This post assembles resources explaining who these “neo-reactionary” aka “NRx” folks are.
Critical overviews
- RationalWiki (ongoing) offers a wealth of resources including relationships and contrasts with other movements, plus nerdy snark
- TechCrunch (2013) has an overview with explanations of some key NRx vocabulary plus a pretty big index of links to other resources
- Vanity Fair (2022) has a thoughtful deep dive by David Pogue looking at the culture of NRx and its relationship with other politics
- Current Affairs (2022) has a roundtable discussion featuring Elizabeth Sandifer, whose book Neoreaction: A Basilisk (2018) is smart, witty, and suitiably unkind
- QZ (2017) connects NRx to both tech culture and other far right movements
- Mouthbreathing Machiavellis & Moldbug Variations from leftist culture commentary magazine The Baffler
- Politico (2017) on Steve Bannon and his connection with both the “Alt Right” and NRx
- Vox explains (2022) leading NRx thinker Curtis Yarvin aka Mencius Moldbug, and links him to Steve Bannon (2017)
- Matt “The Dark Elf” McManus at Commonweal examines Yarvin’s peculiarities (2023), contrasting the anti-democratic “libertarianism” that he and Thiel represent against other far right movements
- Mother Jones (2022) addresses Peter Thiel and Senate candidate Blake Masters (shading from NRx into Gray Tribe, see below)
- The Darkness at the End of the Tunnel (2017) is a long discussion of the overlaps between NRx and a particular nerdy obsession with potential artificial intelligence, which Sandifer’s book linked above also addresses at length
- Evil Nerd Theory (2024) explores the legacy of NRx and adjacent movements
- Understanding The Tech Right (2023) is an instructive commentary from elsewhere on the far right by odious white nationalist Richard Hanania
- Yarvin’s Case Against Democracy from the liberal Catholic magazine Commonweal calls him “too elitist for fascism”
- Inside the New Right, Where Peter Thiel Is Placing His Biggest Bets (2022) connects a lot of dots, including J.D. Vance
Movement source texts
- The Dark Enlightenment (2013?) is an early sort-of manifesto for the movement, Meltdown (1997) is a poetic evocation of its sensibilities, and Hyper-Racism is a window into its ugly implications; if like me you are a middle-aged weirdo intellectual who remembers the cultural-theory-punk 1990s, it is helpful to situate author Nick Land as a there-but-for-the-grace cautionary demonstration of how we could have gone badly wrong
- Unqualified Reservations (2007-2014) offers the collected NRx writing of Curtis “Mencius Moldbug” Yarvin
- Nerdblog Slate Star Codex offers an overview “In An Enormous, Planet-Sized Nutshell” and an Anti-Reactionary FAQ (2013) which are useful, but I include them among sources from the movement because it turns out that the author is too sympathetic to them.
The texture of the movement
I find this tweetrant by Jay Allen <@a_man_in_black> a useful elaboration of what NRx is:
NRx is Neoreaction. Racist, monarchist nerds, with varying degrees of emphasis on each. Their version of SJWs/cultural Marxists is “the Cathedral”, a liberal academic conspiracy to marginalize them. NRx is against liberal bullshit like immigration, democracy, and human rights. NRx-ers envision a racially-pure autarky with an autocratic leader. The difference between them and fascists isn’t clear to me. They like to take credit for the entire alt right but responsibility for no one, inside or outside NRx. So of course half of the NRx screeds are against intellectual cowardice. NRx is popular with the [4chan] /pol/ crowd, natch.
Fascists romanticize violence; NRx’ers don’t. Fascists don’t really care about policy; NRx’ers do. Still: too close.Okay I lied I do know the differences between NRx and fascism. NRx doesn’t (usually) idolize the military or demonize intellectualism. They have utopian or colonial ideas about achieving racial purity. They’ll convince all the undesirables to move away or all move somewhere with no undesirables (or no settlement at all). More Zionist than Ein Volk, Ein Reich.
NRx eschews solidarity, too. They aren’t a movement or an ideology, just a vague pile of shitty ideas. Their term for themselves is often “the University”, emphasizing their “diversity of thought”, opposing the Cathedral of liberals. Paralleling Eric Scott Raymond’s writing about the Cathedral and the Bazaar, in free software. (ESR has long been a classic nerd “libertarian”; to my knowledge he has not slid to NRx.)
NRx-ers are often freethought / atheists, manosphere / MRAs, and free software types, so they have their meanings for those communities’ terms. NRx-ers “redpill” converts, for example. NRx exalts “western civilization”, which is pretty much code for whiteness.
They have a complicated relationship with religion. NRx-ers alternately love Catholicism as traditional and eschew “superstition.”
NRx has that particular fringe tactic of being so fractious that they don’t have to take responsibility for each other. Everyone else is no true NRx-er.
Differences from fascism
Many smart commentators call NRx a species of fascism. John Ganz’ The Enigma Of Peter Thiel, which I recommend reading in full, makes the best case for this reading which I have seen.
In his biography of Thiel, The Contrarian: Peter Thiel and Silicon Valley’s Pursuit of Power, Max Chafkin writes, “The Thiel ideology is complicated and, in parts, self-contradictory, and will take many of the pages that follow to explore, but it combines an obsession with technological progress with nationalist politics—a politics that at times has seemingly flirted with white supremacy.” Let’s see, we’ve go some futurism, nationalism, maybe a little bit of racism here and there…hmm, what does that all add up to? What a mystery this guy is!
[⋯]
Peter Thiel believes he belongs to an elite group, often understood in implicitly or explicitly racial terms, that is entitled to set aside democratic governance in favor of pursuing a program of technological progress and national restoration. He believes the political means to accomplish this is through a charismatic leader with manipulative, populist appeals to past national glory and against parasitic immigrants and culturally decadent liberalism. For him, even the most milquetoast, reformist liberalism is “tantamount to communism.” He’s obsessed with romanticized fantasies of absolute power, domination, and control. He dreams of wielding the the national security state against enemies both foreign and domestic. He envisioned a kind of imperialist world-state controlled not through deliberative bodies like the U.N. but directly by the intelligence and secret police bureaus. He combines the ideology of white collar, petit-bourgeois intermediary class with its emphases direct management techniques and closely-held ownership with the grandiose, world-spanning designs of an industrial titan. There’s really no contradiction within Peter Thiel’s politics, they are quite consistent: he’s just realized, more clearly than his opponents often, that there’s ultimately a contradiction between the rule of capital and democracy, and the way to deal with this contradiction, as far as he’s concerned, is to do away with democracy.
Ganz’ catalogue of Thiel’s fashy sensibilities describe well why I read NRx as a cousin to fascism in the shape of its reactionary sensibilities. The two overlap in their dread of modernity as a threat (while being unmistakably modern themselves), in their rejection of democracy and universal rights, in their romanticization of the “better” culture of a poorly-specified past, and in their odd futurism threaded into reactionary fantasies. And he is right to register NRx’ers as eager to enter into an alliance with unmistakable fascists.
But I think it is important to be sophisticated about how fascism is a far right authoritarianism but not all authoritarianisms are either fascist or totalitarian. I split this hair partly to make it easier to pick up the scent of NRx’ers even when they display un-fascist characteristics. We need a sharp nose for the whole bouquet of far right movements we face. So I want to name some ways in which the two ideologies differ.
Nationalism is a defining pillar of fascism; it yearns for a “strong” nation-state which reflects the character of its True People. NRx sees the nation-state instrumentally, and is sometimes directly skeptical of it as the right political form.
Fascism is resolutely irrationalist, imploring us to Trust Our Blood, enthusiastic about gut instinct and violence as positive goods triumphing over intellectuals and technocrats. NRx is not just rationalist but romantically rationalist, enthusiastic about nerdy technocrats controlling society, and often insists that violence is unnecesary to achieve its aims.
Fascism dreams of a purge of the people who corrupt the nation — Everyone But The Volk — exemplified by the racism & antisemitism of the Nazis or the transphobia of MAGA. NRx dreams of eliminating the system of liberalism and liberal institutions which they imagine destroy our potential for greatness. The Good People are not the Volk but the IQ Elite.
Because fascism’s authoritarianism leads to strong state interventions in the economy when fascists hold power, it is common to misunderstand fascism as having an economic policy agenda just as communism and neoliberalism do, but fascism at root does not really care about policy any more than social & governance ideologies like monarchism or theocracy do. Neoreaction is not married to a specific economic policy agenda, but it sees economic policy as an essential function of governance, tending strongly toward enthusiasm for “unregulated” capitalism Unleashing The Genius Of Entrepreneurs And The Market.
This connects to different forms their authoritarianism takes. Fascism tends toward totalitarianism, the state intruding into everything, down to ensuring that art and architecture and individuals’ thoughts & feelings align with their vision. NRx loves the example of Singapore: a state unburdened by rights protections for individuals, but also hands-off in many ways, at once ruthless and minarchist.
Both yearn for “traditional” moral & social sensibilities, but come at it from opposite directions. Fascists see everything they want springing from A Strong Nation Of Virtuous People; they start from the fantasy of everyone to Living Right, assuming that quotidian policy questions of economics et cetera will just sort themselves out as a result. (I strongly recommend John Holbo’s long essay on that tendency among conservatives in general.) NRx starts from a libertarian-ish vision of Capitalism Unleashed Enabling The Best Of Us To Do Great Things, rationalizing from there that Science shows us that to achieve that we must cultivate a Smart, Industrious, Normal populace. To a lefty like me, both dreams are rationalizations of their aesthetic preferences in cultural norms, animated largely by misogyny and (usually) racist bigotry; we also see this in the turn some “libertarians” take to white nationalism. But the dynamics are different; libertarianism, fascism, and NRx are not simply equivalent.
Curtis Yarvin
Elsewhere on this blog, I said this about Yarvin:
Yarvin is an extraordinarily terrible person. Not just extraordinary in the degree of his terribleness, but in the kind of his terribleness.
Under the name “Mencius Moldbug” he wrote the blog Unqualified Reservations, in which he made very very long and complicated arguments about culture & politics which made him one of the leading figures in a small, energetic, strange, nerdy, evil movement of political ideas known as the “Dark Enlightenment” or “Neo-Reaction” or “NRx”.
Moldbug said that if one reads enough dead white reactionaries, one realizes that democracy stinks and liberalism is at war with human nature, so we would be better off if we appointed someone smart like Steve Jobs to be dictator of America. Or maybe we should clone Charles II and crown the clone king. After all, Singapore is authoritarian but a nice place to live and very economically productive. This long, tortured argument was full of repulsive asides like, “Golly, reviving slavery is probably not the best move, but while it is not a big deal to me, I have to admit that dead white reactionaries made a lot of persuasive arguments that slavery is actually a good idea, and if you think about it, Black people really are best suited to slavery, aren’t they? Not that I’m a white nationalist, though. Those guys are not as smart as I am.”
If you don’t know Moldbug, I know that sounds like a parody. It is not. That is a succinct taste of stuff the blog really said. I read a fair bit of it years ago, fascinated by its bizarre style and repulsive ideas.
Moldbug is not exactly a Nazi or a fascist; he reflects an idiosyncratic far right sensibility significantly different but equally horrible. Yarvin was not attached to a political movement which did anything real, they just said a bunch of crazy, evil stuff on the internet, but that is still quite bad enough. And though really just a blowhard, he is a dangerous, damaging blowhard. He has radicalized a bunch of nerds. Yarvin evidently had some kind of contact with the Trump campaign though the racist, fascist advisor Steve Bannon. Fascist or not, I cannot overstate how evil his ideas and influence are.
Rather than get fussy about which evil far-right nuts are According To Hoyle “fascists”, antifascists use the word “fash” as a term of art for the whole range of evil far right nuts. Moldbug is definitely fash, and I will refer to him as such here.
I only recommend reading Yarvin if one has both patience and an interest in deeply understanding far right movements. If one wants to make that attempt, he has indexed a Gentle Introduction To Unqualified Reservations which belies its name by being about a hundred thousand words long and not at all gentle. Just a few paragraphs in:
UR is a strange blog: its goal is to cure your brain. We’ve all seen The Matrix. We know about red pills. Many claim to sell them. You can go, for example, to any bookstore, and ask the guy behind the counter for some Noam Chomsky. What you’ll get is blue pills soaked in Red #3.
Since we provide the genuine article, UR is pretty much the anti-Chomsky. (As a broad generalization, UR’s stance in any controversy will be the opposite of Chomsky’s.) Take one of our red pills — heck, split one in half — and you’ll be in a completely different world. Like DMT, except that the DMT reality is prettier than your old reality. UR’s is uglier. Also, DMT wears off.
Alas, our genuine red pill is not ready for the mass market. It is the size of a golfball, though nowhere near so smooth, and halfway down it splits in half and exposes a sodium-metal core, which will sear your throat like a live coal. There will be scarring. What can we say? That’s what you get for being an early adopter.
For the record, in that passage he was the first to appropriate that allegory for use by the far right; it would go on to be adopted primarily by an adjacent strain focused on the supposed horrors of feminism rather than Yarvin’s broader dread of the horrors of democracy & equality.
That should be more than enough of a taste of his smug nerdwit and radical opposition-to-everything for most people.
Yarvin & tech
This is deep geekery, but if you are digging into Curtis Yarvin, you may also want to know about his software infrastructure project Urbit and its implicit politics:
- Popehat has about as accessible an introduction to what the heck Urbit itself is as one could hope for
- Distributed Web Of Care has a smart critique of why Urbit’s structure is bad and concentrates power in some bad hands
Neighbors
- TESCREAL names a thread of reactionary tech utopianism obsessed with the near-future potential for artificial superintelligence within the larger constellation of weirdnerd culture which includes NRx; Jon Evans’ Extropia’s Children takes a wider look at that weirdnerd spehere.
- Breeding for IQ talks about the creepy weirdnerd cult of IQ which extends beyond proper neoreactionaires: “eugenics works by naturalizing socioeconomic inequality and generating support for policies that enhance the life chances of those at the top of the social hierarchy and reducing the life chances of those at the bottom”.
- The Radical Young Intellectuals Who Want to Take Over the American Right at The New Republic talks about a broader far-right movement which includes NRx and more.
- The Rise of the Dale Gribble Voter is an astute reading of the current iteration of the paranoid style in American politics which falls for figures like RFK, Jr. and Joe Rogan, but wear your hazmat suit and keep your wits about you when reading it, as the author Richard Hanania is an outright white nationalist.
Gray Tribe
Eventually I need to spin off a whole post about this type: libertarian-ish nerds disgusted by both liberal and conservative politics.
- Slate Star Codex (again with a big caveat for the source) has the Grey manifesto-ish I Can Tolerate Anything Except The Outgroup, which is referenced in …
- The Rise Of The Grey Tribe, an manifesto-ish overview from 2014
- When Nerds Collide does not refer to itself as Grey Tribe but explores the sensibilities from which it emerges — “my intersectionality will have weirdoes or it will be bullshit”
- IQ With Conscience comes from an insider in the overlapping racist “IQ realism” movement
- The Californian Ideology is a 1995 classic critique of the taproots of tech industry culture from which this springs
- No Exit Opportunities: Business Models and Political Thought in Silicon Valley explores more recent manifestations of the Californian ideology and their internal contradictions
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