Monasteries of the Mind

Hat tip Gayle

Guest Post by Victor Hanson

When everything is politicized, people retreat into mental mountaintops — dreams of the past and fantasies of the future.
by Victor Davis Hanson// National Review

So long, it’s been good to know ya,
So long, it’s been good to know ya,
So long, it’s been good to know ya.
This dusty old dust is a-gettin’ my home,
And I got to be driftin’ along.
—Woodie Guthrie

The rapper Snoop Dogg released a video shooting a mock-up of the president. Rapper Bow Wow wants to “pimp” the first lady. What a difference a few months make. Not long ago rapper Kendrick Lamar issued an album whose cover showed young rappers on the White House lawn celebrating the death of a white judge. He received an invitation to the White House (a cut from his To Pimp a Butterfly album was Barack Obama’s favorite song of the year). When Trump has lost the rapper vote, has he lost America?

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There is now something called the “Resistance,” which by its nomenclature poses that its opposition to Trump is reminiscent of European partisan resistance to Hitler: Affluent progressives are now on the barricades to stop another Holocaust? Cities now nullify federal law in the spirit of the Old Confederacy. A federal judge doesn’t enforce federal law because he says he does not like what the president and his associates said in the past, during the campaign. Op-ed writers overseas wait eagerly for the president’s assassination. At CNN, Fareed Zakaria, wrist-slapped for past plagiarism, melts down while screaming of Trump’s “bullsh**.” Madonna says she has “thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House.” All the insanity reminds one of the old Kingston Trio ballad:

They’re rioting in Africa, they’re starving in Spain.
There’s hurricanes in Florida, and Texas needs rain.
The whole world is festering with unhappy souls.
The French hate the Germans, the Germans hate the Poles.
Italians hate Yugoslavs, South Africans hate the Dutch.
And I don’t like anybody very much!

Bad filibusters are now good ones. Vowing to kill, hurt, or remove the president and first family is hip, when it used to be felonious. States’ rights and nullification are now Confederate-cool. Free speech is hate speech. Censorship is a mere trigger warning. Assimilation is cultural appropriation. The nasal voiced thirtysomethings on the news, in their retro outfits of high-water pants and horn-rimmed glasses, impart worldly wisdom as our new Eric Sevareids.

When we all wish to be victims, there are too few oppressors to go around. Or perhaps the Boomer generation is going out in a fit of frenzied self-recognition: It enjoyed all that was given to it, did not accomplish much itself, and left a mess to its successors. Its metaphor is California’s Oroville dam: Aging greens believe that it never should have been built; but since it was, it came in handy for the good life; but no one should spend any money on its repair; but when it nearly fails, we were all warned that it was never a good idea. And so no more dams will be built for our children.

An increasing number of American don’t take all this seriously. And that’s not new.

In reaction to the growing globalization of the Roman Empire, elite corruption, the banality of bread-and-circuses, and the end of the agrarian Italian Republic, the Stoics opted out, choosing instead a reasoned detachment from contemporary life. Some, like the worldly court philosopher Seneca, seemed hypocritical; others, such as the later emperor Marcus Aurelius, lived a double life of imperial engagement and mental detachment.

Classical impassiveness established the foundations for the later monastic Christians, who in more dangerous times increasingly saw the world around them as incompatible with the world to come — and therefore they saw engagement as an impediment to their own Christian belief.

More and more Americans today are becoming Stoic dropouts. They are not illiberal, and certainly not reactionaries, racists, xenophobes, or homophobes. They’re simply exhausted by our frenzied culture.

They don’t like lectures from the privileged and the wealthy on the pitfalls of privilege and wealth. In response, they don’t hike out to monasteries, fall into fetal positions, or write Meditations. Instead, they have checked out mentally from American popular entertainment, sports, and the progressive cultural project in general.

But aren’t sports at least still sacrosanct?

Hardly. The new monastics were already watching less and less of the National Football League before the televised tantrums of Colin Kaepernick. After his multimillionaire stunts seemed to catch on with other players, many viewers quit entirely. The appeasement of his crudity by Kaepernick’s multimillionaire bosses and teammates might explain why NFL audiences (and revenues) are down.

In this age of pan-politicization, sports, like everything else, is not exempt from wealthy elites’ guilt-ridden obsessions with race, class, and gender agendas — as a $20-million-per-annum, mediocre, and pampered quarterback refuses to stand for the National Anthem, or as Beyoncé does last year’s Super Bowl half-time show as an amateurish paean to Black Lives Matter and the old Black Panthers.

It’s become more painful to watch TV sports analysts than the gladiatorial hits of the game itself: Aging veterans seek to recapture their cool by passing themselves off as political pundits who contextualize interceptions and fumbles in terms of abstract politics.. They’re oblivious that, in the court of identity politics, the NFL is itself found culpable: According to the logic of “disparate impact” and proportional representation, about 12 percent of the population is “overrepresented” through its nearly 70 percent membership on NFL teams.

During the Cold War, Soviet-athlete propagandists who talked of the masses at least had a gun to their heads; today’s ESPN jocks who play-act as NPR talking heads mouth Democratic-party platitudes as a form of career enhancement. Life is short, so when Sundays are no relief from the daily frenzy, an increasing number have pulled the plug on sports.

The Oscar awards?

It too has become cultural Newspeak, with limited themes and scripted vocabulary. Watching hours of multimillionaires gushing about their own psychodramas was always trying, but in the age of Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda, Jimmy Stewart, Katharine Hepburn, and Maureen O’Hara, the stars at least showed some dignity and authentic eccentricity. Now entertainment awards ceremonies are mostly predictable rants, as if career success required speaking “truth” to power in a collective Two Minutes Hate exercise condemning the president, who serves as our new Emmanuel Goldstein. How odd that liberalism became elites’ groupthink about equality — or perhaps not so odd at all, given Orwell’s observation that “all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”

The new monastics likewise avoid new movies. The fall-off in movie viewership is not just due to the advent of cable television and streaming video over the Internet. Nor is the rub that new movies are mostly short on plot, dialogue, and characterization, and long on cardboard-cutout comic-book heroes, explosives, car crashes, and sadism.

The problem is also that there are finite ways of portraying a good-looking, young, liberal, justice crusader uncovering yet another corporate or oligarchic plot — by villains with southern accents or Russian tattoos — to pollute the planet, promote white privilege, or hurt justice crusaders. The actors, directors, producers, and studios are themselves multimillionaire corporatists who are trying to convince themselves that they are not multimillionaire corporatists — and this is another reason that some of the public has long ago lost interest in these scripted morality plays.

Monastics are tuning out the media. Listening to Brian Williams warn of fake news would be like paying attention to Miley Cyrus’s reminder about the need for abstinence. New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, who is often said to be the ethical conscience of the paper’s op-ed page, recently begged the IRS to commit a felony by sending him Trump’s tax returns. He went so far as to provide his own address to facilitate the crime: “But if you’re in IRS and have a certain president’s tax return that you’d like to leak, my address is: NYT, 620 Eighth Ave., NY NY 10018.”

Someone belatedly might have gotten the message. Rhodes scholar Rachel Maddow got a hold of two pages from Trump’s 2005 tax return. On MSNBC she went the full Roswell-UFO mode in hyping the scoop until she finally grasped that a twelve-year-old-tax return revealed that her Trump-as-Snidely-Whiplash had paid a greater tax (percentage-wise and absolutely) than “you didn’t build that” Barack Obama paid. Such an inadvertent demonstration is not the purpose for which a Rachel Maddow was hired.

The Middlebury and Berkeley and indeed all campus violence is now predictable: Mostly rich, white, privileged kids posing as barricade brawlers in a rite of passage — all predicated on the fact that they feel exempt from the reach of the local district attorney and are assured that there are not too many working kids without privilege nearby who might push back.

When everything is politicized, everything is monotonous; nothing is interesting. There are only so many ways one can express existential hatred for Trump, turn the Aztecs into the Founding Fathers, or show disrespect for the National Anthem (Kneeling? Or clenched fist held high? Or just sitting? Or turning one’s back? Or talking over the music?). So millions tune out and retreat to reading what was written before 1980, or to watching movies of a past age or seeking their own tribal ties of the mind.

I went into what once was our sleepy hometown the other day. An Aztec totem devoted to Coatlicue, the earth-mother goddess, portrayed as a paean to noble farm workers, sits in the old park. The huge monolith is sculpted quite well and by a talented former colleague at CSU Fresno. Its dedication was widely reported; no one was so rude as to mention that Coatlicue was a fierce mother goddess to whom captives were sacrificed each year. (She wore a necklace of human hearts and hands and a cloak of skin.) But identity-politics art is never free from overt propaganda: The modern epigraph atop our Coatlicue reads “Viva la Raza” (“Long live the Race”). I don’t recall anyone in the city’s supposed illiberal past ever suggesting that “Long live the race” would have been an acceptable epigraph on any city art.

Monasteries of the mind are an effort to reconnect with the past and disengage psychologically from the present. For millions of Americans, their music, their movies, their sports, and their media are not current fare. Instead, they have mentally moved to mountaintops or inaccessible valleys, where they can live in the past or dream of the future, but certainly not dwell in the here and now.

But oddly, sometimes there are surprises.

Today at 6 a.m. in the dark, I stopped at a gas station in the California coastal foothills. The car next to me had, I thought, way-too-loud booming rap music of the “kill the ho,” “bust up the pig” generic type. Why listen to all that before sunset?

I decided, in protest to the early-morning noise, to leave my own music louder than his as I filled the tank. The first song happened to be a short old folk rendition of Carl Sandburg’s lyrical “The Colorado Trail,” a sad homage to a 16-year-old girl who died on the way westward:

Laura was a laughin’ girl, joyful in the day.
Laura was my darling girl. Now she’s gone away.
Sixteen years she graced the Earth, and all of life was good.
Now my life lies buried ’neath a cross of wood.

I then switched tracks to Joan Baez’s folk version of the 18th-century “Plaisir d’amour.”

As it ended with Plaisir d’amour ne dure qu’un moment? Chagrin d’amour dure toute la vie, the young driver, his neck and wrists spotted with tattoos, got into his car (he had earlier turned down his stereo around “Now she’s gone away”) and drove up alongside me.

What next?

He grinned, “Hey, I liked your songs, okay?”

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14 Comments
Lucia W.
Lucia W.
March 29, 2017 9:34 am

A very timely post. I’m an antiquarian bookseller. Business is booming.

Thank you for opening with Woody Guthrie’s “So Long, It’s Been Good to Know You.” Woody wrote that song when he was holed up in a cabin in West Texas during a Dust Bowl dust storm. He did not believe he would survive. How’s that for a metaphor? Now it’s the media choking us, choking us.

Rob
Rob
March 29, 2017 10:30 am

I like it. So what are you going to do? All of that crap; the fooball, the oscars, dancing with the kardashians, merkins got talent? They are only there to keep your fat ass in front of something that won’t cause the oligarchs any problems. As long as you are stationary you are not a threat. Well there is only one solution to this and it isn’t reading old books and watching old movies, although that is exactly what I have been doing too. The answer is to get out to the pub, or the church, or the doggy park and talk to strangers. Make them your friends. Find out what they think and tell them what you think. Once the majority has learned to ignore the tripe that is “entertainment” then the rebuilding can begin…and not before.

Gayle
Gayle
  Rob
March 29, 2017 11:38 am

But…but Asimov’s psychohistory and S&H’s Fourth Turning assure us that the individual is powerless against the tides of history, no matter how much missionary zeal he or she may possess. God didn’t even send Jesus until the historical context was right.

I am thankful, though, for the truth tellers that enlighten us as to what we are up against. How to respond is the challenge.

Crimson Avenger
Crimson Avenger
March 29, 2017 10:38 am

That was epic – thank you for writing it. I think your characterization of “the new Monastics” is exactly right and worth considering by a large audience.

There are so many people in our shared shoes who are asking, “I know everything is going to shit, what do I DO about it?” And the only answer I can come up with – that ties directly into your insight – is this: Do less. Spend less. Earn less. Stop contributing to the systems that aim to hurt you. And doing less is hard.

Gayle
Gayle
  Crimson Avenger
March 29, 2017 11:40 am

Crimson

I did not write the piece; Victor Davis Hanson did. I just sent it to Jim for sharing. Glad you enjoyed it.

middle aged mad gnome
middle aged mad gnome
March 29, 2017 11:26 am

That is THE question, isn’t it? What to do? No real answer yet. I suspect that there are millions of us waiting, watching, and quietly getting ready…I think we will know what to do when the time comes.

Flashman
Flashman
March 29, 2017 11:44 am

One positive of Kaepernick’s being thrust into the public eye is that it puts the lie to the time honored excuse that “the negro is a product of his environment”. He was adopted by a white couple and raised in the midele class.

Suzanna
Suzanna
March 29, 2017 11:53 am

What a great article. I love it.
The noise from media is so grating, and we banished our TV.
The Oscars? Those folks can congratulate themselves all they want,
but we are not watching them.
Downsize while you can, before it is forced upon you.
I have a vast array of costume jewelry (2 sons and a husband)
and it is useless while living in a farm community in the middle of
nowhere. Also high heels and fancy purses and the latest fashion.
Ha Ha Ha. What a joke that competing for attention via baubles and
gadgets really is. Get with the program. Less is more. Resist.

nancy
nancy
  Suzanna
March 29, 2017 5:35 pm

Couldn’t agree with you more on that …

Mountain life
Mountain life
March 29, 2017 12:33 pm

Yes, the monastic life is in order for many of us. The book, Twilight of American Culture by Morris Berman delineates this perfectly. We stopped watching TV over 30 years ago, read classics and lots of history books, live in the mountains quite remote, garden, do our crafts, and watch (sometimes with horror) the decay of an Empire. We don’t know what else to do because to become engaged in fighting the Beast is suicide. Here is a quote about Berman’s book,”Whether examining the corruption at the heart of modern politics, the “Rambification” of popular entertainment, or the collapse of our school systems, Morris Berman suspects that there is little we can do as a society to arrest the onset of corporate Mass Mind culture. Citing writers as diverse as de Toqueville and DeLillo, he cogently argues that cultural preservation is a matter of individual conscience, and discusses how classical learning might triumph over political correctness with the rise of a “a new monastic individual”―a person who, much like the medieval monk, is willing to retreat from conventional society in order to preserve its literary and historical treasures.” Great read. We are boomers in out later years and have lived this type of lifestyle for decades. I teach about self responsibility with use of herbal medicine and my husband makes stringed instruments in the classical ways. We feel that some of us need to disengage more and more from the madness of the Masses and Leftists to maintain our integrity and spirit.

drime
drime
March 29, 2017 12:52 pm

“The end of gathering is dispersion
The end of rising is falling
The end of meeting is parting
The end of birth is death.”

Buddha Shakyamuni

Or if you prefer; everything that has a beginning has an end. Just passing through.

Unclogged
Unclogged
March 29, 2017 12:58 pm

Dang. Thanks for the hat-tip, Gayle. Much of that post is like it was cut and pasted from my own mind’s wanderings.

For a while, I tried to drink the bullshit away. Now it’s just good to find “release” here. This Burning Platform is a great dumping ground where frustrations burn, and rants rise to the heavens, like smoke.

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
March 29, 2017 3:28 pm

I have an indoor antenna farm. I pick up The Lone Ranger, Have Gun Will Travel, Lassie, All In The Family, Science Fiction from the 50’s, NO SPORTS, NO EMMYS, NO HOLLYWOOD CASTERATI. News from Russia, France and Japan only. They’re coming for me, just don’t know when.

Robert (QSLV)

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
March 29, 2017 4:06 pm