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Richard's avatar

As a card carrying member (r) of the managerial elite, I partially agree. It is hard to argue with some of your specifics, especially as regards the Federales. One of the big problems is the failure to keep experts (especially lawyers) in their lane. But I do think you over-estimate the solidarity of that group. The usual metaphor for trying to accomplish anything at all is "herding cats".

There is another reason why the New Right is badly needed which you hint at in the end of your essay but needs further development. That is the utter failure of the Old Right to conserve any thing at all. Not the economic vigor, not the Constitution, not religion, not the family nor even the notion that there are two sexes. It was the Left driving all these things which they have been doing ever since the French Revolution but the moral collapse of the Right enabled it all. I blame the sainted WFB. His mantra of standing athwart progress and yell Stop was 100% wrong. First of all it ceded the notion of progress to the Left. Second, the message should not have been Stop but Go Back to the Nothingness that awaits you or whatever the exact quote from Gandalf was. What WFB did was to enable the ratchet which is the essential tool for the Left.

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Eric Mader's avatar

Excellent review. I wouldn’t say our liberal democracies “have become tyrannies,” but they are getting ever closer. The direction of drift is unmistakable. Most telling perhaps is the new arrogance on display from governing elites across the West. Where once they would hedge or seek to persuade, they are now unapologetic in their rejection of what the citizenry wants, and clearly *proud* of their support for censorship—“more of which is needed.”

In my view, one of the only reasons this has become viable as a politics is that conservatives let the universities fall entirely into the left’s hands. Not hard to understand why the GOP did so, being that “tax cuts tax cuts tax cuts” were the meaning of conservatism, but that there was no concerted fight anywhere in the West is harder to figure out. A once-Marxist left took over the schools during the very years it was morphing into this present identitarian cult (really no longer even *the Left*) and when the process was complete—voilà, there was available an infinitely busybody “leftish” movement that corporations could stomach. Because, of course, identities can be *marketed*. And look, these fallen universities were yearly minting tens of thousands of new consumers who could be depended on to buy the virtue-signaling junk, even as they were sure to vote for the virtue-signaling, pro-managerial party. Whether state or corporate, then, it was a win win for every managerial busybody.

And so: If the spread of managerialism at the state level was later so neatly paralleled by a similar spread in the corporate world (via the growth of HR) we have our captured universities to thank. “Foucault is ready to praise your precious uniqueness, and you needn’t even read Foucault.” All the anxious kids are signing up. And they will hit the job market this Fall.

As for whether this drift can be reversed, I’m skeptical. But building alternative educational institutions seems the most worthwhile work long term. Short term, it’s at least good that there are political figures like Vance who get the problem.

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