David Brooks has a hammer -- a shelf of sociology books he half-understands -- so he thinks everything is a nail. His nail is the tiresome notion that "social capital," or the lack thereof, explains everything in the universe involving human beings. Here he is aiming that hammer at Edward Snowden, and, by extension, at Snowden's entire generation:
From what we know so far, Edward Snowden appears to be the ultimate unmediated man. Though obviously terrifically bright, he could not successfully work his way through the institution of high school. Then he failed to navigate his way through community college.We've read about Snowden's girlfriend. We know he managed to hold down high-paying jobs, which means he wasn't holed up in Mom's basement railing against the world. He worked with leakees who lived on multiple continents for several months. Sorry, this guy is not the Underground Man.
According to The Washington Post, he has not been a regular presence around his mother's house for years. When a neighbor in Hawaii tried to introduce himself, Snowden cut him off and made it clear he wanted no neighborly relationships. He went to work for Booz Allen Hamilton and the C.I.A., but he has separated himself from them, too.
Though thoughtful, morally engaged and deeply committed to his beliefs, he appears to be a product of one of the more unfortunate trends of the age: the atomization of society, the loosening of social bonds, the apparently growing share of young men in their 20s who are living technological existences in the fuzzy land between their childhood institutions and adult family commitments.
If you live a life unshaped by the mediating institutions of civil society, perhaps it makes sense to see the world a certain way: Life is not embedded in a series of gently gradated authoritative structures: family, neighborhood, religious group, state, nation and world. Instead, it's just the solitary naked individual and the gigantic and menacing state.
This lens makes you more likely to share the distinct strands of libertarianism that are blossoming in this fragmenting age....
And Snowden's generation? As Pew noted in January, 18-to-29-year-olds are, by a significant margin, the most likely to say they "trust the government in Washington to do the right thing always or most of the time."
There may be a subgroup of distrustful Millennial dudes, but the generation as a whole is not alienated from the institution of government. If anything, it's the rest of us, the oldsters, who are alienated. (And remember, the young are the ones who've been most supportive of Barack Obama and other Democrats in recent years. Interest in libertarianism, at least among the young, could be explained in part by Obama's failure to live up to his promise.)
And on the subject of this generation's overall socialization, I'll say that for the past twenty-plus years I've lived a couple of avenues over from a popular bar strip for twentysomethings, and I can assure you that young people generally still like interpersonal engagement -- a lot. It's true that now they spend much of their time checking their phones, but they do this in large groups. And, of course, their parents have pretty much the same phone habits. The young (and not-so-young) are still social, and are also digital-social.
Snowden is just who he is. He is not the representative man of our times.
Snowden still needs to get off Brooks' lawn already. And Brooks is keeping the baseball.
ReplyDeleteWhat Bobo know about anything, could be written on the back of a postage stamp - with plenty of room left over.
ReplyDeleteHe must have some really nasty photo's of his editors, involving kiddie sex, or bestiality.
There's no explanation other than that, for his continued employment at the NY Times.
Except, of course, for the fact that the NY Times is not the NY Times I grew up reading.
The more I read Brooks, the more I am convinced that it is he who is the idiot and not me...
ReplyDeleteI think this really reflects something brooks believes--as opposed to the usual shit he peddles which is what he thinks his paymasters need us, the plebes, to believe. Brooks has always believed that people, and especially men, need to be "tied down" by successive chains of duty: marriage, children, mortgage, military service, citizenship, job, etc..etc..etc... (religion is in there somehwere) or they are the equivalent of rootless cosmopolitans and capable of anything and everything in the form of perversity. His ideal really is someone like Mitt Romney: wealth, duty, family, always busy doing something, a bishop. Brooks doesn't really care at all about the content of a person's morality or what's in their head. He mostly likes to see his heroes kept busy with family, job, scouting, whatever. He is highly suspicious of unmarried men and women or people who have jobs and careers but not families.
ReplyDeleteThe thing he missed is that Snowden unlike Brooks, doesn't care about money. Most people will do anything their boss tells them to do if they can make $200,000.
ReplyDelete