Home » Andrew Sullivan on blogger burnout

Comments

Andrew Sullivan on blogger burnout — 30 Comments

  1. It’s better to burn out
    Than to fade away
    My my, hey hey.

    Out of the blue
    and into the black
    They give you this,
    but you pay for that
    And once you’re gone,
    you can never come back
    When you’re out of the blue
    and into the black.

    The king is gone
    but he’s not forgotten
    This is the story
    of a Johnny Rotten
    It’s better to burn out
    than it is to rust
    The king is gone
    but he’s not forgotten.

  2. It makes me nervous, Neo, to hear you talk about burnout. Hope you’re not hinting at any of your OWN plans.

  3. For Neo it would be better to reduce scope in favor of longevity. There is much to be done on our most strategic perils. Think of the world in the 1930s and of Orwell’s thought control through propaganda. Thank you for today’s exposure of The Telegraph’s distortion by using “Asian” men.

  4. Here is more proof that Hillary is despised by many on the left. No wonder her numbers keep dropping.

  5. Neo: You can’t burn out yet; things are just beginning to get interesting!

  6. carl in atlanta: granted none of us want Neo to suffer burn out, but “things are just beginning to get interesting!”. Really? How about depressing, desperate, dispiriting…

  7. KL: I didn’t say things will be good, fun or stress-free. I do believe that the next 18-20 months will be among the most interesting times (politically, historically) of my lifetime. Remember the old Chinese curse!

    Given the times we’re all living in, any blogger called ‘neo neocon’ simply must stick with it “for the duration”. If it comes, burnout can be acknowledged and surrendered to on February 1, 2016: by then the war for the soul of America will have been won or lost, and we will all know the outcome.

    Sorry for being presumptuous, Neo, but you’re doing important work.

  8. carl in atlanta: I must be older than you. I’m one of those people that thought that the election in Nov 2012 was going to be the most consequential one of our lifetime. (or one could argue that this was true in 2008.)
    Many people argued then that the fate of the country was on line. And then, a few days after the 2012 election, people experienced group amnesia, dusted themselves off and were ready to think there was still hope. I did not experience this amnesia. I’m happy for you optimists! Just not there myself. My country has been taken over by leftists and barring some type of selective catastrophe, I don’t see her glory days returning.

  9. Narcissus, thy name is Andrew. A monologue is not a conversation for normal people.

  10. OT: That didn’t take long….

    Lou Lumenick (NY POST “film critic”) is now saying that the movie Gone with the Wind should be banned.

    Un-freakin’ believable. They’ll do it, too.

    The entire South is being scapegoated viciously and globally for the deeds of ONE MAN. But hell, all the haters needed was an excuse.

  11. Rush Limbaugh has this to say:

    [I]t’s not gonna stop with the Confederate flag because it’s not about the Confederate flag. It is about destroying the South as a political force. It’s about isolating, targeting, and identifying the South as Dylann Roof. Not Charleston, South Carolina, the South. That’s what the leftists’ effort on the Confederate flag is. …

    And I’ll make another prediction to you. The next flag that will come under assault, and it will not be long, is the American flag. … If you take a look at the timeline of progressive events, their speed and rapidity with which the left is conducting this assault on all of these American traditions and institutions, if you don’t think the American flag’s in their crosshairs down the road, you had better stop and reconsider.”

    And this from John Hinderaker, Powerline:

    “It is no coincidence that the South is now the most patriotic region of the United States. That is the sin for which liberals hate the South: not some fictitious affection for a long-gone Confederacy, but a very real love of country—our country—today.

    It is the South’s current patriotism, not its 19th-century rebellion, that drives the Democrats’ hate, and for which the South will now pay a terrible price.

    I don’t know, maybe the Democrats calculate that they never again need to carry a single Southern state. That seems like a bad bet to me.”

    –John Hinderaker, Powerline

    Actually it’s a very good bet. The North has always had a lot more $$$ and a lot more people, and they crushed the South before: they can easily do it again. We’re pretty much in the position of the Ukraine vis-a-vis Russia.

  12. No, I’m not planning to quit. As for burnout—sure, sometimes I get tired, sometimes my energy is higher and sometimes lower, but I don’t plan to follow Andrew Sullivan into the blogger sunset in the foreseeable future.

  13. I had some back and forth email with Andrew Sullivan, back in I’m guessing late 2001 until whenever it was that he turned on a dime against Bush over gay marriage (which had long been an obsession of his, a matter in which he had a personal investment). When I chastised him over this, he wrote back to say that his opinion of GW Bush had been changing, which I really didn’t think was borne out by the evidence.

    I respected him as an excellent editor of the New Republic during some of the years in which it was a very good magazine whose editorial I agreed with by and large.

    I for instance informed him exactly where to find some writings of Susan Sontag, who I was very familiar with but whose work Sullivan confided he’d never really read. Sontag’s two collections of essays from the 1960s seemed to me essential reading, even if you ended up strongly disagreeing with some of what she said (as I did then and still do).

    History has often been rewritten as to who said what in the early days following 9/11. Many were reflexively anti-American and anti-war as a default position, irrational and emotional, wishing to relive what they saw as the lovely days of Vietnam War protest, the stars of which were never challenged nor forced to defend all the harm their posturing had caused millions of evidently inconsequential Vietnamese.

  14. If you ever need it, Neo, take a sabbatical or vacations. I’d recommend Thailand and some great massage up in Chiang Mai. Just make sure to send us a Post Card. Everyone needs a recharge, especially one who feels obligated to satisfy the needs of readers. Live LIFE and smell the Roses, Neo.

  15. If you ever need a vacation, neo, go to Newark.
    You’ll suddenly feel better about your own life.

  16. I won’t miss Sully — like you I quit reading him years ago — but I would miss you if you disappeared from the web. I know I’m not alone in that. Many of us out here appreciate the effort you have been making and look forward to reading your expressed thoughts. Keep it up, kid, and know that your work is not being ignored.

  17. Sounds like a wasted decade to me also. If he had taken comments and responded to a few, he might have gotten to know the minds and souls of a few people who took some interest in his thoughts. incidentally, I never visited his blog, so I don’t know what I have been missing.

  18. The entire South is being scapegoated viciously and globally for the deeds of ONE MAN. But hell, all the haters needed was an excuse.

    The Democrat party was never going to merely forgive the South for betraying eugenics, racism, slavery, or the Democrat party line. You knew it to be true. They destroyed the lives of many Southerners merely for disagreeing with Democrat politics and religion.

  19. No amount of staying loyal to Democrat propaganda and tradition tying the KKK to Forrest, raising up Lee, hating Sherman, or anything else of that nature post Reconstruction was ever going to earn Southerners “forgiveness” in the eyes of the Democrat party. They were always going to get you back for not toeing the Democrat line, for not dying in their wars with patriotic glee and fulsome praise.

    It’s easy to discard what I said about the South being entirely loyal to the Democrat cause since Civil War I, it’s something else to be convinced by the Left slamming a boot in your face. That’s an argument of an entirely different force level.

  20. I’ve thought about a religious blog, but can barely reply to the few comments my FB posts generated without getting weary. You have my utmost respect!

  21. Hi Neo,
    Just a quick thanks for your blog. I read virtually all you write and only occasionally post a comment. I have been quite amazed at your persistence when you have a relatively small following, at least as judged by the # of comments per post. I don’t mean this as insulting in the least. ( As you know, many popular blogs like Ace get hundreds of comments for every post–tens of thousands per week). I have always admired your willingness to keep going without the kind of reinforcement that comes from a higher profile. You have very good insight and a great community here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>