Is there anything that JD Vance actually believes? | Moira Donegan
The only thing we can say for sure that JD Vance believes is that he, personally, should have as much power as possible
How many faces does JD Vance have? For one thing, he looks a lot different these days. Around the time the election denier first ran for Senate in Ohio, in 2022, he grew a beard, perhaps to cover up his decidedly childlike countenance. As rumors swirled this summer that Donald Trump would choose Vance as his running mate - replacing Mike Pence, who left the vice-presidency after a mob of angry Trump supporters tried to hang him - some wondered if maybe Vance would shave. Trump, it seems, doesn't like beards, and prefers his underlings clean-shaven. And JD Vance is - has always been - willing to do just about anything to secure the approval of the powerful.
According to historian Gabriel Winant, Vance has spent much of his life clinging to a series of mentors, whom he has used for professional advancement before moving on from - and, ultimately, betraying. There was his grandmother, or Meemaw", the hardscrabble woman who raised him in rural Ohio - but whom he depicted as ignorant and ultimately culturally pathological in his bestselling memoir, Hillbilly Elegy. There was his Yale Law School mentor Amy Chua, the author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and wife of Jed Rubenfeld, who was suspended from Yale Law after an investigation found that he sexually harassed his students. (Chua also mentored Vance's wife, Usha Vance, whom she helped secure a clerkship with Brett Kavanaugh.) But Vance left this center-right Yale Law milieu for Silicon Valley, where he made his fortune as a venture capitalist under the tutelage (and with the funding) of the far-right techo-libertarian billionaire Peter Thiel, who would later go on to bankroll Vance's Senate campaign. Thiel seems to have introduced Vance to his other mentor, the reactionary neo-monarchist" and favorite intellectual of the Silicon Valley right, Curtis Yarvin.
Continue reading...