| > My impression is that they're what scott calls "my dinner guests." Yes, he's pathologically friendly towards anyone to his right: part and parcel of not taking them that seriously. > Seriously I cannot find anything in his writing that is incompatible with those movements and beliefs. He's a centrist neoliberal, ala Matt Yglesias. In some ways the two groups are mirror images. Paraphrasing someone, though I don't remember who: capitalism ostensibly has two functions: - Concentrate power in the hands of individuals who successfully "move fast and break things" - Efficiently allocate resources through impersonal market mechanisms. These are not fully compatible. Neoliberals aren't exactly anti-oligarch, and neoreactionaries aren't exactly anti-market, but when the two tendencies clash they're on opposite sides. Scott doesn't hate people like Thiel, which marks him as not-left, but he's clearly not interested in doing away with liberal democracy and making him CEO of America. |