#162. Why do poor people love noise?
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🧵Threads of the Week🧵
> An Atlantic writer wrote an essay about how poor people (in her head) love the siren song of police cruisers. Shrieking schizos make them feel alive. Teeth rattling bass — turn it up. Poor people love their jingtinglers, their floo-floobers, their sloo-slonkers, etc. And if you’d like to hold a conversation at a bar without your Apple Watch’s Loud Noise notification warning of your impending deafness, you might just be a stuffy mayo-monster who would never be invited to the cookout, who would never be asked to chop it up in the bodega. Too bad the author of this piece already wrote about how she can’t get work done amid vibrant street life.
> Last week we covered the pretty girl who dared to say a bad word.
argues that this kind of juvenile provocation puts her in the pantheon of conservative voices. When he’s right, he’s right, but this sort of thing happens on the left constantly too.>
makes the case for being mean and making people sad. Civilization just might depend on it. Lolbert that he is, Devon wants to rebuild tradition from the ground up because you can’t trust all the tradition we have lying around to work anymore.> Google Maps would rather you get raped and killed than give you a Scenic Route that avoids bad neighborhoods.
🎥A/V of the Week🎥
> Massive budget Sol Brah-starring feature release when?
> They smashed our vaporwave statues.
> Inside every adult male is a real human bean.
>
interviews about natalism, and The Black Horse contributed a follow-up thread interesting enough to pique the Collins’ attention.> We missed this one when it released last month, a new chapter in
’s “Rise of the Dragonslayer” series, a rousing call for would-be kings that brings together fantasy, religion, philosophy, and ancient ways of seeing.📰Reads of the Week📰
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responds to last week’s Spencer Klavan piece about right wing art. Yes, we need billionaires, but perhaps just as crucially, tastemakers: culturally savvy intermediaries who connect talent and money.>
details the agonizing legal tightrope walk that American businesses must do to appease the DEI gods, and one company’s attempt to route around it.> Fascinating piece from
on the changing nature of warfare in the GWOT that resulted in $725M worth of anthropologists deployed to help the American military understand the people it was fighting with and for. Literal culture war.>
wrote a piece about how desperately hard it is for guy’s to put themselves in a position to have kids in response to ’s exhortation that right-wing leaders should have kids if they expect to be taken seriously as leaders. Fortissax thinks Johann is not being realistic about the challenges men face. Johann says that yes, it’s hard, but it’s non-negotiable — for leaders. This “kin in the game” question is shaping up to be a powerful litmus test for the right.> The natalists are BenOpping in the hinterlands, says
: “The periphery is becoming much more interesting than the center.”>
writes about the Draft Our Daughters meme becoming real, as the American military considers scraping the bottom of the barrel of its fighting capacity. Will it backfire?> Lots of Father’s Day posts, but we liked this one by
best, on the Fatherlessness Tax.>
on the narrative-building nature of modern warfare. The story we tell is more important than what’s actually happening on the front.>
writes at about how power creep creates incentives for corporations to serve inhuman interests.> Meet
’s Remarkably Talented and Alienated Late-Millennial Male, a modern coddled Holden Caulfield who thinks he’d be running things if everything wasn’t so fake and gay.>
completes a magisterial 3-part history of the Trump era which tries to explain what Trumpism means as a radicalizing force for good.> Shifty LinkedIn pick-me
lays out his big-tent strategy to beat the Left with 7-step manifesto featuring a pro-white, pluralist, and vitalist framework. then objected, and Walt responded.🐦Tweets of the Week🐦
There you have it, folks. As always, we are publishing All the Shit that’s Fit to Poast, twice a week. Follow us on Twitter to see our take on who posted the top thread, read and tweet, along with lots of other banter and hijinks between issues that you won’t see on Substack. AND…the NRP Chatroom is open for businesses, for you can discuss the latest edition and argue autistically over the picks there right now. See you in the Chat!
Sorry bro, can’t like your posts until likes go private, too risky
Thanks for putting these together, Dudley. It takes a lot of effort to comb through so much content on a weekly basis and deliver it consistently. I've discovered new authors thanks to your efforts. Hope you continue to grow.