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It’s a terrible big idea btw. “Beefing is good” weakens the body politic so other forces can kill it. It dies not cure it. Kinda like perestroika/glasnost were meant to cure the USSR but just precipitated its collapse. Which could happen here.
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One reason this beefing-is-good big idea thrives is that people confuse their little ideas for big ones and are willing to fight for them. It’s like 50 fighting kittens equals 1 lion. Each kitten sincerely thinks it can win and become a lion. No, a kitten is not a startup lion.
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Every side thinks they can win the war, and get big in the peace after. But keeping the war going is the only big win around. If the war ends, you inherit some rubble. Not a gloriously restored public, reverent awakened masses lionizing you as liberators, and a golden age.
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Your highly hyphenated and prefixed ideology sprawled across 5 blogs, 2 meetups, a manifesto, and a redpilling subreddit really isn’t really going to be next “Marxism” or “Neoliberalism”. Believing that can happen is like believing a chat app can grow into pre-cable TV network
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I mean seriously, can you even imagine what 100 million Americans “believing” in any of these kitten ideologies fighting culture wars looks like in 2019? For eg. There’s this anti-David-Frenchism thing doing the rounds in trad-cath corner. Is _that_ the Next Big Unicorn? 🙄
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The age of big ideologies that hope to rule the world is over. You make bones today merely by running a subreddit and a few meetups. “Arrival” is having one of your Great Battles dominate social media for a day. That’s it. That’s all these manifesto-derping wannabes fight for.
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The biggest ideological successes of our time are... Bannon and Moore? That’s as good as it gets. That’s your prize for briefly getting big enough to take a break from warring. You get to try and sneak a few policies past a mad emperor, to be undone by the next gang of kittens.
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This is not your revolutionary war. It’s the end-of-history war among rotting dinosaur carcasses between mad max tribes. Terminus Hobbes. At best we can hope to starve the war machine of meaning by reading it as spectacle rather than consequential political struggle.
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You can’t really hide from it or ignore it. There’s too much societal energy invested in it (that’s the point of a war, to burn societal energy through futility). But by seeing it differently, you can fall out of love with the big idea of warring and look for better life loves
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