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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 24, 2025

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I’m a classical reactionary.

Communists and neoreactionaries are similar because they are similar. They believe in top-down change according to rationalist principles. In a sense, they’re both totalitarian ideologies. The NRX patchwork state is many tiny countries, not many individuals living in different ways in the same country, not many institutions enabling their members to live different lifestyles under one state. There’s no pillarization. There’s no room for the unknowable, for non-state institutions, only for the subsumption of man into the state, as varied as the state may be.

The main difference is who they think should be in charge/receiving sinecures.

Was the HRE totalitarian in your view?

No, because totalitarianism is a state with no competing institutions to the government. The HRE was... the opposite of that.

What makes you think Patchwork would be in any way different given it advocates specifically for such competition and reaches for the HRE as a specific target outcome?

Keep in mind, Patchwork Moldbug and Absolutist Yarvin are as different philosophers as Early Marx and Late Marx. Land is still specifically supportive of only the former (the former two probably).

Huh? This does not match my interpretation of anything that figures such as Yarvin have advocated. “Totalitarian” means the populace is fully politicized and expected to interface thoroughly, on both a practical and, more importantly, an *affective level, with the state. Yarvin’s model is a depoliticized populace whose relationship with the state is either that of an employee to his employer, or otherwise that of a consumer to a provider. He doesn’t want the average person to have any reason to form an opinion regarding state policy, nor to have any illusion of political input regarding policy decisions. This might be authoritarian, but I don’t see much resemblance between that and, say, North Korean juche or Third Reich state-worshipping rallies. Perhaps you and I have differing understandings of what totalitarianism implies.

"Authoritarianism is when there are things which you cannot talk about; totalitarianism is when there are things which you cannot be silent on"