Larrys, Moes, and Curlys
Jan. 26th, 2008 09:15 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Patrick Nielsen Hayden linked to a quote from The Rev. Ivan Stang's political typology of humans:
I would add, in fact, that Moes really don't understand Curlys, believing them to be either Larrys or failed Moes. (Why, they think, would anyone with such evident intelligence not be a Moe?) The existence of Curlys fills out-of-power Moes with rage, because the Curlys are never doing enough to fight the in-power Moes. And in Curly-unfriendly political times, Curlys are often wracked with angst over whether they should really turn into Moes, though they never will.
There are three kinds of people -- I call them Larrys, Curlys, and Moes. The Larrys don't even know that there are three types; if they're told, it's an abstraction, because they cannot imagine anything beyond Larry-ness. The Curlys know about it, and recognize the pecking order, but find ways of living with it cheerfully...for they are the imaginative, creative ones. The Moes not only know about it, but exploit and perpetuate it.I think this is rather wonderful—cynical but actually not as cynical as the people who leave out the Curlys.
The naive, pleasant believers of all kinds are Larrys -- ineffectual, well-meaning do-gooders destined always to be victims, often without once guessing their status. Like sheep, they don't want to hear the unpleasant legends about "the slaughterhouse"; they trust the strange two-legged beings who feed them. The artists, unsung scientific geniuses, political writers, and earnest disciples of the stranger cults are Curlys -- engaging, original, accident-prone but full of life, intuitively aware of the Moe forces plotting against them and trying to fight back. They can never defeat the Moes, however, without BECOMING Moes, which is impossible for a true Curly.
The Moes, then, are the fanatics, the ranters, the cult gurus, the Uri Gellers AND the Debunkers; they are the Resistance Leaders and the Ruling Class Bankers. They hate each other, but only because they want to control ALL the Larrys and Curlys themselves....Larrys and Curlys die in wars started by rival Moes -- the Larrys willingly, the Curlys with great regret.
I would add, in fact, that Moes really don't understand Curlys, believing them to be either Larrys or failed Moes. (Why, they think, would anyone with such evident intelligence not be a Moe?) The existence of Curlys fills out-of-power Moes with rage, because the Curlys are never doing enough to fight the in-power Moes. And in Curly-unfriendly political times, Curlys are often wracked with angst over whether they should really turn into Moes, though they never will.
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Date: 2008-02-09 11:31 am (UTC)