Thursday, May 14, 2026

Transgression for Its Own Sake

By Jonah Goldberg

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

In an exercise bordering on the sadomasochistic, I spent 20 minutes paging through a seemingly endless stream of quotes about “authenticity” at Goodreads.

 

Unsurprisingly, given the state of our culture, the bulk of them celebrate authenticity as the very definition of the good life, the life well and properly lived.

 

I can forgive some of the authors because what they mean by authenticity is really a hodge-podge of defensible sentiments, intuitions, and cliches that are sufficiently devoid of context to seem true enough for the people who want them to be true. Here are few examples:

 

“Confidence is knowing who you are and not changing it a bit because of someone’s version of reality is not your reality,” the “inspirational author” Shannon L. Alder tells us.

 

Mandy Hale advises in The Single Woman–Life, Love, and a Dash of Sass: Embracing Singleness with Confidence: “Consider the fact that maybe … just maybe … beauty and worth aren’t found in a makeup bottle, or a salon-fresh hairstyle, or a fabulous outfit. Maybe our sparkle comes from somewhere deeper inside, somewhere so pure and authentic and REAL, it doesn’t need gloss or polish or glitter to shine.”

 

In another quote she says, “You’ll learn, as you get older, that rules are made to be broken. Be bold enough to live life on your terms, and never, ever apologize for it. Go against the grain, refuse to conform, take the road less traveled instead of the well-beaten path. Laugh in the face of adversity, and leap before you look. Dance as though EVERYBODY is watching. March to the beat of your own drummer. And stubbornly refuse to fit in.”

 

Meanwhile, Steve Maraboli assures us in Unapologetically You: Reflections on Life and the Human Experience that“A lot of the conflict you have in your life exists simply because you’re not living in alignment; you’re not be being true to yourself.”

 

The writer May Sarton seems to concur: “We have to dare to be ourselves, however frightening or strange that self may prove to be.”

 

Now, I have never heard of any of these authors. I choose them not to single them out, but to illustrate how omnipresently ubiquitous such insights are. There are thousands more like this on Goodreads. If you directionally drill for this stuff in the broader culture—from fortune cookies, motivational posters, PSAs by TV networks (“the more you know!”), university orientation sessions and high school guidance counselor handbooks, family sitcom sermons, and the collected oeuvres of self-help, pop psychology, business, and life coach pabulum—you will realize that American culture sits atop a vast Permian Basin of cliches and aphorisms about being true to yourself.

 

And like oil reserves, these cliches are a commodity, fueling vast industrial complexes.

 

Hence the irony. The idea of defying conformity by being “authentically you” is one of the defining features of intellectual, psychological, and even spiritual conformity in modern life, punctuating commencement speeches and self-help books without a shred of reflection or awareness of the bullshitiosity of it all.

 

Don’t get me wrong. There is wisdom here, but it needs to be imposed in context. By all means, if you are surrounded by horrible people, don’t conform, don’t try to “fit in.” If you are a good and decent person, by all means be true to yourself.

 

But what if the people surrounding you are good and decent? Should you do everything you can not to fit in?

 

What if you’re a deceitful jackass? Should you still be true to yourself?

 

If you’re a racist or rapist and the “reality” of those around demands condemnation of such things, should you remain “confident” in your authentic self in the face of their “reality”?

 

If you’re at a funeral for a beloved family member or, say, a fallen fire fighter who lost his life to save a child, should you really “dance like EVERYBODY is watching?”

 

If you want to murder your boss and wear his skin to the supermarket, should you “dare to be” yourself, “however frightening or strange that self may prove to be”?

 

If your answer to any or all of these questions is “Yes, I’ve got to be me,” then you are a performative, childish jackass or simply an evil person.

 

In his Notebooks, Albert Camus says, “But above all, in order to be, never try to seem.”

 

This is rot, tosh, and folly. In order to be a good person, one must first try to seem like a good person. Resist the seductions of pure feeling, fight the laziness of finding your unformed self as already perfect, and strive to fit an ideal outside yourself. This is what we teach children, in the hope that in the trying, the habit will take root, and with the habit will come the being.

 

The dross of transgression.

 

David Brooks, in his Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There, wrote of how everything “transgressive” ends up “digested by the mainstream bourgeois order, and all the cultural weapons that once were used to undermine middle-class morality … are drained of their subversive content.” There’s a lot of truth to this. But it’s not entirely true. Some subversion remains. So much of this stuff is warmed-over Rousseau and Nietzsche who, each in their own way, sought to undermine, overturn—to subvert—Christian morality.

 

Say what you will about the old Christian dogmatists, they understood that being “true to yourself” was the way of sin. Indeed, giving in to human temptation was the very definition of sin, which is why so many of the seven deadly sins are about going with your feelings, being true to yourself, not conforming to the “reality” of others, never mind, you know, Scripture. Giving in to desires of the flesh, indulging laziness or sloth, thinking yourself better than you are, envying the good fortune of others: These are all natural, authentic, temptations.

 

Humans, according to Christian doctrine, are inherently sinful. But that does not necessarily mean, as I see it, that we are inherently or irredeemably evil. But what is required to avoid becoming—or doing—evil? Moral teaching. Rightly formed conscience. Instruction to know when your feelings are misleading you. Why shouldn’t you steal, if stealing feels good and delivers what your heart desires? Because, absent some very unusual and extreme circumstances, stealing is wrong. And every parent and grade school teacher is morally obliged to teach children this. 

 

This argument doesn’t necessarily require personal faith in Scripture, Christian or otherwise. But it does require thinking. Why do newspapers hire (often ridiculous) ethicists? Because figuring out ethical conduct requires consulting authoritative sources, facts, rules, lessons, and arguments that cannot be provided simply by rummaging through your own feelings. The most secular, atheistic, religion-shunning people in the world know this when it comes to questions about what kind of tuna to buy or whether it’s okay to keep a Tesla now that Elon Musk has become red-pilled. Tell one of these ethicists that you want to eat the most dolphin-unsafe tuna because it “feels good,” and they will tell you how morally disordered you are. Tell them you want to leave your wife and kids, you’ll likely be told to be true to yourself, because the heart wants what the heart wants.

 

Lionel Trilling, in his Sincerity and Authenticity, traces how “authenticity” came to supplant “sincerity” as a kind of cultural lodestar. Sincerity once meant something like authentic, as in pure, unadulterated. Sincere wine had not been watered down. It came to mean “honesty” first metaphorically. Sincere talk was unadulterated or diluted by guile or artifice. By the time Shakespeare used “sincere,” the metaphorical connotation was gone. It just meant from the heart, without pretense or ulterior motive.

 

But in the modern era, “sincere” was demoted. “In its commonest employment it has sunk to the level of a mere intensive, in which capacity it has an effect that negates its literal intention—‘I sincerely believe’ has less weight than ‘I believe,’” Trilling writes. In “the subscription of a letter, ‘Yours sincerely’ means virtually the opposite of ‘Yours’. To praise a work of literature by calling it sincere is now at best a way of saying that although it need be given no aesthetic or intellectual admiration, it was at least conceived in innocence of heart.”

 

A sincere effort means trying your best, usually as consolation because your best wasn’t good enough.

 

Trilling writes that “before authenticity had come along to suggest the deficiencies of sincerity and to usurp its place in our esteem, sincerity stood high in the cultural firmament and had dominion over men’s imagination of how they ought to be.”

 

And that’s the heart of it. Sincerity requires effort, it implies—or at least can imply—some level of thinking, of consideration and contemplation. Authenticity is laziness because it requires nothing more than grabbing the nearest feeling off your own personal shelf of emotions and passions. Sincerity means truth, authenticity means “true for me.”

 

But it’s worse than that, because the vast bulk of authenticity-mongering in our culture is not only inauthentic, it’s insincere. René Girard is profoundly useful on this point. What started in Rousseau as an (allegedly) sincere argument about authenticity being a rebellion against the false pieties of the church, or what was later dubbed “the system”—by a sprawling variety of nihilists, existentialists, Marxists, radicals, bohemians, hipsters, populists, and poseurs—became its own conformity. The tech billionaire who wears a hoodie and sneakers to seem authentic is just wearing the uniform of the authenticity industrial complex. The $100 (or $10,000) T-shirt is a conformist accessory for the well-dressed “rebel.”

 

The tradwife influencers, the professional rebels, the “true-to-themselves” “just asking questions” table pounders work tirelessly to seem effortlessly authentic, because that’s what sells in this capitalist system—that so many “authentic” radicals get rich by denouncing. How many hours at the gym, how many Botox injections, how many expensive unguents does one have to endure in order to seem authentically natural? How much prep time is required to look unconcerned with how you look? How many viral videos do you need to film inside your car in order to “keep it real”? How hard do you have to work to claim you’ve been censored?

 

The French poet Gérard de Nerval famously walked his pet lobster in public, telling people, “It does not bark and it knows the secrets of the deep.” That kind of shock-the-bourgeois nonsense is at least funny. But it wasn’t and isn’t authentic, nor is it even sincere. It’s a performance.

 

Transgressiveness was a multibillion-dollar lifestyle industry long before Columbia Records ran billboards vowing that “But the Man can’t bust our music.”

 

What is so infuriating and nauseating about so much of it is that the consumers and manufactures of this fashionable gruel can’t even see or acknowledge to themselves that they are high on their own supply. Universities teach protest and radicalism as a core value of a college education. They select applicants who fluently parrot the luxury belief shibboleths of social justice and anti-bourgeois rebellion, then pretend that campus protest is an authentic, spontaneous “happening.” 

 

Hollywood peddles the idea that a protagonist is a hero—or at least a cool anti-hero—if he sticks to his code, even when his code is objectively evil. Hannibal Lecter eats people, but we are supposed to pull for him all the same. Breaking Bad’s Walter White is a murderer and meth dealer, but he tugs at our hearts all the same. From the Corleones to the Sopranos, Frank Lucas to Tony Montana, mobsters are glorified. Omar Little is an audience favorite in The Wire, because even though he murders people, he follows his code—as does Dexter, the serial killer who only deviates from his rule of murdering other serial killers when there’s a chance he might get found out.

 

Politicians are lionized as saviors and redeemers on the grounds that they are authentic, even if they are authentic liars or idiots. Yes, President Donald Trump is authentic. He’s an authentic liar. He is sincere in his belief that lying and bullying is fine if it yields the results he wants. Say what you will about the man, he is true to himself. He dances like everyone is watching. He refuses to bend to the reality of others. Would you teach your children to be authentic like him?

 

Graham Platner, the Great Authentic Hope of Democrats and anti-Trump partisans, is authentic in his sincere desire to seem “authentic.” But which is the authentic Platner? The one who got the Nazi tattoo? The one who lied about knowing it was Nazi tattoo? The one who erased it so he could run for office?

 

Populism always and everywhere depends on the cult of false authenticity. It elevates the heroic leader who defies the system, who represents the “authentic” people and their grievances and desires to punish the other people. As German political philosopher Jan-Werner Müller writes, “the core claim of populism: only some of the people are really the people.” “We are the people. Who are you?” Turkish strongman Recep Erdoğan says to his critics. The authentic will of “the people” is legitimate and sacred, but “the people” is never defined as all of the people, just the “right people,” the real people—the “true” Germans, the authentic Hungarians, the denizens of “real America.” When Brexit passed, Nigel Farage insisted that this was a “victory for real people,” leaving one to wonder what the other 48 percent of Britons were. Mannequins? As Trump once said, “The only important thing is the unification of the people—because the other people don’t mean anything.”

 

But not everything is merely lifestyle posing. Contra Brooks, not everything transgressive is digested and made harmlessly bourgeois by capitalism. Throughout history, the one surefire, undefeatable marker of real authenticity, true sincere rebellion, against the establishment, the system, the ruling edifice of hypocrisy and inauthenticity is violence, the “propaganda of the deed.” “It is to violence that Socialism owes those high ethical values by means of which it brings salvation to the modern world,” French political theorist Georges Sorel proclaimed. “From birth it is clear to him,” Frantz Fanon writes, “that this narrow world, strewn with prohibitions, can only be called in question by absolute violence.”

 

Cosplay is kayfabe until somebody gets killed.

 

Brooks is right that transgressiveness is a capitalist product. Transgressive art, transgressive literature, poetry, film, music, fashion, even transgressive education (see bell hooks’—she uses lowercase letters because that’s so authentic—Teaching to Transgress, available in hardback at Amazon for $31.76). Indeed, I doubt very many in the Transgression Industrial Complex are even aware that the word originally meant “disobedience to God’s law, sin.” Even fewer would care. Most would say, “That’s cool.”

 

The problem with transgressiveness for its own sake is like the problem with heroin: One needs an ever-higher dose just to get the same high. To be sure, most people can handle it, because most people don’t actually want to be real rebels, they want to wear rebelliousness as a fashion statement, to stand out at a meeting or when they drop their kids off at school. But just as some wrestling fans refuse to admit the fakery of the kayfabe, what some authenticity-addicts see in mere fashionable transgressiveness is hypocrisy, which they have been taught is their enemy. And when they hear the apologies for and celebrations of actual violence, whether by Luigi Mangione—who murdered a healthcare executive—or Hamas—which proudly murders and rapes on principle—they reach the logical-but-irrational conclusion that such people are fulfilling the demands of authenticity, they’re keeping it real, they’re denying the fake bourgeoise façade of normalcy, because they “know” who they are—and are willing to prove it with blood.

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