By Joy Pullmann
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
In The Atlantic
on Thursday, contributing editor Caitlin
Flanagan wrote of her liberal son and peers’ fascination with Canadian
psychologist and auditorium-packing internet sensation Jordan Peterson.
They “began listening to more and more podcasts and
lectures by this man, Jordan Peterson,” she writes. “The young men voted for
Hillary, they called home in shock when Trump won, they talked about flipping
the House, and they followed Peterson to other podcasts — to Sam Harris and
Dave Rubin and Joe Rogan. What they were getting from these lectures and discussions,
often lengthy and often on arcane subjects, was perhaps the only sustained
argument against identity politics they had heard in their lives.”
In this insightful counter-narrative essay attempting to
explain “Why the Left Is So Afraid of Jordan Peterson,” she notes Peterson’s
listeners are not largely the “alt-right” types often held up to him during
hostile media interviews: “the audience is made up of people who are busy with
their lives — folding laundry, driving commercial trucks on long hauls, sitting
in traffic from cubicle to home, exercising.” Flanagan also memorably writes
that these listeners are “pursuing a parallel curriculum.”
“A parallel culture of ideas has emerged to replace a
corrupted system,” she writes later. What’s the corrupted system? The political
and cultural left that “currently seems ascendant in our houses of culture and
art, has in fact entered its decadent late phase, and it is deeply vulnerable.”
Identity politics, she says, are one evidence and cause of this corruption.
Flanagan does not delve into why identity politics is a
cause and result of corruption, but I have a suggestion. It’s because identity
politics, and so much else of what passes for politics and culture today, is
largely an elaborate system of virtue signaling. Indeed, scholar William
Voegeli has shown in great detail that the left’s entire political program is
wasteful, utterly ineffective virtue signaling.
Virtue signaling, of course, is essentially to present
the appearance of virtue without its substance. It’s a dressy lie, a form of
self-corruption. Its polar opposite is “dangerous” competence, and it is this
that Peterson preaches. It’s deadly to the left because the left is
anti-comptetence, and pro-corruption. Identity politics is merely the most visible
proof of this reality.
Our Self-Appointed Leaders Are Bankrupt
In Aaron Renn’s email newsletter The Masculinist, he
writes: “Populism is not our problem today. Our problem is that the American
elite, of which many of us could be considered members at some level, is
corrupt and inept. There are many good individuals and leaders in this group,
but collectively our elite is bankrupt and has failed.” Here’s more from his
insightful observations, which he aims specifically at Christians but are
applicable outside that sphere as well:
[T]he elite have broken faith with
the people they are supposed to be leading … We have a divergent society in
which the leadership classes have prospered like never before at the same time
much of society has fallen into ruin. At the same time our elite congratulate
themselves for being morally superior to the benighted masses …
Rather than beating back populism,
the problem facing America is fundamentally one of institutional and cultural
renewal among the elite.
At precisely the most credentialed moment in world
history, we have a competency crisis, due to running things according to
politically convenient lies rather than accuracy, competence, and efficiency.
The evidence for this is plentiful and within nearly everyone’s common
experience. Old dishwashers are more efficient and effective than new ones. So
are old showerheads and toilets. Public infrastructure is degrading to shameful
conditions despite our historic peak of technical power because, among other things,
all the maintenance money has been spent on inflated pensions and pork.
Western education institutions now generally and
self-evidently serve not as robust developers of young minds and souls, but of
a ridiculously expensive, careerist version of virtue signaling. Schools and
colleges routinely graduate people who can hardly read or do math at
even an eighth-grade level. Large percentages of would-be teachers, all of
whom graduated high school and college, cannot pass licensing exams typically
set at approximately a fifth- to eighth-grade level that completely ignore key
competencies such as knowledge of how to teach reading.
I regularly field articles from people with advanced
humanities degrees who ought to have flunked fifth-grade writing. Just about
every professor at a non-elite institution can tell similar stories, and even
at elite institutions can clearly tell the marked differences in students
admitted due to affirmative action, which can be the equivalent of an
artificial 400-point SAT score boost.
We the people are well aware that we have to pay for a
fat layer of incompetents to pretend to serve us atop the costs of doing things
right ourselves. Renn lists many other evidences of the prevalence and heights
of corruption among Americans in high levels of responsibility. Consider the
revitalized wave of sex scandals among Catholic and evangelical megachurch
leaders, and the federal officials refusing to carry out the policies of a duly
elected president, to the point of using opposition research as the apparent
basis to start a bottomless witch hunt.
The Place to Start
Is With Ourselves
Because every society must have leaders, Renn is on a
mission to revitalize American leadership, starting with where he and we all
must: taking responsibility for his own character. “To make fundamental change
in the church and broader society, the educated leadership class must
collectively and individually become worthy. That starts with taking
responsibility for ourselves and being above reproach and competent in our
undertakings.”
This is also Peterson’s attraction, audience, and
message. Whatever you think of Peterson, he is clearly competent. His command of general and expertise-specific
knowledge is instantly evident, and earns him credibility and authority. The
people he’s talking to, who aspire to this themselves, may not be our leaders
now, but if they likewise dedicate themselves to the difficult work of
excellence, they will be worthy of leadership in the future.
To be fully human and fully worthy of responsibility is
to fight your entire life to bring order to chaos, to make an imprint upon the
world in some meaningful way, Peterson says. It derives from committing oneself
for life to another person and the children you create, sustain, and pass your
culture’s accumulated wisdom on to together. And it derives from seeking the
ultimate and transcendent truth of life and speaking about it, even if doing so
produces pain. You learn to suffer for truth, because that is good. And life is
worth nothing if it does not center upon a pursuit of the good, the true, and
even the beautiful.
These are old and timeless ideas blessedly familiar to
anyone who has had the good fortune to have family, a religious tradition, and
teachers willing to pass it on. But clearly many in the West have not been
introduced to their own inheritance. Many are orphans with no knowledge or only
faint knowledge of their own intellectual and spiritual ancestors and homes.
This is a source of the alienation, the hunger, and the loneliness that mark
our age.
The ‘Parallel
Curriculum’ Is the Real Curriculum
It is not that there is no home to go to, either. Western
history is rich with sustenance for mind and soul. Its longevity, richness, and
vibrance are proof enough of that. It is that the people who consider
themselves our leaders now deliberately strip America’s young of their roots.
Peterson and many others note rightly that most of our
universities, and the other cultural institutions they gatekeep such as media
and public schools, are anti-education, anti-culture, and anti-American. They
gain power by separating people, by not only refusing to cultivate the capacity
for self-government, but also actively cultivating intellectual, economic, and
spiritual dependency.
This is why, as Flanagan has noticed, a worthy
curriculum, an apprenticeship in the deepest wisdom of our heritage, is
typically no longer delivered through the West’s “leading” institutions. To
gain any real competence, most people must self-educate through a growing “parallel
culture of ideas.” Where have we heard this parallelism language before? Among
the anti-Communists of Eastern Europe, for one.
The associate of Czech leader Vaclav Havel, Vaclav Benda,
wrote of anti-totalitarian dissidents consciously developing a “parallel polis”
specifically focused on self-education and friendship in another society in
which the formal institutions had been corrupted beyond repair. (Polis is an ancient Greek word roughly
translated as “a tight-knit, familial local community dedicated to the common
good.”) Rod Dreher explored this concept in an interview with Benda scholar
Flagg Taylor:
Benda thought that people needed to
be reminded of what they had lost with communism, that [the dissident statement
Charter 77] could help foster the rediscovery of meaningful social life. This
is what he called the parallel polis. The Charter community ought to dedicate
itself to developing parallel social structures to the official ones. This
would reactivate people’s social natures. They could rediscover the deep
rewards of friendship and devotion. [emphasis added]
Flanagan’s observations of Peterson listeners mirror
Taylor’s description: “These are people who aren’t looking for an ideology;
they are looking for ideas. And many of them are getting much better at
discerning the good from the bad. The Democratic Party reviles them at its
peril; the Republican Party takes them for granted in folly.”
Since he cannot really be in relationship to the hundreds
of thousands, even millions of people considering the ideas he’s introducing
them to, Peterson can only be a gateway to an American archipelago of parallel
polises. A true apprenticeship requires the accountability of sustained
personal interaction.
The phenomenon he’s sparked cannot live upon YouTube
videos alone, but requires those ideas incarnating into thousands, even
millions of people consciously choosing a lifetime challenging themselves with
the rigors of true service to and friendship with wives, husbands, children,
neighbors, and God himself. This is what it means to be human, to be fully
alive.
That aliveness is a challenge to the deadness of
political correctness and the mentally enslaved habits it demands and enforces.
The PC zombie shock troops take it as a declaration of intellectual war, and it
is.
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