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Rob Henderson

@robkhenderson206,300 subscribers

Best-selling author of "Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class" | Senior Fellow, @ManhattanInst | All Views My Own

Shorts

A Black woman asked Zohran Mamdani if he identifies as Black or African American and Mamdani replied he would never do that. Turns out he would and did. Circumventing “bourgeois truth” is always justified in the service of socialist revolution.

A Black woman asked Zohran Mamdani if he identifies as Black or African American and Mamdani replied he would never do that. Turns out he would and did. Circumventing “bourgeois truth” is always justified in the service of socialist revolution.

596,553 次观看

Watching the manosphere doc on netflix. This guy brags about being in a “one way” monogamous relationship (meaning he can cheat but she can’t). Then you see his face change up so fast when asked in front of his girlfriend about this:

Watching the manosphere doc on netflix. This guy brags about being in a “one way” monogamous relationship (meaning he can cheat but she can’t). Then you see his face change up so fast when asked in front of his girlfriend about this:

100,142 次观看

Whenever you hear Gavin Newsom speak without a teleprompter, he sounds like the dumbest guy you went to high school with trying to BS his way through the class presentation.

Whenever you hear Gavin Newsom speak without a teleprompter, he sounds like the dumbest guy you went to high school with trying to BS his way through the class presentation.

225,781 次观看

Notice it’s always “smash the system” and “demolish capitalism” and “eat the rich.” It’s never “help the needy” or “feed the poor.” You’ll see a thousand communists say “billionaires shouldn’t exist” but not a single one who says “poor people shouldn’t exist.”

Notice it’s always “smash the system” and “demolish capitalism” and “eat the rich.” It’s never “help the needy” or “feed the poor.” You’ll see a thousand communists say “billionaires shouldn’t exist” but not a single one who says “poor people shouldn’t exist.”

168,012 次观看

There has always been some amount of elite hypocrisy. Still, I prefer what I call the “John F. Kennedy model of hypocrisy” to what we have now. JFK was a flawed man, but the image he presented to the American public was that he was a good husband, a good father. In his private life, though, he was a philanderer and often an absentee father and had other shortcomings. But he thought it was important to set an example for the people. And now we have the opposite. Today, our elites get married, they have kids, and for the most part, they live a very stable, conventional life. But if you ask them their opinions and attitudes around sex, family, around marriage, around law abidingness, hard work, punctuality, integrity, honesty, and so on, they take a very relaxed attitude. "Non-practicing libertines," as the Yale Law School professor Daniel Markovits calls them. Elites used to pay lip service to conventional values but privately strayed. Now, they publicly support straying, but privately behave in a more conventional way.

There has always been some amount of elite hypocrisy. Still, I prefer what I call the “John F. Kennedy model of hypocrisy” to what we have now. JFK was a flawed man, but the image he presented to the American public was that he was a good husband, a good father. In his private life, though, he was a philanderer and often an absentee father and had other shortcomings. But he thought it was important to set an example for the people. And now we have the opposite. Today, our elites get married, they have kids, and for the most part, they live a very stable, conventional life. But if you ask them their opinions and attitudes around sex, family, around marriage, around law abidingness, hard work, punctuality, integrity, honesty, and so on, they take a very relaxed attitude. "Non-practicing libertines," as the Yale Law School professor Daniel Markovits calls them. Elites used to pay lip service to conventional values but privately strayed. Now, they publicly support straying, but privately behave in a more conventional way.

102,524 次观看

Still surprised the showrunners put these words in the mouth of the villain.

Still surprised the showrunners put these words in the mouth of the villain.

30,182 次观看

Sydney Sweeney says “Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color" but why "even eye color?" Most people know eye color is genetic. "Even personality" would've made more sense. I'm not overthinking this.

Sydney Sweeney says “Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color" but why "even eye color?" Most people know eye color is genetic. "Even personality" would've made more sense. I'm not overthinking this.

37,664 次观看

The requirements for the new upper class to take you seriously (e.g., credentials, wealth, power) are also the grounds to brand you a hypocrite for making any criticism of the upper class. A "heads I win, tails you lose" tactic:

The requirements for the new upper class to take you seriously (e.g., credentials, wealth, power) are also the grounds to brand you a hypocrite for making any criticism of the upper class. A "heads I win, tails you lose" tactic:

19,868 次观看

Videos

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One possible effect of MeToo is that now you see plenty of perfectly normal guys who are genuinely afraid of being accused of something—harassment, coercion, intimidation, whatever it may be. I think people misunderstood what young men are actually like and overinterpreted the problem. Yes, there’s always some small percentage of genuine predators out there—people who are basically immune to laws, shame, or stigma. They’re going to be predators no matter what barriers you put in front of them. But the average guy is not like that. The average young guy, when he’s repeatedly told about toxic masculinity, that men are the problem, “the future is female,” and that he constantly needs to prove he respects women, starts to internalize something different. He thinks, I should just hang back. I shouldn’t do anything. I don’t want to make anyone uncomfortable. So he ends up walking on eggshells. When I think back to high school, the average guy already needed basically every condition to be perfect just to make a move. In some ways, it’s amazing anyone ever pairs up at all. I think about my best friend in high school—I lived with him our senior year. He had a crush on this girl in our class for ages. She liked him too; we knew from her friends. It was the classic setup where everyone knew, everyone was talking, and everyone was rooting for them. His friends told her friends. Her friends told him. I told my friend. The entire social machinery was working overtime to make this happen. And still, it felt impossible. Finally, he walks up to her, and I’m standing maybe ten feet away pretending not to listen. He says, “Hey, our friends have been talking, and I guess I should tell you I like you…” He was terrified. He even said, “I can’t believe how hard this is for me.” She was encouraging him: “It’s okay. You can ask.” He says, “I want to ask you something.” She says, “It’s okay. You can ask.” And he says, “I don’t know if I can.” That’s your typical 17-year-old boy. All the nerves, all the emotional energy, all the fear of asking a girl out for the first time. Finally, after all of that, he asks: “Will you go out with me?” She says yes. This is with mutual attraction, friend approval, social permission—basically a green light from the universe. And he was still terrified. Now imagine that same boy growing up hearing over and over: don’t bother women, leave them alone, don’t approach, don’t be creepy, don’t be a toxic male. At some point, the average guy doesn’t become more respectful—he just becomes more passive.

Rob Henderson

84,200 次观看 • 19 天前

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What actually changed my life was learning to do things I hated every single day. Some people read the early chapters of Troubled and say, “I can’t recognize this person. How does the teenage kid I’m reading about become the person I’m speaking to now?” The answer is simple: if you spend eight years in the military, you’re going to change. And it took all eight of those years for me to reshape my personality, my outlook, and my priorities to the point where I could function as a self-sufficient adult. I initially enlisted for four years. One of the most important lessons I learned during that time was that motivation is overrated. It took me a long time to understand this, but motivation is just a feeling. Do I want to do this? Do I not want to do this? Do I feel inspired today? Self-discipline matters more than motivation. Self-discipline means doing what needs to be done regardless of how you feel. It means sticking to healthy routines and making good decisions even when you don’t feel motivated. If you can string together enough productive days over a long enough period of time, your life will begin to improve. What’s happening internally, in terms of motivation or lack of motivation, matters less than people think. The real question is: can you do it anyway? At first, that discipline was imposed from the outside. In basic training, the instructors enforce structure and routine. But over time, that external discipline gradually becomes internal self-discipline. Even after my first four years in the Air Force, from ages seventeen to twenty-one, I knew I still wasn’t ready to leave that rigid structure behind. I understood that I needed more time inside an environment that demanded responsibility and consistency from me. So I reenlisted for another four years. By the time I was twenty-four or twenty-five, I was finally prepared.

Rob Henderson

23,266 次观看 • 6 天前

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Among men who use the dating app Hinge, 10 percent of male users receive 60 percent of the "likes." If you look at Tinder, there was a 2019 study showing that men swiped right on about 60% of female profiles. In other words, most men were willing to like the majority of women they saw. Women, by contrast, swiped right on only about 4% of male profiles. That lines up with what we see in everyday life. Men are generally more open to casual sex and less selective at the outset, while women tend to be more selective and more cautious. For many single men, the default mindset is something like: I would probably sleep with her unless there is some reason not to. For many women, it is the reverse: I probably would not sleep with him unless there is some particular reason why I should. Men tend to look for green flags. Women tend to scrutinize for red flags. I remember a conversation in graduate school with a female friend that made this especially clear. She worked at a café, and there was a guy who came in every day for coffee. They would chat a little each time, and she told me, “I’m just waiting for him to ask me out.” I said, “Why don’t you just ask him out?” She looked at me like I was insane. She said, “Are you crazy? No matter how much I liked a guy, I would never ask him out.” At the time, I laughed and thought, fine, fair enough. But later I realized how revealing that was. You would almost never hear a man say the equivalent: “There’s this woman I see every day, I really like her, but no matter how much I liked her, I would never ask her out.” If a man said that, the obvious response would be: then you’re probably going to be single forever.

Rob Henderson

85,118 次观看 • 1 个月前

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Negative social judgments are not always cruel. Sometimes they are guardrails. Sometimes the most compassionate thing you can do is tell the truth about which choices lead to suffering and which ones do not. Single parenthood is harder. Substance abuse is destructive. Crime corrodes communities. Pretending otherwise, wrapping these realities in a language of non-judgment and normalization, is not kindness. It is a luxury. It’s what you believe when you are insulated from the consequences. The people who pay the price for luxury beliefs are seldom the people who hold them. Sometimes when I speak about luxury beliefs, critics will reply, “But Rob, you’re talking about elite hypocrisy. That’s nothing new. Elites have always been hypocrites.” And that is correct. Still, I prefer what I call the “John F. Kennedy model of hypocrisy” to what we have now. As many of us now know, JFK was a flawed man, but the image he presented to the American public was that he was a good husband, a good father. In his private life, though, he was a philanderer and often an absentee father and had other shortcomings. But he thought it was important to set an ideal for the general public, even if he fell short of it. And now we have the opposite. Today, our elites get married, they have kids, and for the most part, they live stable, conventional lives. But if you ask them their opinions and attitudes around family, around marriage, around law abidingness, hard work, punctuality, integrity, honesty, and so on, they take a very relaxed attitude. Elites used to pay lip service to conventional values but privately strayed. Now, they are publicly indifferent to or actively support straying, but privately behave in a more conventional way.

Rob Henderson

25,543 次观看 • 9 天前

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Is she right?

Rob Henderson

822,156 次观看 • 1 年前

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Adam Carolla was on Joe Rogan’s podcast. Here I’ll paraphrase one of Carolla’s most important points from this discussion: “I realized that you have a skill set. Like martial arts. You know it, you’re comfortable with it, you’re secure in it. You know your abilities there, just like you know your abilities as a comedian or as an archer. For me, I’m a carpenter. I have a skill, a trade. There are things I know well, so I don’t feel insecure. I know what I’m good at, and I’m grounded in that. But a lot of people don’t have that. They don’t have a trade or a skill or anything they can honestly call expertise. If you asked them, ‘What are you an expert at?’ they wouldn’t have an answer. You could name several — UFC, mixed martial arts, jiu-jitsu, podcasting, standup, whatever it is. You could learn another language or master an instrument. But so many people never find that thing. They never develop a skill they can own. And because of that, they walk around in this heightened state of insecurity.” This is an insightful point: once you start getting good at something, and it can be almost anything, you can build from there. You now have something to talk about, something you know more about than most people. And if you can make it even mildly interesting, you can speak about it at length. But many people spend their free time on social media or binge-watching TV. It is strange now: if you talk to younger guys and ask what they’re interested in, they’ll tell you about a Netflix show, or getting high, ordering Uber Eats, binge-watching, and maybe sports gambling. If your life is dull and uneventful, and most of your free time is spent scrolling social media, it will be hard to hold anyone’s interest.

Rob Henderson

191,435 次观看 • 4 个月前