Rob Henderson Profile picture
May 3, 2021 8 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Fascinating essay from 1987 on Soviet youth, just a couple of years before the collapse of the USSR nytimes.com/1987/07/26/mag…
"years of eroding official credibility...Gorbachev's efforts to revive the Soviet Union depend on his ability to engage the young...The country's young are—not universally, but in sufficient quantity to spell trouble—spoiled, alienated, and indifferent"
"Soviet analysts have discovered a general failure of the institutions designed to mold Russian children into bright-eyed young Socialists. Komsomol [communist youth organization] doesn't work, school doesn't work, the army doesn't work, even work doesn't work."
More on Soviet youth: "That teenagers, unlike their parents, have not had to work to supplement the family income is a matter of national pride....experts fear the result has been a generation that expects to be supported well into its 20s, and then to find cushy, well-paid jobs"
The role of the Soviet war in Afghanistan: "The war in Afghanistan..has played a part in this disenchantment...At least half a million young men have served in Afghanistan, an estimated 12,000 have died, and many more have returned with injuries, drug habits or deepened cynicism"
The Soviet youth had a variety of different responses to malaise: Robbing wealthy people, burning cars and houses, lifting weights, self-discipline and stoicism
"I ask my students, 'What do you think is going to happen next? Will things change? Will we live better?' Not an optimistic word from anyone. Already, at 17, they don't believe."
"material conditions alone do not explain everything that happens in the world...the Soviet Union collapsed between 1989 and 1991...The military power of the Soviet state had never been greater, but its authority — a psychological and not a material condition — was non-existent"

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More from @robkhenderson

May 30
Fertility among college-educated women hasn't changed much since a generation ago. Fertility collapse is among poor women. In 1994, the average age of a first-time mother without a university degree was 20. Today, two-thirds of women without degrees in their 20s have no children. Image
A generation ago, a poor woman would have children with a man in the hope that this would lead to marriage and family. This seldom happened. Those children witnessed this failure, absorbed its lessons, grew up, and now are simply not having kids.
Read 4 tweets
May 20
Wrong. They're expensive. Takes yrs to cultivate an understanding of them; to keep up with them, to express them without error. Helps to be immersed in affluence from birth. This is why Bourdieu, Fussell, Fitzgerald etc wrote real mobility is something of a myth.
Saying defund the police in 2024 is like wearing Canada Goose in 2019. You reveal yourself as behind the fashion; a wannabe; an arriviste. Cringe. etc. Gotta be close to the source of the trends (typically elite institutions). Requires money, connections, cultural capital etc.
Luxury beliefs are expensive for the believer to acquire (money, connections, education, habitus, cultural capital, etc.) and costless to express.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 16
3 interesting findings:

1. On Tinder, women in their twenties are roughly twice as likely to swipe right (“like”) for the same man if he has a master's degree compared with a bachelor's degree.
2. Sociometric status (respect and admiration from peers) is a stronger predictor of happiness than socioeconomic status. This finding held up after controlling for gender, ethnicity, and extraversion.
3. From Thomas Sowell’s book Vision of the Anointed: “The family is inherently an obstacle to schemes for central control...Engels’ first draft of the Communist Manifesto included a deliberate undermining of family...Marx was astute enough to leave that out of the final version."
Read 4 tweets
Dec 25, 2023
My most popular Substack posts of 2022:

1. How I Read: Non-secrets for voracious reading robkhenderson.com/p/how-i-read
2. Why Dumb Ideas Capture Smart and Successful People robkhenderson.com/p/how-dumb-ide…
3. The Paradox of Liberation: Reflections on the sexual revolution debate robkhenderson.com/p/the-paradox-…
Read 12 tweets
Dec 13, 2023
3 interesting findings:

1. In contentious disputes with another person, a man is nearly twice as likely to apologize if his adversary is a woman and 3X more likely to physically attack if his adversary is a man.
2. Despite being only 1.2 percent of the population, psychopaths commit 30 to 40 percent of all violent crimes.
3. When two women are engaged in conversation, they usually face each other. But when two men are engaged in friendly conversation, they almost always stand at an angle of about 120 degrees, so that they are nearly standing side-by-side. This is because typically the only time men stare straight at each other is when they are about to engage verbal or physical conflict.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 15, 2023
Lots of discussion at the sexual revolution debate about whether the revolution failed men, or failed women, or helped men more than women, or helped women more than men. Nobody asked whether the sexual revolution failed children. People already know. Too depressing a topic.
The sexual revolution did not fail— it succeeded in its aim: more freedom. Today people (esp women, are less happy but more free. What’s more important—happiness or freedom? For adults, freedom. Better for people to have the ability to choose badly than have no choice at all.
But children lack the maturity to make good choices, so for kids happiness is more important than freedom.

So what’s more important, happiness for children, or freedom for adults? Our society has decided, and there’s no going back.
Read 4 tweets

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