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Ebook About THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLERA Times and Sunday Times Book of the YearUpdated with a new afterword by the author'Douglas Murray fights the good fight for freedom of speech ... A truthful look at today's most divisive issues' – Jordan B. Peterson'[Murray's] latest book is beyond brilliant and should be read, must be read, by everyone' – Richard DawkinsAre we living through the great derangement of our times?In The Madness of Crowds Douglas Murray investigates the dangers of 'woke' culture and the rise of identity politics. In lively, razor-sharp prose he examines the most controversial issues of our moment: sexuality, gender, technology and race, with interludes on the Marxist foundations of 'wokeness', the impact of tech and how, in an increasingly online culture, we must relearn the ability to forgive.One of the few writers who dares to counter the prevailing view and question the dramatic changes in our society – from gender reassignment for children to the impact of transgender rights on women – Murray's penetrating book, now published with a new afterword taking account of the book's reception and responding to the worldwide Black Lives Matter protests, clears a path of sanity through the fog of our modern predicament.Book The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity; THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER Review :
Douglas Murray addresses four of the categorizations of humanity expounded by progressives/cultural Marxists that have defined our societies over the past few decades: gays, feminism, race and transgender. The result, as Murray says in his opening paragraph is:"We are going through a great crowd derangement. In public and in private, both online and off, people are behaving in ways that are increasingly irrational, feverish, herd-like and simply unpleasant. The daily news cycle is filled with the consequences. Yet while we see the symptoms everywhere, we do not see the causes."Murray is a rational man, an Enlightenment man. He points out the absurdities and internal contradictions in the arguments. At the same time he points out the very reasons why his logical approach is bound to fail. The winning arguments are emotional. While presenting themselves as rational, they are at the core profoundly irrational.Progressivism, being "woke," or being a cultural Marxist is a religion to which adherents cling as doggedly as they once did to Christianity and now due to Islam. Murray writes:"The explanations for our existence that used to be provided by religion went first, falling away from the nineteenth century onwards. Then over the last century the secular hopes held out by all political ideologies began to follow in religion’s wake. In the latter part of the twentieth century we entered the postmodern era. An era which defined itself, and was defined, by its suspicion towards all grand narratives. However, as all schoolchildren learn, nature abhors a vacuum, and into the postmodern vacuum new ideas began to creep, with the intention of providing explanations and meanings of their own."That is it in a nutshell. People need some kind of religion to give meaning to their lives. In the absence of a spiritual religion, they have invented the secular religion of social justice. They defend their positions with a fanaticism, an intolerant hatred characteristic of religion rather than the balanced dialog of scientific inquiry.The common theme concerning gays, women, racial minorities and transsexuals is that members of these groups have been treated unfairly, systematically held back by society. The term "social justice" encapsulates the idea that all members of society are entitled to experience equal outcomes. And, of course, they do not. Equality is never observed, and cannot reasonably be achieved in any sphere. SJWs will never want for causes to champion.Every virulent religion needs its Satan, golem, or similar object of hatred. SJWs demonize the affluent straight white male as the epitome of everything that is wrong with society. Murray fails to measure up only on the "straight" criterion. Looking from the inside, he can assess the absurdity of the gay arguments. There are strong parallels in the other three.The book is extraordinarily rich in examples. Murray has done his homework, and he has an extremely good memory for the silly things that have taken place within his lifetime. Some of his recurrent themes are:1. The incredible swiftness with which standards change. He cites gay marriage as something that went from being beyond the pale to beyond question in the course of a decade or so. The acceptance of transsexuals was similarly rapid: Caitlin Jenner appeared on the scene about 2013.2. The fierce arguments with regard to nature versus nurture, which Murray calls hardware versus software. There are strong political reasons to argue that gays are born that way – it is in no way a lifestyle choice. On the other hand, transsexuals decide that they are born in the wrong body. It is forbidden for a white person such as Rachel Dolezal to call herself black, but for a black to call themselves white is no problem.3. Politics is related to the nature versus nurture argument. Peter Thiel is not allowed to be gay because he is conservative. Ditto Kayne West and blackness.4. The Marxist notion of dialectic. Whereas internal contradictions would doom a rational argument, Marxism treats them as a part of the process of working toward the truth. Murray has quite a lengthy section on the extremely intelligent irrationality of Michael Foucault, whom he says is the most cited social scientist of all time, whose most obvious genius was in the ability to write things in such an obscure way that his many contradictions were not glaringly obvious.5. The closer we come to the expressed goals of non-discrimination, the more virulent the arguments become. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan observed decades ago, "claims of human rights violations happen in exactly inverse proportion to the numbers of human rights violations in a country."6. The impersonality of social media exacerbates the problem. Murray has a wonderful essay on the quality of forgiveness. The need to be able to, for instance, forgive Justin Trudeau for his blackface incident or Donald Trump for something indiscreet he might have said to Billy Bush in an interview years ago. He observes that it is all political. A person with the right politics can be forgiven for inexcusable behavior. A person with the wrong politics receives no mercy.These changing currents mean that people can be put on the wrong side of history very quickly. The Internet has a long memory. At the time TV host Joy Reid opposed gay marriage, she was in a majority. The majority shifted but her soundbites had been captured for posterity. It took a lot of explaining. She is lucky to still have a broadcasting job; being a black woman no doubt helps. Likewise, to the delight of conservatives, Justin Trudeau's blackface for the Banana Boat song. Second wave feminists who argue that male to female transsexuals should not be allowed to compete in women's sports are in the same boat.People are different. Murray attempts to deflect criticism by assuming the pose of a reporter, describing what has happened to other people. For instance:"Research into IQ and genetics is among much competition probably the most dangerous and cordoned-off subject of all. When Charles Murray and Richard J. Herrnstein published The Bell Curve in 1994 they were believed to be setting off precisely this landmine. Even though few of their critics read the book, criticisms of its investigation into the hereditary aspect of genetics were widely attacked. A few publications realized that the subject was of such significance that it had to at least be discussed. But in the main the reaction to The Bell Curve was to try to shut it and its author down (‘author’ because Herrnstein had the misfortune, or luck, to die shortly before the book’s publication). Almost all publications that reviewed the book noted that its findings were ‘explosive’. But most critics decided to do a very specific job with those explosive findings. That was to cover them with as much soil as could be found and then pat it down as tightly as possible. One extreme, but not uncommon, piece about the book by a fellow academic was headlined ‘Academic Nazism’ and claimed that the book was ‘A vehicle of Nazi propaganda, wrapped in a cover of pseudoscientific respectability, an academic version of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf’. Not just any old Mein Kampf, but Adolf Hitler’s one."The criticism of The Bell Curve demonstrated why almost nobody wanted to go over the evidence that suggests that intelligence test scores vary with ethnic group and that just as some groups score higher on intelligence tests, others must score lower. This of course is not to say that everybody in such groups does. As Murray and Herrnstein were at pains to point out repeatedly, the differences within racial groups were larger than the differences between them. Yet those who have surveyed the academic literature on IQ differentials across racial groups appreciate better than anyone that the literature in the area is – as Jordan Peterson has said – ‘an ethical nightmare’. And it was a nightmare which almost everybody seemed very keen to steer clear of."Motherhood is atopic feminists find extraordinarily difficult to grapple with. Women should be equal to men, but only women can bear children. Raising children properly demands most of a woman's time and energy. Evolutionary psychologists will go even further. Sarah Blaffer Hrdy writes in Mothers and Others that a major evolutionary advantage of the human species was that a mother was able to enlist others in the tribe – grandmothers, aunts, older daughters – to help raise her children. Tecumseh Fitch repeats the theme, emphasizing the importance of spoken language, in The Evolution of Language .As a result of feminism, not only did these alloparents disappear, but mothers themselves feel obliged to divide time between work and children. The disappearance of ethnic homogeneity in Western societies means that parents themselves may be of different ethnic backgrounds, whatever alloparents there are are probably of yet different ethnicity, and the schools that socialize the children devalue their ethnic background, discourage them from having children, and strongly discourage propagating their culture. The issues that occupy Murray are strongly eroding all Western societies.Murray's focus is on the individual – struggles among individuals for recognition and power within society. He does not address the implications of all of the struggles on society as a whole. There can be no doubt that each of the social movements he discusses – the normalization of gays, women's equality in society in the workplace, and gender fluidity represented by transsexuals – impacts the society's ability to reproduce itself. Gays, feminists and transsexuals will in no way carry on the society. They will have very few children, a significantly smaller percentage of which will be their biological children, and they will not raise them with anything like traditional values. Perversely, it is the more intelligent members of society who are attracted to these lifestyles. See The Intelligence Paradox: Why the Intelligent Choice Isn't Always the Smart One . As Edward Dutton and Michael Woodley of Menie write in At Our Wits End - Why We're Becoming Less Intelligent and What it Means for the Future , the result is that society is getting dumber. Quickly.Give Murray credit for being brave enough to challenge political correctness to the degree that he does. He praises Stephen Pinker, whose 2002 book The Blank Slate ventured as close to the truth as a Harvard intellectual can get without being stoned to death. However, people who know Murray have told me that even he is not brave enough to venture into any deep discussion of human biodiversity and its implications for intelligence. It is for you, the reader, to decide whether Murray is being cowardly or merely displaying common sense. I fear that in today's environment the latter is closer to the truth, and we have to be grateful for the courage he has displayed in publishing this book. It is without a doubt a five-star effort.I offer Murray's table of contents as the first comment below. My views are fairly significantly along "classical liberal" lines, and I live in the Bay Area where the preponderant view is precisely what Murray rails against. So most of my interest in this book was the hope to better understand and contextualize this phenomenon, which seems to be the utter derangement of the far left, and increasingly of modern liberalism. I was less interested in, although of course still willing to partake in, the sort of gleefully-indignant confirmation bias which Murray himself lists as one of the causal factors in the identitarian mob mentality.Unfortunately it's mostly the latter category in which the book shines. There are many anecdotes of unequivocally terrible behavior by leftist mobs, and in that sense my bias is indeed confirmed. But regarding the former category I found it very lacking. There was very little psychological or historical analysis of how the social justice movement arrived at its present state of affairs, and only a shallow analysis of how the situation is currently. Most of the analysis that's there is simplistic, and will be more than familiar to anyone who thinks critically themselves, or follows someone like Sam Harris who thinks in the same space. Some (and admittedly a small minority) of the analysis seems to be on sketchy ground or outright wrong, e.g. where Murray claims that identity status is primary, and is all that protects moderate conservative blacks, say, from backlash by the rabid Twitter mobs. But the left eats their own more thoroughly than that. Identity status is obviously important to the mob, but adherence to the orthodoxy seems to be more important, which is why some white people are celebrated leaders in the community, and why the Twitter mob has gone after blacks (upon whom they cast the tragically-racist label of "Uncle Tom") and other minorities who dare to disagree with the dogma of the day.In the end, this book will satisfy those who haven't already put some thought into these issues, those who haven't kept abreast of the SJW atrocities which this book spends a good deal of time recapping, and those who want to engage in self-satisfied confirmation bias. But for those looking for a deeper analysis, you'll get some tracings of Foucalt and Marxism up through the present, and some points about how the foundations of the trans movement subtly clash with the foundations of the feminist movement, but little more than that. If you find yourself wondering "what made the social justice movement a particularly contagious mind-virus" or "why did it explode precisely when it did" or "what factors besides post-modernism in academia make this attractive to highly educated people? Why is the movement mostly white people? Why is it mostly female?" or "what is the measurable impact of this movement on its stated goals, e.g. racism -- is it positive or negative?", then you'll find this book overly simplistic. 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