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Key insights from
The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and
Identity
By
Douglas Murray
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What you’ll learn
British cultural
commentator and editor for The
Spectator argues that amidst a series of swift and turbulent
cultural changes, Western societies have landed on new, quickly fabricated
narratives that have swiftly been adopted by the masses and become
difficult to discuss in a civil, productive way.
Read
on for key insights from The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity.
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1. Most analyses
of our cultural problems stop at politics and don’t touch the underlying
narratives that animate us.
It is easy to find evidence
that there is a deepening rancor and cantankerousness to public and private
discourse. Many people are quick to lay the blame at the feet of a
politician or political process more generally (and even quicker to take
offense), but these patterns of angry, herd movement have deeper roots than
the most recent news cycle or political election.
The far more profound and
troubling problem is a cultural one: We have been trying to thrive without
an overarching narrative that can give unity and direction to society.
These grand narratives are stories and assumptions about where we come from
and where we’re going, how to live life well and what makes life
meaningful. Since the 1800s, the grand narratives have been getting
undercut, one after another. The first half of the 20th century saw a
number of political ideologies gain prominence but fail to deliver. In the
late 20th century, the postmodern ethos entered the cultural ether with
great force, opposing any system of belief that presumes universality. One
of the few grand narratives left is the need to dismantle grand narratives.
What we have sown in “storylessness” we are now reaping in acrimony and
discord.
Whatever the previously
popular grand or metanarratives left to be desired, they did provide a
sense of purpose to life. Without a grand narrative that unifies society,
we have no heading. Where, then, will we go?
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2. In the absence
of a unifying narrative, culture is finding meaning in diversity and
division.
Rich democratic Western
societies can’t simply remain “storyless” forever. No culture in history
has managed it for very long. Making money where you can and finding
pleasure as it presents itself haven’t managed to scratch the existential
itch. As old grand narratives die out or are slashed to pieces, new ones
inevitably spring up to fill the void that deceased narratives have left.
People find themselves looking for a new cause. The most recent narrative
that people are now flocking to is activism, while they clamor for justice.
Most recently, this has
been embodied as people pitting themselves against anyone who disagrees
with them personally or the causes they choose to attach to. The speed with
which someone can be scrutinized and demonized for holding a contrarian
point of view—or even making a remark that could be interpreted as such—is
frightening.
Tech companies manipulate
this in profound ways, 1) by asserting significant control over the flow of
information and kinds of information that people can see, and 2) by selling
user data to shady customers hoping to refashion us in their image and
modify our behavior.
This is not a small
project. It is not an aimless project either. There is a new metaphysic
being intentionally fabricated to create people with an entirely different
ideological outlook. The new grand narrative that animates the conditioned
crowds integrates “social justice,” “identity group politics,” and
“intersectionality.” People are flocking to this banner in droves.
Social justice retains an
air of respectability in part because it sounds lofty—if only in the
abstract. Who wants to oppose something as noble as “social justice”?
Identity politics is a harder sell because it involves clustering people
based on one or a handful of characteristics: sexual preference, gender, or
skin color, for example.
Intersectionality is an
even less palatable part of this new grand narrative because it combines attributes
into more and more niche categories of compounded oppression—oppression
that will be remedied through activism. For example, one would examine not
just someone’s being black or gay or female, but her social location at the
intersection of black and gay and female.
The language of
intersectionality is not just in the fringe corners of the humanities and
social science departments. It’s mainstream jargon now and is being
systematically adopted as a framework for running many government agencies
and corporations. It probably hasn’t been long at all since you’ve heard
“LGBT” or “transphobic” invoked in casual conversation.
This new grand narrative
that combines social justice, group identity politics, and
intersectionality is dangerous for many reasons. One is that the narrative
is young and untested. Another reason is that it is divisive to the core.
As some have pointed out, it is dangerous and rash to throw one’s full
existential weight behind a paradigm that is so new. The intellectual roots
are shallow, and the effects of adhering to it, and building laws and
policy around it, are still being discovered. A few decades of theorizing
are attempting to upend thousands of years of civilization built through
the blood, sweat, and tears of experience.
Still, this new grand
narrative (a religion, really) marches onward: bullying, shaming, and
intimidating anyone who obstructs its rapid envelopment of society. Many of
these movements began as legitimate, noble efforts to achieve badly needed
reforms. But one after another, each of them has gone off the rails.
Together they make up a new metaphysic that divides us instead of bringing
us together. It teaches us to turn people’s words into weapons that can be
held against them. Public life is becoming a minefield in which everyone is
horribly afraid of making a rhetorical misstep. It would be difficult to
create a more potent recipe for social upheaval.
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3. We are so busy
denouncing bigots that we forget how quickly and dramatically things have
improved for gays in just the past decade.
In the United States and
Great Britain, there have been remarkable strides toward acceptance of gays
in the last decade. But the switch has been so drastic and so sudden that
an old ideology has merely been replaced by a new one and introduced a
different set of heroes and villains, saints and martyrs.
Politicians have altered
their opinions fairly quickly on the subject of gay marriage and
homosexuality more generally to accommodate the new dogma. Hillary Clinton,
for example, pivoted hard on the issue of gay marriage. She stood stalwart
at her husband’s side while he upheld the Defense of Marriage Act in 1996.
When she campaigned in the 2016 election, stalwart support for LGBT was a
platform mainstay. Of course, politicians do change their minds. That’s not
unusual. What is more unusual is how quickly and dramatically opinions on
the issue of homosexuality have changed in recent years, and not just
Hillary’s, but also many other politicians’. No politician would publicly
claim he is against same sex marriage. It’s political suicide. Today’s
politicians are trying to keep up with a cultural ground constantly moving
beneath their feet.
The ideological pivots
encoded in politics and law have often been sharper and more clamorous than
the turns made by Hillary and others in America. For example, right after
Germany legalized same-sex marriage, acceptance of the pro-gay position became
compulsory for citizenship in the state of Baden-Württemberg. These legal
amendments are seen as progress by many, but what if they’re just part of a
new, no-less-hostile orthodoxy replacing an older one?
Changes such as
Baden-Württemberg’s new citizenship requirement have been disorientingly
swift. Even people and papers that now position themselves as “woke” have
had to apologize for anti-gay statements made in earlier years, dug up
courtesy of the mob. In 2018, MSNBC forced its own host Joy Reid to issue a
public apology for making a statement against gay marriage 10 years
earlier. What the angry mob forgets is that it wasn’t just poor Joy but the
majority of people who opposed gay marriage at that time.
Businesses and governments
seem anxious to atone for past sins by approving of the gay lifestyle. They
are pushing it on employees and public servants in the same spirit as a
mother makes her children take their medicine: “You need this. It’s good
for you.”
BBC in 2018 began reporting
gay headlines and giving them the same import of breaking news and
front-page headlines. Below a report of an earthquake and tsunami that
claimed hundreds of lives in Indonesia was a write-up on the diver Tom
Daley, who came out as gay five years earlier and has been very candid
about it since. Hardly news at all, but there it was right alongside news
of a very recent devastating natural disaster. This priority misplacement
is not uncommon. One wonders if the growing frequency with which this kind
of reporting is jammed into news cycles seems to communicate not just,
“Take your medicine,” but, “Take that, bigot”. The spirit appears to be not
just instructive intent, but vindictive. Maybe these are the reflections
that only that only a gay man (like the author) can say without being
deplatformed or canceled.
The certitude with which
journalists and politicians make claims about the nature of homosexuality
is disconcerting, too, considering the short amount of time that these
ideas have been around and debated. There has been little time or
opportunity to evaluate these ideas rigorously, and those who propose
alternative theories or question the new dogma take a serious risk—even if
they are civil, reasonable, or modest in their position. The issue is so
thorny that most don’t bother to say much for fear of being made a pariah.
Take the story of Dr.
Michael Davidson as an example. After first inviting Dr. Davidson for an
interview on Good
Morning Britain and sending a car from the news outlet to fetch
him, Piers Morgan proceeded to berate Davidson for believing he was gay and
now is straight (and currently has a wife and kids), as well as for
offering voluntary conversion services for those who come to him. Davidson
remained calm and composed even while being scolded like a child. “Do you
know what we call these people, Dr. Michael? We call them horrible little
bigots, in the modern world.” What Morgan forgets about the modern world is
how quickly things have chaged. Important discussions about homosexuality
remain to be had because they’re too thorny for most people to broach
without being reproached—more than being their being true beyond a shadow
of a doubt. Whether someone is born gay, becomes gay, or can veer from one
to the other are questions that haven’t percolated long enough to be shored
up with such dogmatism.
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4. Men’s confusion
over what women want is understandable.
Back in 2002, Steven Pinker
wrote a book called Blank
Slate, which addressed the growing contentiousness over gender
questions. Pinker was confident that a scientific perspective would win
out, and after listing numerous differences between boys and girls, he
concluded that things aren’t looking good for the position that there are
no significant differences between boys and girls other than genitalia. In
our own time, it appears Pinker was overly optimistic about science winning
out. It has become controversial to make such assertions, however
empirically founded. Activism and social science have proven more
persuasive.
The controversies about
what it means to be a man or a woman have created a great deal of confusion
about how women and women should interact with one another.
Before MeToo and news about
Harvey Weinstein broke, there were plenty of unsolicited sexual
advances—and not just men toward women, but women toward men—sometimes on
live television. Jane Fonda sat herself in Stephen Colbert’s lap and
whispered titillating sweet nothings while Colbert uncomfortably made jokes
about the interview not going how he’d expected. In the mid-1990s, a young
Drew Barrymore bared her chest to David Letterman, and began switching
between naughty school girl and dominatrix. Mayim Bialik turned her back to
the audience on The Late
Late Show and exposed her breasts to Piers Morgan and James
Corden, calling it a way of standing for feminism. Howls of laughter and
approbation resounded in each instance. Periodicals’ op-eds had glowing
reviews for each instance. It seems that women making advances—even and
especially to the discomfort of men—is seen as empowering to women. The
script changed in 2017 with MeToo, when unsolicited, unwanted sexual
advances went from cheeky and cute to intolerable, but if it is a woman
initiating, that seems to be fine. The definition of harassment should go
both ways, but it doesn’t.
The point of bringing up
these stories and the reactions they elicit is not to shame women, to tell
them how to dress, or to blame victims. Let women do as they wish with
their bodies. Let them expose themselves to men for a laugh if they like.
But can we also agree that some women, especially prominent and celebrated
women, are sending mixed messages? We must believe all women always…and
there are also industries devoted to making women titillating.
Advertisements tell us a
lot about what really motivates women—whatever the lofty rhetoric of
Twitter or awards ceremonies might be. Swimwear campaigns aim to make women
alluring. Alluring to whom, one might wonder? To other women? Probably not.
There are prosthetic stick-on nipples called Just Nips that show through shirts
and dresses better. There’s camel toe underwear, designed to accentuate the
labia. These products are often branded as products to help women feel
better about themselves, but is it really just for women? Might there be other
reasons that no one is allowed to talk about? Society is clearly in
calcified denial about some things. If you’re curious, do two separate
Google searches for “make him drool” and “make her drool.” The results are
laughably different.
There is a difficult,
confusing demand placed on a man: A woman can be sexy, tantalizing, and
“make him drool” but the moment he responds to it, the woman can reject it
and scold him for responding. The switch from seductress to severe
schoolteacher is jarring and confusing. What exactly is the lesson to be
taught here? If the rule here is that women can be as sexy and sensual as
they wish toward men, but don’t you dare sexualize them...how realistic is
that? Nicki Minaj’s music video for her song “Anaconda” presents the
dilemma better than it intends, with Minaj shaking her bum seductively all
over a man’s face, getting him worked up, and then rejecting his advance
with an indignant slap on the hand and walking away. The man hangs his
head, evidently ashamed of his bad behavior.
Or what about the school
boy who attends compulsory classes with detailed etiquette lessons
regarding boy-girl interactions, only to see on the walk home that the
bestselling books and some of the bestselling movies are about women having
fantasies about being raped and taming an abusive male? His mom and her
friends might very well have these books on their shelves.
These incongruities,
unfortunately, are never really talked about. The truth is far more complex
than mad crowds can accommodate.
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5. Whiteness
studies are not progress—they make skin color, rather than the content of
one’s character, the basis of assessment once again.
The greatest threat to
Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream is no longer a lingering white supremacy,
but anti-racism. King’s hope was that one day, color would no longer
determine our treatment of one another, but color has recently become
everything. The color of someone’s skin is a better metric than the content
of someone’s character after all, according to an increasingly influential
school of thought. Hence, the recent New
York Times op-ed titled: “Can My Children Be Friends with White
People?”
Black studies became an
intellectual movement and special interest field in the 1960s that
originally aimed to remove stigma. The idea was to emphasize black
accomplishments and contributions to politics, law, culture, and
literature. But instead of removing stigma, some programs have relocated
it. In a similar way that some popular feminist movements have vilified men,
so some black studies programs have begun bashing whites.
“Whiteness studies” is a
new area of academic exploration. Ivy League institutions across the United
States have incorporated it. University of Wisconsin in Madison offers a
course called “The problem with Whiteness.” In Australia and England,
universities are making whiteness studies and other intersectionality
curricula mandatory for students, regardless of whether those students are
majoring in critical theory or rocket science.
The ideal of color
blindness has been replaced with a fierce preoccupation with race. The
pendulum swing has been a swift and noisy one. Finding something inherently
wrong with an entire group of people based purely on skin color is pretty
racist, but this is what whiteness studies programs and publications push.
If you are white you are not guilty as charged but guilty before charged.
Whiteness is not one of numerous features that comprise a person's
identity, but the central and problematic pillar.
In 2019, professor Robin
DiAngelo, author of White
Fragility, told an audience of her longing “to be a little less
white, which means a little less oppressive, oblivious, defensive,
ignorant, and arrogant.” DiAngelo told those present that people who see
others as individuals rather than by their skin color are “dangerous.” We
are returning to an epoch in which rhetoric about racial differences is
reaching a fever pitch, and we don’t realize the dangers it presents.
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6. The extremist
fringes of woke culture don’t have to get the final word.
The Madness of Crowds launched and its author has survived. The reviews
took the arguments seriously and were mostly positive, give or take some
dampening words of caution.
But still, the backlash was
not as severe as was expected, and perhaps that speaks to a growing
groundswell of people who believe that woke culture at its extremes has
missed something crucial.
The book’s reception is
also a reminder that while many brace themselves for a horrible online
onslaught if they dare to challenge the tenets of wokeness, we might find
the recourse is not as bad as we braced for. So many worry about
cancelation that no one asks what happens after. What if life goes on after
the cancelation mob moves on? For some people, it has cost them a lot, and this
is not to dismiss that, but it is to suggest that there are worse things.
It is also important we
bear in mind that racial equality, women’s and minority rights are some of
the most remarkable achievements in Western society. Their pursuit began as
laudable and necessary endeavors. These achievements are wonderful products
of the culture that produced them, but they are abysmal foundations for a
culture. Trying to rest a civilization on the products instead of the
foundation is a lot like turning a barstool upside down and expecting it to
yield better results.
You can’t take the products
of a system and turn them into the basis for that system. Race, sexuality,
and gender are complex and volatile issues. To make them form the basis of
a society is to create an unstable society. There are numerous
contradictions and contrivances in each issue that are not that difficult
to discover, and many ideas remain open to debate, yet society has reached
a point at which voicing them brings societal and sometimes legal
repercussions. Maybe the presence and influence of woke culture is less pervasive
than some imagine, but the presence of literal thought policing in many
Western countries is unsettling to say the least.
In Western societies today,
the emperor (or new grand narrative of social justice and activism for
certain groups) has no clothes, but many people fear the consequences of
pointing that out. The costs to reputation and career seem too high. But
perhaps there truly are even more people who are willing to speak up and
ask difficult questions than we imagined. Hopefully we can do so civilly.
Hopefully, these questions that need to be asked on subjects of race,
gender, and sexuality can lead us to concepts and principles that we can
all agree on and that will bring unity.
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