Accountability Culture is Cancel Culture: Double Think and Newspeak in Today’s America

“To know and not to know, to be conscious of complete truthfulness while telling carefully constructed lies, to hold simultaneously two opinions which cancelled out, knowing them to be contradictory and believing in both of them, to use logic against logic, to repudiate morality while laying claim to it, to believe that democracy was impossible and that the Party was the guardian of democracy, to forget, whatever it was necessary to forget, then to draw it back into memory again at the moment when it was needed, and then promptly to forget it again: and above all, to apply the same process to the process itself.”—George Orwell (1949)

“Political language has to consist largely of euphemism, question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness. Defenseless villages are bombarded from the air, the inhabitants driven out into the countryside, the cattle machine-gunned, the huts set on fire with incendiary bullets: this is called pacification. Millions of peasants are robbed of their farms and sent trudging along the roads with no more than they can carry: this is called transfer of population or rectification of frontiers. People are imprisoned for years without trial, or shot in the back of the neck or sent to die of scurvy in arctic lumber camps: this is called elimination of unreliable elements. Such phraseology is needed if one wants to name things without calling up mental pictures of them.”—George Orwell (1946)

“Doublethink” is a concept introduced by George Orwell in his 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. It refers to the ability of the citizens of Airstrip One, in Oceania, primarily members of the Inner and Outer Party, to hold two contradictory beliefs simultaneously and to express belief in both in what ego and alter perceive to be equivalent degrees of cogency. (I have discussed Orwell’s work before on Freedom and Reason, e.g., here, but in many other places, as well. The moral outrage that runs through his work should move every thinking person today.)

George Orwell (1903-1950)

Doublethink is a method of controlling the thoughts of the masses that allows the Party to change the “truth” without objection or resistance; citizens are taught to accept whatever the Party says, even if it contradicts what they can see with their own eyes. If the Party claims that war is peace, citizens must believe it to be true, even if they know that war is destructive and violent. Doublethink finds individuals believing that surrendering personal freedoms to the state frees them from the burdens of making decisions and taking responsibility for their own lives. Doublethink has individuals believing that by remaining ignorant of or not questioning the actions of states or other powerful entities, citizens are actually better prepare to live a good live and negotiate the world around them.

Examples of doublethink abound: the advocacy for universal basic income; the demand that people unquestioningly follow public health mandates; the conviction that all gods are mythic except the god in which they believe; the view that shutting down the speech of others is an expression of the free speech right; the view that individuals should be free from having to live according to the designs of others while believing that others should be compelled to live under their design.

With the release of video from the January 6, 2021 event at the Capitol, we are now being told to disbelieve what we can see with our own eyes.

Jacob Chansley was arrested January 9, 2021 and has been in custody ever since. He pleaded guilty in the District of Columbia on September 3, 2021 to obstruction of an official proceeding and was sentences to 41 months in prison. Judge Royce Lamberth also ordered him to pay 2,000 dollar in restitution. After his release from prison, he will also serve a period of three years of supervised release. However, the video kept from the public and from Chansley’s attorney shows two Capitol police officers escorting Chansley around the building.

The video also shows Officer Brian Sicknick, whom the public was told was beaten to death with a fire extinguisher, walking around the building unharmed. In fact, the five officers the public was told died that day did not in fact die that day. What we are witnessing is the remarkable ability of people to manage these facts alongside the belief that Chansley lead an insurrection on January 6 in which five police officers were killed. That’s doublethink.

Doublethink is facilitated in Nineteen Eighty-Four through the use of Newspeak, a language designed by the Party to limit the range of thought and expression making it effectively impossible to articulate and often to even think dissenting thoughts. In Orwell’s work, Newspeak eliminates words related to democracy, individuality, and liberty and instead promotes words that support the Party’s propaganda. The goal of Newspeak is to create a language in which all thoughts are pre-approved by the Party and dissenting ideas are difficult to express and to be understood. It is the way Newspeak works to limits discourse citizens are capable of having that makes it a useful metaphor for describing the current situation.

Newspeak is the work of the Ministry of Truth, one of the four ministries that make up the ruling government of Airstrip One. The Ministry of Truth is responsible for controlling the Party’s version of reality and maintaining the apparent integrity of its propaganda through the manipulation of historical records and the news. The ministry employs a staff of bureaucrats drawn from the Outer Party who are responsible for revising historical documents, newspapers, and other sources of information to conform to the Party’s current version of truth. By controlling the meanings and usages of words, Newspeak makes it easier for citizens to hold and express contradictory beliefs without realizing it.

One can see the idea of Newspeak percolating in Orwell’s mind in his 1946 essay “Politics and the English Language,” published in the literary magazine Horizon in April 1946. The second quote at the top of this blog is from that essay. Recall the last sentence of that passage: “Such phraseology is needed if one wants to name things without calling up mental pictures of them.” Now consider the construct “gender affirming care.” Consider this euphemism especially in light of the last sentence from the above passage and then search Google for images to see what the euphemism to which they mean to blind you. You will not be able to unsee the reality. (You may have to hunt for the images. Google has algorithms.)

Orwell writes, “Consider for instance some comfortable English professor defending Russian totalitarianism. He cannot say outright, ‘I believe in killing off your opponents when you can get good results by doing so.’ Probably, therefore, he will say something like this: ‘While freely conceding that the Soviet régime exhibits certain features which the humanitarian may be inclined to deplore, we must, I think, agree that a certain curtailment of the right to political opposition is an unavoidable concomitant of transitional periods, and that the rigors which the Russian people have been called upon to undergo have been amply justified in the sphere of concrete achievement.’”

For most citizens of Airstrip One, doublethink and the political use of language work as reflex action. Those for whom they don’t are sent to another of the four ministries of Airstrip One, the Ministry of Love. The Ministry of Love is a place of oppression and terror where people are imprisoned and tortured for “thoughtcrime,” i.e., independent or rebellious thoughts that challenge the Party’s authority and question the prevailing ideology. Through surveillance networks and a web of informants, the Ministry of Love maintains records of citizens’ thoughts and monitors their activities. (In our situation today records of citizens’ thoughts are monitored through their voluntary submissions of those thoughts to social media platforms. Because of the isolated nature of bureaucratic structures, this is the way we at the same time build mutual knowledge.)

Part of the reflex action manifests itself in the ritual of the “Two-Minute Hate” in which citizens watch a video that depicts the Party’s enemies, with a focus on Goldstein, a former member of the Inner Party who has now become a symbol of dissent. During the ritual, citizens are expected to express their hatred and anger towards Goldstein and the other enemies of the Party. The purpose of the Two-Minute Hate is to manipulate the emotions of the citizens and reinforce the Party’s control over their thoughts and feelings.

By encouraging the citizens to express their hatred and anger towards a common enemy, the Party is able to create a sense of unity and solidarity among its members, while also diverting attention away from the real problems and issues that affect their lives. We see this phenomenon in contemporary America in the outpouring of hate towards Donald Trump, what has been dubbed Trump derangement syndrome (TDS). But other enemies are also the focus of the ritual. Tucker Carlson of Fox News is the most common hate focus today. Carlson is in possession of the video evidence exposing the propaganda of the Party concerning the events of January 6. Citizens are not to believe the video he shows because they hate the messenger. This is the function of hate.

The concepts of Nineteen Eighty-Four serve as a warning about the dangers of totalitarianism and the importance of critical thinking and free thought in maintaining a free and democratic society. By not becoming caught up in irrational exercises, citizens can calmly and logically think their way through argument and evidence and arrive at reasonable positions.

As much as we might wish that the practice of doublethink exists only in Orwell’s dystopian world, it is in operation everywhere today. Below is a terrific example of doublethink in action. Be sure to take note of the man’s use of the word “accountability.” I will be discussing this matter in the balance of this blog entry.

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I’m going to publish more blog entries critical of queer theory and trans-activism. These will be in the spirit of my critiques of critical race theory and anti-racism, so they’re sure to arouse passions. They will fall within the scope of several blog entries already penned and distributed. They should not therefore surprise anybody. But they will. This is because my thoughts represent independent or rebellious thoughts that challenge the Party’s authority and question the prevailing ideology. My speech is heretical, contradicting the prevailing doctrine. This makes me a bad person, a person worthy of bad names.

Without getting into the substance of my critiques presently, there’s a matter that needs addressing upfront if we’re to defend the principles that allow human beings to make critiques without fear of discipline and punishment—this word “accountability.” We may be bad people who deserves to be called bad names (from one or more standpoints I am one of those persons), but if we are not being disciplined or punished, we continue to live freely. However, there are those who wish to discipline and punish us for the things we say. They dress up their illiberal desires in the language of accountability in order to appear as if they are not in fact illiberal. This isn’t true of all the authoritarians out there. Some openly reject the principles of civil and human rights.

I’m sure readers have seen these memes that state in so many words “accountability is not cancel culture.” The memes are wrong. Accountability is cancel culture. We use that term all the time without defining it. So what is cancel culture?

The term “cancel culture” has its origins in Black Twitter, first used in the early 2010s to describe the practice of calling out individuals, typically public figures, for problematic behavior or statements and then boycotting or “canceling” them as a way of expressing disapproval. For those readers who don’t know what Black Twitter is, this is a community of black users who dwell on black culture and identity. This is the source of hashtags that have become—aggressively pushed out by corporate state media, the culture industry, and educational institutions—popular touchstones, e.g., #BlackLivesMatter. So you can already see that we have a problem.

Cancel culture gained broader purchase in society as social media became more widespread and enabled broader participation in the practice of calling out what busybodies and moral entrepreneurs identified as “problematic behavior,” thereby conflating speech with action. Cancel culture involves a variety of phenomena, including censoring, deplatforming, and the withdrawal of support from public figures. These actions are not only carried out by the users of popular culture, but are also carried out by the private and public sector entities that manage culture, produce knowledge, and control the flow of information.

“Accountability,” on the other hand, refers to the obligation or responsibility of an individual or organization to account for actions and decisions. Put simply, accountability involves being answerable and responsible for one’s behavior and to be willing to explain and justify them to others. However, the right of an individual to freely express his beliefs, observations, and opinions is not subject to accountability—at least not in a free society.

This equivalency is not merely an error. It is an indicator of authoritarian thinking. If I hurt somebody physically, then I can be held to account for my actions. The harm caused by my action is not entirely subjective, but to some significant extent objective—and it must be, or must have intended to be, to be actionable. On the other hand, if I hurt somebody’s feelings with an observation or remark, the effect is entirely subjective; the observation or remark lands differently depending on the person’s sensibilities, which I do not control and for which I am not responsible.

The above clip, where the young man defends the human right of those destroying a Bible yet finds it not only appropriate but it seems necessary to punish those who destroy a Koran, illustrates the distinction perfectly. The selective outrage proves the fact of subjectivity. There is no demonstrable objective harm. It depends entirely on a loyalties. We don’t defend the right to destroy a Bible on the basis of how we feel about Christianity. It is not up to the state or any other powerful entity to tell us how to feel about Christianity. We defend the right to destroy a Bible precisely because it is not up to the state or any other powerful entity to tell us how to feel about Christianity. What the young man is saying is that, depending on the ideology, a person may be punished for his expression—and smeared as a racist.

When speech is conflated with actions and decisions that actually affect people, accountability becomes a euphemism for cancel culture. This is the Newspeak function of reducing one’s capacity to think. Moreover, it allows for the content of speech to determine whether the person can speak not the principle that people can speak regardless of the content of their utterances. It means that there are people—commissars—who are appointed to determine what can and cannot be said.

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I discussed this clip in a previous blog, A Mass Experiment in Gaslighting. I noted there that Deeming exposes Rice as engaged in doublethink. Rice finds it psychological abusive to permit a person to tell a biological fact without considering that it is psychological abusive to make a person deny a biological fact. Flip over her doublethink to get the gravity of her thinking. Imagine forcing a trans woman to say that she is a man. That would be wrong. Obviously. That would be an oppressive act. So why is it not also an oppressive act to force a woman to say that a trans woman is a woman?

What is at stake here is something of much greater concern than trans women not having to be confronted with psychological distressing facts. Equally applying the principle that would compel a woman to say that transwomen are women would mean that trans women would be compelled to say that they are men in order to save another person the psychological stress of hearing her say otherwise. If we are not to have the state determine for us what we must believe, and this is the essence of cognitive liberty, then those who believe a person cannot change their sex must be afforded the same right to do so as those who believe a person can.

Doublethink in this instance reveals a matter of substance we must note here. Those who would compel others to affirm their beliefs do so out of a desire to control the minds of those they seek to compel. This is a desire profoundly authoritarian in character. It is of the same character as the Muslim demanding the infidel affirm the truth of the Koran. Such a demand reflects the insecurity that underpins the demand for conformity—and the desire to destroy those who do not conform. As Erich Fromm pointed out in his Escape from Freedom, the conformity or destruction dynamic is a hallmark of the authoritarian personality.

According to Fromm, there is a pervasive fear of freedom in western societies, a result of the individual’s inability to cope with the uncertainty that comes with freedom. In order to escape this anxiety, individuals often adopt conformist attitudes and behaviors, and seek out conformity and sameness in others. Not all individuals, of course. But enough of them to have an effect. These are those who have not managed to cope with the situation of freedom. They cannot abide by the fact that others do not think as they do. So they lash out. We see this in the actions of Antifa, which is at its core a trans activist countermovement against liberal society. As Fromm points out, the demand for conformity among those who fear freedom is the root of many of the social and political problems that plague modern societies, including authoritarianism and totalitarianism.

Why is anybody compelled to affirm the trans woman? If the trans woman is a woman, she does not depends on others to affirm her gender. The tolerant Christian does not need those around him to affirm his belief in the soul and his religious commitments. The trans woman offended by those who do not affirm her belief depends on the affirmation of others. Here’s a person seeking to enlist others in validating her delusion—in the same way a Muslim unsure of the truth of his beliefs cannot tolerate the infidel. If this trans woman enjoys the force of the state at her back, just as the Muslim does in several theocratic countries, then nobody lives in a free society but a tyranny that demands everybody accept its doctrine. This situation is the diametric opposite of freedom.

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President Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to the Danbury Baptist Association on News Year’s Day, 1802, recalling with “sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should ‘make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’” thus establishing a “wall of separation between Church & State,” notes “that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions.” Jefferson goes on to express his commitment to upholding the principles of the First Amendment, which he believes represents the “supreme will of the nation” regarding to protection of religious freedom. He specifically addresses the question of freedom of conscience, writing, “Adhering to this expression of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights of conscience, I shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of those sentiments which tend to restore to man all his natural rights, convinced he has no natural right in opposition to his social duties.”

To be sure, there are limits on utterances and religious exercise. But these concern utterances and religious exercise that interfere with the expression of these same rights by others. The claims that one is exercising free speech rights when disrupting a public gathering (the “heckler’s veto”) or that one is exercising freedom of conscience by forcing others into the scope of his religious activity (such as a teacher leading students in prayer at a public school) represent a rejection of one’s social duty to respect the natural rights of others. It is a paradox to claim that one negates the right to free speech by the exercise of free speech. Public school administrators should not allow Muslim students to clog the halls during Salah and claim to support religious liberty.

If I am held to account for demanding that public institutions at the very least respect cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience, and it takes no effort to imagine complaints that my references to Islam in forming examples with which to make my points represents acts of Islamophobia, then you will know accountability in this context is cancel culture. A few years ago on Facebook I had several people accuse me of Islamophobia before unfriending me for precisely my criticisms concerning the danger to cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience the practice of cultural pluralism presents—because it lets in Islam.

Of course, because of the long history of irreligious criticism in the West, and the protection of such criticism in the United States thanks to the First Amendment, I am sure that the administrators at my school would hesitate to ask to speak to me about it. In light of what has happened to others at other universities, maybe that’s just my good fortune. But why should it be any different when the criticisms are of the quasi-religions that have proliferated our academic, business, and cultural institutions? Why should one have to speak to an administrator for criticizing Black Lives Matter?

Of course, one shouldn’t—and wouldn’t if administrators upheld the foundational values of a free society. They would know that there is no obligation or responsibility of an individual to account for or to accept any consequences for his speech or his conscience. A free man is neither answerable nor responsible for his utterances. He has no obligation to explain and justify his belief or opinions—or the absence therefore—to anyone. His words are his to do with what he pleases. He is just as entitled to his silence. All this is secured and protected in the foundational law of western civilization.

Based on recent experience, I’m anticipating that administrators where I teach will receive demands to call me to account for things I will have said about queer theory and trans-activism. This has already happened for my criticism of Black Lives Matter and critical race theory. Twice, in fact. If I am being honest, the possibility of having to again meet an administrator does make me fearful; but I’m not going to let that stop me from speaking my mind. I am not going to let the threat of accountability stop me from sharing my views because I know that such demands are motivated by a desire to chill speech. The administration at my school and schools across the nation should recognize this and explain to those who raise complaints the paramount important of cognitive liberty, freedom of conscience, and academic freedom.

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Academic freedom is the principle that members of the scholarly community—professors, researchers, and students—have the right to freely pursue and share knowledge and ideas without fear of censorship, repression, or retaliation. It’s a fundamental concept in modern higher education that supports the free exchange of ideas and the pursuit of truth, regardless of political, religious, or other considerations. Academic freedom enables students to learn about a variety of viewpoints and perspectives in an open and intellectually stimulating environment by protecting the right of teachers to challenge established ideas and beliefs, question authority, and engage in controversial or unpopular research.

I have in class, as I have on Freedom and Reason, criticized claims by activists, media, and other scholars that, for example, black males are overrepresented in fatal police encounters because of systemic racism. I have make this criticism based on the well established fact that the democratic patterns are explained by benchmarks (such as rates of serious crime and likelihood of police contact) and situational factors (presence of weapons and eminent threat to life or limb). That students would, on account of finding the facts objectionable and ill-fitted with what they think the aims of the program, seek to hold me accountable, is precisely what academic freedom protects. I am challenging established beliefs and ideas. I am questioning authority. I am engaged in controversial and unpopular research. To do otherwise would be to act as a clergyman. And the university is not a church.

To say that a criminologist should have to waste time meeting administrators over his criticisms of the anti-racist position is to say that Galileo Galilei was properly involved in a controversy with the Catholic Church over his support of the heliocentric model of the solar system over the Aristotelian view endorsed by the church. Recall that the Church, in 1616, issued a decree prohibiting the teaching or advocating of heliocentrism, and Galileo was warned not to support it publicly. The church sought to deter Galileo with its decree. Galileo was undeterred, publishing in 1632 his Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, which presented arguments for both the heliocentric and geocentric models of the universe. Even giving both sides (which Galileo need not have done), the book was perceived by the Church as an attack on its authority, and Galileo was brought before the Inquisition the following year, charged with heresy and forced to recant his views. He was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life and his book was placed on the Index of Forbidden Books, where it remained for two centuries.

Galileo’s conflict with the Church has been seen as an example of the tension between science and religion and the struggle for intellectual freedom. It’s a cautionary tale about the dangers of challenging established beliefs and institutions. The Catholic Church has acknowledged its treatment of Galileo as a mistake. Will the university acknowledge its mistreatment of the many Galileos that it has sought to make accountable for their speech?

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A chill is put in the air when when institutions take actions that discourage or punish the exercise of free thought. A law or policy that effectively criminalizes—or, more accurately or comprehensively, deviantizes—types of speech by imposing penalties for expressing certain opinions can cause people to self-censor.

Business firms and social media platforms develop policies that discourage the exercise of free speech, firing employees for expressing certain views and de-platforming users for violating community standards. This is happening in the public sector, as well. If we allow such threats to deter the exercise of free thought—free as in the absence of costs associated with speech acts—then we participate in our own repression.

The chill can follow something as minimal as letting an employee know that somebody has complained. I’m sure those administrators who talked to me felt they were being accountable to those who complained. The last time I was called to the principal’s office, the matter was framed as a concern with “retention.”

In recent years, universities and other institutions of higher education have come to believe that creating a more inclusive and diverse environment is not only important for promoting “social justice” and “equity,” but also for improving student retention and academic success, concerns that feel more relevant to the enterprise.

They base the push for “inclusivity” on the basis of research that indicating that students who feel a sense of belonging and community on campus are more likely to persist in their studies and complete their degrees. Conversely, students who feel marginalized or excluded are more likely to drop out or transfer to another institution. Thus the present of views that students say offend them or make them feel alienated or uncomfortable need to be curtailed.

Inclusivity takes the form of recruitment and retention initiatives. Universities are actively recruiting and supporting students from underrepresented groups. This is a laudable goal. But what comes with it are impacts on curriculum and pedagogy, Universities are rethinking their curriculum and teaching methods to be more “inclusive” and “culturally responsive.”

The positive spin on this is the inclusion of diverse perspectives and voices in course materials, creating opportunities for students to engage in dialogue and reflection about diversity and social justice issues, and implementing innovative teaching methods that promote active learning and engagement. But the practical reality of these changes is that knowledge is compromised by crackpot theories and students and faculty are forced into situations of compelled speech.

The same is true with initiatives concerning campus culture and climate. Universities are working to create a more welcoming and inclusive campus culture by promoting diversity and inclusion through events, programs, and initiatives that celebrate diversity and promote social justice. This can include cultural and heritage celebrations, diversity and inclusion training for faculty and staff, and other efforts to build a more inclusive community.

The effect of this is the balkanization and tribalization of social life and university programming, with the diminution of the individual the effect.

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As with inclusivity and the goals of retention, accountability is a threat to free speech and freedom of conscience because it undermines the ability of individuals to engage in open and honest discourse and to express their beliefs and opinions without fear of retribution. It treats individuals are personifications of various identity groups. It silos opinions and drives wedges between students and faculty.

Tamping down controversy for the sake of inclusivity is damaging to the enterprise of higher education. Frank discourse is vital to the life of the university—and to society generally—for several reasons.

It allows people to express their opinions and ideas, even if they are unpopular or controversial. Controversy allows people to engage in meaningful dialogue and debate that pushes the envelop, opening up new avenues of thought, fosters intellectual curiosity, and promotes a healthy and vibrant democratic process.

Objectionable and offensive expressions and opinions encourage critical thinking. When we’re exposed to opinions that challenge our beliefs and opinions, we’re forced to think critically about why we hold those beliefs and whether they are worth holding. Being offended is often the first step towards enlightenment among intelligent men.

Hearing diverse opinions and perspectives can broaden our understanding of complex issues and help us appreciate the diversity of human experiences and viewpoints. It promotes tolerance and understanding. When we listen to unpopular and controversial opinions, if we are really listening, we gain a better understanding of the experiences and perspectives of people who are different from us. This can help promote empathy and tolerance towards others.

By better understanding our own opinions, we may be able to strengthen our own arguments.

A healthy democracy requires an engaged and informed citizenry. Hearing and debating diverse opinions helps to ensure that citizens are engaged and informed. Freedom from fear in expressing one’s perceptions helps build mutual knowledge. And that may expose the nakedness of the king.

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The United States Republic was established with a strong emphasis on civil and human rights. Even before the Constitution and the Bill of Rights were penned (1787 and 1789 respectively), the colony’s declaration of independence from the United Kingdom, penned in 1776, emphasized foundational human rights, those rights that inhere in all human beings, regardless of their ethnicity, nationality, sex, or other characteristics, realized as such in victories against the forces of prejudice and discrimination, victories owing their success to debate and dialogue.

Human rights include equal treatment under the law, freedom of expression and thought, and security of person. The three identified in the Declaration of Independence (1776) as unalienable are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. “We hold these truths to be self-evident,” the committee (comprised of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and a few others) wrote, “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

The difference between “unalienable” and “inalienable” is subtle but important to clarify, especially in light of the fact that these terms are often used interchangeably. Unalienable rights are rights that cannot be taken away or denied. In contrast, inalienable rights are rights that cannot be transferred or surrendered to another person.

The committee used the term unalienable in the Declaration of Independence to emphasize the idea that these rights are inherent to every individual and cannot be negated by any government or other authority. Neither public nor private entity can deprive an individual of life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness. These are fundamental and universal, not granted by any government, but rather recognized and protected by government. The document assert that these rights inhere in the laws of nature. They are organic to our species-being.

Closely related to human rights are civil rights. Civil rights are those rights that are specifically protected by law in a particular society or country. Civil rights may include guaranteeing among citizens equality of the right to vote (itself a political right), such as recognizing the right of women to effectively participate in political and civil life, the right to equal treatment in employment and housing, and the right to access public accommodations. Civil rights explicitly guaranteed in United State law and in precedent.

The foundational rights protected by the First Amendment are both human rights and civil rights in that they are essential to individual autonomy and freedom, and are protected by law in the United States. These rights are seen as fundamental to the functioning of a democratic society and are considered to be a cornerstone of the American system of government.

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I speak often about cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience. Cognitive liberty refers to the idea that individuals have the right to control their own consciousness and to make decisions about what they put into their minds. This includes the right to engage in activities that alter one’s mental state, such as using psychoactive drugs or engaging in spiritual practices, without interference from the government or other authorities.

The idea of cognitive liberty is closely tied to the idea of personal autonomy and the right to privacy, which underpins the Fourth and Fifth Articles of the United States Bill of Rights.

Proponents of cognitive liberty argue that individuals have the right to make their own choices about how to use their minds and assert that this right is essential to personal freedom and well-being. The ability to think freely, make choices, and express oneself without fear of retribution is essential to personal growth and fulfillment.

Freedom of conscience is the right to hold and express one’s own beliefs and values without interference or coercion from the government or other authorities. It is closely related to the concept of religious freedom, but it can also extend to non-religious beliefs.

One of the earliest drafts of the First Amendment proposed by James Madison in the summer of 1789 reads as follows: “The civil rights of none shall be abridged on account of religious belief or worship, nor shall any national religion be established, nor shall the full and equal rights of conscience be in any manner, or on any pretext, infringed.”

The idea of freedom of conscience is rooted in the recognition of individual autonomy and the right of personal liberty. It acknowledges that people have the right to form their own beliefs and opinions, and to act on them, as long as they do not harm others or violate the rights of others.

In practice, freedom of conscience can take many different forms, such as the right to practice a particular religion, the right to express political opinions, or the right to engage in artistic or cultural expression. It also includes the right to refuse to participate in activities or actions that go against one’s deeply held beliefs, such as participating in military service or providing medical treatment that conflicts with one’s moral or religious values.

Freedom of conscience is enshrined in many national and international human rights documents, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), which recognizes the right to freedom of conscience, religion, and thought as fundamental human rights. These rights are considered fundamental to the concept of individual autonomy and the ability to freely choose one’s own actions, beliefs, and values.

Article 18: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.” Article 19: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” Article 20: “Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.” These articles recognize the importance of individual thought, expression, and conscience, and provide protections for individuals to express themselves freely and associate with others without fear of persecution or discrimination. These rights are essential for promoting democracy, transparency, and the exchange of ideas, which are all critical for the development and advancement of societies.

Cognitive liberty, in particular, is closely tied to the right to pursue happiness, which is one of the unalienable rights identified in the Declaration of Independence. The ability to control one’s own mental life and processes and to explore different states of consciousness is seen as essential to personal fulfillment.

Freedom of conscience is closely related to the right to life and liberty, which are also identified as unalienable rights in the Declaration of Independence. The right to hold and express one’s own beliefs and values is seen as essential to individual autonomy and personal liberty, and is a key component of a free and democratic society.

This goes to the vital importance and thus justifications for upholding the ethic of free speech, among these the value of democratic participation, wherein free speech is prerequisite for the ability of individuals to freely express their opinions, engage in political debate, and hold their leaders accountable (i.e., checking government power, where free speech is necessarily the protected ability to criticize and challenge authorities, policies, and practices essential for maintaining a free and democratic life); truth-seeking, wherein free speech is prerequisite for free and open debate, so that truth can emerge through a process of critical inquiry and discussion; and as a means of personal self-fulfillment where individuals have the right to express themselves creatively and intellectually, and to share their ideas with others—to grow as individuals and (hopefully) achieve self-actualization.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution was formulated in 1789 by the First United States Congress. It was one of several amendments proposed in response to concerns about the lack of protections for individual liberties in the original Constitution—which implied freedom of conscience by forbidding the requirement of any office holder to take an oath respecting the establishment of religion. The First Amendment was intended to protect the fundamental rights of speech, religion, press, assembly, and petition. Along with the other ten rights in the Bill of Rights, the First Amendment was ratified by the required number of states in December, 1791. The ratification of the First Amendment marked an important milestone in the protection of individual liberties in the United States and helped to establish the United States as a leading democratic force in the world.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution provides important protections for cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience. Specifically, the First Amendment guarantees several freedoms, including freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly, and the right to petition the government for redress of grievances. Freedom of speech is a key component of both cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience. As I have explained, it allows individuals to express their thoughts and opinions freely, and to engage in creative and intellectual pursuits without fear of government censorship or punishment. This includes the right to explore and discuss controversial or unpopular ideas, and to challenge existing beliefs and norms. It is closely associated with freedom of conscience, which refers to the right to hold and express one’s own beliefs and values without interference from the government or other external forces.

Freedom of the press is also important for cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience. It ensures that individuals have access to a variety of viewpoints and perspectives, and can make informed decisions that bear on their beliefs and values. It protects the right to engage in investigative journalism and to hold those in power accountable for their actions. Freedom of religion guarantees individuals the right to practice their own religious beliefs, or to have no religious beliefs at all, without fear of discrimination or persecution. This includes the right to engage in spiritual practices and to explore alternative belief systems. The right to assemble and petition the government is an important component of both cognitive liberty and freedom of conscience. It allows individuals to come together to express their beliefs and values, and to advocate for their interests. It also ensures that the government is accountable to the people and that citizens have a voice in the political process.

Freedom of association is an implicit right protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. While the term “freedom of association” is not explicitly mentioned in the First Amendment, it is generally considered to be closely tied to the freedom of assembly, which is one of the explicitly stated freedoms in the First Amendment. The freedom of assembly clause of the First Amendment guarantees that individuals have the right to come together in groups, whether for associative and expressive purposes, without fear of government interference. This includes the right to participate in demonstrations and protests, to form political and social clubs, and to engage in other forms of collective action. The freedom of assembly and freedom of association are closely related because both involve the right to come together with others for a common purpose. The right to freedom of association allows individuals to form and join associations, groups, and organizations, and to advocate for their shared beliefs and interests. It also includes the right to not associate with others, meaning that individuals have the right to refuse to join certain groups or organizations.

Other amendments in the Bill of Rights near on the question of cognitive liberty. The Fifth Amendment provides protection against self-incrimination. The Fifth Amendment’s protection against self-incrimination can be seen as associated with cognitive liberty. Since cognitive liberty is the principle that individuals should have the freedom to control their own consciousness and thought processes, including the ability to freely express their beliefs and ideas without fear of punishment or coercion, the protection against self-incrimination is one of the ways in which the Constitution protects an individual’s cognitive liberty. The protection against self-incrimination means that an individual cannot be compelled to give testimony that might incriminate them in a criminal case. This protection is based on the idea that an individual’s thoughts and beliefs should be protected from government intrusion, and that individuals should have the right to control what they say and what information they disclose.

The Fourth Amendment protects the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, and guards against unreasonable searches and seizures. It is also connected to the concept of cognitive liberty, as individuals have the freedom to control their own consciousness and thought processes, including the ability to privately explore their own thoughts and ideas. The Fourth Amendment’s protections against unreasonable searches and seizures can be seen as supporting this concept of cognitive liberty by ensuring that individuals have a right to privacy in their own personal spaces and effects. The Fourth Amendment helps to protect against unreasonable government intrusion into an individual’s private spaces, such as their home, office, or personal property. This protection can be seen as an important safeguard against government overreach and abuse of power, which can have a chilling effect on an individual’s ability to explore their own thoughts and ideas freely.

I have the right as a citizen of a free republic with a constitution that enshrines religious liberty and freedom of speech, press, to petition government, to publicly assemble, and association to criticize anything or anybody, nothing or nobody has a right to not be criticized. This includes me, of course. But efforts to compel government institutions to punish me in some fashion for my utterances, whether disciplinary trainings requirements, demotion, withholding promotion, pay raises, termination must be exposed for what they are—authoritarian and illiberal attitudes and actions that are harmful the foundations of the republic. And if the government institutions allow themselves to be compelled to such thing—or if the institutions take it upon themselves to censor speech and punish faculty for utterances, then they are violating my constitutional and human rights. Moreover, the religious character of these ideologies is obvious. But it is not enough that these ideologies enjoy religious liberty. They do not want me to be free from their religious beliefs and rituals. And this is a violation of my rights.

Free speech is generally considered to be a good thing for several other reasons. It encourages creativity and innovation. When people have the freedom to express themselves, they are more likely to come up with new and innovative ideas—and others are more likely to learn about these news and innovative ideas. This can lead to advancements in art, science, technology, etc. As a fundamental human right, free speech ensures that individuals are able to express themselves without fear of retaliation or persecution. Thus defending free speech is protecting individual rights. Free speech allows citizens to holds accountable those in power—this is the real accountability culture we should be pursuing. When people are free to criticize the government or other powerful entities, they can challenge and prevent abuses of power and corruption. By discouraging the free expression of thought, the chilling effect limits the diversity of ideas and opinions possible in a society. This prevents important issues from being debated and resolved in a consensual and democratic manner.

Marxist but not Socialist

“If you are a libertarian you may find some nourishment in my book Letters to a Young Contrarian where I say that in the same breath as I mourn the decay of some of my socialist allegiances that deep down I’ve always been a sympathizer of the libertarian anti-statist point of view. And one of the things that attracted me to socialism in the beginning was the idea of withering away of the state.” —Christopher Hitchens (2001)

Recently, I have taken to telling people that, while I am no longer identifying as a socialist, I remain a Marxist. I was teetering on that formulation for a number of years when, watching Christopher Hitchens being interviewed about his ideas one day, he pushed me off the fence by putting it almost precisely that way. In 2006, in a town hall meeting in Pennsylvania, Hitchens stated, “I am no longer a socialist, but I still am a Marxist.” (I had not seen this interview until recently.)

Christopher Hitchens (1949–2011) 

Hitchens passed away on December 15, 2011, but he still feels near. Hitchens is well remembered by many of us for his opinions on a range of topics, including the three I want to talk about in this essay: atheism, socialism, and totalitarianism. In Hitchens’ mind, these concerns intersect in profound ways that not only reflect their historical reality but the principles underpinning his thought.

Hitchens was a committed atheist, sometimes describing himself as an antitheist, arguing that religion is a dangerous and irrational force in society. He believed that religion stifled free speech and open inquiry, oppressed various categories of humans, and was responsible for many of the world’s conflicts. In contrast, atheism was for him a liberating force, freeing people from the constraints of dogma and superstition, and opening minds to the force of reason and the benefits of science.

Hitchens was a self-proclaimed Marxist and, for most of his life, a dedicated socialist, believing in the ideals of economic and social justice. In the 1960s and 1970s, he was a member of several far-left organizations that identified with the tradition of Leon Trotsky, the Bolshevik revolutionary who opposed Joseph Stalin and advocated for a more democratic and internationalist strain of socialism. As a Trotskyist, Hitchens believed in the revolutionary potential of the working class. He was critical of the Soviet Union and other socialist countries as having abandoned the principles of the Bolshevik revolution in favor of authoritarianism and bureaucratic collectivism.

Over time, Hitchens moved away from Trotskyism and towards a more general form of democratic socialism, one that lay heavy emphasis on the liberal freedoms of assembly, association, conscience, press, and speech and expression. Hitchens became increasingly critical of some of the more dogmatic and sectarian elements of the leftwing political scene. By the time of his death, Hitchens had developed a democratic socialist position that, informed by his humanism and observations about actually-existing socialism, emphasized civil liberties, individual freedom, and democratic practices and institutions.

Here we see the influence of George Orwell, a figure Hitchens greatly admired and covered in-depth in his 2003 book Why Orwell Matters. Unlike many socialists of his time, Orwell was deeply skeptical of the Soviet-style command economies and centralized political systems. He believed these systems were authoritarian and undemocratic (which they were), and that they led to the suppression of individual freedom and civil liberties, as well as the brutalization and extermination of “enemies of the state.”

In his 1946 essay “Politics and the English Language,” a masterful critique of the propaganda style that conceals authoritarian thinking, Orwell took to task the “comfortable English professor” who cannot admit to the awful facts of “Russian totalitarianism” rationalizing those facts with constructions “something like this: ‘While freely conceding that the Soviet régime exhibits certain features which the humanitarian may be inclined to deplore, we must, I think, agree that a certain curtailment of the right to political opposition is an unavoidable concomitant of transitional periods, and that the rigors which the Russian people have been called upon to undergo have been amply justified in the sphere of concrete achievement.’”

In his landmark 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, Orwell put as an instantiation of the irrationalism that pervaded the political-ideological culture of the dystopian Airstrip One, Oceania, the “Two-Minute Hate,” a ritual in which citizens watch video that depicts the Party’s archenemy Immanuel Goldstein, the mysterious former member of the Inner Party, symbolic of dissent. During the ritual, citizens are expected to express their hatred and anger towards Goldstein and the other enemies of the Party. The purpose of the ritual is to manipulate the emotions of the citizens and reinforce the Party’s control over their feelings and thoughts. It is widely believed that Orwell very likely had in mind Leon Trotsky when constructing the Goldstein character.

In contrast to the socialism of Russian totalitarianism, Orwell was a democratic socialist who believed in a mixed economy, a democratic system with nationalized industries and a comprehensive welfare state, but also one emphasizing the importance of civil rights and individual liberty. Orwell believed that capitalism, with its emphasis on competition and obsession with profit making, led to exploitation and impoverishment of the many. He believed that the state had a responsibility to provide for the basic needs of its citizens, including education, healthcare, housing, and other social services. He also believed that individuals should be free to make their own choices and to live their lives as they see fit. These, too, are among man’s basic needs.

Characterized by a commitment to social and economic justice, combined with a deep appreciation for democratic institutions, civil liberties, and individual freedom, Orwell’s brand of democratic socialism profoundly influenced Hitchens’ conception of socialism. Like Orwell, for most of his life anyway, Hitchens believed that socialism was the best means of achieving humanist objectives of the Enlightenment. But history told both of them that the road to socialism was fraught with challenges and obstacles, and that achieving a truly just and equitable society would require a commitment to democratic values and keeping a vigilant eye open for slippage into authoritarian arrangements and attitudes. Indeed, Hitchens’ leaned into the critique of socialism presented in Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, which he saw as a warning against the dangers of totalitarianism. Hitchens agreed with Orwell that the Soviet model was a perversion of socialism.

Hitchens’ view of capitalism changed over time, as well. Later in life, he moved away from his commitment to socialism and advanced opinions favorable of capitalism. He described capitalism as a truly revolutionary force with the potential to lift millions of people out of poverty and create greater opportunities for individuals, while, at the same time, writing and speaking critically of the excesses of capitalism—income inequality, environmental degradation, and the exploitation of workers. He believed that the state had an important role to play in regulating the excesses of capitalism and ensuring that its benefits were shared more equitably.

After 2005, Hitchens became open about his belief that capitalism is a dynamic force for economic growth and innovation and that socialism had failed to deliver on its promises of greater social and economic equality. Hitchens’ critique of socialism was influenced in part by his opposition to totalitarianism and authoritarianism, which, as noted earlier, he saw as inherent dangers of socialist systems. He believed that socialism, when taken to its extreme, had the potential to become as oppressive and repressive as right-wing dictatorships. Hitchens also argued that socialism was a utopian and unrealistic ideal; capitalism, while imperfect, was a more pragmatic and realistic and system, better able to deliver on the aspirations and needs of individuals.

Yet, despite his criticisms of socialism, Hitchens continued to see himself as a Marxist until late in life and remained committed to the ideals of equality and social justice. Although he argued in his 2007 God is Not Great that he had given up his religious-like faith in Marxism, in a June 2010 interview with The New York Times he stated, “I still think like a Marxist in many ways. I think the materialist conception of history is valid. I consider myself a very conservative Marxist.”

Hitchens saw Marxism as a way of understanding and critiquing the inequalities and injustices of capitalism, even as he came to see the limitations of socialist systems. He saw in historical materialism a powerful and comprehensive critique of capitalist society. He believed that Marxism provided a framework for understanding the underlying economic and social forces that shape our world, and that it offered a way of thinking about how society could be organized in a more just and equitable manner.

Hitchens was impressed by Marxism’s historical and analytical approach to understanding social and economic systems. He saw Marxism as a way of understanding the deep structures and inherent contradictions of capitalist society, and as a way of identifying the underlying causes of inequality and social unrest. Hitchens was particularly drawn to Marxism’s emphasis on social and economic justice. Marxism offered a vision of a society where resources and opportunities were more fairly distributed, and where the needs of the many were prioritized over the needs of the few.

Not that I needed Hitchens’ permission to confess the position he himself took at the end of his life; I am indebted to his demonstration of courage and commitment to self-criticism and self-development and find in the man a ready model for how to live one’s life. If I could only be half as talented a writer . . . .

Democrats Have Declared Parents Who Care About Their Children “Fascist”

I have always believed in parent’s rights in education. I do not coparent my children with the public school system. If something is going on with my child, I must be informed. Whether my son expresses a desire to live as a girl or has taken up Christianity, this is not something a public school can keep from me. They must be proactive in alerting me to life-altering changes in my child’s life—cognitive, emotional, physical. I need to see the curricula of his school, and I need to understand the pedagogy employed in delivering that curricula. This is not because my knowledge of things as a college professor outstrips the minimal education and understanding of most public school teachers and administrators (even though it does). It is because I am the parent of my children. I also need to know what books are in the library and whether these books are age-appropriate, or whether they were selected to serve an agenda that works contrary to the interests of my family.

I have many times confronted teachers and administrators over the way they were misleading and mishandling my kids (I have curated example here and here). My experience with teachers and administrators when I was coming through school provided me with a front row seat to the mediocrity of public education. That experience told me that I could not uncritically and without diligent oversight put my children in the hands of public school teachers and administrators. While adequate public school teachers are not unicorns, they are quite rare. They were just as rare when I was coming up as they are now. However, there is an additional problem with the today’s situations: curricula and classroom have been corrupted by postmodernism and crackpot theory. Anti-white bigotry and trans flags were not items in my schools growing up.

I have supported public education all these years from principle. But that is not enough to cause me to defend the curricula and quality of instruction in today’s public schools. Indeed, I’m thinking we may need to tear it all down and start over. This is why I am supporting the massive expansion of Florida’s school choice program that would make all students eligible for vouchers. The measure is headed to Ron DeSantis after the Republican-controlled Senate passed the measure Thursday. In a 26-12 vote along straight party lines, senators gave final approval to the measure. The House passed the measure last week. DeSantis has pledged to sign the proposal, which includes removing income-eligibility requirements that are part of current voucher program.

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries

Note the party line vote. The single greatest obstacle to reforming public education is the Democratic Party. In the past, I have picked my spots with this party. With the Republican Party increasingly embracing the democratic-republican beliefs and liberal values that animate my politics, and with the Democratic Party completely out of touch with anything remotely resembling an acceptable way forward, I have an entirely different outlook moving forward. If I were on the fence about all this, I wouldn’t be after learning that every single Democrat voted against the Parents Bill of Rights Act, which passed the House without a single Democrat voting for it. But I confess to having climbed down off that fence for a few years now. The Democratic Party is not merely a lost cause. The party is destructive to the American republic.

As if Democrats voting in lockstep against parents rights weren’t bad enough, party members took to their microphones to argue that the bill promotes “fascism” and the “extreme” views of Republicans. Like the Parental Rights in Education signed into law in Florida last March, the House bill is aimed at allowing parents to have greater control over what their children learn in schools, including the ability to remove age-inappropriate books from public school libraries and requiring teachers and administrators to tell parents when their child is questioning his gender or sexual orientation (see Why It Harms the Liberty of Neither Teachers Nor Students to Restrict Ideology in the Classroom). You might ask why, if public schools were not pursuing an agenda of indoctrination that favors progressive politics and the Democratic Party, Democrats would oppose the bill, let alone smear Republicans for standing up for parents.

Gov. Ron DeSantis displays the signed Parental Rights in Education, March 28, 2022

The House bill is a response to growing concerns across the country about school curricula, safety policies, and the prevalence of gender ideology and critical race theory in classrooms. Such concerns have been portrayed as a far right phenomenon. Recent protests and angry school board meetings were used by the Biden administration’s Justice Department to justify mobilizing the national security state apparatus against parents.

First, the government has no business treating citizens as if they are domestic terrorists. Second, the characterization of the objection to the hijacking of public schools by progressive activists as “far right” obscures the point that many of those parents are on the political left. I am one of those leftwing parents who finds the development over the last several years in public schools to be entirely contrary to the interests of the social class with which I stand, the proletariat.

So the House Republicans have approved the Parents Bill of Rights Act, which would give parents access to school curricula and reading lists and require schools to inform parents if staff begin encouraging or promoting their child’s gender transition. These are necessary reforms. Tragically, there is little hope for the bill in the Senate. Moreover, we find ourselves in a historic moment where the party of the administrative state and the technocratic apparatus is pulling us into one of the most undemocratic situation this nation has ever experienced These are the developments that make it necessary to vote Republican this year and next.

Why Open Borders? Here’s One Reason

The governor of my state, Tony Evers, is pushing a petition to support his proposal for automatic voter registration for Wisconsin drivers. Check it out:

Automatic voter registration comes with a major push to provide driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants. Part of Gov. Tony Evers’ 2023-25 budget proposal includes restoring driver’s licenses to all adults regardless of immigration status. Maybe you’re good at rationalizing your way out of the obvious conclusions. I’m not.

Apart from affecting voting behavior and patterns, there is no reason to make voter registration automatic or tying registration to driver licenses. It is not the role of the government to affect voting attitudes or behavior but to make sure elections are free and fair.

In Wisconsin, the only barrier to voting is that convicted felons cannot vote while they’re incarcerated (I disagree with this restriction, but it is standard across the United States). However, individuals convicted of a felony automatically regain their right to vote upon completion of their entire sentence.

It is very simple: If you want to register to vote, then get registered and go to the polls. If voting is important to you, you will do the things necessary to make it possible. Individuals need to use their agency. We need to return to the ethic of individual responsibility and self-reliance. If you want to participate in political life, you must make the effort.

On the immigration question, this is very simple, too. Don’t give illegal immigrants drivers licenses. Detain and deport them instead. Millions have crossed the border under Joe Biden. They join millions already here. We won’t have a country if this continues.

The Casual Use of Propagandistic Language Surrounding Sex and Gender

While the common term “trans woman” appears in the Fox News headline and article covering this story, the construct “transgender female” also appears in the piece, and is used to distinguish Tiffany Thomas from the “biological females” with whom Thomas competes in elite-level cycling. This is propagandistic language, which readers might find surprising coming from Fox News, since the language favors gender ideology by creating the false impression that there is a class of female in the human species other than biological; one would expect, given Fox News’ political bias, that the editors there would avoid leaving such an impression. At the same time, Fox News is deploying unscientific language, which is unsurprising.

Referring to females, the qualifiers “transgender” and “biological” function to indicate that there is are such things as nonbiological females. There are no such things. Female is a genotype, a category of natural history; as such, to speak about females presumes biology. Even if we were to agree with the theory that the category “woman” is a sociocultural construct that males can appropriate, we cannot do so with the category “female.” (Nor can we with the category “male.”) Anomalies aside, humans are not the only species of animal—or plant, for that matter—composed of two distinct genotypes. The classification “female” is not a sociocultural construct. It is a scientific term that refers to an objectively-existing thing.

USA Cycling follows the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) rules regarding transgender athletes at the elite level of competition. Under questioning, USA Cycling points to the “main points” on its website, referencing Policy VII: “Those who transition from female to male (FTM) are eligible to compete in the male category upon providing a written and signed declaration acceptable to the UCI Medical Manager. It is the responsibility of athletes to be aware of current WADA/USADA [World Anti-Doping Agency/US Anti-Doping Agency] policies and to file for appropriate therapeutic use exemptions.”

The policy states: “Those who transition from male to female (MTF) are eligible to compete in the female category under the following conditions: The athlete has declared that their gender identity is female. The athlete must demonstrate that their total testosterone level in serum has been below 2.5 nmol/L for a period of at least 24 months. The athlete’s total testosterone level in serum must remain below 2.5 nmol/L throughout the period of desired eligibility to compete in the female category.”

One wonders why the athlete needs to declare that their gender identity is female. There is nothing objective about such a declaration. It changes nothing. Moreover, the athlete would be declaring a nonsensical status, since “female” is not a gender identity. Gender identity is different from biological sex, which is determined by a person’s chromosomes and gametes. (It is also different from sexual orientation, i.e., an individual’s romantic or attraction to others based on genotype.)

There is no such thing as FTM or MTF transition in our species. While there are some animal species that can change their sex (examples of sequential hermaphrodites include bluehead and leopard wrasse, clownfish, green sea turtles, and parrotfish), humans cannot. No mammal species can change its sex or can be classified as a different sex on the basis of hormones or the appearance of external genitalia or secondary sex characteristics (that the female spotted hyena is dominant over her male counterpart and has higher levels of testosterone, which can causes her to develop male-like genitalia and behaviors, doesn’t obviate her sex).

The USA Cycling and the UCI are denying basic science in policy. The attempt to bring science in with the reference to testosterone levels serves only to manufacture an appearance. Male and female genotype cannot be reduced to testosterone or any other isolated interval- or ratio-level variable. Genotype is a constellation of qualitative and quantitative variables. There are many differences between males and females that put girls and women at a distinct competitive disadvantage to boys and men. To be sure, some of these differences are influenced by testosterone, such as muscle mass, bone density, and red blood production. But these factors are irreducible to testosterone and, once developed during puberty, remain despite testosterone levels.

Compared to females, on average, males have a larger build than females; males typically have broader shoulders, narrower hips, and a more muscular physique, inducing more muscle mass and different mixes of muscle types. These differences give males advantages in activities that require physical strength, e.g., cycling, swimming, and weightlifting. Females tend to have a higher percentage of body fat compared to males, which can make it more difficult to perform certain physical activities that require endurance, e.g., cycling, running, and swimming. Females generally have wider hips and a narrower ribcage compared to males, and a different center of gravity, which can affect balance and stability. Men are on average taller than women, which gives them advantage in sports where height is an asset, such as basketball and volleyball. The male physique puts females at a distinct disadvantage in contact powers.

These overlapping distribution of factors are accompanied by qualitative differences between the sexes. Females are the only sex capable of becoming pregnant and giving birth, which can result in time away from work or other activities and can put them at a disadvantage in competitive environments. Pregnancy and child birth change the body in ways that affect a woman’s capacity to compete. Furthermore, the reproductive capacity comes with menstruation. Only women can experience the cycles that can cause discomfort and pain that affect physical and mental performance. Women are not men with less testosterone. Women and men are qualitatively different things.

Tiffany Thomas, a male dominating women’s cycling.

Why don’t articles like this just specify that the subject of the story is a male who lives as a woman? Why obscure the reality that a male is competing in the female division of the sport and therefore enjoys an unfair physical advantage in competition? After all, that’s the reason why competitive sports are segregated by genotype. Honest language is not used because that would change the way the reader reacts to the story. Why should men who choose to live as women be allowed to compete in women’s sports? How is that fair? Those questions are less likely to come to mind if the “right” language is used. At a minimum, why not consistently use the construct “trans woman”? The controversy over gender ideology aside, at least that construct confuses only those with a cursory knowledge of gender ideology.

Maybe it’s time to end sex segregation in sports. If authorities are not going to recognize the biological differences between men and women, then why put women at a distinct competitive disadvantage in divisions that were created specifically for them in order to level the playing field? Just eliminate women’s sports altogether and let individuals compete regardless of sex. Why all the pretense about hormone levels and such? Abandon any pretense to science altogether and just throw individuals into the arena and let the best person win.

Neil deGrasse Tyson recently appeared on The Ben Shapiro Show Sunday Special and suggested to the host that we don’t specify whether it is a male or female sport but rather make divisions based on the “hormonal balances.” This proposition ignores every other difference between males and females noted above, differences that mean that, even if society allowed for this, men would across sports dominate every division based on testosterone.

You could blind observers to the sex and gender of the athletes, but a visitor from another planet could not help but notice that those with XY chromosomes seemed destined to be elite athletes, whereas those with XX chromosomes, in light of the futility of it competing against males, had given up on professional sports altogether. In this case, the science would work itself out whether humans believed in science anymore. In such a world, accepting there really are such things, women would never win. But there is no such thing as women really if being a woman is really only a sociocultural construct men can appropriate.

Why do we segregate men and women in certain areas of life? Is it really on the basis of gender identity, that is how one identifies gender-wise? If gender identity is subjective, which is obviously is, it has no objective reality. But competitive sports is about objective physical reality. It seems, then, that all this is an agenda to push thinking away from the objective scientific materialist basis and towards something resembling a religious mode of thought, an ideology comprised of subjective categories, called “gender identities,” which can be anything at all.

This move not only calls sex and gender into question; it also calls into question the objectivity of natural and physical reality altogether. Thus, more broadly, this is a backwards atavistic enterprise—a desire to leave the Enlightenment, to escape scientific reality. It is a desire for a pre-scientific world, a world of myths and rituals. Why do elites want this?

I have been saying this among my circle of friends for several years now: gender ideology and the emphasis on transition from one thing to another is an expression of transhumanist desire. Transhumanism is a cultural movement that advocates for the use of science and technology to enhance human cognitive and physical abilities beyond what is currently possible. Transhumanists believe that humans can and should strive to overcome the limitations of biology and achieve a post-human future in which people are able to transcend their current abilities and limitations.

Transhumanists advocate for the application of artificial Intelligence, to augment human cognitive abilities, biotechnology, including genetic engineering, gene therapy, and other methods for modifying the genetic makeup of humans to enhance physical or cognitive abilities, and cybernetics, i.e., the integration of machines and technology with the human body to create synthetic beings or enhanced humans. It may seem paradoxical for a movement dependent on science to deny scientific truth, but transhumanism represents not science but scientism, a new religion that pulls from science the stuff from which it builds up its myths and rituals.

What lies at the core of the transhumanist movement is the desire to transcend human being, which is achieved by instilling in young people a type of alienation characterized as self-loathing. Just as the young woman who amputates her breasts, injects testosterone, and allows surgeons to remove her forearm skin to fashion a faux-penis has internalized the loathing of girls and women that inheres in patriarchal relations, young people generally loathe their bodies and seek to transcend them in some fashion. Many young men hate their bodies and wish to move from that body into the body the young man finds beautiful, a body that can grow breast and is allowed to disguise its ugliness in makeup and wigs. The young man also disappears himself into the virtual worlds he finds online. This is why so many of our young people modify their bodies out of recognition—with the medical-industrial complex there to assist (see Disordering Bodies for Disordered Minds; Making Patients for the Medical-Industrial Complex).

At the popular level, gender ideology and transhumanism are thus manifestations of a religious seeking of the transcendent experience. The way out of gender dysphoria—what is sought in its stead—is gender euphoria, the ecstasy of transcending what they were given. The avoidance of puberty is a way to achieve mastery over the body one is born with. Such dysphoria is created by a cause that needs young people to hate their bodies to serve instead as servants in the new world transnationalists are constructing. Pushing male bodies into women’s sports is just one method of disrupting the ordinary understanding of people that thwarts the next steps from being taken.

The elites are coming not only for science and secularism; they’re coming for humanism. What does that mean? Humanism is the ethical and philosophical stance that emphasizes the agency and value of human beings, individually and collectively. Humanism promotes dignity, freedom, welfare, and well-being for humans. Humanism is rooted in the belief that humans have the capacity for creativity, empathy, and reason, and that these qualities can improve our lives and the world around us. At its core, humanism affirms the intrinsic value and worth of human beings, regardless of their race, gender, ethnicity, religion, or other characteristics. It emphasizes the importance of individual freedom, human rights, and social justice, and seeks to promote these values through education and civic engagement.

The elite are preparing the world’s population for incorporation into a transnational corporatist state system by canceling the Enlightenment and overthrowing humanism while incorporating people conditioned to no longer recognize their species being, no longer capable of thinking in the realist terms of natural history, into a technocratic order in which they will

This isn’t only a struggle over whether males who identify as women can compete in women’s sports, which will result in profoundly unfair outcomes for girls and women if finally resolved in favor of those males. This is a struggle over whether scientific truth prevails as a core value of human civilization.

It is, moreover, a struggle over women’s rights—and this requires recognizing that men and women are different. Because of the physical differences between men and women, there are situations where accommodations are necessary to ensure equal access and opportunities for women. In athletic competitions, women require separate categories to account for differences in physical ability and performance. The practice of sex segregation is not to give women an unfair advantage, or a privilege or special right, but rather to create a fair and level playing field where everyone can compete on equal terms.

Physical differences between men and women require accommodations and adjustments in other situations, as well, and the focus of women’s rights advocacy and gender equality efforts concerns removing barriers and creating equal opportunities for all individuals regardless of their sex and gender. Women cannot be regarded as individuals standing equally before the law while ignoring the many differences that exist between women and men. Indeed, sex-related differences must be recognized in order to treat women and men equally. Sex segregation is a recognition of objective reality. Tearing down the institutions that were designed to remove barriers to equality for women by treating males who claim to be women as women denies that objective reality.

OpenAI’s Chatbot Portrays Left-wing Populist and Pro-Labor Radio Host as Conservative and Pro-Business

Recently, I blogged about the second anniversary of the death of Rush Limbaugh from lung cancer (The Second Anniversary of the Great One’s Passing). In that blog, I discussed Limbaugh’s contribution to AM radio and my relationship to that media. In the same breath I celebrated Chuck Harder, the left-populist radio host for the pro-labor/anti-globalist For the People. Some may have thought it odd that I linked the two. One reason I did so was explicit: these two figures were part of the AM radio continuum at the time and this blog was in part an autobiographic note. But the other reason had to do with the left-right convergence in the gathering populist-nationalist movement.

Chuck Harder (1942-2018), leftwing populist and pro-labor radio host

I will say a bit more about the movement in a moment. But before I get to that, I asked just now Open AI’s ChatGPT to tell me about Chuck Harder. I didn’t know whether the chatbot would even know who Harder was. I was pleased to discover that Harder made enough of an impact to come to the attention of the chatbot during the period it was scraping data across the Internet. However, I was displeased to see, until challenged, the chatbot portrayed Harder as a conservative, pro-business voice!

Here’s the initial prompt:

Here is the chatbot’s initial response:

Here is my challenge to the initial response:

Here is the chatbot’s mea culpa:

I don’t believe the false portrayal is an accident. For decades, Harder waged a war of resistance against the transnationalist’s agenda of establishing a one-world government and, to wage this war, he gave a platform to economic nationalists. Harder fought for the people the power elite consider the rabble, i.e., the average American worker who was—and is—losing his jobs to foreigners thanks to the globe-trotting of powerful corporations and industries. Harder opposed the outsourcing and exporting of jobs, plant closings and foreign relocations, mass immigration, especially the influx of illegals and porous borders.

Harder was a forerunner of Steve Bannon and the MAGA crowd (see The Economic Nationalism of Steven K. Bannon). To be sure, Bannon is a rightwing populist, but Harder’s anti-globalist politics prefigured the present-day convergence of left and right wing populism in the revival of democratic-republican and liberal values and practices currently challenging corporate state power and its transnationalist ambitions (see Bridging the Left-Right Divide to Confront the New World Order).

We see this convergence in the appearance of Tulsi Gabbard, former Democratic Party member, at the Vision 2024 National Conservative Forum (held on March 18, 2023). We see this also in Naomi Wolf’s apology to conservatives for believing the legacy media coverage of the events of January 6, 2021 at the U.S. Capitol after Fox News host Tucker Carlson aired previously unreleased footage. 

We can also see the chatbot’s politics at work in the portrayal of Harder as  “anti-tax” and a  “conspiracy theorist.” On the matter of conspiracy theory, Harder’s opinion regarding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy was cited as the example. In fact, the US House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) concluded that President John F. Kennedy’s assassination was likely the result of a conspiracy and that the lone gunman theory presented in the Warren Commission Report was implausible. The HSCA was established in 1976 to investigate the assassination of Kennedy (as well as the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.) and released its findings in 1979. In the final report, the HSCA stated that it believed Kennedy was probably assassinated as the result of a conspiracy, although it was unable to identify the specific individuals or groups involved. The Warren Commission’s conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in shooting Kennedy was not supported by the evidence.

Then there is this (spoiler alert: it was the CIA):

Article 49.3: Technocratic End-run Around Democracy

The French executive invoked Article 49.3 of the Constitution to push through the National Assembly a bill raising the retirement age without a vote. Article 49.3 was passed in 1958 to give the government the ability to pass legislation in the face of opposition by using the power of. something the French call “engagement of responsibility,” which means that the government declares the bill a matter of confidence and that, without its passing, the government will fall.

By giving the government more power to push through bills, the provision was intended to make the legislative process more efficient and effective. Defenders argue that it is a necessary tool for the government to push through important reforms in a timely manner. In other words, it’s a technocratic end-run around the democratic process. It is an undemocratic tool that undermines the role of the National Assembly and limits public debate and scrutiny of proposed legislation.

Article 49.3 has been used several times in French political history, often when the government faces significant opposition in the National Assembly. You may remember that Article 49.3 was used in the passage of controversial labor reforms in 2016, which led to widespread protests and strikes. Or maybe you don’t remember this because the corporate state media in the United States hardly reported it.

This matters to you, my fellow Americans. Elites will (again) be coming after pensions in the United States. They’ve spent our retirement on globalization and war-making. We are entitled to that money. They are as I write this scheming a way to not have to give it to us.

What is Woke?

You have no doubt by now seen the video of Bethany Mandel, promoting her book Stolen Youth, cowritten with Karol Markowicz, apparently freezing when asked to define woke during a Tuesday interview on The Hill’s online program Rising. Co-host Briahna Joy Gray asked her to clarify the term so everybody could be on the same page. The defenders of woke ideology thrilled when Mandel hesitated before coming up with one. The resulting narrative obscures what turns out to have been a succinct definition of woke.

“So, I mean, woke is sort of the idea that, um,” Mandel seemed to choke before noting: “This is going to be one of those moments that goes viral.” She then gathered her wits about her and gave one of the best definitions of woke I have yet heard: “the understanding that we need to totally reimagine and redo society in order to create hierarchies of oppression.” After Robby Soave jumped in to say, “It’s definitely something you know what it is when you see it,” Mandel added: “Forced conformity.”

Here’s the interview:

Now, Mandel may well have meant something like “the understanding that we need to totally reimagine society in order to reduce hierarchies of oppression,” which would have been a charitable definition given from the standpoint of a woke person. Dictionaries define woke as an aware of and actively attentive to important societal facts and issues, especially issues of racial and social justice (paraphrasing Merriam-Webster). But the way Mandel put it is what those who think in woke terms actually want out of their movement. They do not wish to reduce hierarchies of oppression but to create them. And they have.

If you need somebody to say more, I am certainly that person. Here’s how I would have answered the question: Woke describes a system of political and social beliefs based on identity politics, political correctness, and academic theories of systemic oppression and privilege that promotes a victimhood culture and conditions people to be overly sensitive and easily offended, while stifling free speech and suppressing charitable dialogue. As such woke ideology is divisive and counterproductive, emphasizing differences between groups rather than their commonalities and promoting a culture of blame and resentment rather than one of agency and responsibility.

That definition takes about thirty seconds to say, if you speak at a reasonable pace. Mandel did better with “the understanding that we need to totally reimagine and redo society in order to create hierarchies of oppression.” Even better with “forced conformity.”

The Mayor of Green Bay, WI, Bugs City Hall

A bit more than a month has passed since Green Bay city council members discovered that microphones had moths earlier been added to the building’s surveillance system. Alderman Chris Wery dramatically confronted Mayor Eric Genrich at the full council meeting on Tuesday, February 7: “City council nor the public was advised of this spying and not even a simple signage warning of the intrusion was put in place.”

Alderman Chris Wery questioning Mayor Eric Genrich about surveillance practices.

Today, Green Bay City Hall is not only facing a civil lawsuit over its use of audio recording devices, but an investigation is underway to determine if criminal charges should be filed against anyone from the city. Brown County District Attorney David Lasee worked with the Green Bay Police Department to refer the investigation to the West Allis Police Department. The charge here is serious. Violating Wisconsin’s Electronic Surveillance Control Law is a Class H felony. A conviction on this charge can lead to up to six years in state prison, a maximum fine of $10,000, or both. 

The plaintiffs behind the civil lawsuit claim that the city and Mayor Eric Genrich violated the law by installing audio recording devices in the hallways of City Hall. The complaint alleges that Genrich installed “highly sensitive audio listening devices” that have been intercepting and recording private communications for years, including conversations between council members and the public, privileged attorney-client communications, and personal conversations. Genrich and members of his administration maintain that the devices are legal; they believe there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in a hallway of a public building.

The city formally admitted on February 10, 2023 to installing the devices outside the mayor’s office and city council chambers in December 2021 and outside the city clerk’s office in July 2022. These actions were taken without city council approval or knowledge. Signs were posted to alert visitors of the recording after the presence of the devices were revealed. Then, in early March, Brown County Judge Marc Hammer ordered the microphones turned off while the lawsuit plays out. On Tuesday, March 7, in a 9-3 vote, the city council passed a policy to remove the devices from City Hall and the recordings destroyed at the conclusion of the lawsuit.

In this blog, I will discuss the problem of surveillance of citizens generally and then provide some concerning details on the Green Bay situation. There are questions of legality involved here, but of far greater importance is the character of a politician who would bug the heart of city government and spy on his constituents. Claiming that no laws were broken is not an excuse to listen to the privacy conversations of Green Bay residents. That the mayor did this at all is what is at issue.

While government officials argue that surveillance is necessary for safety and security, and this is Genrich’s explicit justification (claiming that there were three incidents where city employees and members of the public were “verbally assaulted”) surveillance infringes on the civil liberties and privacy rights of people. Privacy is a fundamental human right, enshrined in constitutions and international declarations around the world, with the United States standing as the recognized paradigm—at least in principle. Citizens have the right to keep their personal information and activities private and governments are obliged to respect this right. That they don’t does not obviate principle.

Surveillance has a chilling effect on free speech and association; people may be less likely to express controversial opinions or engage in political activism if they fear being monitored. Moreover, government surveillance affects citizens emotionally and psychologically. Knowing they’re being monitored can make people feel like they are constantly being watched. They become unsure of the spaces where they may privately communicate with others with confidence. This can produce a sense of paranoia and a loss of trust in others. All this negatively affects political engagement and freedom of expression.

Government surveillance is easily abused. I hardly need to recount here the many cases of governments using surveillance to target political opponents, journalists, and activists. Abuse of power undermines the rule of law and erodes trust in government institutions. This is why governments are required to obtain warrants before conducting surveillance—and why these warrants must be subject to judicial review. Citizens should enjoy the right to access and control their personal data, and to know how it is being collected and used by government agencies.

Even if we took those who surveil the public on their word that they deploy such technology to enhance safety and security, the alleged benefits of surveillance are vastly overstated. Moreover, there are alternative ways to achieve the goals of public safety without infringing on civil liberties and privacy rights. At the very least, when listening technology is used for this purpose, there must be transparency and accountability around surveillance activities. Wery was right to raise his objection and educate the mayor on the basic principle that governments should disclose the extent of their surveillance activities, the legal basis for these activities, and any oversight mechanisms that are in place.

When Wery called for the equipment to be removed, Genrich refused to do so, stating that the security system is lawful and commonplace. Afterwards, Genrich’s office provided a fact sheet noting that, of the fourteen cameras in public areas of City Hall, three have audio capability and are located only in the hallways of the first and second floors. The city argued that similar technology has been used in the Green Bay Police Department lobby for nearly a decade and that the transit system has had video and audio capabilities for 20 years.

Genrich means to dissimulate the reality that City Hall is where politics happen. That the June 17, 1972 break-in of the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Washington, D.C. Watergate Office Building was illegal was not the only objectionable thing about the Watergate scandal. Indeed, the burglary was the least of it. It was the fact that members of one political party were there installing bugs in order to listen to the private conversations of their political opponents. President Nixon didn’t resign his office because he was a burglar. He resigned because he betrayed a foundational principle of a free society. At least he had that much integrity.

Despite the city’s assertion that the security system is lawful, concerns persist about the potential violation of citizens’ privacy. Critics argued that the devices could capture private conversations between attorneys and clients, political discussions by voters casting in-person absentee ballots, off-the-record conversations between journalists and sources, and quiet conversations between City Council members and constituents outside of council chambers. Such scenarios could violate citizens’ reasonable expectation of privacy and constitute a breach of their rights.

Attorney Ryan Walsh, representing the Wisconsin Senate and three individuals suing the City of Green Bay and Mayor Genrich over the use of audio surveillance, wrote the letter to Brown County District Attorney David Lasee requesting a criminal investigation be opened. Walsh easily destroyed Genrich’s bogus safety argument. “I don’t know how you deter anyone by secretly recording them and not letting them know that you are recording them,” he said. It is implausible that these were installed for safety reasons if we presume that Walsh’s point would have occurred to Genrich and his administration at some point in their deliberations about whether to install audio listening devices. Surely they aren’t that stupid (I’ve met Genrich, and he struck me as a reasonably intelligent person).

Attorneys for the city and mayor argued the plaintiffs knew about the audio recording devices since mid-September, which is beyond the timeframe allowed for notice under law. They reference a letter sent to some eight hundred of the mayor’s constituents alerting them to the presence of audio surveillance devices.

That a letter of that nature was sent raises two questions. First, was the limited distribution of the letter designed to let a select number of the mayor’s constituents know where they might be recorded and that recordings of others existed? Second, was the letter a tactic to delegitimize as “politics” the concerns of citizens who raised the issue by saying that the letter proves it was not a secret?

The second function of the letter was affirmed by Judge Hammer. Granting the restraining order ordering the microphones be turned off immediately and any recordings sealed until the court says otherwise, he commented, “I’m concerned there was some type of underhandedness or strategy in waiting until after the city primary and before the city election to dirty up the mayor.” He then blatantly accused Republicans of using “a fundamental right that our people have as a political tool.”

Whatever their motive, Republicans are standing up for the fundamental right of people. That the populists in the Republican Party have taken a keen interest in the civil liberties of Americans is a welcome development in light of the history of establishment Republicans on the question of surveillance. That said, speculating about their political motive is an exercise in political speech that undermines the fair and impartial character of the court Judge Hammer is supposed to uphold.

Indeed, Hammer’s political speech appears coordinated with Genrich’s re-election campaign, which quickly issued a statement from the mayor reading in part, “I agree with Judge Hammer that the actions of Wisconsin Republicans are political and suspiciously timed. These MAGA Republicans who are aligned with my opponent are making our residents and city staff less safe by prioritizing politics over safety.”

These MAGA Republicans are putting the civil liberties and privacy rights of Green Bay residents ahead go the mayor’s desire to glean information from them by secretly recording their conversations. Genrich’s use of epithet “MAGA” is typical of Democratic Party rhetoric. It’s rhetoric designed to delegitimize those standing up for working people and separate populist Republicans from their establishment colleagues. It’s part of the Uniparty strategy of differentiating between acceptable Republicans and the deplorables.

It’s a distraction. Consider not only Walsh’s point that there can be no deterrent effect of audio surveillance no one knows exists, but the admission by the mayor’s office that they don’t comprehensively review the recordings—in other words, the mayor is only interested in some conversations. Which ones? That’s not a hard question to answer. It’s a simple matter to keep track of who is in the building with fourteen video cameras, their recordings time stamped, and match those to the audio recordings and listen to the conversations. One is naïve in the extreme to believe with any degree of certainty that this is not what those devices were for.

Jon Stewart: Corporate State Stooge

“Oklahoma State Sen. Nathan Dahm went on The Problem With Jon Stewart to advocate against even modest gun control laws and got blasted by Stewart’s debate bazooka,” gushes the Hollywood Reporter, echoing the sentiments of the several dozen stories Goggle’s algorithm has pushed to the top of its search results.

Oklahoma state senator Nathan Dahm (left) and comedian Jon Stewart (right)

My take? The debate between Stewart and Dahm is a mess. Contrary to fanboy perception that Stewart completely owned the debate, Dahm had his moments. Stewart? On logical and empirical grounds? Not so much. Dahm’s inexperience with debating a rhetorician of Stewart’s caliber doesn’t make Stewart’s arguments golden. The video is sharply edited, and I presume the edits favor Stewart. But clever editing is no substitute for substance. Ever since he had his awokening, Stewart has become a much less compelling figure (his programming on the transgender issue, for example, is fraught with problems).

Because he accepted Stewart’s premise, Dahm blew the question about the correlation between gun deaths and number of guns. Stewart claimed that, the more guns there are, the more gun deaths there are, as if it is the mere presence of guns increases the frequency of gun deaths. Since there has been considerable variability in gun ownership in US history, as well as in gun deaths and violent crime, it is helpful to look at these data.

According the General Social Survey, in the mid-1970s, around half of US households reported having at least one gun. By 2018, that number fell to around a third. At least during some of the time that this percentage was declining, the number of firearms owned by individuals increased. In 1994, there were approximately 200 million firearms owned by individuals. By 2020, that number had more than doubled.

Much attention has been paid to the latter figure. Crucially, however, the increase in firearms ownership during this period doesn’t tell us anything about the percentage of individuals who own guns. Data from the General Social Survey indicates that the percentage of American adults who report personally owning a gun has remained relatively stable over the past several decades, hovering around 30 percent, roughly the same as the percentage of households with at least one gun.

While a few studies have found that households with more guns are more likely to experience firearm injuries and deaths, it is important to keep in mind that this does not mean that owning a gun increases an individual’s risk of dying from a firearm-related injury. Risk depends on numerous factors including how firearms are stored and used, as well as the cultural context and social situation in which they appear. More on this in a moment. But first, we need to consider the other side of the correlation, namely aggregate trends in gun violence and deaths.

Source: FBI’s Crime Data Explorer

Crime increased between 1960 and the early 1990s. The increase was drastic, driven by factors such as the rise of drug-related violence, gang activity, and social unrest. By the early 1990s, violent crime was as bad as it had ever been in America.

Source: FBI’s Crime Data Explorer

Readers may object that violent crime is not reducible to guns deaths so these statistics are a poor proxy for the phenomenon in question. However, most homicides involve firearms, and during this period gun homicides in America remained high despite the sharp decline in the number of households with guns. Moreover, a great deal of violent crime involves guns generally, so the broader trends is relevant.

Trends in gun deaths and injuries in the United States over the last six decades have been complex and varied, but there is an obvious trend. In the mid-20th century, gun deaths averaged around 4 deaths per 100,000 people per year in the 1950s-60s. Beginning in the late 1960s, there was a gradual increase in gun deaths, particularly homicides, which peaked in the early 1990s. In recent years, rates of violent crime, especially homicide, have started rising again, especially in inner city areas.

Returning to cultural context and social situation, gun ownership is not evenly distributed among race and ethnic groups. Overall, gun ownership is more common among whites than among blacks and Hispanics. According to a 2017 Pew Research Center survey, around 36 percent of white Americans reported owning a gun, compared to 24 percent of blacks and 15 percent of Hispanics. However, as I have repeatedly shown on the Freedom and Reason, blacks are far more likely to be perpetrate gun violence and to be the victims of gun violence.

Moreover, among white Americans, gun ownership rates are higher among men, rural residents, and those who identify as Republican or conservative. While studies have suggested that political conservatism is associated with higher rates of gun ownership and support for gun rights, there is no evidence to suggest that conservatives are more likely to be implicated in gun violence than other ideological groupings.

Can we blame the rise in violent crime and persistently high homicide rates on the declining number of households with guns? The rise in violent crime is indeed correlated with the emergence of comprehensive gun control, a trend driven by fear of crime stemming from the disorder of the 1960s. It would stand to reason that, all things being equal, the occurrence of defensive use of guns, i.e., situations where guns are used to deter, stop or repel an attacker or intruder with the intention of preventing harm or loss, is less likely the fewer people possess firearms. Certainly Stewart and his ilk would be reluctant to accept this reasoning.

Is gun control what brought crime down after the mid-1990? We might ask whether folks can have it both ways. As noted, there is a correlation between the percentage of households and persons with guns and rates of violent crime over the long term. What is obvious is the effect of massively expanding the criminal justice response after the early 1990s: more cops, stricter criminal penalties, aggressive prosecution, tough judges, and mandatory minimums drove crime rates down to the lowest levels on record. Prison abolitionist decry the trend in mass incarceration, and the desire for depolicing in the wake of highly-publicized cases of police brutality is widespread among those of a particular political-ideological persuasion, but the fact is that the war on crime did make America a safer place—and back off of it is having disastrous consequences for the most vulnerable communities in America. The increase in crime is also driven by the rise in anti-cop rhetoric and sentiments of racial resentment and anti-white propaganda generated by academia, corporate state media, and the culture industry.

* * *

Dahm is right about this fundamental reality: Guns don’t shoot themselves. Like any piece of technology that is not self-operating, guns require people to operate them. To his credit, Steward concedes the point, and he wants Dahm (and his audience) to know (i.e., think) that he supports the Second Amendment. He grants that it’s not guns but people who are the problem. Stewart says this because he wants the state to know which people are a problem. To do this, the state needs to keep extensive record on those who buy a firearm. 

This makes Stewart and his progressive brethren believers in precrime. “PreCrime” is a concept originating in Philip K. Dick’s The Minority Report. In the story, a futuristic police department uses a system of precognitive beings (“Precogs”) to predict and prevent crimes before they occur. That law enforcement officials rely on psychics to predict crimes before they happen is the perfect metaphor for critiquing the practice of precrime in the real world. To deprive an individual of his constitutional rights on the basis of a belief that the police can predict based on aggregate statistics who is likely to offend or reoffend is an affront to not only to the ethic of individualism but to science.

I will use an analogy to illustrate, one that I have used before, concerning preventative incapacitation. In capital cases in the state of Texas, juries can either impose the death penalty or impose a penalty of life in prison with the possibility of parole. There is no sentence of life in prison without parole in the state of Texas. One strategy prosecutors seeking the death penalty can pursue is convincing a jury that the defendant is at high risk to repeat his crime and capital punishment removes that risk. Prosecutors would bring out Walter Quijano, a psychologist working for the Texas prison system as an expert witness, to testify that, because of the higher rate of recidivism among blacks compared to whites, black defendants should be subject to the death penalty. Death sentences were reversed in several cases where Quijano’s testimony played a role.

For those of us concerned about the Orwellian world emerging all around us, the term “precrime” is shorthand to refer to the approaches and systems of law enforcement that seek to prevent crimes before they happen, often through the use of predictive analytics and surveillance, as well are preventative incapacitation. The idea here is something called “predictive policing.” Agents gather and correlate information about people ostensibly to anticipate criminal incidents before they happen—false positives be damned.

The development of precrime cannot be separated from the government’s growing focus on domestic terrorism, a term that refers to acts of violence committed by individuals or groups within the United States against other individuals, groups, or the government, with the intent to intimidate or coerce a civilian population or influence government policy through fear. Domestic terrorism, which has no formal designation in federal statute, takes many forms, including hate crimes, political violence, and religious extremism. It can be carried out by individuals or groups who hold extremist views on a variety of issues—with the state selective focusing on some views.

According to the government, the threat of domestic terrorism has grown in recent years, with the rise of white supremacist groups and other extremist right wing organizations. In response, the United States government has taken a number of steps to combat that threat, including increasing resources for law enforcement agencies and expanding programs to counter violent extremism. The Department of Homeland Security has designated domestic terrorism as a top national security threat, and federal agencies work closely with state and local authorities to prevent and respond to domestic terrorist attacks.

For decades now, the security state apparatus has sought to establish what is called total situational awareness (TSA). Generally, TSA describes the ability to perceive and understand all aspects of situations—contexts, risks, and opportunities. Technologies such as cameras, microphones, sensors, and other surveillance tools are used to enhance TSA activities. TSA also involves analyzing information from a variety of sources, including government databases, public records, and private sector data.

The Total Information Awareness (TIA) program was an initiative by the United States Information Awareness Office (IAO) under the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which was part of the US Department of Defense. The program’s goal was to develop technology to detect and prevent potential terrorist attacks by gathering and analyzing massive amounts of data on individuals’ personal and financial activities. The program collected and analyzed these data without the targets’ knowledge or consent, raising concerns about civil liberties, especially the privacy right.

In response to these concerns, Congress passed the 2003 Omnibus Appropriations Act with a provision defunding TIA. The Defense Department and DARPA announced the termination of the TIA program in 2003. However, eager to continue the project, TIA was renamed the Terrorist Information Awareness, thus keeping the acronym. TIA continued to be criticized for potential privacy violations and it was ultimately cancelled in 2006. But the tactics and technology did not end there; the surveillance function of the program was incorporated in the national security apparatus more broadly.

For those who do not fully comprehend the vastness of the national security apparatus today, I will digress for a moment and sketch the system. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) coordinates the country’s efforts to prevent and respond to domestic and foreign threats to national security. Among the agencies under the DHS are Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A). DHS sits alongside the more traditional security agencies, the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The DOJ oversees the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF). Ostensibly responsible for gathering, analyzing, and providing intelligence information on foreign countries and issues related to national security, the CIA operations are divided into several major directorates, among them the Directorate of Intelligence (DI), the National Clandestine Service (NCS), and the Directorate of Digital Innovation (DDI), the latter which develops and deploys technologies to support the agency’s intelligence-gathering and analysis capabilities.

I hope readers can grasp the scope of information sharing across platforms and tie the significance of this to the desire to track gun owners. Remember what I said about the demographics of gun ownership. White men, disproportionately rural, and identifying as conservative and Republican, have the highest rates of gun ownership in America. Even though they were underrepresented among those who murder people, the attention payed to their attention to the Second Amendment gets an inordinate amount of attention. We know which gun owners are of concern to the national security state. (See “A New Kind of American Radicalism”: The Campaign to Portray Ordinary America as Deviant and Dangerous; The Establishment Project to Demonize Conservative White Males. What’s This All About? Suppressing the Rabble: Portraying Conservatism and Republicanism as Fringe and Dangerous; A Clueless President, Gun Hysteria, and Ulterior Motives; MDM is the New WMD: DHS Issues a New NTAS Bulletin; A Late Afternoon Blog: The Weaponization of the Government; Church 2.0). Stewart’s objection to the loosening of regulations on guns is tied to the corporate state’s project to surveil and suppress the populist-nationalist movement and derail the democratic-republic revival.

Of course, it’s not just scope of the surveillance system and the politics that’s the problem here. One doesn’t need to acknowledge the project or the scale of the problem. Even in limited use, the idea of precrime raises significant ethical concerns, particularly around issues of civil liberties and due process. This approach to law enforcement and social control risks and has resulted in abuses of power, discrimination, false accusations, and the undermining of the presumption of innocence that is so central to western jurisprudence.

Stewart is advocating the expansion of the surveillance state specifically where police authorities are charged with regulating a constitutional right, the second article in the United States Bill of Rights, that is the citizens prerogative to self-regulate. Stewart is very open about the authoritarian desire expressed here. The state needs to know, in his words, who are “the people you are giving a gun to.” But the state isn’t giving people guns. Stewart’s means to make gun ownership appear as a privilege, like driving an automobile. But people have a right to buy, own, and carry guns for legitimate purposes, e.g., self-defense.

It is crucial to bear in mind that governments don’t give people rights. The state only protects or violates rights by it actions. Persons are born with rights. Of course, as French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau observed, “Man is born free, but everywhere he is in chains.” But that is only more of a reason to demand a reduction in the size and scope of government control.

The right to keep and bear arms is a very old right. Found in English common law, enshrined in the English Bill of Rights of 1689, the right is older than its affirmation in the Bill of Rights. English common law recognized in the inherent right to self-defense the right to use weapons: weapons are an extension of that right, necessary for maximally effecting this right. This right was incorporated into the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution, ratified in 1791, the operative clause affirming that “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

To grasp the seriousness of Stewart’s desire, consider an analogy—the First Amendment, the article that guarantees citizens the right to express their opinions and share information. Should the state keep records on those who express and share certain views? I know they do. But should they? Suppose a citizen who may incite a riot with their speech. Should some determination that they may do this, or perhaps evidence that they have in the past, be reason to deprive them of their Constitutional right to speak? Is the principle “prior restraint” to be regularized and registration of opinions required? Would Stewart say that the state needs to know “the people you are giving voice to”? But, as with firearms, the state does not give free speech to citizens. The state only protects or violates rights by its actions. The state is supposed to protect rights. To regulate those rights is a conflict of interests.

* * *

Stewart makes his thematic for the conversation with Dahm the rhetoric of “chaos versus order.” Stewart wants to know about immigration. But immigration isn’t a right, so his point is irrelevant. Instead of saying this, Dahm raises the problem of fentanyl. Fentanyl is worse than gun deaths. True. So what? Stewart has dragged Dahm off the trail. Never argue about equivalencies between two things that aren’t equivalent.

Dahm sort of saves the day by raising the problem of obesity. His argument suggests the question of whether we should we have background checks on people to determine whether and how much they can eat—especially when they have demonstrated an inability to control their food intake. Not a bad analogy. Steward takes the bait and compares allowing people to buy guns without regulation to giving ice cream to fat people. I don’t need to spend time pointing out how absurd Stewart’s argument becomes here. That comeback was especially beneath him.

Stewart doesn’t have an answer to Dahm’s point about the crisis of single-parent households, but Dahm turns to school shooters in relation to this. These are a minority of gun homicide deaths. Had he discussed single-parent households and violence in black-majority neighborhoods, he would have has Stewart on the defensive. But does Dahm know about this? Why school shootings?

Guns make it less safe for police, Steward says. He gives the scenario of police responding to a domestic violence event. He wonders that, if there are firearms in the home, the police will consider this a safe home. The suggestion is that it isn’t. But Stewart can’t know that. He also can’t know that it makes the home safer. Stewart turns to what the police say. But why do we care what the police say? Stewart wants Dahm to admit that he is making it hard for police to “manage the streets.” Is that the job of the police? To manage neighborhoods? Public safety is a human right. The police are organized to protect that right. Their job is not to “manage the streets,” which is a euphemism for “manage the people.” The police respond to threats to the people.  

Dahm is defending the individual’s right to keep and bear arms. Stewart says that this is different argument from the one he’d like to pursue. He says Dahm wants to say he is a Second Amendment purist, and he is making it safer, and he is not. Stewart says Dahm is making things more chaotic. Dahm is right that this is a matter of opinion. Referencing the police, Stewart wants to know why Dahm is taking away “their tools.” Because, Dahm says, this is an infringement on the rights of people. 

Stewart tries to draw a parallel with voting. Poor choice of analogy. This may come as a surprise to some of those reading this blog, but the 15th Amendment, ratified in 1870, prohibiting the federal government and state governments from denying a citizen the right to vote based on “race, color, or previous condition of servitude,” the 19th Amendment, ratified in 1920, recognizing women’s right to equal suffrage, stating that “the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex,” and the 26th Amendment, ratified in 1971, lowering the voting age from 21 to 18, stating that “the right of citizens of the United States, who are eighteen years of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of age”—these prohibit discrimination in voting based on certain factor; they do establish an affirmative right to vote for all citizens.

This makes the right to vote, a political right, fundamentally different from the right to self defense, a natural right. Requiring a voter to be registered before casting a ballot, requiring him to prove that he is who he says he is at the poll by displaying a voter ID card, is not the same as requiring gun owners to register weapons or be licensed to use them. When Dahm turns this around on Stewart, Stewart says that he’s not the one making the argument. But he is. He attempted the parallel.

Where does Stewart come down on depriving a man of the right to vote on the grounds that he is felon? That restriction is practiced in most places in the United States and, in some states, the loss of the political right to participate in the formation of laws to which one is subject is permanent or very difficult to recover. If the political right to vote should not be denied on the grounds that a person is a felon or mentally ill, which I don’t believe it should, and I would expect Stewart to agree, then how can the civil right to weapons to make more effective the natural right to self defense be abridged?

Stewart resorts to a cliché: “rights have responsibility.” It depends on what one means by responsibilities. If this is referring to the responsibility those enjoying free speech have to not engage in hate speech then, no, such rights don’t have responsibilities. If, on the other hand, it means that a gun owner has the responsibility to keep and handle firearms in a safe and responsible manner that does not put others at risk, then sure. A person who acts in a reckless way will be held responsibility for their poor judgment.

In the extreme, the cliché risks communitarianism, which places the wellbeing of the community or society as a whole above that of individual rights and freedoms. But the American Creed is liberal, even libertarian in character. The American Creed emphasizes individual rights and freedoms, the ethic of individual autonomy and limited government intervention. Given that we are all members of the same species, the latter is not in contradiction with the former. But that convergence is emergent. Starting with the former goal, individuals become subordinated to those who presume to know what the wellbeing of the community or society requires–with an eye towards those individual rights and freedoms believed to obstacles to the realization of those presumptions.

To be sure, the substance of actions protected by a right has parameters. I will return to the example of speech. One cannot disrupt a gathering where disagreeable or offensive speech is being uttered (the “heckler’s veto”). Nor can one make true threat, i.e., utterances that a reasonable person would interpret as a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of violence or harm to another person or group. However, these cases are difficult to determine and it is understood that the government may not prohibit the publication or dissemination of speech or expression before it occurs, except in rare and narrowly defined circumstances, such as in cases involving national security or the safety of individuals. The “prior restraint” doctrine is intended to prevent government censorship and ensure that individuals and the media are free to express their opinions and ideas without fear of retaliation or suppression.

Before readers see in this an opening to an analogous principle in preventing dangerous people form obtaining firearms, recognize that the amount of personal and private information that would have to be obtained in order to accomplish the preventative effect Stewart seeks would violate the privacy rights that undermine the Fourth and Fifth Amendments in the Bill of Rights.

The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures by the government. This means that the government cannot search your person, your property, or seize your belongings without a warrant issued by a judge, based on probable cause. The Fourth Amendment ensures that individuals have a certain level of privacy in their homes and personal effects, free from government intrusion. The Fifth Amendment protects individuals from self-incrimination, which means that a person cannot be forced by authorities to talk to them.

The Supreme Court has interpreted these amendments as protecting an individual’s privacy interests. This interpretation has been used to strike down laws that infringe on a person’s privacy. In addition to these amendments, the Supreme Court has recognized a constitutional right to privacy based on the concept of personal autonomy. This right to privacy has been used to strike down laws that criminalize, for example, consensual sexual activity, such as same-sex relationships. To require a person seeking a firearm to provide personal health records is an invasion of their privacy.

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Stewart raised Dahm’s opposition to Drag Queen Story Hour. This was a predictable move. The goal here was not so much to amplify the theme of hypocrisy he was leveling at Dahm, but to delegitimize him before his audience. Dahm reminded Stewart that his opposition was not about drag but about protecting children.

Dahm wondered why we can restrict children from voting. Stewart doesn’t let that crappy attempt as a response sink in and moves to where he wanted to go—the question of free speech, But the performer’s free speech is not the question at hand. The question at hand is the protection of children from sexualization by adults. Drag queens are not being stopped from exercising their free speech rights. They are only being told that they cannot sexualize children. What is being restricted is not drag but grooming and inappropriate sexual encounters between adults and children.

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Stewart says that the leading cause of death among children in firearms. This is misleading. Guns, including accidental deaths, suicides, and homicides, were the leading cause of death in children and teens ages 1-19 years old in the United States in 2020. But it’s a bit of a trick to include 18 and 19 year olds in this statistic. Those who do so know that they will push gun deaths to the top of the list by including young adults, as firearm deaths are most common among young adults. Excluding young adults, the numbers look different. According to the CDC, the leading causes of death among children ages 1-4 are accidents (defined as unintentional injuries), followed by congenital malformations, and then homicide. For children ages 5-14, the leading cause of death is also accidents, followed by cancer and suicide. Stewart wants to you have an image in your head.

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The Stewart-Dahm debate was witnessed by millions. Dahm had his moments. Folks are ill-advised to take on Stewart. He has honed his skills in the art of rhetoric. Steward is very good at manipulating emotions. One must not confuse manipulation with persuasion. Judged by the standards of reason, Stewart had a bad showing on this day.