NOTE TO
CONSERVATIVES: Stop Fawning Over Celebrities Who Occasionally Say Stuff You
Like
ByBen Shapiro
@benshapiro
April 23, 2018
So, Kanye West is tweeting like a bumper sticker
conservative.
In the past few days, West has taken his Twitter game to
new political heights. He’s tweeted:
new ideas will no longer be condemned by the masses. We
are on the frontier of massive change. Starting from breaking out of our mental
prisons.
self victimization is a disease.
there was a time when slavery was the trend and
apparently that time is still upon us. But now it's a mentality.
Constantly bringing up the past keeps you stuck there.
The thought police want to suppress freedom of thought.
we have freedom of speech but not freedom of thought.
The psychological zombie effect.
Demonization has metastasized.
I love the way Candace Owens thinks.
All of which sounds like solid, empowering conservative
thought. It’s understandable that conservatives are pleased about a massive
cultural figure suddenly embracing such concepts. But conservatives who are
evidencing tremendous excitement over Kanye are falling prey to the same sort
of celebrity-centric mentality they criticize from the Left. It’s one thing to
say, “Hey, Kanye just said something halfway intelligent!” It’s another to say,
“Hey, Kanye’s suddenly got it! He’s a thoughtleader!”
The jump from the former perspective to the latter is far
too fast in today’s politics. Kanye West is the same fellow who once accused
George W. Bush of targeting black people during Hurricane Katrina. He’s also
tweeted about the shortcomings of fur pillows and about the need for antique
fishtanks.
This, in other words, is not a thoughtleader. He’s a
rather crazy human.
But the Right is so starved for celebrity that we’re
often willing to overlook the crazy for the feeling of legitimization. That’s
the same reason so many conservatives suddenly see Roseanne as one of them,
despite the fact that she is a wild leftist who says insane things on a regular
basis. Treat conservatives like humans with ideas, and some on the Right will
respond with the enthusiasm of a puppy greeting its master at the door.
That’s a mistake. It’s particularly a mistake because
allowing the halo effect to impact your views of celebrities means elevating
celebrities in an area in which they’re not particularly qualified. Just
because Kanye knows rap doesn’t mean Kanye knows politics. And just because
conservatives like an occasional treat from the hands of popular artists
doesn’t mean they should grant those artists credibility as arbiters of
political matters.
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