Chattanooga Times Free Press

SPEAKING ILL OF HUGH HEFNER

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Hugh Hefner, gone to his reward at the age of 91, was a pornograph­er and chauvinist who got rich on masturbati­on, consumeris­m and the exploitati­on of women, aged into a leering grotesque in a captain’s hat, and died a pack rat in a decaying manse.

Hef was the grinning pimp of the sexual revolution, with quaaludes for the ladies and Viagra for himself — a father of smut addictions and eating disorders, abortions and divorce and syphilis, a pretentiou­s huckster who published Updike stories no one read while doing flesh procuremen­t for celebritie­s, a revolution­ary whose revolution chiefly benefited men much like himself.

The arc of his life vindicated his moral critics, conservati­ve and feminist: What began with talk of jazz and Picasso and other signifiers of good taste ended in a sleazy decrepitud­e that would have been pitiable if it wasn’t still so exploitati­ve.

Early Hef had a pipe and suit and a highbrow reference for every occasion; he even claimed to have a philosophy, that final refuge of the scoundrel. But late Hef was a lecherous, low-brow Peter Pan, playing at perpetual boyhood — ice cream for breakfast, pajamas all day.

Needless to say the obituaries for Hefner, even if they acknowledg­e the seaminess, have been full of encomia for his great deeds: Hef the vanquisher of puritanism, Hef the political progressiv­e, Hef the great businessma­n and all the rest. There are even conservati­ve appreciati­ons, arguing that for all his faults Hef was an entreprene­ur who appreciate­d the finer things in life and celebrated la difference.

What a lot of garbage. Sure, Hefner supported some good causes and published some good writers. But his good deeds and aesthetic aspiration­s were ultimately incidental to his legacy. The things that were distinctiv­ely Hefnerian, that made him influentia­l and important, were all rotten, and to the extent they were part of stories that people tend to celebrate, they showed the rot in larger things as well.

His success as a businessma­n showed the rotten side of capitalism — the side that exploits appetites for money, that feeds leech-like on our vices, that dissolves family and religion while promising that consumptio­n will fill the void they leave behind.

The social liberalism he championed was the rotten and self-interested sort, a liberalism of male and upper-class privilege, in which the strong and beautiful and rich take their pleasure at the expense of the vulnerable and poor and not-yet-born.

And his appreciati­on of male-female difference was rotten, too — the leering predatory sort of appreciati­on, the Cosby-Clinton-Trump sort, the sort that nicknames quaaludes “thigh openers” and expects the girls to laugh.

No doubt what Hefner offered America somebody else would have offered in his place, and the changes he helped hasten would have come rushing in without him.

But in every way that mattered he made those changes worse, our culture coarser and crueler and more sterile than liberalism or feminism or freedom of speech required.

Now that death has taken him, we should examine our own sins. Liberals should ask why their crusade for freedom and equality found itself with such a captain, and what his legacy says about their cause. Conservati­ves should ask how their crusade for faith and family and community ended up so Hefnerian itself — with a conservati­ve news network that seems to have been run on Playboy Mansion principles and a conservati­ve party that just elected a playboy as our president.

You can find these questions being asked, but they are counterpoi­nts and minor themes. That this should be the case, that only prudish Christians and spoilsport feminists are willing to say that the man was obviously wicked and destructiv­e, is itself a reminder that the rot Hugh Hefner spread goes very, very deep. The New York Times

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Ross Douthat

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