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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 11, 2023

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What does the light at the end of the tunnel look like?

Look, every now and then I stop watching my footfalls and get pensive. And one of the things I've gotten pensive about the past few days is this: the Western culture war is not going to last forever, which means it's going to end. And when it does, how will we look back on this mad time?

Two of the answers are obvious:

  1. If the culture war ends in X-catastrophe, then we won't look back on it at all, because there will be no more historians.
  2. If SJ wins, it'll look back on now much the same way it looks back on the '50s right now, with maybe a few mentions of Nazis added.

But what I can't really put together is the third option, the narrative that will be told if SJ is indeed just a passing phase, either because Red/Grey defeated it or because it wins and then turns out to be unsustainable. Frankly, the Blue Tribe's been writing all the history books since before I was born, so it's hard for me to even picture it. And that troubles me; it's the scenario I think is most likely, and the one I'm to at least some extent trying to bring about, so if I don't have a good idea of what it even looks like that's kind of an HCF. "It is not enough to say that you do not like the way things are. You must say how you will change them, and to what."

So, how will the people in that scenario think of this time? What story will they tell?

(To the SJers here: feel free to answer, if you think you understand your opposition, or feel free to correct me if you think my #2 is uncharitable.)

Why will the culture war ‘eventually end’? This culture war has been happening, in some form or another, since the enlightenment. Certainly it’s been happening since America’s founding. It may wax and wane (the latter if there’s some larger unrelated international or domestic crisis for a prolonged period), but it would be ahistorical to expect it to end. I suppose AI may change things, but since it is likely only to increase the reliance of the people on the state (due to mass unemployment etc), probably not in any direction I’d consider positive.

... I'd be interested to see what sort of 'wane' would fit your expectations, even if the culture war would still remain in a form, that's anywhere short of modern conservativism (and anything drawn as close to it) being smothered out completely.

One of my big frustrations is that for all people might say that this stuff isn't as bad or is 'only' as bad as McCarthyism, McCarthyism lasted less than a decade, and it very much had the seeds of its own destruction within it. We're coming up on fifteen for the most obvious start date of this particular cycle.

But McCarthyism won!

'Communist' is still an insult in like 90% of American contexts and none are tolerated anywhere near positions of real power, capitalist realism is so pervasive that it's treated as a fundamental facet of reality rather than an ideology, and the US is still explicitly hostile towards communist and formerly-communist regimes around the world to this day!

It's hard to imagine McCarthyism succeeding much more strongly than it actually has. The fact that he's remembered as a jerk in some textbooks is pretty immaterial.

You are conflating McCarthyism with anti-communism. Anti-communism won, but not because of McCarthyism, and the distinctively McCarthyite features (trying to root out communist subversives in government, anti-communist loyalty tests, blacklisting communists) are completely outside the mainstream of US politics. For example, the House Un-American Activities Committee is gone and would be regarded as an intolerable infringement on American values if it was restored, at least as an anti-communist institution.

You also say "some textbooks." Don't you think that "almost all" would be more accurate?

I mean, sure, but isn't that sort of like me saying 'you're confusing cancel culture with progressivism, all bad things proceed from the former and all good things proceed from the latter'?

I'm ok with movements disavowing their idiot extremists, or being held accountable for them, as long as that standard is applied consistently.

You also say "some textbooks." Don't you think that "almost all" would be more accurate?

I meant 'some' as in 'a small overall amount' rather than 'a small percent of the total'. My point is that we don't talk about him much in day to day life, compared to how much we praise capitalism and vilify communism.

That said, I literally haven't read a history textbook since highschool, so... sure, I would guess it's at least most, but I honestly have no idea. I occasionally read claims about red-state textbooks being different but I have no idea how true that is, haven't investigated it.

I mean, sure, but isn't that sort of like me saying 'you're confusing cancel culture with progressivism, all bad things proceed from the former and all good things proceed from the latter'?

That could be a perfectly legitimate claim, if you can independently distinguish the two, as people can distinguish anti-communism and McCarthyism. If you conflate the two, you end up jarring with usage, e.g. George Orwell, Sidney Hook, and other anti-communist socialists become "McCarthyites."