From Alexander Muse at Amuse on X:
The uprising now unfolding in Iran presents Western media with a problem
that is not logistical but philosophical. Journalists are not confused
about what is happening. They are avoiding it. The avoidance is
systematic, patterned, and revealing. It stems from two pressures that
converge on the same conclusion. Honest coverage would shatter the moral
framework through which Western liberal institutions interpret the
world, and it would require admitting that President Trump’s strategy of
direct, unapologetic power is working.
Begin with the first pressure. To explain the Iranian uprising honestly
is to say something that Western progressive discourse has trained
itself not to say. Millions of Iranians are not merely protesting
corruption, inflation, or particular leaders. They are rebelling against
Islamic rule itself. They are rejecting a governing ideology that
regulates speech, family life, women’s bodies, work, art, and survival.
They are not asking for reform within clerical power. They are
repudiating clerical power as such.
This creates an immediate problem for Western media. Islam, within
progressive moral language, has been racialized. It is treated not as a
belief system or a political theology but as a protected identity,
analogous to race or ethnicity. Criticism of Islam is therefore framed
as prejudice. It is morally suspect by definition. Once this move is
made, the Iranian uprising becomes difficult to describe, because its
central claim is unintelligible within that framework. The protesters
are rejecting something that, according to the framework, cannot be
rejected without moral wrongdoing.
A puzzled reader might ask why
this is different from criticism of Christianity or other religions. The
answer is that it is not different in substance but it is treated as
different in discourse. Christianity is analyzed as doctrine,
institution, and history. Islam, in progressive media, is treated as
identity. This asymmetry matters. If Islam cannot be named as an
ideology, it cannot be held responsible for political outcomes. And if
it cannot be held responsible, then a revolt against it has no
vocabulary. (Read more.)
When reason dies. From Unlicensed Punditry:
Last night I posted on Facebook that I want Tim Walz, Keith Ellison,
and Jacob Frey to answer ten very simple questions like “Does America
have a border?”
There was not a single question on that list
for which the factual answer is anything other than “yes.” None of them
rely on emotion, interpretation, or ideology. They simply describe what
is, not what some people wish were true.
And
unless we get our arms around the emotional instability now driving
American political life, we are cooked—aluminum foil in the microwave,
timer set to ten minutes, cooked.
Why?
Because no
issue—large or small—is being approached through truth or reason
anymore. Everything is filtered through raw emotion. We are watching a
full-scale renunciation of reason by a significant portion of the
population, including its political leadership. Worse still, much of
that leadership is doing this by design.
This did not happen by
accident. A good deal of it traces back to intellectual arsonists who
taught generations of students that language itself is a weapon and
truth is merely a social construct. Jacques Derrida and his descendants
may not have intended to light the house on fire, but they handed out
plenty of matches.
Once language is severed from reality,
everything becomes negotiable. Illegal aliens become “our neighbors,”
“our people,” “migrants,” or “undocumented persons”—terms that feel good
while erasing the fact that these individuals are, by definition, in
the country illegally. ICE is accused of “snatching people off the
street who committed no crimes,” when in reality it is executing legally
mandated removals of people whose very presence constitutes a violation
of law—whether by illegal entry or visa overstay. Families are said to
be “ripped apart,” yet no similar outrage is expressed when an American
citizen is sentenced to prison and separated from his family as a
consequence of criminal behavior.
Emotion is selectively deployed, not consistently applied.
I
said recently that Minnesota has become the epicenter of the most
successful brainwashing operation since Hitler consolidated power in
Germany. If that sounded excessive a week ago, the intervening days
should have erased any doubt. This is not fringe behavior. It runs from
the top of the DFL straight down through the voters who keep rewarding
it. Democrats are fond of calling Republicans Nazis, but the people who enabled
Hitler were not jackbooted monsters—they were ordinary citizens who
swallowed propaganda wholesale. The resemblance is uncomfortable, and it
is real.
So much of what the modern left believes—what it wants to believe—is simply false. (Read more.)
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