What does The Beard represent? Andrew Spear/Getty Images

If you want to know the secret of J.D. Vance’s meteoric rise, at the age of 39, to Donald Trumpās choice for vice president should he win, just glance at some of the more overheated liberal analyses of Vanceās success. This one, published in the New York Times, is a classic: it is like the X-ray of a liberal psyche outraged by the success of people who are on the āother sideā.
Titled āHow Yale Propelled J.D. Vanceās Careerā, it reveals that āmany students and professors remember Mr. Vance as warm, personable and even charismatic. But several also said they were perplexed by what they saw as Mr. Vanceās profound ideological shift.ā Thatās a real head-scratcher: since when does being warm and personable have anything to do with oneās ideology? Mussolini could be warm and personable. As for charisma, well.
The article recounts, with an air of true perplexity, the conundrum of Vance and his wife, who is of Indian descent and the daughter of immigrants, ādeliver[ing]- home-baked treatsā to a transgender student who had just undergone, as the Times put it in smug jargon, ātop surgeryā as if it were an everyday procedure, like a tonsillectomy. It then quotes the student, who said they abruptly ended the friendship after Vance, as senator from Ohio, supported legislation in Arkansas that prohibited transgender care for children.
Of course, they had every right to take offence. But there is no contradiction between treating trans people with kindness, protectiveness and respect and opposing transgender treatment for children. Except in the mind of the New York Times, whose grim, sanctimonious and lucrative prosecution of MeToo, the 1619 Project, the trans revolution, and its stigmatising of everything from a Confederate statue in the middle of nowhere to gas stoves and gas-powered cars had as much to do with Trumpās resurrection as anything else.
After falling all over itself in 2016 to display its fair-mindedness and embracing Vanceās bestselling book, Hillbilly Elegy, as a ācompassionate, discerning sociological analysis of the white underclassā, the once prestigious liberal flagship now portrays Vance as a second-rate student at an Ivy enclave ingratiating himself with one powerful figure after another.
And this, then, according to the newspaper of record, is what really made Vance the success he is today. It is the truly revealing part of the article: one of his professors, Amy Chua, herself a bestselling author, arranged a meeting for him: āThen she introduced him to her literary agent, Tina Bennett. He was off.ā In other words, for the NYT, it is not Vanceās resilience, literary talent, intelligence, political instincts or his book itself that made him a political success. It was his agent, the ultra-powerful and highly effective Tina Bennett.
For the success and status-obsessed Times, the success and high status of people who donāt share its moral framework can only be the result of obsession with status and success, not the consequence of any admirable human quality. Even Trumpās raised fist after the attempt on his life was, as one of its Timesā cultural interpreters pretentiously put it, a carefully calculated suck-up of world-historical proportions: āThe force of the photographs, in other words, rests not in what they depict politically but what theyĀ convey about political depictionā¦ Mr. Trump had the instinct, amid mortal danger, to consider how everything would look.ā
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