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by devalier
4031 days ago
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Carlyle's position on slavery is not compatible with your summary. Agreed. and, I'll trepidatiously infer, Yarvin's (after correcting for modernity) Since Yarvin is on this thread, he can clarify his actual views if he so wishes. I think it is possible to cite Carlyle, and to point out that Carlyle made better predictions than the abolitionists, without believing that all black people should be re-enslaved, without believing that chattel slavery is the optimal solution for people with an IQ under 85. I think one can draw from Carlyle while still being a good person. I think his positive views are generally cryptic because his goal is not to produce some plan of action, his goal was to provoke and to get us to think critically about whether we are actually as moral and righteous as we think we are. We like to think of ourselves as being morally superior to Carlyle. But the counter argument is that when we try to abolish slavery in a righteousness holy war, we often end up in a worse state of general vagrancy and violence or even a worse state of exploitation (eg, share cropping) or a socialized form of slavery (eg, workfare). So rather than being holy and righteous, we should think about what kind of long-term paternalistic structures would actually work best for all involved. I don't that making this argument makes someone a bad person, or worthy of being purged. |
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Maybe "approver of slavery" is a less apt description than "whatever slavery's equivalent of a holocaust denier is".
Your response to this could be informed by the knowledge that the Adams reference is one of many others I could have chosen to highlight.
Again, I could just be misreading all of this. Yarvin surely made that easy to do.
Ultimately, my argument throughout much of this thread is straightforward, so I'd like to restate it as we delve further into the weeds: Yarvin's writing isn't a case where people have worked hard to mine unsavory associations from ambiguously worded old blog posts. Yarvin is best known for his writing, and much of that writing appears frankly and straightforwardly odious.