Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Tremble and Obey

Glenn Greenwald on cancel culture and Martina Navratilova.

Time to Re-Watch

 


"My Precious"

The FutureLawyer has the perfect sign for our times when people are captivated by their smartphones and life passes them by.

Law Enforcement's Delay in Uvalde

Writing in City Journal, retired FBI agent James A. Gagliano analyzes the strategies and makes some proposals. An excerpt:

Why the delayed response? Citing the benefit of hindsight, Colonel McCraw described the decision to wait as “the wrong decision, period.” Cops are fallible human beings. Yes, they make mistakes. The stakes are considerably higher, however, when lives hang in the balance of decision-making that often occurs within an information vacuum. Yet for two decades, law enforcement professionals have talked about the modifications that the profession made to tactical-response protocols following the April 20, 1999, Columbine mass shooting, where an after-action review indicated an interminably long 47 minutes had transpired between the first shots from Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold and law enforcement officers’ entry into Columbine High School. It has been more than 23 years since those painful lessons were learned. Yet it appears we must relearn them.

On My Desk



Monday, May 30, 2022

Historian Rick Atkinson on Planning for D-Day

 


"The Last To Let You Down"

 


Memorial Day



But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate -- we can not consecrate -- we can not hallow -- this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Abraham Lincoln
November 19, 1863



[Photo by Robert Linder at Unsplash]

"Mansions of the Lord"

 


Saturday, May 28, 2022

Out-Read Your Competition

 Wally Bock has some thought-provoking reading lists for business leaders.

Probably True

A Large Regular has a shot of The Original Childhood Obesity Test. 

Apologies and Litigation

Althouse on the altruism of The Daily Beast vis-a-vis the Hunter Biden laptop story.

From 2014: The Author of "The Gift of Fear"

 


Copland for Saturday

 


You and They


  • You believe in freedom of speech for all. They believe in freedom of speech for those with certain viewpoints.
  • You believe in judging people by their conduct. They believe in judging them by their thoughts as well as their conduct. They also believe they can determine those thoughts.
  • You believe that causes and motives are often complicated and multi-faceted. They believe the reasons behind behavior can be easily traced to one item.
  • You believe that power needs to be limited regardless of which side is in control. They believe that it is more important to get the right people into power and, when that occurs, there should be few, if any, limits on power. [The right people, of course, are those who agree with them.]
  • You believe in conversations. They may pretend to converse but their primary goal is to convert.
  • You believe politics should not be injected into some arenas. They believe that no arena should be immune from political expression or considerations.
  • You believe in equal opportunity. They believe in equal results. They will determine when and how those results are reached.
  • You believe in viewpoint diversity. They oppose such diversity because their viewpoint is the only one that matters.
  • You believe in transparency. They reject transparency if granting it might jeopardize their programs.
  • You believe in courtesy. They mock courtesy but will demand it from you.
  • You tend to favor legislatures and elections over courts and lawsuits. They prefer the opposite. 
  • You are wary of bureaucracy. They are wary of the electorate. 
  • You want rules equally applied. They want exceptions for their side.
  • You are suspicious of all elites. There is an elite they strongly support. They see one of its members everyday in the mirror.

Needed Question in Public Policy Debates

 


"Would you please tell me again how that works?"

First Paragraph

It is a sin to write this. It is a sin to think words no others think and to put them down upon a paper no others are to see. It is base and evil. It is as if we were speaking alone to no ears but our own. And we know well that there is no transgression blacker than to do or think alone. We have broken the laws. The laws say that men may not write unless the Council of Vocations bid them so. May we be forgiven!

- From Anthem by Ayn Rand

Friday, May 27, 2022

Ah, When Newsmen Peddled Cigarettes

 


Americana

 


Great Book Titles: A Series


 

Automatic




 Organizations don't automatically obey the law. Management does not automatically adopt sound practices. Leaders don't automatically consider whether their policies are ethically sound. People don't automatically do what is in their best interest.

Be Prepared

 


Thursday, May 26, 2022

Hans

 


Great Book Titles: A Series

 


"How to Respond to Uvalde?"

Robert VerBruggen of The Manhattan Institute considers some options. 

Weasels

 Solveig Lucia Gold on "What Princeton Did to My Husband." An excerpt:

I watched the man I love become a shell of his former self, as he realized that many of his closest friends were not friends at all.

Who Owns the Future?

 


Vision Meets Reality


The ideas are important. The insight is valuable. The direction is great.

But at some point, someone has to know the most basic elements of getting from Point A to Point Z.

That is not a lesser responsibility.

Re-Reading

 


Wednesday, May 25, 2022

"Divorce Italian Style" Theme Song


 

Wise

 Seek simplicity, then distrust it.

- Alfred North Whitehead

Reading Scores and Anti-Racism

As is always the case in our crazy-quilt, multiracial, multicultural country, the picture varies, depending on which kids you’re looking at. If you categorize by states, the lowest scores can be found in Alabama and New Mexico, with just 21 percent of eighth-graders reading proficiently. The best thing to say about these results is that they make the highest-scoring state—Massachusetts, with 47 percent of students proficient—look like a success story rather than the mediocrity it is.

Read all of Kay S. Hymowitz's article in City Journal.

First Paragraph

This book is about how to communicate effectively with people who hold radically different beliefs. We live in a divided, politicized era, and we're not talking with each other. The repercussions of this are vast and deep, including the fear of speaking openly and honestly, an inability to solve shared problems, and lost friendships.

- From How to Have Impossible Conversations: A Very Practical Guide by Peter Boghossian and James Lindsay

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

A Good Measure

 Political Calculations checks in on Campbell's Tomato Soup prices.

This Sounds Like Science Fiction or Fantasy

Here is the Statement of the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America on the removal of a panelist at their conference. The statement says she was removed for uttering a racial slur.

From what I've been able to find, the offensive word was "colored."

Perhaps litigation will result from the way the group described the incident. A "racial slur" implies that a far more offensive term was used.

Author of "The Dying Citizen"

 


Freedom of Speech and Joshua Katz

Althouse: Princeton fires Joshua Katz.

A case to watch.

[Updated.]

Key Element


We can try various management theories and strive to focus and get everything going in the same direction while recognizing that every day brings new challenges (most of which are old but we just learned of them).

All of the strategies, however, will be doomed if we do not learn to say no and to say it often and to say it to a lot of things we'd like to do.

The Seeds are Out There

 Totalitarian movements are mass organizations of atomized, isolated individuals.

- Hannah Arendt

Documentary Break

 




Monday, May 23, 2022

Reprise

 


Some Leaders

Some leaders do not veer into incompetence. They accumulate their inadequacy over time, call every failure a success, and turn the whole performance into an art.

Find Your Style



[Photo by Serhiy Hipskyy at Unsplash]

In the Pipeline

 


From "The Great Awokening"

You're taught that on race issues, you are morally obliged to suspend your usual standards of logic. Faced with a choice between some benign medacity and being mauled, few human beings choose the latter.

- John McWhorter

Reprise: Radio Garden

 Where you can zoom in on radio stations around the world.

The FutureLawyer Aviary


There are many strange birds seated behind desks in law offices. 

The FutureLawyer was the first U.S. law office to have parrots in the lobby.

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Simply Excellent


 This is not Wally Bock.

Wally Bock on great teachers and great leaders.

The Attraction of the Negative


Just as you can find individuals who have achieved one success after another and yet believe they are impostors, you can find members of a group with a similar record who insist their group is a victim.

All of us have individual flaws and all of us, at one point or another, may be treated adversely because of our group. If we search long enough, perhaps we can find negatives, but is that a sound use of our time?

For Freedom of Expression and Nondiscrimination

 Check out: 

Friday, May 20, 2022

May This Run on a Loop in the Homes of My Enemies

 


First Paragraph

The thesis of this book is very simple. It is that Communists are Communists. I intend to show that they are exactly what they say they are; they believe what they say they believe; their objective is the objective they have repeatedly proclaimed to all the world; their organization is the organization they have described in minute detail; and their moral code is the one they have announced without shame. Once we accept the fact that Communists are Communists, and understand the laws of their thought and conduct, all the mystery disappears, and we are confronted with a movement which is frightening in its superb organization, strategic mobility and universal program, but which is perfectly understandable and almost mathematically predictable.

- From You Can Trust The Communists (to do exactly as they say) by Dr. Fred Schwarz

This Might Work

 


Transformative Social and Emotional Learning

 Max Eden on the political slant to what has been a respected program.

Serious Days and Serious People

 


The Man Who Never Sleeps


It is not surprising that Nicholas Bate - consultant, trainer, prolific author/novelist - knows how to make a serious cup of coffee.


[Photo by Kris Atomic at Unsplash]

Where the Problems Lurk



Footnotes. Priorities. Execution. Definitions. Estimates. Forecasts. Placement. Rumors. Buzzwords. Deadlines. Assumptions. Titles. Budgets. Success.


[Photo by Casey Allen at Unsplash]

Big Elon

I will say one thing for Elon Musk: he makes the right sort of enemies

On My Desk

 


Thursday, May 19, 2022

Don't Sugarcoat It

Almost everybody needs more education after high school. What they don't need is to chase after this fraudulent, destructive, antediluvian piece of paper called a BA. The thesis of my argument really is that the BA is the work of the devil.

- Charles Murray

Trail Wisdom

A Layman's Blog has some wisdom from Louis L'Amour.

Modern Times

The easiest way to close a performance gap between groups is to make the successful group fail.

- Wilfred Reilly


Good Times Ahead

 


Orwell Smiles


 

Maybe this is the moment when the rise of censorship began to slow and our nation began to heal!

- Ann Althouse on the end of the Disinformation Governance Board

Catalytic Crime Wave

 Arizona has a new law to discourage the theft of catalytic converters.

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Other Duties As Assigned


Amid all of life's career plans, it is important to remember that the ability to attain a particular position is often only remotely related to the abilities which are needed once you are on the job.

Serious Teaching

 


Woke Reading Update

The National PTA has "A Family Guide to Selecting Diverse Books."

As a un-woke child many decades ago, my reading list was filled with characters who were like me. That's why I read books and poems about pirates, eccentric doctors, slaves, highwaymen, animals, explorers, natives in the South Pacific, and Indians.

My main concern, of course, was whether it was a good story, not which group was being represented. I also had little interest in the background of the authors.

And I would have quickly spotted preaching.

Re-Reading



Beware of Utopians

 


Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Find Your Style


[Photo by Tyler Nix at Unsplash]

Transports Me to a Better Place

 The photo at Cultural Offering.

Team Member

Was smart, not brilliant. Didn't stun anyone by producing works of genius.

But when any role or assignment landed on this person's desk, it was handled in a thoroughly competent manner.

A highly reliable, low maintenance, team member.

In other words, a great team member.

Not Gritty Enough

 


Perspective

 There are no solutions, only trade-offs.

- Thomas Sowell

Vaughan Williams Break

 


6th Grade Arithmetic and Climate Change

The American Spectator: Rael Jean Isaac notes the elementary calculations of Francis Menton's blog on climate change.

Here are Menton's comments before the New York Climate Change Council:

You’re going to need at least 10,000 GWH of storage to back up just current usage if you replace fossil fuel generation with wind and solar. At the price of Tesla batteries, that will run you about $1.5 trillion, which is approximately the entire GDP of New York State. If you triple electricity consumption by electrifying vehicles and homes, then you must triple the storage, and it will cost at least three times GDP. And by the way, you need a battery that can store electricity all the way from summer to winter without all the energy dissipating and then discharge over the course of months. No existing battery can do that…. How could you commit us to this without any feasibility study, any detailed cost workup, let alone a demonstration project showing that it can be done?

Here is the link to Manhattan Contrarian.

Girl with a Pearl Earring

 


Black Swan Europa takes a look. Very interesting.

Never Underestimate The Old Man

 


Monday, May 16, 2022

Attention

If you don't take appropriate attention to what has your attention, it will take more of your attention than it deserves.

- David Allen

Thought Police 101

 Noah Rothman: "Why the Left Thinks It Can Change Your Mind By Changing the Language."

Robot Update

 


Notes from the Aristocracy: Lawyers


City Journal: John O. McGinnis, "Lawyers for Radical Change."

Gathering Thoughts



I'm working on B, C, and Z in order to open my mind to A.

That means I am working on A.


[Photo by Jonathan Kemper at Unsplash]

Lex Fridman and Glenn Loury

 


A Pleasant Chore


[Long-term plan shown above.]

A portion of the weekend involved increasing the number of bookshelves in the house (including the kitchen area).

Time well spent. Books still being shelved. Subjects being organized.

Big smiles all around.

Saturday, May 14, 2022

Anti-Social Media

 


Sometimes, They Aren't So Terrible


Political Calculations: Why you should read terrible books.


[Photo by Annie Spratt at Unsplash]

Automata

Their conduct was the revenge of men constrained to behave like machines: a revenge not upon the author of their servitude, of course, for that was impossible at the time, but upon those who fell within their extremely limited power.

- Theodore Dalrymple, "How to Read a Society": an essay in Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses

Some Powerful Adversaries


 

If they propose gaining the approval of an outside organization, assume that organization is already in accord with their beliefs.

If they favor following a policy, do recall that their allies wrote that policy.

If they seem offended, regard their anger as a well-rehearsed performance.

If they use specific terms, be sure to get the definitions.

Never forget that they are not there to discuss, they are there either to convert you or accept your surrender.


Innovation

 Wally Bock provides leadership lessons from Sir John Moore and the Rifles.

Still Stunning

 


Friday, May 13, 2022

Social Workers

 


Mass Communication Theory


"Spiral of Silence."


[Photo by Brett Jordan at Unsplash]

The Six-Pager

"At Amazon, after a brief exchange of greetings and chitchat, everyone sits at a table, and the room goes completely silent. Silent, as in not a word. The reason for the silence? A six-page document that everyone must read before discussion begins."

- From Working Backwards: Insights, Stories, and Secrets from Inside Amazon by Colin Bryar and Bill Carr

Not Just Another Novel

 


Thursday, May 12, 2022

Sleep Loss Epidemic

 


"The New Normal"

The new normal: 

Just breast feed if you can't find formula. 

Just buy an electric car if you don't like the price of gas. 

Just put in a generator for planned outages. 

Just grow your own food if the shelves are empty. 

Just accept what we tell you.

- Joel Engel

In My Stack

 


Michael Caine But No "Zulu"

 


Narrow Connections



 More connections than cohesion. 

That pretty much summed up an observation made in a portion of a study of our distracted culture.

In the past, people often connected via PTA meetings and bowling clubs, card games and Rotary clubs. But for many people in today's society, those opportunities to know a person beyond a single electronically-made connection are gone.

I don't have any magic answers but we need to pause and consider just what has been lost.

We may have the sentence without the paragraph and the message without the person.

In short, we may be losing a lot.


[Photo by Ben Kolde at Unsplash]

The Sum Total of Civilization

Of course, civilization is not only an attachment to the highest peaks of human achievement. It relies for its maintenance upon an infinitely complex and delicate tissue of relations and activities, some humble and others grand. The man who sweeps the streets plays his part as surely as the great artist or thinker. Civilization is the sum total of all those activities that allow men to transcend mere biological existence and reach for a richer mental, aesthetic, material, and spiritual life.

- From "What We Have to Lose" in Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses  by Theodore Dalrymple

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Check This Out

 


"When the Mob is Right"

Jonathan Turley analyzes the "when the mob is right" argument of a Georgetown law professor. 

For years, I've been warning my ethics classes about the idea of particularists who alter what are supposed to be uniformly-applied standards. 

They do so because it favors their family, friends, colleagues, and political associates.

Listen Up


It's a rare person who wants to hear what he doesn't want to hear.

- Attributed to Dick Cavett

ACLU Sinking

 Writing in The Atlantic, Law professor Lara Bazelon with "The ACLU Has Lost Its Way."

Find Your Style

 


[Photo by Tamara Bellis at Unsplash]

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Crank It Up

 


Midge Decter, RIP

Abe Greenwald gives a sample of her Commentary magazine contributions.

Parental Rights in Education

City Journal: Thom Nickels on the Florida law.

The Wave

 


Give Us Some Space




A majority of Americans want companies to stay out of politics. They want to have a separate space for where they shop, where they work, and where they invest from the places where they cast their ballots or engage in their political debates.

- Vivek Ramaswamy, author of Woke, Inc.

[Quoted in The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2022 edition article: "Stakeholder Capitalism Criticized"]

On The Bobos

What if the people in charge of the system, the corrupt, oppressive system—indeed, who clawed their meritocratic way into the leadership class of that system—are us? Such thoughts, so obvious and yet so impermissible, perforce create an intolerable psychic dissonance. We must disavow, disavow, disavow: disavow not only our position in America, but America itself. Disavow the Founders; disavow Lincoln; disavow Columbus, Thanksgiving, the flag; disavow borders and national interests. “America,” for us, is NASCAR, guns, McDonald’s. “Americans” are fat, lazy, and stupid. Has there ever been another elite that repudiated the very country it led? We may not see ourselves for what we are, but everybody else does: hypocrites.

Read the rest of the William Deresiewicz essay here.

"Let Them Eat Prestige?"

Washington Examiner: Gabriel Rossman on the low pay of adjunct faculty.

Monday, May 09, 2022

Your Next Project


 

Working Backwards



See Wally Bock's review of the book here.

The Home Protests

 Law professor Jonathan Turley discusses the White House's failure to denounce the protests/harassment at the homes of Supreme Court Justices.

This is not only a matter of basic decency but also one in which it is important to know the strategy. The protesters are seeking to get at the Justices through their families. The signal is home is not a sanctuary and families are not safe. [No one knows how many mentally unbalanced people are in those crowds.] The protests are also telling individuals who might disagree with them on other issues that the same strategy can be used against them.

That second part may be the key factor. If you were a judge and protesters were shouting outside of your home, would that cause you to switch your opinion or would it instead harden your position? 

In my own case, it would be the latter.

Regardless of our political beliefs, we need to declare that type of behavior to be off-limits. 

Strengthen the High School Diploma


I believe that we as a nation would be far better served if, instead of focusing on improving the quality of college degrees, we made the knowledge represented by a high school diploma to be as impressive as it was in the Thirties and Forties.

First Paragraph

Sam Zemurray spoke with no accent, except when he swore, which was all the time. He was a big man, six foot three, rangy, nothing but muscle and bone, with the wingspan of a condor, hooded eyes, and a crisp no-nonsense manner. If you saw him in the French Quarter, walking fast, you got out of the way. He lived uptown. If he was down here, it meant he was working.

- From The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King by Rich Cohen

In the Pipeline

 




Saturday, May 07, 2022

Reprise


 

Please Add "Hornswoggle"


 

You'll find an excellent list of "Words to Use More Often" at Cultural Offering.

First Paragraph

The logic of politics is not complex. In fact, it is surprisingly easy to grasp most of what goes on in the political world as long as we are ready to adjust our thinking ever so modestly. To understand politics properly, we must modify one assumption in particular: we must stop thinking that leaders can lead unilaterally.

- From The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behavior Is Almost Always Good Politics by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith 

Indoctrination or Teaching?

 Should the United States be a color blind nation? Is it important to discuss concepts of privilege and prejudice? Note: The instructor should be prepared to discuss what color blind means perhaps by citing examples of people who state, “I don’t see race.”

·        Suggested answers: The U.S. should not be a color blind nation. People should recognize individuals’ ethnicity and their own. Prejudice and privilege affect all of us in different ways. Having discussions about these concepts when they occur can help the world respond and work to end prejudice and privilege.

·        If students don’t know what prejudice means, the instructor should be prepared to explain the concept to the class.

- The above is an excerpt from the guidelines on "Talking About Race and Privilege: Lesson Plan for Middle and High School Students" 

[Citation: National Association of School Psychologists. (2016). Talking About Race and Privilege: Lesson Plan for Middle and High School Students [handout]. Bethesda, MD: Author.]


Beginning of an Economic Recovery

PLACE: Frankfurt, Germany in July 1948 

PEOPLE

  • General Lucius D. Clay, military governor of the U.S. occupation zone in Germany 
  • Professor Ludwig Erhard, chairman of the Economic Council of the emerging West German government
SITUATION: Erhard has just abolished the rationing of food and other essentials and has removed all wage and price controls.

GENERAL CLAY: "Herr Erhard, my advisers tell me that what you have done is a terrible mistake. What do you say to that?"

PROFESSOR ERHARD: "Herr General, pay no attention to them! My own advisers tell me the same thing."

Erhard then went on to explain the advantages of a "socially responsive free-market economy."

Clay agreed with him.

[Adapted from an account in The Fourth and Richest Reich by Edwin Hartrich]

Hmm

 


Friday, May 06, 2022

The Power of Not Knowing What Can't Be Done

 


Personnel Update

Jordan Peterson is accepting the post of chancellor at Ralston College in Georgia.

Ranking the Sherlocks


CrimeReads: Olivia Rutigliano gives a top 100 ranking of the portrayals of Sherlock Holmes.

And it's hard to disagree with her #1 choice.


[Photo by Soyoung Han at Unsplash]

Be Sure to Read the Ending

 Wally Bock has the fascinating personal and business story of Margaret Rudkin.

"How Does This Place Operate?"



The above is an obvious question, right?

Well, consider how often it is not asked, both by new employees and by those who know the organization has gone through serious changes.

If the answer cannot be given in clear language, perhaps the speaker doesn't know.

Hoffer

It is only when the oyster keeps its mouth shut that a grain of sand within may become a pearl.

- Eric Hoffer

Good Times in D.C.

 


Thursday, May 05, 2022

Collapsing or Thriving?

Is the West collapsing, or is it thriving? On the evidence, it can be hard to tell. The correct answer might be some of both. In the arena of culture, the inheritance of the West is in decline; in regard to the institutions of civilization, it still advances. The meaning of this, and how it has happened, are questions that do not admit of easy answers. Will the attack on Western ideas and ideals lead to a collapse of the civilizational institutions that arose from them? Or might the continuing strength of those institutions provoke a revival of those ideas?

- James Piereson, "Culture Against Civilization" - The New Criterion, May 2022

Crank It Up

 


"Space Captain."

Productivity Boosters


Nicholas Bate has a nifty list. Jump right to the one about the f-word.


[Photo by Sophi Raju at Unsplash.]

Intellectual Candy Shop

 


I still have the above book, which I bought in 1966 for an Introduction to Government class. It cost 75 cents. [Money well spent.] 

Some people thought the class was boring. I thought it was fascinating.

Wednesday, May 04, 2022

Excerpt

For weeks after, Moscow-based state news agencies made no mention of the ongoing disaster. Nor did Communist Party General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev. Six days after the explosion, as nuclear fragments continued to rain down from Chernobyl's toxic cloud, party officials evacuated their own children to safety on the Crimean peninsula, even as they instructed Ukraine's citizens to carry on with their annual May Day parade. Just sixty miles south of Chernobyl's ground zero, thousands of people - including countless children - marched down Kyiv's main drag of Khreschatyk Street. They carried flowers, flags, and portraits of Soviet leaders, unaware that those same leaders had knowingly exposed them to the fallout of one of the worst industrial disasters in history.

- From Sandworm: A New Era of Cyberwar and the Hunt for the Kremlin's Most Dangerous Hackers by Andy Greenberg

An Intellectual Prison

 Quillette: Bo Winegard describes his experience.

They will defend unto death your right to agree with them.

Hmm

 


BUMMER

 Seems like a good moment to coin an acronym so I don't have to repeat, over and over, the same account of the pieces that make up the problem. How about "Behaviors of Users Modified, and Made into an Empire for Rent"? BUMMER.

- Jaron Lanier, Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Right Now 

Don't Judge Me Populism

 Abigail Shrier on J.D. Vance and the "don't judge me" culture. An excerpt:

 “It’s one thing to take an appreciation that cultural circumstances matter,” Vance said to me, of his approach. “It’s another thing to wag your finger at people and tell them the reason they’re not doing better is because they’re just making bad choices. And I think conservatives have to be able to hold two thoughts in their head at the same time: Personal responsibility does really matter; we don’t want to tell everybody that they’re a victim… But also people’s circumstances matter too.”