Sweetpeaa
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2019
I think the mechanics of his popularity are somewhat different. When I look at people who know were fans, they all were fans at different times, but all for roughly the same time. It seems Petersons ideas had a short shelf life of a little less than a year.
But that was enough when he was gaining more fans than he was losing and when he was breaching more and more of the mainstream.
I think it's because he offered people an alternative promise of reward. He seemed particularly attractive to people with poor families/absent or poor fathers. Most of his ideas are just basic good body stuff, basic discipline. Work for stuff like it matters. Clean your room.
Like the guy that started a channel where he was going to follow Jordan Peterson's advice and make it his life creed for a year. He even had a stream with Peterson. But he lasted about 3 months until he succumbed to his bad habits again.
It's the old conundrum. You try to help the people that need it the most. But they don't just need it the most, they're also the neediest. The least likely to succeed. And then when they realize it's pretty hard to completely transform your habits, they're likely to fall back.
I think that's what happened to a large number of Peterson fans. They believed his stuff. They tried it out. It wasn't as good as they'd hoped. Cleaning their room didn't lower their mortgage.
Boot straps, welfare queens and the communist threat has been talked about to death since the early 1980's. What ideas did JP ever had that were new? I really do wonder. It's hard to believe most of his fans were actually Gen Z'ers.