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Title : The moral inferiority of the twenty-somethings
link : The moral inferiority of the twenty-somethings
The moral inferiority of the twenty-somethings
I've been pondering the arrogance of the young. As you know, I'm annoyed by the commonly-heard presumption that the latest generation of whelplings is somehow morally superior to all who came before. The Me Too movement feeds into this delusion.You've all heard the rap from self-impressed college-aged progressives: "The older generation ignored the hundreds of rapes committed by Bill Clinton. This proves how primitive our society was in the 1990s. We are the Superior Ones. We are the FIRST MORAL GENERATION IN ALL OF HUMAN HISTORY!"
Smug young assholes revel in the unearned presumption of superiority: Classic element of social comedy. Now comes the part where we throw our heads back and laugh. Ready? HA HA HA HA HA HA!
You ain't the superior generation, you twenty-something flecks of fecal matter. In fact, you've backslid into barbarity.
You want proof? All right, try this: Ask your ancient forebears, the ones who were adults in the 1980s, how Geraldine Ferraro was treated during the 1984 campaign. Compare the more-or-less civilized reception she received to the incredibly vile sexism meted out to Hillary Clinton -- by both the left and right -- in 2008 and 2012. No, I'm not just talking about the Trumpers: Look at the disgusting misogyny displayed by the Bernie Bros and Chapo Trap House and all of those likeminded creeps.
In any previous election -- and I'm including the 19th century -- Trump's treatment of women would have been deal-breaking. Ruinous. He would not simply have lost the election; he would have been considered a pariah, an ambulatory disease.
I once looked up the contemporary coverage of an 1890 scandal involving William Taulbee, a married Kentucky congressman who had an affair with a girl working in the patent office. When Taulbee was shot on the Capitol steps, newspapers were more concerned about the wellbeing of the shooter than of the congressman. Good riddance, the NYT more-or-less said.
And Trump thinks that the NYT is tough now.
When I was younger, nobody would have dared to refer to the president's daughter as a cunt -- and believe me, Maureen Reagan did much to tempt us. Moreover, if anyone had called Maureen a cunt, nobody could have defended the use that word by pointing out the occasions when the president himself had employed similar language.
Let's turn to race.
Do you really think your generation is better on this score, whelplings? If so, then let me ask you: Why is an openly racist president possible now, when such a thing was not possible during the 50 (or should I say 100?) years preceding 2016?
I didn't notice any grey beards on those white nationalists in Charlottesville.
Do you think any TV star in the 1980s or 1990s would have referred to a prominent black woman as the child of an ape? Hell, let's take this back further: Lucille Ball never would have said such a thing. Of course, she was a liberal -- liberal enough to be red-baited -- but the fact is that no prominent actor of that period (not even the very conservative ones) would have dared to use such language. Going back even further in Hollywood history, even D.W. Griffith -- a true southern racist -- would not have said such a thing. Not in public.
I can sense your objection: Cannon, you told us that you were going to castigate the delusions of the young. Roseanne is not young. True enough -- but please note that she never made such an outrageous comment during the first iteration of her show, which aired in a more civilized time. This year, she felt free to use vile language because a vile new generation assured her that vileness is the new normal.
In a sense, all culture is youth culture. I've seen the process play out over the course of nearly six decades: The young make the times. And the times, they are a-changin' -- for the worse.
The beating of Rodney King in 1991 sparked national outrage, and correctly so. The initial acquittal of the officers sparked riots -- real riots, not the dainty little riot-ette we had in Baltimore as a result of the Freddie Grey affair. But as obviously wrong as the assault on King was, those cops did not out-and-out murder the guy. Moreover, unlike many of the recent black victims of police violence, King had actually committed a serious offense.
Compare the King episode to the series of outrages we have experienced in recent times. Eric Garner (whose "crime" was selling cigarettes). Sandra Bland. Michael Brown. Alton Sterling. Rekia Boyd. Philando Castile. I could go on and on. The cops never seem to suffer any consequences -- unlike two of the cops in the King case, who were found guilty in a second trial.
I can guess what you're going to say: "The police have always mistreated minorities." Absolutely goddamned right, but consider this: If the Castile atrocity had occurred in the 1980s, the country would have spoken of nothing else for months. Reagan or Bush would have felt enormous political pressure to assure everyone that such a thing would never occur again. But now, in this decade, the police murder of Castile -- over a freakin' broken taillight -- is considered yawnsville.
How many young Americans (including those self-impressed white progressives under 30) recognize Castile's name?
Why hasn't anyone written a book about the Sandra Bland murder mystery? Had such an event occurred in the 1990s, there would have been books and documentaries.
Check out this headline: "How Black People Can Avoid Being Killed By Police." We've seen variants of that headline many, many times. My fellow oldsters, can you recall seeing such a headline anywhere in the 1990s? In the 1980s? In the 1970s? I can't.
Thus, my question to self-impressed young shits throughout the land: You really think that you're making the world better? You really think you're superior to guys like me?
From my perspective, your generation made Trump possible. Your generation considers reactionary John Birchian conspiracy theories to be "woke." Your generation made fascist paranoia hip. Your generation dares to question democracy itself.
Given all of the incontrovertible proof of the moral inferiority of the twenty-somethings, why are college-aged "progressives" so effing arrogant? Why do they continually police the language of their obviously-superior elders? Why do they seek flimsy rationales to accuse us of racism and sexism, even though this hideous generation created the most reactionary political culture I've ever known?
On campus, political correctness is invoked not for purposes of social improvement but in order to establish personal gain. As we used to say in the 70s: It's a power trip.
This generation of white whelplings was raised by helicopter parents. They grew up without freedom, and thus without power. Why do we keep hearing the word "coddled"? Because no other word will do. These kids were kept locked up indoors instead of being told, as I was told, to go out and play in the streets. ("Just dodge the cars," Mom said circa 1965. Great times.)
Generation Coddle grew up, grew hipster face-fuzz, and then invaded our campuses, where they demand safe spaces and trigger warnings. Why do they make these absurd demands? Because they can. Because doing so makes them feel big. Because, for the first time in their teensy little lives, they have discovered the joy of exercising power.
Thus, if you dare to use the word "niggardly," they will pretend to be ever-so-offended, even when you patiently explain that this word, of Scandinavian origin, has no etymological relationship to a certain insult with roots in Latin.
Consider this influential article published in Vox in 2015: "I'm a liberal professor, and my liberal students terrify me."
The student-teacher dynamic has been reenvisioned along a line that's simultaneously consumerist and hyper-protective, giving each and every student the ability to claim Grievous Harm in nearly any circumstance, after any affront, and a teacher's formal ability to respond to these claims is limited at best.
I once saw an adjunct not get his contract renewed after students complained that he exposed them to "offensive" texts written by Edward Said and Mark Twain. His response, that the texts were meant to be a little upsetting, only fueled the students' ire and sealed his fate. That was enough to get me to comb through my syllabi and cut out anything I could see upsetting a coddled undergrad, texts ranging from Upton Sinclair to Maureen Tkacik — and I wasn't the only one who made adjustments, either.The same professor got hit by both right and left. Right-wing young assholes called him a commie because he politely refuted the conservative delusion that greedy blacks caused the 2008 banking crisis. Right-wing assholiness, left-wing assholiness: Two sides of the same colon.
I am frightened sometimes by the thought that a student would complain again like he did in 2009. Only this time it would be a student accusing me not of saying something too ideologically extreme — be it communism or racism or whatever — but of not being sensitive enough toward his feelings, of some simple act of indelicacy that's considered tantamount to physical assault. As Northwestern University professor Laura Kipnis writes, "Emotional discomfort is [now] regarded as equivalent to material injury, and all injuries have to be remediated."
It's all about Power. Not the empowerment of once-persecuted groups or ideologies, but personal power. Petty power. Petty victories scored by petty persons.
Hilariously, these petty, power-tripping whelplings actually think they are making things better. But what have they really accomplished? Obnoxious young lefties made the Alt Right seem attractive. Asshole Progs abetted Trumpism.
College leftists erected a false dichotomy: If you're not a hyper-sensitive, manipulative, controlling snowflake like us, you must be a racist, sexist fiend.
In reply, much of America said: Fine. We're voting Trump. The last thing we want is to be lumped in with YOU.
There's another reason why the young have embarked upon this power trip: Laziness.
This realization hit me this morning, as I was reading up on the psychological theories of Alfred Adler. Adler thought...well, he thought a good many things: It's important to be clear on that point. But on the topic of homosexuality, what he thought is now considered wrong. He thought that homosexuality was aberrant behavior (a view he mitigated toward the end).
What would happen if you tried to teach a 22 year-old college student about Adler? What would happen the moment you mentioned Adler's view of homosexuality?
You know damned well what the reaction would be: The smug whelpling would suddenly decide that he or she need not hear one further word about this influential psychological theorist. Even though (as noted above) Adler said a good many other things, and even though many of those things deserve attention, the politically-incorrect view of homosexuality offers a rationale for taking any book by or about Adler and tossing it right out the window.
Whee! We're now free of the obligation to read a hard book!
Freud? He was a sexist. He came to disbelieve the women who told him that they were abused. So now we can chuck out that book about Freud.
Whee! We're now free of the obligation to read a hard book!
Jung? Nazis liked Jung. Out goes his book.
Whee! We're now free of the obligation to read a hard book!
Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn contains many instances of that evil word which has no etymological relationship to "niggardly." Never mind the fact that Twain was a great man and a great writer, and never mind the fact that this particular book critiques and satirizes a racist society. Never mind all of that. Just toss out the volume.
Whee! We're now free of the obligation to read a hard book!
(I'm pretty sure that this quasi-illiterate generation would consider Huckleberry Finn hard.)
One can even apply this principle to a book about higher mathematics. Whoever wrote that book must have done something politically incorrect at one point or another. So out it goes. Wheeeeeeee!
Thus, the new generation: They're petty, they're self-important, they're arrogant, they demand power, and they look for any excuse not to read.
No wonder this generation gave us Trump. Rightwing or leftwing, all young people are Donald Trump. In a sense, Donnie was ahead of his time.
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