John Podhoretz Profile picture
Sep 12 10 tweets 2 min read Read on X
Here's the danger of social media. It allows people to publish their internal monologues. Our internal monologues and fantasies are often incredibly ugly. People go to therapists because they feel so guilty about them, and one of the tasks of a therapist is to explain that 1/
2/ thoughts are not actions. You can rage in your thoughts about your brother, or someone at work, even fantasize about them dying--but you have done nothing and are guilty of nothing, and you need to forgive yourself and learn how to calm yourself down.
-->
3/ This is, I imagine, what Catholic confession is for, though you are, I gather, obliged to do penance for your evil thoughts. But remember--they are still inside you. They are between you and you. Since 2007, people have a means of externalizing that interior monologue ->
4/ and this means something. A researcher at MIT saying, rather than thinking, "I really want to see that video of Charlie Kirk dying again because it works better than my anti-depressant" has become a public act. I see it. I am affected by it. The public discourse is too. ->
My sense of how the world works and what people are really like undergoes a change. I become rageful, and believe people who think this way are evil. It's likely they are not. They just have a means of externalizing the parts of them that no one ever saw. ->
6/ But another human tendency, the tendency to extrapolate from individual samples to the whole, kicks in then as well. I will assume that anyone and everyone like that MIT researcher is an enemy of everything good and is unsalvageable. In that way my world shrinks. ->
7/ The part of him that dehumanizes Charlie Kirk and turns his assassination into a joke then threatens to dehumanize me in a way. And seriously, before social media, I would never even know he existed, or that he thought what he thought, and that was better for him and me ->
8/ "Use every man after his desert," Hamlet says, "and who should 'scape whipping?" Meaning: if the world knew what was going on inside us, we would all be punished viscerally for it. Until 2007, for the most part, the world would not, could not, know. ->
9/ The question is, and I mean this literally: Can civilization survive now that we have been made witness to the interior lives of others? Remember the Seinfeld episode where Jerry and George decide they are going to share their deepest, darkest secrets? ->
George goes first. We don't hear his monologue. We only see Jerry's face when he's done. And he is frozen in horror. And George is his best friend. END.

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More from @jpodhoretz

Mar 14, 2024
So Chuck Schumer is calling for a new government in Israel. So maybe it's time for a little civics lesson. The last Israeli election was in Nov 22. The coalition of the Right got 64 seats--3 more than needed to have a majority in the 120-seat Knesset.
That doesn't sound like a lot, but it was the largest majority in a decade in an Israeli election. It's a parliamentary system, so unlike here, a government can collapse before its tenure is reached, but the full term of an Israeli government is four years.
Netanyahu's government was formed in January of 2023, so it is about 15 months old now--a third of the way through its formal four-year term. Now, like I say, it can collapse. Most do. But what Schumer is calling for here is a particularly striking form of domestic interference.
Read 8 tweets
Nov 22, 2023
I have a story to tell about what happened today at the matinee of Merrily We Roll Along on Broadway. (The production is spectacular, one of the best I've ever seen, and I've seen two previous horrible versions of it.) An understudy went on for the female lead, Lindsay Mendez. 1/
Her name is Sherz Aletaha. And she was great. Really, really great. I've seen many bad or mediocre understudies in my life. She was maybe the best ever. Anyway, there's a scene in the play in which the stars, Daniel Radcliffe and Jonathan Groff, type stuff on a typewriter. 2/
3/ After the curtain call, Groff and Radcliffe and Aletaha came out to make a holiday pitch for a theater charity called Broadway Cares. Radcliffe announced he was auctioning off the piece of paper he and Groff had typed on for charity; they would sign it.
Read 6 tweets

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