Please consider supporting Quillette’s fine work through Patreon at I sat down recently with Claire Lehmann, founder and editor of Quillette, an online magazine that publishes essays on a range of topics related to politics, social life, science, and academia. The magazine has quickly become a highly respected outlet for open discussion of topics in psychology and the social and behavioral sciences. Claire was studying forensic psychology at the graduate level but decided that she could contribute more to the general scientific discussion as a journalist. Hence her decision to found Quillette. In this discussion, she describes the founding, development and monetization strategy underpinning her journalistic work. From Wikipedia: “The website drew significant public attention on August 7, 2017 after publishing the responses of four scientists (Lee Jussim, David P. Schmitt, Geoffrey Miller, and Debra W. Soh) to James Damore’s controversial memo “Google’s Ideological Echo Chamber“. The website was temporarily shut down by a DDoS attack following publication of the piece.” Claire stated, during our discussion: “I didn’t think that any standard journalistic outlet would publish the material, scientific or otherwise, that I considered valuable and appropriate. The best places for scientific journalism won’t go near anything that contradicts very strong left-wing narratives such as the reality of stereotype threat (a literature severely criticized in ), the validity of intelligence research, or the existence of sex differences in personality and interest.” I provided an extensive reference list with regard to the latter in the description for my video commentary on the James Damore/Google affair: ). David Schmitt’s work (summarized here: ) is also relevant in this regard. We discussed the failure of psychologists to admit to, let alone identify, authoritarian tendencies on the left since the end of World War II, although there has been no shortage of work detailing those tendencies on the right. In my lab, we recently tried to rectify this with some recent as-of-yet unpublished studies making up the Master’s thesis work of my student Christine Brophy (see ). Claire and I also discussed the danger to women (particularly mothers) as a consequence of the social-constructionist denial of the biological differences between the sexes and the practical necessity of distinguishing between “women” and “mothers” in the economic discussion, the over-emphasis on career compared to family that is characteristic of modern life, the impossibility of a high-achieving career, in general (to say nothing of managing that with the demands of motherhood), and the failure of feminism to address that impossibility in a realistic and measured manner. We close with a discussion of the fraudulent and politically-motivated misuse of the concept of implicit bias and the lack of evidence for success for anti-unconscious bias retraining programs, and consideration of the differences in competition strategies between males and females in the workplace and more broadly. One of Quillette’s early successes, by criminologists Brian Boutwell: On the false dichotomy between sex and gender: And, in closing, on female preference for male bosses: Once again, please consider supporting Quillette’s fine work through Patreon: Additional relevant links: Website: - Chapters - 0:00) Intro (0:47) Before Quillette (1:48) Why no one would publish her articles (4:14) Explicit censorship (5:59) The corruption of social psychology (8:23) Crisis in academia, authoritarian teaching (10:12) Launching Quillette (14:06) Biological essentialism, Bill C16 (17:25) Gender diffusion hurts women more (22:56) Downfall of the domestic sphere (24:42) The divine mother (27:58) Success means devotion and obsession (31:22) Feminism does not acknowledge the guilt of lost motherhood (36:46) Intellect across genders (40:11) Freedom does not mean security (44:09) Monetizing Quillette (49:54) The administrative movement and DEI (55:24) Mitigating lawsuit risk (56:36) Title 9, bending the knee is admitting guilt (58:22) High achieving women V. High achieving men (1:00:47) Casual insults are not insulting to men (1:05:03) Female dominance hierarchy
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