The Post-nation State

People say, bad FBI, bad CIA, bad police. Well, this is life without these institutions of the nation-state. Are you happy?

In Great Britain, police only comes if you negatively impact the profit margins of pharmaceutical companies, because that’s what this trans persecution is about. The state is playing on the side of Big Business against the population. This is what mass migration is. This is what COVID lockdowns were. This is what Blackrock buying up real estate all over the country is. This is a post-nation state. Chaos on public transportation, population replacement, censorship, incapacity to apprehend and lock down criminals, the evisceration of the middle class. How do you like it?

Everything is downstream from this. We are experiencing a collapse of the statehood model that gave us the middle class, the historically unprecedented standard of living for the majority, law and order, and political representation. It’s a model that has many flaws. But the model in whose favor we are chucking away the nation-state preserves all these flaws and dispenses with the benefits.

When Walmart wanted a larger market share, the government managed to lock us all up very effectively and give Walmart what it wanted. When Iryna Zarutska bleeds out on a train and Charlie Kirk is shot dead on a campus, the government is impotent and actually quite unwilling to prevent it and apprehend Charlie’s shooter. Walmart and Pfizer always get what they want. We no longer do. And please don’t tell me it was always like this. It was not. We used to have a very large middle class. We used to have an accessible high standard of living for the majority. The age of first home ownership went from 27 to 40 in a very short period of time. Today, you need a yearly salary of $100,000 to buy what, only a few years ago, you could buy with $70,000. And most people don’t even have a salary that high.

This is not a partisan issue. It’s a global issue that goes completely beyond any political belonging. And yes, it’s boring that I keep talking about that. But there’s no issue more deserving of discussion.

9/11

Another watershed moment in the country is happening right before 9/11.

True Love

On my way back from my conference in Spain, my husband got me an extra night at a hotel in NYC where I have my layover. I never asked.

This is what true love is like.

Felt like posting something positive for a change.

How Soon?

How soon will we hear that Kirk’s shooter was “mentally ill”?

I wish all punishments of hell on the evildoer who invented this stupid expression. Everybody is now “ill”. Nobody is responsible for anything.

How about we agree that a person who conceived a plan and carried it out effectively is not ill? How about we stop expanding the definition of illness until it includes everyone?

Charlie Kirk Is Shot

Wait, what?

I hope he survives. This is atrocious.

Good News

In good news, Keturah has finally given birth, about 5 months after what she thought was the due date. I’m understandably nervous about early September births, so it’s a great relief that the baby and the mother are fine.

Drones over Poland

In the meantime, Russia is attacking Poland with suicide drones. The sky over Warsaw is closed. Dutch, Italian, and Polish fighter jets are trying to shoot down the Russian drones.

I’d love to hear what people who like the word “escalation” gave to say.

No, I don’t because they are incapable of thinking with their ossified brains.

Cliff Arroyo, I hope you are safe, please confirm.

Indifferent Strangers

There were no Daniel Pennys on the train where Iryna Zarutska was murdered. People sat there indifferently while she bled to death.

Finally, two minutes after the stabbing, when it was already too late to save Iryna’s life, one man and one woman came up to try to stem the flow of blood. Others stood there and filmed. Or walked out indifferently.

The New York Times finally published a story about Iryna. It refers to her as white she her murderer as Black. There’s no honor for the victims even in death.

Here’s the guy filming the death:

I hope somebody identifies him.

Q&A about the Language Question in Ukraine

Aside from the question on why I want to shoot drug dealers on sight (which I absolutely do not), I’m getting excellent questions these days. Thank you, this is an excellent one.

There was never any language issue in Ukraine. If you heard of one prior to 2022, that was all propaganda. Words can’t describe how utterly indifferent everybody in Ukraine was to what language anybody spoke before February 2022. The overwhelming majority spoke Russian but could switch into Ukrainian whenever they wanted to.

Since the beginning of the full-scale invasion in 2022, things changed. People have been wounded, lost loved ones, lived under occupation, have been displaced, sat in bomb shelters. They are being told endlessly by Russians that this is done because of the Russian language. It’s not shocking that many people now feel a visceral hatred for this language. Imagine spending your nights in a bomb shelter for 3 years over a language. How’d you feel?

As a result, many formerly Russian-speaking Ukrainians can’t hear the sounds of this language. Everybody who could, switched to Ukrainian. Among those who are under the age of 30, you will not find any Russian speakers.

Of course, not everybody can switch. Imagine if you had to switch to a different language right now. It’s an enormously difficult and painful proposition. Imagine abandoning all of your favorite jokes, snippets of songs, wordplay, movie quotes, idioms. The older you are, the more cultural baggage you carry. Dropping it all and inscribing yourself into a completely different culture, one that even swears in an entirely different way*, is a Herculean endeavor. It’s also very painful. But seeing daily reports of raped toddlers is more painful, so people keep trying to tear themselves out of any connection with the culture capable of such horror.

Curiously, the most Russian-speaking group of non-elderly Ukrainians right now is the soldiers fighting on the front lines. They don’t have to show their patriotism in additional ways, so they are more indifferent to the language they speak.

I don’t think there’s any going back to the young people in Ukraine not hating the Russian language. That all was buried under the rubble of Mariupol and Bakhmut. I think that’s fine because it’s not much of a language to begin with. I say that as a native speaker who spent a lifetime learning other languages because Russian is so flat and inexpressive.

*Russian swearing is sexual while Ukrainian is scatological. Putting it bluntly, they refer to the sexual act in their swearing, while we refer to the process of excretion.

The Texas A&M Scandal

Facing growing political pressure, Texas A&M University President Mark A. Welsh III announced Monday evening that the dean and department head overseeing a children’s literature course at the center of a viral recording were going to be removed, saying they approved plans to teach material inconsistent with the published course description.

https://www.texastribune.org/2025/09/08/texas-am-video-professor-student-gender-identity-content/

The material that this person was teaching was absolutely inappropriate and wrong but what do the department head and the dean have to do with it? I have absolutely no idea what my faculty members are teaching. Neither does our dean. We aren’t a high school. There are no “approved materials.” I can’t imagine the Dean I currently have approving much of what I say about socialism, US foreign policy, mass migration, etc. But so what? It’s my academic freedom. He wouldn’t dare make a peep about my materials and assigned readings. And that’s good.

The problem here is not with course materials.

From the videos of the incident, it’s clear that the faculty member who taught the course is a crap teacher outside of any ideological considerations. She has no understanding of basic pedagogy and doesn’t know how to engage productively with a student who challenges her politely. We all have students who challenge what we say in class. Knowing how to respond in a way that advances our teaching goals is Pedagogy 101. If you can’t even do that, what can you do?

I love students who contradict me in class. It shows that they are engaged. They care. They want to participate. And I’m not always right. I have apologized on various occasions, saying, “you are absolutely right, my mistake. Thank you for pointing it out.” I love such moments because they are wonderful for establishing trust and rapport with students.

I have had students challenge me aggressively, especially when I was a much younger, early-career academic. Every time, I handled it with dignity, understanding, and kindness. It never occurred to me to throw a student out. In the end, every such student apologized and shared the reasons that drove them to this behavior. I once had a student, strung out on meth, curse me out and threaten me in the classroom. The week after that, she was weeping in my office, telling me how much she appreciated that I didn’t “fuck me up like I fucking deserved for being such a stupid fuck.” I was 24, and this was my first year teaching college. And still, I handled it professionally.

The A&M student who started the hullabaloo is a dream student. She’s polite, articulate, well-spoken. If the Dean and the department head deserve removal, it’s not because of the materials, for which they bear no responsibility, but because they aren’t doing faculty development. Every semester you should be doing something to improve everybody’s pedagogical skills. Including your own. Or you end up with faculty who can’t handle the most basic situations in the classroom.

In one of the videos of the incident, the faculty member (I’m very unconvinced she’s a professor) says “I’m the authority in this classroom.” Dude, only people with zero authority have to say they are the authority. You can’t demand respect. You must generate it. You gain authority by behaving like one.

It’s embarrassing to watch this faculty member flail pathetically like teaching was invented 15 minutes ago and she’s trying to figure it out on the spot. That’s why I don’t think she has tenure. If she does, the university must revise its entire tenure-granting process.

P.S. I googled this “professor”, and I was right. She’s a senior lecturer. Not even an instructor. This is why you want professors, and not a troop of contingent laborers with zero interest in teaching, to work in higher education. Again, none of this is about ideology for me. This is simply an issue of being unqualified for the job.