The Tea Party: Today’s Marauding Civilization-Crushing Nomads?

Sir Barken Hyena writes:

Yeah, I know they aren’t literally nomads, although I do bet RV ownership tracks well with Tea Party membership.

But first, I present the contortions of Frank Rich:

http://nymag.com/news/politics/elections-2012/tea-party-2012-10/

A few paragraphs will do it. I’m not interested in the article – it’s the usual failure-by-sainthood narrative – but in the growing agreement from the left that they’re basically over, and the tone of it all. The superiority and condescension fairly drips from the Rich column. And from a lot of talk from the left these days, when the Tea Party is the subject. It reminded me of the way the Persians regarded the Macedonian thugs who stole their country (I’m reading a biography of Alexander now).

Until the middle ages the basic story of history was: civilizations as islands in a sea of marauding nomads. The civilizations held up because they made the most stuff, until they got old, inflexible and fat. Then they got taken over by the agile lean nomads, and they in turn got old, inflexible and fat.

Read old histories and they love the virility moral of it all, even back to the Roman Tacitus, who praised the Germans as better than the degenerate Romans. But I think the problems civilizations run into have a lot to do with the increasing rigidity of their governing systems. Every action becomes captive to the system’s interference and so society as a whole is made mal-adaptive. The nomads have no such problems, so they alone are in the position to swoop in a snatch it up. Free from the local politics they can assassinate without fear and clean things up. It’s mental independence as much as superior aggression that wins the battle.

If you map this to culture instead of geography you can see that the Tea Party are cultural outliers in the U.S the way nomads were geographic outliers. With home schooling, church attendance, Christian music, blogs etc they have created their own cultural space in the U.S. that has few points of contact with pop culture.  While the schools, courts and media are stepping on their own feet because of the impenetrable labyrinth of what it’s OK the say this week without losing your career, political correctness doesn’t matter to them. They’re already damned no matter what so what do they care? Mental independence.

So maybe our invading outsiders will from now on come from within. As the planet is increasingly settled with industrial humans the only other place is from space. Which would be cool.

Posted in Philosophy and Religion, Politics and Economics | 9 Comments

“The Happiest Days of Your Life”

Fabrizio del Wrongo writes:

The best of the classic English comedies are predicated on notions of Englishness. They use it as both a decorative element (as flavoring) and as an intensifier — because nothing is quite so funny as an Englishman attempting to maintain a facade of Englishness. You know he’ll ultimately fail. But you also know his demeanor in the face of that failure will end up revealing something essential about the English — their adaptability, perhaps, or the way their self-effacing drollness is of a piece with their perseverance.

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Michael Pollan, AMA

Paleo Retiree writes:

Has the Reddit AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) session become one of journalism’s — or at least the web’s — most vital and useful forms? I often get more out of making my way through those things than I do from scanning the websites of newspapers and magazines. Sometimes crowdsourcing really does rule.

Here’s a terrific AMA with food-and-eating guru Michael Pollan.

Posted in Food and health, Science | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Question Lady Question

The Question Lady writes:

What volume level would you like for the world to be at?

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments

Gravity Vs. Anti-Gravity

Paleo Retiree writes:

The main political battle these days isn’t between conservatism and leftism. It’s between the forces of centralization and the forces of decentralization. IMHO, of course.

Donald Livingston is a historian and philosopher of history I’ve learned a lot from. Google his name and you’ll turn up some fascinating and enlightening essays and interviews.

Posted in Philosophy and Religion, Politics and Economics | Tagged , | 4 Comments

“Blood Meridian,” a Western for People Who Hate Westerns

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

This summer I read two wonderful novels, Hombre and Valdez is Coming, early Westerns written by the masterful Elmore Leonard. After finishing those books I decided it was time to tackle one of the Big Kahunas of the last few decades, Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian. My only previous experience with McCarthy was The Road, which I didn’t care for, and the Coen Brothers adaptation of McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men, which I enjoyed. Full disclosure: knowing the book’s reputation as one of the canonical works worshipped by the literary establishment (e.g. MacArthur “genius” Junot Díaz: “so horrifyingly profound and compellingly ingenious it’s almost sorcery”), I was suspicious of it from the beginning. But hey, we’ve all had the pleasant experience of being won over by a work we were initially skeptical of, so maybe that would happen here?

SPOILER ALERT: It didn’t happen here.

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Posted in Books Publishing and Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 26 Comments

Movie Clip of the Day

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

No wonder he was banging the help. You never know when a fan will turn into a crazed demon that you have to toss into the fire.

Posted in Movies, Sex | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Question Lady Question

The Question Lady writes:

What’s your preferred way to get a project done? In an organized, spread out kind of way — or crashed in a big hurry?

Posted in Personal reflections | 1 Comment

Linkathon

Paleo Retiree writes:

Posted in Education, Music, Politics and Economics | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

“A Hero of Our Times”

Fabrizio del Wrongo writes:

This 1955 work from director Mario Monicelli unspools with an ease that belies its absurd subject matter. Alberto Sordi plays Menichetti, a man so anxious to maintain his meager social standing that he just about negates himself. He runs away from car accidents lest he be questioned by the police, he assiduously avoids political affiliation, and when his boss (he works for an industrial milliner) asks him to wear an out-of-fashion hat for a few days, he does so without complaint; he even records the reactions he gets from bemused bystanders.

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Posted in Movies | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments