I see that Helen Dale has turned up on a Youtube with Carl Benjamin, better known (apparently) as Sargon of Akkad, discussing Brexit. The discussion, which went on far too long to keep my interest, was intelligent enough, but I was more interested in the "meta" aspects.
First, she is sounding very British these days (although that happens if you live in a country); but more oddly, if I understood her correctly, she is now in the Conservative Party and said something like she was "conservative from birth". Which sounds a tad odd: did I read somewhere in one of the many articles/interviews about her that she once said she helped (when very young, and perhaps with her father?) on a Greens campaign? But she has also said her father was a con man and made many disparaging remarks about him at other times.
In any event, I have a suspicion that we are witnessing another re-invention of herself.
More significantly, this Benjamin character is a controversial figure, who I have managed to avoid knowing anything about until now. He's running for the pro-Brexit, anti immigration UKIP, and
The Guardian notes that he was a big figure in the Gamergate controversy in 2014 (and not in a good way.) He's also in trouble for some "joke" he made about how he wouldn't rape a certain politician, and he's not apologising for it. He puts on an air of reasonableness in some of his material, but Buzzfeed notes his online presence is closely associated with an alt.right fanbase.
I seriously doubt he is someone who (shall we say) reasonable people should be associating with.
Dale has also done an interview with James Delingpole - the climate change denying twit and general right wing gadfly. Apparently, he was all gushing about her take on Roman society. For a person who thinks libertarians should stop denying climate change, she sure doesn't mind helping the profile of one of the most prominent climate change denying writers of the last decade.
At the risk of being accused of jealousy or undue obsession with her, I say again that there has always been something about her manner in talks, interviews or writing which strikes me as a facade of intellectualism more than anything substantial. But she wins over many on the "classic liberal" or libertarian right, who do not perceive her this way.
She's pretty fascinating, because I perceive her as very strange, and rather
Zelig-like in many ways.