A mind with standards is a dangerous thing
The war on standards: how judgement became taboo
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A mind with standards is a dangerous thing
We’ve been taught that judgment is the refuge of small minds. That having preferences makes you provincial, or that discernment is actually just a nicer word for prejudice. This framing has been so successful that most people now apologize before expressing a preference, as if having taste is some kind of character flaw requiring immediate disclosure.
This is one of the most effective lies of the last fifty years, and it’s worth understanding why it works so well. A person who can’t evaluate is a person who can’t refuse. She takes what’s offered because she’s lost the musculature required to push back. She stays open to everything, which really means she’s defended against nothing. This is not enlightenment, but rather a kind of conceptual immunodeficiency that’s somehow been rebranded as virtue—and that rebranding serves specific interests that are worth naming.
The training starts early. By the time most of us are adults, we’ve internalized a deep suspicion of our own capacity to filter and assess. We learn to qualify our opinions, to hedge our assessments, to genuflect toward “different perspectives” even when some of those perspectives are stupid or boring or corrosive to clear thought. We learn that saying something is bad is worse than the thing itself being bad. The social penalty for judgment exceeds the penalty for whatever’s being judged!
This arrangement works beautifully if you’re in the business of selling things, whether those things are products, ideas, identities, or attention traps. The discerning mind is a hard customer because she doesn’t take the first offer and doesn’t confuse availability with desirability, nor does she doesn’t mistake volume for value. But if you can convince her that her own filtering mechanisms are morally suspect, you’ve removed the last obstacle between your pitch and her attention. You’ve made her porous, and porous people are profitable.
But the trick isn’t just commercial. It’s also social and relational and political in the small-p sense. It’s how mediocrities survive scrutiny and how bad actors avoid consequences. When everything must be tolerated, nothing can be rejected, and rejection is the only mechanism by which quality gets separated from noise. Remove that mechanism and you get a world where the loudest and most persistent voices dominate, not because they’re right but because nobody has retained the authority to say they’re wrong. This is how bad ideas spread like parasites, not through force but through the manufactured politeness that makes refusing them feel like a moral failure.
But I have no problem stating facts, and the fact of the matter is that discernment isn’t cruelty. It’s simply cognition with a spine.
Taps sign—
The mind that has standards doesn’t reject more; it selects better. It moves through the world with something like a mental immune system intact, recognizing what belongs and what doesn’t, what nourishes and what depletes. This isn’t about becoming harsh or closed off, it’s about remaining coherent when everything around you is designed to fragment your attention and dissolve your preferences into an undifferentiated slop soup of consumption.
The person without judgment has to process everything. The person with judgment can afford to think.
There’s a reason the most sophisticated thinkers in history weren’t endlessly open. They were precise. They had taste and they defended it without embarrassment. They understood that real intellectual range comes not from accepting all inputs equally but from knowing which inputs are worth metabolizing in the first place. Discernment is not the enemy of curiosity, it’s what gives curiosity direction. Without that directional capacity, you’re not exploring anything, you’re just wandering in circles that somebody else designed—usually somebody who benefits from your disorientation.
Here’s where it gets political, in the small-p sense. A woman with standards is genuinely dangerous because she’s almost impossible to manipulate. She doesn’t need consensus before she decides and she doesn’t confuse popularity with validity. She doesn’t accept something just because it’s available or tolerate something just because rejection would be socially awkward. She chooses, and in a culture that runs on manufactured insecurity, choosing is a quiet form of insurgency. It implies that she trusts her own mind, which implies she’s not waiting for external validation, which implies she’s not a reliable consumer of whatever you’re selling. She’s a defection from the whole system, and the system knows it.
This is why “judgmental” has become a slur. Not because judgment is actually harmful, but because it’s threatening to every structure that depends on your inability to say no.
The practical application here isn’t complicated, but it requires a kind of ruthlessness that most people have been systematically trained out of. Look honestly at what you allow into your life, including what you read, what you watch, who you spend time with, what you tolerate because it’s easier than refusing. Ask yourself whether these things are genuinely good or merely familiar, or whether they serve your thinking or just occupy space that could be used for something better. Then remove the bottom twenty percent without explanation and without guilt. You don’t owe access to everything that wants in, and you don’t owe your attention to mediocrity just because mediocrity showed up and asked nicely.
I’m not advocating for you to become meaner or more closed off. I’m simply encouraging you to become cleaner and more intentional about what gets to occupy your interior life. A life without filters isn’t free, it’s just noisy. The freedom is actually in the filtering, because filtering is how you make room for what actually matters.
The posture I’m describing here isn’t loud and doesn’t need to announce itself or argue for its own legitimacy. It simply refuses to participate in what isn’t worthy, and it holds that refusal without apology or defensiveness. There’s no performance in it and no righteousness. There’s just a quiet clarity about what belongs and what doesn’t.
A mind with standards is dangerous because it can’t be exhausted into compliance and won’t be shamed out of its own conclusions. It knows what it thinks, and it’s not confused about its right to think it.
That’s where real power actually lives, by the way. Not in the ability to convince others, but in the settled inability to be moved by what doesn’t deserve to move you.
Stay dangerous. x
PS: If you enjoyed this post, I recommend “The difference between being right and being interesting” or “You are what you choose” next.
As always, thanks for reading with me. If you enjoyed this post, please consider hitting the like button and/or sharing it to help boost its visibility. I appreciate you so much. xo









yeh you’ve completely and perfectly articulated my own mindset and way of life back to me
i’m not surprised you have as many subscribers as you do, writing like that