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If You Want A Lesson In Bravery, Don’t Look To Brian Stelter
The Federalist ^ | April 23, 2020 | Sumantra Maitra

Posted on 04/23/2020 8:30:59 AM PDT by Kaslin

Instead of respecting and worshiping fragility, anxiety, and vulnerability, it is time to reconsider stoicism and fortitude.


In the last week, a 99-year-old World War II veteran from Yorkshire, England, raised more than 31 million British pounds for the National Health Service by walking around his yard in a challenge that then went viral. He is a member of a certain generation regularly taught that when the bugle calls, one should rally around the tattered banner regardless of who is leading the nation to battle.

This sentiment was once ingrained in the bloodstream of every civic-minded individual all over the world: There might be severe differences with your fellow citizens at times of peace, but in strife, your individual self is secondary to the flags of your forefathers.

This gentleman, Cpt. Thomas Moore, wanted to help his country by walking 100 laps around his yard, a genuine challenge for someone of his advanced years, to raise 1,000 pounds. Instead he rightfully turned into a celebrity and raised more than 31 million pounds for his country and countrymen, many of whom probably hate the flag colors he once fought for.

Meanwhile, CNN host Brian Stelter wept. Faced with the unbearable agony of being an elitist journalist, Stelter let the taps flow. “Truth is I hit a wall. Gutted by the death toll … I crawled in bed and cried for our pre-pandemic lives. I think those tears had been waiting a month to escape,” he tweeted.

Mocked on Twitter, he courageously fought back, calling masculinity performative. It is no wonder he thinks that. Others soon joined in, calling him bravely vulnerable and thanking him. Still others shared their sob stories in solidarity. It was a scene straight out of a sherry-fueled gathering of Victorian grandmas in a village bridge club in England from late 1890s.

Stelter isn’t the only one. Millionaire Sam Smith, the singer of the world’s worst James Bond theme song who goes by the pronoun “they” to denote his nonbinary status, also had a meltdown from “anxiety” and bravely showcased it through Instagram. Another Instagram influencer, who posed as a nurse only to performatively quit due to anxiety, was also hailed as brave and had her story in CBS before it was discovered to be fraudulent.

This Vulnerability Is Performative

This brings us to the main question. Ignore for a moment that most of these people are pampered, privileged, and in the case of Stelter and Smith, rich. It’s absurd to contemplate that cultural elites working on their laptops in their homes are crying their hearts out due to “anxiety” and are a meme, while Americans across the country are protesting on the streets for their jobs lost.

This is not storming the beaches of Normandy. This is not going to the moon not knowing if one would return alive. This is not braving arrows or risking malaria, scurvy, and stormy, abyssal death in a wooden boat to discover uncharted lands. This is quite literally sitting on one’s dignified derriere.

How fragile and pathetic a society should be that a section of the population is deemed courageous for their vulnerability? In what bizarro universe is being constitutionally weak worthy of respect and adulation? Whatever happened to the conservative concepts of fortitude and stoicism, “chin up” and “keep calm and carry on”?

Of course, the questions are rhetorical. We all know what happened. Most Americans and British — or most people anywhere — are not like Stelter and Smith or that fraud nurse, which is why these specimens are dragged, mocked, and ridiculed on Twitter, and rightfully so.

Emotional weakness is not a virtue, and anyone displaying weakness in public while demanding respect is still rightly considered an oddity by normal people. Theories of “solidarity” for some reason never work in nature, which is far more Hobbesian. These ideas of “fragility and vulnerability” are all elite-driven fads — the weaker you are, the more you’re considered worthy of emulation in sophisticated circles. Most of these actions are therefore performative.

Bravery Is Sacrificial, Not Weak

Unfortunately, there are real-world costs to all of these issues. Children are growing up increasingly anxious and fragile because they are not taught to toughen up in face of adversity, instead having the baggage of their middle-class parents dumped on them. Children emulate adults, and if they are rewarded for their anxiety, they naturally become more anxious.

The whole edifice of an ultra-feminized society and the cries of toxic masculinity have driven a political polarization, wherein masculine men overwhelmingly are the underclass where there are battles of sexual equality in upper-class, cushy jobs. But the lower strata — from tree-lopping, to coal mining, to trash collecting — remains overwhelmingly male.

There’s no scope of displaying emotional fragility for them, as there is in Google’s innovation meetings, for example. This division is evident in voting patterns and will only increase in the future. A vast underclass of Morlocks ruled by a tiny set of Eloi, demanding respect for their “brave vulnerability” as stoicism, is considered taboo in social circles.

It wasn’t like this and shouldn’t be — and not only because it is unnatural and elite-driven. Gallantry and bravery are fundamentally sacrificial. It is not a question of sexuality, race, or sex. It is, however, a question of stoicism and fortitude. An overwhelming number of both men and women can display it. And there are those among the elites who do not.

Royal Navy Cpt. Larry Oates calmly walked away from his expedition camp in the South Pole to his certain death to save his comrades from rationing food 100 years ago. It is William Ernest Henley’s “Invictus.” A Swedish princess quietly served in a hospital. It is the story of thousands of calm and stoic American soldiers, Australian firefighters, Indian health service men, and Italian nurses on the frontlines. And it is the story of Cpt. Tom Moore, one of the last living from a generation that learned to chin-up and look adversity in the eye for God, flag, and country.

Whatever emotions — sympathy? pity? — are attached to weakness and fragility, respect will never be one of them. Humans are not hardwired to respect displays of weakness, mental or physical, something Brian Stelter and Sam Smith are realizing the hard way.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bravery; brianstelter; coronavirus; covid19; culture; effeminazi; effeminazis; elitism; elitists; heroes; media; samsmith; stelter; toxicmasculinity; veterans; worldwarii; wuhancoronavirus; wuhanvirus

1 posted on 04/23/2020 8:30:59 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Is this the same Brian Stelter that got lampooned by YouTuber Mark Dice all the time?


2 posted on 04/23/2020 8:37:07 AM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's Economic Cure)
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To: Kaslin

(Mark Dice on) Brian Stelter Admits What We’ve Known All Along https://youtu.be/cv4hVkyskNQ

Brian Stelter Unhinged! - Best of Mark Dice “Little Brian” Impressions of 2019
https://youtu.be/kc1-lDNBPMo


3 posted on 04/23/2020 8:38:25 AM PDT by PghBaldy (12/14 - 930am -rampage begins... 12/15 - 1030am - Obama's advance team scouts photo-op locations.)
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To: Kaslin

Bragging on TV about crying is unthinkable to me. It was my mother in fact that drilled into us all that we were to be stoic in the face of challenges. She grew up in the depression and WW2 and she was influenced by that I guess. Anyway if I walked around talking about how I had a good cry she’d have ... well I suppose she’d have left the room quietly and gone somewhere private to cry.


4 posted on 04/23/2020 9:15:28 AM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: pepsi_junkie

FWIW: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/weeping-frenchman-1940/


5 posted on 04/23/2020 9:25:36 AM PDT by Calvin Locke
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To: Calvin Locke

I’m not saying I’m immune from emotional response to extreme duress. Nazis strolling down the main street of my home town could do it. But I wouldn’t then go on TV and brag about how I cried and it’s okay, we all should have a good cry.


6 posted on 04/23/2020 9:33:08 AM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: RayChuang88
Seeing and hearing Brian S makes my ovaries shrivel. I am just disgusted at how any woman, without a gun to her head or date rape drugs in her system, 𝑊𝐼𝐿𝐿𝐼𝑁𝐺𝐿𝑌 lay down with him and had a baby. Just... I C K.
7 posted on 04/23/2020 9:46:47 AM PDT by Cowgirl of Justice
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To: Kaslin
Make one of those 'carry on' signs: CRY and GIVE UP.


8 posted on 04/23/2020 9:48:59 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Die-ggl,TWT,FCBK,NYT,WPo,Hwd,CNN,NFL,BLM,CAIR,Antf,SPLC,ESPN,NPR,NBA,ARP,MSNBC)
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To: pepsi_junkie
Crying by itself can mean one of many things. Tears of rage for example are familiar to combat vets. Crying doesn’t have to mean weakness. Whining, on the other hand...
9 posted on 04/23/2020 7:35:10 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard (Power is more often surrendered than seized)
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To: hinckley buzzard
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying it's weak to cry. I've shed tears in public, particularly when I've lost loved ones. I don't think it's weak or unmanly. It's human to do so in such moments. And it's healthy ultimately. For me personally, emotional releases like that are just something that I'd prefer be private. Your mileage may vary.

Now if you are crying because you are depressed or dealing with trauma, seek help. Share your feelings with people who care and can help you. If you don't want to look weak consider that asking for help takes strength, it's definitely not weakness.

On the other hand if you are pretending you cried so YOU can be the center of attention when people are experiencing real tragedies all around you then you are pathetic. That's all. It's pathetic to brag about it - especially when it probably never happened - to seek praise. Which is what Stelter was doing. Do you really believe he was curled up crying in sadness because - Darn it! - he just is so sad for the world? No. He wants to be the story. In fact he said just that, journalists are part of the story is what he said. He thought he would be lauded for being so empathetic and compassionate. The purest example of contrived virtue signaling I've ever seen. And it worked, his fellow journalists hailed him as a hero of the crisis. Right.

10 posted on 04/23/2020 9:50:09 PM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: Kaslin

bttt


11 posted on 04/23/2020 9:53:16 PM PDT by timestax
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To: timestax
CNNclowwwnsmeme
12 posted on 04/23/2020 9:55:14 PM PDT by timestax
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