Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

The Conservative Tide?

NOTE:  This is one of the many posts here that were written over a series of days, or even weeks. Given that, there are events in it and references to posts not yet posted, or which were posted, that may seem sort of out of order, as they in fact are.


The crest of the modern, and quite liberal. . . for the moment, Canadian province of Quebec.  The fleur de lis recalls the Kingdom of France, the lion the United Kingdom, and the maple leafs Canada.  Below it all. . . "I remember".

This might seem like a bad time to bring this particular thread back up, particularly on a blog that ostensibly deals with historical topics rather than others, although this blog very obviously deals with a lot of things.

And besides that, the November election hasn't happened yet.

Barack Obama, the nation's first post Boomer President by some measures, or a late Boomer President by others, with Joe Biden (dob 1942) and Donald Trump (dob 1946).

And added to that, much of what we'll relate here is completely counterintuitive. . . at first blush.  Indeed, at the time we're typing this we're about to elect the most left wing administration in seventy years, protesters backing the most radical agendas imaginable have been out in the streets and their views are now regarded as quasi main stream, and the Pope just made a statement that's clearly contrary to long held Catholic morals and which gave comfort to Catholic radicals like Fr. James Martin, S.J. and left orthodox Catholics, and orthodox Christians in general, feeling betrayed and bewildered.

Pope Francis, (dob 1936), "A_Szentév_kapujának_megnyitása_2015_-_Opening_of_the_Holy_Door_2015_4.jpeg ‎(431 × 435 pixels, file size: 138 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)"  Wikipedia Free Use.

So you  may ask, therefore, are you out of your mind?


Nope.

Having said all of that, we'll launch in.  If this topic isn't ripe, and we feel that it is, it will be soon.

But it is ripe.

Let's start by recapping the past four years and where that's taken us, although that four is really only part of seventy really, as we're about to end an era.  The Boomer Era.

The Short Term.

During the 2016 election one of the things we wrote about here is that the GOP would have to live with the results of a Trump Presidency.  Our feeling, at that time, was that Trump didn't reflect the old conservatism of the GOP but something else, with that something else being a sort of new, alt right, populism.  This isn't meant as a criticism although some might take it that way.  And frankly our predictions were only partially correct.

In reality, the Trump administration has been exceedingly difficult to define.  On some topics it has definitely been conservative in the most traditional and cultural sense. There's been, for example, no administration that was more "pro life" than Donald Trump's, a fact which has caused some people who would not otherwise do so to support him.  In other ways the administration has been purely populist.  

Personally, as has sometimes been noted, Donald Trump himself has been a strange and unlikely standard bearer for the conservative cause, a rich man with a problematic personal history and a crass personality, rather than a man representing national tradition in the conservative mold.

One thing that seems evident this election season, this pandemic season, and during the Red Summer of 2020 is that Conservatives have done a bad job of defining and advancing conservatism.

It isn't that conservatism doesn't have a set of values, goals and definitions.  It very much does.  It's more like the post Buckley conservatives have abandoned them for something else, even while still vaguely recalling that they are there.  In some ways, therefore, modern conservatism has been a blend of really old conservatism, of the pre Buckley and indeed even Pre Second World War type, combined with a remnant of Reaganism and mixed with populism.  That mix might work, but what it lacks overall is a figure who can cogently distill it into a discernible form.  Buckley, who would not have agreed with Trump on many things, was just such a man in an earlier era.  Such figures as Mark Steyn and Victor David Hanson seem unlikely to fit the bill.  Ross Douthat (dob 1979) might be the most likely person to occupy that position, but he clearly is outside of the Trump arena . . .which indeed may very well put him in first position.

What seems clear to me at this point is that following November 3, which is now very close, there's going to be a Republican reckoning.  If current trends hold, Joe Biden will be the next President and the Senate will probably be Democratic.  There will be a reckoning, we'd note, simply because of the first matter, but there will very much be one if both of those things come true.

Indeed, if they don't, the adjustment period for the GOP will be slower and more measured.  Figures like Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham who have been significant Republicans in government, but outside of the Administration itself, will be major influencers in what is to come for the party, much as Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer have been over the last four years.  That this is the case in the Democratic Party may not be evident as its lurched to the left, but Pelosi and Schumer were a brake on that trend. But for them, the party would now be much, much more left leaning than it currently is and chances are overwhelming that Joe Biden wouldn't be the current nominee.  Readers will note that Schumer is out of a position of overall leadership, but Pelosi is not and over the past two years that's been a hugely significant factor in the Democratic Party, which Schumer has participated in.

I doubt very much that Senate Republicans, should the body fall to the Democrats, will be in a similar position.  House Republicans have practically been unheard of in leadership matters for the past two years, which says something quite significant.

So where are things headed?

Well lets look back and look forward, as the direction of things may be clearer than it might at first seem.

In the immediate near term, we'd note, the entire country is going to be taking a big leftward leap. Big.  

But only in terms of the national legislature and the executive.

Now, that is pretty big, but at the same time we're about to experience a "conservative" return in the United States Supreme Court following the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett (dob 1972).  That doesn't really mean what people seem to think it does, for reasons we've noted here repeatedly.  But it does mean that the Court may be sending things back to Congress and the state legislatures in record amounts. That will mean that both of those institutions will have to act in areas, particularly Congress, where they have not for eons.

What's much less clear right now is whether the GOP misfortune at the national level will translate into a local one anywhere. The Democrats control eighteen state legislatures.  Minnesota's is divided between the parties.  Every other legislature is Republican, if you include Nebraska, where the majority of legislators are Republicans but where the legislative races are non partisan.  

That's a closer split than we might presume.  It isn't as if legislators elect Senators anymore, of course, which would make a giant difference at the national level, but the seven state lead that the Republicans now have means that a generally conservative agenda will be in evidence at the state level overall, but barely overall, assuming that lead holds.

The Democrats, however, have targeted thirteen states this election where they think they might be able to flip them, and chances are good that at least Minnesota will go into the Democratic camp.  States where the GOP doesn't have a large legislature lead may be vulnerable this election.  The GOP lead has only existed since 2010 and therefore it represented a rightward drift, but that all came before the big left surge brought about by the Trump administration.

The reason this matters is this.  In Republican states legislation will continue to be generally conservative, but probably less conservative, than it has been in the past.  For a state like Wyoming, however, the legislature is probably about to do inot reaction over the next four years.

It won't go into reaction forever, nor will other similarly situated states where there has been an alt right drift, as at a national level things are going to happen that we're not going to like and simply complaining about it isn't going to do anything, nor is pretending that it isn't happening.  At first there will be some naive hope that the Court will reverse everything that Congress will be doing, but it won't.

And that will mean that there's a real danger that states that have been having a strong alt right drift are just going to be left out of things.  In recent years Wyoming politicians that tacked to Trump's views have been frequently in the national news.  But chances are high that the branch of the Republican Party that's strongly associated with Trump's administration are going to be left out of the a re-formed GOP.  Politicians that took an independent view in the GOP, such as Liz Cheney did during her last two years, are much better situated to rise in the party.  

As part of that the days of platforms that expressed really strong alt right concept that had some appeal to that wing, but not to the base, are likely over.  A Wyoming Senator was responsible for the insertion of a plank seeking to "return" the Federal lands to the states even though locals are adamantly opposed to such ideas.  Ideas like that are now part of the past.

As part of all of this the GOP, as a conservative party, is going to have to contemplate what its about.  Perhaps fortunately for it, what it will end up being about is already a demographic trend that will reform conservatism whether it wants to or not.  It's the passing of the bulge in the snake.

Before we get to that, however, we need to deal with society at large.

Or perhaps Boomer society would be more accurate.

The leftward tilt in politics has more than its fair share of young politicians. Still, it's impossible not to notice that is mostly lead by left leaning Boomers who came up in politics following 1968.  People like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer not only feature in it, but still lead it.  Joe Biden can't be really regarded as part of it so much as somebody benefiting from the current political tide.  Kamala Harris (dob 1964) is, however, in the same demographic as Barack Obama, either an immediate post boomer or a very late term Boomer.  Anyone in that demographic, which includes your humble author, can't deny that politic and culture for this gap generation has been heavily influenced by the Boomers.

Now, not all Boomers are left leaning politically or culturally, to be sure. Witness, for example, teh current administration. But the events of the post war era were generally left leaning culturally and became very much so after 1968.  Culturally, the events that started off in the immeidate post war really bloomed into fruition and impacted every sector of society.  Insertion of libaralism impacted all of the political parties to some degree for awhile, and certainly moved the center line of the center significantly.  In the culture the single biggest impacts were the change in the work status of women, something brought about most significantly due to domestic industrialization, and the disastrous Sexual Revolution, somethign that is still being worked out most particularly among the aging boomers who are in charge of cultural definition due to their positions in the world.

We've written about this before here but one of the real ironies of this current election is that in some ways it's really the end and last gasp of Boomer liberalism, just as the election is also in some ways the end of late Boomer conservatism.  Political ideologies that were strongly formed post World War Two are still dominating the discussion on both end of the spectrum. That's about to end, and as it does, what is also coming up behind it is a large demographic change coincident, oddly enough, with the begging of the global decline in the population.

Where we're headed.

The trend was identified some time ago by demographer Eric Kaufman, a Canadian who teaches in the United Kingdom.  A well knowna nd respected demographer, he surprised people some time ago by presenting the pretty clear evidence that, coincident with population decline, there's been a giant increase in the percentage of the population globally that identified generally with what we'd regard as conservative or traditional ideals. Bits and pieces of the trend, sometimes attributed to completely disparate factors, have been picked up from other social sciences.  In some ways the the world has walked out of the long shadow of World War Two and the Cold War and into a new era.  That doesn't mean an era of universal peace and brotherly love, or anything of the kind, but rather a new, and much more conservative, era.

Kaufman noted in his work that the percentage of the population all over the world that identified with traditionalism and conservatism, and even nationalism, is dramatically rising.  And much of it is occuring in an old European cultural fashion, although not all of it.  Contrary to what American pollsters have noted on a very localized American level, religion is massively on the rise globally.  The fastest growing religion appears to be Islam, although there's some doubt on that, but right behind it is Catholicism.  Orthodoxy has massively revived in the Slavic East.  Traditional Hinduism is on the rise in India.  

In individual religious groups, moreover, the trend is even more pronounced.  In the United States, for example, a majority of Americans will be Catholics by mid Century.  Conservative Orthodox Judaism will make up nearly 1/3d if not 1/2s of American Judaism by the end of the current decade.  While "mainline" Protestantism has been suffering in the US as it has increasingly become theologically liberal, conservative Protestants of all types are on the rise.  

This is the case in the Catholic church as well, which is overall regarded as theologically conservative but which had a large swing to the religious left in some quarters in the 60s and 70s.  Church leaders in the Church today retain a fair number of individuals who came up in this era and who continue to have a mark upon the church, ironically frequently against the views of their younger parishioners who are theologically very well educated and conservative.  People form the outside tend to confuse this with the "Rad Trads", which they are not, but the mere existence of Rad Trads shows how much this is the case.  Among younger Catholics the line tends to be drawn between the orthodox young and the Rad Trads, which are two conservative camps.  Liberals exist, but they're increasingly a thing of the past and tend to be supported in existence only where there are remaining liberals form the 1970s.

Among the Orthodox in the US, at the same time, and evolution has occurred in which the Orthodox communities have moved from having a strong and declining national identity to instead focusing on their Orthodox nature, which in turn has brought in converts from Protestant faiths which have turned liberal.  It's also caused some Catholics from very liberal areas to make the move as well.*  Overall, however, Catholicism is set to become much more orthodox as older Bishops retire and younger, highly orthodox priests move into their place. As that section of the church has always been well represented, the change will be very swift in the Northern hemisphere when it comes.  It's already dominant in Africa and Asia.


A lot of this has to do with a focus in these groups on families in a traditional sense.  To put it purely in the US context, but to provide an example that's illustrative globally, the main line Protestant religions have been traditionally white and upwardly mobile, the same demographic in the US which, starting in the 1970s, basically quit replacing itself.  If demographics is destiny, as liberals like to proclaim, that's a strategy for demographic death.  And its now happening.  Overall population in the European world will continue to decline.  In the US its population increase is solely due to immigration, which is set in the US at a massively  high rate compared to other nations.  In both of these instances, however, that amplifies the trend.  In most countries where there isn't an ethos that requires a high immigration rate for misunderstood economic beliefs or myths, the overall population will continue to go down while the percentage of those being discussed here, paradoxically, goes up.  In the US this is also true, but it's amplified by the immigration of populations from religiously traditional regions.

But viewing this solely as a religious family situation would be in error.  In other ways it's clear that a return to traditionalism, albeit modified traditionalism, is now a definite trend.  You can see it in all sorts of things, including popular culture.

One of the oddest things I've seen during my adult years is the explosion of food programs. That may seem like an odd thing to note here, but their existence and their evolution is telling in this context.  

In the 1970s and early 80s there was sort of an odd theme about how young women didn't know how to cook anymore, and young men never had.  There was no such thing as a "Foodie".  Young people were presumed to live on Ramen noodles (which are disgusting) until they married, and when they did they go by somehow if they didn't have means.  If they did, and were a double income couple ("dinc's"), then sort of the social ideal they ate out.  And then came November 1993.

On November 22, 1993, the Food Network began broadcasting. That may not seem significant in this story, but it is.  Prior to 1993 cooking shows were regarded as an amusing anachronism of the 1950s, which were seen as a remnant of an image of the 1950s that never was.  Never mind that the acme of television cooking, Julia Childs, was actually a World War Two OSS agent whose fellow former OSS husband lost his job during the McCarthy era, she and the entire genre were regularly lampooned by the hip, cool, and persistently left wing Saturday Night Live for years.

Well at some point people quit making fun of the food programs, and for their part, they no longer were what they once were. They were hip, cool and aimed at the young, and full of advice on how to prepare the gourmet dishes they were offering at home. For that matter, not all were gourmet by any means, and one Food Network bastion, Rachel Ray, went from traveling on "Forty Dollars A Day" to preparing basic home meals, like your mother who used to cook for the entire family used to make (assuming your mother did that) in thirty minutes.

None of that may seem like a cultural conservative revolution, but food reflects on the culture and it is.  In the early 70s the concept was that the young were getting stoned at Studio 54, and nobody thought of much of the spouse of the Canadian Prime Minster being photographed sitting on its floor wearing a miniskirt and showing too much.  By the late 1970s and 1980s dinc's still viewed eating out as the standard and people proudly stated "I never eat at home". Well, by the 1990s they were and by now a staple of the food channels are home cooked meals for a family, often with an ethnic emphasis.

That latter item also is demonstrative of a developing type of conservatism that's being missed.  For most of American history conservatism was defined in a WASPish way, except in rural areas of strong other ethnic character.  The "Protestant Work Ethic" defined an aspect of American culture and an aspect of "Americanism" was conforming to a certain WASPish ideal.  Ethnic communities strove to conform to it.  One individual I know whose grandparents were from Armenia noted how they strove to abandon their Armenian identification and to be identified as "Americans", including speaking in a foreign tongue they'd not grown up with.  In my childhood many people resented even the commonly claimed ethnic identifiers, like "Irish Americans", and noted they were Americans, not hyphenated anything.  My own father, whose father spoke German and English due to his place of birth, and who was half Irish and half German by descent, never identified with either and never made any effort to observe the Americanized Irish national day, St. Patrick's Day (my Canadian born mother, however, certainly observed it, but in a much more traditionally Irish way).

Certainly, of course, "ethnic" food existed, but it wasn't domestic in the way its become and remained often distinctly eating out ethnic. Nearly any town of substance had an Italian restaurant and, at least in this region, one or more Mexican restaurant. Chinese restaurants seem to be universal everywhere.  But beyond that, there wasn't much, and not much in terms of restaurants that incorporated those fares into their menu outside of those categories.  Our town had a couple of restaurants that were run by Greek immigrants, for example, but you would not have known it but for maybe one or two speciality items on the menu.  When I was a kid a German immigrant had a family diner and it did have some items that German Americans would recognize, but there was no particular emphasis on it (and indeed, well into the 70s in some areas emphasizing a German menu might have been a mistake).  In big cities ethnic neighborhoods usually had ethnic restaurants, of course.

None of that is surprising and all of that would seem to cut against the point.  But here is the point.  Food Network spends hours and hours per day with programming that shows the viewers how to cook Italian (or whatever) meals at home, "like my mother did", with the idea that you are going to do that. When not doing that, its spending hours and hours per day showing you how to make fast American meals large enough to feed an army, or in at least one case how to feed your presumed big ranch family.  To at least some extent, people watching The Pioneer Woman see themselves in her role, the matron of an agricultural family where the men are out working, and she's manning the large capacity and high demand kitchen.

Indeed, riffing from that, television has become fascinated with families in general, and particularly large ones.  The Duggars, a giant family living an extremely conservative lifestyle, commanded television viewership for years before one of their sons took them down due to a fascination with procreating that strayed outside of his family fold and which was generally icky.   At the same time viewers watched "Kate" and her eight children which wasn't any more interesting other than that she had a bunch of kids at one time.  That too fell to domestic discontent, but now viewers can watch Out Daughtered about a somehat whiney husband and his cute but tough as nails wife and their large collection of kinder.  None of this really resembles watching the single protagonist in the Mary Tyler Moore Show, or her friend Rhoda, or Maude.

Indeed one such liberal television female of the 70s is emblematic of this transformation in some ways.  Valerie Bertinelli portrayed the liberal teenager in One Day At A Time in the 70s, a member of an all female household.  Now 60 years old, she's cooking traditional Italian meals on. . . the Food Channel.

Hmm. . . 

Of course, careful readers of this august cyber tome will note that we've noted the moral sewer which is television before and declaring, therefore, a cultural conservative revival being reflected in it is problematic.  And it is.

But there are several things here to consider.  First of all, television reflects back at us as to who we are, but it also reflects forwards as to what the producers are.  Hollywood has been a moral sinkhole for reasons of its own since day one, and as part of that its always pitched as low to our baser instincts as possible.  Early big film productions were frequently pornographic even by today's standards, a situation that was brought temporarily to heel only by the Film Production Code.  Television operated in restraint out of fear of FCC regulation until its boundaries were slowly expanded and broken.    Pitching to baser instincts work, as long as people are willing to tolerate them, as people are interested in them.

But non fiction shows that are aimed at something else appeal at a different level, if even to the same people.  Food shows and shows depicting families are aimed at something else.  That people are interested in sex on television may mean nothing more than than that are interested in sex, although television has certainly been part of the missive change of the Sexual Revolution and the destructiveness that it's brought in with it.  Interest in such basics as food and raising kids are aimed at something else and reflective of something going on in the culture.

Even on the small screen elsewhere something is going on, even if it remains, almost by prescription, routinely morally problematic.  Having said that the recent film Greyhound may be telling.  Taken from the CS Forester novel The Good Shepherd, its notable that Tom Hanks' (who is Russian Orthodox) adaptation is apparently the only Forester novel in which the captain of the ship is outwardly religious, with even the title referring to the New Testament.  In Hank's adaptation he definitely is.  Elisabeth Shue shows up as a love interest, but in a remarkably understated and traditionally Christian way.  The entire movie is one of virtue in the most traditional sense, emphasizing deep personal sacrifice.  Greyhound looks like a morality play compared to The Big Red One, even though, in some ways, their underlying theme is extremely similar.

This is also evident in other activities that people are participating in, some of them now amplified by the Coronavirus Pandemic.  Hunting, an activity that was decreasing in the 70s and 80s, started to rebound in the 1990s and now significantly has.  As part of that women are joining the activity in unprecedented numbers, something that reflects not only a return to the civilization status quo ante, but the way that this topic has evolved, something we'll address more below.  Women coming to hunting doesn't reflect a sort of feminist statement so much as it does an interesting conservative evolution. At any rate, this trend was ongoing before, but the pandemic has hugely amplified it, as it is many of these trends.

It's also amplifying gardening, a highly related activity.

The most extreme version of this is the agrarian "homesteading" movement, featuring a definite misuse of the word. Strongly rooted in a sort of agrarian ideal, it's been it the works now for probably a decade.  While its easy to find information regarding it in the US, it's spread to Canada as well and is also going on in Europe where young farmers have returned either to old farms owned by their families or purchased small farms that production farmers are no longer using as part of larger units.  During the recent economic downturn in Greece, a long term and systemic problem, it was particularly noted that young people whose grandparents had last been on family farms were going back to them, effectively skipping an entire generation in the process in sort of an Agrarian "Okay, Boomer" moment.  The situation in France has been similar, but with a longer generational gap involved.

Women, it should be noted, have been part of the last several items in a way that they were not in earlier eras. Certainly women gardeners are nothing new, but women agrarian farmers in their current roles are an evolution from prior eras. Women hunters and fishermen are at all time high rates in human history, which should show that what's occured, in some ways, is that feminism has cycled through the left and come back out, in this form, on the right.

This is also true of careerism.

The entire story of women in the workplace has been really badly done. As we've noted here before, it was never really the case that women worked during World War Two, suddenly were acclimated to work and then came the "Women's Liberation" movement. Rather, as we've maintained here, the advent of domestic machinery in the 20th Century reached a critical point following the Second World War which made women's domestic labor surplus to the households and freed them for other employment, which they took up pretty rapidly. That was coincident with the Second World War's employment of women in the emergency, but that had also occurred to a remarkable extent during the First World War as well.

What did occur is that a group of social movements, some of which had roots at least as far back as the 1910s, benefitted from this and to some extent co-opted it.  Feminism as a movement didn't have its origins in the 1960s and 70s, but rather in the Suffrage movement that dated back to the 1860s.  The suffrage movement was split all along between radical and focused elements, with the focused element (the majority) really focused singly on the vote.  Radical elements, however, resembled later feminist to a large degree, but in ways that were of course central to their times.  By the 1910s the more radial elements had broken into other causes, with perhaps Margaret Sanger's birth control movement being the most notable. Generally understood later on to be a woman's cause, Sanger's movement had a strongly racist element in that she was fearful of the growth of the African American population.  Nonetheless, the movement gave an early indication on how women's causes were either being developed or other causes were co-opting existing women's movements.

In the 1960s this expanded into a radical feminist alliance with what effectively was the pronography industry following the introduction of pharmaceutical birth control  Playboy, introduced in 1953, taught that all women were big boobed, easy, dumb, and sterile.  With the introduction of pharmaceutical birth control radical feminist allied themselves partially with pornographers, and indeed Cosmopolitan was semi pornographic, in order to argue the easy part as an attack on marriage.  The concept at the time was that with rising female employment, something that had been a year by year feature of the 20th Century since its dawn, an era had now been reached in which marriage could be eliminated or redefined to exclude much of its traditional aspects, and therefore they pushed the "easy" and sterile parts of the Playboy myth, if not the big boobed and dumb parts (Coso women were think, barely dressed, and smart in their portrayals).

With this came the real push in careerism that was otherwise already occurring post World War Two.

Prior to World War Two a majority of American men didn't graduate from high school, although the situation was approaching parity with those who did. A majority of American women by 1940 did, but a large percentage still did not.  My father and his siblings, all of whom were in school during World War Two, did graduate from high school but my father's father had not and in fact had not even attended it.  My mother, like my father, was a college graduate but interestingly not a high school graduate as she'd been taken out of school at age 16 to work.  It's important to note that all of these people were highly intelligent.  It's the situation that was different.

One of the differences is that was that work was generally grasped by the majority of people as something they needed to do to support themselves and their families.  Often the economic quality fo work was judged in that fashion.  Statements at the time, and even into my teen years, about the need to "get a good job to support a family" were common.  I never heard, the entire time I was growing up, about anyone needing a good job in order to buy nice things or go on vacations.  Rich people were not despised but they also were not really quite envied the way that they later were.

All of that started changing after World War Two but it really took into the 1970s and 80s for it to really get rolling. The generation that started the 1970s off singing Taking Care Of Business was digging Wall Street by the 1980s. Entire professions have ultimately come to be entirely money focused the way they never were before.  As an example, in the 1910s and 20s it was common in mid sized cities and even in large towns for a physician to start a private hospital as sort of a community focused charitable and humanitarian endeavor.  By the 1930s communities everywhere had taken over those institutions.  Now, the government owned ones are being taken over by for profit companies.  We've reprivatized, but now with the same focus.

Starting about a decade ago, however, Boomer employers started to notice that the generation just entering work had a much different focus on work.  They were no longer that dedicated to it as an end all and be all.  Large numbers of the entering generation were willing to drop out of work for long periods of time just to "experience things".  Alternative work situations sprung up.  As noted already on the discussion on agrarian returnees, many young, and well educated, members of society dropped out of traditional work situations entirely.

This lead to the quasi myth of the "slacker".  To some extent this image has some validity as some members of the youngest work age generation came to give up hope of productive lives in an economy that's become increasingly urban and alien to human impulses.  And the reduction in the societal expectation that couples marry and undertake the responsibilities that come along with that has lengthened childhood, particularly for men.  But all throughout society the careerist goals and focus that existed into the 1990s has really declined and is almost dead among younger generations.  

With women, this means that the lie about people finding "fulfillment" in their work, something promised by feminist, has been fully exposed.  Almost nobody finds fulfillment at work. Now very few believe that and the discussion about that as an aspect of employment has vanished.  

We're just on the cusp of this development and where it leads is hard to discern.  To an extent, however, it returns people to a more traditional way of looking at work.

Also more traditional is the return of domestic situations which had seemed to vanish forever.  

In 1981 when I graduated from high school it was the case that some high school colleagues were leaving their parents homes immediately and forever.  This view is one that had come up in the 60s and 70s.  But prior to that, as we've discussed before, it was uncommon.  Men usually remained in their parents households until they married, or if they didn't, they usually had what they viewed as temporary living arrangements that were necessitated by work or school.  Women exhibited this to an even larger degree.  By the late 60s this was changing and a new world, imagined as glamours, came in.  This was reflected to a degree in entertainment in such films as The Apartment from 1960, which depicted two young, unmarried, people who had living arrangements reflective of the period.  Protagonist C. C. "Bud" Baxter has an apartment, in a building which we learn is otherwise generally urban and middle class (his neighbor is a married physician).  The female protagonist, Fran Kubelik, is living with her sister and brother in law and engaged in an illicit relationship with the senior figure at her office.


Citing a movie might seem to be bad form, but that 1960 depiction is telling in many ways. Baxter is of an age at which in an earlier era he might be like the male figures in It's A Wonderful Life, living at home if they're not married.  Kubelik isn't living at home, but the female protagonist is living with her married sister.  She's also engaged in an illicit sexual affair but is not negatively portrayed in the film for it.  Her last name, Kubelik, is one of strong ethnicity (Czech) and her brother in law is a blue collar taxi driver.  Without really mentioning it, its subtly suggested that Kubelik isn't really fallen, and the budding romance between the WASP Baxter and the almost certainly Catholic Kubelik will work out.

We can read a lot into that, and The Apartment isn't regarded as a risque film by any measure.  It stands in blistering contrast, however, to Marty, which portrayed a much different set of urban realities just five years earlier in 1955.  The male protagonist is an aging blue collar meat cutter who wants to get married. He lives with his mother.  The female protagonist is an aging school teacher who also wants to get married.  Marty, when introducing his situation to her, emphasizes that he can likely buy the butcher shop where he works.  Both of the characters are Catholic.  A more recent treatment of the same themes is presented in the recent film Brooklyn, which is set in the same locality in the same era and basically treats all of the same issues identically.

Looking at it from a personal angle, my father left home for the first time, to live, when he went to the University of Nebraska.  He then entered the Air Force. But when he got out of the service he returned home and lived at his mother's home (his father had died a decade prior) until my parents married.  My mother, on the other hand, had entered the work force during World War Two due to economic desperation in her family in Quebec.  She boldly moved out to Alberta at the invitation of an uncle who had employment for her there, and who wanted to try to separate her from the situation in Quebec which he felt was one of low prospect. At some point, and I"m not sure where, she lived with her sister, who also had left home and was working.  She came to the United States to be a bridesmaid for another sister in Denver, over the objection of her uncle, and then came to this town as it had work, taking a basement apartment where the upstairs was occupied by the owner and her husband.

Now, we find, press reports that are full of the "new" trend of adult children returning to their parents homes.

This was going on before the recent Coronavirus pandemic, we should note, although there are now lots of news stories emphasizing it in that context, as its increased it. But this isn't a "new" phenomenon in real terms, but a return to a prior living standards, as noted above.  

Some of this is due, we'd note, to the bulge in the snake phenomenon we've noted before.  World War Two brought about a change in living conditions, although it took some time to fully manifest, as it forcibly separated a lot of young men from their households and it demanded the employment of a lot of young women.  When the generation that fought the Second World War was sending its kids to school in the 1960s, in a lot of ways it was sending them away.  This didn't seem that odd to them, as they'd been displaced young, and a generation that had been forced to enter the adult world before its time naturally, if highly imperfectly, saw that as the  norm.  The Baby Boom generation that had experienced that did as well, although they recall it imperfectly.  

In reality we now know that people in their 20s fit into nearly another age related class than other people, or actually do. They're definitely not teenagers but they don't really have the reasoning faculties that pertain to adulthood in the same fashion that adults do.  If they don't resemble teenagers in their thinking they often don't resemble adults of just a few years later either.  Part of the massive disruption brought about by the 1960s reflected that as not only was it a time of great social change and cultural change, but the very young were being forced into it.

Since some point in the 1990s the same age demographic has taken themselves back out of that arena in large measure.  Part of this is that they're simply smarker, and older if you will, than the same age group was in the 1960s and 1970s.  It's created some interesting conflicts as the Boomer generation has continued to assume that life for it is as it was for them, in the 2020s, even though a lot of their generational decision making was horrifically bad.

At any rate, as this has played out, individuals in their 20s and 30s have found themselves moving back in with their parents. A lot of those parents are either very late stage Boomers or post Boomers themselves.  The Boomer generation has reacted with some horror and surprise to this, and indeed, I've personally been told by one 1969 high school graduate that sending children far, far away to from their homes is part of the necessary experience of university.  Maybe it is, or isn't, but if it is, it' ssomething that seems to reflect the view of those who went to university in the 60s, 70s and to some extent in the 80s.  And a lot of that has to due with how people view work, which we've addressed above.  Suffice it to say, however, that if the purpose of going to university is to get a "good job" and then pursue that job at all costs, well that's one thing.  If its for something else, and may even be ancillary to your life, it's something else. That will impact a lot of a person's approach to these topics.


Not everything is changing, of course, and we're also not saying that Chesterton's observations about "going back" are coming into fruition, at least not in full.  But some of going forward involves going back, and cultures are plastic and sticky.  We've been living through an unprecedented era of history that goes back to the 1930s and present to our very day.  The generation that came up in the 30s and 40s is still in power, but it very rapidly will cease to be. The ones taking their seats at the table are generations that have lived in the wake of the history of the Boomers and who have, in varying but large degrees, but unhappy with it.  As the country is about to take a big jump to the political left, the evidence is that they're already looking for the exit to the right.

___________________________________________________________________________________

*While guessing is premature, my guess is that Pope Francis recent statement on same gender "civil unions", made after we started this thread, will cause a small move from Catholicism to Orthodoxy among some Rad Tad Catholics, although it would be a bit ironic as what Pope Francis is suggesting appears to be an accomodation to the current civil reality, albeit one that's clearly extraordinary problematic from a Catholic perspective and one which requires correction.  It's ironic in that the Orthodox did the same thing many years ago in regard to divorce and remarriage, which Orthodoxy tolerates up to three times in some instances.

Saturday, April 25, 2020

"Japan has a low violence rate and we should copy their example. . . "

Japanese family, 1950s.

I hear that argument a lot.  The basic gist is that if we copied the Japanese in regard to gun control, we'd achieve the same results.

Which leads to this, which I've touched on before briefly.  But I'm touching on it again here, as I happened to look at this for another reason.  But that made it obvious, really. 

You can't look at a country's laws and their results without considering a country's culture.

Japan does indeed have a low murder rate in general.  It has a high suicide rate, however, which is another topic.

Setting aside self murder, which we really ought not to do as it figures into any realistic analysis of violence and Japan, what else might contribute to that low Japanese murder rate?*

Japan's out of wedlock birth rate is darned near 0.

98% of the Japanese births are legitimate, a word we hardly even use anymore in a society where 30% to 60% are not.

Why does that matter?

Well it matters as Japanese children are raised inside of highly stable family environments.

Indeed, they are stable.  There are 1.68 divorces per 1,000 people in Japan.  The rate in the United States is double that, at 3.2 per 1000.  And in the US that doesn't include the number of couples that would have been regarded as having common law marriages in earlier eras.  I.e, our divorce rate doesn't include couples that aren't married but which cohabitate and then "split up" even though such couples often have children.

Indeed, the contrast between Japan and the United States here is monumental.  The Japanese do not have examples of men living with women in which there are children of prior relationships.  They don't even have very many examples of "blended families" in which there's been more than one marriage and children by more than one marriage in a household.  Where that occurs it tends to be because a prior spouse died.

To add to that, and remember this is a thread on what's going on in Japan,  not an argument that we adopt everything Japanese, being a single parent in Japan really sucks.

The Japanese don't approve of children being born out of wedlock and they don't approve of the women who find themselves in that situation. They don't even really approve of the children.

Given all of this, in spite of statistics you may see on other things, the Japanese get married and stay married, and have their kids when they're married.  In the rare instances of the opposite, and they are extremely rare, the mother and child are reduced to poverty.

Japanese marriage, moreover, is really traditional in terms of structure.  This has evolved enormously over the years as, ironically in this context, the Japanese moved towards "Western" marriage in the 20th Century. After World War Two, Western marriage really took off greatly in Japan. This has evolved to such an extent that the majority of Japanese today are married in Christian ceremonies even though less than 1% of the Japanese are Christians.  This has actually resulted in a phrase in Japan of being "born Shinto, married Christian, and dying Buddhist".  That's a joke, of course, but like a lot of jokes, it has a big element of truth to it.

Part of that evolution towards Westernism in marriage has been a real cementing of the traditional Western marriage in Japan in terms of its structure.  Japanese culture places a strong emphasis on the domestic role of women and women's role in that regard is seen as central.  Women in Japanese society are the primary managers of home economics in the true economic and even Greek original meaning of the word in a fashion that's similar to that of some Mediterranean cultures traditionally.

Japanese women do work outside of the home, but after they are married that number declines enormously.  Most married women in Japan do not work.  Most women who work in Japan are intentionally doing so only until they are married.  Japanese women earn around 40% less than men. The workforce is strongly, by culture, divided into male and female roles, recent examples to the contrary notwithstanding.  You may see a cute video of a Japanese female tank commander, but there aren't very darned many of them.

Prior to the Meji period, Japanese marriages were arranged and economic.  During the Meji period this was attacked at a high level in order to try to Westernize the culture, but certain aspects of the old practices remained for a very long time.  Included in that was that Japan had a strict expectation that married women were to be chaste but had no such expectation of the same for men.  This lead to the dual explotivie Japanese occupations of the geisha and the prostitute, which are not at all the same.  Professional prostitution was widespread and highly tolerated.**  As a female profession it was common up until after World War Two when its ongoing nature was frowned upon and seen, moreover, as non Western.

While that's gone, it has left remnants in that men are strongly dominant in society outside of the household, where the opposite is absolutely the case.  Women rule in the household.  Indeed, marriages between the Japanese and non Japanese are very rare and rarely successful in part for this reason.***  Japanese women have really strong expectations of husbands and expect to absolutely rule in the home. Western men who have come to accept the "partnership" concept are accordingly in for a rough surprise with a Japanese spouse.  Conversely, Western men just don't live up to the expectations of Japanese women.

Be that as it may, as noted, men are strongly dominant outside of the home where women's are regarded as a temporary presence and are treated that way.  Beyond that, while the Japanese as a culture are really admirably chaste, the old history of concubinage and male dominance in the society has caused Japan to have a really massive post World War Two pornography industry which is openly tolerated in ways it never would be in Western society and which goes beyond exploitation of women.  Indeed, not only has this found expression in all the conventional mediums in Japan, but in others that are somewhat rarer in the West.  For example, while the "superhero" genre of cartoon in the United States is wildly male and juvenile, including in its portrayal of women, a popular cartoon in Japan, at least at one time, was "Rape Man", who committed that act upon women with an attitude.  The popular Japanese genres of cartoons today are moreover wildly pornorgraphic in thier depictiosn of women and even in the milder forms common in the West they feature grossly exaggerated female forms for obvious reasons.  Therefore, an aspects of Japanese society is a male attitude that's condescending and explotivie to women outside of marriage in an abstract way.  They don't act that way in their personal moral conduct, but they're obviously focused on it otherwise.  While pornography and pornification of Western culture has become vast, it isn't at the really creepy Japanese level (creepiness being relative in this example).

Along with this, the Japanese are what some like to call homogeneous and others like to call xenophobic or even racist in the extreme.   The Japanese regard their own culture as superior to others and they don't want it mixing with yours.****  They want Japan for the Japanese and they don't want you marrying into a Japanese family.  The one American male I know who did that found that his Japanese in laws flat out disowned their daughter as a result of such a marriage.  The Japanese are, therefore, related to each other by a blood in a way that Americans are not and can't even conceive of.  Outside of Hokkaido in the far north, and Okinawa to the south, the Japanese are effectively cousins in a way that very few cultures in the world are.*****

So there you have the Japanese example, for good and ill.

And note we stated for good and, not or, ill.  There are parts of this, including the racist and xenophobic elements that would cause most of us to rightly recoil.

Notably in all of it, the Japanese have copied a major Western, Christian, cultural feature, monogamous life time marriages with a Christian view of sexual morality in marriage and a blisteringly traditional view of people's roles in that marriage.  That singular cultural adoption probably explains more than anything else why Japan has a low, low homicide rate.  All of Japan's children, almost, are raised by their mother and father.  Almost every Japanse marriage survives until the death of one member of the couple.  Every husband is expected to work outside of the home.  Every wife is expected to rule the household and have that be her primary focus.  Everyone marries somebody who is from the same culture and has the same expectations.

Not all of this picture is pretty, in our view from the West.  Japanese men are dominant in the workplace in way that they aren't here and haven't been for decades.  Japanese women rule in the household in a way that most Westerners and Northern Europeans would find shocking.  The Japanese are really admirably chaste in conduct but have an extremely objectified view of women outside of the home, even if it is very rarely acted upon.

All of which may be besides the point, as to us, or maybe, in part, not.

And the part that might not be is the core of the family example.  The Japanese have tight families and, frankly, are sort of a tight family.   There's a lesson in that, and it doesn't have anything to do with laws or regulations.  We aren't going to copy all of that example by any means, but the part of it that they copied from us is perhaps something that we ought to ponder to some degree.


_________________________________________________________________________________

*Indeed, this seems to completely escape those who cite Japan as an example of low rates of violent death.  Japan has a lot of violent death, its just that it tends to be self directed, which isn't any better of societal result than a lot of murders.

**The expectation that rules didn't apply to men was such that the Imperial Japanese Army enslaved large numbers of women as "comfort women" to act as involuntary prostitutes for Japanese soldiers during World War Two.  Only very recently has there been acknowledgement of wrongdoing by Japan for this act.

Notably here, "comfort women" were not Japanese.  To the extent they were Japanese subjects, they tended to be Koreans, whom the Japanese looked down upon as a lesser race.  They weren't limited to Koreans, however, and included women forced into prostitution in other areas that the Japanese conquered during World War Two.

***The only era in which significant numbers of Japanese women married non Japanese men was after World War Two when it was briefly common.  There's a cultural aspect of this that has gone unexplained but at least one historian has theorized that this occurred as a form of Japanese female protest at men having let the culture down by losing the war.

****Japan's culture is, moreover, unique.  Americans tend to view all Asian cultures as more or less the same, but Japan's is distinctly different and has been isolated for  the most part for over a millenia.  There have been cultural insertions in the form of religious and philosophical thought, such as in the form of Buddhism and Confucianism early on, which managed to come in from China, along with Chinese written characters (but not language), and more recently many Western cultural elements, but overall Japan retains a unique Japanese character.

*****There are a few others, of course.  In European terms, the Finns and the Icelanders also are in this category, and the Icelanders, which are a very small nationality, even more so.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Young Diognetus in the modern world.

No surprise here, on this blog. This trend been going on for some time.

But the Huffington Post, that internet blog started by Greek expat Ariana Huffington (who in person pronounces her name in a way that sounds, for all the world, like Aweewaana Wuffington), just published on it.  Meaning that the trend is extremely far advanced because by the time the press notices a trend, it's long since ceased being a trend but is a development.
July 11, 2019
behold,
the
millennial
nuns
More and more young women are being called to the religious life, after 50 straight years of decline. What on earth is going on? By Eve Fairbanks



A couple of weeks ago on a Sunday edition of this blog I ran this item:

Churches of the West: Holy Protection Byzantine Catholic Church, Denver, Colorado.


That item expanded out considerably on the feature on the same church on our companion blog, Churches of the West, and it's at least the fourth here to note a trend towards orthodoxy. And by that we mean small "o" orthodoxy, not Orthodoxy, although, as noted in those posts, that trend very much includes Orthodoxy.  More specifically, it includes, in a major way, the Catholic and Orthodox faiths and, in more minor ways, the the conservative transitional branches of the Lutheran faith, and more particularly, the conservative traditional branch of the of the Episcopal church, with that latter group frequently asserting (nearly always asserting in fact) that they are big "c" Catholics of another type.

I haven't apparently formally coined it yet, but this does give evidence of what will be our Eighteenth Law of Behavior, which is that by the time the media takes note of a trend, it's not longer a trend, it's a development.  And that's what we're seeing here.

I became aware of this news article on the Huffington Post as it appeared on the Twitter feed of a young Millennial Catholic woman who posted it and whom was not surprised.  Don't bother to try to look up "young Catholic woman" or even "conservative young Catholic woman" or "conservative young Catholic", as you'll find far too many and never find the item. There's leagues, including everything from young Catholic laymen to young Catholic nuns (one of whom as a twitter account dedicated to momenti mori) to young Catholic priests.

Moreover, you'll also find that they've moved, way, way, beyond what the news media imagines them to be and, moreover, way, way beyond what Baby Boomer Catholics think them to be.  We're not talking about some mousy young woman here who never gets outside except to attend Mass and whom wears a dress last common in 1946 combined with a mantilla just to go outside.  Not by a long shot.  They're conservative. . .and they're hip, cool, and know a lot more about everything than you do.

And I'm not interjecting hyperbole here. They really are hip. They really are cool. They really are conservative.  They're extremely orthodox. And they know a lot, lot more about absolutely everything than you do, and that would tend to include, if any read this (and I doubt very much any do) many of the aging Baby Boomer priests who went through American seminaries in prior to 1990.  And it certainly includes the now very aging and always a minority, although a very influential one at one time, of Boomer "progressive" or "liberal" Catholics.

And that's why they're Catholic (or Orthodox).

Indeed, leagues of them are converts and most of them came out of secular educations that didn't treat religion kindly whatsoever.  But they are the most educated American demographic ever, and a lot of that education is self education.

In an era in which a lot of the American population has seemingly run around self educating falsely, reading internet baloney about how the South tried to leave the Union as the North tried to ban NASCAR or that World War Two as a conspiracy between Franklin Roosevelt and Hirohito to fix the 1942 World Series, a quiet counter has been going on in which smart, young, people have picked up what amount to post doctorate educations in the Liberal Arts.

And frankly, modern American culture, maybe American culture in general, isn't looking so good to them.  Modern western culture itself isn't either, although what it came out of is, and is deeply understood by them in a way that most English speaking people haven't since the rewriting of history following the Reformation.

And they've reacted.

Now, they're not rejecting all things Western in general, but they've seen up close and personal the wreck of things that prior generations have made.  It's clear to them that the consumer culture brought to a head in the post World War Two American world is lacking.  It's plain to them that the victor in the Sexual Revolution was disease and despair.  They accept science and nature and have rejected the position of the State of Tennessee's position against Skopes which the ignorant eroniously asociate with Christians in general, and in fact have a better grasp on science than any generation prior to them.  Like Chesterton generations earlier they don't confuse that position with Christianity and had the courage to asks what's behind the what's behind.  They've read the Fathers of the Church and know them more deeply than any group of Christians since the 2nd Century.

They're Diognetus in the world.
Christians are indistinguishable from other men either by nationality, language or customs. They do not inhabit separate cities of their own, or speak a strange dialect, or follow some outlandish way of life. Their teaching is not based upon reveries inspired by the curiosity of men. Unlike some other people, they champion no purely human doctrine. With regard to dress, food and manner of life in general, they follow the customs of whatever city they happen to be living in, whether it is Greek or foreign. 
And yet there is something extraordinary about their lives. They live in their own countries as though they were only passing through. They play their full role as citizens, but labor under all the disabilities of aliens. Any country can be their homeland, but for them their homeland, wherever it may be, is a foreign country. Like others, they marry and have children, but they do not expose them. They share their meals, but not their wives.  
They live in the flesh, but they are not governed by the desires of the flesh. They pass their days upon earth, but they are citizens of heaven. Obedient to the laws, they yet live on a level that transcends the law. Christians love all men, but all men persecute them. Condemned because they are not understood, they are put to death, but raised to life again. They live in poverty, but enrich many; they are totally destitute, but possess an abundance of everything. They suffer dishonor, but that is their glory. They are defamed, but vindicated. A blessing is their answer to abuse, deference their response to insult. For the good they do they receive the punishment of malefactors, but even then they, rejoice, as though receiving the gift of life. They are attacked by the Jews as aliens, they are persecuted by the Greeks, yet no one can explain the reason for this hatred. 
To speak in general terms, we may say that the Christian is to the world what the soul is to the body. As the soul is present in every part of the body, while remaining distinct from it, so Christians are found in all the cities of the world, but cannot be identified with the world. As the visible body contains the invisible soul, so Christians are seen living in the world, but their religious life remains unseen. The body hates the soul and wars against it, not because of any injury the soul has done it, but because of the restriction the soul places on its pleasures. Similarly, the world hates the Christians, not because they have done it any wrong, but because they are opposed to its enjoyments. 

Christians love those who hate them just as the soul loves the body and all its members despite the body's hatred. It is by the soul, enclosed within the body, that the body is held together, and similarly, it is by the Christians, detained in the world as in a prison, that the world is held together. The soul, though immortal, has a mortal dwelling place; and Christians also live for a time amidst perishable things, while awaiting the freedom from change and decay that will be theirs in heaven. As the soul benefits from the deprivation of food and drink, so Christians flourish under persecution. Such is the Christian’s lofty and divinely appointed function, from which he is not permitted to excuse himself.
So missed from the Press, which is focused on the travails of boomer Jeffrey Epstein (1953) and his quest for young skirt, is that story itself merely reflects an aspect of the Boomer assault on the culture that commenced in some ways the year of Epstein's birth.  Epstein merely had the wealth to engage in what Playboy celebrated as a desirable goal.  Up until called on it openly, at some point after it became the battering ram on the existing culture between men and women, it also advocated girls as targets for male desires, often cartoon form, until that was too widely noticed and it was forced to back off.  By that time, however, it had been taken up in entertainment in the form of films and music.  It's backed off some since then, but only because disgust became widespread in the cultural mainstream.

But that doesn't mean that the culture at large isn't badly damaged, and indeed much of it wrecked.

And Millennial's know it.

But those steeped in the culture and fully accepting of the "progress" of post 1945 culture have been unable to grasp that fully, including Millennial's who have not been exposed to anything else.  And the dominant Boomer culture just isn't able to grasp it, as it isn't as well educated as the Millennial's are.

Those who are so educated, and as noted largely self educated, have been able to look back and some have been able to sort through both the Boomer wreckage and the wreckage of earlier, some much earlier, eras.

We've cited the Strauss-Howe Generational Theory here more than once and while reserved in our opinion on it, we've also come to the point of acknowledging that it has a lot of credence to it.  The backers of that theory have maintained that its incapable of being disrupted, except by perhaps as something as radical as a nuclear war or something.  And this looking in another direction we're seeing here supports their theory.

But I wonder if it also gives evidence of a major disruption in it.  If it does, that disruption would be deep education.

And if that's the case, a Counter Revolution of epic proportions is going on.  . and has been for some time.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

The University of Wyoming adopts an unneeded slogan and some faculty reveals themselves to be trendy twits


 Black cowboys.  Oh my, this would suggest that certain faculty members at the University of Wyoming are, well, ignorant, sanctimonious, twits.

One third of all cowboys in the Frontier Era were black or Mexican.

One third.

Of cowboys that drove cattle up to Wyoming on the Texas Trail 25% to 30% were black, meaning that when Hispanics were added in, even a higher percentage were non white, if you will. 

This doesn't even consider individuals like Jim Edwards, Lost Springs Wyoming rancher who was also black.  We could consider him to be a cowboy, yes, but more than that, he was also a rancher, and a large scale rancher at that.  And it doesn't consider areas like the Sagre de Cristo region of Colorado, where nearly all the ranchers were Hispanics . . . and many still are today.

Blacks and Mexicans formed a significant base of cowboys early on.  The occupation has never been racially exclusive.  It wasn't in the 19th Century and it isn't now.

I have, from time to time, handled a fair number of cases on the Wind River Reservation.  The judge there was also a rancher.  And yes, he was an Indian.

I've herded cattle many times with working ranch families, including married couples and their teenage daughters.

The point?

Being called a cowboy doesn't imply a race by a long shot and never has.  And in the modern context, it doesn't imply a gender either.

And somebody who gets all up tight in a politically correct snit about that is an sanctimonious ignoramus of epic proportions.

What's this about?

Well, the University of Wyoming, for reasons that escape me, recently decided that for marketing purposes they needed to hire Victor & Spoils, a Boulder Colorado (of course) marketing firm to come up with a new catch phrase for UW.  V&S came up with "The World needs more Cowboys".  UW paid V&S $500,000, so I"m hoping that they got more than that, as if that's what the $500,000 bought, that's pretty darned lame.

Be that as it may, lameness isn't what the faculty flap is about.

Let's go to the Tribune:
“I had lots of different reactions,” said Angela Jaime*, the director of the American Indian Studies department. “I was really disappointed in the university for endorsing such a negative slogan.”
“I was kind of like, ‘Woah, has anyone else heard of this?’” said Christine Boggs, an instructor and the co-chair of the Committee on Women and People of Color at UW. The group sent a letter to university leaders to voice its “grave concerns” about the slogan and requesting that UW “shelve” it in favor of a more diverse tagline.
“Well the concern for me is the ‘boy’ part, right?” said Christine Porter**, a UW professor and vocal opponent of the slogan. “Since the 1950s at least in other parts of the country, it is no longer acceptable ... to use the generic masculine and pretend that includes the feminine.”
She added that the word “cowboy” brings to mind an image of a straight white man and past conflicts with Native Americans.
“As the director of American Indian Studies, it becomes incredibly problematic to try to imagine using any of this promotional material when I’m recruiting Native students,” Jaime said. “The term ‘cowboy’ evokes the play time — the racist play time — of cowboys and Indians, right?”
What a bunch of self important, pretentious, ignorant snobs. All of this faculty ought to go.  And permanently.

And probably go to a ranching and agricultural reeducation camp where they are exposed to a strong dose of reality and actual history.

Let's break this down.
“I had lots of different reactions,” said Angela Jaime, the director of the American Indian Studies department. “I was really disappointed in the university for endorsing such a negative slogan.” 
Has Jaime been on the Reservation's Arapahoe ranch and visited with its Arapahoe cowboys?  Perhaps she should.

Agricultural operations on the Wind River Reservation feature a large Native American element.  One of the biggest operations on the Reservation, if not the biggest, is owned by a Shoshone family whose name is strongly identified with that Tribe. Another is owned by one of the tribes itself.  There are many smaller, Indian, ranching operations on the Wind River Reservation.  On a more personal level, I once employed an Indian secretary whose father was. . . a working cowboy off of the Reservation.
She [Christine Porter] added that the word “cowboy” brings to mind an image of a straight white man and past conflicts with Native Americans.
Only for people who get their history from old re-runs of The High Chaparral.

 An American Indian. . . cowboy.  This isn't as uncommon as some ignorant folks at UW would probably believe. . . and it certainly isn't uncommon now.  Indeed, while Indian cowboys made an early appearance after the introduction of cattle and are very much still with us, it's worth noting that native cultures in the West entered the livestock industry with sheep, which were very common in the Southwest amongst Indian tribes well before the United States had any sort of control of the territory.  But you'd have to know history to know that.

I honestly don't know where the "Cowboys and Indians" concept of Western Expansion came from but it is really grossly exaggerated in the concept of Indian v. Stockmen fights.  Stock raising is an economic activity and by and large most economic enterprises attempt to minimize their risks, not run out and engage in them.  For that reason, while there are certainly exceptions, most of the history of ranching in the Far West comes after that region had been largely pacified in terms of Indian v. Euro American conflict.  Put another way, George Armstrong Custer wasn't leading a band of cowboys into Montana with cattle.  Shoot, for that matter the pioneering economic enterprise in that region was gold mining, not livestock raising.

Anyhow, to be fair, you can find some Indian v. Stockmen conflict, but if you do you are looking at areas like Texas or at fairly rare examples elsewhere.  While there may have been Stockmen v. Indian conflicts somewhere in Wyoming, I'm at a loss to think of a single example.  That doesn't mean that the attitudes of either party were all Faculty Enlightened or something.  No, it means that by the time livestock came into most of Wyoming conflicts with the native populations were largely over.

You'd think a university professor would be educated enough to know that.

But then, you'd also think that an educator at a state land grant university located in Wyoming, the only four year public university in the state, would be aware that not only have their historically been Indian cowboys, there still are.

Consider the Arapaho Ranch.  And in considering it, consider their website, which relates:
So, does Angela Jaime find that the Arapahoe Ranch's proud indication that it's cattle are "worked and cared for by Native American cowboys" to be offensive?  What about its proclamation that this is consistent with:
Eh, Jaime?


Well, that's the real world.  Not the University of Wyoming in our current times, apparently.

You'd also think that a university professor would be educated enough to know that 1/3d of all cowboys were Mexicans or Blacks.  But apparently not.

 Nat Love.  Former slave, cowboy, and later Pullman Porter. Oh, and a married man as well. Oh, what to do, he's not white but not a homosexual . . .and he allegedly was kidnapped by Indians.  What a PC nightmare.

For that matter, you'd think you'd be educated enough to know that up until relatively recently the Mexican presence in working cowboys here remained pretty high.  I knew at least one local top hand who was a Mexican and whose family also owned a ranch in Mexico.  When he retired locally, he retired to the family ranch in Chihuahua.  And most ranchers in the modern era know other ranchers or stockmen somewhere who are either of Hispanic descent or actually Mexican and may have ranching interest in Mexico.  I do.

And I won't even go into sheep ranching in depth, which I won't do in part because sheepherders aren't cowboys.  But if I did, you'd see there was a point at which various ethnicities, Irish, Mexican, Basque and Peruvian cycled through the industry on the working end. Today, if you find a sheepherder, he's more likely to be Peruvian than anything else.

Okay, what about that (oh my gosh) "straight" part of that.

Well thanks in part to campaigning on the topic, and the American entertainment industry, Americans now believe that homosexuals are a statistically significant portion of the population. They are not.  That doesn't mean that they're insignificant as human beings, which would be wholly incorrect, but it does mean that when were discussing the impact of a statement we shouldn't presume a vast slight is being offered.  And that matters to this conversation.

Consider this item of awhile back from Gallup.
PRINCETON, N.J. -- The American public estimates on average that 23% of Americans are gay or lesbian, little changed from Americans' 25% estimate in 2011, and only slightly higher than separate 2002 estimates of the gay and lesbian population. These estimates are many times higher than the 3.8% of the adult population who identified themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender in Gallup Daily tracking in the first four months of this year.
3.8%.

That's pretty small, and that includes people who are lesbian, "gay" (which is technically a subset of the homosexual demographic), bisexual (which is also different) or "transgender" (a category which is still subject to serious debate as to whether or not it is even real).

If, therefore, the image of a cowboy is a straight male (more to that male part in a minute), it's because 96.2% of the American populations is straight.  If you are thinking of a cowboy, oilfield worker, laundress, mechanic, court reporter, policeman, criminal, Mini Mart clerk, accountant, lawyer, mail, or whatever, you ought to be thinking of a "straight" individual as they almost all are.  If you are thinking of any profession as "gay" or any group of individuals as "gay" you are buying into a false stereotype as it is statistically true that almost all members of any profession, no matter what it is, is straight.

Yes, there are people who are not, and that no doubt includes some ranchers and cowboys, but most people are.

Indeed, the greatest modern triumph of "progressives" is creating the illusion that a statistically insignificant demographic is significant so that the argument that laws and social norms ought to be changed to accommodate them partially on that basis. That's a stunning success, if perhaps one that should be questioned.  It certainly ought to be questioned here in this context.

In contrast, to use a really bad comparison which is used as its easy to find, JAMA estimated that 12.7 % of the American population are alcoholics (which I'll note is not meant to suggest the comparisons here are anything other than statistical, clearly same sex attraction is vastly different from alcoholism and I don't mean to suggest they are the same in any fashion, which would be very insulting to homosexuals), up from about 6% in a prior estimate.***  That may be due to a change in the statistical definition, but at any rate its statistically significant and over three times the number of individuals who are regarded as being in the category of sexually attracted outside the norm.  Indeed, it wasn't all that long ago that having a sexual attraction outside of the normal norm was regarded as deviant (by deviating) and a mental illness in no small part due to its comparative rarity.  The change in that is still noted to be rather unscientific in nature and open to question in terms of its process, which is not to say that in most instances there's be any valid social reason to consider it a mental illness.  That doesn't mean, however, that laws and social customs should have been changed to accommodate this statistically small demographic simply because it exists, any more than a person would argue that laws should be altered to accommodate the much larger populations with other behaviors which are outside of the biological norm without there being some good reason beyond the simple fact that it occurs.

Which is to say that people like Porter who are having a snit because the world cowboy brings to mind statistically normal males, to them, is to say that people like Porter have a problem with reality.  Most males, and females, are normal in their attractions.  Only a very small percentage are not. To recognize that fact is to recognize reality, not to identify some horrific slight.

Which brings us to the male/female part.

 
 The Jordan Motor Car Company's legendary Somewhere West of Laramie advertisement, which was inspired by Jordan actually seeing a mounted female west of Laramie. Somewhere on the campus in Laramie now, such a site would cause faculty members to have a seizure.

Women have been involved in ranching since ranching was involved in ranching. In Christine Porter's view, the word "cowboy" may bring up an all male enterprise, and in reality it is largely male even today, but in reality, like it or not, most physical jobs are male.   That has everything to do with male/female physical morphology and male/female natural psychology.  In the current era, and in particular as amplified by our last President, it may be popular for the over-educated ignorant to believe that there are no differences between men and women, but in reality there most definitely are.  That doesn't matter much in the Overheated Under-thinking Faculty Lounge, but it reality it does.

Which his why that even in an era when the last bastions of all male professions, combat soldiers, have been opened up to women unwisely there are still very few women in those roles.  But we should also be honest, even in those roles, such as even in traditionally female roles, the other gender does fill in and does take a role by necessity on occasion.


In agriculture, there have always been female agriculturalist for a couple of reasons.  For one reason, women in farming goes back to the dawn of farming.  Women in animal husbandry does not seem to go back to animal husbandry antiquity, however, which is likely because almost all agricultural animals are big and dangerous and hence it was a male role.  That's the reality of it.

But the added reality of it is that women married to men who engage in animal husbandry have taken a role in that in modern times also by necessity.  If a person doesn't know that, that's because they just flat out weren't looking.  It's not hard at all to find examples of women and girls herding cattle.  And on any modern operation its not hard at all to find women from their early teens to their late sixties doing the same.  Indeed, at least one very promising Wyoming rancher politician, who was also a woman (gasp!), and who is closely related to our current Governor, had her career cut short in a horse accident.****

Women cowboys were not only something that was known, but something celebrated in literature and art at least as far back as the early 20th Century. There was an entire genera of books based on women ranchers.  Women cowboys were a really common early 20th Century literary and artistic motif.

 Girl of the Gold West card, which was related to a novel by that name, that became a series of early movies.  The theme of a cow punching female ranching protagonist was a very early one in 20th Century American literature and, quite frankly, the female central character was shown as a lot more natural active than a lot of female centric novels today.  This gal would have been more likely to pistol whip Gray than bother with his fifty dubious shades.

So what does all this tell us?

Well, probably a lot more than most are willing to admit.

Some time ago the Washington Post Columnist/Snot Catherine Rampell posed the question of why Conservatives hate universities.  I started a reply post at that time and then shelved it, but this is an ample demonstration of why that seems to be the case.  Here article started off:
More than ever, higher education has become critical to snagging a stable job, moving up the income ladder and succeeding in the global economy.*****
Yet more than ever, higher education has also become a political football and object of derision.
It isn't that they hate higher education.  It's that higher education is no longer really very educated, in many departments.  Instead, it's become a refuge from reality and indeed from education itself.  It's become an object of political football, and hence derision, as in many instances its a mere expression of politics, and often left wing radical politics, in and of itself, having not very much to do with actual education.

The faculty reacting at the University of Wyoming are showing themselves to be blisteringly ignorant. They are ignorant of history and of nature. And they're so ignorant that, as long as they are on public support, which is what is the case, they will remain so,and in fact be completely useless.

And in fact, they're fitting into an agenda that seeks to really radically reshape the world in contravention to nature, and they find large aspects of nature and history to be intolerable.

Consider, for example, if you are white male, which is the second largest demographic in the United States (right behind white females, the largest American demographic). For some reason, you are basically defined as bad by these people no matter what you have personally done, and simply because  your demographic has been statistically significant for a long time.  Nobody would do that with any other American ethnicity.  Consider Jaime once again:
“Come up with a different slogan that doesn’t evoke some sort of a white guy in a cowboy hat and tight Wrangler jeans and cowboy boots,” Jaime said. “Rather than trying to quote-unquote redefine a word. There are lots of words we can already use that are really positive.”
So what's this say to the Arapahoe cowboys in the Arapahoe Ranch?  Apparently that they're genuine rural lifestyle doesn't count to a professor who hails from California, enrolled tribal member of Pacific Coast native peoples though they may be. 

Indeed, what's this say to women in agriculture?  And what's it say to a white guy who may be heavily into agriculture but fail to meet the other assumed definitions people like Porter and Jaime have? There's no reason to believe, except perhaps from their prospective, that there aren't gay men or women who are just as much a cowboy as the image they apparently are limited to through too many hours of watching television or movies.  I'll note that I once represented a fellow who had been insulted in a legal context because he was a homosexual; he was also a decorated combat Marine and very proud of that.  Do people like that fit into Porter and Jaime's world?

All cultures define themselves.  A culture without any hero's are archetypes is simply replaced by one that does.  A culture that destroys natural heroes, i.e., ones associated with nature in some ways, won't last.  At best, what Porter, Jaime and Boggs represent is not a bold new reconstructed world in which everyone defines their reality, but the end stage of a Western culture too effete and weak to admire anything at all.  A culture like that, if it persists, won't last long. . .or at all.

But you don't have to sit around accepting its demise.

 Breakin' Through, a University of Wyoming statute depicting a woman riding a bronc.  Oh my, we can't have such horrific racist male depictions can we.

__________________________________________________________________________________

* Jaime had bonafides in that she's an enrolled member of two Pacific Coast Native American tribes. . . or maybe not.  While she's very well educated, a person has to ask the dread question here if being a member of one Native American tribe is as good as being a member of another, to which the answer should be no.

If that seems odd, what is meant is this.  Members of Pacific Coast Indian tribes, ethnically, bear no more resemblance to Plains tribes than Irishmen do to Ukrainians.  Yes, they're both Europeans, in the latter example, but there's a lot of differences.  And hence the odd point.  Even asserting that there's such a thing as "Indians", by an institution, is to make a racial categorization that itself risk being racist.  I don't know much about Pacific Coast tribes, but maybe there were few who were cowboys (I really don't know), but there are Plains Indians who were and are cowboys and there are also Floridian Indians who are cowboys. That's part of their heritage.  To make bold assertions about what an Indian can and cannot be, and what cowboys must be ethnically, is, well, risking racism.

**Porter has a biology degree but a quick look at her University of Wyoming biography reveals a character who would seem to fit into the university "progressive" mold, which is one of the reason that universities are increasingly loosing credit with more than one sector of the American public.  It's easy to be a progressive on the faculty.

***Some argue, and indeed it seems generally presumed, that the number of alcoholics has in fact doubled.  That's questionable, however.  It may be that the number of people recognized as alcoholics has simply doubled.  Indeed, having lived long enough to see the change in how this is viewed, I suspect that's the case.

Likewise, the number of people identified as homosexual and other categories deviating from straight has undoubtedly increased from a lower percentage to 3.8%  In part that is no doubt because people were highly reluctant to self identify in that fashion up until recently, and no doubt quite a few still are reluctant.  At the same time, however, there's an odd element of trendiness in some quarters in identifying in this fashion which causes some identifications in some demographics that are likely false.  That's also true, oddly enough, with alcoholism.  The errors this creates are likely insignificant in the overall percentages, however.

****Mary Mead.

*****Legacy Princeton educated Rampell probably doesn't realize it, but while there's a large element of truth to this, in the modern American economy this is not actually universally true.  Technical educates are once again quite productive, while the occupation that  Rampell occupies, columnist, a species of journalism, is in real trouble.