By Jeffrey Blehar
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
And right off the bat, here I am rehearsing one of my
running themes. In a political age whose refrain among detached observers is
“LOL nothing matters” — witness the scandals that politicians nowadays
regularly survive, or the trash-TV moments that would have in an earlier era
been relegated to Jenny
Jones — I’m here to say that the lone presidential debate, something
that famously used to not matter, now matters a great deal.
Scarcity obviously creates its own market; Harris, who
was switched into the nomination with only 100 days to go until the election,
is running a campaign purposely organized around denying her to the press or to
the American people outside of heavily curated events. Furthermore, the fact
that we are living through one of the most bizarre election cycles in American
history — you’d arguably now have to skip 1968 and head all the way back to
1860 for a weirder one, and joke’s on you, pal, because that one sparked the
Civil War — means that we are primed for the lone confrontation between these
two raggedy emblems of their parties’ ids.
So, yes, this debate genuinely matters. I’ll leave all
the pregame strategizing to others. (My primary counsel to Trump: Avoid
anything that plays like bullying a woman. My advice to Harris: Try to Freaky
Friday yourself into the body of literally anyone else.) Others will
be setting the stage today with the stakes, but, unless struck by a vehicle or
personal catastrophe, I will be live-blogging the debate with the rest of the National
Review crew, and then perhaps mopping up the entrails later on. Given that
an enormous amount rides on this, I recommend — if you really care — that you
start drinking at least an hour before it begins.
Tucker Carlson, J. D. Vance, and the Limits of Loyalty
Last week I wrote about Tucker Carlson with the resigned
understanding that, given his continuing influence on a small but influential
segment of young and future activists within the conservative movement, I’d no
longer be able to ignore him or even wash my hands of him, at least not for a
long time. And wouldn’t you know it, now I have to scratch some J. D. Vance out
from under my fingernails as well, because as it turns out, the
vice-presidential candidate — who I noted in my piece had already agreed to a
podcast appearance with Carlson later this September — also sat down for a pre-recorded interview with Carlson
just last week, on September 5, several days into the controversy over
Carlson’s interview with a pro-Nazi crank “historian” and mere hours after the
White House had officially made a statement about it. Vance justifies it by
saying he’s not into cancel culture and won’t abandon a friend.
I may write yet about Liz Cheney and the agonizingly fine
line across which opposition to Donald Trump (I am notably not a fan) simply
turns into rejection of all conservative principle. Until then, however, it’s
important to grasp that Vance’s attitude is entirely of a piece with Cheney’s,
albeit through the mirror: In her case, principled opposition has curdled into
mindless spite, to the point of proud and outright apostasy. (I’m not even
talking about endorsing or not endorsing Kamala Harris but rather
her support for Democrat Colin Allred, running in Texas to unseat Senator Ted
Cruz.) In Vance’s case we see loyalty beyond reason.
Tucker Carlson begged his entire listenership to pay
close attention for 90 minutes as he slavishly licked the boot soles of the
“most important historian in the United States,” nodding along as an avowed
Hitler sympathizer argued that Eastern Front atrocities — and the Holocaust
itself — were mere accidents, that Winston Churchill was in fact the greatest
villain of the Second World War, and that he was propped up in his villainy by
sinister Jewish financiers. Carlson was an active participant in this
conversation, not as a critic but as a fan, smiling and nodding and
attaboying the entire time. This is not “just asking questions” stuff; this is
the standard method all truly vile liars use to wittingly inject poison into
the bloodstream of our discourse.
Carlson could have taken the tape of this conversation
and simply thrown it away if he’d wanted to. Instead he wants you to ask
yourself whether Hitler and the Nazis might have been the good guys after all,
just wildly misunderstood. If you’re stupid enough to be taken in by this
transparent imposture, then that is your problem; I reserve the right, however,
to point out what it is Carlson is actually trying to do versus what he says he
is doing. (Even though I think he is now sincere in his anti-Americanism, he
remains a supremely skilled liar, merely deploying those talents for other
purposes.)
So I have to ask J. D. Vance: Is this man really your
friend? The personal is not political, this I’ll grant, but have you ever asked
Carlson, the way Seth
Dillon of the Babylon Bee recently did, “Hey bro, cool
show and all, but why did you just smile and nod and praise the Nazi dude last
week?”
“It is what it is,” said a Trump campaign official in
response to the news of Vance’s sit-down with Carlson after the latter went
partway-Nazi. I hope I have the presence of mind to display a similar
equanimity should I find myself mounting a gibbet I constructed for myself.
Greta Thunberg Recedes into Cliché
Remember Greta Thunberg, everyone’s favorite vinegar-rictused
teenage eco-scold, shrieking at us at the United Nations about stolen dreams
and Big Oil and whatnot? (“Like Björk being led to the hangman in Dancer
in the Dark,” to quote an old line I’ll probably never top.) She more
or less disappeared from American media coverage after her big 2019–21 moment.
To remind you of how big she once was: Thunberg was named Time’s
“Person of the Year” in 2019, and though the title has been degraded in value
ever since they awarded it to me back in 2006, at that time it was still a measure of
cultural significance. Last I heard, Thunberg had traded in her eco-panic for
pro-Hamas gear, moving to where the new heat — and media attention — is. So now
she’s getting “arrested” (always for cameras, never in any meaningful sense)
for Gaza, Hamas, and demanding the dissolution of the Jewish state.
I won’t link to the photographs of these (many, many)
recent stunts simply because that is what she wants. I just invite you to
ponder this one photograph of Thunberg arresting herself,
handcuffed to the microphone of a podcast she has joined with a smile and a
keffiyeh. Understand the seriousness of Greta Thunberg — and the level of moral
conviction of an entire generation of activists — through that one picture
alone, and you won’t go terribly wrong.
The End of the Internet Archive’s Digital Lending
Sad news from the world of knowledge piracy:
In a swift decision, a three-judge
panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has unanimously affirmed a March
2023 lower court decision finding the Internet Archive’s program to scan and
lend print library books is copyright infringement. In an emphatic 64-page
decision, released on September 4, the court rejected the Internet Archive’s
fair use defense, as well as the novel protocol known as “controlled digital
lending” on which the Archive’s scanning and lending is based.
“This appeal presents the following
question: Is it ‘fair use’ for a nonprofit organization to scan
copyright-protected print books in their entirety, and distribute those digital
copies online, in full, for free, subject to a one-to-one owned-to-loaned ratio
between its print copies and the digital copies it makes available at any given
time, all without authorization from the copyright-holding publishers or
authors? Applying the relevant provisions of the Copyright Act as well as
binding Supreme Court and Second Circuit precedent, we conclude the answer is
no,” the decision states.
This is a truly niche concern — I doubt that many readers
even realized that such treasures had for many years been available at the
Internet Archive, free to all with an account. (I noticed that certain works —
those whose publishers were more legally aggressive — disappeared more quickly
than others; now presumably they all will.) But it is an enormous loss for me
personally, on an intellectual level, as I have gained so much knowledge from
borrowing otherwise inaccessible and wildly expensive books.
The Internet Archive really opened its library doors
fully once Covid lockdowns went into effect in 2020. The entire period of
“lockdown” is a dark, angry place in my mind. As the parent of a toddler in
Chicago, I’m beset by memories I wish never to return to and regrets that can
never be requited. But what I had back then was this endless resource of
knowledge with which to keep myself sane. I understand the importance of
copyright, and don’t even question the validity of the ruling. I simply lament
the loss of easily available knowledge — real, serious knowledge, available to
all who search it out intentionally — in an era rapidly and increasingly
turning toward the demotic. We’re already becoming a stupid-enough culture in
the age of social media. I suppose a great way to emphasize the divide between
elite access to knowledge and mass ignorance is to wall off academic history
behind $100+ price tags for slim, specialist, hard-copy monographs.
A Thought for Lara Trump during Her Tenure at the RNC
Please do not continue to spend campaign money on professionally videotaping and
editing your singing lessons. We’ll circle back to this later if necessary.
Twitter Moment of the Week: Nikki Haley
This might become a regular feature, or it might not; it
really depends on how Extremely Online our current class of politicians
continues to be. A moment can be good, or it can be despairingly, irrevocably
bad. (Just ask the U.K. Labour Party’s Ed Balls.) But given the revelations
about Tenet media — the Russian propaganda outfit created by Lauren Chen using
recruits like Benny Johnson, Tim Pool, Dave Rubin, and others to unwittingly
mouth Russian propaganda that she hand-fed to them — I figured it was time to
salute Nikki Haley for mentioning something I omitted in my piece: Chen’s appalling tendency — as a Canadian, no
less — to accuse Republican politicians supporting Ukraine or Israel of “dual
loyalties.” She clearly has dual loyalties as well — except, as it turns out,
neither of them was to the United States. I’ll let Ambassador Haley have the
last word:
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