Jash Dholani Profile picture
Jul 29 14 tweets 5 min read Read on X
The king was arrested in the French Revolution

1 man volunteered to be his lawyer

With the king, he was beheaded too

Decades later, the lawyer's grandson wrote a book on the DARK SIDE of democracy, equality, & liberalism

His name: Tocqueville. Book became a classic. A thread: Image
1/ Human lust for equality overpowers our love for freedom:

“Democratic communities have a natural taste for freedom. But for equality, their passion is insatiable: they call for equality in freedom; and if they cannot obtain that, they still call for equality in slavery” Image
2/ Democracy is a force of atomization

It disconnects a man not just from “his ancestors” but also his descendants and peers

Tocqueville: “Each man is for ever thrown back on himself alone, and there is danger that he may be shut up in the solitude of his own heart”

Haunting Image
3/ Tocqueville on how democracy gave us Rupi Kaur:

“Democratic literature will never exhibit the order, skill, art of aristocratic literature; formal qualities will be neglected or actually despised. The style will be strange, incorrect, loose, and almost always strong & bold.”
Image
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4/ Tocqueville on why you can only let people free IF they’re religious:

“Despotism may govern without faith, but liberty cannot”

Political rules can only be relaxed if moral rules are “strengthened”

People can only be “their own masters” once they’re “submissive to the Deity” Image
5/ The modern govt of bureaucrats & managers covers “society with a network of small, complicated rules, minute and uniform”

In such a world, the “most original minds and the most energetic characters” cannot thrive

Tocqueville: “The will of man is not shattered, but softened”
6/ To be a nation capable of collective action, you need a shared worldview:

“Without common ideas, there is no common action, and without common action men still exist, but a social body does not”

Social action is only possible if the society is bound by "some principle ideas"
7/ Tocqueville on safetyism becoming the organizing principle of life:

“What good does it do me if an ever-watchful authority keeps an eye out to ensure that my pleasures will be tranquil and races ahead of me to ward off all danger, sparing me the need even to think?” Image
8/ It is to the government's advantage if more men of action can be spiritually castrated and turned into NPCs

This is why the state “extinguishes and stupefies” our energies

Tocqueville:

“The men are seldom forced to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting” Image
9/ Life today punctures a thousand small holes in us, saps our initiative, makes great tasks impossible:

“What chiefly diverts the men of democracies from lofty ambition is not the scantiness of their fortunes, but the vehemence of the exertions they daily make to improve them”
10/ Tocqueville's conclusion...

Democracy is mid:

“If a democratic society displays less brilliance than an aristocracy, there will also be less wretchedness; the sciences will be on a smaller scale but ignorance will be less common; you will notice more vices and fewer crimes”
11/ Tocqueville perfectly nailed the texture of modern life in 1835: Image
Thank you for reading!

For more such writing, check out my book, Hit Reverse: New Ideas From Old Books

750+ insights from 75 old books: jashdholani.gumroad.com/l/hitreverseImage
Appreciate your time fren!

Today is Tocqueville's 219th birthday...

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More from @oldbooksguy

Jul 26
SOURCE of modern man's weakness, stupidity, and general lack of vitality?

His leisure activities

Aldous Huxley predicted the degeneracy of modern amusements in a 104 year old essay: Pleasures (1920)

Huxley on why and how to radically rewire the way you spend your free time👇🏻 Image
1/ Aldous Huxley writes that pleasures must not be an escape from effort

In fact, they must be unavailable *without* effort

Why? Because when preceded by effort, pleasure reinvigorates

But when preceded by nothing, pleasure retards your brain's reward systems
2/ Regression of "entertainment"

At royal weddings, theological debates were arranged as entertainment

Logicians debated God at Prince Palatine’s engagement

Huxley: “There was a time when people indulged themselves with distractions requiring a certain intellectual effort”
Read 12 tweets
Jul 22
How modernism tried to be original and created hell on Earth

A horror story:
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Image
1/ The modernist builders were obsessed with two things: originality and capturing the essence of modernity in our buildings. Being modern, said the famous Dutch architect Oud, meant one must be “opposed” to traditional architecture

*ominous background music kicks in* Image
2/ Rybczynski, an Urbanism professor, writes that old masters didn’t care for originality. Brunelleschi, the man whose 597 year old dome is still the largest in the world, borrowed liberally from “Roman ruins.” Rybczynski: “Imitation was at the heart of the Italian Renaissance”
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Read 15 tweets
Jul 21
Julius Caesar cried at his statue...

Aristotle tutored him…

The Ancient World worshipped him as a God

On his 2380th birthday today…

Discover the secret of Alexander's greatness: Image
1/ Before he rode into battle, before he founded the ancient world's largest city Alexandria, before he brought the Persian Empire to its knees...Alexander's first great competition was his father. Phillip II was a conqueror, a king, an Olympic athlete, and he cast a long shadow Image
2/ Alexander didnt want to inherit a kingdom and enjoy "idle power." He wanted to be a mythic hero & THAT he could become with his deeds alone

When Alexander was a boy, his father Phillip's military victories made him morose & restless, not happy

From 12 Against The Gods (1929)Image
Read 14 tweets
Jul 18
Dostoevsky🧵

A literary rockstar at 24. Almost executed by a firing squad at 28...

Exiled to Siberia. Returns to write some of the greatest books ever...

In his lesser-known letters and essays, we get a more intimate look at what he loved, hated, fiercely believed in

Dig in👇🏻 Image
1/ Dostoevsky believed life is only possible when you have a philosophical north star you swear by:

"Neither a person nor a nation can exist without some higher idea"

Dostoevsky: "In order to maintain itself and live, every society must necessarily respect someone & something"
2/ In his essay against Environmental determinism, Dostoevsky writes:

"The doctrine of the environment reduces man to an absolute nonentity, exempts him totally from every personal moral duty and from all independence, reduces him to the lowest form of slavery imaginable..."
Read 7 tweets
Jul 16
Trump is getting shot at because he's fighting the "Managerial State" that Burnham wrote about in 1941...

Burnham saw in the future, elected leaders will be overpowered by unelected managers...who will poison all of politics, culture, life

THAT future is your present. Thread:
1/ Capitalism ruled for the past few centuries and was supported by concepts such as

• Individualism
• Private initiative
• Natural rights

But Burnham sees that capitalism has lost the "boundless self-confidence" that an ideology needs to rule. Individualism out of fashion..
2/ The world today is increasingly led by managers

This is evident in the push for a new "pattern of thought and feeling" that benefit the managerial class:

The emphasis on individuals shifts to "the people"

Private initiative gives way to "planning"
Read 14 tweets
Jul 15
This is Henry Hazlitt.

He dropped out of college, became the top finance editor in the country, and wrote a book that turned liberal Ronald Reagan right-wing.

Hazlitt was a great self-taught polymath...

And this is his guide to thinking better: Image
1/ Clarity is all important

Everyone has a "pet little evil" that he attributes the rest of the world's problems to

For the feminist it's the "subjection of women," for the priest it's the "decline of religion"

For Hazlitt it's the neglect of "independent, hard thinking"
2/ "Concentration" is key

A piano key half pressed will produce no music

A fence half completed will keep out no predators

A thought half pursued will lead to no eureka moments

People leave a lot of insight on the table by not following ideas to their logical conclusions
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