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Substack and Spotify Launch . . . Kick-A** . . . Ferguson . . . LARPing . . . Neil Young . . . Tucker . . . Dreher . . . Psychedelics . . . More

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July 22, 2024

The Seven Thinkers and Groups That Have Shaped JD Vance’s Unusual Worldview

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/07/18/jd-vance-world-view-sources-00168984


July 14, 2024

On Hiatus but Still Have a Few Essays in the Barrel

The Left Hemisphere Ruins Literature
D.H. Lawrence might have had the John Thomas of a degenerate, but he had the soul of an artist. I guess it’s no surprise. His father was an illiterate, hard-drinking coal miner. His mother was educated and refined. It made him earthy but reflective. He appreciated cutting-edge ideas

July 13, 2024

Hiatus

It's been a heckuva run: 22 years. Maybe 20 years. 2004? 2002? I can't remember. I always tell people "2004" because that's all I can prove, but I'm pretty sure I started this blog in 2002.

No matter now: The Daily Eudemon is going on hiatus.

All is well and nobody needs to fret. I wasn't even going to post this "good-bye" because I didn't want to alarm anyone, but that didn't seem right. I know a handful of you check in frequently to see if there's anything worth reading (my apologies for all your trips to a dry well). You can stop.

Will it restart? Yeah, probably. In some form or fashion, but I doubt it will be a daily.

The OtML newsletter is more likely to start again. I learned this week that it was more popular than I thought, but I won't run it until I'm convinced it's either entertaining or helpful. I'm tired of adding to the "online creator" noise.

Why am I doing this?

I need to figure out if TDE enhances my life or hinders it. I was a different man in 2001 and I scarcely remember daily life without it. I need to try life without the daily burden/opportunity that is TDE and see how it feels. I've tried to think my way to figuring out which is better, but that's a hopelessly left-hemispheric endeavor, so I'm going "right hemisphere" and embodying the experience. That's the only way--the sacramental way--of knowing anything.

Do you want something to mull over in the meantime?

I've re-summarized the Existence Strikes Back project, incorporating The Hemisphere Hypothesis and adding a fifth part. It's the fifth part that will probably grab most of my attention at this point. It might be the topic that "sees me out" (the traditional saying of old men who, upon buying a new car or item of clothing, say, "This will see me out"). If that sounds mournful, it shouldn't. The topic would take 50 years to explore fully.

The Five Parts of Existence Strikes Back and The Hemisphere Hypothesis
Part I What is the Tao? The Tao, also called “the act of existence (actus essendi),” “the first principle of Zen,” and the region on the other side of Aldous Huxley’s doors of perception, is the nameless reality that is logically, conceptually, and in reality prior to everything else.


July 12, 2024

People who still believe that the news media tell them the truth and that their nation and their world work pretty much the way they were taught in school are just as brainwashed and deluded as any QAnon cultist. Caitlin Johnson
Caitlin Johnstone on Substack
People who still believe that the news media tell them the truth and that their nation and their world work pretty much the way they were taught in school are just as brainwashed and deluded as any QAnon cultist.

July 10, 2024

Ten Years to Remember: One Podcast to Listen to

Of course, it's nearly 90 minutes long, but that's ideal if you're not going to be able to fiddle with your phone, like if you're on a drive or engaged in romance. Concerning the latter, I've assured myself that my velvet voice is an aphrodisiac, so there's that too, but I have laughably little lifetime evidence to support my assurance.

Ten Years to Remember if You Want to Gain a Broad Historical Perspective
Show notes that link to more show notes.

July 9, 2024

My First Substack Series

This thing took a shockingly long time to produce, especially considering that I had written the substance of it a few years ago. Tons of revisions, work on the narration, etc. I started to add a handful of funny memes to each post, but finally determined I just needed to pull the trigger on it.

I hope you enjoy it. As mentioned in the post below, TDE subscribers read free. Just take out a free subscription to Eric Scheske's Outside the Modern Limits Substack publication and I'll send you a one-year complimentary paid subscription.

History of Western Civilization in Just Ten Minutes
My first Substack project

July 8, 2024

Preparing for Catholicism’s Preeminent Role in the West after Democracy Collapses?
Kevin Vallier’s analysis of Patrick Deneen’s newfound Statism in this podcast episode is really interesting. Deneen wrote Why Liberalism Failed. It got a lot of press, especially after Obama included it on his 2018 reading list. Obama liked his insights but disagreed with Deneen’s conservative conclusions. Enter Adrian Vermeule, an
Acton Line – The New Catholic Integralism
Listen here: From the Acton website: Kevin Vallier, political philosopher and associate professor of philosophy at Bowling Green State University, joins Dan Hugger to discuss Catholic Integralism and his forthcoming book All the Kingdoms of the World: On Radical Religious Alternatives to Liberalism, which publishes with Oxford University Press in September. What is Catholic Integralism and what is its relation to Catholic Social Teaching? What […]

July 6, 2024


Fifth of July

A lot of people aren't working today. Good for them. Today's BYCU: People are brewing ancient beers.

"Archival Brewing, a brewpub in Belmont, Mich., [focuses] on historical recreations like 19th-century Mexican lager . . . ".

Rare Figs + a Strain of Yeast from 850 B.C. = Ancient Egypt Beer
The idea came to Dylan McDonnell early in the pandemic, when a sourdough-baking craze took over a nation under lockdown. Mr. McDonnell, an amateur brewer who lives outside Salt Lake City, saw Seamus Blackley, a video game designer, boasting on social media about baking bread with 4,500-year-old Egyptian yeast.

Happy Fourth

The three audio embeds from this week at TDE, combined into one Spotify podcast


Cracked Me Up

Probably because I like to think I have this level of detachment

Joel J Miller on Substack
Discover and discuss great writing with the world’s smartest readers on Substack.

July 3, 2024

Thomas Sowell’s Hemispheres
My first attempt to flush out the phenom that is Thomas Sowell

"Presidential hologram." Ho man. I couldn't stop laughing.

James Howard Kuntsler, who, IMHO, is establishing himself as the finest essayist on the web. He's not cultured like, say, Joseph Epstein, or urbane like Joan Didion, but he's funny, knowledgeable, and a fine stylist whose prose fits well with the online format.

July 2, 2024

Loper Bright: Relentless War Against the Left Hemisphere
Chevron is dead. Thank goodness. It might have been the biggest Supreme Court victory for the right hemisphere ever. We can all read about the landmark decision last week. Chevron had ruled that, if a statute is ambiguous in any manner, the courts must defer to the regulators for interpretation.
Why the death of Chevron matters
Chevron was written in 1984 and championed by conservative Justice Antonin Scalia who joined the Supreme Court soon afterward

July 1, 2024

On Fatty Bolger

I appreciate any effort to rescue the neglected noble: those little things that are good but nobody notices. It could be a person, it could be a garden.

Celebrating the Overlooked
I appreciate any effort to rescue the neglected noble: those little things that are good but nobody notices. It could be a person, it could be a garden. I walk a lot. Pirsig is probably right about the car, and he probably correctly praises the motorcycle with observations like this
Tolkien’s Little Hero: Fatty Bolger
Paul Schweigl at Front Porch Republic

Closley-related: “All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible. Such people have a tendency to become drunk on violence, a condition to which they are quickly addicted.” Frank Herbert

June 29, 2024

The Dorothy Parker and Florence King Reincarnate
But she’s going on maternity leave

June 28, 2024

BYCU

The Anti-Drinking Picks Up Steam
Excerpts from two recent articles

June 26, 2024

It's Out

Getting to the Root of the Matter: A Hemispheric Look at Gardening
Gardening is just a hobby, and it might not always be practical. But it is arguably the pursuit that postmodern man needs the most. A Copernican revolution in metaphysics explains why.

Huge, Mega-Announcement

Two Reboots in One: The Substack page and the podcast are both poised to re-launch tonight. Details to follow.

Eric Scheske’s Outside Modern Limits | Substack
Counter-conduct and flourishing in a postmodern, left-hemispheric, world. Click to read Eric Scheske’s Outside Modern Limits, a Substack publication. Launched 2 years ago.

June 25, 2024

Cells of Peace
I keep a handful of books on my Kindle that I read from sporadically. These aren’t books that I dive into, but rather books that I read at odd moments when I

June 24, 2024

The Return Eudemon

I'm just returning from a short vacation (extended weekend). Blogging is light and, I'm afraid, will remain light until late July due to a variety of family commitments.

Today, I continue to experiment with Substack and the Apple Notes feature. I'm afraid it's not going very well.

Is Substack a Weapon to Preserve Truth?
A Substack montage

June 21, 2024

BYCU

No Amount of Alcohol is Good for You?
“No Amount of Alcohol is Good for You--That Much is Clear”The idea that moderate drinking is healthy has been debunked . . . currentlyThe Daily EudemonEric Scheske About a year ago, a friend of mine started evading my invitations to grab a drink. It was only when we caught up for a

June 20, 2024

Capitalism and Communism are Flipsides of the Same Coin?
Rod Dreher calls Niall Ferguson’s first column for The Free Press a “banger” and he’s right. Ferguson highlights an alarming number of similarities between the last years of the Soviet Union and the United States today. Does it mean the United States is reaching the end? That’s the implication, obviously,

June 19, 2024

On LARPing

This nascent essay needs work, but it's a decent blog post.

The essay could take a few directions.

E.g., Fantasy role-playing is fun, but now take your character into the real world. You're Kick-Ass, coming to beat that inner-city thug, only to find yourself on the cusp of getting throttled by him and his gang because, well, you're not a superhero. You're a white suburbanite who can't hang with hardened criminals from the hood. You're LARPing at playing a superhero, and you better leave that superhero where he belongs: in the fictional, play regions of your mind.

E.g., Thomas Sowell might be the best living public intellectual who adamantly refuses to let abstract ideals beat reality. (I've been working on a Sowell-Hemisphere essay for a year now . . . just so much to condense/capture . . . some day, some day.)

E.g., The essayist of that Atlantic piece is a reincarnation of Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur waxing about Pristine Nature, and that Twitter respondent is D.H. Lawrence.

The Left Hemisphere Larps
The response that I featured in yesterday’s post used the word “LARPing.” I’m embarrassed to admit: I didn’t know what it means. Fortunately, I have a Google machine (well, I’ve started using the Perplexity machine . . . an incredible AI tool recommended at my annual estate law conference last month). Per Perplexity:

June 18, 2024

Rationalized Ideals of Silence Crashing Against the Rock of Reality
A recent essay at The Atlantic deplores how wealthy people gentrify urban neighborhoods, making them sanctuaries of silence. Silence is a manifestation of class and racial privilege. How much better if those wealthy whites would just let the other side of the binary express itself in all its noise and

June 17, 2024

The Most Important War of Freedom Since 1776 Picks Up Steam

“It’s Just Not Right”: Major Venues Now Punishing People For Using Cash Vs. Plastic
Bring your plastic, or be prepared to pay up…

Neil Young is a Part-Time Conservative

Bill Kauffman says we simply need to give Young a mulligan on his Covid tantrum against Joe Rogan and Spotify. It conflicts with my idea of Neil Young, but I don't know nearly as much about Neil Young--or North American history, including cultural history, over the past 75 years--as Bill Kauffman, so I defer.

Politically, Young is nothing if not Whitmanesque, containing multitudes. Elliot Roberts, his late manager, explained: “Neil is more American than anyone, even though he’s Canadian….Neil’s an isolationist. I mean, if it were up to him, we’d have no foreign aid, we’d talk to no one, we’d really deal with no one else—‘If they can’t cut it, f— ‘em.’ Neil is extreme….One minute he’s a leftist Democrat, and the next minute he’s a conservative.”
Bill Kauffman on the Subjugation of Canada and Neil Young’s Sanity
Bill Kauffman at The American Conservative

The Most Wonderful Time of the Year

Father's Day Weekend

June 16, 2024

Eric Scheske on Substack
James Howard Kuntsler continues to channel Chesterton, Belloc, McNabb and the other Distributists, albeit in far more colorful language. “This is the most significant reality of the world picture now: the wishes of the manager class are going in one direction while the actual dynamics of economy and politics go in the opposite direction. The managers wish for their management of systems to become as centralized and top-down as possible; but the very systems they manage are breaking down and seeking to reorganize at smaller scale, distributed locally. The tension entailed is explosive.” https://jameshowardkunstler.substack.com/p/if-wishes-were-fishes-a-teachable

June 15, 2024

Experimental Feature

Bear with me as I figure out whether this is viable.

Slanting History Since 400 BC
A Substack Montage

June 14, 2024

BYCU

Memories of Cleveland’s infamous 10-cent Beer Night, 50 years on: Ted Diadiun
As bottles, chairs and anything else the fans could get their hands on rained down on the field, the Texas Rangers pitcher got understandably rattled and the Indians tied the game at 5-5, before Nestor Chylak, the umpire crew chief, rightfully ended the infamous June 4, 1974, game -- 10-cent Beer Night at Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium -- with a forfeit, writes Ted Diadiun in a column describing his firsthand experiences during the melee.
Cocaine Beer Coming?
If it were anywhere else in South America, the nondescript house with buckets of coca leaves soaking in liquid could be mistaken for a clandestine cocaine lab. But this is La Paz, Bolivia, and the fruity aroma of coca steeping in barrels signals that you’ve arrived at the government-authorized

June 13, 2024

Carlson on Ryan

I got through the Tucker Carlson's interview on the Shawn Ryan Show. It was nothing momentous. I'm glad I got a lot of garden weeding done while listening to it.

He didn't offer much more insight into aliens than he did on Joe Rogan: he thinks alien sightings are supernatural phenomenon that are here for dark purposes and there's possibly a supernatural war brewing. He seems to be saying, "the World War III being courted by poking Russia in the face is the manifestation on the natural level of the Supernatural World War that's taking place." That's kinda how I read him.

In any event, he emphasizes that he doesn't know and it's just a gut feeling, but one emanating from very solid evidence that the government is covering up. I remain agnostic.

The end of the interview, veers pretty strongly, if circumspectly, anti-Catholic. After a brief exchange about the priestly abuse scandal, Ryan left-hemispherically (dogmatically) insisted Christ's church isn't "brick and mortar," which I'm pretty sure is simply his metaphor for "an earthly institution." I suspect he used the metaphor instead of the literal because he didn't want to alienate any Catholic listeners. I hasten to add that I know nothing about Ryan except what I heard on this podcast, so it's entirely possibly I entirely misread him, but I doubt it.

SRS #115 Tucker Carlson - Tucker Carlson - Revolution, World War 3, WT
Tucker Carlson is an American journalist, commentator and host of the Tucker Carlson Network. He is most widely known for his 2016 - 2023 stint as host of Tucker Carlson Tonight, an extremely popular political Fox News show. Carlson’s long career in media is marked by both critical acclaim and criticism. His express

Dreher at Substack

Rod Dreher publishes a diary at Substack. I read it for the first time this morning. It's very good and, it appears, free.

Keep in mind, Dreher left the Catholic Church, traumatized by the priestly abuse scandal (understandable) and justified by his conclusion that Catholic doctrine is wrong (I forget the specifics; I remember rolling my eyes and thinking he should've simply left off at the buggery . . . that woulda sufficed for me).

Anyway, on display is a dose of the anti-Catholic serum that flows through every former Catholic's veins. I think the serum is unavoidable because there's a broken metaphysic involved, but I'm obviously just concocting that notion in my head (I also hunch the same when it comes to couples who divorce even though the original marriage was valid). Regardless, the animus in the diary entry seems fair, just, and on display for a reason.

Public Life, Private Life
And: Open Borders & Terrorism; Liberals & Migration; Ignatian Customer Service

June 12, 2024

Abbreviated Blogging Continues

My apologies for the abbreviated posts lately. Summer is tough on everyone's time. On top of that, I've been working on a few lengthy essays for submission to various magazines.

Existence Strikes Back Project Glossary
A work-in-process. Very early stages. I envision the final product will be ten times this long, if not longer. I haven’t even begun to include The Hemisphere Hypothesis, but I hope to start soon.

June 11, 2024

Members Only

Read Your Way Out of Left-Hemisphere Hegemony
Eric Scheske

June 10, 2024

Encourage Urban Gardening
I have a client in Detroit who keeps a small stash of money at his son’s house, along with a few guns, on the west side of Michigan, in a rural farming community. The reason? “When things collapse and Detroit erupts, I’ll boogie out and live with my son, where

June 9, 2024

An Excerpt from the Second Substack I've Paid to Subscribe to

I'll listen to the referenced podcast soon.

The Free Press on Tucker Carlson
Bari Weiss’ Free Press says Tucker Carlson is a loon. Me? I’m not sure what to think.

The Far Right is Not What Threatens Europe Most

It is time that the European left grew up. Prattling on about Mussolini and Marshal Pétain is passé.

Voters have eyes and ears, they are aware of what has unfolded in Europe in recent months. It is not far-right students calling for the destruction of Israel; it was not members from Marine Le Pen’s party who were questioned by police on charges of “apology for [Hamas] terrorism;” it was not a right-wing Spanish member who tweeted soon after the October 7 attack: “Today and always with Palestine;” it was not a right -wing mayor in Brussels trying to prevent democratically elected politicians speaking at a conference because he objected to their views; it was not a Swedish right-wing member who recently attended a conference linked with Hamas.
The far right is not what threatens Europe most
Europe does indeed feel like it might be returning to ‘the darkest pages of our history.’ But do not blame the ‘far right’ for it

June 7, 2024

BYCU

There's Always Something New Under the Drinking Sun

Today: artichoke liqueur. Yikes, but this writer adores the stuff.

Put Cynar In Everything
Two cocktails that use Cynar as a base ingredient.
Cynar and Tonic
Peter Suderman at Cocktails with Suderman (Substack)

June 6, 2024

Labor Costs Killing Asparagus in the Golden State

Fast-growing asparagus once flourished on California farms. Why is it disappearing?
At the turn of the 21st century, California growers were farming more than 36,000 acres of asparagus. Now, fewer than 3,000 acres are in production in the state for commercial sale. These are the last three farms.

June 5, 2024

Knowledge Through Experience is Still Knowledge
Eric Scheske

June 4, 2024

Science is Magic's Brother

Both toil in this valley of tears. One's just better at it than the other.

Magic in Everyday Renaissance Europe
Laura Miller at Slate

June 3, 2024

Postmodern Man Needs the Garden

It's for TDE members only. If you're not a member, consider it. My big project right now is to re-launch my Substack, with a short history series that will be available to paid subscribers only. TDE members will receive a free one-month subscription through the TDE newsletter (during that month, you can download the history series if you like them and cancel your subscription).

Why Gardening Matters
The right hemisphere is receptive to those things offered—demanded—by the garden: uncertainty, failure, surprise, patience, slowness, curiosity. The left hemisphere is also engaged by the garden: it plots, plans, and implements procedures. But gardening keeps the right hemisphere in the master position because gardening relentlessly pushes the right

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