There isn’t one plan, there are fifty thousand, and nobody is in charge.

Guest Post by Eugyppius

This image heads Harvard University’s list of Socializing Rules. None of these students is at serious risk of severe outcome from Corona.

I should have expected that my last post would provoke some angry replies [see UPDATE]. Now that my inbox is full of grumpy people, I will double down.

First, though, a parable from my very formative and disturbing time in American academia: I abandoned my professorial career at the height of the Great Awokening. Before I fled, I endured two pretty difficult years, navigating tidal of waves of nonsense and trying to stay uncanceled. In the midst of it all, I had plenty of time to study the institutional workings of the Woke. The fundaments of their dogma were laid by specific critical theorists long before I entered graduate school, but the system as a whole did not become operative until a long while later, as its acolytes ascended to senior faculty and administrative positions, and a distributed consensus emerged that the tenets of Wokeness were right and necessary and just.

People tend to believe things that further their personal interests, and universities are no exception. Wokification succeeded largely because it gave a lot of different people a lot of different things that they wanted. It gave the increasingly powerful university administration a reason to hire more administrators to manage diversity and ensure its forward march. Self-propagation is the highest goal of administrators everywhere. Wokeness also became a useful tool in ongoing turf wars between administrators and faculty. Diversity is a simple metric via which the administration can interfere with faculty hiring and academic operations; new diversity hires know who is buttering their bread and remain loyal to the administrators whose policies brought them in. For the increasingly mediocre and incapable faculty who now teach at even the most august American schools, the woke circus has its own attractions. It provides distraction from the unrelenting demands of objectivity and originality, and permits a pleasing, self-righteous indulgence in moral scolding. In Woke Studies, the answers are always predetermined and it is very easy to get anything published, provided you say the right things. For students, Wokeness has still other attractions—as a font of easy coursework, as an opportunity for social networking, and as a locus for the periodic ritual entertainment of false moral outrages and protests.

All of this is to say that Wokeness was selected from many aspiring ideological and intellectual programs, because it gave the right things to the right people. The bottomless mediocrities who helped construct the subgenre of critical theory on which the whole Woke phenomenon rests are not in charge of the Wokeness Circus. The administrators who promote and participate in Wokeness are not alone in running it, and they could never turn off or redirect the machine over which they appear to preside. Stepping out of line would only mean their personal destruction. The donors, the trustees, the tenured faculty, the powerful committees – none of these hold the reins either. Wokery is a self-organising decentralised movement. It is the sum of all the actions and opinions of all the people who have opted into it.

Importantly, Wokeness is also self-radicalising, in the way that many university-incubated ideologies turn out to be. Administrators or department chairs are constantly in danger of being outflanked on their left, and so they must adopt and endorse the most radical line to maintain their position. Otherwise they will be accused of racism or sexism or whatever and replaced by even more unhinged dangerous people. Also too, diversity is increasingly managed by dedicated administrative offices and special committees, which end up peopled with the most racially obsessed, divisive, woke-enthused types imaginable. Finally, nobody can gain support for or argue on behalf of anything, unless it can be cast in Woke terms. Want a new Egyptologist? Need to renovate the library? Collecting support for shortening the spring semester by a week? Well, you and your allies better explain why these initiatives will help redress historical racial injustices. In this way, all internal discourse and management comes to be about Wokeness, all of the time.

While Wokeness provides many personal incentives for true believers, it is destructive for the institutions that foster it. Those schools that have advanced very far down the woke path face semi-regular hate speech hoaxes and student protests, hordes of incapable hostile junior faculty, and massive curricular disarray. They are pretty miserable places to work and study and they are bleeding talented people and rapidly burning through the cultural capital they accumulated in prior, more reasonable decades. Nor is Wokeness, at the end of the day, even the best thing for many of its most committed adherents. Alas, this doesn’t matter either. Nobody, not even Kimberlé Crenshaw, can redirect or modulate Wokeness any longer.

All of this matters, because American universities aren’t just eager sponsors of racial hysteria. They have also emerged as some of the most radical centres of Corona containment in the world. Their students endure all manner of unreasonable hygiene measures. Constant testing, quarantining, mask rules, enforced isolation, officially encouraged snitching, movement restrictions, vaccine mandates — all of this and more are routine for millions of students. Klaus Schwab is not making them do this. The culprit is a broad, distributed adherence to the dictates of containment ideology, probably driven in no small part by emotional and ideological exhaustion with the prior tyranny of Wokeness. Now that everybody agrees, the self-directed, self-radicalising elements are in place: Administrators and committee chairs that are perceived not to be taking Corona seriously enough will be removed or sidelined in favour of more radical people who take things more seriously than you could possibly imagine. All of these schools now operate with a wealth of Corona Committees, peopled by all the most lunatic germophobic faculty.

Like wokeness, containment is destructive to the institutions that embrace it. American universities in particular depend on attracting students with over-provisioned campuses and entertaining student-life programs. They are basically massive amusement parks for young adults. Sooner or later, people will begin to think twice about paying tens of thousands of dollars a year to live in a prison camp. The destruction will start at less selective schools and proceed upwards. How high it will go, nobody knows. Also like Wokeness, containment is probably bad even for many of its truest believers and most committed enforcers, who now live lives of fear, desperation and isolation, and see now way out.

It is very easy to confuse cause and effect when examining the emergence of ideological systems. People raised up as leaders and heroes of emerging movements are almost never its directors, but merely expressions of all the separate beliefs and aspirations of those involved. Ultimately it’s just extremely difficult for any confined group of people, no matter how wealthy or powerful, to implement any kind of coherent agenda in heavily bureaucratised modern states. Policies can only be realised via a bureaucratic machinery involving thousands and thousands of people, all of whom have different incentives and answer to different bosses. Even when a single person manages to sell a policy to the bureaucratic machine, he cannot predict how it will be implemented and he will have no control over what actually happens. The agency of any single person is illusory here. It is the demobilised, distributed, complex institutional system that selects items and policies, via largely hidden processes.

To further irritate my readers, I provide the following sloppy sketch. It is the best that I can do with my fingers on the train. The inverted triangle represents the growing volume of people in the apparatus of government who have bought in to Corona containment, as we move forward in time. At the beginning — the tip — there were just a few. Now almost everybody is on board. Even my little institute, which has nothing to do with viruses or hygiene or public health, is a firmly committed node in the bureaucratic Corona network.

The green zone represents a notional threshold. Below this area, most policy initiatives won’t come to your notice or achieve very much. Not enough of the bureaucracy is on board. Much beyond this zone, and this policy is a part of your everyday life. The little circle at the bottom represents the maximum possible size of any directed initiative or conspiracy within the bureaucratic machine. For any such confined initiative to be realised, the conspirators must hope for adoption vastly in excess of their own numbers and their own powers, at which point they will have lost all prospect of steering the juggernaut. Finally, the purple line represents the furthest possible institutional horizon of our conspirators. They may have vague hopes of getting their plan adopted at all levels of government, but the only people on whom they can directly act and whose reactions they have any expectation of predicting, are below that line.

These constraints don’t exist in every country, but in the world of liberal democracy, this is very roughly how governance happens. We have to fit our theories of What Is Going On to some version of this framework, or they just won’t be credible.

Tomorrow, I promise, I’ll get back to more technical Corona posts. There are many scientific and political developments to discuss.


For all the people preparing to tell me what an uninformed idiot I am, I’ve prepared this brief list of objections and answers. In my experience it covers about 80% of everything you want to shout at me right now:

These failures are too consistent to be accidental: The system is too large and unwieldy to act according to coherent strategies and basically lurches from one failure to the next. It is only good at sustaining itself and enforcing compliance.

Elites can’t be stupid, or they wouldn’t be elites: Yes, they can actually, but the behaviour of the system as a whole is more important to my argument. Because of these institutional constraints, the system is condemned to behave constantly in overtly stupid ways and there is nothing that any individual supergenius anywhere can do about it.

The system you’re describing is a just a facade, those bureaucrats are all pawns. There are secret actors pulling the strings behind the scenes: This is all but impossible, and one of the fundamental mistakes of conspiracy theorising on both the left and the right. Political power can’t be mediated in this way; power accrues to those who are perceived to wield it.

It’s absurd to say humans don’t plot and scheme: There are many, many plots and schemes all the time. But widely adopted, general policies are the reflection of a broad-based bureaucratic consensus and are by their very nature undirected.

It’s obnoxious that you think they’re acting in good faith: None of this necessarily presumes that anybody is acting in good faith. Plenty of people who participate in bureaucratic consensus politics do so for cynical reasons.

You’re ignoring the fact that this is evil: No, I say all the time that it’s extremely evil. I am arguing merely that the locus of evil is not condensed in any single actor, but rather distributed, like a foul-smelling gas, throughout the entire system.

In sum: If I could wave a wand and send the whole globalist crew on a twenty-year mission to conduct a thorough tree census of Siberia, I would. But that wouldn’t stop any of this. Containment would continue on its current path, and a new collection of clowns and loser philanthropists would emerge out of the woodwork to take their place. Before long, Siberia would be very full of tree counters, and we would still be facing vaccine mandates and lockdowns and all the rest of it.

UPDATE: Allusions to angry replies are about enraged emails, not the comments on the last piece. I learn a lot from disagreement and back-and-forth with my readers; I merely find the outrage that some of my theories provoke puzzling and no little amusing.

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61 Comments
QM
QM
December 16, 2021 5:52 pm

I’ve found myself getting pissed off when I see these kids in their 20s who should be out bird doggin’ one another and enjoying their lives, walking around masked, wide eyed and fearful. The adults over 40, I could care less about; they should know better. But your only young once. And to spend your youth afraid instead of happy just sucks.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  QM
December 16, 2021 6:20 pm

Every time I go to the grocery store, or any store, I pretend to be on my phone talking about how weird it is to still see everyone in masks. I do this when I’m within earshot of a group of people wearing masks.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 6:30 pm

Don’t wear one ever.
Simply calmly say, “I guess you’d better call the cops,
because I will never wear a mask. Ever. Your mask will protect you, right?”
And watch the the circuits overload.

Phantom lurking
Phantom lurking
  Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 8:40 pm

Thanks, I’m going to copy that!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 9:27 pm

I do the same hahaa

danlaw12
danlaw12
  Glock-N-Load
December 17, 2021 8:27 am

Good idea. Another is to say “Don’t people know they are concentrating the virus in their masks?”.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  danlaw12
December 17, 2021 8:58 pm

Better to lay their “saftety’

ReluctantWarrior
ReluctantWarrior
  Glock-N-Load
December 18, 2021 9:30 am

For the most part I live in a strong red area of a purple state and no one is observing the masking or distancing tyrannical mandates. The other day I had a little fun with a masked ‘Karen’ type by walking up to her and asking her why everyone was wearing a mask. Her reply was ‘where are you from? Mars.’ I said ‘yabooya’ which I told her was ‘yup’ in Martian.

John Pietrusiewicz
John Pietrusiewicz
  QM
December 16, 2021 7:18 pm

When I see young people without masks, I make sure to say you have a real nice smile or face. Praise is the best incouragement.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  John Pietrusiewicz
December 17, 2021 1:13 pm

Amen to that!!!

Mr. Guest
Mr. Guest
  QM
December 16, 2021 8:35 pm

Can’t thumb this comment up enough. When I was that age, I was out trying to pick up every STD
I possibly could. Add to that, drinking like a fish and trying every experimental drug that didn’t require a needle. Why, it’s a wonder I’m still alive /sarc.
Not advocating for everyone to take my path, but damn, people. You’re only young once.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Mr. Guest
December 16, 2021 11:14 pm

Every sane human who ever lived did the same.
That’s why there are 7 billion of us reckless fools alive now.

bryanjb
bryanjb
  Colorado Artist
December 17, 2021 12:27 am

or said another way, i’ve enjoyed my freedom enough to be willing to pay for it now, and be there to pass to the future, if they can.

Be Prepared
Be Prepared
  QM
December 17, 2021 11:09 am

I have been wearing a mask to the Giant Grocery store not because I believe it does anything… I just have no desire to be profiled by “Marty”, the AI robot.

comment image

Steve
Steve
  Be Prepared
December 17, 2021 12:44 pm

No excuses. Don’t wear the damned mask!

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  Be Prepared
December 17, 2021 12:54 pm

If you can’t even handle being bullied by a robot, then it doesn’t look like you’ll refuse the jab when you’ll really have to sacrifice something…job/income, restaurants/entertainment, travel, etc.

It’s not looking good for you.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Abigail Adams
December 19, 2021 1:42 am

Ab, you seem to have a knack for misconstruing things.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Be Prepared
December 19, 2021 1:39 am

That robot annoys me almost as much as seeing an endless stream of 20year olds thumbing their phones incessantly – and I’m not a Luddite.

Steve
Steve
  QM
December 17, 2021 12:43 pm

You don’t know the meaning of the word “zombie” until you’ve been bumped into by a young person walking along, black face masked, earphoned and becapped, staring into their phone.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 6:18 pm

I think the only way to fight wokeness is through the defense of Merit. Merit is color blind. ANYTHING that puts race in the picture is racist.

August
August
  Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 6:28 pm

Openly talking about Merit will get you a ticket to Camp Cancel.
And for God’s sake never use the phrase ‘color-blind’.

GNL
GNL
  August
December 16, 2021 11:09 pm

Camp Cancel. I’m going to use that one.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
December 16, 2021 9:30 pm

Diversity merely places appearance over ability. Simplest explanation I’ve heard. And we all know that’s not right.

m
m
  Glock-N-Load
December 17, 2021 7:17 am

Why do you choose Merit, instead of Morality?

Ken31
Ken31
  m
December 19, 2021 1:50 am

My younger self would have argued against you all day for that, but he is gone and I think you are correct.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
December 16, 2021 6:24 pm

It’s a pandemic of the willfully stupid.
There is no cure for that except the “vaccine”.
Already killing hundreds of thousands.
In a few years, the human IQ will go up exponentially
as the stupid will be culled by the 100s of millions.

Steve
Steve
  Colorado Artist
December 17, 2021 12:46 pm

True, but not “stupid” in purely educational terms. The stupidest people I know all have very high IQs and consider themselves intellectual. They’ve all fallen for this garbage, while people they look down on like hairdressers and mechanics know it’s BS.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve
December 17, 2021 3:29 pm

Very true. High IQ does not equate to the ability (willingness?) to think.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve
December 19, 2021 1:47 am

Intellect works better with wisdom, but wisdom does not need intellect.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
December 16, 2021 6:50 pm

Inspired by Admin, I looked into how you become an HVAC tech (for my children), because without a doubt I am not sending them into one of these hellholes.

OT: Got a Christmas card from a veterinarian friend who, of all options, chose his son’s masked photo of rolled up sleeves with bandaid over deltoid to put on the card with the greeting “we survived another year.” I guess in their world, that was the best thing that happened in 2021, to get the 15 year old vaccinated.

John Pietrusiewicz
John Pietrusiewicz
  Svarga Loka
December 16, 2021 7:30 pm

It used to be I got my driver’s license, my first car, my first job. Now it’s my first Covid VAX. How sad. I’m glad my kids are adults. The young people need to know it’s not about survival but thriving in Gods wonderful universe.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Svarga Loka
December 16, 2021 8:26 pm

Svarga – Any skilled trade will be very useful and rewarding for your kids. Electrical technician will always be a needed skill, as will mechanic, plumber, welder, HVAC, robotics. If they are good with their hands, have them learn a skill.

John Pietrusiewicz
John Pietrusiewicz
  TN Patriot
December 16, 2021 9:07 pm

Yes. It worked out real well doing construction work in my younger days. I almost never have to pay anyone to fix anything. Being a do it yourselfer is one of reasons I retired early.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
December 16, 2021 7:06 pm

A couple of paragraphs was enough, I get it.

Good. This will kill the institutions which were long past irrelevant. And an education, for the cost of a laptop and an Internet connection, in any discipline and to any depth, is there for the taking.

We are witnessing the end of a multitude of institutions and traditions.

Balbinus
Balbinus
  hardscrabble farmer
December 16, 2021 8:28 pm

I left Purdue U. in 1966 after one year. I consider it to be the worst year of my life. University was garbage then and has only deteriorated since. My life has been well worth living and I have no regrets about the meandering path through this life. No one’s life is without some bumps and bruises but mine have been minor compared to many folks I have passed by .

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  hardscrabble farmer
December 16, 2021 8:35 pm

A few years ago, we thought about buying a small apartment in a college town for investment purposes, but decided against it for the reasons stated. We saw it coming that there was not going to be a need to live near a university to get an education.

Ken31
Ken31
December 16, 2021 7:34 pm

So sport on about the role of diversity undermining the integrity of the faculty. The other direction they corrupted themselves from was Fauci and his ilk controlling the grant money. Faculty no longer have integrity, but they pretend to themselves otherwise.

i forget
i forget
December 16, 2021 8:00 pm

Fluidity of war aside, & Maslows arrowhead buried in William Tell’s apple portfolio, that pinpoint is the not Tempe•rary Amygdala Administration Building foundation, that green Hell on Wheels transcon RR track is Nervous System, & all that free-floating emergence above is the creature Cowardice.

That’s the Plan.

comment image

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  i forget
December 16, 2021 9:40 pm

Not only is it an eyesore it looks like it has more wasted space than useable space.

A metaphor of higher education.

GNL
GNL
  hardscrabble farmer
December 16, 2021 11:14 pm

Apt observation.

Be Prepared
Be Prepared
  i forget
December 17, 2021 11:15 am

This building is some Architect’s self-indulgent stroking of their ego and sense of wonderfulness. The cost of a building is too high not to ensure that the form doesn’t outweigh function.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
December 16, 2021 8:20 pm

Learn a trade, become self-employed, and invest in a home library…(before they ban all the important books).

JiffyJeff
JiffyJeff
December 16, 2021 9:53 pm

It’s all part of the same plan. Maintain the absurd charade however possible. The more illogical the better, to increase cognitive dissonance, of course.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
December 16, 2021 10:08 pm

A delightful “Green Acres” episode concerned Oliver wanting to practice law in Hootersville. Went to Pixley to inquire.

Asked, “Where’d you go to law school?” “Harvard.” “Sorry, the only Harvard we have listed is the Harvard School of Hypnotism”.

Remember, Arnold Ziffel went to Stanford.

Vigilant
Vigilant
  lamont cranston
December 17, 2021 3:32 pm

Love Green Acres

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
December 17, 2021 1:51 am

If you took away Sportsball, most universities would be gone by next week.

Ken31
Ken31
  NickelthroweR
December 19, 2021 1:46 am

That is why I am glad to get out of this town. That is coming.

Arthur
Arthur
December 17, 2021 2:15 am

Don’t confuse unconscious response with conscious manipulation.

Lies don’t tell themselves.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
December 17, 2021 2:47 am

I think you are describing the results of over-complex systems. Complex Adaptive Systems have their own energy and direction. like the weather, and our liberal democracies suffer exactly this dysfunction you describe. Many writers detail these phenomenon.

“A complex adaptive problem is one that changes by the merit of you trying to solve it before you are able to complete the solution.” QED

m
m
  Austrian Peter
December 17, 2021 7:22 am

I thought that too, for a long time.

But one day I found a better underlying theory, which turns out to be a requirement for the emergence of over-complex systems: “Perfection is achievable [in the Earthly world.]”
That’s the underlying false premise which removes all limits/consideration of trade-offs to over-complexity.

Ken31
Ken31
  m
December 19, 2021 1:48 am

m, thank you for articulating that for me. I think you just saved me some time. I was close to that.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 17, 2021 6:01 am

the author either doesnt appreciate, or maybe doesnt understand, how those perpetrating this nonsense have leveraged a handful of choke points to get their foot in the door, using organizations which _do_ have few control nodes- the mass media megacorps, only a half dozen or so corporations all told – the big tech megacorps, again, maybe a half dozen corporations all told, the who and a few other ‘health’ related bureacracies – and only slect points in their leadership even needed to be compromised, the rest gets pulled around by the head – the banks – well known to be a very close cabal – all institutions where the people needed to pull the strings would literally fit in a big room. None of those institutions is anything at all remotely democratic and many of them are not really ‘public’ or ‘government’ either- but in many cases (e.g. the WHO) there has already been achieved the subversion passing regulatory power to such bodies, dragging government machinery along for the ride as well. Then the whole field is slanted by the mass media and big tech, and with a tug from the compromised institutions the rest of the avalanche gets moving. Once in motion it becomes pretty much lethal to one’s career to oppose the trend. many brave people have been steamrolled for speaking out or refusing to comply. but one thing that surprises me is how well they actually pulled it off _without_ a priori fine grained control of a majority of the moving parts. that much, one must admit, was masterfully executed.
yes, much of it has, like an avalanche, gotten out of control since then, and some of that will run over and bury the ruling class who thought themselves so clever, too, though that’s little comfort when we too have been buried by it.
beyond that, the author sounds like he’s in america, where this crap never got as crazy or extreme or, most important , never got so much of the full force of the state behind it to enforce it mercilessly. take a look at whats going on in europe, where the davos crowd feels most at home and is certainly most in control, and see a nightmare in full bloom.

m
m
  Anonymous
December 17, 2021 7:25 am

LOL, that a long sermon to defend your BS stance of “it’s [still] less bad in the US!”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  m
December 17, 2021 7:43 am

i can assure you it is a lot worse here in europe.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
December 17, 2021 3:47 pm

I am unimpressed by Eugyppus’ dismissal of conspiracy theorizing. I do, however, agree that once set in motion, a plan will carry on by its own momentum and the desire of bureaucrats to bureaucratize. One sentence stands out: “Self-propagation is the highest goal of administrators everywhere.” Making use of this simple fact enables just a few people to plant just the right seeds in just a handful of places, and then rest assured of reaping a bumper crop. The mistake Eugyppus makes is thinking that any one person or group even needs to be in charge at this point. They were in charge years and even decades ago planting the right seeds in the right places to ensure that when a pandemic arose, totalitarian control of societies around the globe would be the response. This wasn’t whipped up in the last two or three years. A farmer plants, and a farmer reaps, but in between the crop grows of its own accord.

very old white guy
very old white guy
December 17, 2021 6:28 am

The picture shows all that is wrong with their thought processes. The virus, what ever the hell it is cannot survive outside in the sunshine and there we have three fools with masks social distancing. The stupid doesn’t get much stronger than that.

Hansen
Hansen
December 17, 2021 10:50 am

No argument here, agree with that assessment 100%. Save money for the kids college education? Why the hell would you do that! Teach them to hunt, fish and grow crops.

ReluctantWarrior
ReluctantWarrior
December 18, 2021 9:25 am

Wearing a mask out of doors is the height of stupidity. It is stupid to wear one any where. These people are clearly delusional.

Ken31
Ken31
  ReluctantWarrior
December 19, 2021 1:42 am

It is an Overton window maneuver that there is an acceptable amount of insanity. Think masks work is insane. Or incredibly stupid, but that half of the population is not a secret at all.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 19, 2021 1:32 am

I would disagree about behind the scenes actors; the general idiocracy we see on stage would dictate a more uniform intelligence behind the scenes.

Old School Counselor
Old School Counselor
December 20, 2021 5:53 am

This is correct, although there are influential revolutionaries in positions of influence and many connectors who spread the messaging. There is a loose-knit collection of organizations and gathering places that pass along the accepted narratives to the soldiers in the field. They have the big media reinforcing their marching orders. We are gradually creating a similar organization, but we are much too diffuse, and the Feds are infiltrating many of our hubs.