Batfort

Style reveals substance

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Christmas decorations and feminism

The jackals of social media have descended on Melania Trump’s Christmas decorations.

AIDE: There’s this perception you don’t care about children, so we need to—

MELANIA: Get me the blood-red nightmare Christmas trees with NO ORNAMENTS OR PRESENTS

These trees remind me of the Handmaid’s Tale protestors. Perhaps these decorations are more tongue-in-cheek than you think.

Yet when Michelle Obama rolled out a similar treatment, she got a feature in Vogue.

Glowing lava trees

At this point, the double-standard isn’t shocking anymore. Frankly, it’s expected, boring, tiresome. No matter what Melania does, a large subset of the population will criticize her for it regardless of what (or if) they liked the aesthetic last week.

If Melania wore the Gucci clown look (which she never would, but let’s pretend for a moment), it would finally die.

Perhaps the “Cold Melania Doesn’t Care” criticism is real, but ~showing compassion~ wouldn’t turn things around for her. It would just make her weak, and they would swarm. Even divorcing her husband and denouncing everything he stands for wouldn’t do it.

Feminists, which most fashion people tend to be, absolutely hate it when other women go off the reservation. The hate is so strong that it permeates everything—the free-thinking woman can no longer do anything right.

Even Christmas decorations.

I appreciate that Melania does her own thing, with style and grace. She’s certainly not going to get any support from the Style Establishment.

Here are more pics of her Christmas White House.

Plenty of warmth and elegance to go around.

A Very Personal Review of Vox Day’s JORDANETICS

This is less of a review and more of a reaction.

When I opened Vox Day’s Jordanetics last week, I was expecting something similar to what Vox has posted in his blog and uploaded in his YouTube livestreams: a fairly straightforward takedown of Jordan B Peterson and his views. The takedown would go a little bit too far (it’s a bit much for me to fathom going that hard at someone with an admitted mental illness, but then again I’m a girl and I don’t go hard at anyone), would probably make a few wisecracks about the all-meat diet, and would pull apart JPB’s books in a way that people couldn’t ignore.

What I did not expect was the stake to the heart.

But more on that in a bit. First, a look at Jordanetics: A Journey into the Mind of Humanity’s Greatest Thinker.

I particularly liked how the book was structured at the beginning—a mix of social proof, evidence, and reasoning. First we have an introduction from Milo Yiannopoulos, who has been personally lied about by Jordan “don’t say things that aren’t true” Peterson. Milo’s writing style is always a little abrasive, but it’s good to get a third angle on things.

Then, we have an introduction to how Vox got involved, in typical Vox style. There are a few parts of this book that are going to stick with me for quite some time, and Vox’s analysis of JBP handles citations and evidence is going to be one of those things. It’s one thing to make small errors or fail to understand statistics well (quite common among university faculty). It’s quite another thing to cite the complete opposite conclusion from what the authors wrote in a study. That is bending evidence into a pre-formed conclusion. It’s straight-up fraud.

This analysis is followed by a very long list of quotes pulled from YouTube comments, an analysis of like/dislike ratios, and a transcript of the Voxiversity video on JBP (let’s be real: the transcript doesn’t do the video justice—the comedic timing of the editing is superb). This part is highly skippable and mostly receipts. It’s somewhat equivalent to a grumpy dad saying to a group of rowdy kids, “I wasn’t going to come downstairs and break this up, but y’all wouldn’t stop so now I’m here.”

Vox acknowledges that people like myself, Owen Benjamin, and others feel “bewildered” or “tricked” at how we could be taken in by this guy. Even after knowing about his involvement with the Trilateral Commission, his judgement of the Brett Kavanaugh situation, and reading this book, part of me still likes some of JBP’s messages. It’s tough to sort through the lies while still holding onto appreciation for the small truths, such as his admonishment to “do it badly.” I set very high standards for myself, so to see myself “failing” in the first steps of a new venture is disheartening. I like having a touchstone that things still worth doing badly when you’re first getting started, even though I know there are many other ways to get that touchstone.

With that in mind, Vox then dismantles many anticipated objections to his arguments, from “JBP is a respected academic” to “How do I know that you aren’t the one lying about him?” I particularly liked the response to latter objection, because it illuminates quite a few other cultural battles that are going on at the moment.

With the (lengthy) preamble dispensed of, Vox proceeds to take apart each of the 12 rules while weaving together an argument of how, following an ancient pattern, JBP is another in a long line of false teachers. It is a line of argument that I was not expecting, especially from Vox. It is an argument that punched me in the face, and for reasons that had nothing to do with Jordan Peterson.

You see, I am drawn to gnosticism like a moth to a flame. A gnostic view of the world is one in which there is hidden knowledge, and that to find salvation one must find and uncover those secrets.

It’s not surprising that I’m drawn to this way of thinking. I am a seeker. I am intelligent and highly intuitive, someone who has always loved fairy tales and myths. I’m the type of person who is always aware that there is something that I do not know. I’m fairly emotionally obtuse, so I’m always learning new things about myself (uncovering hidden knowledge, you may say.)

You might be this type of person, too.

In grad school, I remember learning about the sophists, and how they used rhetoric to essentially “manifest” the reality they wanted. That type of thinking hasn’t gone away, and in fact flourishes today more than ever. I rely on the Jung-influenced MBTI in my interactions with people, and it’s been on my list for so very long to dive into Jung’s writings on archetype and the psyche. I am fascinated by persuasion and conspiracy theories and little known facts.

As a Christian, I’ve been careful to avoid the occult—but setting that personal boundary has not erased its allure.

Over the past year or so, I’ve started to notice that many of my main influences are very gnostic-based. I’ve started noticing patterns of thought repeating around me. Every once in a while, I would stop and think to myself “I really need to examine the origins of this.”

It would be useful to identify the gnostic influence in my life and in my thinking, but it would also be hard. So I ignored it.

Which brings us back to this book, and this particular passage, which is included in the chapter on rule 11:

For, as long as Satan is not integrated, the world is not healed and man is not saved. But Satan represents evil, and how can evil be integrated? There is only one possibility: to assimilate it, that is to say, raise it to the level of consciousness. This is done by means of a very complicated symbolic process which is more or less identical with the psychological process of individuation. In alchemy this is called the conjunction of two principles.

—Carl Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections (as quoted in Jordanetics)

I had a physical reaction to reading this. I am not kidding when I describe it as a punch in the face or a stake to the heart. Remember what I said about not actually having read Carl Jung’s works? This is why that’s a problem.

You see, the way to salvation is not through “integrating” evil through a “very complicated symbolic process.” The way to salvation is through Jesus Christ, and Him only. The narrow path.

To follow Christ, one must reject evil—not integrate it.

This revelation changed the landscape in my heart. Now, it is not merely an intellectual exercise to trace the influence of gnosticism in my mind, up to and including Jordan B Peterson. It is now a matter of right thinking, of the utmost Truth, to sort out the wheat from the tares.

This is not something I can ignore any longer. I need to sit down and do the work of sorting through what I’ve learned in my life, where it came from, and how it contributes to my intuitive “filter” of the world. I do not expect this work to be fun.

It is not often that I have this type of reaction to a book, let alone share it on my blog. I have no doubt that I will write more about my de-gnostificating journey here, and I hope that it will help you, dear reader, if you are anything like me.

Overall, Jordanetics is a worthwhile read, especially if you have enjoyed JBP in the past. I am thankful that I stayed away from his Biblical lectures, because I didn’t trust him to present the Bible truthfully.

Now I know why.

 

 


As with all of the Very Personal Review series, I’m no expert in this category. I can’t always connect a book with broad context or deep history, but I still like to share my experience and thoughts.

The Reader: Human beings are important and the emptiness of leaning in

Red Velvet repack coming soon. This image of Yeri is amazing.

» Melania Trump goes after the haters in a way that Sarah Palin never did on that scale. Respect.

» Speaking of the Trumps, Barron is getting really tall!

» Bullshit jobs and managerial feudalism (or as I like to call it, “petty turtle battles”)

» Favorite performances in k-pop (feat. Taemin and TOP)

» The truth about Cheryl Sandberg and “lean in”

“Lean In” is not fundamentally a feminist manifesto. It is a road map for operating within the existing system, perhaps changing it at the margins to make it easier for other women to, well, operate within the system. Sandberg does not spend much time asking whether the system is so screwed up that pushing against it might be the better route toward meaningful change.

» Always learn more biology

» “We are not servants of an economic system. We are human beings.”

 

» The infrastructure behind the influencer beauty industry (Seed, the company behind Colourpop and Kylie Cosmetics, is one to watch):

Landver believes that the next big lifestyle brand—the next Tory Burch or Martha Stewart, say — will be founded by an influencer. Or several, actually. “As opposed to looking at one big hundred million-dollar brand, we’re looking at building many ten million dollar brands,” says Landver. “I say longtail five times a day. The future is going to be many more small brands focused on smaller segments.”

» Further proof that SM Entertainment’s audio engineers are the real MVPs

Image of the week: A Reminder

Eyes on the prize (that is, Jesus Christ).

Keep dong the work.

Forgive yourself.

The Appreciation Appreciation Post

I’ve never been overly enthusiastic about Thanksgiving.  Orange and brown was never my aesthetic and as a kid with an autoimmune digestive illness the whole focus on “eating too much” was occasionally problematic.

What I do love about Thanksgiving is the premise: it’s a time to give thanks.

We all know how busy we can get, and how difficult it can be to see the big picture in our daily struggles. I often forget (or disregard) all of the good things in my life. I’m grateful for the built-in chance to sit back, contemplate all that God has done in my life and in the world, and truly appreciate.

I’ve been blessed with a lot (being born at this time in history, in America, to loving parents who taught me to know God) and have worked to know myself but also to carve out some small accomplishments on this earth (my health being first and foremost—I didn’t do it all myself but by gum I have to give myself a little credit for doing the work).

It is hard to feel confused or doubtful or hateful when your heart is full of gratitude for what you have received and what exists in your life.

I try to thank God for something (any little thing) every single day, but there is so much to be thankful for.

Happy Thanksgiving, y’all.

 

Creative Achievement Questionnaire Quiz

Finally, an interactive version of the Creative Achievement Questionnaire!

The actual questionnaire was developed by Jordan B Peterson and Shelly Carson. This version is just for fun.

To take the quiz, pick the level that best represent your achievement in that area. If you’re not logged in with a WordPress account, enter your email for the results to be sent to you.

Visual Arts (painting, sculpture)

Aesthetic Consistency

This post has been brought to you by my sudden urge to archive everything on my now-defunct Tumblr, with the intention to use on this site because the aesthetic matches.

It’s interesting, growing up on the internet. I didn’t even fully grow up on it—I didn’t do much but hamsterdance.com and chain emails until I left for college—but it’s funny to know that there are different bits and pieces of my life on various social media sites.

A different persona portrayed on each site, as befitted its mechanism and branding. What goes on Facebook is not what goes on Tumblr is not what goes on Instagram is not what goes on Livejournal is not what goes on Twitter is not what went on Myspace.

And so tiny pieces of me are scattered across the internet like horcruxes, if we want to use a Harry Potter reference to honor one of those tiny pieces.

Because of this fragmentation, I’ve always assumed that there are wildly different parts of me in each place, or that different facets of my personality develop different aesthetic styles. The fandom bits that morphed into k-pop. The love of The Lord of the Rings that got distracted by Harry Potter and Game of Thrones. The internet drama precursor to politics.

 

You’d think it would be true. That me in 2013 was so vastly different from me in 2018 that we would like and save different photos and memes.

And in one sense, it is true. I’m a completely different person than I was in 2013. I’m more mature, more sure of what I believe in, and there are a few major issues that I’ve done an about-face on. I’ve grown as a person, and developed new and greater insight into the world.

And yet I have a photo from the exact same photoset saved currently on my phone that I first found in 2015. I follow the same artists on YouTube now that I reblogged in my old Tumblr, without realizing it—because I was drawn to her work.

The medium may change. The frequency may change. The year may change.

But the soul doesn’t.

Let’s rewrite tired Higher Ed talking points

The Chronicle of Higher Ed has recycled an article from 2016 about how to talk about higher ed with those who are not initiated into its subtle and arcane rites.

From one perspective, you can now breathe a sigh of relief because you don’t have to spend any time thinking about how you can defend your calling against the nosy and presumptive questions asked by Aunt Thelma over Thanksgiving dinner.

From another perspective, the Cathedral doesn’t even care enough to update its propaganda two years later. Trust me, Aunt Thelma isn’t going to be asking about the “Trump chalkings” anytime soon.

This is why I’m taking the liberty of providing some new talking points, updated for 2018. These talking points may or may not reflect whatever updated, sanctioned rhetoric is currently used to talk about the academy. I call it like I see it, yo.

Why does college cost so much?

David Graeber can answer this one pretty well:

One thing it shows is that the whole “lean and mean” ideal is applied much more to productive workers than to office cubicles. It’s not at all uncommon for the same executives who pride themselves on downsizing and speed-ups on the shop floor, or in delivery and so forth, to use the money saved at least in part to fill their offices with feudal retinues of basically useless flunkies. […]

Health and education are equally hard hit: managers now feel they need to each have their little squadron of assistants, who often have nothing to do, so they end up making up new exotic forms of paperwork for the teachers, doctors, nurses… who thus have ever less time to actually teach or treat or care for anyone.

Other answers include: academics are taught a lot of things but not how to budget, athletics programs don’t actually pay the bills, and state funds are not going to keep a university afloat anyway.

What does the student-debt crisis mean? How much debt are students really in?

Graeber can take this one, too:

Well if you talk to young people fresh out of college, you don’t hear a lot of them saying, “Ah, the world lies open before me … what then would I best do?”

Sure, you heard that a lot in the 1970s, 80s, even 90s: “What do I really want?” Now, not so much. Most graduates are in a panic over how they’re going to pay their student loans and the real dilemma you hear is: “Can I get a job that will actually pay me enough to live on (let alone be able to have a family someday) that I wouldn’t be entirely ashamed of?”

Maaaaaaaaybe the scary stories about debt that is over $100k are just that, scary stories, but the reality for most of us is that student debt is a massive burden—we can’t discharge it through bankruptcy, it demands to be paid, and it eats up the small paychecks that we receive right out of college. For me personally, for a few years it was a choice between paying my debts and putting money in savings. Just because the majority of stories aren’t dRaMaTiC doesn’t mean they’re not shaping individual lives.

There was speculation that President-elect Donald J. Trump wouldn’t win white voters with college degrees, but he did. Why did that shift happen?

No one is asking this question in 2018. Let’s talk about Alexandra Occasio-Cortez instead.

What’s all this I’m hearing about trigger warnings and safe spaces?

I’m skipping this because frankly, it’s boring. Yes, it’s a trope that Millennials are sheltered delicate flowers who want to cry in dark corners and eat avocado toast all day instead of getting a Real Job ™. Yes, it’s true that many students are constitutionally ill-equipped to handle adversity.

But nobody is “shocked” to hear about safe spaces anymore.

Why is there so much attention on campuses to sexual assault?

Oh, I don’t know, why don’t you ask the people in power who got away with it for so long, like Avitell Ronnell or Larry Nassar?

Perhaps you’d prefer to talk to students who have been falsely accused of assault and denied due process?

Why aren’t college athletes paid?

Many of the problems that the university faces are caused by an identity crisis. The university is caught between two faces:

  1. the corporate entity promising new and better jobs for each and every one of its graduates, run by and for businesses
  2. the ivory tower where research is paramount and immediate application is secondary (so are students)

If you subscribe to view #1, of course athletes should get paid. If you subscribe to view #2, athletics don’t belong in a university setting and therefore the question is irrelevant. Until that question is resolved, don’t expect any real answers.

 

The Reader: Media Misrepresentation and K-pop Controversy

» The fake news media is once again manipulating images to make perfectly reasonable people look like Nazis.

» Caitlin Johnstone took one for the team

» It still blows my mind that more people don’t know about this study on how everybody else can predict liberal behavior but liberals don’t have a clue about anybody but themselves:

Moderates and conservatives were most accurate in their predictions, whether they were pretending to be liberals or conservatives. Liberals were the least accurate, especially those who described themselves as “very liberal.” The biggest errors in the whole study came when liberals answered the Care and Fairness questions while pretending to be conservatives.

» To make a cup of coffee, it takes more than a village

» BTS may not have factored in cultural differences, especially their American fanbase’s tendency toward SJWism, when they went hard for the North American market this year. K-pop groups use American and European style tropes out-of-context all the time—except now they’re going to get called on it.

» Yet more proof that regulators don’t care about us, and that the people who speak out are smeared or silenced.

In 2004, a world no-one anticipated came into view. As part of an FDA review of paediatric antidepressant trials at this point, it became clear that all trials in paediatric depression were negative, that all published studies were ghost or company written, in all cases the data were inaccessible and in the case of the published studies, the publications were at odds with the data regulators revealed. The data on both benefits and harms was systematically distorted in publications even in the leading medical journals (5). This came to a head over the issue of suicide in 2004, when New York State filed a fraud action against GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), primarily on the basis that a ghost-written publication of Study 3291 claimed paroxetine worked for and was safe for children who were depressed, when in an internal review it had recognised it didn’t work and had opted to pick out the good bits of this study and publish them (6).

» Related: I don’t really know what’s going on with the Cochrane/Gotzsche situation, but it doesn’t look good.

» A whole thread of favorite k-pop stages.

 

Questions for a new church

I’ve been checking out a new church. It’s young. It’s aggressive. The type of church that is run by Millennials for Millennials. The infrastructure is online and designed to work without “elders.” The all the trappings are specifically aimed at college students.

  • Why have you chosen to use all-new nomenclature and symbols? I understand that you are trying to make a new “experience” for people in the church, but at what cost?
  • If you are accepting “investors” to help pay the bills, what do they get or expect in return? Equity? Saved souls?
  • What led to the decision to have nobody serve communion? Self-service is an interesting semiotic choice.
  • Why is there no explicit mention of the Gospels in your church membership “vows.” Yes, someone would have to be a baptized believer to join your church, but the membership requires more explicit buy-in to the mission of this specific church than the mission of Jesus Christ.

We’ll see. I’ve seen the “invisible hand” destroy some churches in my time, and I hope to never witness that again.

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