The Grim Joust: a Reply to Ravikant

Engaging in politics habituates and rewires the brain to value agreement and signaling. It weakens the ability to reason independently and clearly.
Naval Ravikant, on Twitter this week

Politics is, indeed, notoriously something that kills minds, and is not actually even a very interesting thing to contemplate. In a well-ordered polity, the average man would no more have an opinion about politics than he does about the content of dental amalgam.

Politics is a waste of scarce mental resources. Literally anything else we might spend our time doing would be time better spent: arts, sciences, coding, business or even intelligent conversation. There is just one problem, though, with the idea that we should spend our time and intellect on arts, science, coding, business, and conversation, and just forget about politics.

We can’t.

If we pursue the arts, we may produce some epic work with great insight into the human condition, only to be told that we’re terrible people for not putting more minority women into “The Red Badge of Courage”. (And even if we fend off such carping by somehow shoehorning Black women into, say “The Forty-Seven Ronin”, it will somehow never be enough.)

If we follow the sciences (assuming we can even get in the door in the first place) it will be no better. We’ll find ourselves fired for honest debate, and driven into penury for disagreement. If we choose to apply the sciences outside of the academy, perhaps we can push back the boundaries of space flight only to find ourselves vilified for the clothes we wear.

Coding! Surely that pursuit of high-minded nerds will be a refuge! Surely coding will be immune to politics? Surely we won’t be banned, blacklisted or fired over something as silly as politics? Right?

And forget all about business, since even attempting to bring science and reason into it will increasingly lay one open to being accused of the inexpiable crime of “discrimination”.

While as for the art of conversation – has Justine landed yet? (I’d ask Pax Dickinson or Clark Hat that question, but they both seem to have been disappeared from Twitter, in a manner not even remotely reminiscent of Soviet citizens in the Great Terror.)

This is the predicament that we find ourselves in: we have no choice but to engage in the grim joust of politics, because whatever at all we choose to do, politics will hunt us down. And so like John Adams before us, we must study politics and war so that our sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy (and arts, sciences, coding, business and even conversation).

This is the future you chose, leftists. And may God forgive you; because we won’t.

“The Nationale”

A while ago the Derb called for “someone to come up with a suitable anthem” for a worldwide alliance of nationalists united against globalism. Here’s my attempt at writing one.

The Nationale

In God’s House there are many mansions

A home made ready for everyone;

Here on Earth there are many nations

A homeland for everyone under the sun.

We stand together to guard our homelands

We stand together for Liberty!

Divided by borders, united by purpose:

Defend our uniqueness from Tyranny!

 

Forefathers down to our generation

We guard the flame from father to son:

Family, Mannerbund, Tradition

Unites us all, we stand as one!

We stand together, etc.

 

Brothers we live in our separate houses,

Governed our own hopes best to fulfill;

Brothers we are to our separate neighbors,

Glad for their triumphs, full of goodwill.

We stand together, etc.

 

Scorn we oppression of Nation by Nation!

Over ourselves, only, are we supreme;

Empire we shun as the plaything of tyrants,

Ask only lordship of our own demesne.

We stand together, etc.

 

Sing one last anthem for our sacred Nation!

Sing one last chorus for his, hers and yours!

Different and separate, but all heirs of Freedom:

There stand we firm, and pray God it endures!

We stand together to guard our homelands

We stand together for Liberty!

Divided by borders, united by purpose:

Defend our uniqueness from Tyranny!

And What Exactly _Is_ a Cuardach?

What are the facts? Again and again and again – what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore divine revelation, forget what “the stars foretell,” avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable “verdict of history” – what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your single clue. Get the facts!

The Notebooks of Lazarus Long

There are some things that can be said in 140 characters or less; for everything else, there’s WordPress. In keeping with Heinlein’s wise advice, this blog is a way for me to figure out what are the facts: to analyze some of the implications of ideas and see whether the real world looks anything like that, or whether we might get it to look like that, and whether we’d like the looks of it if we did. Expect the essays and excursions herein to be conducted on the principle that 20% of a vague truth is better than 100% of a precise falsehood.

Of course, Heinlein also said that writing should be done in private and you should wash your hands afterwards. Still, nowadays people do publicly and online all sorts of things that might be better done in private.

Oh, I almost forgot: cuardach is Gaelic for “quest,” the quest being of course one for understanding. (In the interests of sanity, there will be no more Gaelic on this blog, ever again.)