The Cthuluh always swimming left might be something you feel as manifest destiny of some sort of inevitable history or whatever, but bear in mind that others might feel
incredibly different than that. Let me expand on this point, because I feel is the most interesting one to me.
Thing is, conservatives *do not feel* that the way Ctuluh is working is something that is either random or an inevitable historical necessity, nor even that it is a
good thing at all. And conservatives are, as I last recalled, still human beings. They are or should be allowed to
imagine the future, or other realities, or fantasies, where the progressive storylines of all the ideological necessities that the core leftist wing demands of them, simply do not exist, or are even refuted, countered. Why not, it seems to me, is the
pertinent question here. It's as if the biggest problem here is not *just* one of mere politics between cliques, but also a battle on the landscape of the imagination of possibilities for the future.
And
we all know that this is the issue. Progressives can't stop talking about this. How certain narratives are not "enabling" certain demographics, how certain stories are "limited" from a diversity point of view, not being sufficiently open to certain possibilities and futures of sex, genders, racial identities, and any other identity-laden issues you might imagine. Thus one might infer that this struggle is about
who gets to define what is a *good* imagination from not just an artistic, literary point of view, but more than that, to a
political and moral issue.
Returning to Ctuhluh swimming left, YES, I could even accept this sort of metaphysical inevitability (I don't, my pessimism doesn't allow it), but Vox Day and friends
don't. And I refer to Vox Day especially here, because he is indeed the extreme reference here. And perhaps you don't know this, but he's not just a "rabid" right wing lunatic, he's a guy that is involved in the
Dark Enlightment movement. And this movement proposes that this Cthuluh exists and its name is
The Cathedral, which is a huge ideological edifice being maintained by academia and promoted by the "Public Opinion" (not the real public, mind you, but of those who are the real Opinion Makers, that is, the Media, the Schools, etc). Everything being discussed by the Academia at a certain point in time will eventually trickle down to the media and opinion makers who will hammer down the point until the public accepts it. This is a decades-spanning phenomena.
Now, I'm not the kind of person who accepts such weird theories, but I do accept that
they believe these things, which can be summed up as saying that Ctuhluh always swims left because the system
makes it swim Left (In a way, it's a paranoid theory that mirrors the "Patriarchy" quite well).
If you accept that Ctuhluh swimming Left is not the work of Inevitable History, but rather the combination of wilful acts of the society at large, then you are forced to accept that
People can affect this direction themselves, and that's what these people are trying to do.
From
MY point of view, I don't subscribe to this point of view, but I REALLY don't want to be left in a world where the only allowed imaginations are those who are pre-described ideologically, who all point to the same direction (OR ELSE), where all must abide to the new social justice checklists of approved talking points, tokens and thematics. I don't welcome a world where not only Ctuhluh rides Left, but we can't even
imagine it going anywhere else.
Regarding Karajorma's point that all the slate books were terrible (did he read them at all?), let me just state that I find that statement incredible, that I don't buy that whole reasoning one bit, and that I would much rather have people tell me (like The_E for instance) that what *really* happened was that people disapproved of the Puppies' tactics and decided en masse to vote against it for these political reasons. I see a lot of contradictions here (people shouting on twitter in utter unironical or self-aware mode that it had nothing to do with politics, it was just our "community" that decided to keep these "people out" and so on and so on, you can't make this **** up), but at least I
respect it.
Yes, the Puppies have shown that it is politics. I commend them for having made everyone aware of this situation. I am not convinced that they are able to do anything else in the future. Solutions, real solutions must come from elsewhere. Or not. I mean, it's not inevitable that the whole Hugo Awards and the whole sci fi genre doesn't go to the ****ters. My pessimism is way less censorial in its imagination than any social justice inclined voter at the Hugos was.
It's a ridiculous overreaction to fill the entire slate with only their authors and then complain that people get annoyed at that.
Talk about overreactions, just look at your rationale for god's sake.