Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

SULTAN KNISH BLOG: The Best Minds of My Generation
the Sultan Knish blog ^ | Tuesday, April 30, 2013 | Daniel Greenfield

Posted on 05/01/2013 5:46:33 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Best Minds of My Generation

Posted by Daniel Greenfield @ the Sultan Knish blog
The one thing that gave me hope for my generation was our cynicism. We might not believe in anything, but at least we wouldn't believe in everything. We might be apathetic, but that just meant it was harder to enlist us in causes. We didn't just march to the beat of our own drummer, we questioned the need for having a drummer and a beat. We were burnt out on everything and done with it all.

Of course it wasn't really like that.

Generation X became obsessed with authenticity the way that the Baby Boomers had with realization. Reality TV overseen by Baby Boomer producers and catering to Generation X combined the two and made it seem revolutionary. The Baby Boomers may have given us navel gazing music, but Gen X's obsession with authenticity gave us grunge and rap as their defining genres.

In its on way, Generation X was as narcissistic as the Boomers. It just didn't want to be seen that way. Like the Baby Boomers it was obsessed with selling out, but in a generation that had already sold out, it had no one left to sell out to and nothing to buy. The worst Boomer excesses rejected tangible accomplishments for narcissism, but by the time Generation X got to it there was no longer a culture with tangible accomplishments, only a long slide downhill.

Generation X was born into Weimar Germany. It came of age among decadence. And its own decadence, its sour obsessions, its media skills, set the stage for another generation that would be defined by the media. It would no longer be obsessed with authenticity. Instead it would embrace its own inauthenticity. Defined by the media, it would see fakeness as the true test of reality. Born in a life defined by the image, it would treat the ability to recognize and subvert the fourth wall of the audience, the recognition of the unreality of reality as the ultimate form of reality.

Each generation further fragmented what was already broken. Each spent far too much time looking into mirrors. Each had undeniable talents and skills, but employed them in a way that was autistic, disconnected from others, giving up the culture of builders for a lonely life as craftsmen, hobbyists learning to make small things while letting the big ones go to rust.

There is something medieval about our world. A strange dazzling house of technological mirrors filled with the caves and straw huts where hermits make their own homes and every hundred people become their own community. Connectivity has disconnected physical communities, torn down towns and nations and replaced them with online communities making for a world that is defined less by family, neighborhood or even work, and more by the movies you like and the celebrities you hate.

The Boomers laid the cornerstone of that world when the culture began breaking up with nothing to replace it, but Generation X built much of the rest of it out of its eccentric talents and social unease. It was left to its successors to properly populate it with a broken culture coming together around nothing.

Generation X wanted to be defined by taste. Taste was the thing it thought was lacking in the Baby Boomers who were creatures of many enthusiasms, embracing the terrible and the tacky for the sake of novelty. Generation X wasn't going to settle and it didn't. It is still unsettled. Many of its members are unmarried, childless and still looking around for a world that suits them. Like the Boomers, they want the ideal, but the ideal can only be found in the flaws of the real world that they tore apart.

Some Baby Boomers had developed a penchant for abusing their generation as the one that wrecked the country and some Generation X'ers couldn't help but join in. But it's a simplistic picture that doesn't entire hold up. The static image of frozen generations divided by fundamental characteristics is a simplification of a more fluid reality.

The line between Generation X and the Baby Boomers is blurred. Generation X was what the Baby Boomers were becoming in the shards of their own culture. The Millennials are what Generation X became lured by its solipsistic siren song. Generationsim fragments each generation further until we have generations not of decades, but of years. And looking back, it is easy to see not a dozen generations, but only one generation.

The problem did not begin with the Baby Boomers. Each generation only takes up the qualities of its parents. The flaws and triumphs of each generation can be found in subtler forms in the preceding generations. The 70s would not have existed without the 50s or the 20s or for that matter the 1890s. Every obscenity and absurdity, each form of irresponsibility and depravity, has its origins in prior generations.

The collapse of social mores, bizarre interests in the supernatural, a fascistic obsession with government power and complete economic irresponsibility all happened before in American history. There was no Tabula Rasa out of which evil was born. The evil came, it was suppressed or survived, and then it rose again. It is tempting to look back and imagine a perfect past that became corrupted, but that perfect past didn't exist. What did exist was an ongoing struggle in which the bad did not succeed in destroying the good and in which the good passed on its qualities to the next generation.

Look back enough and you find that the heroic generation of pure men and women were considered a band of scoundrels and rapscallions by their forebears. And usually they were right, not because we were in an inevitable state of decline in which each generation was worse than the last, but because change churns out different qualities, bringing both bad and good to the surface.

The collapse of America is largely a failure of education. Not the education of the behemoth systems which transmit the latest politically correct nostrums from degenerate academics drunk on their own theorizing at the hands of incompetents with Master's Degrees and union entitlements, but the passing of values from one generation to the next.

The growth of the media made that difficult. The rise of the state collapsed the notion of the family. The world in which the virtues of the healthy family and the larger culture did not contradict each other is gone. The two are at war and each succeeding generation is born into a world in which excesses and eccentricities are no longer marginal, but defining.

The Baby Boomers became the defining point because for the first time each generation became actively hostile to the future. They embraced ideals over realities and destroyed realities in the process. The narcissism of each generation made the demand of an ideal, on their behalf or on their own behalf, second-nature. It became routine to call for a world without war, without hunger or without any of the other realities of life and to expect that someone would deliver it.

That ideal world was never delivered, but the real world was torn apart trying to deliver it. Interest in the real incremental future diminished while an obsession with changing the world into something perfect by letting go of reality increased. Media exposure weakened the walls between the real and the ideal. Natural disasters looked like special effects. Ordinary people became famous. Famous people became ordinary.

While the family is the province of the real, the media is the province of the unreal. Generations raised by the media were being raised to seek out unreality and to live unreal lives. That is the legacy not only of the Boomers or the Gen-X'ers alone, but of the generations that preceded them. The growing influence of a collective culture that made the ideal seem real, that encouraged everyone not to sell out, to seek self-realization, the authentic experience and the deconstructed everything, killed the real future and replaced it with an unreal future of fantasy politics, fantasy economics, fantasy values and fantasy people.

Idealism and cynicism are flip sides of the same narcissistic coin. The search for the ideal sometimes brings back beautiful things, but in an entire culture it only produces a decaying self-obsession. In a culture where everyone is an artist, no one is an artist. In a society where everyone shatters taboos, there are no taboos left to shatter. In a world where everyone is searching for truth, there is no truth.

That is the beautiful ugly world we made. A world enraptured with its own preciousness while giving no thought for the future.

Obama is the perfect intersection between the two generations, idealism made cynicism and cynicism made idealism, the authenticity of the fake and the reality of the unreal. He doesn't belong to any single generation. He is the fluid transition point between Generation X and the Baby Boomers and also the Millennials. The decay he represents transcends generations. To believe in him is to believe in everything and nothing except the empathy and cleverness that makes each of us a better person.

A narcissistic culture besotted with its own reflection is bad news for the future. Those who spend too much time looking in the mirror rarely have time to gaze out the window.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics; Religion
KEYWORDS: 60sradicals; danielgreenfield; education


Sultan Knish/Daniel Greenfield Ping List (notification of new articles).

FReepmail or drop me a comment to get on or off the Sultan Knish ping list.

1 posted on 05/01/2013 5:46:33 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: arasina; daisy mae for the usa; AdvisorB; wizardoz; free-in-nyc; Vendome; Georgia Girl 2; ...

That is a list worth keeping.


2 posted on 05/01/2013 5:47:32 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Better the devil we can destroy than the Judas we must tolerate.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell
Whatever will be
Has already been done.
And there is nothing new
Under the sun.
3 posted on 05/01/2013 5:59:29 AM PDT by circlecity
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell
Obama is the perfect intersection between the two generations, idealism made cynicism and cynicism made idealism, the authenticity of the fake and the reality of the unreal. He doesn't belong to any single generation. He is the fluid transition point between Generation X and the Baby Boomers and also the Millennials.

I suspect the Obama we see is entirely a construct of the media and consultants, with only rare insights into the man hiding behind the curtain. We don't know if the real Obama is a drug-addled loser too lazy to be as big a danger as his beliefs would otherwise make him, or a clever manipulator using that image to lull us into tolerating his slow progress toward socialism and tyranny. We don't know anything about the hidden Obama other than that he or those who create his image feels a need to hide the real thing, if there is any reality behind the carefully crafted media construct. If the Obama on the news is a media construct designed by members of several generations to appeal to all of those generations, that would explain why the artificial image seems to fit so many groups.

4 posted on 05/01/2013 6:05:58 AM PDT by Pollster1 ("Shall not be infringed" is unambiguous.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell

Brilliant....as usual. I think The Greatest Generation may have been too worn out to educate the Boomers.


5 posted on 05/01/2013 6:07:49 AM PDT by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell
Article of faith:
Continually hammering at depravity with morality erodes the weaker element.
Abortion must fall to life.
Homosexuality cannot withstand healthy men and women.
Muhammed withers and dies under Christ's salvation.
6 posted on 05/01/2013 6:10:18 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Better the devil we can destroy than the Judas we must tolerate.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell

Wow, so absolutely spot on. DG has perfectly dissected the forces that have led to the deconstruction of this society and its “culture”.

I would have to re-read this several times to figure out what he sees the future being; my perception of the future is one where this society having been finally atomized, falls apart in much the same manner as grains of a fistful of sand slip between one’s fingers.


7 posted on 05/01/2013 6:18:48 AM PDT by Rich21IE
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell
Generation X wanted to be defined by taste.

How Greek.

8 posted on 05/01/2013 6:24:38 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (Life, liberty, property, family, RKBA, sovereignty, security, borders, independence, the oath.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell

I have a unique perspective on the Up and Coming Generation, as I teach Piano, Guitar, and Voice to Children. The average age is 10, but I teach as young as 6 and as old as 15. Now, given that these are kids whose parents can afford music lessons, it may be a skewed sample, but I teach children of all races, nationalities, and religions.

Here are some observations.

1. In 13 years of teaching, I have only had two students who had one parent who was a nominal muslim. In BOTH cases, the parent had escaped Iran when the Ayatollah took over. They considered themselves PERSIAN, not Iranian OR muslim, and their kids attended church and had a Christmas Tree. From this, I concluded that muslims either don’t want their children to have music lessons, or that they refuse to allow a Kaffir(me) into their homes.

2. 100% of my guitar students want to learn the genre known as “Classic Rock” (The music of the 60’s and 70’s). They LOVE the Beatles, the Stones, led Zeppelin, the Eagles, the Doors, Carol King, Dylan, etc. This not only shows their discernment that the music of the “Baby Boomers” was good stuff. It also indicates that the new generation is dissatisfied with the cr*p that the media is spewing at them, which is unmelodious, soul-less, mechanized, and just plain ugly. The few contemporary songs that are requested are in the “old style”, such as songs by Adele, Taylor Swift, and Bruno Mars.

3. Today’s kids are (in spite of the media and education’s attempts to make them otherwise!) fiercely PATRIOTIC. Every year they compete for the honor of opening the Recital with the National Anthem. The ones who don’t get to open the show have a second chance...to close the show with “God Bless America”. They stand and put their hands over their hearts when either of these songs are performed. I sure hope they STAY like this!

4. Generation X was indeed narcissistic, as DG states. Perhaps my experience with the NEXT Generation (Generation Y?) indicates a pendulum swing in the opposite direction. My kids are always doing yard sales, candy drives, etc to benefit somebody. There was even an occasion when several of my little girl students had their long hair cut off to make wigs for children with cancer!

This is by no means a scientific study, but it is a true observation based on my own personal experience.

There IS hope.


9 posted on 05/01/2013 6:36:19 AM PDT by left that other site ((Ban the ubiquitous and deadly solvent, Di-hydrogen monoxide!!!))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell

Any famous quote from Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl” ought to at least be acknowledged, and it falls, I suppose, to someone of my generation to do so.

Heinz Kohut and his disciples were predicting as early as the 1950s that each succeeding generation from then on would necessarily build on the narcissism of their parents. Prescient indeed.


10 posted on 05/01/2013 6:54:28 AM PDT by dagogo redux (A whiff of primitive spirits in the air, harbingers of an impending descent into the feral.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: left that other site
My optimism bucket sprung a big leak in '08, and those few drops helped slow the emptying .. thanks   :-)
11 posted on 05/01/2013 7:03:58 AM PDT by tomkat (Give us a 12 pack of Founders and a large order of Minutemen to go, please !)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: tomkat

And Thank YOU for your kind words! :-)


12 posted on 05/01/2013 7:06:08 AM PDT by left that other site ((Ban the ubiquitous and deadly solvent, Di-hydrogen monoxide!!!))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Pollster1

I believe you have caught a sense of DG’s intention. He discusses O toward the end of the article in just the terms you describe, as a construct. If he were the genius some want him to be we would be much furthur along his dangerous path with much more dedication to the cause of his tyranny.

Face it, Obama is no Hitler and he is no Stalin. He certainly does not have the intellectual stamina or convictions of a Trotsky or, for that matter, of an FDR. He lacks the moral courage of Reagan and the sophistication - however deluded - of a Kennedy.
That he is an addled, brain dead junkie seems patently obvious. His constant forays to the playground and witless ramblings are exceeded only by his sidekick, besotted old Joe. Both are famously sexual perverts. Neither has a wit of respect, not even for themselves.
This makeshift house of cards must crumble and soon. When we can no longer tolerate their mindless, malicious evil we will bring them down.


13 posted on 05/01/2013 7:11:28 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Better the devil we can destroy than the Judas we must tolerate.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: left that other site

I’m Gen X and at one time I cherished a delusion that we would fix the mess that the Baby Boomers left. No more.

Many of my peers never grew up. And even many of those that married and had kids aren’t grounded in anything greater than their bellies and wallets. Families are blowing apart left and right. The first generation who were aborted en masse are still aborting en masse.

You may be right about Gen Y. But it was once true of us too. We were patriotic too—we grew up in the Reagan era. But whatever selflessness we had was corroded by the time we became adults. Patriotism can’t stand up to societal decay of this magnitude. The Boomers sang “All you need is love” as kids and now are engineering a police state.

Not trying to diss any generation, but the Evil One knows how to turn a generation’s strengths and weakness against them.

If those kids you teach are to have a hope, we have to work to radically change the culture.


14 posted on 05/01/2013 7:22:38 AM PDT by Claud
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Claud

Oh, I AGREE with you that we have to “change the culture”.

These kids get hammered from all sides...school, video games, the media, Hollywood, and even their parents!

I am just one person, but perhaps, please God, I might have a positive influence on these kids.

BTW, I am a Baby Boomer. If I was able to change, then there is hope for these kids.


15 posted on 05/01/2013 7:30:16 AM PDT by left that other site ((Ban the ubiquitous and deadly solvent, Di-hydrogen monoxide!!!))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: left that other site

Yep, well said. :)


16 posted on 05/01/2013 10:37:16 AM PDT by Claud
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: left that other site

moslems don’t allow music


17 posted on 05/01/2013 6:49:33 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: yldstrk

Yep.

That has made itself quite evident.


18 posted on 05/02/2013 4:49:25 AM PDT by left that other site ((Ban the ubiquitous and deadly solvent, Di-hydrogen monoxide!!!))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: Louis Foxwell

PFL


19 posted on 05/02/2013 9:43:03 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson