Sohrab Ahmari
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Sohrab
Ahmari
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sohrab_Ahmari
Sohrab
Ahmari (Persian: سهراب احمری,
romanized: Sohrāb Aḥmarī; born February 1, 1985) is an Iranian-American columnist, editor,
and author of nonfiction books. He is a founding editor of the online magazine
Compact. He is a contributing editor of The Catholic Herald, and a columnist
for First Things. Previously, he served as the op-ed editor of the New York
Post, an editor with The Wall Street Journal opinion pages in New York and
London, and as a senior writer at Commentary.
Ahmari is
the author of The New Philistines (2016), a critique of how identity politics
are corrupting the arts; From Fire, by Water (2019), a spiritual memoir about
his conversion to Roman Catholicism; and The Unbroken Thread: Discovering the
Wisdom of Tradition in an Age of Chaos (2021).
Early life
and education
Ahmari was
born in Tehran, Iran. In his 2012 book, Arab Spring Dreams, he writes that he
was interrogated by security officials about his parents and faced disciplinary
action as a child for accidentally bringing a videocassette of Star Wars into
school at a time when Western films were officially banned in the country. In
1998, at the age of 13, Ahmari moved with his family to the United States.
Ahmari
earned a J.D. degree from Northeastern University School of Law in Boston.Between
college and law school, Ahmari completed a two-year commitment to Teach for
America in the Rio Grande Valley region of South Texas.
While in
law school, inspired in part by the protests following the disputed June 2009
Iranian presidential election, he began working as a freelance journalist,
contributing pieces to publications such as The Boston Globe, The Wall Street
Journal, The New Republic, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and Commentary
among others.
Career
After
serving as a Robert L. Bartley fellow at The Wall Street Journal in 2012,
Ahmari joined the publication as assistant books editor. He then served as an
editorial page writer based in London, writing editorials and commissions and
editing op-eds for The Journal's European edition.
In these
positions, Ahmari wrote book reviews, op-eds, and conducted interviews with
prominent politicians, activists, and intellectuals for The Journal's
"Weekend Interview" feature.
Political
views
Ahmari had
previously identified with neoconservatism and criticized politicians such as
Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, and Marine Le Pen, whom he considered to stand
for a global trend towards illiberalism and increasingly polarized populist
politics. However, he became a more outspoken critic of progressivism after
joining the conservative magazine Commentary and has since supported both Trump
and Viktor Orbán. Ahmari is pro-life. After the Republican Party's
disappointing turnout in the 2022 midterm elections, he published an op-ed in
The New York Times which blamed this turnout on the lack of a coherent campaign
message and suggested that the American right wing should do more to address
economic difficulties facing the working class.
Dispute
with David French
A
high-profile dispute between Ahmari and National Review writer David French
broke out over the summer of 2019 as a result of the publication of Ahmari's
polemic "Against David French-ism", sparking numerous essays and
commentaries in politically conservative publications like National Review and
The American Conservative,[26] as well as in moderate and progressive outlets
like The New York Times, The New Yorker, and The Atlantic.
The dispute
began on May 26, 2019, when Ahmari expressed on Twitter his frustration with a
Facebook advertisement for a children's drag queen reading hour at a library in
Sacramento, California, which he described as "transvestic
fetishism". In the tweet, Ahmari argued that there is no "polite,
David French-ian third way around the cultural civil war". This prompted a
response from French in a May 28 essay in National Review entitled
"Decency Is No Barrier to Justice or the Common Good". The dispute
escalated significantly after Ahmari published the essay "Against David
French-ism" in the conservative religious journal First Things on May 29,
2019. In the essay, Ahmari argued that French was insufficiently socially
conservative, and that his belief in individual autonomy was contributing to
the overall degradation of American society. The direct targeting of French and
the impromptu creation of the "David French-ism" political philosophy
led the essay to gain significant notoriety, prompting a response from French
and the publication of numerous commentaries. On September 5, 2019, French and
Ahmari engaged in an in-person political debate moderated by New York Times
columnist Ross Douthat at the Catholic University of America in Washington
D.C., again prompting a flurry of commentaries.
The dispute
centered on their differing opinions on how conservatives should approach
cultural and political debate, with Ahmari deriding what he calls "David
French-ism", a political persuasion he defines as believing "that the
institutions of a technocratic market society are neutral zones that should, in
theory, accommodate both traditional Christianity and the libertine ways and
paganized ideology of the other side". He argues that this belief leads to
an ineffective conservative movement, and contends that the best way for
culturally conservative values to prevail in society is a strategy of
"discrediting...opponents and weakening or destroying their institutions",
which he maintains is a tactic already utilized by progressives, leaving
conservatives who adhere to the David French-style of politics impotent in what
he views as a raging culture war in the United States. He argues that the
political realm should be viewed as one of "war and enmity", and that
the power of the government should be directly utilized to impose culturally
conservative values on society. French, by contrast, advocates a conservative
libertarian approach in which decency, civility, and respect for individual
rights are emphasized, and argues that Ahmari's beliefs "forsake" the
philosophy of classical liberalism that the Founding Fathers of the United
States espoused. He placed particular criticism on Ahmari's desire for direct
government intervention in the lives of individuals, which he argues is not
only antithetical to liberty but is a politically ruinous tactic for
conservatives, who would end up on the receiving end of progressive policies if
the government were given greater license to interfere in the private lives of
individuals.
Books
While in
law school, Ahmari co-edited with Nasser Weddady the 2012 book Arab Spring
Dreams: The Next Generation Speaks Out for Freedom and Justice from North
Africa to Iran, an anthology of the top essays submitted by young Middle
Eastern dissidents to the Dream Deferred Essay Contest. The Times Literary
Supplement writes that Weddady and Ahmari "perceptively edited this
collection of winning entries" from the Dream Deferred contest and that
"some of these young writers [featured in the anthology] possess more
clarity than all the pundits combined." The book received endorsements
from Polish Nobel Peace Prize winner Lech Wałęsa and feminist icon Gloria
Steinem, who wrote the anthology's foreword.
Ahmari's
book, The New Philistines, about his belief that identity politics are
corrupting the arts, was released on October 20, 2016, from Biteback
Publishing.[36] In January 2019, Ignatius Press published his spiritual memoir,
From Fire, by Water, about his conversion to Roman Catholicism.
The
Unbroken Thread: Discovering the Wisdom of Tradition in an Age of Chaos was
released in 2021.
His most
recent book, Tyranny, Inc.: How Private Power Crushed American Liberty – and
What to Do About It, was released in 2023.
Personal
life
Ahmari was
raised as a Twelver Shia Muslim but later embraced atheism, ultimately later
converting to Roman Catholicism in 2016.[40] In late September 2016, he wrote a
three-page article about his conversion in The Catholic Herald, which was the
cover story of the September 30, 2016 issue.
Ahmari is
married to architect Ting Li, with whom he has a son and a daughter.
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