Virtue Gone Mad: Manager Punished More Harshly Than the Shoplifter He Stopped

In The Epoch Times, Dalrymple recounts the case of Sean Egan, a supermarket manager of 29 years dismissed for physically confronting a prolific shoplifter. He traces a line from Nietzsche and Matthew Arnold through G.K. Chesterton to argue that what we are witnessing is not exactly a change in values but a perversion of older ones.

Procedure is good as a guideline, and in some instances, though not very many in everyday life, is essential—for example, in the flying of an aircraft. But where it is bowed down to and worshipped as if it were a jealous god, it leads to a brainless formalism, gross injustice, and an absurd situation in which a man who attempts to prevent shoplifting is punished much more severely than is the shoplifter.

Read the full essay here.

Against the Technocratic Temper

In New English Review, Dalrymple reviews Frank Furedi’s book on populism, drawing on his acquaintance with three brilliant sociologists—Christie Davies, Kenneth Minogue, and Furedi himself—to explore why the word “populist” has become a term of denunciation rather than description, and why the technocratic alternative is no less dangerous than the populism it claims to oppose.

The demand that we should eschew all nostalgia as a harmful emotion is a demand that we should never compare the past—which is, after all, one of the great teachers of humanity—with the present, except in the triumphalist spirit that we know best and that therefore we have nothing to learn from the past.

Read the full essay here.

Miss Havisham’s Guide to Loss

Writing in The Oldie, Dalrymple considers the new psychiatric category of Prolonged Grief Disorder, using Miss Havisham as its archetype. He notes that a review of 169 controlled trials found little evidence that any treatment does much good.

Grief, like any emotion, can turn morbid. Whatever is morbid is soon hypostasised these days to a disease, and every disease calls forth its acronym.

Read the full essay here.

Review by Peter Hitchens: An Englishman’s Home Is His Car Park

Peter Hitchens reviews An Englishman’s Home Is His Car Park in the Daily Mail, calling Dalrymple one of the most acute voices describing the vandalising of Britain by an alliance of fanatics and idiots. The book recounts a visit to Worcester, once a handsome English city, now hollowed out by frenzied modernisation, and asks why those in charge of our heritage seem relieved to see beauty go.

He wonders if the frenzied modernisation of everything, the crazy 1960s love affair with concrete and glass, the obsession with tidying and sweeping away the old and illogical, is based on our national decline. Even though we are no longer a great power, officialdom decided, we could at least be modern, like America. And those now in charge of our heritage—councillors, planners, ministers—have come to hate the elegant, well-proportioned and pleasing past, because they know they are no good at beauty themselves. And, as they cannot create it, they are relieved to see it go.

Read the full review here.

Easeful Death for Everybody

In Quadrant, Dalrymple examines the logic of assisted suicide legislation, arguing that once the avoidance of suffering is accepted as the criterion, there is no principled reason to confine assisted suicide to the terminally ill and that measuring suffering objectively is not possible.

The fundamental problem with any law that tries to make suffering the criterion of eligibility for assistance with suicide is that it has in effect to measure suffering in the same way as the level of haemoglobin in the blood is measured, as if it were purely objective: that is to say, as if such and such a condition resulted in such and such an amount of suffering, and as if there were a cutoff point at which it became intolerable. All this is necessarily false.

Read the full essay here.

Is the Witchcraft Mania Really Behind Us?

In The American Conservative, Dalrymple draws on Sir Walter Scott’s Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft to argue that the mechanisms of the witch-craze—forced confessions, denunciations, the punishment of skeptics—are far from extinct.

Reading this, who will not think that this is the explanation of the vast increase in gender dysphoria and transsexualism in the last few years, and indeed of the spread of psychopathology in general?

Read the full essay here.

Theodore Dalrymple, Truth-Teller

Rob Henderson contributes the foreword to the twenty-fifth anniversary edition of Life at the Bottom, drawing on his own experience of foster care and the military to explain why Dalrymple’s account of the underclass remains so urgent. He argues that the “luxury belief class” — affluent people who promote permissiveness while living with strict discipline — has dismantled the norms that once helped the poor build decent lives.

Dalrymple is indispensable because he refuses to romanticize the poor or celebrate intellectual rebellion. He writes about people who trade stability for fleeting pleasures and a culture that cheers them on. Without pity or platitude, he cuts through the fog of jargon, reminding us that stability is fragile, that tradition is wisdom distilled through trial, and that humans are capable of virtue only when we believe we should be.

As Life at the Bottom turns 25, its warnings feel more urgent than ever.

Read it here.

European Exceptionalism

At Law & Liberty, Dalrymple reviews Walter A. McDougall’s The Mighty Continent: A Candid History of Modern Europe, a sweeping conspectus that he finds masterful in its fairness and clarity. While noting several small errors of fact and occasional lapses of judgment, he praises the book’s account of the First World War’s causes and its distinction between technical progress and moral progress.

The decline of Europe is obvious. It is relative and may yet become absolute. The author makes much of the failure of the Europeans to bear sufficient children to maintain, let alone to increase, their numbers but, except in sub-Saharan Africa, this is a worldwide problem. He attributes the decline of Europe to a toxic mixture of hubris and loss of self-belief, as well as a loss of faith in God.

Read the full essay here.

Agatha Christie & the Metaphysics of Murder

Writing in The New Criterion, Dalrymple offers an extended essay on Agatha Christie’s social, psychological, and philosophical acuity, adapted from his forthcoming book of the same title. Taking They Do It With Mirrors as his text, he makes a case for Christie as a shrewd observer of human nature whose comedies of manners contain depths that her detractors, notably Edmund Wilson, were too snobbish to notice.

This piece is adapted from Dalrymple’s forthcoming book of the same name.

“It is odd, when you have a secret belief of your own which you do not want to acknowledge, the voicing of it by someone else will rouse you to a fury of denial.”

This is a sharp psychological observation whose truth we recognize at once. In a sense, we have always known that it was true, but it is not until it is so clearly enunciated that we let it into the forefront of our minds.

Read the full essay here.