by Jeffrey A.
Tucker
August 12,
2023
from
Brownstone Website
The last three and a half years have been times of enormous
upheaval.
It has affected
politics, economics, culture, media, and technology.
It's not just about
the spreading of economic, cultural, and demographic decay.
Millions and billions
of lives have been wrecked, to be sure, but there is also a big
impact on the way we see the world around us.
What we once trusted, we
now doubt and even disbelieve as a matter of new habit.
The simple categories of
understanding that we once deployed to make sense of the world have
been tested, challenged, and even overthrown.
Old forms of
ideological commitments have opened their way to new.
This particularly
pertains to intellectuals.
Or should in any case...
If you have not shifted
your thinking in some respect over these years, you are either a
prophet, asleep, or in denial.
The way social media
works today, influencers are reluctant to admit it lest risk their
followings built out of a prior cultural landscape. This is really
too bad.
There is nothing wrong
with changing, adapting, migrating, and calling out truth even if
that contradicts what you once said or how you used to believe.
There is no need to change your principles or ideals.
What should change in
light of evidence is,
-
your evaluation
of the problems and threats
-
your outlook on
the relative priorities of focus
-
your perceptions
of the functionality of institutional structures
-
your awareness of
issues and concerns about which you had limited prior
knowledge
-
your political
and cultural allegiances,
...and so on.
These days, this intellectual migration seems mainly to have
affected the left.
Nearly daily I find
myself having the same conversations with people in person, on the
phone, or online. It is from an
Obama voter and someone with
traditionally "liberal" allegiances.
The Covid era utterly shocked them
in what they discovered about their own tribe.
They aren't liberal
at all.
They supported
universal quarantine, forced face coverings, and then mandatory
jabs pushed by a tax-funded corporate monopoly.
Concerns about human
rights, civil liberties, and the common good suddenly
evaporated.
Then of course they
turned to the most blunt instrument of all:
censorship...
The trauma felt by
principled people who imagined themselves to be "on the left" is
palpable.
But the same is true of
people "on the right" who were aghast to observe that it was
Trump and his administration
that,
greenlighted
lockdowns, spent many trillions forcing Covid compliance, and
then threw public monies at
Big Pharma to rush a shot by
bypassing all standards of necessity, safety, and
effectiveness...
The promise to "make
America great again" ended in wreckage coast-to-coast.
For Trump partisans, this
realization that it all happened under their hero is hard to take, a
triangulating rope-a-dope. Even more strangely, it was the "never
Trumpers" on the right who most strongly supported lockdowns,
masking, and shot mandates.
The libertarians are another story entirely, one that nearly
surpasses understanding.
Among the higher echelons
of this faction in academia and think tanks, the silence from the
start and even years later was truly deafening.
Instead of standing
up to totalitarianism, as the whole of the intellectual
tradition had prepared them to do, they deployed their clever
heuristics to justify outrages against core freedoms, even the
freedom to associate.
So, yes, observing one's
own tribe collapse into craven careerism and coercion is
disorienting.
But the problem goes even
deeper.
The most striking
alliance of our time has been to observe the lockstep of the
elites in government, media, tech, and academia.
The reality blows apart
the traditional binary of public vs. private that has
dominated ideological discussion for centuries.
This binary is nicely represented by the sculpture in front of the
Federal Trade Commission.
It shows a man
holding back a horse.
It's man vs. beast,
completely different species and totally different interests,
one demanding to move forward and the other holding it back.
The point of the
sculpture is,
to celebrate the role
of government (man) in controlling trade (industry).
The contrary position
would condemn government for controlling industry.
But what if the sculpture
is pure fantasy even at its very structure...?
In reality, the horse is
either carrying the man or pulling a cart that carries the man.
Are they cooperating
together in a partnership that is allied against consumers,
stockholders, small businesses, the working classes, and people
more generally?
That realization - the
very essence of what was revealed to us in the course of the
Covid response - utterly shatters core presumptions behind
the dominant ideologies of our times and going far back in time.
That realization requires a recalibration from honest thinkers.
I'm glad to start.
I was going through
an archive of writings from the 2010s in search of some insight
or possibly something to reprint. I found many hundreds of
articles.
None of them jumped
out at me as necessarily wrong but I found myself rather bored
with their superficiality.
Yes, they are
entertaining and fascinating in their way but, what precisely
did they reveal?
There was no
consumer product unworthy of rhapsodic celebration,
No pop tune or
movie that didn't reinforce my biases...
No new technology
or company undeserving of my highest praise...
No trend in the
land that was contrary to my conception of progress all
around us...
It's exceedingly
difficult to recreate an older state of mind but let me try.
I saw myself as a
composer of hymns to material progress all around us, a
cheerleader of the glories of all market forces.
I lived with this
public-private binary.
All that was good in
the world came from the private sector and all that was evil
came from the public sector.
That easily became
for me a simplistic and even Manichean conception of the
great struggle, and also blinded me to the ways that these two
ideal types play together in real life.
Armed with this
ideological weaponry, I was ready to take on the world.
And so Big Tech came in
for massive celebration from me, even to the point that I completely
ignored warnings of capture and surveillance.
I had a model in mind -
migration to the digital realm was emancipatory, while attachment to
the physical world was mired in stagnation - and nothing could shake
me from it.
I had also implicitly adopted an "end-of-history" style of Hegelian
thinking that befits the generation that saw freedom win the great
Cold War struggle. And so the final victory of liberty was always at
hand, at least in my fevered imagination.
This is why the lockdowns came as such a shock to me.
It flew in the face of
the linear structure of historical narrative that I had constructed
for myself in order to make sense of the world. This happened to
many writers for Brownstone, whether traditionally associated with
the right or the left...
This is why the best comparison of
the Covid years might be to the
Great War, the global calamity that was simply not supposed to
happen based on the wild optimism cultivated during the Gilded and
Victorian epochs of decades earlier.
The very foundations of
peace and progress had gradually eroded, and prepared the way
for terrible war, but that generation of observers did not see it
happening simply because they were not looking for it.
To be sure, and uniquely so far as I can tell, I had been writing
about the prospect of pandemic lockdowns for the previous 15
years.
I read their
research, knew of their plans, and followed their germ games.
I drummed up
awareness and called for hard limits on what the state could do
during a pandemic.
At the same time, I
had become accustomed to treating the academic and intellectual
worlds as something exogenous to the social order.
In other words,
I never once believed
that these cockamamie ideas would ever leak into our own lived
realities...
Like so many others, I
had come to regard intellectual discussion and debate as a
challenging and most enjoyable parlor game that had little impact on
the world.
I knew for sure that
there were crazy people extant who dreamed of universal human
separation and the conquering of the microbial planet by force.
But I had presumed that
the structures of society and the trajectory of history embedded too
much intelligence to actually implement such delusions.
The foundations of
civilization were too strong to be eroded by gibberish, or so I
had believed...
What I had overlooked
were several factors.
First, I
didn't understand the extent of the rise, independence, and
power of the administrative state and the impossibility of
controlling its authority through elective representatives.
I simply did not
anticipate the fullness of its reach.
Second, I had not understood the extent to which private
industry had developed a full working relationship with the
structures of power in its own industrial interests.
Third, I had overlooked the way consolidation and
cooperation had developed between pharmaceutical companies,
public health, digital enterprises, and media organs.
Fourth, I had failed to appreciate the tendency of the
public mind to drop knowledge accumulated from past wisdom.
For example,
who would have
believed that people would forget what they once knew, even
from thousands of years of experience, about exposure and
natural immunity?
Fifth, I did
not anticipate the extent to which high-end professionals would
give up all principles and curry favor with the new policy
priorities of the government/media/tech/industry hegemon.
Who knew that nothing
about the main themes of patriotic songs and movies would have
stuck when it most mattered?
Sixth, and this is perhaps my greatest intellectual
failing, I had not seen how rigid class structures would feed
conflicting interests between the professional class of laptop
workers and the working classes who still need the physical
world to accomplish their goals.
On March 16, 2020, the
laptop class conspired in a forced digitalization of the world in
the name of pathogenic control, and this came at the expense of some
two-thirds of the population who depended on physical interactions
for their livelihood and psychological well-being.
This aspect of
class conflict - which I had always chalked up to be a
Marxian delusion - became the defining feature of the whole of
our political lives.
Instead, the lack of
empathy from the professional class was evident everywhere, from
academic opinion to media reporting. It was a society of serfs and
lords.
For those who are researchers, writers, academics, or just curious
people who want to understand the world better - even improve it -
to have one's intellectual operating system so profoundly disturbed
is an occasion of profound disorientation.
It is also a time to
embrace the adventure, recalibrate, and set about correcting and
finding a new path.
When your ideological system and political allegiances fail to
provide the explanatory power we are seeking, it is time to improve
them or give them up entirely.
Not everyone is up to the task. Indeed, this is a major reason why
so many want to forget about the past three and a half years. They
would rather close their eyes to the new realities and default back
to their intellectual comfort zones.
For any writer or thinker of integrity, this should not be an
option.
As painful as it might
be, it is best just to admit where we went wrong and set out to
discover a better path. This is why so many of us have adopted a
paradigm called the "Covid test."
Few pass. Most fail...
They failed in shockingly
public and inexcusable ways:
left, right, and
libertarian...
The influencers who
flopped so badly in these years and have yet to own up to it deserve
neither attention nor respect.
Their attempt to pretend
they were never wrong and then move on as if nothing much has
happened is embarrassing and disreputable.
But those who come to terms with the wreckage all around us and seek
to understand its causes and the way forward deserve a listen and
appreciation.
For it is these
people who are doing their best to save the world from another
round of disaster...
As for the rest, they are
taking up air space and should, in a just world, be tutoring the
children with learning losses and delivering meals to
the vaccine-injured...
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