November 2019 Issue

FROM THE MAGAZINE

November 2019

‘Extinction Rebellion has discovered that by mixing up its demands with concern for the environment, it can win support — or at least a passing kind of support — from a much wider band of the population.’

Science & Tech

E-scooters are a wretched species to be introduced into the urban ecosystem

DC is the Wild West of e-scooterdom: there are just too many operating here

By Matt McDonald

From the Magazine

The wonderful world of community theater

The woman sitting next to me whispered urgently: ‘I can’t take my eyes off that man’s nipple’

By Bill Kauffman

From the Magazine

Where did the term ‘impeach’ come from?

The term was first used in its modern sense for the process of removing errant members of the English House of Lords in the 14th century.

By The Spectator

From the Magazine

Science & Tech

Keeping up with the sex robots

The uncanny valley of the dolls

By Bridget Phetasy

From the Magazine

Big dope: how marijuana benefited from one of the slickest PR campaigns in history

The effects on many of its users are permanent. They may give it up, but the damage has been done

By Peter Hitchens

From the Magazine

Tacitus, master of ‘government sources’

For the modern journalist, rumor and inside sources, however attractive, often generate only fake news

By Peter Jones

From the Magazine

Education

Asians are doing too well — they must be stopped

The Asian American success story catastrophically undermines the assumptions behind affirmative action

By Lionel Shriver

From the Magazine

Politics

Trump’s economic nationalism is an effort to save capitalism

America needs to harness capitalism as successfully as China has

By Daniel McCarthy

From the Magazine

Spectator Editorial

Mass extinction

The only way to tackle Extinction Rebellion is by dissecting its ideology

By Spectator Editorial

From the Magazine

Europe

Berlin on the brink

Germany’s economic ills could have far-reaching effects

By Liam Halligan

From the Magazine

Who really invented the word ‘posh’?

People prefer memorable tales, especially those involving acronyms, to the truth

By Dot Wordsworth

From the Magazine

California is a gigantic asylum

Before the 1960s, the culture of lunacy in California was confined to Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Carmel

By Chilton Williamson, Jr.

From the Magazine

Internet

Words matter: we must be more honest about language

When we say politicians should be pilloried, we don’t mean passers-by should throw rocks at them

By Sam Leith

From the Magazine

Internet

Who’s listening? Civilized debate is dead

Our society has become perfectly content with a set of unchallenged lies

By Douglas Murray

From the Magazine

Politics

Trans rights, voter wrongs

Insisting that men can be women is a sure way to lose an election

By Meghan Murphy

From the Magazine

Education

Why are young people so left-wing?

Left-wing professors think it’s their responsibility to open their students’ eyes to injustice

By Toby Young

From the Magazine

Politics

The shallow state

A real Deep State would have stopped Trump winning in the first place

By Paul Wood

From the Magazine

Politics

Big Squaw E. Warren speaks with forked tongue

Do the Democrats have a death wish?

By Roger Kimball

From the Magazine

Politics

Elizabeth Warren is the Hillary Clinton of 2020

The Massachusetts senator is a left-wing populist for people who don’t want left-wing populism

By John R. MacArthur

From the Magazine

Politics

Does Trump have a better idea than endless wars?

Few in Washington acknowledge the scope of the self-inflicted wounds the US has sustained since 9/11

By Andrew Bacevich

From the Magazine

Books + Arts

Books

Old King Cole

The Letters of Cole Porter by Cole Porter reviewed

By Christopher Bray

From the Magazine

Art

Time to end the taste truce

Have we become so tolerant that taste no longer matters?

By Cosmo Landesman

From the Magazine

Art

Tough gospel: the twin cities of Sesame Street and Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood

Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood is the world we have lost: grandparents, honest jobs and Sunday school teachers

By James Panero

From the Magazine

Books

Once more without feeling

Serotonin by Michel Houellebecq reviewed

By Douglas Murray

From the Magazine

Art

A motel room of one’s own

Adman to American existentialist: Edward Hopper at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

By Carolyn Stewart

From the Magazine

Books

‘A Russian vowel is an orange, an English vowel is a lemon’

Think, Write, Speak: Uncollected Essays, Reviews, Interviews and Letters to the Editor by Vladimir Nabokov reviewed

By Philip Hensher

From the Magazine

Art

Brazilian wax

Before the Beatles were boss, there was bossa nova

By Jacob Heilbrunn

From the Magazine

Art

Audio blitzkrieg

‘Motörhead, remember me now’

By Luke Haines

From the Magazine

Art

The perfect crime

Once true crime has you by the listicles, you’re compelled to return to the scene

By Emily Ferguson

From the Magazine

Books

Is Lou Reed a rock ’n’ roll Dostoevsky?

I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Collected Lyrics by Lou Reed reviewed

By D.J. Taylor

From the Magazine

Books

A vacation in a hell of a state

North Korea Journal by Michael Palin reviewed

By Claire Kohda Hazelton

From the Magazine

Books

Heart of darkness

Pravda Ha Ha: True Travels to the End of Europe by Rory MacLean reviewed

By Sara Wheeler

From the Magazine

Books

On Freud’s couch

The Lives of Lucian Freud: The Restless Years, 1922-1968 by William Feaver reviewed

By Craig Raine

From the Magazine

Art

Top Boy wins the turf war

Top Boy reviewed

By James Delingpole

From the Magazine

Books

Why do we write dedications in books?

These ghostly remnants of love, loss and friendship tell stories of their own

By Anthony Quinn

From the Magazine

Art

On photography, shrines and Maradona: a Neapolitan pilgrimage

The author wanders around Naples seeking transcendence – and finds it

By Geoff Dyer

From the Magazine

Life

Humor

My morning with Black Lives Matter UK

By the time I was 12, I was listening to Bob Marley while memorizing Dr King

By Godfrey Elfwick

From the Magazine

Low Life

What did the maid make of my penis vacuum pump?

While I was out, she had polished it and positioned it on a glass shelf lit by four spotlights

By Jeremy Clarke

From the Magazine

Faith

Fashion victims: how feminists are betraying Muslim women

In the West, hierarchies of collective privilege and victimhood are more important than individual rights

By Libby Emmons

From the Magazine

Home

Is your home culturally insensitive?

Keep your judgmental hands off my Japanese tea bowls

By Laura Freeman

From the Magazine

Faith

The ‘Russians’ of Brighton Beach

The attitude of Jewish ‘Russians’ in America toward Russia is goodbye and good luck. But mostly goodbye

By Karol Markowicz

From the Magazine

Diary

How do you make the most ‘quintessentially English’ magazine work in the US?

Launches and liquid lunches in New York and Washington

By Freddy Gray

From the Magazine

Faith

Right-wing jihad

How Republicans became the anti-Islam party

By Tim Stanley

From the Magazine

High Life

Why Roy Cohn is not one of the world’s most evil men

He may have had a gruff exterior but I always thought he was gooey inside

By Taki

From the Magazine

Food and Drink

Drink

Everyone’s climbing aboard the Beyond Meat gravy train

Welcome to the new meal deal

By Jane Stannus

From the Magazine

Drink

California drinking: forgive them their granola

Homer spoke of the ‘wine-dark sea’. He could not, but should, have had a Syrah like this in mind

By Roger Kimball

From the Magazine

Drink

Craft brewing’s Midwest comeback

Emerging breweries seem uninterested in the rapid growth that brought about the downfall of earlier brands

By Lillian Li

From the Magazine