Today with returning guest Robert Tracinski who is here discussing his two recent articles on populism and illiberalism.
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Episode 59 (54 minutes) was recorded at 2030 Central European Time, on October 27, 2022, with Ringr app.. Martin did the editing and post-production with the podcast maker, Alitu. The transcript is generated by Alitu.
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Alright, ladies and gentlemen, this is another episode of the Secular Foxhole podcast
Blair:and today we have a great returning guest.
Blair:Rob Krasinski is here with us.
Blair:Rob, how are you?
Robert:I'm doing well.
Robert:How about you guys?
Blair:Doing great, doing great.
Robert:Glad to be here.
Blair:Thank you.
Blair:It's always great to have you.
Blair:The reason I asked you back is because of two of your most recent articles.
Blair:I think it's important for to get both of these ideas and issues out to the wider
Blair:audience.
Blair:So that's why I want you here.
Blair:Your Discourse article.
Blair:Do the populist have a point?
Blair:And the unpopulist article on illiberalism.
Blair:I think they actually probably go hand in hand
Blair:in a certain sense.
Robert:Yes, they certainly do.
Robert:They certainly do because the one in the
Robert:unpopulous is talking about the populist leader, Georgia Maloney, the new populist
Robert:Prime Minister of Italy.
Robert:So it's sort of tying into what populism looks
Robert:like.
Robert:Populism looks like in the current era.
Blair:Right.
Martin:We have closed, at least for my view here in Sweden also, and more established part
Martin:of it.
Martin:So maybe we'll come back to that, but I see
Martin:the parallel, so please continue there.
Blair:Yes, I think Britain is another quick example of populism's perhaps terrible
Blair:influence.
Blair:I mean, what was her name?
Blair:Liz Truss.
Blair:She was a well, she wanted to be saturated,
Blair:she wanted to be a saturate.
Blair:And I guess those ideas just got blown out of
Blair:the water of low taxes, less government.
Robert:Well, okay, so we can talk about this trust in it because she's got lower taxes, but
Robert:she wasn't going to reduce any spending.
Robert:And then the bond market freaked out.
Robert:Some people said she was scuffed by the bank of England.
Robert:That created this exchange rate and interest rate crisis in response to that.
Robert:But it really came from the fact that she was trying to be Market Thatcher, but she was
Robert:elected here's where populism comes in that she was elected by the Tory party membership,
Robert:which is this tiny little membership.
Robert:It's like a couple of hundred thousand people
Robert:in a nation of something on the order of 70, 8100 million people.
Blair:Oh my gosh.
Robert:So it probably has to do with how the British parties are oriented.
Robert:That Boris Johnson, you could call him a populist, but he at least had the best
Robert:character of a populist, which is he was actually popular.
Robert:He actually got voted into office in an election and so he had a sort of popular
Robert:mandate to do the big thing he wanted to do, which was Brexit.
Robert:And when he left, they replaced it with Liz Trust, who was sort of chosen by this very
Robert:interior inside the party, just a small number of people making the decision.
Robert:And she didn't have popular backing, she didn't have a popular mandate.
Robert:And I think that explains sort of how she lasted four scaramuchis in office.
Blair:Right, well, first let's in a broad definition.
Blair:What is populism compared to, like, Republicanism and democracy and so on.
Robert:Well, that's a really interesting question because I think you sent me a couple
Robert:of links and things like that that I thought were interesting because it is an interesting
Robert:question.
Robert:What is populism?
Robert:Because it's a kind of an illdefined thing and oftentimes people don't have a clear idea what
Robert:it is.
Robert:I define populism as basically an idea that I
Robert:think it's more of a style of politics than it is an actual agenda because there's populism
Robert:of all different types.
Robert:There was something for a while that people
Robert:called the Tea Party movement libertarian populism.
Robert:And now with Donald Trump in America, with some other leaders overseas, you have what is
Robert:a very much not a libertarian populism.
Robert:It's a sort of right wing, big government
Robert:populism.
Robert:But we've also had times in the past when you
Robert:had left wing populism, when you had the populism was we represent the little guy as
Robert:opposed to those big businessmen on Wall Street.
Robert:And so you had almost a socialist or a big government, left wing style of populism.
Blair:Sure.
Robert:So populism is more a style of government or style of politics rather than an
Robert:agenda because it could be a harness for different agendas.
Robert:But the defining characteristic of populism, as I see it, is the appeal to we represent the
Robert:people, the ordinary people, the regular man of the street, as opposed to the elites, as
Robert:opposed to some sort of real or imagined minority cabal of people who are separate from
Robert:it and hostile to the great mass of the people.
Robert:Now, go ahead.
Robert:But in practice, now, that sort of in theory,
Robert:populism was an appeal to popularity, to we represent the people, the ordinary man, the
Robert:common man in practice.
Robert:And here's one of the ways that populism goes
Robert:wrong in practice, it tends to end up referring to what we're for the real people.
Robert:We're for real America and real Americans in the populist imagination.
Robert:And one of the articles you sent me, links to me had a good summary of this.
Robert:Basically, the idea of a unitary people, the people, quote unquote, the people sort of a
Robert:trademark symbol on it, right? The people are one unit.
Robert:And it's one unit that is supposed to all agree.
Robert:And they all agree on something that just by coincidence, happens to be the exact agenda
Robert:that the populist leader wants to pursue at this moment.
Robert:Right? So it's this idea that the people is this one
Robert:entity that are all agreed, and it's only this tiny little cabal.
Robert:It's George Soros or this small group of people in Hollywood and Washington DC.
Robert:They're the only ones who are on the other side.
Robert:And so we're for the real voice of the real people.
Robert:And anybody who's not part of that imagined majority in reality, of course, there is no
Robert:such unified single voice of the majority of the people.
Robert:There's a whole wide diversity of opinions.
Robert:So I'm practice populism, come down to the
Robert:idea that anyone who doesn't share the opinions of my particular faction is not a
Robert:quote unquote, real American.
Robert:He's one of the elites.
Robert:He's one of these people, this small cabal or faction that needs to be pushed down and
Robert:suppressed so that the real people can have their say.
Robert:So in reality it sort of builds itself as being we're for the people, but in reality it
Robert:always ends up being we're for a little minority or faction among the people.
Robert:We've got 30% or 25% or sometimes less people who sign up for our full agenda, but we paint
Robert:them as if they are the real people and everybody else is a tiny minority and then use
Robert:that as an excuse to run roughshod over them and to suppress them.
Robert:And you see that a lot in Europe where it takes on this very overtly ethnic character of
Robert:populism.
Robert:The real people are basically whoever has been
Robert:here for 1000 years or 500 years or however far back, whoever came over with the Maggie's
Robert:when they first came over into Europe.
Robert:Those are the real Hungarians and immigrants
Robert:and foreigners and especially refugees and people like that.
Robert:Those are the threats to the real people.
Robert:So it takes on this very ethnic
Robert:majoritarianism that kind of casts to it, I would say.
Blair:Then here in America, then it would be the Christians who are trying to pick up that
Blair:mantle.
Blair:Then would you say that?
Robert:Absolutely.
Blair:Christian nationalist?
Robert:I think Christian nationalism is becoming basically kind of a mainstream
Robert:philosophy of the Republican Party.
Robert:Unfortunately, from ten to twelve years ago
Robert:you had the Tea Party movement, which I saw as a sort of rapprochement between the
Robert:conservatives and the libertarian wing of the right and the legitimately libertarian wing of
Robert:the right, the small government wing of the right focusing around economic issues and all
Robert:of that.
Robert:And now what's happened is the religious
Robert:conservatives have struck back and they've come back and taken over the ideology of the
Robert:Republican Party.
Robert:And so their form of populism is real America,
Robert:is basically white Christian America and they adopted the sort of Christian nationalism.
Robert:But I think one of the things that's common with all forms of populism is it's an
Robert:assertion, this assertion that my particular faction of people, my 20% or 30% of the
Robert:voters, they're the real people, they're the real Americans, they are the unitary voice of
Robert:the people themselves.
Robert:It is a reaction, it seems like this
Robert:overclaiming that how come my little faction represents the entirety of the people.
Robert:Well, I think that is in reaction to the fear underneath that that in fact they are becoming
Robert:a minority.
Martin:All right, Robert, I will not interrupt you, but I do that anyway because I
Martin:was for a second almost getting depressed there.
Martin:But I know that you have written in your letter two big trends, and one was the
Martin:richness of the country and also the secular trend.
Martin:So thanks for coming to that.
Robert:Yeah, that's what I was coming to, which is that at the same time that the
Robert:populist, the sort of rightwing populists in this country are trying to sort of claim the
Robert:majority voice of the people on behalf of Christianity.
Robert:There's new polls out showing that the number of Christians in this country, the number of
Robert:people who declare themselves to be Christians, is rapidly decreasing.
Robert:I think just recently, the number of people who describe themselves as none of the above
Robert:may have no specific religious affiliation.
Robert:Some atheists, some agnostic, some simply not
Robert:having any formal religious set of beliefs.
Robert:Those people now outnumber evangelical
Robert:Christians in America.
Robert:So evangelical Christians are like the most
Robert:fanatical Protestant group in America.
Robert:I think they either outnumber or just about
Robert:outnumber Catholics.
Robert:And the projection is by 20, 50, 20, 60,
Robert:america will no longer be a majority Christian nation.
Robert:It will be more like, well, what has happened in Europe, in many European countries, where
Robert:the number of sort of practicing, committed religious believers is a minority in the
Robert:population, that the large population is largely secular.
Robert:And so I think it's a combination of that sense of feeling like they ought to be the
Robert:majority, but then fearing that they are becoming a minority, that fuels this sort of
Robert:populism, that in a way, they need the populism even more because they need the
Robert:fantasy that, no, it's only the small minority that's causing people to be secular.
Robert:We are the real Americans.
Robert:We're the real majority.
Robert:And if only we just asserted ourselves as the real majority, then we wouldn't have to be
Robert:afraid that religious belief is going to be fading away and.
Blair:They assert themselves by appealing to government force.
Robert:Well, that's the other thing about populism is it's always about if we represent
Robert:the voice of the people, therefore we should be unobstructed.
Robert:We should have the complete ability to impose whatever the people want.
Robert:So majoritarianism is another ingredient of populism, which is this idea that if you
Robert:represent people, then therefore the limitations of government procedures and
Robert:protections of the rights of minorities, protections of the rights of the individual,
Robert:shouldn't be brought up as obstacles.
Robert:They shouldn't get in your way for whatever
Robert:your agenda has to be, because after all, you represent the people.
Blair:Yeah. Now, in your Discourse article, I do admire how you've defended liberalism
Blair:institutions like the rule of law, limited government, obviously individualism, which is
Blair:all but unknown today.
Blair:Can you expand on that a little bit?
Robert:Yeah. The Discourse article, what I did is it sort of had an audience of one, at
Robert:least when I first started out, because it's Scott Schiff, who I've done some things with
Robert:when I know that I work for the Atlas Society.
Robert:He's often there as sort of like a host to
Robert:introduce the clubhouses that we were doing there.
Robert:Clubhouse is another one.
Robert:It's sort of like a combination of a podcast
Robert:and talk radio because you get audience feedback.
Robert:It's kind of nice, but unfortunately, the medium is not really growing that much.
Robert:So we're sort of reevaluating what we're doing there.
Robert:But Scott is sort of one who always expresses this sort of quasipopulist exasperation with
Robert:the elites, basically.
Robert:Well, in defense of the populist, basically
Robert:said, what about the elites? Aren't the elites corrupt?
Robert:Aren't they foolish? Don't they impose these intellectual fads on
Robert:people? Basically, isn't the corruption of the elites
Robert:an excuse for populism or a justification for populism?
Robert:And so I was looking at that and saying, well, what about the elites part of it?
Robert:I think the elites are not as bad as they're made out to be.
Robert:So another aspect of populism in this idea that we represent the people as opposed to the
Robert:elites, is there in populism, there's a contempt for expertise.
Robert:And so anyone who is in a position of authority in academia or who has worked in
Robert:government, or who has some sort of position where they are endowed with some kind of
Robert:intellectual authority, is considered suspicious just by virtue of being an expert,
Robert:right? And so they love to use the term the socalled
Robert:experts to imply that all these people who are experts in academia or in science or in
Robert:scientific institutions, et cetera, are all frauds.
Robert:They say they're experts, but they're not really experts.
Robert:And that's incredibly exaggerated.
Robert:So oftentimes what you end up with with
Robert:populism is by saying, oh, the elites are terrible.
Robert:The experts don't know what they're talking about.
Robert:So therefore, I'm going to do my own research.
Robert:And doing my own research means watching some
Robert:random guy who has a YouTube video in which he makes crackpot claims.
Robert:So it's not substituting invalid expertise with real expertise.
Robert:It's often throwing out all expertise and simply going on whatever you feel to be true,
Robert:or whatever sort of random idea has been popping around that somebody has been
Robert:promoting that you either haven't tried to check or that you don't have the knowledge of
Robert:the background to check.
Martin:QAnon.
Robert:Yeah. QAnon because that's why you get an element of populism, is these rampant
Robert:conspiracy theories.
Robert:Because if you don't have a base of knowledge
Robert:and you reject all the knowledge given to you by the experts and the fact checkers and
Robert:everybody else, then you're going to be, what are you left with?
Robert:If you don't have your own expertise and you don't have anybody else's expertise, then
Robert:you're going to have to go with, well, whoever told me what I wanted to hear most recently,
Robert:that's functionally, what's going to happen? And so somebody who's out there connecting the
Robert:dots of some conspiracy is going to be able to get your ear.
Robert:So the article is talking about that and talking about the fact that, yes, the elites
Robert:do make mistakes sometimes things like Latinx.
Robert:Here this idea you have to refer to people
Robert:with Hispanic background, who, by the way, when you pull them overwhelmingly, we'll tell
Robert:you we like to be referred to as Hispanic, but you say, no, the proper term is Latinx.
Robert:The greatest thing about Latinx is it makes absolutely no sense in the Spanish language.
Robert:Right.
Robert:It doesn't even fit it with the Spanish
Robert:language.
Robert:You're trying to show how sensitive you are to
Robert:Spanish speakers.
Robert:I know.
Blair:It's really absurd.
Robert:Yeah. So oftentimes you said middle school.
Robert:I remember they're like fads going through a middle school, that these weird ideas will go
Robert:through the elite media or academia.
Robert:And yet the problem is that the populace don't
Robert:really have an alternative to that.
Robert:They don't have an alternative way of saying,
Robert:well, how do we counteract what's going on among the elites?
Robert:They say, no, we're going to install our own elite.
Robert:Our own elite of sort of political demagogues.
Robert:So we're going to install our own people in
Robert:power, give them even more power than anybody had under the old system.
Robert:And we're going to be selecting people not who were selected because they're greater and
Robert:better experts, but they're selected because they achieved Internet celebrity, or in the
Robert:case of some of the older ones, tabloid journalism, celebrity back in the old days,
Robert:right? But we're going to choose people who came up
Robert:through the Internet or through television as celebrities.
Robert:We're going to put them in place, and we're going to get a new elite that has even less
Robert:expertise than the old one.
Robert:So I go on and talk about what we actually
Robert:need to have as the alternative to both sort of what you might call elitism and populism,
Robert:is you need to have the institutions that were actually put in place as part of the a liberal
Robert:society precisely to deal with this problem.
Robert:So one of the things I point out is this
Robert:problem of the elites might be corrupt is not new at all.
Robert:The Founding Fathers were very well aware of it.
Robert:They were dealing with the entrenched elite of an aristocratic society, and whoever had the
Robert:ear of the king or whoever did the mechanisms to get his way up in parliament, and they were
Robert:trying to come up with mechanisms that would limit the power of those people and allow
Robert:competition and allow criticism.
Robert:And they created all the institutions of a
Robert:liberal, a bad liberal, I mean, a free society liberal in the political philosophers.
Robert:And so those are the institutions that a lot of the populists want to tear down or shove
Robert:off to the side and make an end run around instead of revigorating them and using them.
Blair:Right.
Blair:Now, let me throw this in there real quick.
Blair:In my mind, there has always seemed to be a strain, if that's the right word, of, like,
Blair:anti intellectualism in the culture.
Blair:And then even in Rain wrote, the breach
Blair:between the intellectuals and the American people, would that have anything to do with
Blair:the rise of the populist ideas?
Robert:Well, I think anti intellectualism is in a way I think it's the default mode of
Robert:humanity because the idea of mediating the world through ideas, of doing deep and serious
Robert:thinking about a subject in a relatively new way historically.
Robert:So there's this unfrozen cavemen idea that I don't like, which is that we're all just
Robert:cavemen really under the surface.
Robert:And this modern, sophisticated society where
Robert:we deal with ideas and principles and abstractions is artificial and sits very badly
Robert:on.
Robert:Jonathan Goldberg wrote a whole book based on
Robert:this, where I described it as being sort of like a it's the old conservative argument from
Robert:Depravity or original Sin, but it's active, right?
Robert:So the idea is that the original sin is we have a caveman's mind and psychology, which on
Robert:top of which there's a thin veneer of intellectuality.
Robert:I don't think that's true because human beings have been thinkers from the very beginning.
Robert:But it is true that intellectuality, that being able to think about things is an
Robert:achievement.
Robert:It's something that people need to learn how
Robert:to do, and it's something that a culture needs to be able to support, and a culture needs to
Robert:as a whole needs to learn how to do that.
Robert:And we're often very bad at that.
Robert:And there's a lot of institutional and I see especially in the media business.
Robert:I often say that the market signals from the media business to me.
Robert:Tell me I should be running a grift.
Robert:That is.
Robert:I should be I should be running a con.
Robert:I should be starting a podcast where I lie to
Robert:people and tell them whatever they want to hear.
Robert:Or start a substantial newsletter where I do that.
Robert:And then I would get huge numbers of subscribers and people would love me and I
Robert:hate my work.
Robert:But there are people out there who do that.
Robert:So there is a lot of there's always this sort of ground for people who want to be told what
Robert:they want to hear and to not want to have to think very deeply or very independently about
Robert:what's going on in the world and about morality and about politics and about what
Robert:ought we to be doing.
Robert:So there's always that tendency of anti
Robert:intellectuality.
Robert:And so I think you're always going to have
Robert:that sort of populist movement underneath that sort of gives people permission to say, you
Robert:don't have to think about this.
Robert:Just go with your emotions, go with what you
Robert:feel, go with your tribal affiliation.
Robert:Whichever group you happen to identify with,
Robert:you can go with that.
Robert:And that's all you need to do because it is a
Robert:certain freedom from effort that populism is selling to people.
Robert:You are right, because you are one of the quote unquote, the people.
Blair:I hear you now you mentioned the irony of the left answer to today's elites is to
Blair:hand over even more power to the unelected bureaucracy.
Robert:Well, actually, I think the right answer to today's elites is to put our
Robert:populist debit cards in place and give them more power.
Blair:Okay?
Robert:Now, the elites on the left that they're complaining about are yes, they're the
Robert:people who become more entrenched in the permanent bureaucracy, which is a real
Robert:problem.
Robert:That the populist.
Blair:Right.
Blair:I want to push back a little bit on that, but
Blair:not necessarily the deep state, but the administrative state, the unelected people in
Blair:the administrative state.
Blair:There's so many agencies and miles and miles
Blair:of laws.
Blair:I know my wife who ran a business.
Blair:She was constantly, what if I do this, I break the law, but if I don't do it, I break the
Blair:law?
Robert:Yeah.
Blair:So she had to choose.
Blair:And finally, it just wore out again.
Robert:Yeah. Hernandezotto, who dealt with this even more chaotic environment societies,
Robert:he's looking at, like, Third World countries and South American countries.
Robert:He has some very interesting things to say about that, about how basically, when you have
Robert:enormous amounts of regulations to start a business, and often in these Latin American
Robert:countries, tons and tons of paperwork you have to fill out.
Robert:And he says, basically, what happens is it means that the average a poor person who's not
Robert:well educated basically cannot legally start a business.
Robert:Now they start them anyway.
Robert:They just run them in the, quote, unquote,
Robert:informal economy, the black market economy.
Robert:They run them without a legal basis.
Robert:But then they're always sort of on the edge of ruin because they have no legal claim to
Robert:anything, right? They could be shut down at any moment.
Robert:They're in a legally precarious position, and they can't raise capital or take out loans
Robert:because, again, they have no legal organization.
Robert:It ends up being basically a subsidy to lawyers, and it ends up giving a monopoly to
Robert:people who can afford lawyers.
Robert:So if you are well off and can afford a lawyer
Robert:to do all the amounts and amounts of paperwork, then you can legally run a business
Robert:in that society, and you get all the advantages of being the one person who can
Robert:legally do this, and it shuts out everybody else who could potentially compete with you.
Robert:So, yes, that is a serious problem.
Robert:We don't have it in America as badly as they
Robert:have it elsewhere, but it is a problem.
Robert:But one thing I want to point out is that a
Robert:lot of that bureaucratic administrative state, ironically, it is the leftover of a previous
Robert:wave of populism.
Robert:And these are the people actually called
Robert:themselves populists the capital P. This is the early 20th century progressives, and they
Robert:were the economic populists.
Robert:They were the left wing populist who said, oh,
Robert:no, we have to have we can't have these big businessmen running them up.
Robert:We have to have big government, we have to have more regulations.
Robert:And they're the ones who pushed for the massive regulatory state with the idea that
Robert:being, well, we're going to be tying down JPMorgan and all these other malefactors of
Robert:great wealth, I think that was FDR's phrase.
Robert:And we're going to tie them down with all
Robert:these regulations to make sure they can't run roughshod over again, quote, unquote, the
Robert:people.
Robert:So it was an economic populism that then
Robert:produced big government as a reaction to the elites on Wall Street.
Robert:And then, of course, big government became its own group of elites that were.
Blair:Less susceptible to the permanent bureaucracy.
Blair:The permanent bureaucracy.
Blair:What is liberalism's answer to today's
Blair:epistemological? Chaos.
Blair:That's how I look at it.
Blair:It's all about epistemology how you think
Blair:about it.
Robert:Well, okay, so liberalism has several answers, and I guess that liberalism has
Robert:actually developed as an answer to this.
Robert:Yes, that if you go back to the Enlightenment,
Robert:into the Founding Fathers, and to the Lockyer ideals that led to this, among other things,
Robert:freedom of speech was one that the institutions of freedom of speech were created
Robert:as a way of basically preventing dogmas and groups of insiders from being able to control
Robert:what people believe and to control what people thought was true.
Robert:And so they created these standards where the standard of free speech, which is that you
Robert:have to allow criticism, you can't shut out criticism, you can't ban anybody.
Robert:You have to allow a vigorous debate to go back and forth.
Robert:And so the institutions of freedom of speech are tremendously important.
Robert:I also think political institutions, that the institution of free elections is a way of
Robert:basically saying that the leaders have to answer to the people at regular intervals.
Robert:They have to constantly be defending and being put on the spot for, well, you did this and
Robert:people don't like it, so why justify yourself? And then somebody can come up with a better
Robert:argument.
Robert:Free markets are one of the great liberal
Robert:institutions that are meant to fight corruption.
Robert:The irony of the left wing populace is they see all those are free markets that cause all
Robert:these big businesses that have too much power, not realizing that actually free markets are
Robert:one of the institutions that helps distribute power.
Robert:Because what it means is that anybody can come compete with you.
Robert:And also, it means that free markets also mean that you are not dependent on the goodwill of
Robert:a politician to be able to make a living and to be able to run a business and to be able to
Robert:survive.
Robert:And that's hugely important.
Robert:That one of the character we talked about, the different characteristics of populism.
Robert:Right.
Robert:One characteristics of populism, it generally
Robert:ends up leading to sort of what we used to call very inaccurately called crony
Robert:capitalism.
Robert:It's not capitalism at all.
Robert:It was just called cronyism.
Robert:But it's the idea that you have a system where
Robert:you have a government controlled either by unelected bureaucrats or by demagogues,
Robert:depending on your style of populism.
Robert:But the government has so much control over
Robert:society that in order to survive, all businesses have to basically be on good terms
Robert:with whoever's in charge politically.
Robert:And so you see this, the right has developed
Robert:this, adopted this.
Robert:They've gotten very enamored with this idea
Robert:that well, wait a minute.
Robert:So Ron DeSantis in Governor of Florida
Robert:basically said, well, Disney opposed me on a piece of anti woke legislation and so
Robert:therefore now I'm going to use my power as governor to cause problems for them.
Robert:And he went and revoked the basically took the organizations in charge of the utilities and
Robert:the power and the sewers at Disney World in Florida and said, well, I'm going to basically
Robert:exert control over this.
Robert:I'm going to appoint people as governor to run
Robert:that.
Robert:And basically Disney will then be disney World
Robert:will then be at my mercy.
Robert:I could shut it down.
Robert:If I don't like the way they're acting, I'll have them by the throat.
Robert:And this is very much populist thinking.
Robert:And of course there's the bureaucratic left
Robert:wing version of that because they love to do the same thing too.
Robert:But it's this idea that if you don't have free markets and everyone is dependent for their
Robert:livelihood and their ability to run a business and make a living, they're dependent on the
Robert:goodwill of politicians.
Robert:Politicians get this tremendous amount of
Robert:power over people and ability to crush dissent, which we see in a lot of popular sort
Robert:of quote unquote populist silent dictatorships, right?
Blair:Well that's a perfect segue into your unpopular article about the illiberal
Blair:synthesis between which is what I call the worst of both worlds, the liberal left and the
Blair:liberal right.
Robert:Can you so the jumping off a point for that.
Robert:Now by the way, I love the fact that I just got published in the unpopulous.
Robert:I love the name of it.
Robert:This is a longtime libertarian writer
Robert:sympathetic to objectivism.
Blair:Nice.
Robert:She said dealings and connections over the years.
Robert:She started this thing called the unpopulous, which basically meant to oppose populism.
Robert:But I quickly got a kick out of being published there because I've been writing
Robert:unpopular things for years.
Robert:So it's great that I'm in the unpopulous.
Robert:Anyway, that piece launched off with there was a speech given by Georgia Maloney.
Robert:She was the presumptive.
Robert:She's now the new Prime Minister of Italy and
Robert:her party won like 26% of the vote.
Robert:But in the crazy coalition politics of Italy,
Robert:that meant she got the prime ministership and she gave this fiery speech.
Robert:And the interesting thing about the speech got a huge reaction among conservatives here in
Robert:America about, oh, this is a great speech.
Robert:And when I looked at it, what I found is
Robert:there's this conspiratorial anticapitalism that's mixed in with the traditionalist anti
Robert:woke conservative social policy, right? So you have the conservative traditionalism,
Robert:the pro religion profamily traditionalism, combined with this anticapitalist rhetoric
Robert:about how well the reason why corporations are forcing this wokeness laws.
Robert:Is that we'll be perfect consumer slaves and we'll be at the mercy of financial
Robert:manipulators.
Robert:And what I saw there, this is basically
Robert:something I've been dreading for.
Robert:I've been dreading constant fear of mine for
Robert:decades, which is that the Right or left would finally discover how little difference there
Robert:is between them and join forces.
Blair:Yeah, the ominous parallels, one of the.
Robert:Things that helped us over the years is that the Left will come with terrible,
Robert:terrible policies.
Robert:And because they have these superficial
Robert:differences with the Right, the Right will oppose them.
Robert:The Right has its own terrible policies, but because they disagree on certain in the style
Robert:and oftentimes superficial differences around the margins, they never figure out how to make
Robert:common cause.
Robert:And my great fear is that maybe someday
Robert:they'll figure out how to make common cause.
Robert:And that's why this synthesis of this
Robert:anticapitalist rhetoric with the social conservatism, the traditionalism, that
Robert:basically we should be using government to support traditional religious values and
Robert:impose them on people, that is the thing that I've been looking for, and I'm starting to see
Robert:more signs of in the west.
Robert:And I think it's the big thing to be concerned
Robert:about.
Robert:Now, in that piece, I also look at how that
Robert:applies, how that parallels a speech recently given by Vladimir Putin, a fairly recent one,
Robert:where he's reacting to the war in Ukraine, where he does the exact same thing.
Robert:And in Putin's case, it's really funny because you can see how, like, a whole section of the
Robert:speech is basically warmed over anticapitalist, anti imperialist rhetoric from
Robert:his old KGB days in East Germany, right? Yeah.
Robert:It's the old Sovietstyle, anticapitalist propaganda, but then combined with him quoting
Robert:a Russian fascist philosopher and talking about authentic cultures and traditional
Robert:values.
Robert:So he's doing the same thing there, where he's
Robert:taken the social and religious conservatism and then combined it with the world, with
Robert:parts of the old world view of the Communist, this anti capitalist conspiracy theory that
Robert:America is this horrible capitalist empire he's taken us to and combined them.
Robert:And I think that's how he's providing a model that is now being adopted by American
Robert:conservatives and European conservatives.
Blair:Yes, he was even saw something where he was blessed by the Russian Orthodox Church.
Robert:Well, he formed a true attila in the witch doctor partnership.
Robert:This is one of Ein Rand's analogies, right? You have atilla is the man of muscle and
Robert:strength, and the witch doctor is the man of mysticism.
Robert:And they have this partnership in Russia.
Robert:That partnership is totally there.
Robert:It is Vladimir Putin as the mystic of muscle, the attila.
Robert:And the witch doctor in that partnership is Patriarchy, who's the leader of the Russian
Robert:Orthodox Church.
Robert:And the partnership is the Russian Orthodox
Robert:Church gets official support, it gets legal support.
Robert:The Russian government goes out and tries to actively suppress other kinds, other
Robert:religions, including other versions of Christianity.
Robert:Underneath this conflict, in Ukraine, there's actually a bit of a religious conflict, which
Robert:is the Ukrainians, just in the last few years, petitioned to create a Ukrainian Orthodox
Robert:Church that's separate from the Russian Orthodox Church.
Robert:And it's basically under the leadership of the Patriarch of Constantinople, who is based in
Robert:Istanbul and not the Patriarch of Moscow.
Robert:So there's this sense if the Russian invasion
Robert:of Ukraine had succeeded, there's this sense that while Archbishop Kuro would have made
Robert:sure that all the Orthodox churches in Ukraine were Russian Orthodox and under his control
Robert:because he's in this sort of struggle for power with the Patriarchal constant snaple.
Blair:Oh, my goodness.
Blair:All right, a side story I didn't know.
Robert:Yes, that's something to look at, but it shows you it's something that seems
Robert:medieval in a way, that power struggle between the Patriarch of Moscow and the Patriarch of
Robert:contacts in Opal.
Robert:But that stuff is still there.
Robert:It's still around.
Robert:It's still a basis for geopolitical
Robert:wranglings.
Robert:Yeah.
Blair:So the answer today, though, is advanced towards liberalism.
Blair:Again, the rule of law, the reimbursement of individualism, and the proper definition of
Blair:capitalism.
Robert:I also think, too, is that I said earlier, this poll showing Americans becoming
Robert:a secular nation.
Robert:Yes.
Robert:All of those Christians will probably be a minority sometime in the middle to second half
Robert:of this century.
Robert:And I think it also creates the need for if
Robert:we're going to be secular, we have to decide what that means.
Robert:We have to have a secular ideology, a secular philosophy, a secular morality above all else.
Robert:I think the thing is people and you can see Europe became secular and it did not
Robert:immediately fall apart.
Robert:Most people actually live according to, I
Robert:think, a fairly decent secular morality.
Robert:They live it implicitly in their regular life.
Robert:Most people go out and they get a job.
Robert:They find the work they want to do, they buy
Robert:houses, they have families, they do all the things that, you know, peaceful, productive,
Robert:decent, normal do.
Robert:They live according to an implicit morality of
Robert:what I call rational selfinterest or enlightened selfinterest.
Robert:But at the same time, they don't have the theory, they don't have the idea to defend
Robert:that and to define fully what that means.
Robert:And that's what leads to the sense of over
Robert:going off a cliff and we don't know what we're doing.
Blair:Right.
Blair:Martin, do you want to step in?
Martin:Yes, please.
Martin:Yeah. I have some short questions and also
Martin:ending on we haven't had a good note here in between, but also a shout out, but an
Martin:expression or a word called your boning job.
Robert:You want to explain that one?
Martin:Yes, please.
Robert:Okay. Jawboning is an example.
Robert:So this is an example of one of these free
Robert:speech issues.
Robert:This is an interesting one because it's kind
Robert:of a gray area or a hard to define issue.
Robert:But jawboning is a word used.
Robert:So, yeah, your job boating, you're moving your jaw, you're talking to somebody sort of flying
Robert:term for talking to someone.
Robert:But what it refers to is when a government
Robert:official goes out.
Robert:And so, for example, the example being used
Robert:here is during the beginning of COVID you had some government officials, including people
Robert:from the Centers for Disease Control.
Robert:So these are scientists or people in the
Robert:science bureaucracy who are in charge of dealing with infectious diseases.
Robert:And they were going to places like Facebook and saying, well look, these are what we see
Robert:as the main sources, including sometimes specific people.
Robert:We see these as the main sources of disinformation of wrong information about
Robert:COVID And we think you should be and basically suggesting that they should do something to
Robert:prevent the spread of that misinformation.
Robert:And in many cases they were actually really
Robert:correct about the misinformation that the people who were spreading this were people who
Robert:were crackpots, who were denying provable scientific facts about the pandemic.
Robert:But the problem comes in.
Robert:And when you have a government official now,
Robert:on the one hand, a government official in charge of fighting infectious diseases has a
Robert:responsibility that can be communicating to the public.
Robert:It's part of his job to say here's what we think is true and here's what we think is not
Robert:true.
Robert:On the other hand, whenever somebody who works
Robert:for the government says something or suggests something, it's not 100% just a suggestion or
Robert:just somebody's opinion.
Robert:It also carries the implication that, well,
Robert:maybe there would be some legal repercussions should you not comply with what I'm
Robert:suggesting.
Robert:And so that's one of the things that we sort
Robert:of have to deal with here is that and this technique of jawboning is not just a pyramid,
Robert:it's been used on other things.
Robert:But there's the sense of what happens when you
Robert:have people who work for the government who express their opinion about what you ought to
Robert:do.
Robert:And even if it's not an explicit direct
Robert:threat, it is still someone from the government saying, gee, it's a nice business
Robert:you've got here.
Robert:It'd be a shame if something were to happen to
Robert:it.
Robert:So it could be an implicit threat.
Robert:And so I had a link to some fascinating discussions about ways to sort of determine
Robert:the certain legal standards and this has been adjudicated in certain Supreme Court cases
Robert:about what constitutes a legitimate, quote ungovernment, speech, the speech that's
Robert:permissible for because you can't say to somebody just because you're a politician or
Robert:just because you work for the CDC, you can't state your opinion on anything.
Robert:But at the same time you have to have like, under what conditions can you state it?
Robert:Under what disclaimers you have to state it.
Robert:And I think the big issue here comes this is
Robert:another example of why you need capitalism, why you need free markets, because the less
Robert:power government has to force people to do something, the less danger there is that a
Robert:politician shooting his mouth off or a government official expressing an opinion
Robert:could be even remotely conceived as an implicit threat.
Robert:Right.
Robert:Because to threaten you, they have to have
Robert:power over you.
Robert:The less power they have over you, the less
Robert:possibility that they could implicitly abuse that power.
Martin:Great.
Martin:Could you clarify and tell a little bit more
Martin:about the label the new classical liberal?
Robert:Classical liberal? Yeah.
Martin:The neoclassical it's a new term, you could say, but at the same time.
Robert:A couple of people have used it occasionally referred to something.
Robert:It never really caught on.
Robert:So I figured it was available out there to be
Robert:granted.
Robert:So I grabbed it.
Robert:I use it as a title for my column at Discourse magazine and it's sort of my attempt to appeal
Robert:to or try to make.
Robert:So if we're going to have this alliance
Robert:possibly forming of left wing and right wing populists of the right wing traditionalism
Robert:combined with the left wing anti capitalism as I was describing this liberal synthesis.
Robert:My attitude is we better have our own coalition.
Robert:Liberal coalition to go against that and to basically do if people are going to see what
Robert:they have in common across party lines or across left and right lines when they're
Robert:opposed to freedom.
Robert:We should be making efforts to try to reach
Robert:across ideological lines and across traditional sort of divides to make an
Robert:alliance of liberals.
Robert:And so neoclassical liberal comes from it's
Robert:sort of a portmanteau, a combination of the classical liberal.
Robert:And so most people who are premarkers, we usually describe ourselves as classical
Robert:liberal.
Robert:The idea is that liberal, the word liberal
Robert:just means pro freedom.
Robert:And so liberalism in the 19th century referred
Robert:to being a pro free marketer, being basically free speech and free markets.
Robert:That's the classical liberalism.
Robert:And then in the 20th century, the progressives
Robert:and the populists came along and the big government guys came along and stole the term
Robert:liberal to refer to this big government ideology.
Robert:But more recently, there's been a wing that calls themselves the neoliberals and they sort
Robert:of define themselves as more market friendly.
Robert:They're sort of left of center, but more
Robert:marketfriendly.
Robert:And they're more likely to be, for example, to
Robert:be YIMBYs.
Robert:So NIMBY means not in my backyard.
Robert:It's the sort of person who opposes any development project that's happening.
Robert:You want to build a 20 story apartment building and they'll turn out at the local
Robert:meeting and they'll yell and scream and try to block it and they'll sue you.
Robert:Well, these are the yes in my backyard people where they say, no, we need to be building
Robert:more housing.
Robert:If you don't build housing, it gets expensive.
Robert:People can't afford.
Robert:And sort of from a more of a leftist center
Robert:perspective, they said, well, if you're going to be able to have affordable housing for the
Robert:poor, you need to be building more housing.
Robert:So we should be more open to profit driven
Robert:free market approaches in housing.
Robert:So these are what's called the neoliberals and
Robert:they've kind of tried to make a brand out of the term neoliberal.
Robert:So I said, well, what if we could get some sort of coalition or cooperation between the
Robert:neoliberals, the center left neoliberals and the center right classical liberals?
Robert:As I said, let's call that neoclassical liberalism.
Robert:And so that's sort of what I'm trying to promote as a liberal synthesis where we try to
Robert:find this even though there are disagreements and philosophy and disagreements and
Robert:priorities.
Robert:We try to find the things that we can
Robert:cooperate on and work together on because I think if we don't.
Robert:Then the advantage of forming a big coalition could potentially flip over to the illegal
Robert:symphony that I've been worried about.
Martin:Great, thanks for that.
Martin:And you have also recently a course fair on
Martin:effective writing.
Martin:Do you want to tell a little about that?
Martin:And your articles there, all your work that you're doing?
Robert:Well, yeah, so this is something I've been wanting to do for a while because 20
Robert:years or so ago I used to do a course it was through the Ingrand Institute.
Robert:I did a course on writing where I was dealing I did some with undergraduates and some with
Robert:graduate students and got a tremendous amount out of teaching that to those students and
Robert:have wanted to do it again.
Robert:So a friend of mine convinced me last spring
Robert:to sort of do another round of it as she set up a group of people.
Robert:And I said, well, I decided having gone back to that and realizing, oh, I not only was able
Robert:to put back together a lot of the old material that I had, but I was able to approve on it
Robert:because I've been writing for 20 years since then, doing a lot of writing and I've learned
Robert:even more.
Robert:So I decided to do other round of it.
Robert:So I got a group of students going through it just started on Tuesday.
Robert:And it's one of the things that I feel strongly about is basically having learned so
Robert:much of sort of passing on those skills and the hard run wisdom and not just about little
Robert:tips.
Robert:Tricks and techniques but I've also done a lot
Robert:of thinking about the process of writing and I think most people find the process of writing
Robert:to be very difficult.
Robert:To be very psychologically brutal and
Robert:challenging.
Robert:I got one of the people who interested in the
Robert:class said I think I'm actually I like the product of my writing but I find the process
Robert:to be incredibly painful and difficult.
Robert:And that's exactly trying to sort of address
Robert:is there's a whole process of how you have to manage the actual act of writing, how you can
Robert:break it down into sort of smaller constituent parts that are not as sort of brainbustingly
Robert:complicated or as anxiety inducing.
Robert:And so they turn it into something where you
Robert:have a series of discrete steps you can take that will make it manageable.
Robert:And I think it's one of the keys to doing a lot of writing.
Robert:As I've done over the years.
Robert:Is being able to have that sort of to know the
Robert:process you need to go through to keep just to keep chugging away at being able to do it
Robert:without stumbling over the process of how do you manage this ability to take this complex.
Robert:A lot of facts.
Robert:A lot of ideas.
Robert:And you have to put them together in an order and give them a structure.
Robert:How do you go about doing that? Well, I've got a series of techniques that
Robert:I've developed over the years, insights into how to break that into a manageable process.
Martin:That's great to hear, Robert.
Robert:The funniest thing is one of the people in the class said they asked what is
Robert:your writing process? They got something more specific because I
Robert:never voluntarily get up, I have frequently stayed up till 05:00 a.m. A lot of my writing
Robert:is done in a dark room alone at 03:00 in the morning because then nobody will interrupt
Robert:you, I hear you.
Martin:So we will do a bit of call to action here and then outro and thank a fellow
Martin:podcasting called Mac in Torch and he has podcast called Crypto
Martin:Generationwealthcrypto.com and he sent us a booster gram, like a digital telegram with a
Martin:note and says 48 Satoshis.
Martin:That's a bit of a bitcoin.
Martin:Part of a bitcoin, yeah.
Martin:And he says, Good job, gentlemen.
Martin:Keep stacking those sets, Macintosh.
Martin:And that was sent after the latest episode
Martin:there, episode 58 and in October, so that was great to hear.
Martin:At 11 October.
Blair:Very good.
Martin:Thanks Macintosh, for your support and for your note.
Martin:That may be something.
Martin:What's your crystal ball for that in, Robert,
Martin:with how you could support content creators and writers and podcasters and others in a
Martin:more direct, in a free way.
Martin:Do you have any thoughts about that?
Robert:Yeah, you can subscribe to my Substack.
Robert:It's resistantletter substack.com.
Robert:They have to shoot me if I lose my writer's
Robert:card if I don't put that out there.
Robert:I love substative platform.
Robert:It's actually the platform.
Robert:For a long time I was basically doing a
Robert:Substack, but before Substack existed because my career sort of started a little before the
Robert:beginning of the blog era and blogs were great, but there was no way to get make money
Robert:at it, right? You could put all this information out, you
Robert:could get it out there for free and people get used to everything for free.
Robert:The thing I hate, the slogan I hate the most is information wants to be free because it's
Robert:usually set by people who are getting paid well to build the technological
Robert:infrastructure, not to actually provide the information.
Robert:So my view is information needs to get paid, right?
Robert:We need to find a way that people who are producing good ideas and producing good
Robert:information can actually make a living at it, because there's no way I could do as much as I
Robert:do if it weren't what I'm doing full time.
Robert:If I were doing this on the side, I could do a
Robert:small fraction of it.
Robert:So finding ways that people can get rewarded
Robert:for doing this and unfortunately, in the digital era, the media business has been going
Robert:the other direction.
Robert:So, definitely, if you have a podcast you
Robert:like, like this one, if you have a newsletter you like, subscribe to those things.
Robert:Find ways to support them financially.
Robert:But the great thing is the barriers to entry
Robert:have been knocked out.
Robert:They've been knocked down.
Blair:That's true.
Robert:Anybody with interesting idea can go and start writing.
Robert:Anybody with an interesting idea, I can start a podcast so you don't have to get into The
Robert:New York Times, get over the parapets of the boiling oil and all of that, and to get into
Robert:the citadel of the mainstream media, you don't need to get there anymore to get an audience.
Robert:The downside of that is it's very hard to make money at doing it.
Robert:But if you want those barriers to enter, to be open, if you want people with your ideas that
Robert:you like to be able to find an audience, then the responsibility goes to you individually to
Robert:say, well, if I want that to happen, I should find the people I like and find ways to give
Robert:them support.
Robert:You guys probably have, like, a tip jar kind
Robert:of thing where people can send in support and you can subscribe to my newsletter and
Robert:substack.
Robert:It's a way of supporting what I do at the
Robert:various ventures that I do.
Blair:Yeah. All right, Robert, we're coming up on the hour mark, so I know you've got to
Blair:go.
Blair:And once again, we thank you for manning the
Blair:Foxhole with us today.
Robert:It's always a pleasure.
Martin:Thank you very much.
Robert:Bye. Thank you.
Robert:Bye bye.