstream audiences but are not so far into tabooness, in content and/or tone, to get the author branded a full-on thought-criminal.

Linking your real email adress to accounts commenting on outright white nationalist websites seems like an incredibly low IQ thing to do, and all the more weird for someone as obsessed with IQ as Hanania.

In recent years, he's been explicitly condemning the HBD right, even going on Emil Kirkegaard's blog to trash it to his face. I suspect Hanania probably understood that wignat politics was a dead end, but at the same time he couldn't pretend that HBD was false. So he tried to triangulate into a "moderate centrist" position, but apparently the ruling elite and its attack dogs are never far behind.

This will be an important test for the US right. The history of these doxxing events has shown that the right is all too happy to throw people under the bus for offending liberal sensibilities on issues like race. We'll see if this time is different.

This will be an important test for the US right. The history of these doxxing events has shown that the right is all too happy to throw people under the bus for offending liberal sensibilities on issues like race. We'll see if this time is different.

I don't think it should be. That dude that was working for Tucker as a writer might have been worth defending. Hanania? Not only do I not understand how he was ever taken seriously, dude's basically the personification of Hlynka's "alt-right progressive" meme. Also, he seems pretty happy throwing people under busses himself.

I don't know who Hlynka is, nor have I seen their meme. Care to link it?

@HlynkaCG is a long-time poster here, who has posited that what most people refer to as the "far right" or "alt-right" are better understood as offshoots of the left/progressive movement. For evidence, consider the history of the eugenics movement, the original party affiliation of the KKK, and progressive interest in Fascism and Communism prior to WWII, versus opposition to both from people like Lewis, Chesterton, Tolkien, etc.

people like Lewis, Chesterton, Tolkien, etc.

...Hobbes, Smith, Burke, Madison, Kipling...

Hobbes, Smith, Burke, Madison

Now this is downright anachronistic.

I don't think it is, there are distinct themes and lines of reasoning that can be followed from each to through to the next.

He is a regular poster here. He often makes these claims on these here pages.

Also, he seems pretty happy throwing people under busses himself.

This might be what does him in. He's been spending the better part of the recent past praising the liberal establishment and throwing people on the dissident right to the meatgrinder, even condemning them for racism.

In hindsight, it seems obvious he made a dash for respectability by opportunistically burning past bridges. Well, seen in that light, you could say this is karma in a sense. Who will now defend him after he did so much to alienate and even actively disparage those who used to read him?

throwing people on the dissident right to the meatgrinder, even condemning them for racism

I don’t think he did it as a ‘dash for respectability’, I think he did it because he has a genuine respect for power. And his views on racism are that a lot of it on the hard right isn’t motivated by measured consideration of the evidence but rather by pure tribal outgroup hatred for difference, by disgust in other words. This isn’t an original point - @DaseindustriesLtd made the same argument here very recently on a couple of occasions, for example when observing some German racism towards Turks. It certainly doesn’t make Hanania a ‘progressive’.

I don’t think he did it as a ‘dash for respectability’, I think he did it because he has a genuine respect for power.

They're the same picture.

It certainly doesn’t make Hanania a ‘progressive’.

Never claimed Hanania is a progressive. Surely you can do better than arguing against strawmen?

I don’t think he did it as a ‘dash for respectability’, I think he did it because he has a genuine respect for power

Same, same. Respectability is defined by those who have power and not by those who don't.

To be fair, those he threw to the wolves defending him would make him look worse to the people he wishes to be associated with. There is a reason why every election year both parties try to accuse the other of being supported by David Duke.

Maybe he lost the substack gig of having a loyal following of dissidents, but if he sacrificed perceived truth for wider reach, I doubt he cares about such a career path.

Hlynka’s meme is essentially that anyone on the right who doesn’t agree with the exact views of a gun-owning moral majority Reaganite hick in a flyover state circa 1987 is a secret “progressive”, so that isn’t a particularly useful distinction.

Or (mods), to put it more charitably, his is a very narrow, very particular, very recent definition that doesn’t encompass the vast majority of the rightist / conservative tradition in the West since the French Revolution.

Hlynka’s meme is essentially that anyone on the right who doesn’t agree with the exact views of a gun-owning moral majority Reaganite hick in a flyover state circa 1987 is a secret “progressive”

No, my claim is that there is a readily identifiable intellectual/philosophical tradition that starts with writers like Hobbes and Montaigne during the Protestant Reformation, progresses through thinkers like Smith, Madison, and Burke to become the "One Nation" (Tory), Abolitionist, and Republican movements of the 19th Century, which were then carried into the 20th by writers like Kipling, Lewis and Tolkien.

Furthermore, I maintain that this tradition exists distinctly from (and often in opposition to) the more progressive "Rousseauean" tradition from which the [current year] secular academic memeplex derives.

in other words the left-right spectrum is best understood as a religious schism within the European Enlightenment, and that left codes as intellectual not because they possess any great intellect, but because they were able to hollow out the institution of academia and wear it as a skinsuit.

If I were more like yourself and a few others on this forum I might have some comments why you in particular would want to misrepresent my views, but Im not, and I'm not going to make that comment because when you're born outside the Matrix you know in that the steak aint real.

Lewis and Tolkien (&Kipling?) certainly did not approve of any republican movements. And unless I misremember, Lewis is on record as saying he believed that socialism was the most Christian economic policy though he himself disliked it intensely. In general many of the English figures on that list were deeply dubious about American culture.

What everyone keeps trying to point out is that you have an incredibly specific interpretation of all those figures that is very distinctively postwar American.

There is indeed a vague tradition of pessimistic human-fallibility conservatism that is often opposed by a utopian human-perfectibility tradition. But they’re fuzzy, interbred and often linked with other elements. They are certainly not distinct enough for “only I / my tribe carry the true flame, and the rest of you are irredeemably corrupted by progressivism” style dismissals. They are also not quite the same as the progressive/conservative distinction.

left codes as intellectual not because they possess any great intellect, but because they were able to hollow out the institution of academia and wear it as a skinsuit.

Yes, I agree.

EDIT: plus the abolition movement was mostly Methodists and quakers (or utopian leftists) and Hobbes is best know as the great defender of absolute monarchy.

And unless I misremember, Lewis is on record as saying he believed that socialism was the most Christian economic policy though he himself disliked it intensely.

Unless I'm misremembering he talks about the political system Christianity aims for in Mere Christianity, and says that it would contain elements of conservatism, socialism, liberalism etc while resembling none of these as a whole.

No, you’re right. I apologise, it’s been a while. My only point is that these people do not fit into a nice beat tradition where they are build on each other.

Lewis and Tolkien (&Kipling?) certainly did not approve of any republican movements.

approving of a movement is not the same thing as being part of a movement or "a product" of it.

In fact, that's one of, if not the core, points of disagreement. Whether Stormfronters and SJWs like each other has zero bearing on whether or not they are they are drinking from the same well or using the same rhetoric. The old "Stormfront or SJW" question is a meme for a reason.

EDIT: plus the abolition movement was mostly Methodists and quakers (or utopian leftists) and Hobbes is best know as the great defender of absolute monarchy.

19th century Quakers were neither left-wing nor particularly utopian, likewise while Hobbes is memed as an absolute monarchist he was perhaps one of the most ardent individualists of his time precisely because his whole schtick is that 'agency ultimately resides with the individual.

That the mark of a true king is that men choose to follow him of their own volition

approving of a movement is not the same thing as being part of a movement or "a product" of it.

In fact, that's one of, if not the core, points of disagreement. Whether Stormfronters and SJWs like each other has zero bearing on whether or not they are they are drinking from the same well or using the same rhetoric. The old "Stormfront or SJW" question is a meme for a reason.

You’re clearly not wrong (horseshoe theory exists for a reason) but unless you can back up your intuitions about what movements people belong to then you’re left with either a very superficial analysis or visceral feelings of kinship/dislike. It seems rather similar to the way that the left decides certain figures or groups are progressive/fascist /colonial not because of anything they say or do but by squinting until they see a certain resemblance and ignoring whatever doesn’t fit. Because it’s in the eye of the beholder it’s hard to debate usefully.

More importantly to my mind, it ignores the role that circumstances play. As @FCfromSSC says, religious tolerance means a very different thing in a 99% Protestant country vs a 50/50 prot/catch country versus a 30% Christian, 30% atheist, 30% Muslim country, say. If you hold exactly the same political beliefs in these different places the results will be wildly divergent.

I feel like I've been pretty open about and consistant in my theory that there is a spectrum of philosophies between Rousseau on the left and Hobbes on the right.

I feel like you're trying to pull a "national socialism isn't actually socialism" or "real communism has never been tried" type card rather than acknowledge the argument being made.

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