American Thought Leaders - Why Many Elites Denigrate the Very Values That Made Them Successful | Rob Henderson
Episode Date: July 3, 2026Rob Henderson grew up in poverty in Los Angeles moving from foster home to foster home, seeing addiction, instability, and family breakdown all around him. He joined the U.S. Air Force at 17, entered ...Yale University at 25 with help from the GI Bill, and completed his PhD at the University of Cambridge. He climbed “every rung on the American class ladder,” as he describes it.But at Yale and other elite universities, he saw the spread of radical ideas—abolish the police, empty prisons, dismantle marriage, decriminalize all drugs—ideas that he understood would be devastating to the communities he grew up in.And that’s how he came to develop his now famous concept of luxury beliefs: “Luxury beliefs are ideas and opinions that confer status on the affluent … while inflicting costs on the less fortunate members of society,” he says.How is it that these ideas came to be so pervasive? And what are their true consequences for society?Henderson is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, contributing editor of City Journal, and bestselling author of “Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class.”Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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I grew up in poverty in Los Angeles, in foster homes, and then I get to Yale and I'm seeing people,
the majority of whom are raised by two married parents, they denigrate the very values that fueled their own success.
In this episode, I sit down with Rob Henderson, writer and senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
He's best known for coining the term luxury beliefs.
You'll see this with people who were raised wealthy, but then they say tax the rich,
or they are married personally, but then they say we need to dismantle marriage.
They personally never use drugs, or if they do, they do it in a very careful way.
But publicly, it's let's decriminalize everything and let people do whatever they want.
How is it that these ideas came to be so pervasive?
And what are their consequences?
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kellick.
Rob Henderson, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here.
Rob, your concept of luxury beliefs has been very helpful to me over the years now.
It's a beautiful little way of thinking about a whole range of, perhaps you could call it ideology.
I want to look at how you actually came to understand this idea and build it out.
And I know your background fits into this.
Why don't you give me a picture of that?
Sure.
Well, the luxury beliefs idea, I started thinking about it when I was in college, developed it in grad school.
Luxury beliefs are ideas and opinions that confer status on the affluent and the credentials while inflicting costs on the less fortunate members of society, people lower on the socioeconomic ladder.
And a core feature of a luxury belief is that the believer is sheltered from the consequences of his or her belief.
Hence luxury.
Right.
And the basic idea here is that historically elites exhibited their status, their high social rank,
with luxury goods, expensive material possessions.
And now material goods are a noisier signal of social status.
Now we live in an age where anyone can get an iPhone.
You can go to certain outlets and buy expensive clothes or clothes that used to be expensive off the rack.
And so compared to 100 years ago, you look around who's rich, who's poor, it's hard
you to identify by appearance alone.
And so now what affluent and credentialed people have done, cultural elites, they now exhibit
their status through luxury beliefs instead of luxury goods.
And these beliefs signal certain kinds of information about them.
It sub-communicates what kind of family you grew up in, the kinds of socioeconomic status
you hold, what kind of college you went to, what kind of job.
you have the amount of cultural capital you possess. I arrived at this idea. I mentioned it started
to sort of form in my mind in college. Before college, before I set foot on campus, my life was
very different. I grew up in poverty in Los Angeles, in foster homes, never knew my father. I was
taken from my mother when I was three years old. My mom was Korean, came to the U.S., her life very
quickly unraveled, suffered from drug addiction, and lived through a series of foster homes
and a bunch of sort of chaotic and difficult, adverse situations. I fled as soon as I could.
I enlisted in the U.S. Air Force when I was 17. And then with some hiccups and some setbacks
along the way, I finally arrived at Yale at age 25 as an undergraduate studying on the GI Bill.
And during this process, I sort of climbed every rung on the American class ladder.
You know, I was born about as poor as you can be in a developed first world country
and then lived through a kind of series of working class, lower middle class homes as a kid.
Military, I started encountering middle class people.
And then by the time I got to Yale, I was around sort of upper middle class and wealthy individuals.
And during these experiences, I noticed, oh, opinions and beliefs would differ along the way.
At Yale, I heard beliefs that I'd never encountered before, things like abolish the police,
we need to end incarceration, empty the prisons, we should promote polyamory, we should
dismantle any kind of conventional or traditional ideas of marriage, we need to decriminalize
all drugs, and all of these ideas that are popular among elites, they had an effect on
the communities that I grew up in, and I saw a lot of suffering, a lot of
of addiction, a lot of abuse, a lot of neglect and abandonment, and so on. And as a student,
both in college and then later at the University of Cambridge for my PhD, I read a lot of
papers on the sociology of class, the psychology of social status, and I encountered some
shocking statistics. One, for example, if you go back to 1960 and you look at the number of kids
in the U.S., same in the U.K., by the way, the number of
of kids who are raised by two married parents in 1960, it's identical across the socioeconomic
spectrum. Rich kids and poor kids alike, 95% of the kids were raised by two married parents.
You fast forward to 2005 when I was a kid and I was in high school for upper and upper
middle class kids. It declined slightly from 95% in 1960 to 85% by 2005. So a slight decline,
95% to 85%. Now, if you look at poor and working class kids, it dropped from 95% to 30% by 2005. So 30%. And so now if you visit a lot of working class, blue collar, impoverished areas, seeing kids in what the idea of the family is, that's an anomaly. Now you, you know, I grew up the kinds of, I was in foster homes. I think about my friends who I grew up with. But another friend who was raised by,
his single father, two friends raised by single mothers, another friend raised by his grandmother
because his mom was addicted to drugs and his dad was in prison. That's kind of the norm now in
these communities of kids in these fragmented, unstable family environments. And then I get to Yale
and I'm seeing people, the majority of whom are raised by two married parents who personally
have lived very traditional kinds of lives. Their parents and their families valued at
education and family, hard work, integrity, punctuality, law-abidingness.
They lived like they were conservatives.
But then when I heard them express their views, it was, again, sort of let's move beyond marriage,
defund the police.
If you want to use drugs, that's okay.
A very sort of hands-off, non-judgmental attitude about how you should live your life.
And so if you want to understand the luxury beliefs idea in a sort of concise and intuitive way,
I say that the luxury belief class, they walk the 50s and talk the 60s.
They walk the 50s and talk the 60s.
They walk the 50s and talk the 60s, meaning they live their lives as if they are in 1950s,
Republicans in the white picket fence, you know, love God and country, work hard, go to college,
go to work, pay your taxes, do the right thing.
Personally, that's how they live their life.
But then if you ask them about their opinions on various important sociocultural topics,
it's either kind of a laissez-faire, you know, you can do what you like, a practice,
practiced indifference or it's often the opposite of the way they live their life.
Like, yes, I got married, I did this, I did that, but you shouldn't have to do this,
and we need to find a way to dismantle this structure.
And so you'll see this with people who were raised wealthy, but then they say tax the rich,
or they are married personally, but then they say we need to dismantle marriage.
They personally never use drugs, or if they do, they do it in a very careful way.
But publicly, it's let's decriminalize everything and let people do it,
they want. And so that's the idea. There was a book a few years ago called The Meritocracy Trap by the
Yale Law Professor Daniel Markovits. And in this book, he uses this unforgettable phrase,
he uses this phrase non-practicing libertines. That's how he describes the new elite, non-practicing
libertines. And what does he mean by this? He means they are libertines outwardly. Again, you know,
if you want to live in a polycule and use drugs and, you know, sort of, sort of endowulfing.
indulge in your hedonistic impulses, that's perfectly fine, but they're non-practicing,
meaning personally they live the opposite of that. They're very careful and rigid and kind of
conservative in their own personal lives. So what I would like is for the luxury belief class,
you know, this segment of our elites who spread these ideas, to essentially preach what they
practice. You know, if you're going to live like a conservative, maybe you should also sort of share
those steps that fueled your own success.
And that was one of the things that shocked me the most.
The people that I encountered in college, grad school,
and now graduates of these institutions,
they denigrate the very values that fueled their own success.
There's a few ways you could think about what's happening, right?
One way is that, I don't know,
to use a term from this conference, we're here at ARC,
you know, the deconstructionists that they say,
somehow captured the minds of the elites, right, with these ideas. And so they're performatively
being expressed, purely performatively, even though that's not the culture within the families
themselves. Another way you could view it is that, you know, these people are actually, you know,
kind of intentionally, intentionally promoting things which are destructive, right, so that they can
maintain their high level social status.
Do you think, where do you think this lands?
It's a good question.
You know, this idea of intent, you know, do the people who espouse luxury beliefs,
are they malicious?
Are they intentionally trying to erode the values that lead to success?
My sense is that most of the people who express luxury beliefs are sincere.
You know, they really do believe that defunding the police would somehow lead to less
suffering. They have been convinced somehow. I would say there's about maybe 20% of the people
who espouse these beliefs who are very cynical and duplicitous. They intentionally express these
views in order to acquire social status or clout. And in the same way that many people will buy
expensive material possessions, not because they like the possession, but because they know it'll
impress other people.
And similarly, there are people who express luxury beliefs, not because they believe in that
view, but because they know it'll garner clout, it'll garner status, so they express the belief.
So the motivation for the luxury good and the luxury belief are often identical.
But there are many people who convince themselves that the reason why they're partaking in
these activities is, you know, their motives are sincere.
So if you ask, you know, you ask the guy, he buys a Lamborghini, and he says, look,
it just makes me feel confident that I drive the Lamborghini, it makes me feel.
feel good. I like the car. That's why I bought it. I'm not trying to impress anyone. But I think a
part of you might suspect, well, I think all of that's true, but I think a part of you also likes
the fact that when people see you in that Lamborghini, they think of you in a certain way.
Same with luxury beliefs. They espouse the belief. They're sincere in it. But there's a part of me
that thinks somewhere deep down, there's also this sense of satisfaction you get from
espousing the belief, your peers, your social circle, similarly credentialed elites,
applaud you for it. And they say, you know, what a, what a compassionate and interesting and
sophisticated person you are for holding that view.
Do you remember when you first sort of made this connection of this concept, when this concept
became something real in your mind?
Yeah, well, so, you know, I studied psychology and, you know, my interests were, you know,
eclectic, and I was having a lot of conversations with students and graduates of elite universities.
and one of the first interactions I had that made this idea click for me,
I was having a conversation with a fellow student at Yale,
and she told me that, you know, again, we got to move beyond marriage.
And I asked her, how were you raised?
And she said, well, I was raised by two married parents.
And then I said, you know, you're going to be a very successful person.
Later on down the line, do you plan to have a family?
How are you thinking about your own future?
And she said, well, I'm going to get married and have kids.
because that's how I was raised, and that's what I'm going to do for my kids.
But I think as an ideal, we need to move beyond this.
And what I was hearing was I benefited from this age-old institution that led me to study at Yale.
I plan to carry this benefit forward for my own kids.
But my official public stance is people shouldn't do this.
And so I heard that and this interesting mismatch,
and I started to read a lot about sociology of class,
Thorsten Veblen, Pierre Bordeaux.
and there was an interesting book just a few years ago
called Wasps, The Splenders and Misories of an American Aristocracy.
So Wasp, meaning white Anglo-Saxon Protestant,
this was the American ruling class from roughly the mid-19th to the mid-20th centuries.
I'm sure you're aware of this, but just for the viewers.
Sure, sure, of course.
And so in this book, the author Michael Knox Barron,
it's basically a sort of history of the Wasp class,
the ruling elite of America.
and he points out that what he terms high wasps,
kind of the tippy top of the wasp elite structure,
they would intentionally champion ideas and support certain causes
because, and this is a quote,
because of the secret knowledge that it would abhor the Bulgarians.
In other words, they would support these views,
not because they believed in them necessarily,
but because there was a certain gleean satisfaction
at the fact that the masses wouldn't like it.
It was a way to achieve distinction.
So if you are a normal ordinary person and you think police are a good thing,
how do I distinguish myself from you?
How do I show that I'm a member of this rarefied class?
I'm a card-holding member of polite society.
Well, I say, well, actually, we don't need police.
This whole idea of police is tawdry, it's de class A, it's lowly.
And so this is a way to sort of elevate myself above the commoner by saying these things.
and so those kinds of ideas around class of this distinction, this pursuit of status,
and you see sort of historical examples of this during the Middle Ages, spices were extremely expensive initially.
They were hard to obtain, only the elites could afford them.
But then during the age of exploration, European explorers started to travel to the Americas, to India.
the cost of spice dropped dramatically,
and suddenly ordinary European peasants could afford spice.
And in response, a lot of the elites and aristocrats in Europe,
they banned spice from the courts.
Famously, King Louis XIV, said no spice allowed except for desserts.
And this was in the 15th and 16th century.
And so you had this thing.
It was, only us elites get it.
Oh, no, no, the masses are using it now.
Okay, so in response, no, we don't want that anymore.
It's always trying to be different from the ordinary person.
And luxury beliefs are the latest way that they do this.
The difference here is that luxury beliefs are costly in a way that, okay, they're using spice,
we're not going to use it anymore.
But if I say they believe in the police so we don't,
so let's not allow them to have access to law enforcement.
Or I have a lot of impulse control and the ability to plan ahead.
I'm in a fortunate environment.
So, you know, the possibility of drug use is very remote for me.
But let's flood those other areas with, you know, if you want to order fentanyl on Amazon, that's perfectly fine.
Because who am I to judge?
Who am I to say, you know, one choice is better than the other?
I keep going back to this idea.
I mean, again, the theme of this conference is, well, reconstruction from the continuing deconstruction, right, of Western civilization.
And I can't help but wonder, it feels like some sort of ingenious.
ploy, if you will, to kind of convince the elites of society to get on a program, which would, in effect, be deconstructionist.
Because, well, of course, those elites always have a disproportionate impact on what really happens in the society.
Right? So do you think this was a deliberate play by people who were into deconstruction to kind of inculcate this idea into
the elites so that then it would sort of trickle through society.
Yeah, it's interesting.
I think a lot of these ideas are conceived in elite universities.
And many of the originators of these ideas, I think, yes, they do have this.
The end in mind is something like a socialist utopia, some kind of toppling of capitalism,
the structure as it exists, people are suffering from, some Marxist.
notion of false consciousness, and we need to wake people up.
And so I'm going to spread these ideas.
Anything that is potentially at odds with conventional Western norms or values, it must
inherently be good.
So the propagators may have some of that malicious intent, but I think, like, as it spreads
throughout elite media, and then through kind of the rest of the upper and upper middle
class, most people are persuaded somehow that, well, it's got to be a good.
good idea.
But otherwise, you couldn't, I mean, most people are actually well-intentioned.
So there would be no way for it to spread unless, unless, I mean, that's what I, that's why
I think it strikes me like this sort of ingenious.
Yes.
Yeah, no, no, it is brilliant because they, they frame it in a way that sort of captures people's
desire to feel moral and it captures the kind of uniquely elite desire to feel special to
achieve distinction. So of course you're a compassionate person if you believe these ideas,
but also you're going to be unique and different and you're going to sound sophisticated and
interesting. You're going to come up with the sort of intellectual acrobatics necessary to arrive
at this idea that is at odds with what the majority of society believes. But there's always this
kind of implicit, snobbish attitude that maybe the masses don't know what's good for them
anyway. And it's us fine people who went through these institutions that that, that
we know better. Many people have made the argument recently that sometime this year or last year,
we've kind of hit an inflection point. Some people call it peak woke, right? And there's just a
drawback and a lot of institutions that were kind of caught up in this are starting to pull back
from these policies that would, you know, basically codify, enact a lot of the luxury beliefs
that we've just been discussing. What do you know,
think? Have we reached peak woke? Yes, in sort of a broad sense I think we have. Things are obviously
not as bad as they were in 2020 or 2021. Still, there are certain parts of society where it's as bad as
ever. I think academia is as woke in 2026 as it was in 2021. But for elite media and for, I think,
sort of the professional managerial class overall, things have gotten a little better.
And so, you know, we went through a very sort of strange and intense period there in the early
2020s of, you know, the far left captured the institutions and they saw their moments to
push forward and maybe they saw that there was a little bit too much overreach and there was a backlash
with the election of Trump, for example, in 2024. And now I think there's a sort of a period of
self-reflection, but, you know, I don't think woke will, is permanently going away. It's in a
kind of hibernation mode. And this is something I think people misunderstand here is that in 2020,
many activists were, you know, digging up social media posts from 2009 and saying, oh,
you know, we're going to retroactively apply, you know, progressive moral standards today to
something you posted a decade ago. Today, people think, okay, we've passed peak woke. I'm going to
say what I want, speak my mind, but they're unaware, I think many of them that in, you know,
just to throw a number out there, say 2033, woke is going to come back, and they're going to find
your post from 2026 and say, oh, you know, we're in power again. We're in Woke 2.0 or 3.0.
And you posted something on X or on Facebook or what have you from six or seven years ago.
And now is the time for us to sort of reemerge and reenact our preferred policies.
So I think it's just sort of a lull in sort of the woke far left movement.
That doesn't bode well for the future.
I mean, again, if you accept the premise of this conference,
that doesn't bode well for the future of Western civilization.
I mean, not to be overly melodramatic here.
I know.
I just, I have very, like, you know, look, I'm broadly,
what temperamentally, I suppose, aligned with,
conservatives, but I think like a lot of them are incompetent and they sort of fumble and
mismanage the power whenever they manage to acquire it. They manage to, what is the line? They seize
defeat from the jaws of victory and, you know, I, I, there's still, there's still a chance,
you know, we'll see how things go with the midterms with 2028, with, you know, how the
universities continue to, you know, interact with the Republican administration. I, there
are some kind of signs of reform, but look, that energy from 2020, it didn't go away.
It's, you know, that that will sort of return. And then how do we handle it the next time?
Because in 2020, you know, all the institutions folded, you even saw conservatives sort of
falling in line with the whole sort of BLM, Antifa, all that kind of stuff. Yeah.
At the very least paying lip service to it. So, you know, will this time, you know, or will the next
time that energy arises, will it be different?
What would you give me some examples of this?
What is it?
Seizing defeat from the Jaws of Victory?
Give me some examples of what you mean when you say that.
There are examples at elite universities where, you know, I understand like, you know, with
people like Trump, with J.D. Vance and with many other members of the administration that
these elite universities.
Removing funding, often when you hit them in their pocketbooks, that's when you can start
to persuade them.
But I think they may have overshot the mark by reducing funding for science, for example.
Not fake social science, but actual hard STEM sciences, in physics and chemistry, mathematics,
medical technology and so on.
I think that went a little bit too far.
And even a lot of people who may have otherwise been allies or have been broadly aligned within the academy,
when they saw the administration start to do this, strip funding from sectors that had nothing to do with wokeness,
that ended up backfiring.
And they lost a lot of people that would have otherwise been on their side.
I see. Interesting.
So it's not not going far enough.
It's going too far in most cases.
Is that going too far?
I think it was just, you know, a very unstrategic move.
It was a blunder, unnecessary.
I don't even know if I would say going too far.
But I suppose there is a case to be made that, you know, making mistakes like that,
it's better than the opposite, which would be doing nothing.
So, you know, I've heard versions of that argument, too.
I'm curious if you have some thoughts.
You gave a list earlier of these different luxury.
beliefs. Do you have a sense of which one you think is the most damaging or that needs to be
challenged first? Oh man, there's a lot, but the... Or a few or a handful, but a few.
Like, if I had to choose one, I think a lot of the difficulties that we see would be around the
family.
You know, this idea that either all family structures are equally likely to allow children
to succeed and flourish, or the belief that we need to actively dismantle the very family
structure that is most likely to lead to success, which is two married parents.
And so if we can, I think if we can fix that one, we may sort of indirectly start to repair
some of the others, because when you have kids that are in environments full of neglect and
an absence of role models and aspirations and goals.
You know, the behavioral gap between people who are at the top and the bottom of the
socioeconomic spectrum, the gap in terms of marriage rates, law-abidingness, punctuality,
employment rates, all of these kinds of things.
They used to be very small.
And they started to diverge in the early 1960s.
And what could be responsible for this, because in 1960s,
there were poor people too. This can't be the result of economic factors alone. If you compare
poor people in 1960 to poor people in 2026, their lives look very different in terms of, again,
employment rates, law abidingness, crime, likelihood of getting married and staying married versus
remaining single or divorced, incarceration, drug addiction. And much of that starts sort of in the
home with the family, with stable communities. But the framework around luxury beliefs is
important, which is the people who are successful in their lives, I think they need to be more
honest about the practices that led to that success. And that's sort of the meta idea of luxury
beliefs. That's right. You've written about status anxiety in that vein, right? And just how
the realities of modern culture kind of amplify that. Tell me a bit about that.
Yeah. Well, so status anxiety, it's an interesting idea. So people ask, well, what is social status? And a simple way to think about it is respect and admiration from your peers. The people whose opinion you care about, do you feel admired by them? Do you feel respected by them? And there have been some interesting findings in social psychology, which have indicated that that type of status of do I feel respected in it,
admired by my peers, that is a stronger predictor of happiness than socioeconomic status,
how much money or how educated you are. There's a moderate, small to moderate correlation between
income and happiness, but a stronger effect of admiration and respect. That's what I mean by status.
And people have sort of varying degrees of desire for this kind of status. I, like sometimes
compare it to hunger. You know, hunger is a universal thing that we all feel.
but some of us experience it more frequently and more intensely than others, this desire for food.
Now we see this also for status.
Now it's a human universal, we all want to be liked and admired to some degree,
but some of us feel it more frequently and more intensely than others.
And there's a question here, well, who experiences this anxiety, this longing for status the most?
Well, maybe counterintuitively, the findings are that the people at or near the top of the socioeconomic ladder experience the
most desire for status. So the people who already have it want it even more. And so there
have been a couple of different studies. This is a replicated finding when you ask people, you
know, first collecting their objective metrics of status. So, you know, income, occupational
prestige, level of education, how well you're doing in your life, people who are at or near
the top of those measures are the most likely to agree.
with statements like it would please me to be in a position of power over others.
I enjoy when people look at me when I walk into a room.
It's important for me to have influence over my peers.
And so these are the people.
You know, you think, well, who has this sort of insatiable desire?
It's people who kind of already are doing quite well.
There's a sociologist, Emil Durkheim, from the 19th century,
and he had this classic line.
the more one has, the more one wants, since satisfactions received only stimulate instead of filling needs.
One way to think about this is if you are dispossessed, impoverished, you are materially deprived in some way,
you have very limited number of desires. Maybe you want shelter, you want warmth, you want food.
These very basic desires, a limited number.
But once all of those needs are met, now what do you want?
Well, you want respect, you want esteem.
on admiration, you want approval, and that feeling is much stronger once all of your other needs are already met.
You know, being here at Arc, it's very interesting because, you know, I go to a number of different conferences that are broadly interested in this topic, right?
Even epoch times, our tagline is truth, tradition, hope, right?
It's there in your shot on camera, in fact.
Okay.
And what strikes me with this conference at Ark, I want to talk about it a little bit here,
is that it feels to me like, you know, an audience that views itself as somewhat sophisticated
or a group that views itself as somewhat sophisticated, which isn't necessarily the case
in most of the other conferences that I'm going to, which are more.
kind of like a people's thing, right?
I'm curious what you think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I love Arc.
You know, I've been to every single one.
I think that these conferences are necessary.
I feel at home here.
I mean, I love the emphasis on classical music and art.
It's like really, it's been a joy to be here.
Oh, yeah.
It's edifying.
And it's a place where they have managed to collect a group of ambitious, smart,
interesting people who
can sense that something is going wrong
in the culture and
even if everyone here doesn't agree on
everything they do agree that
there's room for repair, for
reform, for finding ways
to help society flourish.
And these are
necessary
sort of events to bring
these kinds of people together.
I
begrudgingly become
accepting
I suppose, of this idea that, you know, if you want to understand sort of class conflict and this kind of thing, you know, it's often framed as, you know, it's the rich versus the poor, it's the workers versus the capitalists. It's, you know, the 1% and the 99%.
Well, this is that, that's the communist framing, isn't it? Always. Yes. It's often framed as, yeah, in the kind of Marxist framework. Right.
But if you look historically at how societies actually change and who drives this change,
it's sort of one
there's the existing regime
of the existing elites
and they are deposed by a counter-elite
or an aspirational elite
so this is Peter Turchin's idea
he's discussed this at length of intra-elite conflict
intra-elite competition
and essentially
so much of the battles in society
are waged between sort of two groups of people
who have economic capital, cultural capital
a vision for society
and of course they often
require support and they're bolstered by support from the masses for many people.
But ultimately, you need sort of a group of unified, intelligent, combat, incapable people
who sort of have connections into different nodes in society in order to drive change.
And, you know, this is, I suppose, there's another shortcoming, I think, that conservatives have.
Leftists are extremely good at that kind of ground game of sort of, you know, the long march
through the institutions and that kind of idea of playing.
the long game of sort of infiltrating K through 12, higher education, the professions, HR, and so on,
and conservatives have repeatedly dropped the ball on this. And, you know, there's this classic line
of, you know, the side that wants to win is always going to triumph over the side that wants
to be left alone. And conservatives, you know, they want to be left alone. It's understandable.
You want the small government. You want to be sort of left to your own devices. But as long as
there's a powerful faction out there that wants to interfere with you, you know, that's that, that kind of
you know, just hang out at your house and grill and be left alone is not really feasible.
There's got to be sort of a counter-elite to shield you from those other kinds of elites.
Well, so I went to this American dinner last night, and, you know, of course, we were talking about the American Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence,
and it just strikes me in the vein of what you just said, that those people, you know, the founding fathers and the people that people that particular,
participated were people who both wanted to be left alone and to win.
Yeah.
Oh, that's a good, that's a good point.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, with the American Revolution, I mean, this is, this is a perfect example of this of,
you know, the American Revolution, you know, it's often put it as, you know, sort of
sort of ordinary settlers or people in the American colonies and they're fighting against
this, you know, aristocratic British elite.
But the founding fathers themselves were, you know, very aristocratic, erudite, educated men who
themselves were, you know, financially for their time.
very well off and obviously we won't know the the specific statistics for this but I've read
that historian say something like only a third of the people in the American colonies actually
supported the American Revolution you know very few ordinary people wanted to wage this
war and yet the founding fathers you know they saw their opportunity they saw their
opening they coalesced they united they you know gave this sort of shared ambition
and managed to to triumph in this case and I
I think like that is kind of a model of how these things actually tend to go.
That, you know, historically, ordinary people, you know, they're either uninvolved or sort of tepidly interested,
but then the elite sort of, and counter elites sort of a spotlight and foreground certain issues and get them to care about it.
We talked about peak woke and you say you think it's just kind of simmering and waiting to roar back.
So I'll ask the question maybe in a slightly different way.
like luxury beliefs now, right?
Are they here to stay with our elite classes?
Or is this something you see a way to kind of, or at least reduce them?
I mean, maybe by people like this,
because clearly there's a lot of elites
which have a different view of the world here.
Yeah.
Well, I liken the idea of luxury beliefs to fashion.
And so there's this cyclical nature of what's fashionable and trendy today,
you know a year from now two years from now it'll be out of date it won't be trendy
anymore it feels awfully fickle yes yeah yeah I mean these are these are these have
profound impacts on our society on our socio-economic status of people of the most
vulnerable people right I mean this is this is no this is what probably got you
thinking about this stuff in the first place right yes yeah so I mean I think maybe
the specific beliefs will shift over time but the under
underlying drive for status, for distinction, that will remain and it will continue to express
itself in the form of luxury beliefs.
So look, I started writing about this publicly in 2019.
September, the first essay I published on the idea of luxury beliefs.
And I was asked at that time, what's the next luxury belief?
And I said, you know, I have no idea.
I think I probably tossed out a couple of ideas that never came to fruition, not good at predicting
the future. But the very last thing I think I would have ever predicted was, oh, in six or seven
months, you're going to see the cultural elite coales around this idea that we need to abolish
the police. That would have never occurred to me. And then six months later, it's, you know,
in the headlines of the New York Times, yes, we literally mean abolish the police and you're seeing
people in the streets marching in favor of it. And then there were many cities that did reduce
funding for law enforcement and led to a temporary increase in violent crime. And now it's to class
and a lot of people are embarrassed by that whole thing.
If you bring up deep on the police with a lot of left-leaning people,
they start to get a little uncomfortable and say,
well, we didn't really mean that because now it's unfashionable.
And we're going to move on to the next thing.
No one will be held accountable for it.
That's the tragic thing about this.
So never any accountability for luxury beliefs being enacted
with disastrous consequences?
I mean, was anyone held accountable for the lockdowns, you know?
Like did any...
Well, no, but we're still holding out some hope.
here, you know?
I don't know.
I hope there will be, but, you know, I wouldn't, I wouldn't bet on it.
You know, once in a while there is, you know, there's a bit of, yeah.
We need that to, listen, this whole, again, right, everything, we're all about sort of
re-nitting the fabric of society somehow that's being deconstructed.
Don't we need accountability to get that?
Like, how, I mean, yes, yeah.
I mean, to an extent.
I think there's also something to be said for, you know, the accountability is pointing out
mistakes of others, and then there's the other piece, which is, you know, creating a positive
aspirational vision and focusing more on, okay, all of these things happened, a lot of disappointments,
a lot of elite failure, but let's move on and move forward with a different path.
And in order to persuade people of that path, just to, you know, kind of point out, oh, by the way,
remember all those failures and how no one was accountable?
So you can use that too as a sort of a fuel for your movement.
I've really enjoyed this conversation.
A final thought as we finish?
No, no, I've really enjoyed this as well.
So thank you.
Well, Rob Henderson, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you all for joining Rob Henderson and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Janja Kellick.
