These a-holes. About what happened:
Of course Jen Psaki does the issue justice in the daily White House briefing:
Sotomayor strongly dissents
Why don’t we get tougher on this + other issues? Where warranted and legal:
These a-holes. About what happened:
Of course Jen Psaki does the issue justice in the daily White House briefing:
Sotomayor strongly dissents
Why don’t we get tougher on this + other issues? Where warranted and legal:
A strong and prevalent cognitive bias that causes a large majority of people to rate themselves more highly and more skilled than statistically possible. Lack of self-awareness can cause us to overestimate our knowledge or ability in a given area, and this phenomenon is known as the Dunning-Kruger Effect.
Posited in 1999 by two Cornell psychologists, Professors Dunning and Kruger also found that low-skilled people often have a double bind: they think of themselves as very skilled, but the lack even the basic level of skill that would allow them to detect and learn from their mistakes to get better. It’s very difficult for them to get out of the “trap” of perceiving themselves as superior, thus obviating any need to continue effort at improvements.
They also found that individuals of high skill levels also suffer from a sort of “lensing effect” (now dubbed the Dunning-Kruger Effect accordingly) in terms of their own self-assessment, but in the other direction — they are not generally aware of the rarity of their gifts. They assume most other people have the same kinds of knowledge and critical thinking skills that they do. In other words, careful study of our images of ourselves found us all to be living in a bubble of inaccurate self-perception, on both ends.
It’s been said that the devilish ways of pedophiliac liberal Democrats are killing Christianity in America, but the numbers tell a different story. Following the 2016 Armistice in the War on Christmas, Donald Trump yet managed to drive 1 in 7 Evangelicals from the fold, according to data from Pew and PRRI.


Far from the surge in True Believers prophesied by the right wing, the religious right’s deal with the proverbial and/or literal devil seems to have driven members away. Trump is losing Evangelicals, and really — should we be so shocked? If it doesn’t matter (to some) whether our leaders are serial philanderers and lifelong business cheats, or earnestly striving public servants spreading compassion — what use is their moral code, then? None. It is bankrupt.
The religious right can’t have it both ways — either moral leadership is important, or it isn’t. It can’t selectively be important *only* when a Democrat is in power. Evangelicals also need to make a choice between God and Caesar. Prosperity gospel is the latter and not the former, but many pretend otherwise or are fooled — after all, fool’s gold can still fool.
Cognitive dissonance upon dissonance continues to fall in the totally unraked forest of right-wing values. I’m aiming to continue pulling on a few threads connecting the religious right, and Evangelicals in particular, to the rise of political extremism in the Republican Party:
The whitewashing of the Civil War to assuage white Southern guilt, Lost Cause refers to the historical gaslighting of the former Confederates. New mythology reinvented our nation’s greatest internal conflict as if it had been more of a technocratic war over states’ rights and the limits of federal power, instead of the truth — which is that the seditionists first seceded, then started a war against the northern states, to preserve their right to own human beings as slaves.
When they lost the war, they never accepted defeat, or put down their conviction that white people (conveniently, them) ought to “naturally” rule over the dark people (conveniently, not them) because, you know, God said so. It is known. Many people are saying.
Nevertheless, the South did have to put up with the ignomy of federal occupation for several years before they were able to expel the godless globalists and return to their safe, secure, sadistic ways of slavering. It sent the Confederates’ sense of wounded pride soaring when they could finally recreate slavery under other names, after the short-lived era of Reconstruction gave way to the terrifying age of southern “Redemption.”
Peonage, convict leasing, sharecropping, and other forms of neoslavery persisted all the way through at least 1954, when the Sumter slavery case was one of the last judicial prosecutions of involuntary servitude in the United States.
1954.
The Confederacy, and with it the idea of Black servitude, stayed alive in the hearts and minds of the former Confederates — many of whom were pardoned and later went on to sit in Congress making decisions about the direction of the “union,” all the while harboring seditious views, biding their time, and awaiting the next opportunity to viciously strike. This sort of “fantasy football” fanfic version of a hallucinatory alternate history where the South won the Civil War is not just alarming, but very very dangerous.
That the Confederates were given only light slaps on the wrist before being allowed to reassume the mantle of legitimate power is bad enough. But worse — they lashed white supremacy to the mast of white southern Christianity in efforts to shore them both up, forever interweaving and corrupting a certain strain of red state Evangelical zealotry into something consciously or unconsciously celebrating white supremacy and harboring fever dreams of a white theocracy in America.
Or, DADA vs. MAGA. Defense Against the Dark Arts was like the women’s self-defense class of Hogwarts — it taught you how to prepare yourself for the evil that was out there lurking and waiting for you out there. This course of DADA will follow suit, aiming to offer ways to detect, defend, and defeat the cultism rising in America and beyond.
It will be a work in progress over time, so please bear with me as I assemble learnings from a number of sources.
The internet, social media, seemingly infinite channels of entertainment and franchises in gaming are but tips of the giant iceberg that now competes for our time and attention. The number of options to choose from has scaled exponentially over the past several decades — but our amount of time to spend has not increased whatsoever. If anything, it’s decreased
| proteanism | cultism |
|---|---|
| seeks expansion of event horizon | radical reduction of the "size of the universe" and human potential |
| open system | closed system |
| personal growth | stagnation; stasis |
| Bayesian logic | motivated reasoning |
| collects data | selective exposure |
| positive disintegration | immaturity |
| questions authority | follows orders |
| new ideas | old dogma |
| improvisational | ritual |
| iterative | recursive |
| expansive | limited |
| motivated by love | motivated by fear |
| generative | destructive |
The following list must be prefaced with some caveats about painting with broad strokes, and acknowledging everything is a distribution and Not All Republicans espouse all of these things to the same degree or even at all. Nevertheless, both the extremism and the polarization in our political system is the highest in recent memory — certainly in the totality of my Generation X memory, and by all accounts the highest since the 1930s. Extremism is high on both the Left and the Right, but research shows it’s been growing much more extreme on the Right.
And in many ways it feels like we are living through something akin to the 1930s, again. The rise in authoritarian regimes and totalist thought and linguistic patterns is troubling and dangerous. The United States never had an armed insurrection take over the Capitol building prior to January 6, 2021. America has had many periods of brutality in its past and present, but historically speaking nothing like the recent decades of escalating mass shooter events.
What can explain the religious devotion to a failed businessman and failed President on the Right? Loathe him through we might on the Left, Trump is revered on the Right for espousing the “virtues” of a traditional hierarchical society, and for giving coded approval to America’s most shadowy extremist groups that he would be finding excuses to look the other way if they chose to strike. They both held up their ends of the bargain, with would-be assassins in tactical gear assaulting the nation’s lawmakers as they certified the 2020 election results as mandated by the Constitution, and paid puppets in the Senate letting them all off the hook… technically speaking, that is.
Trump looked the other way, but only for another 14 days — until Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th President of the United States. With a new sheriff Merrick Garland in town, all bets are off regarding leniency for the nation’s most vile and seditious lot who stormed the Capitol and disrupted the peaceful transfer of power for the first time in US history — a sad day for the country and its venerable history of managing to keep the republic.
This will be a work in progress, as usual. And a tool for discussion — we’re going to need it for the coming years.
| Liberal Values | Authoritarian Values |
|---|---|
| Equality | Hierarchy |
| Justice | Force |
| Liberty | Control |
| Popular sovereignty | Unpopular rule |
| Common good | Privatization |
| Logic | Magical Thinking |
| Reason | Power |
| Truth | Propaganda |
| History | Myth |
| Reality | Fantasy |
| Responsibility | Escapism |
| Rationality | Irrationality |
| Integrity | Hypocrisy |
| Character | Character disorder |
| Wisdom | Ignorance |
| Generosity | Greed |
| Honesty | Deception |
| Earnestness | Cynicism |
| Skepticism | Loyalty |
| Curiosity | Boredom |
| Compassion | Contempt |
| Empathy | Sadism |
| Driven by care | Driven by fear |
| Morality | Nihilism |
| Transparency | Secrecy |
| Consideration | Callousness |
| Patience | Impatience |
| Maturity | Immaturity |
| Emotional intelligence | Emotional manipulation |
| Wholeheartedness | Cognitive dissonance |
| Vulnerability | Defensiveness |
| Authenticity | Mimicry |
| Deliberation | Act without thinking |
| De-escalation | Aggression |
| Conscious | Unconscious |
| Self-aware | Self-deception |
| Education | Brainwashing |
| Diversity | Conformity |
| Creativity | Destruction |
| Artistic | Fundamentalist |
| Solutions | Grievance |
| Community | Rugged individualism |
| Trust | Distrust |
| Gratitude | Envy |
| Respect | Disrespect |
| Sustainability | Extraction |
| Self-regard | Cathexis |
| Spirituality | Religiosity |
| Self-actualization | Follow the leader |
| Problem solvers | "Tear it down"-ers |
Unthinking is a kind of militant stance against thinking, for oneself and others. It goes beyond a simple distaste for or preference against thinking, and on into something of a dedication, mission, or serious zeal for anti-intellectualism. As well, the Unthinking mentality includes a sort of reverence for instinctiveness and impulsiveness, and a distaste or contempt for “over-thinking” or being “overly sensitive.”
Fascism and cults have a technique in common: “thought stopping.” In cults, followers will be directly taught to attack negative and critical thoughts from their minds via use of a mantra — this further insulates them from independent sources of information outside the cult and its belief systems. Under fascism, the tactics of this type of unthinking are more easily disguisable:
Unthinking is the sinking feeling that perhaps more of Gustave Le Bon’s controversial 1895 Study of the Popular Mind is true than one might hope. Our willingness to trade away our independent, critical thinking faculties to follow orders from authorities has been well-documented — yet somehow we still struggle to wrap our minds around those folks who, well, don’t seem to be nearly as interested in wrapping their minds around stuff.
Those folks do exist, and they have no intention of coming in second place to the coastal brainiacs who manage to enjoy mental labor thank you very much. In the Trumpian world view, if you are at a deficit in the intellect department, you do not under any circumstances accept the intellectual authority of The Enemy as legitimate. You simply rebrand yourself as the “smartest guy in the world” no matter what the subject, and you say it confidently, no matter how absurdly false it is and no matter that all the people around you know it to be false. It is their compliance with your non-stop stream of lies that brands them as useful pawns and allows them to live another day under your beneficent gaze.
Much has been made about how the so-called “Hillbilly Elegy” types are actually a distribution that includes plenty of comfortable and well-off business owners and working professionals who are not struggling economically. While that is true, I think it’s still relevant to the upper-middle class whites who support Trump that they perceive themselves as having not done as well as their liberal Commie counterparts in big cities. They may not be hurting so much themselves in Barbara Eirenreich fashion, but they are “hurting” in terms of status wounds. They are not being recognized as much as they believe they are due.
And they know the reason they’re missing out on this entitlement is because some globalist scum outsmarted them. They know instinctively, whether consciously or unconsciously, that they cannot win in an intellectual battle with the Coastal Elite Enemies. This vulnerability is absolutely unforgiveable and can never be discovered by anyone — so they move the goalposts. They claim that intelligence is a worthless thing to have, and/or that if you have it you’ll be impure and no longer worthy of membership in the tribe. This anti-intellectual streak on the right is equal parts self-delusion (“smarts don’t matter!”) and hyper-competition — by discouraging potential rivals from becoming more educated than they are.
The seemingly inexplicable Evangelical support for the violence of Trumpism can perhaps in part be explained by the great paranoia and growing existential fear of a secularizing nation. In a way, they’re not wrong to be foretelling of the End Times — most likely not the one they’re envisioning from the book of Revelations, but the one where Christianity dwindles from the landscape, leaving a roiling mass of American heathen liberal commies to eat babies at their pedo parties right out in the open.
That reality is happening before our eyes — the dwindling part, anyway, if not so much the rest (if anything, evidence so far has shown those pedo parties are on the Right…). Older believers are dying out, and new ones are not being formed fast enough to create a new base. You could look at this as a triumph of science over superstition, as liberals do — or, you could look at it as a threat to your way of life, as the Trumpists do.
It is highly problematic that there are not really many or even any replacements for religion and the church in terms of providing people a place and a platform for spirituality. As religious adherence continues to drop, this hunger for spiritual solidarity will only grow — many folks will seem as if hungry ghosts, gasping for a wisp of organized religion’s shared hivemind experiences.
Where else shall we get our sacred? What new institutions can we collectively devise, by which to safely explore the mystical unknowns of our most basic existence? How can we find, regain, or re-imagine a sense of shared togetherness and fellowship? How can we rebuild basic reciprocity?
It is urgent we find these answers, for the doomsday clock is running for American democracy.
Baptist Evangelical minister Tim LaHaye’s 12-volume series of novels about the Rapture have sold over 65 million copies, and kept the apocalypse top of mind for the nation’s Evangelicals. Jesus is coming back any day now, and when he does, he is for some reason going to favor all the fat pasty oligarchs who did all the things He warned against and none of the things he preached. This is why some right-wing folks seem frighteningly eager for the world to end — because they are.
Related to:
Empathy is the capacity, ability, and willingness to understand or share the feelings of someone else. It is to harmonize with that person (or animal, or even fictional character…) and synchronize with their mood — to walk a mile in their shoes.
The word empathy comes from a Greek word meaning “suffering,” which describes the ethos of the term in its encapsulation of feeling what another being feels.
Compassion is a behavior made possible by empathy, and is revered throughout culture and the world’s religions. It is considered one of the hallmarks of advanced emotional development, representing selflessness, altruism, and Good Samaritanism. It is to make less distinct, the separation between self and other.
Empaths are some of society’s greatest healers, caregivers, teachers, artists, performers, and leaders. They find unique and often enduring ways to add value in places often left behind by the brutalism of American hypercapitalism.
People with empathy help uplift humanity, and inspire us to do our utmost to care for each other as best we can. Nobody can do everything, but everybody can do something, said a wise man some decades past.
Conversely, individuals who are lacking in empathy can commit some of the most heinous crimes and greatest atrocities in history. People without empathy lack a conscience, which makes them more willing than most to go too far, take things to extremes, and play impulse high-stakes gambling without a net. Hannah Arendt, Erich Fromm, and others chronicled the psychology of the Nazis during its regime and World War II, as well as in its aftermath — they classified the behavior as pathological, from malignant narcissism to even deeper evils within the Cluster B family of personality disorders.
Human beings aren’t the only species with the capacity for empathy. In fact many if not most mammalian species exhibit empathic nurturing behavior, from rodents to primates and cetaceans. Cognitively, the brain system for empathy includes spindle cells, the amygdala, hypothalamus, basal ganglia, insula, orbitofrontal cortex, and brain stem.
Prosocial behaviors thus appear to be an advanced adaptation, to be willing to risk potential sacrifice for other people, including strangers. Perhaps the dividend in profits from the returns of this kind of routine yet extraordinary behavior are the true wealth of the nation.
The vast majority of billionaires in the world got richer during the year of the pandemic — fantastically richer. And they still demand more!
Inequality grows and grows, warping both capitalism and government, and yet still the plutocrats press their advantage further while whining about their invented delusional oppression.
Certainly not all rich people are gigantic assholes, but a depressing many of them are. We can hang onto the good ones while tossing the others out of the Titanic lifeboats where their rugged masculinity can carry them to shore.
see also:
| Name | Net Worth | Wealth Source | Industry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jeff Bezos | $177 B | Amazon | Technology |
| Elon Musk | $151 B | Tesla, SpaceX | Technology |
| Bernard Arnault & family | $150 B | LVMH | Fashion & Retail |
| Bill Gates | $124 B | Microsoft | Technology |
| Mark Zuckerberg | $97 B | Technology | |
| Warren Buffett | $96 B | Berkshire Hathaway | Finance & Investments |
| Larry Ellison | $93 B | software | Technology |
| Larry Page | $91.5 B | Technology | |
| Sergey Brin | $89 B | Technology | |
| Mukesh Ambani | $84.5 B | diversified | Diversified |
| Amancio Ortega | $77 B | Zara | Fashion & Retail |
| Francoise Bettencourt Meyers & family | $73.6 B | L'OrΓ©al | Fashion & Retail |
| Zhong Shanshan | $68.9 B | beverages, pharmaceuticals | Food & Beverage |
| Steve Ballmer | $68.7 B | Microsoft | Technology |
| Ma Huateng | $65.8 B | internet media | Technology |
| Carlos Slim Helu & family | $62.8 B | telecom | Telecom |
| Alice Walton | $61.8 B | Walmart | Fashion & Retail |
| Jim Walton | $60.2 B | Walmart | Fashion & Retail |
| Rob Walton | $59.5 B | Walmart | Fashion & Retail |
| Michael Bloomberg | $59 B | Bloomberg LP | Media & Entertainment |
| Colin Zheng Huang | $55.3 B | e-commerce | Technology |
| MacKenzie Scott | $53 B | Amazon | Technology |
| Daniel Gilbert | $51.9 B | Quicken Loans | Finance & Investments |
| Gautam Adani & family | $50.5 B | infrastructure, commodities | Diversified |
| Phil Knight & family | $49.9 B | Nike | Fashion & Retail |
| Jack Ma | $48.4 B | e-commerce | Technology |
| Charles Koch | $46.4 B | Koch Industries | Oil & Gas |
| Julia Koch & family | $46.4 B | Koch Industries | Oil & Gas |
| Masayoshi Son | $45.4 B | internet, telecom | Technology |
| Michael Dell | $45.1 B | Dell computers | Technology |
| Tadashi Yanai & family | $44.1 B | fashion retail | Fashion & Retail |
| FranΓ§ois Pinault & family | $42.3 B | luxury goods | Fashion & Retail |
| David Thomson & family | $41.8 B | media | Media & Entertainment |
| Beate Heister & Karl Albrecht Jr. | $39.2 B | supermarkets | Fashion & Retail |
| Wang Wei | $39 B | package delivery | Service |
| Miriam Adelson | $38.2 B | casinos | Gambling & Casinos |
| He Xiangjian | $37.7 B | home appliances | Manufacturing |
| Dieter Schwarz | $36.9 B | retail | Fashion & Retail |
| Zhang Yiming | $35.6 B | TikTok | Technology |
| Giovanni Ferrero | $35.1 B | Nutella, chocolates | Food & Beverage |
| Alain Wertheimer | $34.5 B | Chanel | Fashion & Retail |
| Gerard Wertheimer | $34.5 B | Chanel | Fashion & Retail |
| Li Ka-shing | $33.7 B | diversified | Diversified |
| Qin Yinglin & family | $33.5 B | pig breeding | Food & Beverage |
| William Lei Ding | $33 B | online games | Technology |
| Len Blavatnik | $32 B | music, chemicals | Diversified |
| Lee Shau Kee | $31.7 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Jacqueline Mars | $31.3 B | candy, pet food | Food & Beverage |
| John Mars | $31.3 B | candy, pet food | Food & Beverage |
| Yang Huiyan & family | $29.6 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Alexey Mordashov & family | $29.1 B | steel, investments | Metals & Mining |
| Robin Zeng | $28.4 B | batteries | Energy |
| Hui Ka Yan | $27.7 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Susanne Klatten | $27.7 B | BMW, pharmaceuticals | Automotive |
| Vladimir Potanin | $27 B | metals | Metals & Mining |
| Dietrich Mateschitz | $26.9 B | Red Bull | Food & Beverage |
| Pang Kang | $26.4 B | soy sauce | Food & Beverage |
| Klaus-Michael Kuehne | $26.3 B | shipping | Logistics |
| Vladimir Lisin | $26.2 B | steel, transport | Metals & Mining |
| Wang Xing | $26.1 B | e-commerce | Technology |
| German Larrea Mota Velasco & family | $25.9 B | mining | Metals & Mining |
| Leonardo Del Vecchio & family | $25.8 B | eyeglasses | Fashion & Retail |
| Takemitsu Takizaki | $25.8 B | sensors | Manufacturing |
| Leonard Lauder | $25.5 B | Estee Lauder | Fashion & Retail |
| Thomas Peterffy | $25 B | discount brokerage | Finance & Investments |
| Vagit Alekperov | $24.9 B | oil | Energy |
| Leonid Mikhelson | $24.9 B | gas, chemicals | Energy |
| Jim Simons | $24.6 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Jiang Rensheng & family | $24.4 B | vaccines | Healthcare |
| Gina Rinehart | $23.6 B | mining | Metals & Mining |
| Rupert Murdoch & family | $23.5 B | newspapers, TV network | Media & Entertainment |
| Shiv Nadar | $23.5 B | software services | Technology |
| Zhang Zhidong | $23.4 B | internet media | Technology |
| Iris Fontbona & family | $23.3 B | mining | Metals & Mining |
| Lei Jun | $23 B | smartphones | Technology |
| Zhang Yong | $23 B | restaurants | Food & Beverage |
| Richard Qiangdong Liu | $22.4 B | e-commerce | Technology |
| Gennady Timchenko | $22 B | oil, gas | Energy |
| Stephen Schwarzman | $21.9 B | investments | Finance & Investments |
| Goh Cheng Liang | $21.7 B | paints | Manufacturing |
| Stefan Quandt | $21.6 B | BMW | Automotive |
| Li Xiting | $21.5 B | medical devices | Healthcare |
| Pierre Omidyar | $21.4 B | eBay, PayPal | Technology |
| Stefan Persson | $21.3 B | H&M | Fashion & Retail |
| Abigail Johnson | $20.9 B | money management | Finance & Investments |
| R. Budi Hartono | $20.5 B | banking, tobacco | Finance & Investments |
| Andrew Forrest | $20.4 B | mining | Metals & Mining |
| Ray Dalio | $20.3 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Michael Hartono | $19.7 B | banking, tobacco | Manufacturing |
| Li Shufu | $19.7 B | automobiles | Automotive |
| Zhong Huijuan | $19.7 B | pharmaceuticals | Healthcare |
| Xu Hang | $19.5 B | medical devices | Healthcare |
| Lui Che Woo & family | $19.4 B | casinos/hotels | Gambling & Casinos |
| Emmanuel Besnier | $19.1 B | cheese | Food & Beverage |
| Laurene Powell Jobs & family | $19 B | Apple, Disney | Technology |
| Eric Schmidt | $18.9 B | Technology | |
| Sun Piaoyang | $18.9 B | pharmaceuticals | Healthcare |
| Theo Albrecht, Jr. & family | $18.8 B | Aldi, Trader Joe's | Fashion & Retail |
| Alisher Usmanov | $18.4 B | steel, telecom, investments | Metals & Mining |
| Robert Pera | $18.3 B | wireless networking gear | Technology |
| Wu Yajun | $18.3 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Fan Hongwei & family | $18.2 B | petrochemicals | Energy |
| Dhanin Chearavanont | $18.1 B | diversified | Diversified |
| Peter Woo | $18 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Chen Bang | $17.9 B | hospitals | Healthcare |
| Andrey Melnichenko | $17.9 B | coal, fertilizers | Energy |
| Dustin Moskovitz | $17.8 B | Technology | |
| Su Hua | $17.8 B | video streaming | Media & Entertainment |
| Donald Newhouse | $17.6 B | media | Media & Entertainment |
| Petr Kellner | $17.5 B | finance, telecommunications | Finance & Investments |
| Lee Man Tat | $17.4 B | food | Food & Beverage |
| Pavel Durov | $17.2 B | messaging app | Technology |
| James Ratcliffe | $17 B | chemicals | Manufacturing |
| Jorge Paulo Lemann & family | $16.9 B | beer | Food & Beverage |
| Reinhold Wuerth & family | $16.8 B | fasteners | Manufacturing |
| Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken & family | $16.7 B | Heineken | Food & Beverage |
| Radhakishan Damani | $16.5 B | retail, investments | Fashion & Retail |
| Wang Chuanfu | $16.3 B | batteries, automobiles | Automotive |
| Steve Cohen | $16 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Ken Griffin | $16 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Chen Zhiping | $15.9 B | e-cigarettes | Manufacturing |
| Ernest Garcia, II. | $15.9 B | used cars | Automotive |
| Uday Kotak | $15.9 B | banking | Finance & Investments |
| Carl Icahn | $15.8 B | investments | Finance & Investments |
| Suleiman Kerimov & family | $15.8 B | investments | Finance & Investments |
| Thomas Frist, Jr. & family | $15.7 B | hospitals | Healthcare |
| Lukas Walton | $15.6 B | Walmart | Fashion & Retail |
| Mikhail Fridman | $15.5 B | oil, banking, telecom | Energy |
| Wei Jianjun & family | $15.5 B | automobiles | Automotive |
| Zuo Hui | $15.5 B | real estate services | Real Estate |
| Zhou Qunfei & family | $15.4 B | smartphone screens | Technology |
| Donald Bren | $15.3 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Hinduja brothers | $14.9 B | diversified | Diversified |
| Lakshmi Mittal | $14.9 B | steel | Metals & Mining |
| Georg Schaeffler | $14.9 B | auto parts | Automotive |
| Eric Yuan & family | $14.9 B | video conferencing | Technology |
| Wang Jianlin | $14.8 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Kwong Siu-hing | $14.7 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Robin Li | $14.7 B | internet search | Technology |
| Pallonji Mistry | $14.6 B | construction | Construction & Engineering |
| Eduardo Saverin | $14.6 B | Technology | |
| Roman Abramovich | $14.5 B | steel, investments | Diversified |
| David Tepper | $14.5 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Gong Hongjia & family | $14.4 B | video surveillance | Finance & Investments |
| Mike Cannon-Brookes | $14.2 B | software | Technology |
| John Menard, Jr. | $14.2 B | home improvement stores | Fashion & Retail |
| Seo Jung-jin | $14.2 B | biotech | Healthcare |
| Cheng Yixiao | $14.1 B | video streaming app | Media & Entertainment |
| Liang Wengen | $14.1 B | construction equipment | Manufacturing |
| Scott Farquhar | $14 B | software | Technology |
| Finn Rausing | $13.9 B | packaging | Food & Beverage |
| Jorn Rausing | $13.9 B | packaging | Food & Beverage |
| Kirsten Rausing | $13.9 B | packaging | Food & Beverage |
| Brian Chesky | $13.7 B | Airbnb | Technology |
| Joseph Lau | $13.6 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| David Duffield | $13.5 B | business software | Technology |
| Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi | $13.5 B | alcohol, real estate | Food & Beverage |
| Kim Jung-ju | $13.3 B | online games | Technology |
| Robert & Philip Ng | $13.3 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Zhang Bangxin | $13.3 B | education | Service |
| Anders Holch Povlsen | $13.2 B | fashion retail | Fashion & Retail |
| Wang Wenyin | $13.2 B | mining, copper products | Metals & Mining |
| Wang Liping & family | $13.1 B | hydraulic machinery | Manufacturing |
| Tatyana Bakalchuk | $13 B | ecommerce | Fashion & Retail |
| Michael Platt | $13 B | hedge funds | Finance & Investments |
| Huang Shilin | $12.9 B | batteries | Energy |
| Ricardo Salinas Pliego & family | $12.9 B | retail, media | Fashion & Retail |
| Kumar Birla | $12.8 B | commodities | Diversified |
| Dang Yanbao | $12.7 B | coal | Metals & Mining |
| Cyrus Poonawalla | $12.7 B | vaccines | Healthcare |
| Robert Kuok | $12.6 B | palm oil, shipping, property | Diversified |
| Hank & Doug Meijer | $12.6 B | supermarkets | Fashion & Retail |
| Jack Dorsey | $12.5 B | Twitter, Square | Technology |
| Lu Zhongfang | $12.5 B | education | Automotive |
| Ma Jianrong & family | $12.5 B | textiles, apparel | Fashion & Retail |
| Zhang Tao | $12.5 B | e-commerce | Fashion & Retail |
| Nathan Blecharczyk | $12.4 B | Airbnb | Technology |
| John Doerr | $12.4 B | venture capital | Technology |
| Joe Gebbia | $12.4 B | Airbnb | Technology |
| Forrest Li | $12.4 B | gaming | Media & Entertainment |
| Yu Renrong | $12.3 B | semiconductors | Manufacturing |
| Liu Yonghao & family | $12.1 B | agribusiness | Service |
| Gordon Moore | $12.1 B | Intel | Technology |
| Jeff Yass | $12 B | trading, investments | Finance & Investments |
| Bobby Murphy | $11.9 B | Snapchat | Technology |
| Patrick Drahi | $11.8 B | telecom | Telecom |
| Jensen Huang | $11.8 B | semiconductors | Technology |
| Alexander Otto | $11.8 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Cen Junda | $11.6 B | pharmaceuticals | Healthcare |
| Joseph Tsai | $11.6 B | e-commerce | Technology |
| Aliko Dangote | $11.5 B | cement, sugar | Manufacturing |
| Marcel Herrmann Telles | $11.5 B | beer | Food & Beverage |
| Mikhail Prokhorov | $11.4 B | investments | Finance & Investments |
| Jorge Moll Filho & family | $11.3 B | hospitals | Healthcare |
| Viktor Rashnikov | $11.2 B | steel | Manufacturing |
| Harry Triguboff | $11.2 B | real estate | Real Estate |
| Leonid Fedun & family | $11.1 B | oil | Energy |
| Eyal Ofer | $11.1 B | real estate, shipping | Diversified |
| Evan Spiegel | $11.1 B | Snapchat | Technology |
| Luis Carlos Sarmiento | $11 B | banking | Finance & Investments |
The right wing is full of contradictions — a defining trait, almost. Chief among them is this bit of cognitive dissonance:
You can’t have this both ways, philosophically speaking. The entire concept of individual liberty (hint: it’s right there in the name!) is a core insight of the Enlightenment.
This 18th century philosophical movement grew large in Europe, predating the French Revolution of 1789 and influencing heavily the American Revolution. Resting on the then recent revolutions in science, math, and philosophy including the works of Descartes, Galileo, Kepler, and Leibniz, The Enlightenment has its roots in 1680s England with the political philosophy of John Locke.
Locke argued that human beings are capable of self-improvement via rational thought and accumulated experience. His philosophy was a break with traditional assumptions that knowledge came only from authorities, and that truth was opaque and unknowable. Working in the same era as Isaac Newton, Locke’s ideas about human nature were highly informed by the Scientific Revolution well underway by this time. The two strains of philosophy have a common commitment to reason and empiricism at their core.
You can appreciate why any number of authorities would find the radical ideas of the Enlightenment philosophers potentially threatening — their age-old power structures were in jeopardy. It represented the democratization of knowledge, removing a dependency of the less powerful upon the powerful as a singular source of truth. The church, monarchy, and aristocracy were all on the chopping block — sometimes literally — during this age of philosophical and political revolutions.
The following philosophical and political ideals emerged from The Enlightenment:
The history of political philosophy reveals the evolution of Enlightenment thinking over the course of centuries, and how the ideas underpinning our government have deep roots. Freedom isn’t a new idea, and it does come with some caveats.
The first caveat is that freedom cannot be unlimited if we are to have a civil society. As Hobbes put it, if men are left to their natural state our lives will be “nasty, brutish, and short.” Also, we cannot preserve equal rights for all citizens if some members of society are allowed to trample on the rights of others.
That’s why the concept of liberty is so important. It’s important to our democracy, and it’s important to our day to day lives and how we treat each other. Freedom and liberty are similar and we often use these words interchangeably, but there is a very important distinction between them.
Liberty means that I have freedom, but only insofar as I don’t intrude upon your freedom. I must respect your rights and not invade your sovereign boundaries of life and property. For all persons are created equal, and the rights of one another shall not be infringed.
Political liberty has its foundations in Greek philosophy and was closely linked with the concept of democracy. Aristotle and Plato among others planted the seeds that would later be picked up by Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and John Stuart Mill — giving us our modern concept of liberty today.
Sociologist Theodor Adorno created the “F scale” in a 1950 seminal work entitled The Authoritarian Personality, in order to rank the level of predilection to fascism in an individual, which became desirable both during and shortly after World War II. According to Adorno and his cohort, the defining authoritarian personality traits of the Platonic fascist (or the ur-Fascist as Umberto Eco would later call them) include the following:
We are seeing all of these traits today. We see the rise of authoritarianism — we see it in our leadership, we see it in our communities, and we see it surging around the world.
We see it in a much larger percentage of our populace than many of us might have imagined. Research by Karen Stenner and others shows that across populations in the developed world, about a third of a given population will be prone to authoritarian tendencies. People of good character far outnumber the Right-Wing Authoritarians, but they can be subjugated, emotionally manipulated, strong-armed, abused, intimidated, made cynical by the RWAs. And the RWA personality is driven to actively hate outgroups in many outrageously twisted and depraved ways, from pettiness to genocide.
Refined by professor of psychology Bob Altemeyer (The Authoritarians, et al) in 1981, the Right-Wing Authoritarianism scale (RWA) addresses some of the limitations of the F scale and exhibits more predictive power in identifying individuals exhibiting authoritarian personality.
The RWA personality is associated with all of the following traits, beliefs, actions, patterns, and signs of authoritarianism:
Maybe we could offer up the RWA test as a “good faith” gesture, if one is interested in participating in civic discourse with credibility and authenticity. It would help us identify those individuals who are going to be unlikely to play by the rules of the game or have no intention of behaving fairly. It would help us draw authoritarianism and totalitarianism out of the proverbial closet and into public discourse so we can refute it vehemently in a proper forum.
Although we have bot tests, we don’t really have great ways of measuring and identifying human beings with deceptive agendas to help us in this battle of democracy vs. autocracy. If we could screen people as authoritarians via “honorable challenge,” we could save so much time by not wasting it on the lost causes whose power trip runs so deep it can never be exposed. It could serve as a way to drag out into the light any number of intolerable, anti-democratic sentiments masquerading as “strict Constitutionalism.” We can pry open the doublespeak and arm ourselves with the secret decoder rings of understanding RWA dogwhistles.
And maybe we can finally change the conversation by more easily identifying friendlies from foes from the start, without having to wade through every minefield.
Just maybe.
We have so many mental frames related to numbers, that have been handed down culturally for, in some cases, hundreds and even thousands of years. These numerical superstitions come from myths, some from science, some cultural and historic — and many are universal. They remind us that despite our differences across nations and across time, we human beings still have a lot more in common with one another than we have differences.
I’ll keep adding to the list of numerical superstitions over time…!
Hierarchy vs. Fairness is the dominant Manichaean struggle of our age, and perhaps every age before it: shall we structure our society with a strict hierarchical system of highs and lows, with power concentrated at the top? Or shall we have an egalitarian society where truth, justice, and fairness rule the day?
There are a lot of stories, myths, and narratives centered on this question: hierarchy or fairness? Cultural wars and actual wars have been waged — numerous times throughout history.
We are fighting a new incarnation of that war now in our nation, as civil unrest spreads following yet another extrajudicial murder by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin — who knelt on the neck of George Floyd for a jaw-dropping 8 minutes and 46 seconds: 2 minutes and 53 seconds beyond the point where Floyd lost consciousness and 1 minute and 54 seconds past the point fellow officers checked to confirm he had no pulse.
That is a staggeringly long time.
There is simply no credibility to the typical excuse that Chauvin somehow feared for his life — from an unarmed, handcuffed, prone, unconscious, and then lifeless George Floyd. Arrested over an allegedly counterfit $20 bill. Meanwhile Congress appropriates hundreds of billions and even trillions for big business and last I heard, no arrests had been made. Curious.
Psychologists like Alice Miller and Darcia Narvaez attribute this troubling mentality — this mentality that exhibits complete disregard for human life — as originating in our child-raising “techniques.” At one time corporal punishment for youth was the rule and not the exception; not uncoincidentally, the Hitler Youth of Germany had been largely raised under the “advice” of Daniel Gottlieb Moritz Shreber who advocated beating babies from a young age so the importance of obedience would be drilled into them early on.
It wasn’t until much later we learned that traumatized and neglected children display severe lesions affecting up to the 30 percent of the areas of the brain responsible for controlling emotions. In other words, “traditional” authoritarian child-rearing in the fundamentalist religion style of “spare the rod, spoil the child” produces emotionally crippled adults — who tend to enact the revenge fantasies of their internal repressed rage as adults later in life. They simply need be provided with an “authorized” scapegoat.
Miller goes on to suggest the psychological survival mechanism of denial employed by abused children to survive their situation leads them to develop the kind of emotional blindness in adulthood that will turn the other way when witnessing violations of another person’s humanity — or may even be induced to carry them out. We’re all familiar with Nazi Adolf Eichmann’s “defense” of why he should be exonerated for behaving like a robotic killer: “I was just following orders.”
Teaching children to be obedient or be emotionally abandoned — whether through physical abuse or emotional abuse or both — is the key to unlocking this mystery of the appeal of hierarchy and authoritarianism which is seeing a resurgence not just in the United States but around the world — especially in Europe as well. Miller calls it “poisonous pedagogy” — not just parents but many other forms of authority indoctrinate youth in this vicious cycle and benefit from the creation of obedient individuals by amassing and maintaining power.
The kicker is we are not supposed to recognize this process — and if we do, we most certainly are not supposed to speak up about it. We are supposed to remain unaware that our deference to authority is merely a construct; a thin veneer over the insecurity of power that hopes desperately to continue wielding absurd moral authority over the masses. This collective and complicitous denial keeps us all locked in the dance of abuser and abused — essentially pretending it isn’t happening all around us including in our own homes.
For all the right wing enjoys brandishing the Constitution as fundamental law, they tend to often miss the forest for the trees — that the founding fathers wrote extensively on their views and consideration in constructing a new nation towards the end of the 18th century, and that those views were decidedly against the arbitrary rule of kings and the strict striations of class as seen in the empires of Europe. They sought to get away from the cult of personality paradigm of the divine right of kings, believing that the rule of law should hold sway and that men ought to govern themselves through a political process with enough checks and balances to ensure no single branch or individual could wield too much power over others.
James Madison especially was a big believer in the “wisdom of crowds” to arrive at a better, more morally appropriate solution to legislation and problem solving. Moreover they were extremely uncomfortable with the role of slavery at the founding of the nation, despite being simultaneously apiece with the times and not entirely living up to those professed ideals.
Nevertheless, the role of ideals is to move us forward towards better times; to continually improve our individual and collective characters to get closer to living them out. Taking the founding ideals of fairness and equality as the guiding north star of a new nation and falling short is, in my humble opinion, still leagues farther along than giving in to the indulgent impulse towards supremacy and hierarchy and calling it a day. It’s the essence of progressivism as a vehicle for a narrative of self-growth — as opposed to the narrative hierarchy offers, which is static; dead; inert. There can be no change, no dynamism to a system which defines a priori everyone’s place in society.
Hierarchy is the politics of death.