Barley pancakes, and two mysteries


Why is it that grains that are so difficult to make into bread — barley and buckwheat, for example — make such perfect pancakes?

And why is that so much barley is grown — especially in Europe — but that so little of it is eaten? Most of the barley goes into beers and ales and whiskeys, while trendy but inferior grains such as quinoa get all the attention.

I’m a barley evangelist, as regular readers know. I can’t imagine not keeping organic hulled barley in stock, with an electric mill to grind it into flour.

The pancakes in the photo are made from fresh-ground barley flour, a little olive oil, a little baking powder, and nonfat milk.

Getting by in a pub-deprived culture



Vegetarian fake chicken pie. Click here for high-resolution version.

To those of us born into a Northern European culture, there is no food more magical than a pie. Pies have ancestors in the ancient Mediterranean, but I suspect that it was in medieval England where the magical pies of fairy tales (and now, pubs!) came into existence.

Regular readers know how much I like the British and Irish pubs, and how deprived I feel because America does not have a proper pub culture. And, in pubs, it’s not just about the drink. It’s also about the food. I’m recently home from Scotland, and fall weather has arrived. So I can’t stop thinking about savory pies.

I kick myself for neglecting to photograph the seafood pie that Ken and I had in a pub in Peebles, near the John Buchan museum. Every pub is different, of course. Many pubs don’t have savory pies with a complete top and bottom crust — a lazy compromise. Instead, the filling is poured into a baking vessel, and a round piece of crust is laid on top. The pie is still good, but the magic isn’t very effective. The best pies, really, come from high street bakeries.


⬆︎ Click here for high-resolution version.



Cream of mushroom soup and whole wheat bread. Click here for high-resolution version.

⬆︎ Bread and soup

And then there’s bread and soup. Somewhere in Scotland there must be pubs that can beat me at bread and soup. I haven’t yet found those pubs, though.


⬆︎ Wood for winter

The photo is from my morning ATV ride. An old oak up on the ridge had died. Neighbors sawed it up and split it for firewood. I wish I had the option of heating with wood. But I don’t have a chimney.

The awful 17th century



Source: Wikimedia Commons


Witch Wood. John Buchan, first published 1927.


Silence of the Gods: The Untold History of Europe’s Last Pagan Peoples. Francis Young, Cambridge University Press, 2025. 432 pages.


The history of witch-burning in Scotland is horrifying. Between 4,000 and 6,000 people were tried for witchcraft in Scotland, far more than in England. The trials continued into the late 1600s, but the panic over witches had pretty much subsided by 1707.

How in the world do we understand how a century of witch trials in Scotland was so quickly followed — in the very same Scotland! — by a century of the Enlightenment? How was it that these prominent elements of Scottish history were mirrored so quickly in America?

I am no historian, and I don’t have any thorough answers for these questions. For one, the history of Scotland is bafflingly complicated. By comparison, it seems to me that the histories of England and America are much easier to get one’s head around. But I do think I can see just a glimmer of how the sudden transition from witch trials to the Enlightenment unfolded in Scotland.

I often read two books at once, one fiction and one nonfiction. By coincidence, I was reading John Buchan’s Witch Wood at the same time I arrived at Chapter 4 of Silence of the Gods. (A hat tip here to Chenda, for recommending this book.) That chapter is about the 17th Century, with the title “Antiquarians and Witch-Hunters.”

Silence of the Gods limits itself to places farther north and more remote than Scotland. But it’s clear that, though Scotland excelled at burning witches, the witch panic was everywhere in Christendom during the 17th Century. But it’s only in Scotland where a particular zeal for witch-burning was immediately followed by the work of the Enlightenment. Surely one set the stage for the other, in some strange way?

I had a long discussion with ChatGPT about this. ChatGPT’s bottom line was: Religious zealotry built the roads that the Enlightenment ran on.

There are a couple of key points to understanding this. The first is that, during the 17th Century, Scotland’s kirk had far too much civil power. That is, as we Americans would understand it, there was very little separation between church and state. Scotland was divided by religious conflict and was in great turmoil. In ways that I don’t understand very well, the deposition of James VII, followed by William III and Mary II (1689) set the stage for important changes in how Scotland was governed. The Settlement of 1690 preserved the church but handed civil power in Scotland back to civil authorities.

Americans learned an important lesson from this. To quote ChatGPT: “Seventeenth-century Scotland showed what happens when a church (whether presbyterian or episcopal) fuses with state power—persecution, ‘enthusiasm,’ and civil strife. Scots-Irish Presbyterians who emigrated carried that memory and became key allies of Baptists in the push for disestablishment in the states (notably in Virginia).”

John Buchan’s Witch Wood is a fictional account of what village life was like in Scotland in 1644. Buchan knew this history. At the time he was writing Witch Wood, he also was writing a biography of James Graham, the 1st Marquess of Montrose, who figured prominently in Scotland’s religious conflicts of the 17th Century.

Buchan probably expected his readers of a hundred years ago to know much more about Scottish history than most of us do today. That lack of knowledge of Scottish history makes Witch Wood harder to appreciate. One thing that strikes me about Witch Wood, though, is Buchan’s harsh treatment of the kirk, its theologies, and the zeal of the men who held power in the church. To put it coarsely, Buchan did not find it necessary to kiss the church’s feet, which makes me think that by 1927 Scotland was well along in losing its religion. That draws our attention to yet another mystery about the problems of America: How was it that England, Scotland, and even Ireland lost their religion, while Americans are now dealing with an attempted takeover by Christian nationalists? In disturbingly many ways, what’s happening in America today resembles what happened in Scotland in the 17th Century (bitter, even violent division with the empowerment of fanatics), fused with some political innovations developed in Germany in the 1930s.

I’m only halfway through Silence of the Gods, but one thing is perfectly clear. The Christianization of the far north — Norway, Sweden, Finland, parts of Russia, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania — was just as violent and ugly as what happened to the south.

All of this is horrifyingly relevant today, because it’s still going on, in America at least. What will it take for people to remember that to be governed by zealots is to be governed by the devil?


Witch Wood, Chapter 2. Click here for high-resolution version.

You’re just a peasant now



Peter Thiel. Source: Wikimedia Commons.


It was back in 2021 when Fiona Hill wrote, “Russia is America’s ghost of Christmas future.” And now here we are.

Fiona Hill’s words might have been just a metaphorical warning back in 2021. Now it’s obvious not only what Trump’s intentions are, it’s equally obvious that the Republican Party, Republicans in Congress, and the U.S. Supreme Court are fully on board. They want a Putin-like head of state with unlimited power. The country will be run not for the people, but for the billionaire oligarchy and the elite but incompetent hacks who are corrupt enough, and loyal enough to Trump, to be a part of the government.

We’ve had Elon Musk’s number for quite a while now. But even more chilling is how tech billionaires who formerly supported Democrats have now gone over to Trump. And why wouldn’t they? The American economy, as in Russia, is being allocated out to its billionaire oligarchs. They all want their piece of it. For example, in Politico: “‘Slap in the face’: Marc Benioff’s Trump turn stuns San Francisco.” Benioff’s wealth has doubled in the last five years.

Those who now control the power of government can give the oligarchs a choice: Come on board and get your share, or be targeted, corruptly, by the law, like George Soros.

Trump could never have gained power without the help of the deplorables’ machinery of religion, so Christian nationalists also are getting their share of the government. Kevin Roberts, a Christian nationalist and president of the Heritage Foundation (which is behind Project 2025) said, “We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be.”

We’re past the point at which billionaires had to be discreet about their intentions. They talk openly now. We can see clearly now what they are and what they want. If they stay in power, it’s clear what America is to be.

Peter Thiel actually gave a series of four lectures to the Commonwealth Club of California. The title of the lectures was, “The Antichrist: A Four-Part Lecture Series.” Recordings of the lectures were leaked. You can read about what Thiel said here, in the Washington Post; and here, in the Guardian.

So we know what these people want. We also know what they are afraid of. What they are afraid of is democracy. In a democracy they would be heavily taxed, and their power would be curbed. Thiel has been explicit about this, as when he says that democracy is incompatible with freedom. He thinks only of his own freedom, of course. The freedoms (and rights) of people like us mean nothing to him. To him, we are not free people with rights and freedoms. Rather, we are dangerous threats to his freedom.

It’s really pretty terrifying what great wealth can do to people. We’ve reached another point in history in which a few people with great wealth believe — and it may be true — that they have more power than the people and that they have a right — God-given, no less — to use that power, bloodlessly or not.

21,000 steps before supper



Click here for high resolution version.

Probably the most written-about hotspot for food in Edinburgh is the Sheep Heid Inn, especially their Sunday roasts. This inn lies some distance from the more trafficked parts of Edinburgh. If you walk down the Royal Mile to the Palace of Holyroodhouse, you’ll be right at the foot of Arthur’s Seat, a high, steep hill with stunning views. The walk up Arthur’s Seat will burn some calories.

Then if you descend from Arthur’s Seat in just the right direction, you’ll find the Sheep Heid Inn, hidden among some trees and a high stone wall. According to my watch, I had gone more than 21,000 steps in Edinburgh that day before we had Sunday roast at the Sheep Heid Inn.

Dunrobin Castle


Click here for high resolution version.

Most of Scotland’s castles are in varying stages of ruin. An exception is Dunrobin Castle, which is about an hour’s drive north of Inverness. The castle is in beautiful condition, and it’s fully furnished. It must cost a fortune to maintain.

The incapacities of deplorable people



Source: U.S. Department of Defense via YouTube


Regular readers know that my view of the deplorables is very different from that of mainstream political pundits. The mainstream view is (or at least professes to be) that conservatives are entirely normal people who for whatever reason are politically conservative.

My view is that that view is mistaken, and that the mistake is a very dangerous one. My view is that there is something wrong with conservative minds, cognitively and morally. They are cognitively and morally deformed. Conservative moral values — love of authority, a fetish for purity, an uncaring attitude toward those unlike themselves — are self-evidently inferior moral values that cause great harm in the world. I understand why mainstream pundits can’t say any of this. Nevertheless, I think it’s self-evidently true.

Recent events provide evidence that this is true.

I have written in the past about one of the most obvious consequences of deplorable incapacity. That’s the inability to assess character, which involves both cognitive and moral deformities. A normal person will see through a con man pretty quickly. A morally normal person will be disgusted by people whose words and deeds reveal hatred, a love of cruelty, a lust for power, and the will to dominate and exploit. A morally normal person does not need scapegoats. A morally normal person quickly sees through false piety and isn’t deceived by the stunted but sanctimonious people who strut around saying God this and God that. A morally normal person is not deceived by the lies that such people tell. And above all a morally normal person does not see such people as sent by God to rule over us all.

Watching a room full of America’s top generals coldly stonewalling Trump and Pete Hegseth was one of the most beautiful and encouraging things I’ve seen lately. The United States trains its military brass for rationality and character. Those generals are not the sort of people to be fooled by the kind of trash talk and lies that deplorable voters love so well.

But here’s the thing. Both Trump and Hegseth, because of their moral and cognitive deformities, were completely unable to see in advance — or to understand after the fact — the response that their “loser and suckers” trash talk would get from rational people of vastly superior character (and intelligence). As I’ve argued here many times in the past, people cannot perceive above their own level. Or, to say the same thing in a slightly different way, conservative minds simply do not have the cognitive and moral capacity to model healthy and normal minds. If they had the capacity to model cognitively and morally healthy minds, then they would have healthy minds. Instead, they unconsciously project their own demons onto the people they don’t like. Even just recently, how many preachers and priests have been arrested for molesting children at the very same time they were demonizing others (always liberals) for what they themselves were doing?

The Guardian, partly because it’s unapologetically liberal and partly because it’s based in London, often says things that the American media cannot or will not say. There have been two such pieces recently:

A critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0

Why Trump’s speech to US military top brass was such a disaster

One of the things that I think we must admit is that deplorable people, because of their incapacities, are simply not reachable by any rational liberal discourse — at least, not while they are being wound up by uber deplorables whom they regard as authoritative. There are many reasons why I am skeptical of all the many strategies that have been proposed for “reaching out” to them and somehow winning them back to rational discourse and a rational and decent politics. That, I maintain, cannot happen until they realize that they have been betrayed by, exploited by, and abandoned by the con men who claim to have come to save them. I believe that process has started to happen.

One more thing about all those generals: I very much want to believe that they would never carry out illegal orders or allow the troops and officers under them to do so. I append here Hitler’s loyalty oath, August 2, 1934. This expresses what Trump and Hegseth want. Unless they have a plan for firing and replacing 800 top generals, they’re not going to get it.

“I swear by God this holy oath that I shall render unconditional obedience to the Führer of the German Reich and people, Adolf Hitler, the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and that I shall at all times be prepared, as a brave soldier, to give my life for this oath.”

One might ask: Since these people are always with us (and always have been), then one might ask why they are far more dangerous in some eras more than others. As I see it, that’s because they don’t and can’t self-organize. They don’t have a gift for that. Instead they require someone to wind them up, some kind of charismatic uber-authoritarian figure both to feed them with their dangerous ideas and to organize them and motivate them for political purposes.


Update

I’m well aware that the above blog post is harsh and uncompromising. Yet to back down on what I believe to be true would make me as timid and mealy-mouthed as the mainstream punditry. After I wrote this, I asked ChatGPT 5 for a critique. Its first response sounded pretty much like what I’d expect, say, from most liberal pundits — mealy-mouthed and eager to display what a critic who thinks more like I do aptly called “civility theater.” I very much support civility in everyday good-faith interactions. But civility in the face of fascism is a different matter. Wasn’t that Neville Chamberlain’s strategy? It took a war. My own father fought in such a war.

I asked ChatGPT to write a version of the piece that is more polite and with an academic rather than rhetorical tone. Below is the result. I like it.


The Incapacities of Deplorable People: Notes Toward a Moral Anthropology

Public discourse in liberal democracies tends to assume that political difference arises from diversity of temperament or experience, not from fundamental disparities in moral or cognitive capacity. The prevailing view, especially among mainstream pundits, is that conservatives and liberals represent complementary aspects of human nature—order versus change, stability versus progress—each necessary for the balance of a healthy society.

I believe this assumption is mistaken, and dangerously so. It mistakes a pathology for a perspective. There exists, and has always existed, a subset of human character that is both cognitively limited and morally stunted: drawn to authority, comforted by conformity, and hostile to complexity. Such people are what modern political vernacular calls “deplorables.” They are not evil in the melodramatic sense, but their incapacity for moral imagination makes them available to evil.

I. Moral perception and cognitive limits

The capacity for moral judgment depends on the ability to perceive character—to recognize empathy, integrity, and cruelty in others. That ability, in turn, depends on cognitive maturity: on abstraction, self-reflection, and an inner life rich enough to imagine the perspective of another.

Some people, for reasons that may be partly psychological and partly developmental, appear to lack this capacity. They are easily deceived by spectacle, incapable of irony, and unable to model minds more complex than their own. What they call “strength” is often mere aggression; what they take for “authenticity” is simply the absence of self-control.

In this sense, moral and cognitive deformity are intertwined. To be morally stunted is to be unable to think deeply about others; to be cognitively shallow is to have no internal resources against the seductions of power. These are not partisan defects but structural ones, as visible in history’s worst moments as they are in the present.

II. The social mechanics of cruelty

The twentieth century demonstrated, repeatedly, how ordinary people could become participants in extraordinary cruelty. Hannah Arendt’s account of the “banality of evil” remains the most unsettling description: evil committed not by monsters, but by conformists whose incapacity for thought made them susceptible to ideology (Arendt 1963).

The Frankfurt School, particularly Theodor Adorno and his collaborators, described this phenomenon as the authoritarian personality: characterized by submission to hierarchy, aggression toward out-groups, and a preference for certainty over ambiguity (Adorno et al. 1950). Later experiments by Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo confirmed what history already knew—that the architecture of obedience can transform the timid into tormentors (Milgram 1974; Zimbardo 2007).

In these frameworks, “deplorable” behavior is not a mystery but a predictable outcome of certain dispositions: a limited capacity for empathy combined with a longing for belonging. When such individuals find a charismatic figure who validates their resentments and channels their fear into hatred, they become a political force. They cannot self-organize; they must be organized, wound up, given a script and an enemy.

III. The unreachability problem

Liberal optimism holds that rational discourse can bridge moral divides. But persuasion presupposes mutual access to reason and empathy. When one party lacks that access, dialogue becomes futile. The moral incapacity at issue here is not ignorance—ignorance can be corrected—but a structural defect in moral imagination.

The deplorable mind does not misinterpret liberal appeals to decency; it fails to register them. It hears tolerance as weakness and equality as threat. Reasoning with such people is like speaking color to the colorblind. The recognition of this limit is not elitism; it is realism.

IV. The quiet danger of the compliant

One might ask whether this diagnosis amounts to dehumanization. I would argue the opposite. The deplorables are recognizably human—all too human—in their need for authority and their yearning for simplicity. Left unprovoked, they are often harmless: family-centered, tradition-minded, suspicious of abstraction. They become dangerous only when mobilized by figures who exploit those traits.

This pattern recurs throughout history. Every authoritarian movement depends not only on its leaders but on its followers—the small, decent people who wish to be told what to do and whom to hate. Their obedience is the raw material of political evil.

When I say that such people are morally and cognitively deformed, I mean that their psychological architecture lacks a safeguard that others possess: the inner resistance that says no when an authority commands cruelty. That safeguard—call it conscience, empathy, or imagination—is what separates the moral adult from the moral child.

V. The lesson of the oath

The military oath imposed by Hitler in 1934 offers a stark illustration of this dynamic:

“I swear by God this holy oath that I shall render unconditional obedience to the Führer of the German Reich and people, Adolf Hitler… and that I shall at all times be prepared, as a brave soldier, to give my life for this oath.”

What mattered was not the words themselves but the psychological readiness they revealed: a willingness to surrender judgment, to externalize morality, to let obedience replace thought. The dream of every would-be tyrant—and of his followers—is the same.

The American generals who recently met Trump’s insults with silence exemplify the opposite disposition. Their professionalism rests on habits of reason and self-command that inoculate against charismatic abuse. Their restraint, their very thinking, stands as a quiet rebuke to the culture of cruelty that cheers at every insult and mistake.

VI. What follows

To speak of moral deformity is uncomfortable in liberal society, which prefers pluralism to judgment. Yet moral relativism, however humane in intention, becomes complicity when faced with cruelty. Evil is not always deliberate, but it is real; and the line that separates decency from depravity often runs through the capacity to imagine the suffering of others.

The deplorable mind lacks that capacity. It is not reachable through reason because it has surrendered the faculties by which reason operates. Our task, then, is not to redeem such people but to limit their power—to build institutions, norms, and narratives that keep their appetites from shaping the state.

In quieter times, they may again resemble hobbits: small, local, unambitious, and mostly harmless. But history shows how easily the hobbit becomes the soldier of a cause he does not understand. The difference lies not in essence but in circumstance—and in whether we, the rest of us, have the courage to recognize deformation when we see it.

References

Adorno, Theodor W., Else Frenkel-Brunswik, Daniel J. Levinson, and R. Nevitt Sanford. 1950. The Authoritarian Personality. New York: Harper and Row.

Arendt, Hannah. 1963. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. New York: Viking Press.

Fromm, Erich. 1941. Escape from Freedom. New York: Farrar & Rinehart.

Milgram, Stanley. 1974. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View. New York: Harper & Row.

Snyder, Timothy. 2017. On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. New York: Tim Duggan Books.

Stanley, Jason. 2018. How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them. New York: Random House.

Weil, Simone. 1952. The Need for Roots: Prelude to a Declaration of Duties Towards Mankind. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Zimbardo, Philip G. 2007. The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil. New York: Random House.

Cèilidh!


If you want to know how to pronounce cèilidh, you’ll probably need to ask someone in Scotland. It’s KAY-lee. But I suspect that anglophone pronunciation is approximate, because most of us don’t know how to make the sounds of Scottish Gaelic.

I was ever so happy to be able to go to a cèilidh while I was in Scotland. It was at the West Barns Village Hall in East Lothian. The jig in the video is “The Flying Scotsman.” I believe that’s a 19th Century jig, meant to evoke the movements of the famous train with that name.

The dancing isn’t exactly perfect. But this is how children learn these things. As for men, I imagine more men would participate if their prospects in courtship still depended upon it.

Uh-oh. Covid.



The red line beside the “T” indicates that the Covid test was positive.


I knew the risks of picking up contagious diseases during air travel, which is why I went so far out of my way to get this year’s new Covid and flu vaccines before my trip to Scotland. The second evening after I returned home, I started feeling like I was getting a cold. I felt miserable and feverish during the night, so the next morning I did one of the at-home Covid tests. It was positive.

We know that it’s possible to get Covid even though one had the vaccine. The severity of the Covid, though, should be reduced into a “mild” case. My fever wasn’t all that high — 101.8 at its highest. But on day 2 of Covid it’s impossible to know what course it will take. After some Googling, I described my condition to ChatGPT and asked for advice. “Call your doctor,” was the bottom line. I called, they said I should come in, and an hour later I was in the doctor’s office, where another Covid test was positive. It did indeed look like a mild case, but out of an abundance of caution the doctor recommended Paxlovid.

At the pharmacy, I went to the drive-by. I was shocked at how much Paxlovid costs, though my Humana Medicare Advantage insurance paid for most of it. I checked the Humana app this morning for the official numbers. The pharmacy billed Humana $1,406.66 for the Paxlovid. My share of that was $132.74. Yikes!

It’s now day 3, and I’m feeling better. This is the first time I’ve had Covid. I do my best to avoid colds and flu by avoiding public places probably more than I should. I’m just glad that I got Covid on the way home, rather than on the way to Scotland. What a way that would be to ruin a trip.

It really isn’t fair that people my age have Medicare, while younger Americans must try to get by in a health-care wilderness. The obvious solution is Medicare for all. Republicans will do everything possible to see that that never happens.

Leakey’s Book Shop



Click here for high-resolution version.

I’m back from Scotland. On this trip, I spent two days in Inverness. The first stop after checking into the hotel was Leakey’s Book Shop, which is said to be the largest seller of used books in Scotland.

It would take all day, and then some, to explore the entire store. I made do with the literature section, looking for older editions of Scottish writers, books that would be pretty much impossible to find in the United States. I bought two novels by John Buchan and a copy of Nigel Tranter’s Man’s Estate that had been signed by Tranter — a steal at £30.

I’ve written a great deal here about Sir Walter Scott, and I already have a complete set of the Waverley novels, a gift from Ken that he schlepped all the way from Scotland, in a box, as checked baggage. I bought only three books at Leakey’s, no more than I could fit into my suitcase. Scottish novelists, I suppose, have always had to live in the shadow of Sir Walter Scott, and none have achieved Scott’s fame. I will have a separate post soon on John Buchan. Nigel Tranter, like Buchan, must be on any reading list of Scottish fiction.

The inscription in the book makes me think that Dorothy was a friend of Tranter’s, as opposed to someone who bought the book after a bookshop reading by Tranter.

I have a ton of photos from Scotland, including castles, castles, and more castles, and of course some food and seascapes. I’ll post some of them during the next week or so.


Click here for high-resolution version.

Hacks in a time of fascism


With the United States in a tailspin into fascism, the New York Times’ star columnists work ever harder to change the subject. The subject is never fascism. Anything but that! It’s always: What’s wrong with the left?

Ross Douthat and Ezra Klein have slightly different ways of doing this. But the very idea of their doing a “show” together reveals that their purpose is the same: Distract from the mainstream media’s catastrophic failure to perceive where the U.S. democracy stands from a historical perspective. Try to keep a conversation going about how the left, not the right, is to blame for what is happening in the U.S. today.

Douthat: I also think that there’s a way in which at the peak of progressive cultural power, there was a sense that progressives were censorious scolds who certainly didn’t like populists and conservatives, but seemed to not like a lot of people generally. Today, I feel like it’s almost — and this is, again, impressionistic — but do progressives like themselves?

Klein: You really want to put them on the couch. But the answer is no. [Laughs.]

Douthat: The answer is no, right? And in a way, that’s always been true — nothing like a self-hating liberal.

What kind of minds does this nonsense come from? And why is it in the New York Times? Neither of these two hacks is half as smart as he thinks he is.