By Rich
Lowry
Tuesday,
December 13, 2022
Elon
Musk, who has never called himself a conservative, is now the nation’s
foremost culture warrior.
That
he’s achieved this status without espousing anything remotely like social
conservatism illustrates how important hothouse progressive pieties have become
to the nation’s political debate.
We’ve
come a long way from the days of Pat Buchanan or Pat Robertson.
Simply
by refusing to play by the rules that so many in corporate America accept
without hesitation, Musk has made himself Public Enemy No. 1, a figure of fear
and loathing whom his critics desperately want to fail — and the more
humiliatingly so, the better.
Not that
Musk is shy. He has taken over Donald Trump’s championship belt as the troll
who most dominates the consciousness of the country’s journalistic elite. His
puckish tweet the other day tweaked both the fashionable practice of declaring
your pronouns and the secular saint Anthony Fauci: “My pronouns are
Prosecute/Fauci.”
This
little five-word haiku of provocation predictably created a storm of “How could
he?” outrage.
The Atlantic responded
with a piece arguing, as the headline put it, “Elon Musk Is a Far-Right
Activist.” The only thing the article lacked was a shred of evidence that Musk
is either “far-right,” or an “activist.”
Yes,
Musk said before the midterms that he’d vote Republican, but that doesn’t make
him far right-wing any more than voting for Democrats necessarily makes someone
far left. News flash: About half the country votes for Republicans.
And he’s
obviously doing everything he can to win attention for Twitter as he tries to
make it a sustainable business. That’s marketing and showmanship, though, not
political activism.
In
releasing what he calls The Twitter Files, exposing the decision-making of the
company’s prior management, Musk hasn’t been working with conservatives. One of
the writers, Matt Taibbi, is a well-known progressive, while the other, Bari
Weiss, is slightly right-of-center but by no means a right-winger.
What
Taibbi and Weiss share, along with Musk, is an unwillingness to swallow the
orthodoxies of the elite media and progressive establishment.
It is
this posture that makes Musk an intolerable dissenter. “Far-right” now means
saying things that you aren’t supposed to say — not racist things or extreme
things, but things that have only recently been deemed unsayable. Several years
ago, no one would have thought it was a terrible offense to refuse to adopt the
weird obsession with pronouns gaining traction at liberal-arts colleges; now,
it’s practically a hate crime.
Musk is
also a traitor to his class. The tech elite was supposed to be libertarian but
in a left-aligned way, maintaining a belief in the profit motive but otherwise
moving along in the slipstream of progressive culture.
Musk has
refused to go along, and he’s highlighting what is ultimately a clash of
values. It’s independent thinking vs. the herd mentality; free speech over and
above an ideology of “safety”; a tough-minded focus on work and the bottom line
in opposition to the priorities of an entitled, woke workforce.
This is
all playing out in the battle for the soul of Twitter, assuming it has one. The
platform had become a progressive playpen. Woke writers and activists, for good
reason, expected it to be run according to their worldview and by rules
favorable to their interests.
Not
anymore. The fearless, shoot-from-the-hip Musk is, like Trump before him, a
barbarian at the gate and a heretic. His takeover of Twitter is like the
Vikings sacking the famous English monastery of Wearmouth-Jarrow in the eighth
century. Questioning Fauci is like the Albigensians challenging monotheism in
the 13th century. Mocking pronouns is like questioning divine-right kingship in
the age of absolute monarchies.
This is
why the fight over Twitter, which is itself not that important — “Twitter is
not real life,” as the cliché has it — is so heated and bitter. It’s ultimately
over whether progressive ideology will maintain its default status in elite
precincts of America, and whether a high-profile dissenter can survive and
thrive.
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