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Offline Emile

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The politics of the barbell
« on: June 30, 2022, 12:45:29 PM »
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  • The Politics of the Barbell
    Since everything is political now, let's consider fitness

    The Chivalry Guild

    Jun 29


    Watching the corporate media’s campaign against vitality has been simultaneously fascinating and boring. What once were normal, innocent pursuits are now deeply politicized—fitness being no exception.
    Some notable results that come up in a quick search: A Vice headline declares, “Gym bros are right-wing jerks.” One from MSNBC declares, “The intersection of extremism and fitness leans into a shared obsession with the male body, training, masculinity, testosterone, strength and competition.” A columnist for the Guardian declares, “I’m not sure what exercise does for your body, but I do know what it does to your personality. And it’s not pretty.” So, in other words, getting strong and fit is P-R-O-B-L-E-M-A-T-I-C, to use their favorite fake-sophisticated word. My single favorite line comes from the Vice article mentioned above: “Under those rock-hard abs lie the rock-hard souls of men who doesn't believe in spreading their riches around.” That’s not parody, apparently.
    (One wonders, if these attempts fail to properly stigmatize fitness, whether we can count on new “studies” finding that exercise is indeed bad for the planet—thus making personal health a threat to public health and requiring Bill Gates and his friends to intervene.)
    I don’t really wish to answer any of the claims of the corporate media, but they do prompt one to reflect on the political implications of fitness.
    Here are my reflections on a few of the things that the gym teaches a man about life. These notes will focus specifically on weight-lifting, which is probably the most offensive to lefty journos and professional outrage artists. Are these the characteristics that make fitness a right-wing pursuit?

    1) Agency
    The forces allied against human flourishing are so formidable and so grand—Big Tech, Big Finance, Big Food, Big Entertainment, Big Administration, and so on—that a man is liable to feel helpless. What can a normal man do in the face of such enemies? Where does he even begin?
    If nothing else, he can begin with lifting. That might sound rather trivial to some, but there is no activity which shows a man that he can take action and have effect quite like moving heavy weights. The man who lifts (correctly) will experience an undeniable transformation in his body, as he becomes stronger, more formidable, more handsome, and more confident. Just as importantly, he will see the difference, very obviously. This is less about becoming a supersoldier who can singlehandedly take on the evil perverts and sinister forces of the world, and more about learning that a man isn’t so helpless in the face of those forces as he might imagine. Doors open to such men of agency.

    2) Hierarchy
    We've taken to paying so much lip service to human equality that no one knows what the term means anymore. The gym is a reminder that the world is hierarchical: some can do a lot more than others. What’s worse: this superiority is easily visible. We can see with our own eyes—and thus don’t need an elite class of experts to tell us—that he who correctly squats 315 lbs exerts more force than he who squats 155 lbs. This makes those who obsess over equality, whatever that means, very uneasy.
    This probably sounds mean to many who have grown up on the warm, mushy sentiment of equality, but it also isn’t the end of the story—for the gym provides a perfect complement to hierarchy.

    3) Respect
    Despite the obvious display of inequality made at every gym every day, lifting allows for fraternity among unequals. When you hit it hard, you show dignity and you earn respect from your fellow lifters, regardless of your place in the hierarchy. Almost all gymbros nod in approval when the least among them make gains. Of course there will be vain jackasses, but such is the case with any domain of human life.
    Respect offers a surer alternative to equality. We all know what respect means, and we’re all capable of showing it. And this reconciliation of respect and hierarchy offers a model for a better politics—sharply contrasting the approach of our current elites, who spout pieties about equality at the same time that they disdain actual people. Ultimately, they’re not against hierarchy; they just want one designed by them.

    4) Realism
    On a related note, the gym is where ideological fantasies go to die. Reality prevails. One such fantasy of recent decades is that “girls can do everything boys can do—only better.” Again it’s not entirely clear what this means or how far it extends. Perhaps it is true that women can equal men in their performance of most of the tasks demanded by the modern paperwork economy. But can girls do athletics and combat as well as boys? Countless movies show Charlize Theron or Angelina Jolie or some other slim beauty beating 200 lb henchmen to a pulp with her bare fists. People kind of start to believe it. You hear the lie repeated often enough and start to wonder about the nature of reality—but then you go into a gym and are instantly reminded that such fantasies are just that.

    5) Etiquette
    Even in the rough world of gymbros, etiquette reigns. Unwritten rules require observance: about space, sharing, reracking weights, etc. Even a man’s lifting form is a matter of etiquette. The way a thing is done matters, and has social implications. The lifter who loads the squat bar with plates but only squats halfway is guilty of bad form—bad lifting form and bad social form; in his attempt to claim unearned honors, he disrespects the accomplishment of the man who does that much weight and does it correctly.

    6) Friendship
    In a cold and commercialized world, the gym is one of the last bastions of friendship, where old friendships can be strengthened and new friendships made. It is a third place of sorts—not the home, not the office, but somewhere a man can go in between and be one of the guys.
    And though one can be a lone wolf in the gym, so much more is possible with a lifting buddy—not just for reasons of spotting, but also for accountability, competition, new ideas, among other things. My lifting buddy and I much have our best conversations at the gym.
    Conclusion

    Looking back on this list, maybe there is something to fitness as a right-wing endeavor. A politics of agency, hierarchy, respect, realism, etiquette, and friendship doesn’t sound like the regime of the managerialism, consumerism, resentment, fashionable theories, and social atomism that the other side currently offers.


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    https://thechivalryguild.substack.com/p/the-politics-of-the-barbell
    Patience is a conquering virtue. The learned say that, if it not desert you, It vanquishes what force can never reach; Why answer back at every angry speech? No, learn forbearance or, I'll tell you what, You will be taught it, whether you will or not.
    -Geoffrey Chaucer


    Offline ServusInutilisDomini

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    • O sacrum convivum... https://youtu.be/-WCicnX6pN8
    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #1 on: July 01, 2022, 08:30:15 AM »
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  • I am unaware of any official Church guidance on what constitutes decent dress for men, however, I am pretty sure the above picture is indecent.

    I believe most women here would agree.

    Thanks for sharing the article, it's really good :D


    Offline Yeti

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    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #2 on: July 01, 2022, 12:45:40 PM »
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  • The forces allied against human flourishing are so formidable and so grand—Big Tech, Big Finance, Big Food, Big Entertainment, Big Administration, and so on—that a man is liable to feel helpless. What can a normal man do in the face of such enemies? Where does he even begin?
    .
    He begins with turning that garbage off and leaving it off. Actually, that's all he has to do. If someone doesn't read the brainwashing, he doesn't get brainwashed.

    The enemies described here want people to think we can't get away from their malicious attacks. But we are free from them with the simple press of a power button or the closing of a browser.

    As an added bonus, the more people do this, the fewer people will read this garbage and the less money they will make on advertisers.

    Offline Yeti

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    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #3 on: July 02, 2022, 10:22:33 PM »
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  • This sort of thing reminds me of a scene from one of my favorite budget thrillers of all time, an undeservedly forgotten movie called Joy Ride. These two young men are going across the country and they get in a protracted confrontation with a murderous truck driver who tries to kill them and taunts them on the CB radio. In one scene, the trucker is threatening them and demanding they apologize for some silly thing over the radio, and one of the protagonists (Steve Zahn) becomes furious and spits back into the mike of his own CB radio:


    Quote
    You're not getting anything from me! You know why? Because I have something more powerful than your psychosis. It's called a volume knob, and the only thing I need to do to make you go away is to turn it counter-clockwise. You got that? You copy that??!


    I've always thought this is an amazingly apt approach for this kind of thing that is described in this article. We all have something more powerful than the psychosis of the media, which is called a power button, and the only thing anyone needs to do to make this kind of garbage disappear is to press that magic button.

    I really don't know why this simple, incredibly powerful idea is so hard for people to understand.

    Offline cletus1805

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    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #4 on: July 02, 2022, 10:42:03 PM »
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  • I've always thought this is an amazingly apt approach for this kind of thing that is described in this article. We all have something more powerful than the psychosis of the media, which is called a power button, and the only thing anyone needs to do to make this kind of garbage disappear is to press that magic button.

    I really don't know why this simple, incredibly powerful idea is so hard for people to understand.
    Because in order to turn the propaganda off, the mind has be at a certain level of peace. Without that, all the thoughts and feelings that they have been trying to distract themselves from will have their mind's full attention. This is difficult to face, but the propaganda is easy and mind numbing. 


    Offline Yeti

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    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #5 on: July 04, 2022, 08:50:18 PM »
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  • Because in order to turn the propaganda off, the mind has be at a certain level of peace. Without that, all the thoughts and feelings that they have been trying to distract themselves from will have their mind's full attention. This is difficult to face, but the propaganda is easy and mind numbing.
    .
    This is a profound and very insightful observation. Thank you, my friend!

    Offline Mike Henderson

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    • Discite a Me, quia mitis sum, et humilis corde
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    Re: The politics of the barbell
    « Reply #6 on: July 05, 2022, 05:51:51 AM »
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  • Good hard work will keep a man fit.

    An infernal irony is that both the extreme fitness and anti-fitness crusades are tinged with homoeroticism.