A reader writes:
Just out of curiosity (and, as a Jewish reader of your blog, I'm quite curious), are you accused of anti-Semitism for simply discussing these issues?
Of course, but the more effective tactic is not debating you but just making sure that you don't get paying work (e.g., recall how nice liberal Gregg Easterbrook was fired from ESPN in 2003 to encourage the others).
My         co-religionists, amongst themselves, talk about these things all the         time (as do members of most ethnic and racial groups) and I would be         sorry if they attacked you for simply doing the same. Different groups         bring different things to the table, and it just so happens that the         past century or so fit in nicely with the skill sets that Jews have         developed over the years.
   
      One of the fascinating aspects of Jewish culture, to me, has been the         fact that we are everywhere on the ideological spectrum. The most         prominent libertarians? Check. The most prominent communists? Check. The         biggest neo-conservatives? Check. The biggest anti-war demonstrators?         Check. Josh Marshall and Matthew Yglesias [well, both supported the war         back in the beginning] are members of the tribe, but so are Kristol and         Podhoretz. One of the reasons why it's so easy to come up with         preposterous statements about Jews. in general, is that specific Jews         can be found propagating almost any point of view imaginable -- and         doing it well enough to be seen as a prominent figure in whatever         movement they join.
Indeed. Similarly,          the most anti-Communist English-language literary giant of the last 40          years,  Tom          Stoppard, discovered as a middle-aged man that he's 100%          Jewish.
   
      For example, here are two fairly honest depictions of two utopian groups          that were diametrically opposed in politics but in which Jews played          dominant roles: Students for a Democratic Society and the Ayn Randers:
    
      - Mark Rudd of the Columbia sit-in and the Weathermen on "Why          Were There So Many Jews in SDS? Or, The Ordeal of Civility"          (via Larry          Auster)
   
      - Economist Murray Rothbard on "The          Sociology of the Ayn Rand Cult" (Rothbard was expelled by Rand after a          year's membership in the cult) (via Lew          Rockwell)
   
      One member of the Ayn Rand cult from his late 20s up at least through          the age         of 42 was Alan Greenspan, the future chairman of the Federal Reserve          Board. Bill Bradford reported in The          American Enterprise:
As I learned in hours of interviews with their associates, Greenspan was a member of Rand’s inner circle during this entire period [the 1950s] and beyond. He lectured on economics for the Nathaniel Branden Institute. He wrote for the first issue of The Objectivist Newsletter, and when Rand broke with Branden [her 25-year younger lover], he signed a public statement condemning the traitor “irrevocably.” [Greenspan was then in his 40s.] When Gerald Ford appointed him to the Council of Economic Advisors, he invited Rand to his swearing-in ceremony, and attended her funeral in 1982.
That somebody as         seemingly hard-headed as Greenspan should have spent much of his adult         life in the Rand cult is striking.
   
      My reader continues:
Jews, unfortunately, are also likely to have a persecution complex (I know that nearly every one of them -- including me -- that I've ever met has one to some degree). And in most cases they have them for historically valid reasons -- our persecutions have been regular and consistent. Sadly, however, this means that any discussion of the role that Jews have played in the history of the past three centuries is often seen as an attack. If Jews are seen as too influential, the theory goes, it will bring the hammer down like some cosmic game of whack-a-mole.
The obvious          question then is whether being shielded from objective analysis in the          media is good for the Jews.          Unfortunately, getting yourself deemed above criticism is the surest way          to lower one's performance.
    
      For Americans as a whole, understanding Jewish tendencies is both more          complicated and, perhaps at this point in history, more important than          understanding those of any other ethnic group.
    
      In their 1995 book Jews and the New American Scene, the prominent          social scientist Seymour Martin Lipset, a Senior Scholar of the Wilstein          Institute for Jewish Policy Studies, and Earl Raab, Director of the          Perlmutter Institute for Jewish Advocacy at Brandeis University, pointed          out:
"During the last three decades, Jews have made up 50% of the top two hundred intellectuals, 40 percent of American Nobel Prize Winners in science and economics, 20 percent of professors at the leading universities, 21 percent of high level civil servants, 40 percent of partners in the leading law firms in New York and Washington, 26% of the reporters, editors, and executives of the major print and broadcast media, 59 percent of the directors, writers, and producers of the fifty top-grossing motion pictures from 1965 to 1982, and 58 percent of directors, writers, and producers in two or more primetime television series." [pp 26-27]
The last thing,          however, that non-Jews are allowed to do in the U.S. is to objectively          discuss the kind of psychological and sociological patterns that help          explain why the quality of Jewish political and social decision-making          has, on average, not always been as strong as their IQs, work ethic,          argumentative skills, interest in public affairs, and self-confidence in  their own judgment might suggest. The first          President Bush understood this, but the second didn't seem to have          learned this lesson before the Iraq Attaq (although he seems to have          learned a little in the aftermath, with Feith gone, Wolfowitz kicked          upstairs, and Perle out of fashion).
    
      What are some of these common self-debilitating Jewish tendencies? Off          the top of my head, I'd suggest:
    
      -  Utopianism: Bombing Iraq into an America-loving democracy is only the          latest disastrous project
   
      - Cult-Worship- of- the-All-Knowing-Scholar-Sageism: Marxism, Freudianism,  Randism, Straussianism, etc.
   
      - Ethnocentric  nostalgiaism: vividly seen in the current immigration          debate, where Ellis          Island-worship is substituted for facts and logic
   
      - Be-Like-Meism: e.g., the common suggestion by Jewish pundits that all Mexican  illegal immigrants          have to do is act like the Jewish immigrants of 1906 and everything will turn out  fine. Well, swell ...
   
      - Pseudo ethnic Humilityism: few Jews actually believe that Mexicans are          just like Jews -- they think Jews are much smarter -- but they don't          want anybody else to notice that Jews are smarter so they advocate          immigration policies that depend for their success upon Mexicans being          just as smart as Jews. That this immigration policy is obviously bad for          the country is less important than keeping up the charade that nobody          mentions in the press that Jews are smarter than everybody else on  average.
   
      - Rube Goldbergism:          overly complicated plans and analyses with too many moving parts to work          reliably (e.g., the neocon plans for fixing the Middle East through          invasion)
   
      - Is-It-Good-for-the-Jewsism: I am a huge fan of enlightened          self-interest, so I don't object to this on principle
   
      -  Rube Goldbergian Is-It-Good-for-the-Jewsism: This could also  be called He-Who-Says-A-Must-Say-B-C-D-E-Q-W-and-Zism. Jewish intellectuals have  a tendency that on any topic related to Jews, they tend to think baroquely many  steps down the line. Thus, the full panoply of the          subjects that have been assumed to be bad-for-the-Jews and therefore  ruled out of discussion in polite society is breathtakingly          broad -- for example, IQ has been driven out of the media in large          part because it is feared that mentioning          that Jews have higher average IQs would lead, many steps down the  line, to pogroms.
- Missing-Piece-of-the-Puzzleism: One obvious          problem with this tendency is that you can't make a Rube Goldberg analysis work          in the real world if you've banned the use of crucial moving parts, such          as IQ
- Pay-No-Attention-to-that-Man-Behind-the-Curtainism: The biggest  unmentionable, as the Mearsheimer-Walt brouhaha demonstrated once again, is also  one of the biggest pieces of the puzzle for understanding how the modern world  works: the influence of Jews.
   
      - Enemy Nostalgiaism: Difficulty identifying current and future enemies because of emotional          obsession with past enemies: e.g., the obsession with "The Passion          of the Christ" combined with the inability to identify growing          Latin American populism as a future threat due to immigration, etc.
   
      - Faux Sabraism: as Francis          Fukuyama pointed out to Charles Krauthammer, American neocon          thinking about Iraq was motivated less by hardheaded          is-it-good-for-Israel analysis -- Sharon's government was only modestly          enthusiastic about the Iraq Attaq -- than by What-Would-the-Israelis-Do          emotions. Armchair warriors like Douglas Feith are particular          susceptible to this kind of Let's Pretend thinking..
    
      Ironically, Jewish writers themselves are obsessed with Jewish          influence, even in fields where Jews have virtually no influence, such          as soccer. I'm reading How          Soccer Explains the World: An (Unlikely) Theory of Globalization         by Marty Peretz's latest young man to edit The New Republic,          Franklin Foer. This Jewish soccer fan's book is hilariously obsessed with the Jewish role in soccer,          even though that role is almost nonexistent. The great majority of Jews          live in America and Israel, two countries that are almost irrelevant to          the story of soccer.
    
      Did you know that a Jewish team won the Austrian national championship          in 1925? Isn't that the most fascinating thing you've ever heard in your          life? Well, Foer seems to think so, as he travels to Vienna to interview          elderly Jews about their memories of that amazing team, but it turns out          that none of the old Jews in Vienna can remember it or, for that matter,          ever had any interest in soccer. But Foer still scrapes together a full          10 pages on this epochal team. Similarly, his chapter on English soccer          hooligans is based on the perhaps not quite reliable memories of one          middle-aged yobbo who is (surprise!) half-Jewish.
    
      As you'd expect, references to the Jewish Holocaust pop up throughout          this book on soccer. On the other hand, Foer's 26-page chapter on soccer          in Ukraine never mentions the Ukrainian          Holocaust of 1932-33. I wonder why?
    
      Unfortunately, as you might expect from one of Marty Peretz's minions,          Foer's writings about Jews and soccer are so hamstrung by powerful          emotions and worries about what exactly is good for the Jews to put down          in writing about the Jews that they are largely analytically worthless for learning          anything directly about Jewish tendencies. You have to read between the          lines, and that's not popular these days. Not Safe For Work.
    
      Even sillier are Will          Saletan's current articles in Slate          on his visit to Germany to see the World Cup, which an impudent editor          re-titled "Don't          Mention the War" after the addled Basil Fawlty's warning to his          hotel staff about their poor German guests in the funniest scene in all          of Fawlty Towers (and thus likely the funniest scene in sit-com          history):
No         Nazi jokes. That's what I told myself when I landed in Frankfurt on         Saturday to see the World Cup. The Germans are throwing a very nice         party, especially for journalists. They're setting aside tickets, even         giving us free train travel. The least we can do is not mention         you-know-what. But then you ride a German train, and you sit in a German         stadium throbbing to the chants of a nationalist mob, and it all comes         back.
   
      The dark humor started last week. I'm on a fellowship in Cambridge with         a few Englishmen who haven't forgotten the Hun. The other day, a         lecturer showed us a couple of slides fictionally depicting England         under Hitler. The idea, which the speaker meant to challenge, was that         if this or that hadn't happened, history would have unfolded in a         completely different way. That's why Churchill said of the Royal Air         Force, "Never has so much been owed by so many to so few."         Fortunately, the few on whom Britons are relying this week are just         footballers, and the adversary is just Paraguay. But remind me again:         What's that South American country to which the you-know-whos         disappeared?...
   
      It's a beautiful trip, full of chalet-like villages nestled in valleys.         Churches are everywhere. Windmills circle in the breeze. On the train,         everyone's friendly. Americans play video games or yap on cell phones;         Germans read books. It's such a civilized country. Sitting on that         train, listening to reassuring announcements, I tried to imagine how         hard it must have been for German Jews to recognize the early days of         you-know-what. Maybe that's why they took so long to get out. Good folks         can't turn bad, can they? But they did, and they could again, and so         could the Brits, and so could we.
   
      But as I was saying, you-know-what is gone. It's been replaced by the         new you-know-what, the one that hit us on 9/11 and hit the Brits last         year. On the way to Hamburg, I wondered about that. Wasn't the 9/11 plot         launched         from Hamburg? Is it just coincidence that the home of the old         fascism incubated the new fascism?
Well, if it's not a coincidence, it's because people like Will Saletan have browbeaten the modern Germans into not being so insensitively nationalistic as to throw out the Muslim extremists infesting their country.
And here's Saletan's bizarre sermon on why the Serbs, those New Nazis, deserved their loss to the Dutch in the their opening round match:
Maybe the match says something about why so many Dutchmen protected people like me when you-know-what roamed the earth. Maybe it says something about why so many Serbs perpetrated their own ethnic cleansing in the war before the war on terror. Or maybe it's all in my head. All I know is, the man who led that cleansing is dead, and he died in the prison of the international justice system, and that prison is in Holland. And I'm going home with a couple of orange jerseys in my bag.
Uh, actually, not that many Dutch protected people like you, Will. As Franklin Foer points out (inevitably) in his soccer book:
But more than rediscovering this history of resistance, the Dutch fabricated it. As historians have pointed out tirelessly in recent years, the Dutch did a better job collaborating with the Nazis than stopping them. Holland lost a higher percentage of its Jews to the Holocaust than any other country.
As a reader points out, Saletan may be confusing the Dutch and the Danes, who sneaked their Jews out to neutral Sweden (which Saletan probably remembers as Switzerland).
And those Dutch         peacekeepers sure distinguished themselves in Bosnia!
   
      Meanwhile, the Serbs fought the Nazis and their Croatian allies for all         five years their country was occupied by the German Army. Serbs died by         the hundreds of thousands at the hands of the Nazis and Nazi-Wannabes.         Gratitude is why Israel backed         Serbia for most of the 1990s. And the Serbs ended up as the most         ethnically cleansed Balkan nation of the 1990s.
   
      And, anyway, it's just a boring soccer match...
   
      Saletan's essay is a classic example of how much of America's Kosovo         policy was based not on facts but on modern Jewish-Americans'         psychodramas, most notoriously Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's,         about getting revenge on the Nazis by sticking it to the Serbs.
      
      As Chris Caldwell wrote         in the New York Times about former Secretary of State Madeleine         Albright's memoirs: "For her, every conflict is a replay of the         Munich conference of 1938..." Albright was born in Czechoslovakia,         which was dismantled at the Munich conference when the Great Powers took         away its border province of the Sudetenland due to agitation by its         German population, so it's hardly surprising she's obsessed with it.         Obsession, however, is not precisely what you want in a Secretary of         State, as we saw with Albright. The great irony of Albright's life is         that when she finally got power in her hands, her lifelong fixation with         Munich manifested itself in a hilariously twisted manner. She staged her         own Great Power conference (Munich-Rambouillet) to take away from a         small Eastern European country (Czechoslovakia-Yugoslavia) its border         province (Sudetenland-Kosovo) due to agitation by its disaffected         minority ethnicity (Germans-Albanians).
   
      The unexpected consequence of our Kosovo war and the campaign of         anti-Serbism was growing anti-Israel sentiment among Europeans, who then         saw Israel's West Bank occupation as the equivalent of Serbia's Kosovo         occupation. This analogy was a natural one to everybody outside the         sphere of influence of the U.S. media, but since American Jews are the         most intense consumers as well as producers of American media, they got         blindsided by this analogy.
      
      In summary, the crucial question for Jews is:
      Is it good for the Jews to obsess over "Was it good for the          Jews?" Or should they, when thinking about immigration and foreign          policies, ask, "Will it be good for the Jews?"
And for Americans as a whole, the crucial question is: Is it good for America if a powerful group is free from all outside analysis, no matter how objective?
    
      A reader responds:
You state  that keeping the fact of high Jewish IQ’s on the down low is the reason for  public ixnay on the IQ alktay in ublicpay. Hmm, I could swear that the big  factor is fear of noting that blacks had low IQ’s was the big mover. What has  swayed US domestic policy more, the PC need to see non-whites as virtuous,  talented victims held back by WE, the man, or all that Jewish stuff?
I thought the obvious public lens on the Balkan damn fool thing was that the  Kosovo muslims were BLACK, and the Serbs were Klansmen just as much as the  Kosovos were Jews and the Serbs Nazis.
Heck, I’d say the whole Euro American divide re: Isreal is as much about  European white guilt as American Jew-guilt, yah? Europeans aren’t nearly so  guilty about what they did to blacks as to the beige and brown, Arabs largely  among them, and the Isrealis are seen as Europeans doing some nasty colonial  thing to the Arabs, yah? But Americans don’t automatically see Arabs as  minority victims, where we do recognize Jews as historical victims needing to  defend themselves.
Euros feel bad about colonialism, and guilt compensate by taking the Arab side  in what they see as a colonial land grab. Americans have no guilt regarding Jews  or Arabs, but they do feel good about being Holocaust liberators, so they take  the Jewish side in what they see as the Jews surrounded on all sides, fighting  off the Huns.
In fact, couldn’t this be seen as the Euros doing that liberal intra-white  status game of who’s more beastly to the minorities? The Euros establish moral  superiority by being more tolerant of the Arabs than their fellow westerners,  the Isrealis? And the Isrealis are helpfully just different enough –they’re  Jews, and their problems don’t really directly touch Europe, except as riling  their own problem urban minorities?
Couldn’t one say Euro superiority to Isrealis, and concern for rioting  domestic Arabs, is like NE libs and their superiority over Red State rednecks,  especially those in high black population southern states who must actually deal  with the issue, and their simultaneous concern for rioting blacks in Harlem?
Another reader writes:
One Jewish  characteristic which may considerably underlie several of the others might be a  tendency to religious fanaticism. In Antiquity, Jews were certainly not regarded  as being especially smart or good at business; instead it was their extreme  religious fanaticism that attracted attention. And one might argue that during a  couple of millenia of living as religious minorities in Europe and elsewhere,  the less fanatic Jews might probably have tended to convert for pragmatic  reasons and merge into the larger Gentile population.
I suspect that one reason this plausible Jewish characteristic attracts  relatively little attention is the extreme secularism of modern Jews, probably  about the least religious ethic group in most countries. But I would suggest  that the same underlying psychological tendency easily manifests itself in lots  of "secular religions," which helps to explain why Jews are so  prominent in almost every conflicting ideological movement, ranging from  Marxism/Communism to libertarianism, liberalism, multiculturalism,  neo-conservatism, environmentalism, pro-Israelism (and anti-Israelism), and  everything else.
And Hans Gruber looks at the flip side of the coin:
One  possible explanation for the Utopian tendency is that Jews are much more secular  than the general population. Religion is a human universal. It's possible that  religion satisfies inherent desires for purpose, for meaning, and for  immortality. Secular peoples, lacking the fulfillment religion provides, might  then seek a sort of substitute from political ideology and creating paradise  here, today (therefore ensuring their immortality as well). Religious peoples,  however, tend to accept the imperfection of this world for the promise of  paradise in the next, staving off Utopian impulses.
You also mention reverence for the "all-knowing-scholar-sage." This is  also consistent with the secular explanation because this is essentially the  replacement of a religious priesthood with a secular priesthood. The priest or  rabbi gives us guidance on how to live our lives, and so too does the secular  priesthood of "all-knowing-scholar-sages."
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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1 comment:
"Saletan may be confusing the Dutch and the Danes, who sneaked their Jews out to neutral Sweden (which Saletan probably remembers as Switzerland)."
Mixing up placenames is a common trait of New Yorkers (with whom Jews identify, and are identified, more than anyone really wants to talk about).
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