The New Virtue Police • Kevin D

The New Virtue Police • Kevin D

SECONDABOUT THOUGHTSMARY #METOO EBERSTADT JUNE 25, 2018 $5.99 THE NEW VIRTUE POLICE • KEVIN D. WILLIAMSON on Heretics & Etiquette • JAMES CAMPBELL meets Lionel Shriver WEEKLYSTANDARD.COM Contents June 25, 2018 • Volume 23, Number 40 2 The Scrapbook A man-hating op-ed, a source close to the reporter, & more 5 Casual Christine Rosen remembers the ’80s 6 Editorials The Summit of Our Fears • The Pimp and the Primary 9 Comment Hed Goes Here BY FRED BARNES France learns a hard lesson about immigration BY CHRISTOPHER CALDWELL 5 The assassination conspiracy theories that just won’t die BY PHILIP TERZIAN The struggle to drain the swamp will never cease BY JAY COST Articles 15 A Time of Reckoning BY MARY EBERSTADT Second thoughts about the sexual revolution 17 The IT Guy and Wasserman Schultz BY JENNA LIFHITS Allegations of fraud, theft, bigamy, and violence surround Imran Awan 19 Deferring to Trump on Trade BY HALEY BYRD Congress could in theory have a greater say on tariffs. Don’t hold your breath. 6 21 Commodification, Where Is Thy Sting? BY STEPHEN MILLER The world needs more of it, not less Features 22 Heretics & Etiquette BY KEVIN D. WILLIAMSON The social-media generation is the most status-obsessed since the ancien régime 26 The Lion of South London BY JAMES CAMPBELL Lionel Shriver does not want to write books in which people only say the right thing 31 As the E.U. Weakens BY DOMINIC GREEN The nation-state reconsidered 19 Books & Arts 34 Decline . BY PHILIP DELVES BROUGHTON From crumbling infrastructure to broken meritocracy, Steven Brill sees problems 35 . and Division BY JAMES BOWMAN The decisions that led to today’s heightened partisanship 38 From Ironic to Iconic BY CHRISTOPHER ATAMIAN How Takashi Murakami unites kitsch, mockery, and tradition 40 Understanding the ‘Beautiful Game’ BY ALAN JACOBS The logic of the world’s most popular sport 41 Ragtime to Riches BY JOHN CHECK A musician’s knack for covering songs in vintage styles led to a YouTube powerhouse 43 Heist in Heels BY JOHN PODHORETZ All-woman crew boosts bling in latest Ocean’s caper 22 44 Parody The other summit giveaway COVER BY DAVE CLEGG THE SCRAPBOOK Anthony Bourdain, 1956-2018 ny assessment of Anthony Bour- the country that made him famous A dain’s life, his suicide notwith- and wealthy and he never engaged standing, is likely to be tinged with in the sort of anti-patriotic tut-tut- jealousy. We suppose someone had ting one sees from many famous to get paid to be a world traveler and Americans abroad. The writer James bon vivant, but did Bourdain have to Gleick reports that he appeared on be so good at it? At a minimum, few a panel discussion with Bourdain in people have a constitution that can Australia where an audience mem- alternately subsist on gallons of rich ber asked whether the 9/11 attacks bone marrow and spicy Asian street weren’t America’s own fault. While food cooked in hygienically mysteri- Gleick was mulling over what to say, ous circumstances. Bourdain immediately responded America’s favorite food writer was with string of profanities directed at brusque and opinionated and, perhaps cooks regard these members of the the questioner ending with “and the too often, offensive. But there was dining public—and their Hezbollah- horse you rode in on.” much to admire in a man who refused like splinter faction, the vegans—as Imaginative, ferociously curious, to abide mediocrity or bow to the dic- enemies of everything that’s good and humane in the widest sense, cool tates of cultural fashion. The 1999 New decent in the human spirit.” but never pretentious—Anthony Yorker essay that made him famous Bourdain was not unaware of Bourdain was one of those rare celeb- declared of vegetarians that “serious America’s shortcomings, but he loved rities who was justly celebrated. ♦ The (Unruly) Streets “People are starting to ask, ‘Maybe Washington Post is a strong contender we need a Rudy Giuliani?’ ” one resi- for Dumbest Op-Ed Ever Written. of San Francisco dent tells the Times. Giuliani, readers The article, by Suzanna Danuta Wal- will remember, saved New York by ters—according to her byline a “pro- bucking the doctrinaire liberalism of fessor of sociology and director of the the city’s political and cultural elite and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Stud- directing its police force to, you know, ies Program at Northeastern Univer- arrest people for breaking the law. sity” and “editor of the gender studies The primary reason more of San journal Signs”—is headlined “Why Francisco’s concerned citizens don’t Can’t We Hate Men?” simply plump for the GOP—such is The question is rhetorical. She the impression of the Times reporter, can and does hate men, judging from anyway—is Donald Trump. Nobody her contribution to the Post. Walters’s Awaiting their Hizzoner wants to be associated with that reasoning goes something like this: guy. “It’s hard,” says one resident, Although it’s true that not every male hings have gotten bad in Cali- “because people don’t want to iden- on earth is a bad person, she doesn’t T fornia. So bad, in fact, as the tify as Republican, per se. But then like to hear feminists qualify their New York Times recently reported, they look around.” arguments with the statement that all that some not insignificant num- Irving Kristol famously quipped men aren’t bad. Why? Because most ber of San Franciscans are actually that a neoconservative is a liberal men are really really terrible. thinking of . voting Republican. who got mugged by reality. Maybe Or something like that. Anyway, The streets are filthy, crime is on the a San Francisco Republican is just a we’ll spare readers the trouble and skip uptick, and government services are Democrat who got mugged. ♦ to the end: in decline. Add to that the city’s bur- geoning homeless population—an So men, if you really are #WithUs and excess generated at least in part by #MeThree would like us to not hate you for all the millennia of woe you have produced California’s generous welfare programs e’ve read some dumb and sub- and benefited from, start with this: and the state’s year-round beautiful W standard political pieces in Lean out so we can actually just stand weather—and you begin to think of our day—we may even have gener- up without being beaten down. Pledge New York City in the early 1990s. ated some—but a June 10 piece in the to vote for feminist women only. Don’t BOTTOM: / GETTY; JOSH EDELSON / AFP GETTY MORRIS / BLOOMBERG PAUL DAVID TOP: 2 / THE WEEKLY STANDARD JUNE 25, 2018 run for office. Don’t be in charge of anything. Step away from the power. We got this. And please know that your crocodile tears won’t be wiped away by us anymore. We have every right to hate you. You have done us wrong. #BecausePatriarchy. It is long past time to play hard for Team Femi- nism. And win. You may wonder how the professor’s demand that men step aside and let women win—a demand prem- ised, isn’t it, on the surely anathema sup- position that men are stronger?—is supposed The illustrious to further the cause Professor Walters of feminism. If so, that’s because you’re not a tenured academic and director of a Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program. ♦ For Sale: Local Journalism, Like New ar be it from THE SCRAPBOOK to F judge the philanthropic impulses of the extremely wealthy, but the recent announcement of a $20 million gift to the City University of New York struck us as a bit rich. The money, which will fund the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, was the gift of Craig Newmark, described by the New York Times as “the Craigslist entrepre- neur who arguably forced the news- paper industry to change its business prices, a decrease in circulation, conference, seems unlikely. But he’s model after his website put a dent in and . a decrease in display-ad rates.” clearly developed the philanthro- the lucrative classified ads business.” Newmark’s network of free pist’s taste for seeing his Well, everything is “arguable,” we sites, the Economist noted, name attached promi- suppose. But Craigslist’s free ad list- “has probably done more nently to his acts of gener- ings did far more than “put a dent” than anything to destroy osity: The newly endowed in the “lucrative” business of classi- newspapers’ income.” CUNY program will now fied ads. Newmark’s website, launched Yet suddenly he views be known as the Craig in 1996, was the first horseman of himself as journalism’s sav- Newmark Graduate School the Internet apocalypse that gut- ior. “In this time,” he told of Journalism. ted the newspaper industry. It extin- the Times, “when trustwor- “The way you stand up guished many small, local newspapers thy news is under attack, these days is by putting Craig Newmark that relied on classified ad revenue somebody has to stand your money where your to stay afloat. The company’s trade- up.” Newmark claims he “developed mouth is, and that’s what I’ve done,” mark hippie purple peace sign not- a serious interest in journalism about he remarked humbly. That’s great for withstanding, a Harvard Business 10 years ago, when he started attend- the non-journalist academics who’ll School study found that Craigslist ing journalism conferences,” which, get sleek new offices at CUNY.

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