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“The Bill of Rights has no greater defender than Robby Soave. He’s also a terrific reporter and a talented stylist. He’s written the comprehensive guide to what’s happening to millennial America. Read this book if you want to understand what the stakes are.” ―Tucker Carlson, host ofTucker Carlson Tonight
“Robby Soave reports the truth, even when it makes people uncomfortable. This book shines a bright light on the thought-crushing insanity that has taken hold among young Americans and at some of our most important institutions. Soave tells a stunning story of the assault on free speech, one that should concern us all.” ―Meghan McCain, co-host ofThe View
"Panic Attack is a methodical, earnest and often insightful work of reporting and analysis.” ―The Guardian
"A comprehensive and critical look at the flourishing ecosystem of American radicalism." ―Washington Monthly
“A thoroughly informative study that combines first-person interviews, scholarly literature, and current events reportage to construct a ‘psychological profile’ of Zillennial activists…for willing defenders of tolerance and free speech,Panic Attack provides considerable insight into where to begin.” ―J. Grant Addison,Washington Examiner
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Panic Attack
Young Radicals in the Age of Trump
By Robby SoaveSt. Martin's Press
Copyright © 2019 Robert Emil Soave, Jr.All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-16988-4
Contents
Title Page,Copyright Notice,
Dedication,
PROLOGUE Arrested Development,
ONE Intersectional A.F.,
TWO Nazi Punching Anti-Trump, Anti–Free Speech, Antifa,
THREE Off to the Races Identity, Culture, and Black Lives Matter,
FOUR Burn the Witch Fourth-Wave Feminism and #MeToo,
FIVE LGB vs. T Radical Trans Activism,
SIX Bernie Woulda Won The Democratic Socialists of America,
SEVEN The Others Greens, Guns, and More,
EIGHT Bleached Social Media and the Alt-Right,
EPILOGUE When Extremes Meet,
Acknowledgments,
Notes,
Index,
About the Author,
Copyright,
CHAPTER 1
INTERSECTIONAL A.F.
The Women's March came to Washington, D.C., on January 21, 2017, the day after Trump's inauguration. Its purpose was to call attention to the incoming president's history of appalling behavior toward women — behavior to which Trump had all but admitted during the infamous hot-mic moment that became known as theAccess Hollywood tape. "When you're a star, they let you do it," Trump had said. "You can do anything. Grab 'em by the pussy."
This was a statement that rightly offended millions of Americans of all political stripes — indeed, Trump's electoral fortunes were never lower than they were immediately after the tape's release — and thus the march held the promise of uniting people around a universal, positive message: it's not okay to abuse women.
More than half a million people descended on D.C. for the march, making it the largest protest in the United States since the Vietnam War era. It was a fairly awe-inspiring spectacle. I live in D.C. and only had to walk a few blocks from my apartment before I happened across streets jam-packed with activists. A sea of pink hats greeted me. Many of the protesters had chosen to reclaim Trump's own vulgar language, and I saw dozens of signs bearing some variant of the slogan "This pussy grabs back." Others were less intense; a young woman with pink streaks in her light brown hair held a sign that said, "To love, we must survive; to survive, we must fight; to fight, we must love." Her friend stood next to her, waving a sign that featured a hand-drawn Donald Trump with the universally recognized emoji for excrement atop his head and the words "Dump Trump."
All in all, the Women's March was a success for the nascent anti-Trump movement informally known as the Resistance. More people showed up to protest than to attend the inauguration — something that seemed to infuriate the president, forcing several Trump staffers to make misleading statements about the relative sizes of the crowds. (This was the genesis of presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway's line about "alternative facts.")
Still, the Women's March suffered from some noteworthy behind-the-scenes conflicts that occasionally spilled out into the open and hampered the protest's overall effectiveness and staying power.
Organizers claimed to have geared the event toward "inclusion," according to its website. Inclusion would have been a good strategy, since many women of differing political beliefs had reason to be suspicious of Trump and cause to send him a message about disrespecting them. Inclusion can be difficult, however.
Right off the bat, the planned event ran into trouble. It was organized primarily on Facebook, showcasing the incredible power of social media, and also its considerable disadvantages. The Facebook page was constantly besieged by infighting. A lot of people were upset that white women were running the event, given that they aren't as threatened by Trump's policies as black and Hispanic women are. (A much larger percentage of white women voted for Trump than did black and Hispanic women, which has led to continuing resentment — a sense that some significant mass of white women betrayed their sisters of color.) The protest was initially called the Million Women March, but critics said that was too much of a rip-off; a 1997 event of a similar name had intended to call attention to civil rights for women of color.
Then there was the issue of prostitution, a topic that often divides the left. For reasons that will be more fully explored in Chapter Four, modern feminism is largely split on the subject of whether sex workers are independent women boldly reclaiming their agency and their bodies from a system of male domination or victims of economic and sexual exploitation.
At first the Women's March stood firmly in column A, and its Unity Principles included a pledge to "stand in solidarity with sex workers' rights movements." This was eventually replaced with a very different line about protecting "all those exploited for sex and labor," a column B position. Finally, the group compromised and included both positions: "We stand in solidarity with the sex workers' rights movement. We recognize that exploitation for sex and labor in all forms is a violation of human rights."
The abortion issue was even more contentious. Most people on the left are pro-choice, of course, and it's not surprising that the Women's March would broadly support abortion rights. But at least one pro-life group, the New Wave Feminists, signed on as an official partner of the march. At the time, many pro-life women were undoubtedly feeling just as uncertain about Trump as their opponents; while Trump has governed as a fairly staunch social conservative during his first term, there was once ample reason to doubt whether the twice-divorced former Democrat and lifelong practitioner of what Senator Ted Cruz dubbed "New York values" would actually support the pro-life cause.
Organizers of the pro-life New Wave Feminists group told theAtlantic that they were "not just pro-lifers who are also feminists ... we're feminists first and foremost," and "[we're] so grateful to have this opportunity to walk together with [our] sisters and brothers."
Unfortunately for them, inclusion did not and could not extend to pro-lifers, and heaps of denunciation ensued.
"You cannot be anti-choice and feminist," wrote Amanda Marcotte, a leftist feminist writer, on Twitter.
"Inclusivity is not about bolstering those who harm us," wrote Jessica Valenti, a feminist columnist for theGuardian, on Twitter.
The backlash succeeded, and Women's March leadership decertified the New Wave Feminists as an official partner. Inclusion only goes so far.
And yet despite the myriad ways in which the Women's March failed to live up to its stated goal of inclusivity, many of the young leftists I interviewed for this book told me they thought the protest turned out to betoo inclusive.
"That's actually fucking right," Laila, the twenty-six-year-old Muslim woman and political activist mentioned in the introduction, agreed.
I asked Laila, who lives in Washington, D.C., whether she attended the march. She did not. In fact, she skipped town that weekend. "I'm tired of being a poster child for someone else's attempt at inclusivity," she said.
In her view, by including so many different perspectives, organizers had watered down the message and ended up marginalizing the people who should have been the focus. They took "an approach that co-opted the narratives of many who have already been fighting in this space, specifically, black women."
Laila is hardly the only young activist who felt that way about the Women's March. Juniper, the nineteen-year-old trans woman, castigated the march as "super white, super cisgender-centric." ("Cisgender," the opposite of "transgender," describes people who identify as the gender to which they were born.) She was skeptical of it at best, she said. And others were even harsher.
"I just felt like it wasn't very sincere," said Yanet, a woman of color and student at the University of Maryland. Yanet made a conscious decision not to participate. "It just felt like a moment for people who aren't as involved or didn't care as often or before to feel like, 'Oh, I did something.'"
"I hated it," Ma'at, a student of color at American University, told me. "It was super cis-centric. It was exclusive of trans identities. It was whitewashed. It just in general was very co-opting and ineffective."
"Insincere" and "ineffective" will strike many readers as surprising ways for leftist activists to describe the most well-attended mass march in four decades. But it makes perfect sense when one considers the priorities of the new activist culture, which prefers quality — intellectual purity — over quantity. A protest is successful only if it highlights the correct issues, includes theright people — people who humbly check all the appropriate boxes — and is organized by a ruling coalition of the most oppressed.
This, of course, is what intersectionality dictates. Though the words "intersectionality" and "inclusion" sound like synonyms, they are actually in conflict with each other — a conflict perfectly encapsulated by the Women's March and the activists' dissatisfaction with it. In case there was any confusion, Roxane Gay, a celebrated feminist author and voice of the left, said this in response to the idea of inclusion: "Intersectional feminism does not include a pro-life agenda. That's not how it works!" This chapter will define intersectionality, explain how it provides an ideological framework for safety-conditioned Zillennials, and describe the main problems with an intersectional approach to activism.
Intersectional Theory 101
Intersectionality is the operating system for the modern left. Understanding what it means and where it comes from is essential for comprehending the current state of activism on college campuses, at protests in major cities, and elsewhere.
Put simply, intersectionality means that various kinds of oppression — racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, economic inequality, and others — are simultaneously distinct from each other and inherently linked. They are distinct in the sense that they stack: a black woman suffers from two kinds of oppression (racism and sexism), whereas a white woman suffers from just one (sexism). But they are also interrelated, in that they are all forms of oppression that should be opposed with equal fervor. For instance, a feminist who isn't sufficiently worked up about the rights of the gay and transgender communities is at odds with the tenets of intersectionality. She is a feminist, but she is not anintersectional feminist.
Holly, a twenty-three-year-old Berkeley student whom I met at the April 2017 People's Climate March in Washington, D.C., told me that for her, intersectionality means all issues are "connected and tie in with each other, like indigenous rights, Black Lives Matter, and climate change."
Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, a professor at UCLA Law School and Columbia University School of Law, coined the termintersectionality in her 1989 paper "Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex." She needed a word to describe the lives of black women who were discriminated against because of both their race and their sex. Their experiences were fundamentally different from those of black men, who were privileged to the extent that they were men, and from those of white women, who were privileged to the extent that they were white.
"Discrimination, like traffic through an intersection, may flow in one direction, and it may flow in another," wrote Crenshaw in the paper. "If an accident happens in an intersection, it can be caused by cars traveling from any number of directions and, sometimes, from all of them. Similarly, if a Black woman is harmed because she is in the intersection, her injury could result from sex discrimination or race discrimination."
Crenshaw got the idea from a 1976 federal district court case,DeGraffenreid v. General Motors, in which five black women had sued GM. They argued that GM's policy of laying off the most recently hired employees violated Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which prohibits both racial and gender-based discrimination. Since it had been only a little more than a decade since the law had required GM to hire black and female employees, the most recently hired employees tended to be black women, the plaintiffs argued.
But the court determined that black women enjoyed no special protection under the law — the employees were protected from racial discrimination and gender-based discrimination, but not from the combined effects of these two categories. "The plaintiffs are clearly entitled to a remedy if they have been discriminated against," wrote the court. "However, they should not be allowed to combine statutory remedies to create a new 'super-remedy' which would give them relief beyond what the drafters of the relevant statutes intended."
Since GM policy allowed women to work in management positions, where there were several white women, it could not be said that the company engaged in sexism, and the court told the plaintiffs they should drop this aspect of their case and instead proceed with a purely race-based lawsuit. But the women had no interest in doing so — they felt they had been discriminated against not because they were black but because they were black women.
DeGraffenreid v. General Motors was Crenshaw's lightbulb moment. Black women lived in the midst of two kinds of discrimination — racism and sexism — and thus languished under an oppressive force greater than the sum of its parts.
"What Kimberlé is saying with intersectionality is that, in order to understand how power operates, you have to understand how people live their lives," Alicia Garza, an activist and cofounder of the Black Lives Matter movement, told me. "Intersectionality is the very basic notion that we live multiple experiences at once. It's not just, oh, I'm black and I'm a woman, and I'm a black woman. It's to say that I'm uniquely discriminated against. I uniquely experience oppression based on standing at the intersection of race and gender."
Though Crenshaw came up with the term, the concept itself predates her. As far back as 1892, the black feminist Anna Julia Cooper had criticized leading anti-racists for failing to advance the cause of black women. "Only the black woman can say when and where I enter, in the quiet undisputed dignity of my womanhood ... then and there the whole race enters with me," she said. (Cooper, who was born a slave in 1858, eventually became the first formerly enslaved woman to earn a Ph.D. She lived to be 105. Her sprawling Washington, D.C., residence still stands — in fact, I rented a room there for six months in 2012.)
For the Boston-based black feminist lesbian organization known as the Combahee River Collective, which existed in the 1970s, "simultaneity" was the word they used to describe the cumulative impact of the various oppressions they experienced. Their manifesto called not just for the abolition of racism and sexism but for "the destruction of the political-economic systems of capitalism and imperialism as well." Avowed enmity toward all the various isms: this is the strategy required by the intellectual framework that became known as intersectionality.
Patricia Hill Collins, a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland, expanded upon Crenshaw's work, publishingBlack Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment in 1990. Taking a cue from Crenshaw, she used the term "intersectionality" to refer to the interlocking matrixes of oppression that serve to marginalize people. Initially focused on race and gender, Collins gave additional consideration to class as a matrix in her 1992 bookRace, Class and Gender: An Anthology. A decade later,Black Sexual Politics added sexual orientation to the mix. "Intersectional paradigms view race, class, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and age, among others, as mutually constructing systems of power," she wrote inBlack Sexual Politics. "Because these systems permeate all social relations, untangling their effects in any given situation or for any given population remains difficult."
That's quite the understatement, since every new addition to the list of interrelated oppressions makes the task even more cumbersome. There are more of these categories than most people might imagine, and every year, intellectual peers of Crenshaw and Collins propose new ones. Meanwhile, intersectionality has become a ubiquitous force on college campuses, where young people are taught to perceive all social issues through the lens of interrelated oppression, and to find smaller and smaller grievances to add to the pile. Young people who grasp the truth of intersectionality are said to be "woke," Zillennial slang that describes someone who has awakened to the reality of their own privilege and adopted a progressive worldview.
The spread of intersectionality poses some problems for the left, since the theory divides people as often as it unites them. In the wake of Trump's election, Hulu'sThe Handmaid's Tale, a prestige drama based on feminist author Margaret Atwood's beloved novel, became mandatory #Resistance viewing for its depiction of an oppressive society where women have been enslaved by theocratic authoritarians — a future toward which Trump's America is hurtling, according to many on the left. But season two ofThe Handmaid's Tale, which debuted in 2018, drew criticism; the show was accused of a "failure of intersectionality" because it never grappled with racism, only sexism. "This is a show all about gender — it is built entirely around that concept — but untilThe Handmaid's Tale learns to make its feminism intersectional, it's going to keep letting its audience down," commentedBuzzFeed TV writer Louis Peitzman.
(Continues...)Excerpted fromPanic Attack byRobby Soave. Copyright © 2019 Robert Emil Soave, Jr.. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Product details
- Publisher : All Points Books
- Publication date : June 18, 2019
- Language : English
- Print length : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250169887
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250169884
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.72 x 1.14 x 8.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #656,633 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #200 inRadical Political Thought
- #238 inNationalism (Books)
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About the author

Robby Soave is an associate editor at Reason magazine and author of Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trump. He enjoys writing about culture, politics, education policy, criminal justice reform, television, and video games. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Daily Beast, U.S. News & World Report, The Orange County Register, and The Detroit News. In 2016, Forbes named him to the "30 Under 30" list in the category of law and policy. In 2017, he became a Novak Fellow at The Fund for American Studies. He also serves on the D.C. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
Soave won widespread recognition for setting the record straight in two infamous cases of media malpractice: the 2014 Rolling Stone hoax article about sexual assault at the University of Virginia, and the 2019 incident involving Catholic high school students at the Lincoln Memorial. He won a Southern California Journalism Award for discrediting the former; his writings about the latter prompted several mainstream media outlets to apologize for having wrongly smeared the boys.
A Detroit native, and a graduate of the University of Michigan, Soave now lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, Carrie, and their two Yorkies, Caesar and Oliver.
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2019I have read a number of social commentary books like this(The Coddling of the American Mind, Campus Rape Frenzy, Unjustified, etc.) and this one is a real standout. First off, the author is a libertarian, so he is often at odds with the more conservative positions taken in those books. He also discusses excesses of the right as well as the left- something those books don't do at all, or skim over. The result is a very balanced perspective.
There are a few points he made that I found particularly interesting:
1. I had no idea UC Berkeley was a stronghold of free speech and open discourse back in the 60's, The author contrasts that with what it is now- quite the opposite.
2. The author's point about the genesis of young people's' need for safe spaces and protection from harmful thoughts may be at least partially due(if not more) to their parents, and the media, and it is not something they developed on their own. The practices of parents that overshield their children with their perception that a child-kidnapper lurks around every corner, and now with school shootings. The author uses *statistics* to point out that child kidnappings and school shootings are both very, very rare events. But the media saturates coverage on these events, driving the perception of heightened danger. So given these things, is it any wonder that college kids feel the need for protection?
3. I really liked that the author differentiated between speech that is protected and speech that is not, and cited relevant court cases(Matal vs. Tam, and Brandenburg vs. Ohio, respectively). I really like Samuel Alito's words in the unanimous finding on the former:
"Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age disability or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom the express 'the thought that we hate'".
There's a lot of misunderstanding about what is and isn't free speech so I like that the author brought up both.
The book is well-written and well-cited. Names, dates, places, publications, etc. It's not just a bunch of invective in either direction. We need that sort of civil, balanced discourse. - Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2019The author does a good job of revealing the true focus of the Zillennials. What should scare the bejeebers out of all of us is that many of these people will have some amount of control of our society in the near future. It's hard to believe that any of these coddled and petulant CHILDREN would ever be able to take a dressing down from a drill sergeant or even minor criticisms from a boss. There is one amusing thing I'd like you to keep in mind while reading this book -- how offended and what demonstration of outrage would this current crop of snowflakes have at T.V. shows like All In The Family, Sanford and Son, or even Seinfeld?
There were three "opinions" that I felt the author had completely wrong:
He seemed oblivious to some of the key facts in the defense of George Zimmerman in the Trayvon Martin case.
His stance on the abolishment of ICE.
And his statement that the housing crash was an economic disaster inflicted upon us by older Americans.
Overall the book was well worth the time it took to read. - Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2019The author went to great pains to lay out a lot of information in a way that it could be understood, but kept his own options largely out of the discussion. This book is a good start for anyone trying to understand the madness that is going on in many of our colleges and universities today. It goes further, in that it also covers the political inclinations of our younger generations that may or may not be in college, though colleges are clearly identified as the hot houses of discontent.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2019Honestly I bought this book because Robby is hot (why are the libertarians giving strip teases at the national convention never the ones you *want* to give a strip tease?). That said, the book turned out to be riveting. As someone who is Too Online I was vaguely aware of a lot of the incidents he discusses, but the additional research and cohesive narrative he builds around them helped me see the past few years of culture wars in a new light. Definitely recommend!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2019Informative about the most things that have sparked the political landscape for the past few years and is relevant. Point of view was slightly bias but had great references and notes to clear up any confusing subjects.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2019*I received this for free in exchange for an honest review*
I don't think this was quite the right book for me, not because it's a bad book but because I already knew everything the author was talking about. I've been following all the 'radical' news since it started to effect the book community. So I know just how... passionate these kind of people are. Now, I will say that it also talks about the alt-alright and discusses them as well. What I loved was how he showed the older generations and how they went after things and how my generation does it today. That was awesome. While I don't agree with everything the author says, it was pretty nifty seeing some of this stuff through another's eyes. As long as those are eyes are still reasonable and not so far gone down the rabbit hole on either side.
“I think of safety as the right of every person to leave their house or to leave wherever they live, to walk this world and to feel safe and comfortable in their own skin, in their own ways that they identify, and to not fear violence, not fear prejudice, not fear discrimination, to not fear being bothered or to not fear living." - My favorite quote - Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2019Informative. Bought it to understand the changing dynamic of our current political realm with the radical left.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2020Reading this was not worth the time or the money. All Robby does is recant current events, so if you've been paying attention and reading the news then you'll already be familiar with the content of this book. Robby fails to bring any kind of unique analysis or insight to the events themselves and instead just reiterates that the events occurred. Don't waste your time.
Top reviews from other countries
- Jeffrey NoahReviewed in Canada on September 2, 2019
1.0 out of 5 starsArticulate, verbose and shallow.
Robby Soave and his book offer extensive evidence of the superficiality of, “The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupifies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future … “by Mark Bauerlein. Soave is articulate, verbose and shallow. Soave appears unable to decipher and cite appropriate social statistics and political theory.