If you want a glimpse into the deepest recesses of the leftist mind, you can’t do better than read Bruce Holsinger’s novel Culpability. Noah, the main character, is completely subservient to his girl-boss wife Lorelei. It’s fascinating that the same people who always tell us that it’s horrible when a wife turns herself into her husband’s silent, obedient maid think it’s just peachy when a husband says he’s the pedestal for his wife to step on as she marches towards glory.
Poor Noah is so cucked it’s painful to read about his self-abasement. He’s a successful man who makes an excellent living but he convinced himself that Lorelei is a genius while he’s stupid, and there’s no humiliation at her hands that he doesn’t eagerly accept. Their children also treat him like garbage, and it never occurs to Noah that he deserves some respect from them. Noah’s eldest son, an 18-year-old high-school graduate, learns the lessons of debased masculinity from his father and lets first his sister and then a girlfriend get him into a lot of trouble. Male weakness has become a sad legacy that father passes down to his son.
In the USSR we also had inverted gender roles. Noah is very similar to the Soviet model of masculinity. But there is one huge difference. In the USSR, women took the roles that had been abandoned by men. They became strong, resilient, stoic, and leaders of the family. In Culpability, this doesn’t happen. Lorelei is a neurotic basket case. She’s a tender flower who has a nervous breakdown if plates aren’t arranged just so in the kitchen cabinet and has hysterics over sad stories on TV.
In this vacuum of leadership, Noah tries to step in and act like a man but Lorelei humiliates him every time when he emerges from his browbeaten stupor. Unsurprisingly, their three children suffer because neither parent is a figure of authority.
There’s a lot of AI stuff sprinkled into the narrative because AI is a safe, PC subject that brings an aura of coolness to a story. Against the background of the clown show that is Noah’s and Lorelei’s family dynamic, however, AI doesn’t sound all that scary.