Ta-Nehisi Coates Rules, The Thread

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Once you get past the not-great introduction it makes some pretty interesting points.

― El Tomboto, 25. marts 2018 16:21 (ten minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Copy-paste or it didn't happen. I'm simply done reading about that point from the introduction, it's been done to death and it's always pushed by people who seems to have never read TNC.

Frederik B, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:35 (six years ago) link

xyzzz, have you read Ta-Nehisi Coates?

Frederik B, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:35 (six years ago) link

Yes Fred I've read a couple of big, juicy pieces. Oh yeah baby.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:38 (six years ago) link

Criticizing at length the FHA's policies post-WWII also implicitly criticizes capitalism, it seems to me.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:44 (six years ago) link

Yes Fred I've read a couple of big, juicy pieces. Oh yeah baby.

― xyzzzz__, 25. marts 2018 16:38 (six minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Which ones?

Frederik B, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:44 (six years ago) link

Titles on pieces aren't usually chosen by the writer so I skipped that bit.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:50 (six years ago) link

Looool

Might I propose creating a separate 'Thread for posting articles saying that Ta-Nehisi Coates needs to focus on class, and then agree on how right that is' I promise I won't disturb the group wank.

Frederik B, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:51 (six years ago) link

Maybe you could post a poll then never post on the thread again Fred

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:52 (six years ago) link

I saw this piece get praise from a couple of people, saw the introduction, noticed the length, and saw no need to reopen this particular case at this time lol

Simon H., Sunday, 25 March 2018 14:58 (six years ago) link

But watching you and Fred act fucking superior when you both actually suck is the spice of life

El Tomboto, Sunday, 25 March 2018 15:12 (six years ago) link

good morning tombot

Simon H., Sunday, 25 March 2018 15:18 (six years ago) link

No, acting superior when you yourself actually suck is the spice of life. Watching it in other people just makes me envious.

Frederik B, Sunday, 25 March 2018 15:27 (six years ago) link

All this discord makes me fret that people are spending too much resource looking to give each other the 'dansk skalle' as we say, rather than respecting Ta-Nehisi's bestowed unadulterated brilliance for the manna it is. But no matter, tally ho, meet you at the milk bar comrades!

Phillipe J. (sleepingbag), Sunday, 25 March 2018 15:37 (six years ago) link

poster A: You suck!

poster B: No you suck!

bleeping sag: Hold my beer

Google lobster hierarchies (Bananaman Begins), Sunday, 25 March 2018 16:09 (six years ago) link

snort my coke

flappy bird, Monday, 26 March 2018 04:40 (six years ago) link

I liked Touré Reed’s essay, mainly for the historical bits from the Great Society era and the Obama era I did not know.

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Monday, 26 March 2018 06:07 (six years ago) link

Everyone sucks, just as everyone poops. Let’s appreciate each other. (I e been watching Mister Rogers for the last 72 hours)

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Monday, 26 March 2018 13:32 (six years ago) link

one month passes...

The Atlantic had a staff meeting to discuss the hiring and firing of Kevin Williamson; Jeffrey Goldberg and Ta-Nehisi Coates ran it, and took questions from staff. The Huffington Post obtained a recording, and published a full (yeah, it's long) transcript that's worth reading.

grawlix (unperson), Friday, 4 May 2018 15:55 (six years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/5quibIl.png

Karl Malone, Friday, 4 May 2018 16:59 (six years ago) link

I still find it baffling that Coates thinks Williamson is/was a good writer, like just on a style level. Like as an *actual* good writer you'd think he could spot overwritten trash.

Simon H., Friday, 4 May 2018 17:07 (six years ago) link

what conservative writers do you think are good writers?

k3vin k., Friday, 4 May 2018 17:09 (six years ago) link

Edmund Burke.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:12 (six years ago) link

Coleridge

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:12 (six years ago) link

I mean contemporary ones

obviously there must be many, I just don't really read them unless there is some compelling reason to read a particular essay. I read a couple of k will essays recently and they're written fine

k3vin k., Friday, 4 May 2018 17:15 (six years ago) link

Joan Didion

valorous wokelord (silby), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:16 (six years ago) link

Didion hasn't evinced conservative leanings at least since Reagan won in 1980

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:17 (six years ago) link

this is the final passage from the most recent piece of kevin d williamson writing i found by googling. it is terrible writing:

The scientistic delusion—the pretense of knowledge, Hayek called it—promises us that there is a way forward, that it is discoverable, and that it may be revealed to us by applying familiar, widely understood principles. The alternative—that minds and markets are beyond management—is for many too terrible to contemplate. The world beyond science is not only religion, it is also art and literature, which have been in notable if predictable decline as our increasingly timid culture defers ever more desperately to white coat-wearing figures of authority, demanding that they provide lab-tested, peer-reviewed, eternal answers to life’s every question.

Science, broadly defined, may inform our politics. It will not liberate us from politics. Nor will it liberate us from making difficult choices. And while the physical sciences have earned their prestige, the scientific consensus of any given moment may prove unreliable. Sometimes, what all the best people know to be true turns out to be a bizarre and embarrassing fantasy cooked up by an Austrian strange-o with a gift for self-promotion.

It pays to be cautious. You know it in your id.

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:21 (six years ago) link

seems fine tbh

k3vin k., Friday, 4 May 2018 17:26 (six years ago) link

The world beyond science is not only religion, it is also art and literature, which have been in notable if predictable decline as our increasingly timid culture defers ever more desperately to white coat-wearing figures of authority, demanding that they provide lab-tested, peer-reviewed, eternal answers to life’s every question.

this sentence is a gross example of magical thinking, with Buckley-itis in the bones, but it's not terrible English.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:32 (six years ago) link

Sometimes, what all the best people know to be true turns out to be a bizarre and embarrassing fantasy cooked up by an Austrian strange-o with a gift for self-promotion.

this line was the worst imo

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Friday, 4 May 2018 17:33 (six years ago) link

sometimes ta-nehisi lets some overwritten junk slip through in his own work. I am not surprised that he might mistake williamson for a decent stylist if he was truly inured to / willfully ignoring the ideas in it.

El Tomboto, Friday, 4 May 2018 17:40 (six years ago) link

The sample above ("scientistic delusion") is highly rhetorical, but for its intended audience it is fairly effective. The degree to which it depends on carefully selected adjectives is partially disguised by the fact that it is ornate enough to absorb most of your attention in deciphering the content. That excerpt is more readable than you'd expect, considering the tortured path it takes, because Williamson shows a very good sense of prose rhythm.

As for his Buckley-itis, both WFB and George Will made million-dollar careers by being the very picture of what a non-intellectual thinks an intellectual ought to write and sound like. Williamson is just emulating their formula for success; he knows which side his bread is buttered on. It's amazing that Galbraith was able to straddle both worlds so successfully.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 4 May 2018 18:15 (six years ago) link

I read The Affluent Society a few years ago and his novel A Tenured Professor two months ago, and Galbraith could write a simple subject-verb-object sentence with a pungency that would flummox the non-intellectual commentariat.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 May 2018 18:25 (six years ago) link

i think a lot of times artists are looking at what is effective when they glean ideas for their own work, whereas critics are often pushing back against using 'effective' as the only metric (cf critics panning post malone while acknowledging its effectiveness)

I could totally imagine coates making determinations about what works and what does & what strategies people use in an effort to improve his own

there's always the danger of slippage there, of letting message intrude over your appreciation of the medium

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 4 May 2018 19:21 (six years ago) link

i've never knowingly read Williamson, and i've seen some of the terribly over-written and hilariously vacuous passages going around on twitter. i assume they're cherry-picked in bad faith and i trust if Coates likes him there's good stuff

flopson, Friday, 4 May 2018 20:49 (six years ago) link

i have 2 or 3 grumpy conservative/libertarian economists i like to read. reading them is like arguing with your dad. ymmv

flopson, Friday, 4 May 2018 21:02 (six years ago) link

I'm with Kevin. I don't have any problem with the rhythm of the paragraph and I can follow the line of thought without putting a lot of effort into parsing it. "Strange-o" is a strange-o word, though.

He's also describing garden variety pragmatism and I don't see what's objectionable. The idea can be construed as right wing in the context of abortion or climate science or something, but reading only that passage, I'd say he's describing way of thinking that can help liberate us from a technocratic politics, to think morally or humanistically.

bamcquern, Friday, 4 May 2018 22:10 (six years ago) link

much as i despise technocratic liberalism the ethos of "don't trust experts" is the driving force behind Brexit and the election of Trump

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Friday, 4 May 2018 22:14 (six years ago) link

I agree with you there. The idea (20th century pragmatism?) requires good faith. It's not an abdication of trying to be reasonable. It's not even an anti-science idea! But that whole spiel against progressivist thinking jibed with me. That's something that says, Don't let your guard down.

tbf to Coates, I don't know how much he really likes Williamson. I only skimmed that long-ass transcript, but he seems to think he's culpable somehow and that his attitude toward Williamson and his own role at The Atlantic both require some reflection.

bamcquern, Friday, 4 May 2018 22:21 (six years ago) link

this is a weird bit

Ok, this exchange is just. . . what!? No wonder Coates left the internet if folks are being as sycophantic as Goldberg. Good question from Vann. pic.twitter.com/I7ZRjGgc4T

— Freebrie (@briebriejoy) May 3, 2018

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Friday, 4 May 2018 22:36 (six years ago) link

oh my god, that's not weird for it's sycophancy, it's weird because Goldberg just doesn't get at all what this attention and focus means both for Coates's psyche and for the editorial policies of The Atlantic.

bamcquern, Friday, 4 May 2018 22:46 (six years ago) link

Yeah. All Coates is saying is that right-wing trolls will now point at anything controversial that he writes and cry whatabout. Right?

DJI, Friday, 4 May 2018 23:57 (six years ago) link

And that they'll make him a symbol of the entire magazine - "You can't trust The Atlantic; they publish Ta-Nehisi Coates."

grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 5 May 2018 00:02 (six years ago) link

williamson a "good writer", but he's the kind of good writer who makes me actively want to be a worse writer.

Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Saturday, 5 May 2018 00:30 (six years ago) link

though given my habit of randomly leaving out crucial words i'm not sure it's at all necessary

Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Saturday, 5 May 2018 00:31 (six years ago) link

I had to look up what happened after I read this : "Ta-Nehisi Coates had a whole conversation with another man about the guy who wanted women to be hanged for abortions while women sat mute."

Yerac, Saturday, 5 May 2018 01:48 (six years ago) link

Technocrat ‘pragmatism’ is only pragmatic to technocrats; ‘to each according to their needs, from each according to their abilities’ has always sounded genuinely pragmatic to me.

suzy, Saturday, 5 May 2018 07:20 (six years ago) link

Coates loves livid language, where you really FEEL the argument being made. He loves words like 'plunder' and rooting racism in the actual physical violence done to people. I could see why he thinks Williamson is a 'kick-ass' writer. They discuss whether it was the word 'hanging' that got him in trouble, because it's so visceral, but I can absolutely see why Coates thinks that kind of conservative writing is better and more honest than the 'civil' conservative arguments, basically arguing the exact same thing but in nicer words. It really seems to be what he's struggling with in that discussion, no?

Frederik B, Saturday, 5 May 2018 09:23 (six years ago) link

“I’m kind of squishy about capital punishment in general, but I’ve got a soft spot for hanging as a form of capital punishment.”

tsrobodo, Saturday, 5 May 2018 09:59 (six years ago) link

"Technocrat ‘pragmatism’ is only pragmatic to technocrats; ‘to each according to their needs, from each according to their abilities’ has always sounded genuinely pragmatic to me.

― suzy"

i'd argue that it's _sensible_, in the same way "love thy neighbor as thyself" is sensible. technocrat pragmatism is based on what's possible - they give short shrift to both the long-term implications of their actions and the question of whether or not what they're doing is moral. sounds pretty well in line with kissinger to me!

Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Saturday, 5 May 2018 14:11 (six years ago) link


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