Culture How did The Lord of the Rings end up so beloved by the right wing? - Elon Musk, JD Vance and Giorgia Meloni have all described JRR Tolkien’s fantasy novels as fundamental to their respective world views – but it’d be too easy to claim they’ve simply misunderstood them.

The Lord of the Rings is like a rich old uncle who periodically reappears in your life to announce his latest triumph or name-drop his famous friends. It was the epic bedtime story that thrilled you as a kid, then the billion-dollar movie franchise that came to dominate the early Noughties. Now the trilogy is back, celebrating its 25th anniversary with the theatrical release of an “extended edition” that was already available on home video to begin with. So The Lord of the Rings is basically the same as it ever was: a solid entertainment banker, a saga to set your watches by. What has changed is the fanbase. It has grown louder and weirder and a whole lot less edifying.

“Speak friend and enter,” reads the riddle that opens the gates of Moria. This essentially means that if you can say you’re a friend, you’re allowed free run of the house – and never mind that Moria’s self-proclaimed friends might not necessarily be friends with one another, just as all Tolkien fans aren’t always on the same page. It was inside Moria, for instance, that the disputatious Boromir began to wonder just what kind of Fellowship he was a part of, and how much he really had in common with an elf, a dwarf and a bunch of hobbits anyway. I’m feeling a similar sense of estrangement when it comes to The Lord of the Rings’ current crop of high-profile pals.

It used to be easy to spot a true Tolkien fan. His tale was the perfect blend of tweedy respectability with folksy eccentricity and was therefore beloved by young nerds, old hippies and a smattering of liberal, literate Real Ale aficionados. But it’s clear that we need to update all the files. Those older fans have died out while the nerds have grown rich and skewed right, dragging the text along for the ride, reframing it as the touchstone for extremist politicians and Silicon Valley billionaires alike.

The libertarian venture capitalist Peter Thiel is so in thrall to Middle-earth that he’s named his data analysis company Palantir (after Saruman’s seeing stone), his capital management firm Mithril (after a rare elvish silver) and his military start-up Anduril (after Aragorn’s sword). JD Vance, the US vice president, credits the story with “shaping his conservative worldview”. Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni, for good measure, used to cosplay as a halfling at neo-fascist “hobbit camps” outside Rome. The Lord of the Rings is her roadmap, her bible, her mantra for life. “I don’t consider it to be a fantasy at all,” she once said.

The evidence would suggest that Elon Musk doesn’t either. The Lord of the Rings remains the world’s richest man’s favourite book. More worryingly, its epic adventure across Middle-earth has come to shape and inform his hardline views on immigration. Speaking on Joe Rogan’s podcast last year, Musk likened the hobbits of the Shire to the citizens of small-town England, and asylum seekers to Mordor’s orcs. “The hobbits were able to live their lives in peace and tranquillity,“ he explained. “But only because they were protected by the hard men of Gondor.” In Musk’s real-world reimagining of the Tolkien classic, he presumably casts himself in the role of Gandalf while Tommy Robinson co-stars as the heroic Aragorn.

In the meantime, thank heavens, we are left with The Lord of the Rings as it was envisaged by the director Peter Jackson, with Ian McKellen playing the wizard and Viggo Mortensen as the avenging king. The trilogy blows in like an emissary from a kinder, simpler age, altogether unsullied by recent associations as it sends its lowly underdogs on an impossible mission to destroy an evil ring of power and thereby save the planet. Or as loyal Sam Gamgee puts it, “There’s some good in this world, Mr Frodo, and it’s worth fighting for.”

At this point, it would be nice to hail Jackson’s adaptation as the definitive take on Tolkien’s epic story – its real shape, its true form. Except that this would only be replacing one false narrative with another. Because while Tolkien’s writing contains numerous qualities that contradict Musk’s bizarre theories, it also contains several elements (a sense of moral exceptionalism; an implied racial hierarchy) that tangentially support them. So it’s too easy to say that Musk, Meloni, Thiel and Vance simply misunderstand The Lord of the Rings in the same way that some fans failed to realise Starship Troopers (1997) and Fight Club (1999) were satires. Annoyingly, it’s more likely a case of different interpretations. Jackson gives us the liberal reading of the classic text; Musk the swivel-eyed, ethno-nationalistic remix. The truth – if it’s anywhere – dances somewhere in between.

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Elijah Wood in Peter Jackson’s ‘The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers’
(Shutterstock)


In his later years, living in moneyed retirement in Bournemouth, Tolkien was reportedly horrified to see his work lauded by a bunch of wide-eyed leftist hippies he had absolutely nothing in common with. It’s safe to assume that he’d be equally dismayed to see it hijacked by a cohort of billionaire tech bros with links to the military industrial complex. But isn’t that the case with every artist who’s lucky enough to produce something that people take to their hearts? Stable door, horse bolted. Wash your hands and walk away.

The Lord of the Rings stopped being Tolkien’s the second he finished writing it, just as it stopped being Jackson’s the second he put his film in the can. It now belongs to all of us. To you and to me, to Thiel and Musk; to anybody, in fact, who declares themself to be a friend of the story. So throw open the gates and let them argue The Lord of the Rings out among themselves, from one side of the Misty Mountains to the other. It’s a good story and a noble pursuit. It’s alive, it’s ongoing, and its issues are forever up for grabs. Tolkien has long gone, but his tale – like the world – is still worth fighting for.

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his capital management firm Mithril (after a rare elvish silver) and his military start-up Anduril (after Aragorn’s sword).
im pretty sure its short men silver and not wood fag silver.
also isnt anduril the company of the occulus guy and not thiels?

Yes, it's stated that the Dunedain were protecting that area from outside forces for centuries. Musk was incorrect in saying the people of Gondor were at all involved; they were at best tangentially helping the Shire by being a bigger target for Sauron's attention. It was the scruffy rangers running around in the forest working for Aragorn who were directly keeping the Hobbits safe.
Well Aragorn reunited Arnor and Gondor.
 
So it’s too easy to say that Musk, Meloni, Thiel and Vance simply misunderstand The Lord of the Rings in the same way that some fans failed to realise Starship Troopers (1997) and Fight Club (1999) were satires
It would make these media literacy guys so angry to know the failure of understanding is entirely on them, not those who knowingly take up unorthodox interpretations of a work.
 
I dunno...the NAFO faggots sure love the word orc and most of them are leftwing. I think the author is mad that some rightwing people like LOTR. Typical reactionary progessive faggotry.
 
"Oh gee, our little attempt to rewrite the history of literature that is very specifically written about white people by a stuffy old white guy didn't go over well. Let's just call it 'right wing' so people hate it because it didn't serve our pet groups properly."

Also: "This group that you're not supposed to like really likes a thing, which means it's obviously got something in it that's really, really bad to associate with."

They talk about fucking dogwhistles, but I swear, they haven't quite figured out that they're the ones rolling over for pets and treats.
 
I thought those were the Dwarves.
So it’s too easy to say that Musk, Meloni, Thiel and Vance simply misunderstand The Lord of the Rings in the same way that some fans failed to realise Starship Troopers (1997) and Fight Club (1999) were satires. Annoyingly, it’s more likely a case of different interpretations. Jackson gives us the liberal reading of the classic text; Musk the swivel-eyed, ethno-nationalistic remix. The truth – if it’s anywhere – dances somewhere in between.
Leftists can't accept that what they yook over might be liked by anyone else, so they love to use the "you misunderstood/media literacy" argument as some ultimate excuse. While also arguing for death of the author in case he outright said they were wrong.

You basically can never win against them. They are more like Gollum, obsessing forever over their tiny amount of power.
 
Tolkien was Catholic, sure, but the actual blood of the universe is 100% Norse Pagan. The elves, trolls, and rings come from the Norse mythology. Gandalf and the dwarves are named from the Poetic Edda. It's a pagan world that happens to have a Christian God (Eru). Plus, saying there are "no Jews" is false. He explicitly based the Dwarves on the Jewish people and their history. It's a lot more complex than just 'Western Christianity vs. Evil.'
The blood of LOTR is Catholic lmao. The whole plot of the LOTR universe mirrors God’s plan for OUR universe.
 
Given that America is Mordor it's funny seeing all of those orcs proclaim how good they are. LOTR is indeed a strong trilogy and a great read, but its interpretation is just as deformed as anything else in America. Thiel, Vance, the rest of the chuds, they really and genuinely don't seem to realize they are the Sarumans and Wormtongues of modern day and that they are servants of evil. For all practical purposes Sauron is American. This is how the rest of us see you.

Interestingly this isn't even an isolated example. The deformed religion in America also has fuck all to do with Jesus and his teachings. Everything gets deformed in America. It is a place of evil. It is Mordor, to loop back to the beginning.
 
The blood of LOTR is Catholic lmao. The whole plot of the LOTR universe mirrors God’s plan for OUR universe.
You could argue that almost all of Tolkien’s writings, especially the Silmarillion, are both an attempt to “make a Norse-like saga for England” and an attempt to reconcile the Norse “long defeat” with Catholicism.

He didn’t hide this, his letters and scholarly works are pretty clear on it.
 
Mmm, it was meant to be one book (and has been reprinted as one, single book) but the publisher split it up into three because they didn't think a single 1000 page novel would sell

It's a combination of them having no theory of mind (because they're ideologues and fanatics who can't see past their personal political viewpoints) and them being exposed to a caricature of the Right, rather than the Right's actual talking points. Whereas the Right is routinely exposed to the Left's actual viewpoints because they never stop shoving them down our throat.
They were partially worried about sales and partially hindered by the fact that paper was kind of expensive post WWII. It would have just been too expensive to make.
 
What a shitty article. It spends 90% of it's word count setting up examples of it's hypothesis, then at the end just cops out and it's conclusion is basically "Yeah, I guess so."
 
The Lord of the Rings is a fundamentally conservative story. It’s literally about the fading away of the elves, i.e. the elder days, and how things progressively and inevitably get worse over time (because the world is fallen), but not in a Nihilistic way, but rather a Christian way, in that man’s quest for progress and a meaning without God only leads to more and more sin, but good will continue to endure and triumph over evil in the long run.

A lot of people think Middle-earth is just a fantasy world. It’s actually the same as our world, just a long time ago. It’s a fantasy mythology of prehistory, but it’s the same physical location.
Someone guessed at the period to sometime around ten thousand years ago. Apparently there's a large time span of history that is pretty much completely unknown. There were kingdoms and civilizations at the time, and we know nothing of them.

Conan came from the same (several thousand years long) period so I will blithely assume while Frodo was climbing Mount Doom he was in the south somewhere fighting snake people.

Also, Terry Pratchett while likely not a conservative, made a lot of points in his story very contrary to modern progressivism and human self-righteousness.
 
Did this motherfucker just write and get paid for a whole ass article whining about how fans of one of the largest cultural touchstones of the last 100 years exist in all political spectrums? Could I really write shit like this and get paid?

It used to be easy to spot a true Tolkien fan. His tale was the perfect blend of tweedy respectability with folksy eccentricity and was therefore beloved by young nerds, old hippies and a smattering of liberal, literate Real Ale aficionados.

Before the PJ adaptations, I think you could come across the LOTR books at the home of a conservative business owner too, retard. Not everyone spends their lives broadcasting their preferences on their sleeves and people read a LOT more before the internet. After? Almost everyone loved these movies except for bitches who lacked the ability to suspend belief and not criticize everything for it's lack of real world application.

Which is why the author can spot a shift in the fan base because leftists and progressives can't have any fucking fun anymore because their ideology doesn't permit it unless an endless list of check boxes have been audited and satisfied first.
 
>right wing
>consume hollywood jewSA created mind programming
>worship billionare tech-jew gangsters
>the world is just like le heckin LOTR(r)(tm)!
>change nothing, infinity niggers, jeets, shitskin rape-hordes, criminal gangsters continue to multiply, consume, rape and kill us
>coexist, keep being a slave to the system

yeah nah, thinking like that is no different than being a Harry Potter obsessed redditor
 
Also, Terry Pratchett while likely not a conservative, made a lot of points in his story very contrary to modern progressivism and human self-righteousness.
Pratchett understood human nature and it shows in a number of his stories, which is why he never felt particularly progressive.
 
Because its not gay shit for fags.
Someone guessed at the period to sometime around ten thousand years ago. Apparently there's a large time span of history that is pretty much completely unknown. There were kingdoms and civilizations at the time, and we know nothing of them
The Younger Dryas provides a very convenient reason for why none of the relics of Middle Earth remain for us to see. And IIRC there are theories that there were relatively advanced civilizations that it wiped out. Is that what you're talking about?
 
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